1Mojolicious::Guides::ReUnsdeerriCnogn(t3r)ibuted Perl DoMcoujmoelnitcaitoiuosn::Guides::Rendering(3)
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6 Mojolicious::Guides::Rendering - Rendering content
7
9 This document explains content generation with the Mojolicious
10 renderer.
11
13 Essentials every Mojolicious developer should know.
14
15 Renderer
16 The renderer is a tiny black box turning stash data into actual
17 responses utilizing multiple template systems and data encoding
18 modules.
19
20 {text => 'Hello.'} -> 200 OK, text/html, 'Hello.'
21 {json => {x => 3}} -> 200 OK, application/json, '{"x":3}'
22 {text => 'Oops.', status => '410'} -> 410 Gone, text/html, 'Oops.'
23
24 Templates can be automatically detected if enough information is
25 provided by the developer or routes. Template names are expected to
26 follow the "template.format.handler" scheme, with "template" defaulting
27 to "controller/action" or the route name, "format" defaulting to "html"
28 and "handler" to "ep".
29
30 {controller => 'users', action => 'list'} -> 'users/list.html.ep'
31 {template => 'foo', format => 'txt'} -> 'foo.txt.ep'
32 {template => 'foo', handler => 'epl'} -> 'foo.html.epl'
33
34 The "controller" value gets converted from "CamelCase" to "snake_case"
35 using "decamelize" in Mojo::Util and "-" characters replaced with "/".
36
37 {controller => 'My::Users', action => 'add'} -> 'my/users/add.html.ep'
38 {controller => 'my-users', action => 'show'} -> 'my/users/show.html.ep'
39
40 All templates should be in the "templates" directories of the
41 application, which can be customized with "paths" in
42 Mojolicious::Renderer, or one of the the "DATA" sections from "classes"
43 in Mojolicious::Renderer.
44
45 __DATA__
46
47 @@ time.html.ep
48 % use Time::Piece;
49 % my $now = localtime;
50 <!DOCTYPE html>
51 <html>
52 <head><title>Time</title></head>
53 <body>The time is <%= $now->hms %>.</body>
54 </html>
55
56 @@ hello.txt.ep
57 ...
58
59 The renderer can be easily extended to support additional template
60 systems with plugins, but more about that later.
61
62 Embedded Perl
63 Mojolicious includes a minimalistic but very powerful template system
64 out of the box called Embedded Perl or "ep" for short. It is based on
65 Mojo::Template and allows the embedding of Perl code right into actual
66 content using a small set of special tags and line start characters.
67 For all templates strict, warnings, utf8 and Perl 5.10 features are
68 automatically enabled.
69
70 <% Perl code %>
71 <%= Perl expression, replaced with XML escaped result %>
72 <%== Perl expression, replaced with result %>
73 <%# Comment, useful for debugging %>
74 <%% Replaced with "<%", useful for generating templates %>
75 % Perl code line, treated as "<% line =%>" (explained later)
76 %= Perl expression line, treated as "<%= line %>"
77 %== Perl expression line, treated as "<%== line %>"
78 %# Comment line, useful for debugging
79 %% Replaced with "%", useful for generating templates
80
81 Tags and lines work pretty much the same, but depending on context one
82 will usually look a bit better. Semicolons get automatically appended
83 to all expressions.
84
85 <% my $i = 10; %>
86 <ul>
87 <% for my $j (1 .. $i) { %>
88 <li>
89 <%= $j %>
90 </li>
91 <% } %>
92 </ul>
93
94 % my $i = 10;
95 <ul>
96 % for my $j (1 .. $i) {
97 <li>
98 %= $j
99 </li>
100 % }
101 </ul>
102
103 Aside from differences in whitespace handling, both examples generate
104 similar Perl code, a naive translation could look like this.
105
106 my $output = '';
107 my $i = 10;
108 $output .= '<ul>';
109 for my $j (1 .. $i) {
110 $output .= '<li>';
111 $output .= xml_escape scalar + $j;
112 $output .= '</li>';
113 }
114 $output .= '</ul>';
115 return $output;
116
117 An additional equal sign can be used to disable escaping of the
118 characters "<", ">", "&", "'" and """ in results from Perl expressions,
119 which is the default to prevent XSS attacks against your application.
120
121 <%= 'I ♥ Mojolicious!' %>
122 <%== '<p>I ♥ Mojolicious!</p>' %>
123
124 Only Mojo::ByteStream objects are excluded from automatic escaping.
125
126 <%= b('<p>I ♥ Mojolicious!</p>') %>
127
128 Whitespace characters around tags can be trimmed by adding an
129 additional equal sign to the end of a tag.
130
131 <% for (1 .. 3) { %>
132 <%= 'Trim all whitespace characters around this expression' =%>
133 <% } %>
134
135 Newline characters can be escaped with a backslash.
136
137 This is <%= 1 + 1 %> a\
138 single line
139
140 And a backslash in front of a newline character can be escaped with
141 another backslash.
142
143 This will <%= 1 + 1 %> result\\
144 in multiple\\
145 lines
146
147 A newline character gets appended automatically to every template,
148 unless the last character is a backslash. And empty lines at the end of
149 a template are ignored.
150
151 There is <%= 1 + 1 %> no newline at the end here\
152
153 At the beginning of the template, stash values that don't have invalid
154 characters in their name get automatically initialized as normal
155 variables, and the controller object as both $self and $c.
156
157 $c->stash(name => 'tester');
158
159 Hello <%= $name %> from <%= $c->tx->remote_address %>.
160
161 A prefix like "myapp.*" is commonly used for stash values that you
162 don't want to expose in templates.
163
164 $c->stash('myapp.name' => 'tester');
165
166 There are also many helper functions available, but more about that
167 later.
168
169 <%= dumper {foo => 'bar'} %>
170
172 Most commonly used features every Mojolicious developer should know
173 about.
174
175 Automatic rendering
176 The renderer can be manually started by calling the method "render" in
177 Mojolicious::Controller, but that's usually not necessary, because it
178 will get automatically called if nothing has been rendered after the
179 router finished its work. This also means you can have routes pointing
180 only to templates without actual actions.
181
182 $c->render;
183
184 There is one big difference though, by calling it manually you can make
185 sure that templates use the current controller object, and not the
186 default controller specified with the attribute "controller_class" in
187 Mojolicious.
188
189 $c->render_later;
190
191 You can also disable automatic rendering with the method "render_later"
192 in Mojolicious::Controller, which can be very useful to delay rendering
193 when a non-blocking operation has to be performed first.
194
195 Rendering templates
196 The renderer will always try to detect the right template, but you can
197 also use the "template" stash value to render a specific one.
198 Everything before the last slash will be interpreted as the
199 subdirectory path in which to find the template.
200
201 # foo/bar/baz.*.*
202 $c->render(template => 'foo/bar/baz');
203
204 Choosing a specific "format" and "handler" is just as easy.
205
206 # foo/bar/baz.txt.epl
207 $c->render(template => 'foo/bar/baz', format => 'txt', handler => 'epl');
208
209 Because rendering a specific template is the most common task it also
210 has a shortcut.
211
212 $c->render('foo/bar/baz');
213
214 If you're not sure in advance if a template actually exists, you can
215 also use the method "render_maybe" in Mojolicious::Controller to try
216 multiple alternatives.
217
218 $c->render_maybe('localized/baz') or $c->render('foo/bar/baz');
219
220 Rendering to strings
221 Sometimes you might want to use the rendered result directly instead of
222 generating a response, for example, to send emails, this can be done
223 with "render_to_string" in Mojolicious::Controller.
224
225 my $html = $c->render_to_string('mail');
226
227 No encoding will be performed, making it easy to reuse the result in
228 other templates or to generate binary data.
229
230 my $pdf = $c->render_to_string('invoice', format => 'pdf');
231 $c->render(data => $pdf, format => 'pdf');
232
233 All arguments passed will get localized automatically and are only
234 available during this render operation.
235
236 Template variants
237 To make your application look great on many different devices you can
238 also use the "variant" stash value to choose between different variants
239 of your templates.
240
241 # foo/bar/baz.html+phone.ep
242 # foo/bar/baz.html.ep
243 $c->render('foo/bar/baz', variant => 'phone');
244
245 This can be done very liberally since it only applies when a template
246 with the correct name actually exists and falls back to the generic one
247 otherwise.
248
249 Rendering inline templates
250 Some renderers such as "ep" allow templates to be passed "inline".
251
252 $c->render(inline => 'The result is <%= 1 + 1 %>.');
253
254 Since auto-detection depends on a path you might have to supply a
255 "handler" too.
256
257 $c->render(inline => "<%= shift->param('foo') %>", handler => 'epl');
258
259 Rendering text
260 Characters can be rendered to bytes with the "text" stash value, the
261 given content will be automatically encoded with "encoding" in
262 Mojolicious::Renderer.
263
264 $c->render(text => 'I ♥ Mojolicious!');
265
266 Rendering data
267 Bytes can be rendered with the "data" stash value, no encoding will be
268 performed.
269
270 $c->render(data => $bytes);
271
272 Rendering JSON
273 The "json" stash value allows you to pass Perl data structures to the
274 renderer which get directly encoded to JSON with Mojo::JSON.
275
276 $c->render(json => {foo => [1, 'test', 3]});
277
278 Status code
279 Response status codes can be changed with the "status" stash value.
280
281 $c->render(text => 'Oops.', status => 500);
282
283 Content type
284 The "Content-Type" header of the response is actually based on the MIME
285 type mapping of the "format" stash value.
286
287 # Content-Type: text/plain
288 $c->render(text => 'Hello.', format => 'txt');
289
290 # Content-Type: image/png
291 $c->render(data => $bytes, format => 'png');
292
293 These mappings can be easily extended or changed with "types" in
294 Mojolicious.
295
296 # Add new MIME type
297 $app->types->type(md => 'text/markdown');
298
299 Stash data
300 Any of the native Perl data types can be passed to templates as
301 references through the "stash" in Mojolicious::Controller.
302
303 $c->stash(description => 'web framework');
304 $c->stash(frameworks => ['Catalyst', 'Mojolicious']);
305 $c->stash(spinoffs => {minion => 'job queue'});
306
307 %= $description
308 %= $frameworks->[1]
309 %= $spinoffs->{minion}
310
311 Since everything is just Perl normal control structures just work.
312
313 % for my $framework (@$frameworks) {
314 <%= $framework %> is a <%= $description %>.
315 % }
316
317 % if (my $description = $spinoffs->{minion}) {
318 Minion is a <%= $description %>.
319 % }
320
321 For templates that might get rendered in different ways and where
322 you're not sure if a stash value will actually be set, you can just use
323 the helper "stash" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.
324
325 % if (my $spinoffs = stash 'spinoffs') {
326 Minion is a <%= $spinoffs->{minion} %>.
327 % }
328
329 Helpers
330 Helpers are little functions you can use in templates as well as
331 application and controller code.
332
333 # Template
334 %= dumper [1, 2, 3]
335
336 # Application
337 my $serialized = $app->dumper([1, 2, 3]);
338
339 # Controller
340 my $serialized = $c->dumper([1, 2, 3]);
341
342 We differentiate between default helpers, which are more general
343 purpose like "dumper" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers, and tag
344 helpers like "link_to" in Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers, which are
345 template specific and mostly used to generate HTML tags.
346
347 %= link_to Mojolicious => 'https://mojolicious.org'
348
349 In controllers you can also use the method "helpers" in
350 Mojolicious::Controller to fully qualify helper calls and ensure that
351 they don't conflict with existing methods you may already have.
352
353 my $serialized = $c->helpers->dumper([1, 2, 3]);
354
355 A list of all built-in helpers can be found in
356 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and
357 Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers.
358
359 Content negotiation
360 For resources with different representations and that require truly
361 RESTful content negotiation you can also use "respond_to" in
362 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers instead of "render" in
363 Mojolicious::Controller.
364
365 # /hello (Accept: application/json) -> "json"
366 # /hello (Accept: application/xml) -> "xml"
367 # /hello.json -> "json"
368 # /hello.xml -> "xml"
369 # /hello?format=json -> "json"
370 # /hello?format=xml -> "xml"
371 $c->respond_to(
372 json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
373 xml => {text => '<hello>world</hello>'}
374 );
375
376 The best possible representation will be automatically selected from
377 the "format" "GET"/"POST" parameter, "format" stash value or "Accept"
378 request header and stored in the "format" stash value. To change MIME
379 type mappings for the "Accept" request header or the "Content-Type"
380 response header you can use "types" in Mojolicious.
381
382 $c->respond_to(
383 json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
384 html => sub {
385 $c->content_for(head => '<meta name="author" content="sri">');
386 $c->render(template => 'hello', message => 'world')
387 }
388 );
389
390 Callbacks can be used for representations that are too complex to fit
391 into a single render call.
392
393 # /hello (Accept: application/json) -> "json"
394 # /hello (Accept: text/html) -> "html"
395 # /hello (Accept: image/png) -> "any"
396 # /hello.json -> "json"
397 # /hello.html -> "html"
398 # /hello.png -> "any"
399 # /hello?format=json -> "json"
400 # /hello?format=html -> "html"
401 # /hello?format=png -> "any"
402 $c->respond_to(
403 json => {json => {hello => 'world'}},
404 html => {template => 'hello', message => 'world'},
405 any => {text => '', status => 204}
406 );
407
408 And if no viable representation could be found, the "any" fallback will
409 be used or an empty 204 response rendered automatically.
410
411 # /hello -> "html"
412 # /hello (Accept: text/html) -> "html"
413 # /hello (Accept: text/xml) -> "xml"
414 # /hello (Accept: text/plain) -> undef
415 # /hello.html -> "html"
416 # /hello.xml -> "xml"
417 # /hello.txt -> undef
418 # /hello?format=html -> "html"
419 # /hello?format=xml -> "xml"
420 # /hello?format=txt -> undef
421 if (my $format = $c->accepts('html', 'xml')) {
422 ...
423 }
424
425 For even more advanced negotiation logic you can also use the helper
426 "accepts" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.
427
428 Rendering "exception" and "not_found" pages
429 By now you've probably already encountered the built-in 404 (Not Found)
430 and 500 (Server Error) pages, that get rendered automatically when you
431 make a mistake. Those are fallbacks for when your own exception
432 handling fails, which can be especially helpful during development. You
433 can also render them manually with the helpers "reply->exception" in
434 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and "reply->not_found" in
435 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.
436
437 use Mojolicious::Lite;
438 use Scalar::Util 'looks_like_number';
439
440 get '/divide/:dividend/by/:divisor' => sub {
441 my $c = shift;
442
443 my $dividend = $c->param('dividend');
444 my $divisor = $c->param('divisor');
445
446 # 404
447 return $c->reply->not_found
448 unless looks_like_number $dividend && looks_like_number $divisor;
449
450 # 500
451 return $c->reply->exception('Division by zero!') if $divisor == 0;
452
453 # 200
454 $c->render(text => $dividend / $divisor);
455 };
456
457 app->start;
458
459 You can also change the templates of those pages, since you most likely
460 want to show your users something more closely related to your
461 application in production. The renderer will always try to find
462 "exception.$mode.$format.*" or "not_found.$mode.$format.*" before
463 falling back to the built-in default templates.
464
465 use Mojolicious::Lite;
466
467 get '/dies' => sub { die 'Intentional error' };
468
469 app->start;
470 __DATA__
471
472 @@ exception.production.html.ep
473 <!DOCTYPE html>
474 <html>
475 <head><title>Server error</title></head>
476 <body>
477 <h1>Exception</h1>
478 <p><%= $exception->message %></p>
479 <h1>Stash</h1>
480 <pre><%= dumper $snapshot %></pre>
481 </body>
482 </html>
483
484 The hook "before_render" in Mojolicious makes even more advanced
485 customizations possible by allowing you to intercept and modify the
486 arguments passed to the renderer.
487
488 use Mojolicious::Lite;
489
490 hook before_render => sub {
491 my ($c, $args) = @_;
492
493 # Make sure we are rendering the exception template
494 return unless my $template = $args->{template};
495 return unless $template eq 'exception';
496
497 # Switch to JSON rendering if content negotiation allows it
498 $args->{json} = {exception => $args->{exception}} if $c->accepts('json');
499 };
500
501 get '/' => sub { die "This sho...ALL GLORY TO THE HYPNOTOAD!\n" };
502
503 app->start;
504
505 Layouts
506 Most of the time when using "ep" templates you will want to wrap your
507 generated content in an HTML skeleton, thanks to layouts that's
508 absolutely trivial.
509
510 use Mojolicious::Lite;
511
512 get '/' => {template => 'foo/bar'};
513
514 app->start;
515 __DATA__
516
517 @@ foo/bar.html.ep
518 % layout 'mylayout';
519 Hello World!
520
521 @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
522 <!DOCTYPE html>
523 <html>
524 <head><title>MyApp</title></head>
525 <body><%= content %></body>
526 </html>
527
528 You just select the right layout template with the helper "layout" in
529 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and place the result of the current
530 template with the helper "content" in
531 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers. You can also pass along normal
532 stash values to the "layout" helper.
533
534 use Mojolicious::Lite;
535
536 get '/' => {template => 'foo/bar'};
537
538 app->start;
539 __DATA__
540
541 @@ foo/bar.html.ep
542 % layout 'mylayout', title => 'Hi there';
543 Hello World!
544
545 @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
546 <!DOCTYPE html>
547 <html>
548 <head><title><%= $title %></title></head>
549 <body><%= content %></body>
550 </html>
551
552 Instead of the "layout" helper you could also just use the "layout"
553 stash value, or call "render" in Mojolicious::Controller with the
554 "layout" argument.
555
556 $c->render(template => 'mytemplate', layout => 'mylayout');
557
558 To set a "layout" stash value application-wide you can use "defaults"
559 in Mojolicious.
560
561 $app->defaults(layout => 'mylayout');
562
563 Layouts can also be used with "render_to_string" in
564 Mojolicious::Controller, but the "layout" value needs to be passed as a
565 render argument (not a stash value).
566
567 my $html = $c->render_to_string('reminder', layout => 'mail');
568
569 Partial templates
570 You can break up bigger templates into smaller, more manageable chunks.
571 These partial templates can also be shared with other templates. Just
572 use the helper "include" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers to
573 include one template into another.
574
575 use Mojolicious::Lite;
576
577 get '/' => {template => 'foo/bar'};
578
579 app->start;
580 __DATA__
581
582 @@ foo/bar.html.ep
583 <!DOCTYPE html>
584 <html>
585 %= include '_header', title => 'Howdy'
586 <body>Bar</body>
587 </html>
588
589 @@ _header.html.ep
590 <head><title><%= $title %></title></head>
591
592 You can name partial templates however you like, but a leading
593 underscore is a commonly used naming convention.
594
595 Reusable template blocks
596 It's never fun to repeat yourself, that's why you can build reusable
597 template blocks in "ep" that work very similar to normal Perl
598 functions, with the "begin" and "end" keywords. Just be aware that both
599 keywords are part of the surrounding tag and not actual Perl code, so
600 there can only be whitespace after "begin" and before "end".
601
602 use Mojolicious::Lite;
603
604 get '/' => 'welcome';
605
606 app->start;
607 __DATA__
608
609 @@ welcome.html.ep
610 <% my $block = begin %>
611 % my $name = shift;
612 Hello <%= $name %>.
613 <% end %>
614 <%= $block->('Wolfgang') %>
615 <%= $block->('Baerbel') %>
616
617 A naive translation of the template to Perl code could look like this.
618
619 my $output = '';
620 my $block = sub {
621 my $name = shift;
622 my $output = '';
623 $output .= 'Hello ';
624 $output .= xml_escape scalar + $name;
625 $output .= '.';
626 return Mojo::ByteStream->new($output);
627 };
628 $output .= xml_escape scalar + $block->('Wolfgang');
629 $output .= xml_escape scalar + $block->('Baerbel');
630 return $output;
631
632 While template blocks cannot be shared between templates, they are most
633 commonly used to pass parts of a template to helpers.
634
635 Adding helpers
636 You should always try to keep your actions small and reuse as much code
637 as possible. Helpers make this very easy, they get passed the current
638 controller object as first argument, and you can use them to do pretty
639 much anything an action could do.
640
641 use Mojolicious::Lite;
642
643 helper debug => sub {
644 my ($c, $str) = @_;
645 $c->app->log->debug($str);
646 };
647
648 get '/' => sub {
649 my $c = shift;
650 $c->debug('Hello from an action!');
651 } => 'index';
652
653 app->start;
654 __DATA__
655
656 @@ index.html.ep
657 % debug 'Hello from a template!';
658
659 Helpers can also accept template blocks as last argument, this for
660 example, allows very pleasant to use tag helpers and filters. Wrapping
661 the helper result into a Mojo::ByteStream object can prevent accidental
662 double escaping.
663
664 use Mojolicious::Lite;
665 use Mojo::ByteStream;
666
667 helper trim_newline => sub {
668 my ($c, $block) = @_;
669 my $result = $block->();
670 $result =~ s/\n//g;
671 return Mojo::ByteStream->new($result);
672 };
673
674 get '/' => 'index';
675
676 app->start;
677 __DATA__
678
679 @@ index.html.ep
680 %= trim_newline begin
681 Some text.
682 %= 1 + 1
683 More text.
684 % end
685
686 Similar to stash values, you can use a prefix like "myapp.*" to keep
687 helpers from getting exposed in templates as functions, and to organize
688 them into namespaces as your application grows. Every prefix
689 automatically becomes a helper that returns a proxy object containing
690 the current controller object and on which you can call the nested
691 helpers.
692
693 use Mojolicious::Lite;
694
695 helper 'cache_control.no_caching' => sub {
696 my $c = shift;
697 $c->res->headers->cache_control('private, max-age=0, no-cache');
698 };
699
700 helper 'cache_control.five_minutes' => sub {
701 my $c = shift;
702 $c->res->headers->cache_control('public, max-age=300');
703 };
704
705 get '/news' => sub {
706 my $c = shift;
707 $c->cache_control->no_caching;
708 $c->render(text => 'Always up to date.');
709 };
710
711 get '/some_older_story' => sub {
712 my $c = shift;
713 $c->cache_control->five_minutes;
714 $c->render(text => 'This one can be cached for a bit.');
715 };
716
717 app->start;
718
719 While helpers can also be redefined, this should only be done very
720 carefully to avoid conflicts.
721
722 Content blocks
723 The helper "content_for" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers allows
724 you to pass whole blocks of content from one template to another. This
725 can be very useful when your layout has distinct sections, such as
726 sidebars, where content should be inserted by the template.
727
728 use Mojolicious::Lite;
729
730 get '/' => 'foo';
731
732 app->start;
733 __DATA__
734
735 @@ foo.html.ep
736 % layout 'mylayout';
737 % content_for header => begin
738 <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html">
739 % end
740 <div>Hello World!</div>
741 % content_for header => begin
742 <meta http-equiv="Pragma" content="no-cache">
743 % end
744
745 @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
746 <!DOCTYPE html>
747 <html>
748 <head><%= content 'header' %></head>
749 <body><%= content %></body>
750 </html>
751
752 Forms
753 To build HTML forms more efficiently you can use tag helpers like
754 "form_for" in Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers, which can automatically
755 select a request method for you if a route name is provided. And since
756 most browsers only allow forms to be submitted with "GET" and "POST",
757 but not request methods like "PUT" or "DELETE", they are spoofed with
758 an "_method" query parameter.
759
760 use Mojolicious::Lite;
761
762 get '/' => 'form';
763
764 # PUT /nothing
765 # POST /nothing?_method=PUT
766 put '/nothing' => sub {
767 my $c = shift;
768
769 # Prevent double form submission with redirect
770 my $value = $c->param('whatever');
771 $c->flash(confirmation => "We did nothing with your value ($value).");
772 $c->redirect_to('form');
773 };
774
775 app->start;
776 __DATA__
777
778 @@ form.html.ep
779 <!DOCTYPE html>
780 <html>
781 <body>
782 % if (my $confirmation = flash 'confirmation') {
783 <p><%= $confirmation %></p>
784 % }
785 %= form_for nothing => begin
786 %= text_field whatever => 'I ♥ Mojolicious!'
787 %= submit_button
788 % end
789 </body>
790 </html>
791
792 The helpers "flash" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and
793 "redirect_to" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers are often used
794 together to prevent double form submission, allowing users to receive a
795 confirmation message that will vanish if they decide to reload the page
796 they've been redirected to.
797
798 Form validation
799 You can use "validation" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers to
800 validate "GET" and "POST" parameters submitted to your application. All
801 unknown fields will be ignored by default, so you have to decide which
802 should be required or optional before you can perform checks on their
803 values. Every check is performed right away, so you can use the results
804 immediately to build more advanced validation logic with methods like
805 "is_valid" in Mojolicious::Validator::Validation.
806
807 use Mojolicious::Lite;
808
809 get '/' => sub {
810 my $c = shift;
811
812 # Check if parameters have been submitted
813 my $v = $c->validation;
814 return $c->render unless $v->has_data;
815
816 # Validate parameters ("pass_again" depends on "pass")
817 $v->required('user')->size(1, 20)->like(qr/^[a-z0-9]+$/);
818 $v->required('pass_again')->equal_to('pass')
819 if $v->optional('pass')->size(7, 500)->is_valid;
820
821 # Render confirmation if validation was successful
822 $c->render('thanks') unless $v->has_error;
823 } => 'index';
824
825 app->start;
826 __DATA__
827
828 @@ index.html.ep
829 <!DOCTYPE html>
830 <html>
831 <head>
832 <style>
833 label.field-with-error { color: #dd7e5e }
834 input.field-with-error { background-color: #fd9e7e }
835 </style>
836 </head>
837 <body>
838 %= form_for index => begin
839 %= label_for user => 'Username (required, 1-20 characters, a-z/0-9)'
840 <br>
841 %= text_field 'user', id => 'user'
842 %= submit_button
843 <br>
844 %= label_for pass => 'Password (optional, 7-500 characters)'
845 <br>
846 %= password_field 'pass', id => 'pass'
847 <br>
848 %= label_for pass_again => 'Password again (equal to the value above)'
849 <br>
850 %= password_field 'pass_again', id => 'pass_again'
851 % end
852 </body>
853 </html>
854
855 @@ thanks.html.ep
856 <!DOCTYPE html>
857 <html><body>Thank you <%= validation->param('user') %>.</body></html>
858
859 Form elements generated with tag helpers from
860 Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers will automatically remember their
861 previous values and add the class "field-with-error" for fields that
862 failed validation to make styling with CSS easier.
863
864 <label class="field-with-error" for="user">
865 Username (required, only characters e-t)
866 </label>
867 <input class="field-with-error" type="text" name="user" value="sri">
868
869 For a full list of available checks see also "CHECKS" in
870 Mojolicious::Validator.
871
872 Adding form validation checks
873 Validation checks can be registered with "add_check" in
874 Mojolicious::Validator and return a false value if they were
875 successful. A true value may be used to pass along additional
876 information which can then be retrieved with "error" in
877 Mojolicious::Validator::Validation.
878
879 use Mojolicious::Lite;
880
881 # Add "range" check
882 app->validator->add_check(range => sub {
883 my ($v, $name, $value, $min, $max) = @_;
884 return $value < $min || $value > $max;
885 });
886
887 get '/' => 'form';
888
889 post '/test' => sub {
890 my $c = shift;
891
892 # Validate parameters with custom check
893 my $v = $c->validation;
894 $v->required('number')->range(3, 23);
895
896 # Render form again if validation failed
897 return $c->render('form') if $v->has_error;
898
899 # Prevent double form submission with redirect
900 $c->flash(number => $v->param('number'));
901 $c->redirect_to('form');
902 };
903
904 app->start;
905 __DATA__
906
907 @@ form.html.ep
908 <!DOCTYPE html>
909 <html>
910 <body>
911 % if (my $number = flash 'number') {
912 <p>Thanks, the number <%= $number %> was valid.</p>
913 % }
914 %= form_for test => begin
915 % if (my $err = validation->error('number')) {
916 <p>
917 %= 'Value is required.' if $err->[0] eq 'required'
918 %= 'Value needs to be between 3 and 23.' if $err->[0] eq 'range'
919 </p>
920 % }
921 %= text_field 'number'
922 %= submit_button
923 % end
924 </body>
925 </html>
926
927 Cross-site request forgery
928 CSRF is a very common attack on web applications that trick your logged
929 in users to submit forms they did not intend to send, with something as
930 mundane as a link. All you have to do, to protect your users from this,
931 is to add an additional hidden field to your forms with "csrf_field" in
932 Mojolicious::Plugin::TagHelpers, and validate it with "csrf_protect" in
933 Mojolicious::Validator::Validation.
934
935 use Mojolicious::Lite;
936
937 get '/' => {template => 'target'};
938
939 post '/' => sub {
940 my $c = shift;
941
942 # Check CSRF token
943 my $v = $c->validation;
944 return $c->render(text => 'Bad CSRF token!', status => 403)
945 if $v->csrf_protect->has_error('csrf_token');
946
947 my $city = $v->required('city')->param('city');
948 $c->render(text => "Low orbit ion cannon pointed at $city!")
949 unless $v->has_error;
950 } => 'target';
951
952 app->start;
953 __DATA__
954
955 @@ target.html.ep
956 <!DOCTYPE html>
957 <html>
958 <body>
959 %= form_for target => begin
960 %= csrf_field
961 %= label_for city => 'Which city to point low orbit ion cannon at?'
962 %= text_field 'city', id => 'city'
963 %= submit_button
964 %= end
965 </body>
966 </html>
967
968 For Ajax requests and the like, you can also generate a token directly
969 with the helper "csrf_token" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers,
970 and then pass it along with the "X-CSRF-Token" request header.
971
973 Less commonly used and more powerful features.
974
975 Template inheritance
976 Inheritance takes the layout concept above one step further, the
977 helpers "content" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers and "extends"
978 in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers allow you to build skeleton
979 templates with named blocks that child templates can override.
980
981 use Mojolicious::Lite;
982
983 # first > mylayout
984 get '/first' => {template => 'first', layout => 'mylayout'};
985
986 # third > second > first > mylayout
987 get '/third' => {template => 'third', layout => 'mylayout'};
988
989 app->start;
990 __DATA__
991
992 @@ layouts/mylayout.html.ep
993 <!DOCTYPE html>
994 <html>
995 <head><title>Hello</title></head>
996 <body><%= content %></body>
997 </html>
998
999 @@ first.html.ep
1000 %= content header => begin
1001 Default header
1002 % end
1003 <div>Hello World!</div>
1004 %= content footer => begin
1005 Default footer
1006 % end
1007
1008 @@ second.html.ep
1009 % extends 'first';
1010 % content header => begin
1011 New header
1012 % end
1013
1014 @@ third.html.ep
1015 % extends 'second';
1016 % content footer => begin
1017 New footer
1018 % end
1019
1020 This chain could go on and on to allow a very high level of template
1021 reuse.
1022
1023 Serving static files
1024 Static files are automatically served from the "public" directories of
1025 the application, which can be customized with "paths" in
1026 Mojolicious::Static, or one of the "DATA" sections from "classes" in
1027 Mojolicious::Static. And if that's not enough you can also serve them
1028 manually with "reply->static" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers
1029 and "reply->file" in Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers.
1030
1031 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1032
1033 get '/' => sub {
1034 my $c = shift;
1035 $c->reply->static('index.html');
1036 };
1037
1038 get '/some_download' => sub {
1039 my $c = shift;
1040 $c->res->headers->content_disposition('attachment; filename=bar.png;');
1041 $c->reply->static('foo/bar.png');
1042 };
1043
1044 get '/leak' => sub {
1045 my $c = shift;
1046 $c->reply->file('/etc/passwd');
1047 };
1048
1049 app->start;
1050
1051 Custom responses
1052 Most response content, static as well as dynamic, gets served through
1053 Mojo::Asset::File and Mojo::Asset::Memory objects. For somewhat static
1054 content, like cached JSON data or temporary files, you can create your
1055 own and use the helper "reply->asset" in
1056 Mojolicious::Plugin::DefaultHelpers to serve them while allowing
1057 content negotiation to be performed with "Range", "If-Modified-Since"
1058 and "If-None-Match" headers.
1059
1060 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1061 use Mojo::Asset::File;
1062
1063 get '/leak' => sub {
1064 my $c = shift;
1065 $c->res->headers->content_type('text/plain');
1066 $c->reply->asset(Mojo::Asset::File->new(path => '/etc/passwd'));
1067 };
1068
1069 app->start;
1070
1071 For even more control you can also just skip the helper and use
1072 "rendered" in Mojolicious::Controller to tell the renderer when you're
1073 done generating a response.
1074
1075 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1076 use Mojo::Asset::File;
1077
1078 get '/leak' => sub {
1079 my $c = shift;
1080 $c->res->headers->content_type('text/plain');
1081 $c->res->content->asset(Mojo::Asset::File->new(path => '/etc/passwd'));
1082 $c->rendered(200);
1083 };
1084
1085 app->start;
1086
1087 Helper plugins
1088 Some helpers might be useful enough for you to share them between
1089 multiple applications, plugins make that very simple.
1090
1091 package Mojolicious::Plugin::DebugHelper;
1092 use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';
1093
1094 sub register {
1095 my ($self, $app) = @_;
1096 $app->helper(debug => sub {
1097 my ($c, $str) = @_;
1098 $c->app->log->debug($str);
1099 });
1100 }
1101
1102 1;
1103
1104 The "register" method will be called when you load the plugin. And to
1105 add your helper to the application, you can use "helper" in
1106 Mojolicious.
1107
1108 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1109
1110 plugin 'DebugHelper';
1111
1112 get '/' => sub {
1113 my $c = shift;
1114 $c->debug('It works!');
1115 $c->render(text => 'Hello!');
1116 };
1117
1118 app->start;
1119
1120 A skeleton for a full CPAN compatible plugin distribution can be
1121 automatically generated.
1122
1123 $ mojo generate plugin DebugHelper
1124
1125 And if you have a "PAUSE" account (which can be requested at
1126 <http://pause.perl.org>), you are only a few commands away from
1127 releasing it to CPAN.
1128
1129 $ perl Makefile.PL
1130 $ make test
1131 $ make manifest
1132 $ make dist
1133 $ mojo cpanify -u USER -p PASS Mojolicious-Plugin-DebugHelper-0.01.tar.gz
1134
1135 Bundling assets with plugins
1136 Assets such as templates and static files can be easily bundled with
1137 your plugins, even if you plan to release them to CPAN.
1138
1139 $ mojo generate plugin AlertAssets
1140 $ mkdir Mojolicious-Plugin-AlertAssets/lib/Mojolicious/Plugin/AlertAssets
1141 $ cd Mojolicious-Plugin-AlertAssets/lib/Mojolicious/Plugin/AlertAssets
1142 $ mkdir public
1143 $ echo 'alert("Hello World!");' > public/alertassets.js
1144 $ mkdir templates
1145 $ echo '%= javascript "/alertassets.js"' > templates/alertassets.html.ep
1146
1147 Just give them reasonably unique names, ideally based on the name of
1148 your plugin, and append their respective directories to the list of
1149 search paths when "register" is called.
1150
1151 package Mojolicious::Plugin::AlertAssets;
1152 use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';
1153
1154 use Mojo::File 'path';
1155
1156 sub register {
1157 my ($self, $app) = @_;
1158
1159 # Append "templates" and "public" directories
1160 my $base = path(__FILE__)->sibling('AlertAssets');
1161 push @{$app->renderer->paths}, $base->child('templates')->to_string;
1162 push @{$app->static->paths}, $base->child('public')->to_string;
1163 }
1164
1165 1;
1166
1167 Both will work just like normal "templates" and "public" directories
1168 once you've installed and loaded the plugin, with slightly lower
1169 precedence.
1170
1171 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1172
1173 plugin 'AlertAssets';
1174
1175 get '/alert_me';
1176
1177 app->start;
1178 __DATA__
1179
1180 @@ alert_me.html.ep
1181 <!DOCTYPE html>
1182 <html>
1183 <head>
1184 <title>Alert me!</title>
1185 %= include 'alertassets'
1186 </head>
1187 <body>You've been alerted.</body>
1188 </html>
1189
1190 And it works just the same for assets bundled in the "DATA" section of
1191 your plugin.
1192
1193 package Mojolicious::Plugin::AlertAssets;
1194 use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';
1195
1196 sub register {
1197 my ($self, $app) = @_;
1198
1199 # Append class
1200 push @{$app->renderer->classes}, __PACKAGE__;
1201 push @{$app->static->classes}, __PACKAGE__;
1202 }
1203
1204 1;
1205 __DATA__
1206
1207 @@ alertassets.js
1208 alert("Hello World!");
1209
1210 @@ alertassets.html.ep
1211 %= javascript "/alertassets.js"
1212
1213 Post-processing dynamic content
1214 While post-processing tasks are generally very easy with the hook
1215 "after_dispatch" in Mojolicious, for content generated by the renderer
1216 it is a lot more efficient to use "after_render" in Mojolicious.
1217
1218 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1219 use IO::Compress::Gzip 'gzip';
1220
1221 hook after_render => sub {
1222 my ($c, $output, $format) = @_;
1223
1224 # Check if "gzip => 1" has been set in the stash
1225 return unless $c->stash->{gzip};
1226
1227 # Check if user agent accepts gzip compression
1228 return unless ($c->req->headers->accept_encoding // '') =~ /gzip/i;
1229 $c->res->headers->append(Vary => 'Accept-Encoding');
1230
1231 # Compress content with gzip
1232 $c->res->headers->content_encoding('gzip');
1233 gzip $output, \my $compressed;
1234 $$output = $compressed;
1235 };
1236
1237 get '/' => {template => 'hello', title => 'Hello', gzip => 1};
1238
1239 app->start;
1240 __DATA__
1241
1242 @@ hello.html.ep
1243 <!DOCTYPE html>
1244 <html>
1245 <head><title><%= title %></title></head>
1246 <body>Compressed content.</body>
1247 </html>
1248
1249 If you want to compress all dynamically generated content you can also
1250 activate "compress" in Mojolicious::Renderer.
1251
1252 Streaming
1253 You don't have to render all content at once, the method "write" in
1254 Mojolicious::Controller can also be used to stream a series of smaller
1255 chunks.
1256
1257 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1258
1259 get '/' => sub {
1260 my $c = shift;
1261
1262 # Prepare body
1263 my $body = 'Hello World!';
1264 $c->res->headers->content_length(length $body);
1265
1266 # Start writing directly with a drain callback
1267 my $drain;
1268 $drain = sub {
1269 my $c = shift;
1270 my $chunk = substr $body, 0, 1, '';
1271 $drain = undef unless length $body;
1272 $c->write($chunk, $drain);
1273 };
1274 $c->$drain;
1275 };
1276
1277 app->start;
1278
1279 The drain callback will be executed whenever the entire previous chunk
1280 of data has actually been written.
1281
1282 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
1283 Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2014 16:48:29 GMT
1284 Content-Length: 12
1285 Server: Mojolicious (Perl)
1286
1287 Hello World!
1288
1289 Instead of providing a "Content-Length" header you can also call
1290 "finish" in Mojolicious::Controller and close the connection manually
1291 once you are done.
1292
1293 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1294
1295 get '/' => sub {
1296 my $c = shift;
1297
1298 # Prepare body
1299 my $body = 'Hello World!';
1300
1301 # Start writing directly with a drain callback
1302 my $drain;
1303 $drain = sub {
1304 my $c = shift;
1305 my $chunk = substr $body, 0, 1, '';
1306 length $chunk ? $c->write($chunk, $drain) : $c->finish;
1307 };
1308 $c->$drain;
1309 };
1310
1311 app->start;
1312
1313 While this is rather inefficient, as it prevents keep-alive, it is
1314 sometimes necessary for EventSource and similar applications.
1315
1316 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
1317 Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2014 16:48:29 GMT
1318 Connection: close
1319 Server: Mojolicious (Perl)
1320
1321 Hello World!
1322
1323 Chunked transfer encoding
1324 For very dynamic content you might not know the response content length
1325 in advance, that's where the chunked transfer encoding and
1326 "write_chunk" in Mojolicious::Controller come in handy. A common use
1327 would be to send the "head" section of an HTML document to the browser
1328 in advance and speed up preloading of referenced images and
1329 stylesheets.
1330
1331 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1332
1333 get '/' => sub {
1334 my $c = shift;
1335 $c->write_chunk('<html><head><title>Example</title></head>' => sub {
1336 my $c = shift;
1337 $c->finish('<body>Example</body></html>');
1338 });
1339 };
1340
1341 app->start;
1342
1343 The optional drain callback ensures that all previous chunks have been
1344 written before processing continues. To end the stream you can call
1345 "finish" in Mojolicious::Controller or write an empty chunk of data.
1346
1347 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
1348 Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2014 16:48:29 GMT
1349 Transfer-Encoding: chunked
1350 Server: Mojolicious (Perl)
1351
1352 29
1353 <html><head><title>Example</title></head>
1354 1b
1355 <body>Example</body></html>
1356 0
1357
1358 Especially in combination with long inactivity timeouts this can be
1359 very useful for Comet (long polling). Due to limitations in some web
1360 servers this might not work perfectly in all deployment environments.
1361
1362 Encoding
1363 Templates stored in files are expected to be "UTF-8" by default, but
1364 that can be easily changed with "encoding" in Mojolicious::Renderer.
1365
1366 $app->renderer->encoding('koi8-r');
1367
1368 All templates from the "DATA" section are bound to the encoding of the
1369 Perl script.
1370
1371 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1372
1373 get '/heart';
1374
1375 app->start;
1376 __DATA__
1377
1378 @@ heart.html.ep
1379 I ♥ Mojolicious!
1380
1381 Base64 encoded DATA files
1382 Base64 encoded static files such as images can be easily stored in the
1383 "DATA" section of your application, similar to templates.
1384
1385 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1386
1387 get '/' => {text => 'I ♥ Mojolicious!'};
1388
1389 app->start;
1390 __DATA__
1391
1392 @@ favicon.ico (base64)
1393 ...base64 encoded image...
1394
1395 Inflating DATA templates
1396 Templates stored in files get preferred over files from the "DATA"
1397 section, this allows you to include a default set of templates in your
1398 application that the user can later customize. The command
1399 Mojolicious::Command::Author::inflate will write all templates and
1400 static files from the "DATA" section into actual files in the
1401 "templates" and "public" directories.
1402
1403 $ ./myapp.pl inflate
1404
1405 Customizing the template syntax
1406 You can easily change the whole template syntax by loading
1407 Mojolicious::Plugin::EPRenderer with a custom configuration.
1408
1409 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1410
1411 plugin EPRenderer => {
1412 name => 'mustache',
1413 template => {
1414 tag_start => '{{',
1415 tag_end => '}}'
1416 }
1417 };
1418
1419 get '/:name' => {name => 'Anonymous'} => 'index';
1420
1421 app->start;
1422 __DATA__
1423
1424 @@ index.html.mustache
1425 Hello {{= $name }}.
1426
1427 Mojo::Template contains the whole list of available options.
1428
1429 Adding your favorite template system
1430 Maybe you would prefer a different template system than "ep", which is
1431 provided by Mojolicious::Plugin::EPRenderer, and there is not already a
1432 plugin on CPAN for your favorite one. All you have to do, is to add a
1433 new "handler" with "add_handler" in Mojolicious::Renderer when
1434 "register" is called.
1435
1436 package Mojolicious::Plugin::MyRenderer;
1437 use Mojo::Base 'Mojolicious::Plugin';
1438
1439 sub register {
1440 my ($self, $app) = @_;
1441
1442 # Add "mine" handler
1443 $app->renderer->add_handler(mine => sub {
1444 my ($renderer, $c, $output, $options) = @_;
1445
1446 # Check for one-time use inline template
1447 my $inline_template = $options->{inline};
1448
1449 # Check for appropriate template in "templates" directories
1450 my $template_path = $renderer->template_path($options);
1451
1452 # Check for appropriate template in DATA sections
1453 my $data_template = $renderer->get_data_template($options);
1454
1455 # This part is up to you and your template system :)
1456 ...
1457
1458 # Pass the rendered result back to the renderer
1459 $$output = 'Hello World!';
1460
1461 # Or just die if an error occurs
1462 die 'Something went wrong with the template';
1463 });
1464 }
1465
1466 1;
1467
1468 An "inline" template, if provided by the user, will be passed along
1469 with the options. You can use "template_path" in Mojolicious::Renderer
1470 to search the "templates" directories of the application, and
1471 "get_data_template" in Mojolicious::Renderer to search the "DATA"
1472 sections.
1473
1474 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1475
1476 plugin 'MyRenderer';
1477
1478 # Render an inline template
1479 get '/inline' => {inline => '...', handler => 'mine'};
1480
1481 # Render a template from the DATA section
1482 get '/data' => {template => 'test'};
1483
1484 app->start;
1485 __DATA__
1486
1487 @@ test.html.mine
1488 ...
1489
1490 Adding a handler to generate binary data
1491 By default the renderer assumes that every "handler" generates
1492 characters that need to be automatically encoded, but this can be
1493 easily disabled if you're generating bytes instead.
1494
1495 use Mojolicious::Lite;
1496 use Storable 'nfreeze';
1497
1498 # Add "storable" handler
1499 app->renderer->add_handler(storable => sub {
1500 my ($renderer, $c, $output, $options) = @_;
1501
1502 # Disable automatic encoding
1503 delete $options->{encoding};
1504
1505 # Encode data from stash value
1506 $$output = nfreeze delete $c->stash->{storable};
1507 });
1508
1509 # Set "handler" value automatically if "storable" value is set already
1510 app->hook(before_render => sub {
1511 my ($c, $args) = @_;
1512 $args->{handler} = 'storable'
1513 if exists $args->{storable} || exists $c->stash->{storable};
1514 });
1515
1516 get '/' => {storable => {i => '♥ mojolicious'}};
1517
1518 app->start;
1519
1520 The hook "before_render" in Mojolicious can be used to make stash
1521 values like "storable" special, so that they no longer require a
1522 "handler" value to be set explicitly.
1523
1524 # Explicit "handler" value
1525 $c->render(storable => {i => '♥ mojolicious'}, handler => 'storable');
1526
1527 # Implicit "handler" value (with "before_render" hook)
1528 $c->render(storable => {i => '♥ mojolicious'});
1529
1531 You can continue with Mojolicious::Guides now or take a look at the
1532 Mojolicious wiki <http://github.com/mojolicious/mojo/wiki>, which
1533 contains a lot more documentation and examples by many different
1534 authors.
1535
1537 If you have any questions the documentation might not yet answer, don't
1538 hesitate to ask on the mailing list
1539 <http://groups.google.com/group/mojolicious> or the official IRC
1540 channel "#mojo" on "irc.freenode.net" (chat now!
1541 <https://kiwiirc.com/nextclient/#irc://irc.freenode.net/mojo?nick=guest-?>).
1542
1543
1544
1545perl v5.28.0 2018-11-01 Mojolicious::Guides::Rendering(3)