NAME¶
RPC::XML::Procedure - Object encapsulation of server-side RPC procedures
SYNOPSIS¶
require RPC::XML::Procedure;
...
$procedure = RPC::XML::Procedure->new({ name => 'system.identity',
code => sub { ... },
signature => [ 'string' ] });
$method = RPC::XML::Method->new('/path/to/status.xpl');
$function = RPC::XML::Function->new(name => 'add',
code => sub { ... });
DESCRIPTION¶
The
RPC::XML::Procedure package is designed primarily for
behind-the-scenes use by the
RPC::XML::Server class and any subclasses
of it. It is documented here in case a project chooses to sub-class it for
their purposes (which would require setting the "method_class"
attribute when creating server objects, see RPC::XML::Server).
This package grew out of the increasing need to abstract the operations that
related to the methods a given server instance was providing. Previously,
methods were passed around simply as hash references. It was a small step then
to move them into a package and allow for operations directly on the objects
themselves. In the spirit of the original hashes, all the key data is kept in
clear, intuitive hash keys (rather than obfuscated as the other classes do).
Thus it is important to be clear on the interface here before sub-classing
this package.
CLASSES¶
This module provides three classes, representing the three types of procedures
that servers can use:
- Methods (RPC::XML::Method)
- Code that is considered a "method" by the server
is called as though it were, in fact, a method in that class. The first
argument in the list is the server object itself, with the arguments to
the call making up the rest of the list. The server checks the signature
of the method against the arguments list before the call is made. See
below ("How Procedures Are Called") for more on the invocation
of code as methods.
- Procedures (RPC::XML::Procedure)
- Code that is considered a "procedure" by the
server is called like a normal (non-method) subroutine call. The server
object is not injected into the arguments list. The signature of the
procedure is checked again the list of arguments before the call is made,
as with methods.
- Functions (RPC::XML::Function)
- Lastly, code that is considered a "function" is
the simplest of the three: it does not have the server object injected
into the arguments list, and no check of signatures is done before the
call is made. It is the responsibility of the function to properly
understand the arguments list, and to return a value that the caller will
understand.
There is (currently) no version that is called like a method but ignores
signatures like a function.
SUBROUTINES/METHODS¶
The following methods are provided by this class:
- new(FILE|HASHREF|LIST)
- Creates a new object of the class, and returns a reference
to it. The arguments to the constructor are variable in nature, depending
on the type:
- FILE
- If there is exactly on argument that is not a reference, it
is assumed to be a filename from which the method is to be loaded. This is
presumed to be in the XPL format descibed below (see "XPL File
Structure"). If the file cannot be opened, or if once opened cannot
be parsed, an error is raised.
- HASHREF
- If there is exactly one argument that is a reference, it is
assumed to be a hash with the relevant information on the same keys as the
object itself uses. This is primarily to support backwards-compatibility
to code written when methods were implemented simply as hash
references.
- LIST
- If there is more than one argument in the list, then the
list is assumed to be a sort of "ersatz" hash construct, in that
one of the keys ("signature") is allowed to "stack" if
it occur multiple times. Otherwise, any keys that occur multiple times
overwrite the previous value:
- name
- The name of the method, as it will be presented to
clients
- code
- A reference to a subroutine, or an anonymous subroutine,
that will receive calls for the method
- signature
- Provides one calling-signature for the method, as either a
space-separated string of types or a list-reference
- help
- The help-text for a method, which is generally used as a
part of the introspection interface for a server
- version
- The version number/string for the method
- hidden
- A boolean (true or false) value indicating whether the
method should be hidden from introspection and similar listings
Note that all of these correspond to the values that can be changed via the
accessor methods detailed later.
If any error occurs during object creation, an error message is returned in lieu
of the object reference.
- clone
- Create a copy of the calling object, and return the new
reference. All elements are copied over cleanly, except for the code
reference stored on the "code" hash key. The clone will point to
the same code reference as the original. Elements such as
"signature" are copied, so that changes to the clone will not
impact the original.
- name
- Returns the name by which the server is advertising the
method. Unlike the next few accessors, this cannot be changed on an
object. In order to streamline the managment of methods within the server
classes, this must persist. However, the other elements may be used in the
creation of a new object, which may then be added to the server, if the
name absolutely must change.
- namespace
- If the procedure object was created from a file, or if the
instantiation included namespace information, this accessor will return
the namespace that the underlying code executes in. Otherwise, it returns
an empty string. This cannot be altered (even if the code method is
used to replace the code routine).
- code([NEW])
- Returns or sets the code-reference that will receive calls
as marshalled by the server. The existing value is lost, so if it must be
preserved, then it should be retrieved prior to the new value being
set.
- signature([NEW])
- Return a list reference containing the signatures, or set
it. Each element of the list is a string of space-separated types (the
first of which is the return type the method produces in that calling
context). If this is being used to set the signature, then an array
reference must be passed that contains one or more strings of this nature.
Nested list references are not allowed at this level. If the new
signatures would cause a conflict (a case in which the same set of input
types are specified for different output types), the old set is silently
restored.
- help([NEW])
- Returns or sets the help-text for the method. As with
code, the previous value is lost.
- hidden([NEW])
- Returns or sets the hidden status of the method. Setting it
loses the previous value.
- version([NEW])
- Returns or sets the version string for the method
(overwriting as with the other accessors).
- add_signature(LIST)
- Add one or more signatures (which may be a list reference
or a string) to the internal tables for this method. Duplicate signatures
are ignored. If the new signature would cause a conflict (a case in which
the same set of input types are specified for different output types), the
old set is restored and an error message is returned.
- delete_signature(LIST)
- Deletes the signature or signatures (list reference or
string) from the internal tables. Quietly ignores any signature that does
not exist. If the new signature would cause a conflict (a case in which
the same set of input types are specified for different output types), the
old set is restored and an error message is returned.
- match_signature(SIGNATURE)
- Check that the passed-in signature is known to the method,
and if so returns the type that the method should be returning as a result
of the call. Returns a zero (0) otherwise. This differs from other
signature operations in that the passed-in signature (which may be a
list-reference or a string) does not include
the return type . This method is provided so that servers
may check a list of arguments against type when marshalling an incoming
call. For example, a signature of 'int int' would be tested for by calling
"$M->match_signature('int')" and expecting the return value
to be "int".
- call(SERVER, PARAMLIST)
- Execute the code that this object encapsulates, using the
list of parameters passed in PARAMLIST. The SERVER argument should be an
object derived from the RPC::XML::Server class. For some types of
procedure objects, this becomes the first argument of the parameter list
to simulate a method call as if it were on the server object itself. The
return value should be a data object (possibly a RPC::XML::fault),
but may not always be pre-encoded. Errors trapped in $@ are converted to
fault objects. This method is generally used in the "dispatch"
method of the server class, where the return value is subsequently wrapped
within a RPC::XML::response object.
- reload
- Instruct the object to reload itself from the file it
originally was loaded from, assuming that it was loaded from a file to
begin with. Returns an error if the method was not originally loaded from
a file, or if an error occurs during the reloading operation.
Additional Hash Data¶
In addition to the attributes managed by the accessors documented earlier, the
following hash keys are also available for use. These are also not strongly
protected, and the same care should be taken before altering any of them:
- file
- When the method was loaded from a file, this key contains
the path to the file used.
- namespace
- If the code is loaded from a file, this hash key will
reflect what namespace the code executes in. If the file specified a
namespace, that is the value you will get (any occurrence of "."
in the specified namespace will have been converted to "::"). If
no explicit namespace was provided, the namespace of the class you called
new from will be used. See "Namespaces".
- mtime
- When the method was loaded from a file, this key contains
the modification-time of the file, as a UNIX-style "time" value.
This is used to check for changes to the file the code was originally read
from.
- called
- When the method is being used by one of the server classes
provided in this software suite, this key is incremented each time the
server object dispatches a request to the method. This can later be
checked to provide some indication of how frequently the method is being
invoked.
XPL File Structure¶
This section focuses on the way in which methods are expressed in these files,
referred to here as "XPL files" due to the "*.xpl"
filename extension (which stands for "XML Procedure Layout"). This
mini-dialect, based on XML, is meant to provide a simple means of specifying
method definitions separate from the code that comprises the application
itself. Thus, methods may theoretically be added, removed, debugged or even
changed entirely without requiring that the server application itself be
rebuilt (or, possibly, without it even being restarted).
- The XML-based file structure
- The XPL Procedure Layout dialect is a very simple
application of XML to the problem of expressing the method in such a way
that it could be useful to other packages than this one, or useful in
other contexts than this one.
The lightweight DTD for the layout can be summarized as:
<!ELEMENT proceduredef (name, namespace?, version?, hidden?,
signature+, help?, code)>
<!ELEMENT methoddef (name, namespace?, version?, hidden?,
signature+, help?, code)>
<!ELEMENT functiondef (name, namespace?, version?, hidden?,
signature+, help?, code)>
<!ELEMENT name (#PCDATA)>
<!ELEMENT namespace (#PCDATA)>
<!ELEMENT version (#PCDATA)>
<!ELEMENT hidden EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT signature (#PCDATA)>
<!ELEMENT help (#PCDATA)>
<!ELEMENT code (#PCDATA)>
<!ATTLIST code language (#PCDATA)>
The containing tag is always one of "<methoddef>",
"<proceduredef>" or "<functiondef>". The
tags that specify name, signatures and the code itself must always be
present. Some optional information may also be supplied. The
"help" text, or what an introspection API would expect to use to
document the method, is also marked as optional. Having some degree of
documentation for all the methods a server provides is a good rule of
thumb, however.
The default methods that this package provides are turned into XPL files by
the make_method tool (see make_method). The final forms of these
may serve as examples of what the file should look like.
- Information used only for book-keeping
- Some of the information in the XPL file is only for
book-keeping: the version stamp of a method is never involved in the
invocation. The server also keeps track of the last-modified time of the
file the method is read from, as well as the full directory path to that
file. The "<hidden />" tag is used to identify those
methods that should not be exposed to the outside world through any sort
of introspection/documentation API. They are still available and callable,
but the client must possess the interface information in order to do
so.
- The information crucial to the method
- The name, signatures and code must be present for obvious
reasons. The "<name>" tag tells the server what external
name this procedure is known by. The "<signature>" tag,
which may appear more than once, provides the definition of the interface
to the function in terms of what types and quantity of arguments it will
accept, and for a given set of arguments what the type of the returned
value is. Lastly is the "<code>" tag, without which there
is no procedure to remotely call.
- Why the <code> tag allows multiple languages
- Note that the "<code>" tag is the only one
with an attribute, in this case "language". This is designed to
allow for one XPL file to provide a given method in multiple languages.
Why, one might ask, would there be a need for this?
It is the hope behind this package that collections of RPC suites may one
day be made available as separate entities from this specific software
package. Given this hope, it is not unreasonable to suggest that such a
suite of code might be implemented in more than one language (each of
Perl, Python, Ruby and Tcl, for example). Languages which all support the
means by which to take new code and add it to a running process on demand
(usually through an ""eval"" keyword or something
similar). If the file A.xpl is provided with implementations in all
four of the above languages, the name, help text, signature and even
hidden status would likely be identical. So, why not share the
non-language-specific elements in the spirit of re-use?
The "make_method" Utility¶
The utility script "make_method" is provided as a part of this
software suite. It allows for the automatic creation of XPL files from either
command-line information or from template files. It has a wide variety of
features and options, and is out of the scope of this particular manual page.
The package
Makefile.PL features an example of engineering the
automatic generation of XPL files and their delivery as a part of the normal
Perl module build process. Using this tool is highly recommended over managing
XPL files directly. For the full details, see make_method.
NAMESPACES¶
As default behavior, Perl code that is passed to "eval" when a XPL
file is loaded gets put into the same namespace as the package used to load
the XPL. It is not an issue when you create your own
RPC::XML::Procedure (or
::Method or
::Function) objects,
as the code is already instantiated into a given namespace. This can be
important if your code expects to call routines in other loaded packages,
utilize package-level globals, etc.
To give developers control over the namespace in XPL code, a new optional tag
"<namespace>" was added in the 0.65 release. If this tag is
present in the XPL being read, it defines the namespace that the
"<code>" block is evaluated in.
The value of the namespace tag is a string providing the namespace in either the
Perl-style of hierarchy parts separated by "::", or the style used
by Java, Perl6, etc., in which the parts are separated by ".". The
latter form is converted to Perl style for the evaluation of the code. If
there is no namespace declaration in a XPL file, the namespace of the class
that loads the XPL is used.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
Unless otherwise noted in the individual documentation sections, all methods
return the object reference on success, or a (non-reference) text string
containing the error message upon failure.
CAVEATS¶
Moving the method management to a separate class adds a good deal of overhead to
the general system. The trade-off in reduced complexity and added
maintainability should offset this.
BUGS¶
Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-rpc-xml at
rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=RPC-XML
<
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=RPC-XML>. I will be
notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as
I make changes.
SUPPORT¶
- •
- RT: CPAN's request tracker
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=RPC-XML
<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=RPC-XML>
- •
- AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
http://annocpan.org/dist/RPC-XML
<http://annocpan.org/dist/RPC-XML>
- •
- CPAN Ratings
http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/RPC-XML
<http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/RPC-XML>
- •
- Search CPAN
http://search.cpan.org/dist/RPC-XML
<http://search.cpan.org/dist/RPC-XML>
- •
- MetaCPAN
https://metacpan.org/release/RPC-XML
<https://metacpan.org/release/RPC-XML>
- •
- Source code on GitHub
http://github.com/rjray/rpc-xml <http://github.com/rjray/rpc-xml>
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT¶
This file and the code within are copyright (c) 2011 by Randy J. Ray.
Copying and distribution are permitted under the terms of the Artistic License
2.0 (
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license-2.0.php
<
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license-2.0.php>) or the
GNU LGPL 2.1 (
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php
<
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php>).
CREDITS¶
The
XML-RPC standard is Copyright (c) 1998-2001, UserLand Software, Inc.
See <
http://www.xmlrpc.com> for more information about the
XML-RPC specification.
SEE ALSO¶
RPC::XML::Server, make_method
AUTHOR¶
Randy J. Ray "<rjray@blackperl.com>"