NAME Padre::Plugin::Plack - PSGI/Plack plugin for Padre VERSION Version 0.04 SYNOPSIS cpan install Padre::Plugin::Plack; Then enable it via Padre, The Perl IDE: Padre > Plugins > Plugin Manager > Plack > enable DESCRIPTION As the name suggests, Padre::Plugin::Plack adds Plack awareness to Padre. With the plugin installed, opening *.psgi files causes some special things to happen. PSGI files are really just ordinary Perl files, so Padre does its normal Perl lexing/syntax highlighting magic on them, but the real fun starts with the Plack-specific features that appear in the per-file graphical plackup control panel that shows up. The panel lets you run your web app in a Plack server at the click of a button, view server output, configure plackup options and launch a web browser on the appropriate port. The great thing about Plack/PSGI is that unlike my previous plugin (Padre::Plugin::WebGUI) which was specific to a single web app (albeit a big one), this plugin can be used for any web app built in a web framework that supports Plack (Catalyst, CGI::Application, HTTP::Engine, etc..). This is the same motivating factor that excites Plack::Middleware authors. The plugin turns on plackup’s "--reload" option by default, which conveniently causes the plack server to reload every time you modify your source files in Padre. This makes for quite a nice, if somewhat minimal "Plack IDE" experience (this is version 0.01 after all). The plugin integrates all of the Plack example "dot-psgi”"files as templates that can be used to create different types of Plack apps straight from the GUI menu. The pre-populated list of Plack servers and the simple start/stop button makes for a nice way of exploring the Plack server ecosystem. You can use the other panel options to enter a specific port to run on, toggle auto-start mode and pass additional options to plackup (options that start with "--" are passed through to the backend server). The output panel is similar to the output panel that Padre normally displays when you execute Perl files, except that you get one panel per .psgi file meaning that you can run multiple plack servers simultaneously and independently view their output. The appropriate panel is automatically selected when you click on the corresponding file tab, and running processes are stopped when you close the tab. It should be really easy to turn Padre::Plugin::Plack into new plugins that involve the same basic ingredients, namely a file extension and an external command for running those files, with a per-file panel for command options and output. So I encourage anyone who has a similar plugin in mind to steal liberally from Padre::Plugin::Plack (as I did from Padre::Plugin::Catalyst - thanks garu++). Ruby Rack support comes to mind as a trivial example. Make Padre your domain-specific IDE today :) Blog post with screenshots: AUTHOR Patrick Donelan (PDONELAN) CONTRIBUTORS * Gábor Szabó - גאבור סבו (SZABGAB) TRANSLATORS * French - Jerome Quelin (jquelin) * Dutch - Dirk De Nijs (ddn123456) * Brazilian Portuguese - Breno G. de Oliveira (garu) BUGS Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-padre-plugin-plack at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at . I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes. SUPPORT You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command. perldoc Padre::Plugin::Plack You can also look for information at: * RT: CPAN's request tracker * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation * CPAN Ratings * Search CPAN SEE ALSO Plack, Padre COPYRIGHT & LICENSE This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.