Provided by: libwww-perl_6.05-2_all bug

NAME

       LWP::UserAgent - Web user agent class

SYNOPSIS

        require LWP::UserAgent;

        my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new;
        $ua->timeout(10);
        $ua->env_proxy;

        my $response = $ua->get('http://search.cpan.org/');

        if ($response->is_success) {
            print $response->decoded_content;  # or whatever
        }
        else {
            die $response->status_line;
        }

DESCRIPTION

       The "LWP::UserAgent" is a class implementing a web user agent.  "LWP::UserAgent" objects can be used to
       dispatch web requests.

       In normal use the application creates an "LWP::UserAgent" object, and then configures it with values for
       timeouts, proxies, name, etc. It then creates an instance of "HTTP::Request" for the request that needs
       to be performed. This request is then passed to one of the request method the UserAgent, which dispatches
       it using the relevant protocol, and returns a "HTTP::Response" object.  There are convenience methods for
       sending the most common request types: get(), head(), post(), put() and delete().  When using these
       methods then the creation of the request object is hidden as shown in the synopsis above.

       The basic approach of the library is to use HTTP style communication for all protocol schemes.  This
       means that you will construct "HTTP::Request" objects and receive "HTTP::Response" objects even for non-
       HTTP resources like gopher and ftp.  In order to achieve even more similarity to HTTP style
       communications, gopher menus and file directories are converted to HTML documents.

CONSTRUCTOR METHODS

       The following constructor methods are available:

       $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new( %options )
           This method constructs a new "LWP::UserAgent" object and returns it.  Key/value pair arguments may be
           provided  to  set  up  the  initial  state.   The  following  options correspond to attribute methods
           described below:

              KEY                     DEFAULT
              -----------             --------------------
              agent                   "libwww-perl/#.###"
              from                    undef
              conn_cache              undef
              cookie_jar              undef
              default_headers         HTTP::Headers->new
              local_address           undef
              ssl_opts                { verify_hostname => 1 }
              max_size                undef
              max_redirect            7
              parse_head              1
              protocols_allowed       undef
              protocols_forbidden     undef
              requests_redirectable   ['GET', 'HEAD']
              timeout                 180

           The following additional options are also accepted: If the "env_proxy" option is  passed  in  with  a
           TRUE  value,  then proxy settings are read from environment variables (see env_proxy() method below).
           If "env_proxy" isn't provided the "PERL_LWP_ENV_PROXY" environment variable controls  if  env_proxy()
           is called during initialization.  If the "keep_alive" option is passed in, then a "LWP::ConnCache" is
           set  up (see conn_cache() method below).  The "keep_alive" value is passed on as the "total_capacity"
           for the connection cache.

       $ua->clone
           Returns a copy of the LWP::UserAgent object.

ATTRIBUTES

       The settings of the configuration attributes  modify  the  behaviour  of  the  "LWP::UserAgent"  when  it
       dispatches requests.  Most of these can also be initialized by options passed to the constructor method.

       The  following  attribute  methods are provided.  The attribute value is left unchanged if no argument is
       given.  The return value from each method is the old attribute value.

       $ua->agent
       $ua->agent( $product_id )
           Get/set the product token that is used to identify the user agent on the network.  The agent value is
           sent as the "User-Agent" header in the requests.  The default is the string returned by the  _agent()
           method (see below).

           If the $product_id ends with space then the _agent() string is appended to it.

           The  user  agent  string  should  be  one or more simple product identifiers with an optional version
           number separated by the "/" character.  Examples are:

             $ua->agent('Checkbot/0.4 ' . $ua->_agent);
             $ua->agent('Checkbot/0.4 ');    # same as above
             $ua->agent('Mozilla/5.0');
             $ua->agent("");                 # don't identify

       $ua->_agent
           Returns the default agent identifier.  This is  a  string  of  the  form  "libwww-perl/#.###",  where
           "#.###" is substituted with the version number of this library.

       $ua->from
       $ua->from( $email_address )
           Get/set  the  e-mail  address for the human user who controls the requesting user agent.  The address
           should be machine-usable, as defined in RFC 822.  The "from" value is send as the  "From"  header  in
           the requests.  Example:

             $ua->from('gaas@cpan.org');

           The  default  is  to not send a "From" header.  See the default_headers() method for the more general
           interface that allow any header to be defaulted.

       $ua->cookie_jar
       $ua->cookie_jar( $cookie_jar_obj )
           Get/set the cookie jar object to use.  The only requirement  is  that  the  cookie  jar  object  must
           implement the extract_cookies($request) and add_cookie_header($response) methods.  These methods will
           then  be  invoked  by  the user agent as requests are sent and responses are received.  Normally this
           will be a "HTTP::Cookies" object or some subclass.

           The default is to have no cookie_jar, i.e. never automatically add "Cookie" headers to the requests.

           Shortcut: If a reference to a plain hash is passed in as the $cookie_jar_object, then it is  replaced
           with  an  instance  of  "HTTP::Cookies"  that  is  initialized  based  on  the  hash.  This form also
           automatically loads the "HTTP::Cookies" module.  It means that:

             $ua->cookie_jar({ file => "$ENV{HOME}/.cookies.txt" });

           is really just a shortcut for:

             require HTTP::Cookies;
             $ua->cookie_jar(HTTP::Cookies->new(file => "$ENV{HOME}/.cookies.txt"));

       $ua->default_headers
       $ua->default_headers( $headers_obj )
           Get/set the headers object that will provide default header values for any requests sent.  By default
           this will be an empty "HTTP::Headers" object.

       $ua->default_header( $field )
       $ua->default_header( $field => $value )
           This is just a short-cut for $ua->default_headers->header( $field => $value ). Example:

             $ua->default_header('Accept-Encoding' => scalar HTTP::Message::decodable());
             $ua->default_header('Accept-Language' => "no, en");

       $ua->conn_cache
       $ua->conn_cache( $cache_obj )
           Get/set the "LWP::ConnCache" object to use.  See LWP::ConnCache for details.

       $ua->credentials( $netloc, $realm )
       $ua->credentials( $netloc, $realm, $uname, $pass )
           Get/set the user name and password to be used for a realm.

           The $netloc is a string of the form "<host>:<port>".  The username and password will only  be  passed
           to this server.  Example:

             $ua->credentials("www.example.com:80", "Some Realm", "foo", "secret");

       $ua->local_address
       $ua->local_address( $address )
           Get/set  the local interface to bind to for network connections.  The interface can be specified as a
           hostname or an IP address.  This value is passed as the "LocalAddr" argument to IO::Socket::INET.

       $ua->max_size
       $ua->max_size( $bytes )
           Get/set the size limit for response content.  The default is "undef", which means that  there  is  no
           limit.  If the returned response content is only partial, because the size limit was exceeded, then a
           "Client-Aborted"  header  will  be  added  to  the  response.   The  content might end up longer than
           "max_size" as we abort once appending a chunk of  data  makes  the  length  exceed  the  limit.   The
           "Content-Length"  header,  if present, will indicate the length of the full content and will normally
           not be the same as "length($res->content)".

       $ua->max_redirect
       $ua->max_redirect( $n )
           This reads or sets the object's limit of how many times it will obey redirection responses in a given
           request cycle.

           By default, the value is 7. This means that if you call  request()  method  and  the  response  is  a
           redirect  elsewhere  which is in turn a redirect, and so on seven times, then LWP gives up after that
           seventh request.

       $ua->parse_head
       $ua->parse_head( $boolean )
           Get/set a value indicating whether we should initialize response headers from the <head>  section  of
           HTML documents. The default is TRUE.  Do not turn this off, unless you know what you are doing.

       $ua->protocols_allowed
       $ua->protocols_allowed( \@protocols )
           This  reads  (or  sets) this user agent's list of protocols that the request methods will exclusively
           allow.  The protocol names are case insensitive.

           For example: "$ua->protocols_allowed( [ 'http', 'https'] );" means that this user  agent  will  allow
           only those protocols, and attempts to use this user agent to access URLs with any other schemes (like
           "ftp://...") will result in a 500 error.

           To delete the list, call: "$ua->protocols_allowed(undef)"

           By default, an object has neither a "protocols_allowed" list, nor a "protocols_forbidden" list.

           Note that having a "protocols_allowed" list causes any "protocols_forbidden" list to be ignored.

       $ua->protocols_forbidden
       $ua->protocols_forbidden( \@protocols )
           This  reads (or sets) this user agent's list of protocols that the request method will not allow. The
           protocol names are case insensitive.

           For example: "$ua->protocols_forbidden( [ 'file', 'mailto'] );" means that this user agent  will  not
           allow  those  protocols,  and  attempts to use this user agent to access URLs with those schemes will
           result in a 500 error.

           To delete the list, call: "$ua->protocols_forbidden(undef)"

       $ua->requests_redirectable
       $ua->requests_redirectable( \@requests )
           This reads or sets the object's  list  of  request  names  that  "$ua->redirect_ok(...)"  will  allow
           redirection  for.   By  default,  this  is  "['GET', 'HEAD']", as per RFC 2616.  To change to include
           'POST', consider:

              push @{ $ua->requests_redirectable }, 'POST';

       $ua->show_progress
       $ua->show_progress( $boolean )
           Get/set a value indicating whether a progress bar should be displayed on on the terminal as  requests
           are processed. The default is FALSE.

       $ua->timeout
       $ua->timeout( $secs )
           Get/set the timeout value in seconds. The default timeout() value is 180 seconds, i.e. 3 minutes.

           The  requests  is  aborted  if  no activity on the connection to the server is observed for "timeout"
           seconds.  This means that the time it takes for the complete transaction and the request() method  to
           actually return might be longer.

       $ua->ssl_opts
       $ua->ssl_opts( $key )
       $ua->ssl_opts( $key => $value )
           Get/set  the options for SSL connections.  Without argument return the list of options keys currently
           set.  With a single argument return the current value for the given option.  With 2 arguments set the
           option value and return the old.  Setting an option to the value "undef" removes this option.

           The options that LWP relates to are:

           "verify_hostname" => $bool
               When TRUE LWP will for secure protocol schemes ensure it connects to servers that  have  a  valid
               certificate  matching  the  expected hostname.  If FALSE no checks are made and you can't be sure
               that you communicate with the expected peer.   The  no  checks  behaviour  was  the  default  for
               libwww-perl-5.837 and earlier releases.

               This  option  is initialized from the PERL_LWP_SSL_VERIFY_HOSTNAME environment variable.  If this
               environment variable isn't set; then "verify_hostname" defaults to 1.

           "SSL_ca_file" => $path
               The path to a file containing Certificate Authority certificates.  A  default  setting  for  this
               option   is   provided   by   checking   the  environment  variables  "PERL_LWP_SSL_CA_FILE"  and
               "HTTPS_CA_FILE" in order.

           "SSL_ca_path" => $path
               The path to a directory  containing  files  containing  Certificate  Authority  certificates.   A
               default   setting   for   this   option   is  provided  by  checking  the  environment  variables
               "PERL_LWP_SSL_CA_PATH" and "HTTPS_CA_DIR" in order.

           Other options can be set and are processed directly by the SSL Socket  implementation  in  use.   See
           IO::Socket::SSL or Net::SSL for details.

           The  libwww-perl  core  no  longer  bundles  protocol  plugins  for  SSL.   You  will need to install
           LWP::Protocol::https separately to enable support for processing https-URLs.

   Proxy attributes
       The following methods set up when requests should be passed via a proxy server.

       $ua->proxy(\@schemes, $proxy_url)
       $ua->proxy($scheme, $proxy_url)
           Set/retrieve proxy URL for a scheme:

            $ua->proxy(['http', 'ftp'], 'http://proxy.sn.no:8001/');
            $ua->proxy('gopher', 'http://proxy.sn.no:8001/');

           The first form specifies that the URL is to be used for proxying of access methods listed in the list
           in the first method argument, i.e. 'http' and 'ftp'.

           The second form shows a shorthand form for specifying proxy URL for a single access scheme.

       $ua->no_proxy( $domain, ... )
           Do not proxy requests to the given domains.  Calling no_proxy without any domains clears the list  of
           domains. Eg:

            $ua->no_proxy('localhost', 'example.com');

       $ua->env_proxy
           Load  proxy  settings  from  *_proxy environment variables.  You might specify proxies like this (sh-
           syntax):

             gopher_proxy=http://proxy.my.place/
             wais_proxy=http://proxy.my.place/
             no_proxy="localhost,example.com"
             export gopher_proxy wais_proxy no_proxy

           csh or tcsh users should use the "setenv" command to define these environment variables.

           On systems with case insensitive environment variables there exists a  name  clash  between  the  CGI
           environment  variables  and  the "HTTP_PROXY" environment variable normally picked up by env_proxy().
           Because of this "HTTP_PROXY" is not  honored  for  CGI  scripts.   The  "CGI_HTTP_PROXY"  environment
           variable can be used instead.

   Handlers
       Handlers  are  code  that  injected  at  various phases during the processing of requests.  The following
       methods are provided to manage the active handlers:

       $ua->add_handler( $phase => \&cb, %matchspec )
           Add handler to be invoked in  the  given  processing  phase.   For  how  to  specify  %matchspec  see
           "Matching" in HTTP::Config.

           The possible values $phase and the corresponding callback signatures are:

           request_preprepare => sub { my($request, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               The  handler  is  called before the "request_prepare" and other standard initialization of of the
               request.  This can be used to set up headers and attributes that  the  "request_prepare"  handler
               depends  on.  Proxy initialization should take place here; but in general don't register handlers
               for this phase.

           request_prepare => sub { my($request, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               The handler is called before the request is sent and can modify the request any way it  see  fit.
               This can for instance be used to add certain headers to specific requests.

               The method can assign a new request object to $_[0] to replace the request that is sent fully.

               The  return  value  from  the  callback  is ignored.  If an exception is raised it will abort the
               request and make the request method return a "400 Bad request" response.

           request_send => sub { my($request, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               This handler gets a chance of handling requests before they're sent to the protocol handlers.  It
               should return an HTTP::Response object if it wishes to terminate  the  processing;  otherwise  it
               should return nothing.

               The "response_header" and "response_data" handlers will not be invoked for this response, but the
               "response_done" will be.

           response_header => sub { my($response, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               This  handler  is  called  right  after  the  response headers have been received, but before any
               content data.  The handler might set up handlers for data and might croak to abort the request.

               The handler might set the $response->{default_add_content} value to control if any received  data
               should  be  added  to  the  response  object  directly.   This  will  initially  be  false if the
               $ua->request() method was called with a $content_file or $content_cb argument; otherwise true.

           response_data => sub { my($response, $ua, $h, $data) = @_; ... }
               This handler is called for each chunk of data received for the response.  The handler might croak
               to abort the request.

               This handler needs to return a TRUE value to be called again for subsequent chunks for  the  same
               request.

           response_done => sub { my($response, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               The  handler  is  called  after  the  response  has  been fully received, but before any redirect
               handling is attempted.  The handler can be used to extract information or modify the response.

           response_redirect => sub { my($response, $ua, $h) = @_; ... }
               The handler is  called  in  $ua->request  after  "response_done".   If  the  handler  returns  an
               HTTP::Request object we'll start over with processing this request instead.

       $ua->remove_handler( undef, %matchspec )
       $ua->remove_handler( $phase, %matchspec )
           Remove  handlers that match the given %matchspec.  If $phase is not provided remove handlers from all
           phases.

           Be careful as calling this function with %matchspec that  is  not  not  specific  enough  can  remove
           handlers not owned by you.  It's probably better to use the set_my_handler() method instead.

           The removed handlers are returned.

       $ua->set_my_handler( $phase, $cb, %matchspec )
           Set  handlers  private  to  the  executing  subroutine.   Works by defaulting an "owner" field to the
           %matchspec that holds the name of the called subroutine.  You  might  pass  an  explicit  "owner"  to
           override this.

           If $cb is passed as "undef", remove the handler.

       $ua->get_my_handler( $phase, %matchspec )
       $ua->get_my_handler( $phase, %matchspec, $init )
           Will retrieve the matching handler as hash ref.

           If $init is passed passed as a TRUE value, create and add the handler if it's not found.  If $init is
           a  subroutine  reference, then it's called with the created handler hash as argument.  This sub might
           populate the hash with extra fields; especially the callback.  If $init is a  hash  reference,  merge
           the hashes.

       $ua->handlers( $phase, $request )
       $ua->handlers( $phase, $response )
           Returns the handlers that apply to the given request or response at the given processing phase.

REQUEST METHODS

       The  methods  described  in this section are used to dispatch requests via the user agent.  The following
       request methods are provided:

       $ua->get( $url )
       $ua->get( $url , $field_name => $value, ... )
           This method will dispatch a "GET" request on the given $url.   Further  arguments  can  be  given  to
           initialize  the  headers  of  the  request. These are given as separate name/value pairs.  The return
           value is a response object.  See HTTP::Response for a description of the interface it provides.

           There will still be a response object returned when LWP can't connect to the server specified in  the
           URL  or  when  other  failures in protocol handlers occur.  These internal responses use the standard
           HTTP status codes, so the responses can't be differentiated  by  testing  the  response  status  code
           alone.   Error  responses  that LWP generates internally will have the "Client-Warning" header set to
           the value "Internal response".  If you need to differentiate these internal responses from  responses
           that a remote server actually generates, you need to test this header value.

           Fields  names  that start with ":" are special.  These will not initialize headers of the request but
           will determine how  the  response  content  is  treated.   The  following  special  field  names  are
           recognized:

               :content_file   => $filename
               :content_cb     => \&callback
               :read_size_hint => $bytes

           If  a  $filename is provided with the ":content_file" option, then the response content will be saved
           here instead of in the response object.  If a callback is provided with the ":content_cb" option then
           this function will be called for each chunk of the response  content  as  it  is  received  from  the
           server.   If  neither  of  these  options are given, then the response content will accumulate in the
           response object itself.  This might not be suitable for very large  response  bodies.   Only  one  of
           ":content_file" or ":content_cb" can be specified.  The content of unsuccessful responses will always
           accumulate  in the response object itself, regardless of the ":content_file" or ":content_cb" options
           passed in.

           The ":read_size_hint" option is passed to the protocol module which will try to read  data  from  the
           server  in  chunks  of  this size.  A smaller value for the ":read_size_hint" will result in a higher
           number of callback invocations.

           The callback function is called with 3 arguments: a chunk  of  data,  a  reference  to  the  response
           object,  and  a  reference  to  the  protocol object.  The callback can abort the request by invoking
           die().  The exception message will show up as the "X-Died" header field in the response  returned  by
           the get() function.

       $ua->head( $url )
       $ua->head( $url , $field_name => $value, ... )
           This  method  will  dispatch  a  "HEAD" request on the given $url.  Otherwise it works like the get()
           method described above.

       $ua->post( $url, \%form )
       $ua->post( $url, \@form )
       $ua->post( $url, \%form, $field_name => $value, ... )
       $ua->post( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => \%form )
       $ua->post( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => \@form )
       $ua->post( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => $content )
           This method will dispatch a "POST" request on the given $url,  with  %form  or  @form  providing  the
           key/value  pairs for the fill-in form content. Additional headers and content options are the same as
           for the get() method.

           This method will use the POST() function from "HTTP::Request::Common"  to  build  the  request.   See
           HTTP::Request::Common for a details on how to pass form content and other advanced features.

       $ua->put( $url, \%form )
       $ua->put( $url, \@form )
       $ua->put( $url, \%form, $field_name => $value, ... )
       $ua->put( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => \%form )
       $ua->put( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => \@form )
       $ua->put( $url, $field_name => $value,... Content => $content )
           This  method  will  dispatch  a  "PUT"  request  on the given $url, with %form or @form providing the
           key/value pairs for the fill-in form content. Additional headers and content options are the same  as
           for the get() method.

           This  method  will  use  the  PUT()  function from "HTTP::Request::Common" to build the request.  See
           HTTP::Request::Common for a details on how to pass form content and other advanced features.

       $ua->delete( $url )
       $ua->delete( $url, $field_name => $value, ... )
           This method will dispatch a "DELETE" request on the  given  $url.   Additional  headers  and  content
           options are the same as for the get() method.

           This  method  will  use the DELETE() function from "HTTP::Request::Common" to build the request.  See
           HTTP::Request::Common for a details on how to pass form content and other advanced features.

       $ua->mirror( $url, $filename )
           This method will get the document identified by $url and store it in file called $filename.   If  the
           file  already  exists,  then  the  request  will  contain  an "If-Modified-Since" header matching the
           modification time of the file.  If the document on the server has not changed since this  time,  then
           nothing  happens.   If  the document has been updated, it will be downloaded again.  The modification
           time of the file will be forced to match that of the server.

           The return value is the the response object.

       $ua->request( $request )
       $ua->request( $request, $content_file )
       $ua->request( $request, $content_cb )
       $ua->request( $request, $content_cb, $read_size_hint )
           This method will dispatch the given $request object.  Normally  this  will  be  an  instance  of  the
           "HTTP::Request"  class,  but  any  object  with  a  similar interface will do.  The return value is a
           response object.  See HTTP::Request and HTTP::Response for a description of the interface provided by
           these classes.

           The request() method will process redirects and authentication responses transparently.   This  means
           that it may actually send several simple requests via the simple_request() method described below.

           The  request  methods  described  above;  get(),  head(),  post() and mirror(), will all dispatch the
           request they build via this method.  They are convenience methods that simply hides the  creation  of
           the request object for you.

           The $content_file, $content_cb and $read_size_hint all correspond to options described with the get()
           method above.

           You  are allowed to use a CODE reference as "content" in the request object passed in.  The "content"
           function should return the content when called.  The content can be returned in chunks.  The  content
           function  will  be invoked repeatedly until it return an empty string to signal that there is no more
           content.

       $ua->simple_request( $request )
       $ua->simple_request( $request, $content_file )
       $ua->simple_request( $request, $content_cb )
       $ua->simple_request( $request, $content_cb, $read_size_hint )
           This method dispatches a single request and returns the response received.  Arguments are the same as
           for request() described above.

           The difference from  request()  is  that  simple_request()  will  not  try  to  handle  redirects  or
           authentication  responses.   The  request()  method  will  in fact invoke this method for each simple
           request it sends.

       $ua->is_online
           Tries to determine if you have access to the Internet.   Returns  TRUE  if  the  built-in  heuristics
           determine that the user agent is able to access the Internet (over HTTP).  See also LWP::Online.

       $ua->is_protocol_supported( $scheme )
           You can use this method to test whether this user agent object supports the specified "scheme".  (The
           "scheme" might be a string (like 'http' or 'ftp') or it might be an URI object reference.)

           Whether   a   scheme  is  supported,  is  determined  by  the  user  agent's  "protocols_allowed"  or
           "protocols_forbidden" lists (if any), and by the capabilities of LWP.  I.e., this  will  return  TRUE
           only if LWP supports this protocol and it's permitted for this particular object.

   Callback methods
       The  following  methods  will  be  invoked  as  requests are processed. These methods are documented here
       because subclasses of "LWP::UserAgent" might want to override their behaviour.

       $ua->prepare_request( $request )
           This method is invoked by simple_request().  Its task is to  modify  the  given  $request  object  by
           setting  up  various  headers  based  on  the  attributes  of the user agent. The return value should
           normally be the $request object passed in.  If a different request object is returned it will be  the
           one actually processed.

           The headers affected by the base implementation are; "User-Agent", "From", "Range" and "Cookie".

       $ua->redirect_ok( $prospective_request, $response )
           This  method  is  called  by  request()  before  it  tries  to follow a redirection to the request in
           $response.   This  should  return  a  TRUE  value  if   this   redirection   is   permissible.    The
           $prospective_request will be the request to be sent if this method returns TRUE.

           The   base   implementation   will   return   FALSE   unless   the   method   is   in   the  object's
           "requests_redirectable" list, FALSE if the proposed redirection is to a "file://..."  URL,  and  TRUE
           otherwise.

       $ua->get_basic_credentials( $realm, $uri, $isproxy )
           This  is  called  by  request()  to  retrieve  credentials for documents protected by Basic or Digest
           Authentication.  The arguments passed in is the $realm provided by the server, the $uri requested and
           a boolean flag to indicate if this is authentication against a proxy server.

           The method should return a username and password.  It should  return  an  empty  list  to  abort  the
           authentication  resolution  attempt.   Subclasses can override this method to prompt the user for the
           information. An example of this can be found in "lwp-request" program distributed with this library.

           The base implementation simply checks  a  set  of  pre-stored  member  variables,  set  up  with  the
           credentials() method.

       $ua->progress( $status, $request_or_response )
           This  is  called  frequently  as the response is received regardless of how the content is processed.
           The method is called with $status "begin" at the start of processing  the  request  and  with  $state
           "end"  before  the  request  method  returns.   In  between these $status will be the fraction of the
           response currently received or the string "tick" if the fraction can't be calculated.

           When $status is "begin" the second argument is the request  object,  otherwise  it  is  the  response
           object.

SEE ALSO

       See  LWP  for  a  complete  overview  of  libwww-perl5.  See lwpcook and the scripts lwp-request and lwp-
       download for examples of usage.

       See HTTP::Request and HTTP::Response for a description of the message objects  dispatched  and  received.
       See HTTP::Request::Common and HTML::Form for other ways to build request objects.

       See   WWW::Mechanize   and   WWW::Search   for   examples  of  more  specialized  user  agents  based  on
       "LWP::UserAgent".

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 1995-2009 Gisle Aas.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.

perl v5.18.1                                       2013-11-30                                LWP::UserAgent(3pm)