NAME¶
RPC::XML::Server - A server base-class for XML-RPC
SYNOPSIS¶
use RPC::XML::Server;
...
$srv = RPC::XML::Server->new(port => 9000);
# Several of these, most likely:
$srv->add_method(...);
...
$srv->server_loop; # Never returns
DESCRIPTION¶
This is both a base-class for developing XML-RPC servers, and a working server
class in its own right. It is built upon the
RPC::XML data classes, and
defaults to using
HTTP::Daemon for the communication layer.
SUBROUTINES/METHODS¶
Use of the
RPC::XML::Server is based on an object model. A server is
instantiated from the class, methods (subroutines) are made public by adding
them through the object interface, and then the server object is responsible
for dispatching requests (and possibly for the HTTP listening, as well).
Static Methods¶
These methods are static to the package, and are used to provide external access
to internal settings:
- INSTALL_DIR
- Returns the directory that this module is installed into.
This is used by methods such as add_default_methods to locate the
XPL files that are shipped with the distribution.
- version
- Returns the version string associated with this
package.
- product_tokens
- This returns the identifying string for the server, in the
format "NAME/VERSION" consistent with other applications such as
Apache and LWP. It is provided here as part of the compatibility
with HTTP::Daemon that is required for effective integration with
Net::Server.
Methods¶
The following are object (non-static) methods. Unless otherwise explicitly
noted, all methods return the invoking object reference upon success, and a
non-reference error string upon failure.
See "Content Compression" below for details of how the server class
manages gzip-based compression and expansion of messages.
- new(OPTIONS)
- Creates a new object of the class and returns the blessed
reference. Depending on the options, the object will contain some
combination of an HTTP listener, a pre-populated HTTP::Response
object, a RPC::XML::ParserFactory-generated object, and a dispatch
table with the set of default procedures pre-loaded. The options that
new accepts are passed as a hash of key/value pairs (not a hash
reference). The accepted options are:
- no_http
- If passed with a "true" value, prevents the
creation and storage of the HTTP::Daemon object. This allows for
deployment of a server object in other environments. Note that if this is
set, the server_loop method described below will silently attempt
to use the Net::Server module.
- no_default
- If passed with a "true" value, prevents the
loading of the default procedures provided with the RPC::XML
distribution. These may be later loaded using the
add_default_methods interface described later. The procedures
themselves are described below (see "The Default Procedures
Provided").
- path
- host
- port
- queue
- These four are specific to the HTTP-based nature of the
server. The path argument sets the additional URI path information
that clients would use to contact the server. Internally, it is not used
except in outgoing status and introspection reports. The host,
port and queue arguments are passed to the
HTTP::Daemon constructor if they are passed. They set the hostname,
TCP/IP port, and socket listening queue, respectively. They may also be
used if the server object tries to use Net::Server as an
alternative server core.
- xpl_path
- If you plan to add procedures/methods/functions to the
server object by passing filenames to the
add_method/add_procedure/ add_function calls, this
argument may be used to specify one or more additional directories to be
searched when the passed-in filename is a relative path. The value for
this must be an array reference. See also the add_* and
xpl_path methods, below.
- timeout
- Specify a value (in seconds) for the HTTP::Daemon
server to use as a timeout value when reading request data from an inbound
connection. The default value is 10 seconds. This value is not used except
by HTTP::Daemon.
- auto_methods
- If specified and set to a true value, enables the automatic
searching for a requested remote method/procedure/function that is unknown
to the server object handling the request. If set to "no" (or
not set at all), then a request for an unknown function causes the object
instance to report an error. If the routine is still not found, the error
is reported. Enabling this is a security risk, and should only be
permitted by a server administrator with fully informed acknowledgement
and consent.
- auto_updates
- If specified and set to a "true" value, enables
the checking of the modification time of the file from which a
method/procedure/function was originally loaded. If the file has changed,
the method is re-loaded before execution is handed off. As with the
auto-loading of methods, this represents a security risk, and should only
be permitted by a server administrator with fully informed acknowledgement
and consent.
- parser
- If this parameter is passed, its value is expected to be an
array reference. The contents of that array are passed to the new
method of the RPC::XML::ParserFactory class, which creates the
parser object that the server object caches for its use. See the
RPC::XML::ParserFactory manual page for a list of recognized
parameters to the constructor.
- message_file_thresh
- If this key is passed, the value associated with it is
assumed to be a numerical limit to the size of in-memory messages. Any
out-bound request that would be larger than this when stringified is
instead written to an anonynous temporary file, and spooled from there
instead. This is useful for cases in which the request includes
RPC::XML::base64 objects that are themselves spooled from
file-handles. This test is independent of compression, so even if
compression of a request would drop it below this threshhold, it will be
spooled anyway. The file itself is created via File::Temp with
"UNLINK" set, so once it is freed the disk space is immediately
freed.
- message_temp_dir
- If a message is to be spooled to a temporary file, this key
can define a specific directory in which to open those files. If this is
not given, then the "tmpdir" method from the File::Spec
package is used, instead.
- fault_code_base
- Specify a base integer value that is added to the numerical
codes for all faults the server can return. See "Server Faults"
for the list of faults that are built-in to the server class. This allows
an application to "move" the RPC::XML::Server pre-defined
fault codes out of the way of codes that the application itself may
generate.
Note that this value is not applied to any faults specified via the
next option, "fault_table". It is assumed that the developer has
already applied any offset to those codes.
- fault_table
- Specify one or more fault types to either add to or
override the built-in set of faults for the server object. The value of
this parameter is a hash reference whose keys are the fault type and whose
values are either a scalar (which is taken to be the numerical code) or a
list reference with two elements (the code followed by the string). See
"Server Faults" for the list of faults that are built-in to the
server class, and for more information on defining your own.
Any other keys in the options hash not explicitly used by the constructor are
copied over verbatim onto the object, for the benefit of sub-classing this
class. All internal keys are prefixed with "__" to avoid confusion.
Feel free to use this prefix only if you wish to re-introduce confusion.
- url
- This returns the HTTP URL that the server will be
responding to, when it is in the connection-accept loop. If the server
object was created without a built-in HTTP listener, then this method
returns "undef".
- requests
- Returns the number of requests this server object has
marshalled. Note that in multi-process environments (such as Apache or
Net::Server::PreFork) the value returned will only reflect the messages
dispatched by the specific process itself.
- response
- Each instance of this class (and any subclasses that do not
completely override the "new" method) creates and stores an
instance of HTTP::Response, which is then used by the
HTTP::Daemon or Net::Server processing loops in constructing
the response to clients. The response object has all common headers
pre-set for efficiency. This method returns a reference to that
object.
- started([BOOL])
- Gets and possibly sets the clock-time when the server
starts accepting connections. If a value is passed that evaluates to true,
then the current clock time is marked as the starting time. In either
case, the current value is returned. The clock-time is based on the
internal time command of Perl, and thus is represented as an
integer number of seconds since the system epoch. Generally, it is
suitable for passing to either localtime or to the
"time2iso8601" routine exported by the RPC::XML
package.
- timeout(INT)
- You can call this method to set the timeout of new
connections after they are received. This function returns the old timeout
value. If you pass in no value then it will return the old value without
modifying the current value. The default value is 10 seconds.
- server_fault(STRING, STRING)
- Create a RPC::XML::fault object of the specified
type, optionally including the second (string) parameter. See "Server
Faults" for the list of faults defined by RPC::XML::Server (as
well as documentation on creating your own).
- add_method(FILE | HASHREF | OBJECT)
- add_procedure(FILE | HASHREF | OBJECT)
- add_function(FILE | HASHREF | OBJECT)
- This adds a new published method/procedure/function to the
server object that invokes it. The new method may be specified in one of
three ways: as a filename, a hash reference or an existing object
(generally of either RPC::XML::Procedure, RPC::XML::Method
or RPC::XML::Function classes).
If passed as a hash reference, the following keys are expected:
- name
- The published (externally-visible) name for the
method.
- version
- An optional version stamp. Not used internally, kept mainly
for informative purposes.
- hidden
- If passed and evaluates to a "true" value, then
the method should be hidden from any introspection API implementations.
This parameter is optional, the default behavior being to make the method
publically-visible.
- code
- A code reference to the actual Perl subroutine that handles
this method. A symbolic reference is not accepted. The value can be passed
either as a reference to an existing routine, or possibly as a closure.
See "How Procedures are Called" for the semantics the referenced
subroutine must follow.
- signature
- A list reference of the signatures by which this routine
may be invoked. Every method has at least one signature. Though less
efficient for cases of exactly one signature, a list reference is always
used for sake of consistency.
- help
- Optional documentation text for the method. This is the
text that would be returned, for example, by a system.methodHelp
call (providing the server has such an externally-visible method).
If a file is passed, then it is expected to be in the XML-based format,
described in the
RPC::XML::Procedure page (see RPC::XML::Procedure). If
the name passed is not an absolute pathname, then the file will be searched
for in any directories specified when the object was instantiated, then in the
directory into which this module was installed, and finally in the current
working directory. If the operation fails, the return value will be a
non-reference, an error message. Otherwise, the return value is the object
reference.
The
add_method,
add_function and
add_procedure calls are
essentialy identical unless called with hash references. Both files and
objects contain the information that defines the type (method vs. procedure)
of the funtionality to be added to the server. If
add_method is called
with a file that describes a procedure, the resulting addition to the server
object will be a
RPC::XML::Procedure object, not a method object.
For more on the creation and manipulation of procedures and methods as objects,
see RPC::XML::Procedure.
- delete_method(NAME)
- delete_procedure(NAME)
- delete_function(NAME)
- Delete the named method/procedure/function from the calling
object. Removes the entry from the internal table that the object
maintains. If the method is shared across more than one server object (see
"share_methods"), then the underlying object for it will only be
destroyed when the last server object releases it. On error (such as no
method by that name known), an error string is returned.
The delete_procedure and delete_function calls are identical,
supplied for the sake of symmetry. All calls return the matched object
regardless of its underlying type.
- list_methods
- list_procedures
- list_functions
- This returns a list of the names of methods and procedures
the server current has published. Note that the returned values are not
the method objects, but rather the names by which they are externally
known. The "hidden" status of a method is not consulted when
this list is created; all methods and procedures known are listed. The
list is not sorted in any specific order.
The list_procedures and list_functions calls are provided for
symmetry. All calls list all published routines on the calling server
object, regardless of underlying type.
- xpl_path([LISTREF])
- Get and/or set the object-specific search path for
"*.xpl" files (files that specify methods) that are specified in
calls to add_method, above. If a list reference is passed, it is
installed as the new path (each element of the list being one directory
name to search). Regardless of argument, the current path is returned as a
list reference. When a file is passed to add_method, the elements
of this path are searched first, in order, before the installation
directory or the current working directory are searched.
- get_method(NAME)
- get_procedure(NAME)
- get_function(NAME)
- Returns a reference to an object of the class
RPC::XML::Method, RPC::XML::Function or
RPC::XML::Procedure, which is the current binding for the published
method NAME. If there is no such method known to the server, then
"undef" is returned. Note that this is a referent to the object
as stored on the server object itself, and thus changes to it could affect
the behavior of the server.
The get_procedure and get_function calls are provided for
symmetry. All will return the same object for NAME, regardless of the
underlying type.
- server_loop(HASH)
- Enters the connection-accept loop, which generally does not
return. This is the "accept()"-based loop of HTTP::Daemon
if the object was created with an instance of that class as a part.
Otherwise, this enters the run-loop of the Net::Server class. It
listens for requests, and marshalls them out via the "dispatch"
method described below. It answers HTTP-HEAD requests immediately (without
counting them on the server statistics) and efficiently by using a cached
HTTP::Response object.
Because infinite loops requiring a "HUP" or "KILL"
signal to terminate are generally in poor taste, the HTTP::Daemon
side of this sets up a localized signal handler which causes an exit when
triggered. By default, this is attached to the "INT" signal. If
the Net::Server module is being used instead, it provides its own
signal management.
The arguments, if passed, are interpreted as a hash of key/value options
(not a hash reference, please note). For HTTP::Daemon, only one is
recognized:
- signal
- If passed, should be the traditional name for the signal
that should be bound to the exit function. If desired, a reference to an
array of signal names may be passed, in which case all signals will be
given the same handler. The user is responsible for not passing the name
of a non-existent signal, or one that cannot be caught. If the value of
this argument is 0 (a "false" value) or the string
"NONE", then the signal handler will not be installed,
and the loop may only be broken out of by killing the running process
(unless other arrangements are made within the application).
The options that
Net::Server responds to are detailed in the manual pages
for that package. All options passed to "server_loop" in this
situation are passed unaltered to the "run()" method in
Net::Server.
- dispatch(REQUEST)
- This is the server method that actually manages the
marshalling of an incoming request into an invocation of a Perl
subroutine. The parameter passed in may be one of: a scalar containing the
full XML text of the request, a scalar reference to such a string, or a
pre-constructed RPC::XML::request object. Unless an object is
passed, the text is parsed with any errors triggering an early exit. Once
the object representation of the request is on hand, the parameter data is
extracted, as is the method name itself. The call is sent along to the
appropriate subroutine, and the results are collated into an object of the
RPC::XML::response class, which is returned. Any non-reference
return value should be presumed to be an error string.
The dispatched method may communicate error in several ways. First, any
non-reference return value is presumed to be an error string, and is
encoded and returned as an RPC::XML::fault response. The method is
run under an "eval()", so errors conveyed by $@ are similarly
encoded and returned. As a special case, a method may explicitly
"die()" with a fault response, which is passed on
unmodified.
- add_default_methods([DETAILS])
- This method adds all the default methods (those that are
shipped with this extension) to the calling server object. The files are
denoted by their "*.xpl" extension, and are installed into the
same directory as this Server.pm file. The set of default methods
are described below (see "The Default Methods Provided").
If any names are passed as a list of arguments to this call, then only those
methods specified are actually loaded. If the "*.xpl" extension
is absent on any of these names, then it is silently added for testing
purposes. Note that the methods shipped with this package have file names
without the leading "status." part of the method name. If the
very first element of the list of arguments is "except" (or
"-except"), then the rest of the list is treated as a set of
names to not load, while all others do get read. The
Apache::RPC::Server module uses this to prevent the loading of the
default "system.status" method while still loading all the rest
of the defaults. (It then provides a more Apache-centric status method.)
Note that there are no symmetric calls in this case. The provided API is
implemented as methods, and thus only this interface is provided.
- add_methods_in_dir(DIR [, DETAILS])
- add_procedures_in_dir(DIR [, DETAILS])
- add_functions_in_dir(DIR [, DETAILS])
- This is exactly like add_default_methods above, save
that the caller specifies which directory to scan for "*.xpl"
files. In fact, the add_default_methods routine simply calls this
routine with the installation directory as the first argument. The
definition of the additional arguments is the same as above.
add_procedures_in_dir and add_functions_in_dir are provided
for symmetry.
- share_methods(SERVER, NAMES)
- share_procedures(SERVER, NAMES)
- share_functions(SERVER, NAMES)
- The calling server object shares the
methods/procedures/functions listed in NAMES with the source-server
passed as the first object. The source must derive from this package in
order for this operation to be permitted. At least one method must be
specified, and all are specified by name (not by object refernce). Both
objects will reference the same exact RPC::XML::Procedure (or
derivative thereof) object in this case, meaning that call-statistics and
the like will reflect the combined data. If one or more of the passed
names are not present on the source server, an error message is returned
and none are copied to the calling object.
Alternately, one or more of the name parameters passed to this call may be
regular-expression objects (the result of the qr operator). Any of
these detected are applied against the list of all available methods known
to the source server. All matching ones are inserted into the list (the
list is pared for redundancies in any case). This allows for easier
addition of whole classes such as those in the "system.*" name
space (via "qr/^system[.]/"), for example. There is no substring
matching provided. Names listed in the parameters to this routine must be
either complete strings or regular expressions.
The share_procedures and share_functions calls are provided
for symmetry.
- copy_methods(SERVER, NAMES)
- copy_procedures(SERVER, NAMES)
- copy_functions(SERVER, NAMES)
- These behave like the methods share_* above, with
the exception that the calling object is given a clone of each method,
rather than referencing the same exact method as the source server. The
code reference part of the method is shared between the two, but all other
data are copied (including a fresh copy of any list references used) into
a completely new RPC::XML::Procedure (or derivative) object, using
the "clone()" method from that class. Thus, while the calling
object has the same methods available, and is re-using existing code in
the Perl runtime, the method objects (and hence the statistics and such)
are kept separate. As with the above, an error is flagged if one or more
are not found.
This routine also accepts regular-expression objects with the same behavior
and limitations. Again, copy_procedures and copy_functions
are provided for symmetry.
Specifying Server-Side Remote Procedures¶
Specifying the methods themselves can be a tricky undertaking. Some packages (in
other languages) delegate a specific class to handling incoming requests. This
works well, but it can lead to routines not intended for public availability
to in fact be available. There are also issues around the access that the
methods would then have to other resources within the same running system.
The approach taken by
RPC::XML::Server (and the
Apache::RPC::Server subclass of it) require that remote procedures be
explicitly published in one of the several ways provided. Procedures may be
added directly within code by using
add_procedure/
add_method/
add_function as described above,
with full data provided for the code reference, signature list, etc. The
add_* technique can also be used with a file that conforms to a
specific XML-based format (detailed in the manual page for the
RPC::XML::Procedure class, see RPC::XML::Procedure). Entire directories
of files may be added using
add_methods_in_dir, which merely reads the
given directory for files that appear to be method definitions.
The Three Types of Procedures¶
There are three types of procedures that
RPC::XML::Server marshalls calls
to. All are provided by the
RPC::XML::Procedure module. You should not
need to load or reference this module directly, as loading
RPC::XML::Server (or a derivative) makes it available. The three types
are:
- 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.
How Procedures Are Called¶
When a routine is called via the server dispatcher, it is called with the
arguments that the client request passed. Depending on whether the routine is
considered a "function", a "procedure" or a
"method", there may be an extra argument at the head of the list.
The extra argument is present when the routine being dispatched is part of a
RPC::XML::Method object. The extra argument is a reference to a
RPC::XML::Server object (or a subclass thereof). This is derived from a
hash reference, and will include these special keys:
- method_name
- This is the name by which the method was called in the
client. Most of the time, this will probably be consistent for all calls
to the server-side method. But it does not have to be, hence the passing
of the value.
- signature
- This is the signature that was used, when dispatching. Perl
has a liberal view of lists and scalars, so it is not always clear what
arguments the client specifically has in mind when calling the method. The
signature is an array reference containing one or more datatypes, each a
simple string. The first of the datatypes specifies the expected return
type. The remainder (if any) refer to the arguments themselves.
- peeraddr
- This is the address part of a packed SOCKADDR_IN
structure, as returned by "pack_sockaddr_in" in Socket, which
contains the address of the client that has connected and made the current
request. This is provided "raw" in case you need it. While you
could re-create it from "peerhost", it is readily available in
both this server environment and the Apache::RPC::Server
environment and thus included for convenience.
- peerhost
- This is the address of the remote (client) end of the
socket, in "x.x.x.x" (dotted-quad) format. If you wish to look
up the clients host-name, you can use this to do so or utilize the encoded
structure above directly.
- peerport
- This is the port of the remote (client) end of the socket,
taken from the SOCKADDR_IN structure.
- request
- The HTTP::Request object for this request. Can be used to
read HTTP headers sent by the client ("X-Forwarded-For" for your
access checks, for example).
Those keys should only be referenced within method code itself, as they are not
set on the server object outside of that context.
Note that by passing the server object reference first, method-classed routines
are essentially expected to behave as actual methods of the server class, as
opposed to ordinary functions. Of course, they can also discard the initial
argument completely.
The routines should not make (excessive) use of global variables, for obvious
reasons. When the routines are loaded from XPL files, the code is created as a
closure that forces execution in the
RPC::XML::Procedure package
(unless the XPL specifies a namespace, see RPC::XML::Procedure). If the code
element of a procedure/method is passed in as a direct code reference by one
of the other syntaxes allowed by the constructor, the package may well be
different. Thus, routines should strive to be as localized as possible,
independent of specific namespaces. If a group of routines are expected to
work in close concert, each should explicitly set the namespace with a
"package" declaration as the first statement within the routines
themselves.
The Default Methods Provided¶
The following methods are provided with this package, and are the ones installed
on newly-created server objects unless told not to. These are identified by
their published names, as they are compiled internally as anonymous
subroutines and thus cannot be called directly:
- system.identity
- Returns a string value identifying the server name,
version, and possibly a capability level. Takes no arguments.
- system.introspection
- Returns a series of struct objects that give
overview documentation of one or more of the published methods. It may be
called with a string identifying a single routine, in which case
the return value is a struct. It may be called with an array
of string values, in which case an array of struct
values, one per element in, is returned. Lastly, it may be called with no
input parameters, in which case all published routines are documented.
Note that routines may be configured to be hidden from such introspection
queries.
- system.listMethods
- Returns a list of the published methods or a subset of them
as an array of string values. If called with no parameters,
returns all (non-hidden) method names. If called with a single
string pattern, returns only those names that contain the string as
a substring of their name (case-sensitive, and this is not a
regular expression evaluation).
- system.methodHelp
- Takes either a single method name as a string, or a
series of them as an array of string. The return value is
the help text for the method, as either a string or array of
string value. If the method(s) have no help text, the string will
be null.
- system.methodSignature
- As above, but returns the signatures that the method
accepts, as array of string representations. If only one
method is requests via a string parameter, then the return value is
the corresponding array. If the parameter in is an array, then the
returned value will be an array of array of
string.
- system.multicall
- This is a simple implementation of composite function calls
in a single request. It takes an array of struct values.
Each struct has at least a "methodName" member, which
provides the name of the method to call. If there is also a
"params" member, it refers to an array of the parameters
that should be passed to the call.
- system.status
- Takes no arguments and returns a struct containing a
number of system status values including (but not limited to) the current
time on the server, the time the server was started (both of these are
returned in both ISO 8601 and UNIX-style integer formats), number of
requests dispatched, and some identifying information (hostname, port,
etc.).
In addition, each of these has an accompanying help file in the
"methods" sub-directory of the distribution.
These methods are installed as "*.xpl" files, which are generated from
files in the "methods" directory of the distribution using the
make_method tool (see make_method). The files there provide the Perl
code that implements these, their help files and other information.
Content Compression¶
The
RPC::XML::Server class now supports compressed messages, both
incoming and outgoing. If a client indicates that it can understand compressed
content, the server will use the
Compress::Zlib (available from CPAN)
module, if available, to compress any outgoing messages above a certain
threshhold in size (the default threshhold is set to 4096 bytes). The
following methods are all related to the compression support within the server
class:
- compress
- Returns a false value if compression is not available to
the server object. This is based on the availability of the
Compress::Zlib module at start-up time, and cannot be changed.
- compress_thresh([MIN_LIMIT])
- Return or set the compression threshhold value. Messages
smaller than this size in bytes will not be compressed, even when
compression is available, to save on CPU resources. If a value is passed,
it becomes the new limit and the old value is returned.
Spooling Large Messages¶
If the server anticipates handling large out-bound messages (for example, if the
hosted code returns large Base64 values pre-encoded from file handles), the
"message_file_thresh" and "message_temp_dir" settings may
be used in a manner similar to
RPC::XML::Client. Specifically, the
threshhold is used to determine when a message should be spooled to a
filehandle rather than made into an in-memory string (the
RPC::XML::base64 type can use a filehandle, thus eliminating the need
for the data to ever be completely in memory). An anonymous temporary file is
used for these operations.
Note that the message size is checked before compression is applied, since the
size of the compressed output cannot be known until the full message is
examined. It is possible that a message will be spooled even if its compressed
size is below the threshhold, if the uncompressed size exceeds the threshhold.
- message_file_thresh
- message_temp_dir
- These methods may be used to retrieve or alter the values
of the given keys as defined earlier for the "new" method.
Server Faults¶
Previous versions of this library had a very loosely-organized set of fault
codes that a server might return in certain (non-fatal) error circumstances.
This has been replaced by a more configurable, adjustable system to allow
users to better integrate the server-defined faults with any that their
application may produce. It also allows for the definition of additional fault
types so that the same mechanism for formatting the pre-defined faults can be
used within sub-classes and user applications.
The server method
server_fault is used to generate
RPC::XML::fault
objects for these situations. It takes one or two arguments, the first being
the name of the type of fault to create and the second being the specific
message. If a fault is defined with a static message, the second argument may
be skipped (and will be ignored if passed).
In addition to defining their own faults, a user may override the definition of
any of the server's pre-defined faults.
Defining faults
The user may define their own faults using the "fault_table" argument
to the constructor of the server class being instantiated. They may also
override any of the pre-defined faults (detailed in the next section) by
providing a new definition for the name.
The value of the "fault_table" argument is a hash reference whose keys
are the names of the faults and whose values are one of two types:
- An integer
- If the value for the key is a scalar, it is assumed to be
an integer and will be used as the fault code. When the fault is created,
the message argument (the second parameter) will be used verbatim as the
fault message.
- A 2-element list reference
- If the value is a list reference, it is assumed to have two
elements: the first is the integer fault code to use, and the second is a
message "template" string to use as the fault message. If the
string contains the sequence %s, this will be replaced with the message
argument (the second parameter) passed to server_fault. If that
sequence is not in the string, then the fault message is considered static
and the message argument is ignored.
An example of defining faults:
my $server = RPC::XML::Server->new(
...
fault_table => {
limitexceeded => [ 500 => 'Call limit exceeded' ],
accessdenied => [ 600 => 'Access denied: %s' ],
serviceclosed => 700
},
...
);
In this example, the fault-type "limitexceeded" is defined as having a
fault code of 500 and a static message of "Call limit exceeded". The
next fault defined is "accessdenied", which has a code of 600 and
message that starts with "Access denied:" and incorporates whatever
message was passed in to the fault creation. The last example defines a fault
called "serviceclosed" that has a code of 700 and uses any passed-in
message unaltered.
Server-defined faults
The
RPC::XML::Server class defines the following faults and uses them
internally. You can override the codes and messages for these by including
them in the table passed as a "fault_table" argument. The faults
fall into three groups:
- Request Initialization
- Faults in this group stem from the initialization of the
request and the parsing of the XML. The codes for this group fall in the
range 100-199.
- Method Resolution
- This group covers problems with mapping the request to a
known method or function on the server. These codes will be in the range
200-299.
- Execution
- Lastly, these faults are for problems in actually executing
the requested code. Their codes are in the range 300-399.
The faults, and the phases they apply to, are:
- badxml (Request Initialization)
- This fault is sent back to the client when the XML of the
request did not parse as a valid XML-RPC request.
The code is 100, and the message is of the form, "XML parse error:
%s". The specific error from the XML parser is included in the
message.
- badmethod (Method Resolution)
- This fault is sent when the requested method is unknown to
the server. No method has been configured on the server by that name.
The code is 200, and the message is of the form, "Method lookup error:
%s". The name of the method and other information is included in the
message.
- badsignature (Method Resolution)
- If a method is known on the server, but there is no
signature that matches the sequence of arguments passed, this fault is
returned. This fault cannot be triggered by server-side code configured
via RPC::XML::Function, as no signature-checking is done for those.
The code is 201, and the message is of the form, "Method signature
error: %s". The name of the method and the signature of the arguments
is included in the message.
- execerror (Execution)
- This fault relates back to the client any exception thrown
by the remote code during execution. If the invoked code returned their
error in the form of a RPC::XML::fault object, that fault is
returned instead. Otherwise, the value of $@ is used in the message of the
fault that gets generated.
The code is 300, and the message is of the form, "Code execution error:
%s". The actual text of the exception thrown is included in the
message.
There is one special server-fault whose code and message cannot be overridden.
If a call is made to
server_fault for an unknown type of fault, the
returned object will have a code of "-1" and a message stating that
the fault-type is unknown. The message will include both the requested
type-name and any message (if any) that was passed in.
Adjusting the server-defined codes
If you just want to "move" the range of codes that the server uses out
of the way of your application's own faults, this can be done with the
"fault_code_base" parameter when constructing the server object. The
value of the parameter must be an integer, and it is added to the value of all
existing fault codes. For example, a value of 10000 would make the code for
the "badxml" fault be 10100, the code for "badmethod" be
10200, etc.
This is applied before any user-defined faults are merged in, so their code
values will not be affected by this value.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, all methods return some type of reference on
success, or an error string on failure. Non-reference return values should
always be interpreted as errors unless otherwise noted.
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, RPC::XML::Client, RPC::XML::ParserFactory
AUTHOR¶
Randy J. Ray "<rjray@blackperl.com>"