NAME Perinci::Access::InProcess - Use Rinci access protocol (Riap) to access Perl code VERSION version 0.46 SYNOPSIS # in Your/Module.pm package My::Module; our %SPEC; $SPEC{mult2} = { v => 1.1, summary => 'Multiple two numbers', args => { a => { schema=>'float*', req=>1, pos=>0 }, b => { schema=>'float*', req=>1, pos=>1 }, }, examples => [ {args=>{a=>2, b=>3}, result=>6}, ], }; sub mult2 { my %args = @_; [200, "OK", $args{a} * $args{b}]; } $SPEC{multn} = { v => 1.1, summary => 'Multiple many numbers', args => { n => { schema=>[array=>{of=>'float*'}], req=>1, pos=>0, greedy=>1 }, }, }; sub multn { my %args = @_; my @n = @{$args{n}}; my $res = 0; if (@n) { $res = shift(@n); $res *= $_ while $_ = shift(@n); } return [200, "OK", $res]; } 1; # in another file use Perinci::Access::InProcess; my $pa = Perinci::Access::Process->new(); # list all functions in package my $res = $pa->request(list => '/My/Module/', {type=>'function'}); # -> [200, "OK", ['pl:/My/Module/mult2', 'pl:/My/Module/multn']] # call function my $res = $pa->request(call => 'pl:/My/Module/mult2', {args=>{a=>2, b=>3}}); # -> [200, "OK", 6] # get function metadata $res = $pa->request(meta => '/Foo/Bar/multn'); # -> [200, "OK", {v=>1.1, summary=>'Multiple many numbers', ...}] DESCRIPTION This class implements Rinci access protocol (Riap) to access local Perl code. This might seem like a long-winded and slow way to access things that are already accessible from Perl like functions and metadata (in %SPEC). Indeed, if you do not need Riap, you can access your module just like any normal Perl module. Supported features: * Basic Riap actions These include "info", "actions", "meta", "list", and "call" actions. * Transaction/undo According to Rinci::Transaction. * Function wrapping Wrapping is used to convert argument passing style, produce result envelope, add argument validation, as well as numerous other functionalities. See Perinci::Sub::Wrapper for more details on wrapping. The default behavior will call wrapped functions. * Custom location of metadata By default, metadata are assumed to be stored embedded in Perl source code in %SPEC package variables (with keys matching function names, $variable names, or ":package" for the package metadata itself). You can override "get_meta()" to provide custom behavior. For example, you can store metadata in separate file or database. * Custom code entity tree By default, tree are formed by traversing Perl packages and their contents, for example if a "list" action is requested on uri "/Foo/Bar/" then the contents of package "Foo::Bar" and its subpackages will be traversed for the entities. You can override "action_list()" to provide custom behavior. For example, you can lookup from the database. * Progress indicator Functions can express that they do progress updating through the "features" property in its metadata: features => { progress => 1, ... } For these functions, periai will then pass a special argument "-progress" containing Progress::Any object. Functions can update progress using this object. How request is processed User calls "$pa->request($action => $uri, \%extras)". Internally, the method creates a hash $req which contains Riap request keys as well as internal information about the Riap request (the latter will be prefixed with dash "-"). Initially it will contain "action" and "uri" (converted to URI object) and the %extras keys from the request() arguments sent by the user. Internal "_parse_uri()" method will be called to parse "uri" into "-uri_dir" (the "dir" part), "-uri_leaf" (the "basename" part), and "-perl_package". Forbidden or invalid paths will cause this method to return an enveloped error response and the request to stop. For example, if "uri" is "/Foo/Bar/" then "-uri_dir" is "/Foo/Bar/" and "-uri_leaf" is an empty string. If "uri" is "/Foo/Bar/baz" then "-uri_dir" is "/Foo/Bar/" while "-uri_leaf" is "baz". "-uri_dir" will be used for the "list" action. In both cases, "-perl_package" will be set to "Foo::Bar". The code entity type is then determined currently using a few simple heuristic rules: if "-uri_leaf" is empty string, type is "package". If "-uri_leaf" begins with "[$%@]", type is "variable". Otherwise, type is "function". "-type" will be set. After this, the appropriate "action_ACTION()" method will be called. For example if action is "meta" then "action_meta()" method will be called, with $req as the argument. This will in turn, depending on the action, either call "get_meta()" (for example if action is "meta") or "get_code()" (for example if action is "call"), also with $req as the argument. "get_meta()" and "get_code()" should return nothing on success, and set either "-meta" (a defhash containing Rinci metadata) or "-code" (a coderef), respectively. On error, they must return an enveloped error response. "get_meta()" or "get_code()" might call "_load_module()" to load Perl modules if the "load" attribute is set to true. METHODS PKG->new(%attrs) => OBJ Instantiate object. Known attributes: * load => BOOL (default: 1) Whether to load Perl modules that are requested. * after_load => CODE If set, code will be executed the first time Perl module is successfully loaded. * wrap => BOOL (default: 1) If set to false, then wil use original subroutine and metadata instead of wrapped ones, for example if you are very concerned about performance (do not want to add another eval {} and subroutine call introduced by wrapping) or do not need the functionality provided by the wrapper (e.g. your function does not die and already validates its arguments, you do not want Sah schemas in the metadata to be normalized, etc). Wrapping is implemented inside "get_meta()" and "get_code()". * extra_wrapper_args => HASH If set, will be passed to Perinci::Sub::Wrapper's wrap_sub() when wrapping subroutines. Some applications of this include: adding "timeout" or "result_postfilter" properties to functions. This is only relevant if you enable "wrap". * extra_wrapper_convert => HASH If set, will be passed to Perinci::Sub::Wrapper wrap_sub()'s "convert" argument when wrapping subroutines. Some applications of this include: changing "default_lang" of metadata. This is only relevant if you enable "wrap". * cache_size => INT (default: 100) Specify cache size (in number of items). Cache saves the result of function wrapping so future requests to the same function need not involve wrapping again. Setting this to 0 disables caching. Caching is implemented inside "get_meta()" and "get_code()" so you might want to implement your own caching if you override those. * allow_paths => REGEX|STR|ARRAY If defined, only requests with "uri" matching specified path will be allowed. Can be a string (e.g. "/spanel/api/") or regex (e.g. "qr{^/[^/]+/api/}") or an array of those. * deny_paths => REGEX|STR|ARRAY If defined, requests with "uri" matching specified path will be denied. Like "allow_paths", value can be a string (e.g. "/spanel/api/") or regex (e.g. "qr{^/[^/]+/api/}") or an array of those. * use_tx => BOOL (default: 0) Whether to allow transaction requests from client. Since this can cause the server to store transaction/undo data, this must be explicitly allowed. You need to install Perinci::Tx::Manager for transaction support (unless you are using another transaction manager). * custom_tx_manager => STR|CODE Can be set to a string (class name) or a code that is expected to return a transaction manager class. By default, Perinci::Tx::Manager is instantiated and maintained (not reinstantiated on every request), but if "custom_tx_manager" is a coderef, it will be called on each request to get transaction manager. This can be used to instantiate Perinci::Tx::Manager in a custom way, e.g. specifying per-user transaction data directory and limits, which needs to be done on a per-request basis. $pa->request($action => $server_url, \%extra) => $res Process Riap request and return enveloped result. $server_url will be used as the Riap request key 'uri', as there is no server in this case. $pa->parse_url($server_url) => HASH FAQ Why wrap? The wrapping process accomplishes several things, among others: checking of metadata, normalization of schemas in metadata, also argument validation and exception trapping in function. The function wrapping introduces a small overhead when performing a sub call (typically around several to tens of microseconds on an Intel Core i5 1.7GHz notebook). This is usually smaller than the overhead of Perinci::Access::InProcess itself (typically in the range of 100 microseconds). But if you are concerned about the wrapping overhead, see the "use_wrapped_sub" option. Why %SPEC? The name was first chosen when during Sub::Spec era, so it stuck. SEE ALSO Riap, Rinci AUTHOR Steven Haryanto COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Steven Haryanto. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.