Provided by: libmojolicious-perl_6.15+dfsg-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       Mojolicious::Guides::Tutorial - Tutorial

TUTORIAL

       A quick example driven introduction to the wonders of Mojolicious::Lite.  Almost everything you'll learn
       here also applies to full Mojolicious applications.

   Hello World
       A simple Hello World application can look like this, strict, warnings, utf8 and Perl 5.10 features are
       automatically enabled and a few functions imported when you use Mojolicious::Lite, turning your script
       into a full featured web application.

         #!/usr/bin/env perl
         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         get '/' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Hello World!');
         };

         app->start;

       There is also a helper command to generate a small example application.

         $ mojo generate lite_app myapp.pl

   Commands
       All the normal Mojolicious::Commands are available from the command line.  Note that CGI and PSGI
       environments can usually be auto detected and will just work without commands.

         $ ./myapp.pl daemon
         Server available at http://127.0.0.1:3000

         $ ./myapp.pl daemon -l http://*:8080
         Server available at http://127.0.0.1:8080

         $ ./myapp.pl cgi
         ...CGI output...

         $ ./myapp.pl get /
         Hello World!

         $ ./myapp.pl
         ...List of available commands (or automatically detected environment)...

       The "app->start" call that starts the Mojolicious command system should usually be the last expression in
       your application and can be customized to override normal @ARGV use.

         app->start('daemon');

   Reloading
       Your application will automatically reload itself if you start it with the morbo development web server,
       so you don't have to restart the server after every change.

         $ morbo ./myapp.pl
         Server available at http://127.0.0.1:3000

       For more information about how to deploy your application see also "DEPLOYMENT" in
       Mojolicious::Guides::Cookbook.

   Routes
       Routes are basically just fancy paths that can contain different kinds of placeholders and usually lead
       to an action, if they match the path part of the request URL. The first argument passed to all actions $c
       is a Mojolicious::Controller object containing both the HTTP request and response.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Route leading to an action that renders some text
         get '/foo' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Hello World!');
         };

         app->start;

       Response content is often generated by actions with "render" in Mojolicious::Controller, but more about
       that later.

   GET/POST parameters
       All "GET" and "POST" parameters sent with the request are accessible via "param" in
       Mojolicious::Controller.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /foo?user=sri
         get '/foo' => sub {
           my $c    = shift;
           my $user = $c->param('user');
           $c->render(text => "Hello $user.");
         };

         app->start;

   Stash and templates
       The "stash" in Mojolicious::Controller is used to pass data to templates, which can be inlined in the
       "DATA" section. A few stash values like "template", "text" and "data" are reserved and will be used by
       "render" in Mojolicious::Controller to decide how a response should be generated.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Route leading to an action that renders a template
         get '/foo' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->stash(one => 23);
           $c->render(template => 'magic', two => 24);
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ magic.html.ep
         The magic numbers are <%= $one %> and <%= $two %>.

       For more information about templates see also "Embedded Perl" in Mojolicious::Guides::Rendering.

   HTTP
       "req" in Mojolicious::Controller and "res" in Mojolicious::Controller give you full access to all HTTP
       features and information.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Access request information
         get '/agent' => sub {
           my $c    = shift;
           my $host = $c->req->url->to_abs->host;
           my $ua   = $c->req->headers->user_agent;
           $c->render(text => "Request by $ua reached $host.");
         };

         # Echo the request body and send custom header with response
         post '/echo' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->res->headers->header('X-Bender' => 'Bite my shiny metal ass!');
           $c->render(data => $c->req->body);
         };

         app->start;

       You can test the more advanced examples right from the command line with Mojolicious::Command::get.

         $ ./myapp.pl get -v -M POST -c 'test' /echo

   Built-in "exception" and "not_found" pages
       During development you will encounter these pages whenever you make a mistake, they are gorgeous and
       contain a lot of valuable information that will aid you in debugging your application.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Not found (404)
         get '/missing' => sub { shift->render(template => 'does_not_exist') };

         # Exception (500)
         get '/dies' => sub { die 'Intentional error' };

         app->start;

       You can even use CSS selectors with Mojolicious::Command::get to extract only the information you're
       actually interested in.

         $ ./myapp.pl get /dies '#error'

   Route names
       All routes can have a name associated with them, this allows automatic template detection and
       backreferencing with "url_for" in Mojolicious::Controller, on which many methods and helpers like
       "link_to" in Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers rely.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Render the template "index.html.ep"
         get '/' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render;
         } => 'index';

         # Render the template "hello.html.ep"
         get '/hello';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ index.html.ep
         <%= link_to Hello  => 'hello' %>.
         <%= link_to Reload => 'index' %>.

         @@ hello.html.ep
         Hello World!

       Nameless routes get an automatically generated one assigned that is simply equal to the route itself
       without non-word characters.

   Layouts
       Templates can have layouts too, you just select one with the helper "layout" in
       Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and place the result of the current template with the helper
       "content" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         get '/with_layout';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ with_layout.html.ep
         % title 'Green';
         % layout 'green';
         Hello World!

         @@ layouts/green.html.ep
         <!DOCTYPE html>
         <html>
           <head><title><%= title %></title></head>
           <body><%= content %></body>
         </html>

       The stash or helpers like "title" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers can be used to pass additional
       data to the layout.

   Blocks
       Template blocks can be used like normal Perl functions and are always delimited by the "begin" and "end"
       keywords, they are the foundation for many helpers.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         get '/with_block' => 'block';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ block.html.ep
         % my $link = begin
           % my ($url, $name) = @_;
           Try <%= link_to $url => begin %><%= $name %><% end %>.
         % end
         <!DOCTYPE html>
         <html>
           <head><title>Sebastians frameworks</title></head>
           <body>
             %= $link->('http://mojolicio.us', 'Mojolicious')
             %= $link->('http://catalystframework.org', 'Catalyst')
           </body>
         </html>

   Helpers
       Helpers are little functions you can reuse throughout your whole application, from actions to templates.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # A helper to identify visitors
         helper whois => sub {
           my $c     = shift;
           my $agent = $c->req->headers->user_agent || 'Anonymous';
           my $ip    = $c->tx->remote_address;
           return "$agent ($ip)";
         };

         # Use helper in action and template
         get '/secret' => sub {
           my $c    = shift;
           my $user = $c->whois;
           $c->app->log->debug("Request from $user");
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ secret.html.ep
         We know who you are <%= whois %>.

       A list of all built-in ones can be found in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and
       Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers.

   Placeholders
       Route placeholders allow capturing parts of a request path until a "/" or "."  separator occurs, similar
       to the regular expression "([^/.]+)". Results are accessible via "stash" in Mojolicious::Controller and
       "param" in Mojolicious::Controller.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /foo/test
         # /foo/test123
         get '/foo/:bar' => sub {
           my $c   = shift;
           my $bar = $c->stash('bar');
           $c->render(text => "Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
         };

         # /testsomething/foo
         # /test123something/foo
         get '/(:bar)something/foo' => sub {
           my $c   = shift;
           my $bar = $c->param('bar');
           $c->render(text => "Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
         };

         app->start;

   Relaxed Placeholders
       Relaxed placeholders allow matching of everything until a "/" occurs, similar to the regular expression
       "([^/]+)".

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello/test
         # /hello/test.html
         get '/hello/#you' => 'groovy';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ groovy.html.ep
         Your name is <%= $you %>.

   Wildcard placeholders
       Wildcard placeholders allow matching absolutely everything, including "/" and ".", similar to the regular
       expression "(.+)".

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello/test
         # /hello/test123
         # /hello/test.123/test/123
         get '/hello/*you' => 'groovy';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ groovy.html.ep
         Your name is <%= $you %>.

   HTTP methods
       Routes can be restricted to specific request methods with different keywords.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # GET /hello
         get '/hello' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Hello World!');
         };

         # PUT /hello
         put '/hello' => sub {
           my $c    = shift;
           my $size = length $c->req->body;
           $c->render(text => "You uploaded $size bytes to /hello.");
         };

         # GET|POST|PATCH /bye
         any [qw(GET POST PATCH)] => '/bye' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Bye World!');
         };

         # * /whatever
         any '/whatever' => sub {
           my $c      = shift;
           my $method = $c->req->method;
           $c->render(text => "You called /whatever with $method.");
         };

         app->start;

   Optional placeholders
       All placeholders require a value, but by assigning them default values you can make capturing optional.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello
         # /hello/Sara
         get '/hello/:name' => {name => 'Sebastian', day => 'Monday'} => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(template => 'groovy', format => 'txt');
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ groovy.txt.ep
         My name is <%= $name %> and it is <%= $day %>.

       Default values that don't belong to a placeholder simply get merged into the stash all the time.

   Restrictive placeholders
       The easiest way to make placeholders more restrictive are alternatives, you just make a list of possible
       values.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /test
         # /123
         any '/:foo' => [foo => [qw(test 123)]] => sub {
           my $c   = shift;
           my $foo = $c->param('foo');
           $c->render(text => "Our :foo placeholder matched $foo");
         };

         app->start;

       All placeholders get compiled to a regular expression internally, this process can also be customized.
       Just make sure not to use "^" and "$", or capturing groups "(...)", non-capturing groups "(?:...)" are
       fine though.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /1
         # /123
         any '/:bar' => [bar => qr/\d+/] => sub {
           my $c   = shift;
           my $bar = $c->param('bar');
           $c->render(text => "Our :bar placeholder matched $bar");
         };

         app->start;

       You can take a closer look at all the generated regular expressions with the command
       Mojolicious::Command::routes.

         $ ./myapp.pl routes -v

   Under
       Authentication and code shared between multiple routes can be realized easily with routes generated by
       "under" in Mojolicious::Lite. All following routes are only evaluated if the callback returned a true
       value.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Authenticate based on name parameter
         under sub {
           my $c = shift;

           # Authenticated
           my $name = $c->param('name') || '';
           return 1 if $name eq 'Bender';

           # Not authenticated
           $c->render(template => 'denied');
           return undef;
         };

         # Only reached when authenticated
         get '/' => 'index';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ denied.html.ep
         You are not Bender, permission denied.

         @@ index.html.ep
         Hi Bender.

       Prefixing multiple routes is another good use for it.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /foo
         under '/foo';

         # /foo/bar
         get '/bar' => {text => 'foo bar'};

         # /foo/baz
         get '/baz' => {text => 'foo baz'};

         # / (reset)
         under '/' => {msg => 'whatever'};

         # /bar
         get '/bar' => {inline => '<%= $msg %> works'};

         app->start;

       You can also group related routes with "group" in Mojolicious::Lite, which allows nesting of routes
       generated with "under" in Mojolicious::Lite.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Global logic shared by all routes
         under sub {
           my $c = shift;
           return 1 if $c->req->headers->header('X-Bender');
           $c->render(text => "You're not Bender.");
           return undef;
         };

         # Admin section
         group {

           # Local logic shared only by routes in this group
           under '/admin' => sub {
             my $c = shift;
             return 1 if $c->req->headers->header('X-Awesome');
             $c->render(text => "You're not awesome enough.");
             return undef;
           };

           # GET /admin/dashboard
           get '/dashboard' => {text => 'Nothing to see here yet.'};
         };

         # GET /welcome
         get '/welcome' => {text => 'Hi Bender.'};

         app->start;

   Formats
       Formats can be automatically detected from file extensions like ".html", they are used to find the right
       template and generate the correct "Content-Type" header.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /detection
         # /detection.html
         # /detection.txt
         get '/detection' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(template => 'detected');
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ detected.html.ep
         <!DOCTYPE html>
         <html>
           <head><title>Detected</title></head>
           <body>HTML was detected.</body>
         </html>

         @@ detected.txt.ep
         TXT was detected.

       The default format is "html", and restrictive placeholders can be used to limit possible values.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello.json
         # /hello.txt
         get '/hello' => [format => [qw(json txt)]] => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           return $c->render(json => {hello => 'world'})
             if $c->stash('format') eq 'json';
           $c->render(text => 'hello world');
         };

         app->start;

       Or you can just disable format detection with a special type of restrictive placeholder.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello
         get '/hello' => [format => 0] => {text => 'No format detection.'};

         # Disable detection and allow the following routes to re-enable it on demand
         under [format => 0];

         # /foo
         get '/foo' => {text => 'No format detection again.'};

         # /bar.txt
         get '/bar' => [format => 'txt'] => {text => ' Just one format.'};

         app->start;

   Content negotiation
       For resources with different representations and that require truly RESTful content negotiation you can
       also use "respond_to" in Mojolicious::Controller.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # /hello (Accept: application/json)
         # /hello (Accept: application/xml)
         # /hello.json
         # /hello.xml
         # /hello?format=json
         # /hello?format=xml
         get '/hello' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->respond_to(
             json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
             xml  => {text => '<hello>world</hello>'},
             any  => {data => '', status => 204}
           );
         };

         app->start;

       MIME type mappings can be extended or changed easily with "types" in Mojolicious.

         app->types->type(rdf => 'application/rdf+xml');

   Static files
       Similar to templates, but with only a single file extension and optional Base64 encoding, static files
       can be inlined in the "DATA" section and are served automatically.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ something.js
         alert('hello!');

         @@ test.txt (base64)
         dGVzdCAxMjMKbGFsYWxh

       External static files are not limited to a single file extension and will be served automatically from a
       "public" directory if it exists.

         $ mkdir public
         $ mv something.js public/something.js
         $ mv mojolicious.tar.gz public/mojolicious.tar.gz

       Both have a higher precedence than routes for "GET" and "HEAD" requests.  Content negotiation with
       "Range", "If-None-Match" and "If-Modified-Since" headers is supported as well and can be tested very
       easily with Mojolicious::Command::get.

         $ ./myapp.pl get /something.js -v -H 'Range: bytes=2-4'

   External templates
       External templates will be searched by the renderer in a "templates" directory if it exists and have a
       higher precedence than those in the "DATA" section.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Render template "templates/foo/bar.html.ep"
         any '/external' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(template => 'foo/bar');
         };

         app->start;

   Conditions
       Conditions such as "agent" and "host" from Mojolicious::Plugin::HeaderCondition allow even more powerful
       route constructs.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Firefox
         get '/foo' => (agent => qr/Firefox/) => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Congratulations, you are using a cool browser.');
         };

         # Internet Explorer
         get '/foo' => (agent => qr/Internet Explorer/) => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Dude, you really need to upgrade to Firefox.');
         };

         # http://mojolicio.us/bar
         get '/bar' => (host => 'mojolicio.us') => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->render(text => 'Hello Mojolicious.');
         };

         app->start;

   Sessions
       Cookie based sessions just work out of the box, as soon as you start using them through the helper
       "session" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers. Just be aware that all session data gets serialized
       with Mojo::JSON and stored client-side, with a cryptographic signature to prevent tampering.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Access session data in action and template
         get '/counter' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->session->{counter}++;
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ counter.html.ep
         Counter: <%= session 'counter' %>

       Note that you should use custom "secrets" in Mojolicious to make signed cookies really secure.

         app->secrets(['My secret passphrase here']);

   File uploads
       All files uploaded via "multipart/form-data" request are automatically available as Mojo::Upload objects.
       And you don't have to worry about memory usage, because all files above 250KB will be automatically
       streamed into a temporary file. To build HTML forms more efficiently, you can also use tag helpers like
       "form_for" in Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Upload form in DATA section
         get '/' => 'form';

         # Multipart upload handler
         post '/upload' => sub {
           my $c = shift;

           # Check file size
           return $c->render(text => 'File is too big.', status => 200)
             if $c->req->is_limit_exceeded;

           # Process uploaded file
           return $c->redirect_to('form') unless my $example = $c->param('example');
           my $size = $example->size;
           my $name = $example->filename;
           $c->render(text => "Thanks for uploading $size byte file $name.");
         };

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ form.html.ep
         <!DOCTYPE html>
         <html>
           <head><title>Upload</title></head>
           <body>
             %= form_for upload => (enctype => 'multipart/form-data') => begin
               %= file_field 'example'
               %= submit_button 'Upload'
             % end
           </body>
         </html>

       To protect you from excessively large files there is also a limit of 16MB by default, which you can tweak
       with the attribute "max_message_size" in Mojo::Message or "MOJO_MAX_MESSAGE_SIZE" environment variable.

         # Increase limit to 1GB
         $ENV{MOJO_MAX_MESSAGE_SIZE} = 1073741824;

   User agent
       With Mojo::UserAgent, which is available through the helper "ua" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers,
       there's a full featured HTTP and WebSocket user agent built right in. Especially in combination with
       Mojo::JSON and Mojo::DOM this can be a very powerful tool.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Blocking
         get '/headers' => sub {
           my $c   = shift;
           my $url = $c->param('url') || 'http://mojolicio.us';
           my $dom = $c->ua->get($url)->res->dom;
           $c->render(json => $dom->find('h1, h2, h3')->map('text')->to_array);
         };

         # Non-blocking
         get '/title' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->ua->get('mojolicio.us' => sub {
             my ($ua, $tx) = @_;
             $c->render(data => $tx->res->dom->at('title')->text);
           });
         };

         # Concurrent non-blocking
         get '/titles' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->delay(
             sub {
               my $delay = shift;
               $c->ua->get('http://mojolicio.us'  => $delay->begin);
               $c->ua->get('https://metacpan.org' => $delay->begin);
             },
             sub {
               my ($delay, $mojo, $cpan) = @_;
               $c->render(json => {
                 mojo => $mojo->res->dom->at('title')->text,
                 cpan => $cpan->res->dom->at('title')->text
               });
             }
           );
         };

         app->start;

       For more information about the user agent see also "USER AGENT" in Mojolicious::Guides::Cookbook.

   WebSockets
       WebSocket applications have never been this simple before. Just receive messages by subscribing to events
       such as "json" in Mojo::Transaction::WebSocket with "on" in Mojolicious::Controller and return them with
       "send" in Mojolicious::Controller.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         websocket '/echo' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->on(json => sub {
             my ($c, $hash) = @_;
             $hash->{msg} = "echo: $hash->{msg}";
             $c->send({json => $hash});
           });
         };

         get '/' => 'index';

         app->start;
         __DATA__

         @@ index.html.ep
         <!DOCTYPE html>
         <html>
           <head>
             <title>Echo</title>
             <script>
               var ws = new WebSocket('<%= url_for('echo')->to_abs %>');
               ws.onmessage = function (event) {
                 document.body.innerHTML += JSON.parse(event.data).msg;
               };
               ws.onopen = function (event) {
                 ws.send(JSON.stringify({msg: 'I ♥ Mojolicious!'}));
               };
             </script>
           </head>
         </html>

       For more information about real-time web features see also "REAL-TIME WEB" in
       Mojolicious::Guides::Cookbook.

   Mode
       You can use the Mojo::Log object from "log" in Mojo to portably collect debug messages and automatically
       disable them later in a production setup by changing the Mojolicious operating mode, which can also be
       retrieved from the attribute "mode" in Mojolicious.

         use Mojolicious::Lite;

         # Prepare mode specific message during startup
         my $msg = app->mode eq 'development' ? 'Development!' : 'Something else!';

         get '/' => sub {
           my $c = shift;
           $c->app->log->debug('Rendering mode specific message');
           $c->render(text => $msg);
         };

         app->log->debug('Starting application');
         app->start;

       The default operating mode will usually be "development" and can be changed with command line options or
       the "MOJO_MODE" and "PLACK_ENV" environment variables. A mode other than "development" will raise the log
       level from "debug" to "info".

         $ ./myapp.pl daemon -m production

       All messages will be written to "STDERR" or a "log/$mode.log" file if a "log" directory exists.

         $ mkdir log

       Mode changes also affect a few other aspects of the framework, such as mode specific "exception" and
       "not_found" templates.

   Testing
       Testing your application is as easy as creating a "t" directory and filling it with normal Perl tests
       like "t/basic.t", which can be a lot of fun thanks to Test::Mojo.

         use Test::More;
         use Test::Mojo;

         use FindBin;
         require "$FindBin::Bin/../myapp.pl";

         my $t = Test::Mojo->new;
         $t->get_ok('/')->status_is(200)->content_like(qr/Funky/);

         done_testing();

       Just run your tests with the command Mojolicious::Command::test or prove.

         $ ./myapp.pl test
         $ ./myapp.pl test -v t/basic.t
         $ prove -l -v t/basic.t

MORE

       You can continue with Mojolicious::Guides now or take a look at the Mojolicious wiki
       <http://github.com/kraih/mojo/wiki>, which contains a lot more documentation and examples by many
       different authors.

SUPPORT

       If you have any questions the documentation might not yet answer, don't hesitate to ask on the mailing-
       list <http://groups.google.com/group/mojolicious> or the official IRC channel "#mojo" on "irc.perl.org".

perl v5.22.1                                       2015-12-28                 Mojolicious::Guides::Tutorial(3pm)