NAME

   Dancer - lightweight yet powerful web application framework

VERSION

   version 1.3512

SYNOPSIS

       #!/usr/bin/perl
       use Dancer;

       get '/hello/:name' => sub {
           return "Why, hello there " . param('name');
       };

       dance;

   The above is a basic but functional web app created with Dancer. If you
   want to see more examples and get up and running quickly, check out the
   Dancer::Introduction and the Dancer::Cookbook. For examples on
   deploying your Dancer applications, see Dancer::Deployment.

DESCRIPTION

   Dancer is a web application framework designed to be as effortless as
   possible for the developer, taking care of the boring bits as easily as
   possible, yet staying out of your way and letting you get on with
   writing your code.

   Dancer aims to provide the simplest way for writing web applications,
   and offers the flexibility to scale between a very simple lightweight
   web service consisting of a few lines of code in a single file, all the
   way up to a more complex fully-fledged web application with session
   support, templates for views and layouts, etc.

   If you don't want to write CGI scripts by hand, and find Catalyst too
   big or cumbersome for your project, Dancer is what you need.

   Dancer has few pre-requisites, so your Dancer webapps will be easy to
   deploy.

   Dancer apps can be used with an embedded web server (great for easy
   testing), and can run under PSGI/Plack for easy deployment in a variety
   of webserver environments.

MORE DOCUMENTATION

   This documentation describes all the exported symbols of Dancer. If you
   want a quick start guide to discover the framework, you should look at
   Dancer::Introduction, or Dancer::Tutorial to learn by example.

   If you want to have specific examples of code for real-life problems,
   see the Dancer::Cookbook.

   If you want to see configuration examples of different deployment
   solutions involving Dancer and Plack, see Dancer::Deployment.

   You can find out more about the many useful plugins available for
   Dancer in Dancer::Plugins.

DANCER 2

   This is the original version of Dancer, which is now in maintenance
   mode. This means that it will not receive significant new features, but
   will continue to receive bugfixes and security fixes. However, no "end
   of life" date has been set, and it is expected that this version of
   Dancer will continue to receive bugfixes and security fixes for quite
   some time yet.

   However, you should consider migrating to Dancer2 instead when you can,
   and are advised to use Dancer2 for newly-started apps.

   Dancer2 is mostly backwards compatible, but has been re-written from
   the ground up to be more maintainable and extensible, and is the future
   of Dancer.

   Dancer2::Manual::Migration covers the changes you should be aware of
   when migrating an existing Dancer 1 powered app to Dancer 2.

EXPORTS

   By default, use Dancer exports all the functions below plus sets up
   your app. You can control the exporting through the normal Exporter
   mechanism. For example:

       # Just export the route controllers
       use Dancer qw(get post put patch del);

       # Export everything but pass to avoid clashing with Test::More
       use Test::More;
       use Dancer qw(!pass);

   Please note that the utf8 and strict pragmas are exported by this
   module.

   By default, the warnings pragma will also be exported, meaning your
   app/script will be running under use warnings. If you do not want this,
   set the global_warnings setting to a false value.

   There are also some special tags to control exports and behaviour.

:moose

   This will export everything except functions which clash with Moose.
   Currently these are after and before.

:syntax

   This tells Dancer to just export symbols and not set up your app. This
   is most useful for writing Dancer code outside of your main route
   handler.

:tests

   This will export everything except functions which clash with commonly
   used testing modules. Currently these are pass.

   It can be combined with other export pragmas. For example, while
   testing...

       use Test::More;
       use Dancer qw(:syntax :tests);

       # Test::Most also exports "set" and "any"
       use Test::Most;
       use Dancer qw(:syntax :tests !set !any);

       # Alternatively, if you want to use Dancer's set and any...
       use Test::Most qw(!set !any);
       use Dancer qw(:syntax :tests);

:script

   This will export all the keywords, load the configuration, and will not
   try to parse command-line arguments via Dancer::GetOpt.

   This is useful when you want to use your Dancer application from a
   script.

       use MyApp;
       use Dancer ':script';
       MyApp::schema('DBSchema')->deploy();

   Note that using :script will disable command-line parsing for all
   subsequent invocations of use Dancer (such that you don't have to use
   :script for each and every module to make sure the command-line
   arguments don't get stolen by Dancer).

!keyword

   If you want to simply prevent Dancer from exporting specific keywords
   (perhaps you plan to implement them yourself in a different way, or you
   don't plan to use them and they clash with another module you're
   loading), you can simply exclude them:

       use Dancer qw(!session);

   The above would import all keywords as normal, with the exception of
   session.

FUNCTIONS

after

   Deprecated - see the after hook.

any

   Defines a route for multiple HTTP methods at once:

       any ['get', 'post'] => '/myaction' => sub {
           # code
       };

   Or even, a route handler that would match any HTTP methods:

       any '/myaction' => sub {
           # code
       };

before

   Deprecated - see the before hook.

before_template

   Deprecated - see the before_template hook.

cookies

   Accesses cookies values, it returns a HashRef of Dancer::Cookie
   objects:

       get '/some_action' => sub {
           my $cookie = cookies->{name};
           return $cookie->value;
       };

   In the case you have stored something other than a Scalar in your
   cookie:

       get '/some_action' => sub {
           my $cookie = cookies->{oauth};
           my %values = $cookie->value;
           return ($values{token}, $values{token_secret});
       };

cookie

   Accesses a cookie value (or sets it). Note that this method will
   eventually be preferred over set_cookie.

       cookie lang => "fr-FR";              # set a cookie and return its value
       cookie lang => "fr-FR", expires => "2 hours";   # extra cookie info
       cookie "lang"                        # return a cookie value

   If your cookie value is a key/value URI string, like

       token=ABC&user=foo

   cookie will only return the first part (token=ABC) if called in scalar
   context. Use list context to fetch them all:

       my @values = cookie "name";

   Note that if the client has sent more than one cookie with the same
   value, the one returned will be the last one seen. This should only
   happen if you have set multiple cookies with the same name but
   different paths. So, don't do that.

config

   Accesses the configuration of the application:

       get '/appname' => sub {
           return "This is " . config->{appname};
       };

content_type

   Sets the content-type rendered, for the current route handler:

       get '/cat/:txtfile' => sub {
           content_type 'text/plain';

           # here we can dump the contents of param('txtfile')
       };

   You can use abbreviations for content types. For instance:

       get '/svg/:id' => sub {
           content_type 'svg';

           # here we can dump the image with id param('id')
       };

   Note that if you want to change the default content-type for every
   route, you have to change the content_type setting instead.

dance

   Alias for the start keyword.

dancer_version

   Returns the version of Dancer. If you need the major version, do
   something like:

     int(dancer_version);

debug

   Logs a message of debug level:

       debug "This is a debug message";

   See Dancer::Logger for details on how to configure where log messages
   go.

dirname

   Returns the dirname of the path given:

       my $dir = dirname($some_path);

engine

   Given a namespace, returns the current engine object

       my $template_engine = engine 'template';
       my $html = $template_engine->apply_renderer(...);
       $template_engine->apply_layout($html);

error

   Logs a message of error level:

       error "This is an error message";

   See Dancer::Logger for details on how to configure where log messages
   go.

false

   Constant that returns a false value (0).

forward

   Runs an internal redirect of the current request to another request.
   This helps you avoid having to redirect the user using HTTP and set
   another request to your application.

   It effectively lets you chain routes together in a clean manner.

       get '/demo/articles/:article_id' => sub {

           # you'll have to implement this next sub yourself :)
           change_the_main_database_to_demo();

           forward "/articles/" . params->{article_id};
       };

   In the above example, the users that reach /demo/articles/30 will
   actually reach /articles/30 but we've changed the database to demo
   before.

   This is pretty cool because it lets us retain our paths and offer a
   demo database by merely going to /demo/....

   You'll notice that in the example we didn't indicate whether it was GET
   or POST. That is because forward chains the same type of route the user
   reached. If it was a GET, it will remain a GET (but if you do need to
   change the method, you can do so; read on below for details.)

   WARNING : using forward will not preserve session data set on the
   forwarding rule.

   WARNING : Issuing a forward immediately exits the current route, and
   perform the forward. Thus, any code after a forward is ignored, until
   the end of the route. e.g.

       get '/foo/:article_id' => sub {
           if ($condition) {
               forward "/articles/" . params->{article_id};
               # The following code is never executed
               do_stuff();
           }

           more_stuff();
       };

   So it's not necessary anymore to use return with forward.

   Note that forward doesn't parse GET arguments. So, you can't use
   something like:

        return forward '/home?authorized=1';

   But forward supports an optional HashRef with parameters to be added to
   the actual parameters:

        return forward '/home', { authorized => 1 };

   Finally, you can add some more options to the forward method, in a
   third argument, also as a HashRef. That option is currently only used
   to change the method of your request. Use with caution.

       return forward '/home', { auth => 1 }, { method => 'POST' };

from_dumper ($structure)

   Deserializes a Data::Dumper structure.

from_json ($structure, \%options)

   Deserializes a JSON structure. Can receive optional arguments. Those
   arguments are valid JSON arguments to change the behaviour of the
   default JSON::from_json function.

   Compatibility notice: from_json changed in 1.3002 to take a hashref as
   options, instead of a hash.

from_yaml ($structure)

   Deserializes a YAML structure.

from_xml ($structure, %options)

   Deserializes a XML structure. Can receive optional arguments. These
   arguments are valid XML::Simple arguments to change the behaviour of
   the default XML::Simple::XMLin function.

get

   Defines a route for HTTP GET requests to the given path:

       get '/' => sub {
           return "Hello world";
       }

   Note that a route to match HEAD requests is automatically created as
   well.

halt

   Sets a response object with the content given.

   When used as a return value from a filter, this breaks the execution
   flow and renders the response immediately:

       hook before sub {
           if ($some_condition) {
               halt("Unauthorized");
               # This code is not executed :
               do_stuff();
           }
       };

       get '/' => sub {
           "hello there";
       };

   WARNING : Issuing a halt immediately exits the current route, and
   perform the halt. Thus, any code after a halt is ignored, until the end
   of the route. So it's not necessary anymore to use return with halt.

headers

   Adds custom headers to responses:

       get '/send/headers', sub {
           headers 'X-Foo' => 'bar', X-Bar => 'foo';
       }

header

   adds a custom header to response:

       get '/send/header', sub {
           header 'x-my-header' => 'shazam!';
       }

   Note that it will overwrite the old value of the header, if any. To
   avoid that, see "push_header".

push_header

   Do the same as header, but allow for multiple headers with the same
   name.

       get '/send/header', sub {
           push_header 'x-my-header' => '1';
           push_header 'x-my-header' => '2';
           will result in two headers "x-my-header" in the response
       }

hook

   Adds a hook at some position. For example :

     hook before_serializer => sub {
       my $response = shift;
       $response->content->{generated_at} = localtime();
     };

   There can be multiple hooks assigned to a given position, and each will
   be executed in order. Note that all hooks are always called, even if
   they are defined in a different package loaded via load_app.

   (For details on how to register new hooks from within plugins, see
   Dancer::Hook.) Supported before hooks (in order of execution):

   before_deserializer

     This hook receives no arguments.

       hook before_deserializer => sub {
         ...
       };

   before_file_render

     This hook receives as argument the path of the file to render.

       hook before_file_render => sub {
         my $path = shift;
         ...
       };

   before_error_init

     This hook receives as argument a Dancer::Error object.

       hook before_error_init => sub {
         my $error = shift;
         ...
       };

   before_error_render

     This hook receives as argument a Dancer::Error object.

       hook before_error_render => sub {
         my $error = shift;
       };

   before

     This hook receives one argument, the route being executed (a
     Dancer::Route object).

       hook before => sub {
         my $route_handler = shift;
         ...
       };

     it is equivalent to the deprecated

       before sub {
         ...
       };

   before_template_render

     This is an alias to 'before_template'.

     This hook receives as argument a HashRef containing the tokens that
     will be passed to the template. You can use it to add more tokens, or
     delete some specific token.

       hook before_template_render => sub {
         my $tokens = shift;
         delete $tokens->{user};
         $tokens->{time} = localtime;
       };

     is equivalent to

       hook before_template => sub {
         my $tokens = shift;
         delete $tokens->{user};
         $tokens->{time} = localtime;
       };

   before_layout_render

     This hook receives two arguments. The first one is a HashRef
     containing the tokens. The second is a ScalarRef representing the
     content of the template.

       hook before_layout_render => sub {
         my ($tokens, $html_ref) = @_;
         ...
       };

   before_serializer

     This hook receives as argument a Dancer::Response object.

       hook before_serializer => sub {
         my $response = shift;
         $response->content->{start_time} = time();
       };

   Supported after hooks (in order of execution):

   after_deserializer

     This hook receives no arguments.

       hook after_deserializer => sub {
         ...
       };

   after_file_render

     This hook receives as argument a Dancer::Response object.

       hook after_file_render => sub {
         my $response = shift;
       };

   after_template_render

     This hook receives as argument a ScalarRef representing the content
     generated by the template.

       hook after_template_render => sub {
         my $html_ref = shift;
       };

   after_layout_render

     This hook receives as argument a ScalarRef representing the content
     generated by the layout

       hook after_layout_render => sub {
         my $html_ref = shift;
       };

   after

     This is an alias for after.

     This hook runs after a request has been processed, but before the
     response is sent.

     It receives a Dancer::Response object, which it can modify if it
     needs to make changes to the response which is about to be sent.

       hook after => sub {
         my $response = shift;
       };

     This is equivalent to the deprecated

       after sub {
         my $response = shift;
       };

   after_error_render

     This hook receives as argument a Dancer::Response object.

       hook after_error_render => sub {
         my $response = shift;
       };

   on_handler_exception

     This hook is called when an exception has been caught, at the handler
     level, just before creating and rendering Dancer::Error. This hook
     receives as argument a Dancer::Exception object.

       hook on_handler_exception => sub {
         my $exception = shift;
       };

   on_reset_state

     This hook is called when global state is reset to process a new
     request. It receives a boolean value that indicates whether the reset
     was called as part of a forwarded request.

       hook on_reset_state => sub {
         my $is_forward = shift;
       };

   on_route_exception

     This hook is called when an exception has been caught, at the route
     level, just before rethrowing it higher. This hook receives the
     exception as argument. It can be a Dancer::Exception, or a string, or
     whatever was used to die.

       hook on_route_exception => sub {
         my $exception = shift;
       };

info

   Logs a message of info level:

       info "This is a info message";

   See Dancer::Logger for details on how to configure where log messages
   go.

layout

   This method is deprecated. Use set:

       set layout => 'user';

logger

   Deprecated. Use <set logger => 'console'> to change current logger
   engine.

load

   Loads one or more perl scripts in the current application's namespace.
   Syntactic sugar around Perl's require:

       load 'UserActions.pl', 'AdminActions.pl';

load_app

   Loads a Dancer package. This method sets the libdir to the current
   ./lib directory:

       # if we have lib/Webapp.pm, we can load it like:
       load_app 'Webapp';
       # or with options
       load_app 'Forum', prefix => '/forum', settings => {foo => 'bar'};

   Note that the package loaded using load_app must import Dancer with the
   :syntax option.

   To load multiple apps repeat load_app:

       load_app 'one';
       load_app 'two';

   The old way of loading multiple apps in one go (load_app 'one', 'two';)
   is deprecated.

mime

   Shortcut to access the instance object of Dancer::MIME. You should read
   the Dancer::MIME documentation for full details, but the most
   commonly-used methods are summarized below:

       # set a new mime type
       mime->add_type( foo => 'text/foo' );

       # set a mime type alias
       mime->add_alias( f => 'foo' );

       # get mime type for an alias
       my $m = mime->for_name( 'f' );

       # get mime type for a file (based on extension)
       my $m = mime->for_file( "foo.bar" );

       # get current defined default mime type
       my $d = mime->default;

       # set the default mime type using config.yml
       # or using the set keyword
       set default_mime_type => 'text/plain';

params

   This method should be called from a route handler. It's an alias for
   the Dancer::Request params accessor. In list context it returns a list
   of key/value pair of all defined parameters. In scalar context it
   returns a hash reference instead. Check param below to access quickly
   to a single parameter value.

param

   This method should be called from a route handler. This method is an
   accessor to the parameters hash table.

      post '/login' => sub {
          my $username = param "user";
          my $password = param "pass";
          # ...
      }

param_array

   This method should be called from a route handler. Like param, but
   always returns the parameter value or values as a list. Returns the
   number of values in scalar context.

       # if request is '/tickets?tag=open&tag=closed&order=desc'...
       get '/tickets' => sub {
           my @tags = param_array 'tag';  # ( 'open', 'closed' )
           my $tags = param 'tag';        # array ref

           my @order = param_array 'order';  # ( 'desc' )
           my $order = param 'order';        # 'desc'
       };

pass

   This method should be called from a route handler. Tells Dancer to pass
   the processing of the request to the next matching route.

   WARNING : Issuing a pass immediately exits the current route, and
   performs the pass. Thus, any code after a pass is ignored until the end
   of the route. So it's not necessary any more to use return with pass.

       get '/some/route' => sub {
           if (...) {
               # we want to let the next matching route handler process this one
               pass(...);
               # This code will be ignored
               do_stuff();
           }
       };

patch

   Defines a route for HTTP PATCH requests to the given URL:

       patch '/resource' => sub { ... };

   (PATCH is a relatively new and not-yet-common HTTP verb, which is
   intended to work as a "partial-PUT", transferring just the changes;
   please see http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5789|RFC5789 for further
   details.)

   Please be aware that, if you run your app in standalone mode, PATCH
   requests will not reach your app unless you have a new version of
   HTTP::Server::Simple which accepts PATCH as a valid verb. The current
   version at time of writing, 0.44, does not. A pull request has been
   submitted to add this support, which you can find at:

   https://github.com/bestpractical/http-server-simple/pull/1

path

   Concatenates multiple paths together, without worrying about the
   underlying operating system:

       my $path = path(dirname($0), 'lib', 'File.pm');

   It also normalizes (cleans) the path aesthetically. It does not verify
   the path exists.

post

   Defines a route for HTTP POST requests to the given URL:

       post '/' => sub {
           return "Hello world";
       }

prefix

   Defines a prefix for each route handler, like this:

       prefix '/home';

   From here, any route handler is defined to /home/*:

       get '/page1' => sub {}; # will match '/home/page1'

   You can unset the prefix value:

       prefix undef;
       get '/page1' => sub {}; will match /page1

   For a safer alternative you can use lexical prefix like this:

       prefix '/home' => sub {
           ## Prefix is set to '/home' here

           get ...;
           get ...;
       };
       ## prefix reset to the previous version here

   This makes it possible to nest prefixes:

      prefix '/home' => sub {
          ## some routes

         prefix '/private' => sub {
            ## here we are under /home/private...

            ## some more routes
         };
         ## back to /home
      };
      ## back to the root

   Notice: once you have a prefix set, do not add a caret to the regex:

       prefix '/foo';
       get qr{^/bar} => sub { ... } # BAD BAD BAD
       get qr{/bar}  => sub { ... } # Good!

del

   Defines a route for HTTP DELETE requests to the given URL:

       del '/resource' => sub { ... };

options

   Defines a route for HTTP OPTIONS requests to the given URL:

       options '/resource' => sub { ... };

put

   Defines a route for HTTP PUT requests to the given URL:

       put '/resource' => sub { ... };

redirect

   Generates an HTTP redirect (302). You can either redirect to a
   completely different site or within the application:

       get '/twitter', sub {
           redirect 'http://twitter.com/me';
       };

   You can also force Dancer to return a specific 300-ish HTTP response
   code:

       get '/old/:resource', sub {
           redirect '/new/'.params->{resource}, 301;
       };

   It is important to note that issuing a redirect by itself does not exit
   and redirect immediately. Redirection is deferred until after the
   current route or filter has been processed. To exit and redirect
   immediately, use the return function, e.g.

       get '/restricted', sub {
           return redirect '/login' if accessDenied();
           return 'Welcome to the restricted section';
       };

render_with_layout

   Allows a handler to provide plain HTML (or other content), but have it
   rendered within the layout still.

   This method is DEPRECATED, and will be removed soon. Instead, you
   should be using the engine keyword:

       get '/foo' => sub {
           # Do something which generates HTML directly (maybe using
           # HTML::Table::FromDatabase or something)
           my $content = ...;

           # get the template engine
           my $template_engine = engine 'template';

           # apply the layout (not the renderer), and return the result
           $template_engine->apply_layout($content)
       };

   It works very similarly to template in that you can pass tokens to be
   used in the layout, and/or options to control the way the layout is
   rendered. For instance, to use a custom layout:

       render_with_layout $content, {}, { layout => 'layoutname' };

request

   Returns a Dancer::Request object representing the current request.

   See the Dancer::Request documentation for the methods you can call, for
   example:

       request->referer;         # value of the HTTP referer header
       request->remote_address;  # user's IP address
       request->user_agent;      # User-Agent header value

send_error

   Returns an HTTP error. By default the HTTP code returned is 500:

       get '/photo/:id' => sub {
           if (...) {
               send_error("Not allowed", 403);
           } else {
              # return content
           }
       }

   WARNING : Issuing a send_error immediately exits the current route, and
   perform the send_error. Thus, any code after a send_error is ignored,
   until the end of the route. So it's not necessary anymore to use return
   with send_error.

       get '/some/route' => sub {
           if (...) {
               # we want to let the next matching route handler process this one
               send_error(..);
               # This code will be ignored
               do_stuff();
           }
       };

send_file

   Lets the current route handler send a file to the client. Note that the
   path of the file must be relative to the public directory unless you
   use the system_path option (see below).

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file(params->{file});
       }

   WARNING : Issuing a send_file immediately exits the current route, and
   performs the send_file. Thus, any code after a send_file is ignored
   until the end of the route. So it's not necessary any more to use
   return with send_file.

       get '/some/route' => sub {
           if (...) {
               # we want to let the next matching route handler process this one
               send_file(...);
               # This code will be ignored
               do_stuff();
           }
       };

   Send file supports streaming possibility using PSGI streaming. The
   server should support it but normal streaming is supported on most, if
   not all.

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file( params->{file}, streaming => 1 );
       }

   You can control what happens using callbacks.

   First, around_content allows you to get the writer object and the chunk
   of content read, and then decide what to do with each chunk:

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file(
               params->{file},
               streaming => 1,
               callbacks => {
                   around_content => sub {
                       my ( $writer, $chunk ) = @_;
                       $writer->write("* $chunk");
                   },
               },
           );
       }

   You can use around to all get all the content (whether a filehandle if
   it's a regular file or a full string if it's a scalar ref) and decide
   what to do with it:

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file(
               params->{file},
               streaming => 1,
               callbacks => {
                   around => sub {
                       my ( $writer, $content ) = @_;

                       # we know it's a text file, so we'll just stream
                       # line by line
                       while ( my $line = <$content> ) {
                           $writer->write($line);
                       }
                   },
               },
           );
       }

   Or you could use override to control the entire streaming callback
   request:

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file(
               params->{file},
               streaming => 1,
               callbacks => {
                   override => sub {
                       my ( $respond, $response ) = @_;

                       my $writer = $respond->( [ $newstatus, $newheaders ] );
                       $writer->write("some line");
                   },
               },
           );
       }

   You can also set the number of bytes that will be read at a time
   (default being 42K bytes) using bytes:

       get '/download/:file' => sub {
           send_file(
               params->{file},
               streaming => 1,
               bytes     => 524288, # 512K
           );
       };

   The content-type will be set depending on the current MIME types
   definition (see mime if you want to define your own).

   If your filename does not have an extension, or you need to force a
   specific mime type, you can pass it to send_file as follows:

       send_file(params->{file}, content_type => 'image/png');

   Also, you can use your aliases or file extension names on content_type,
   like this:

       send_file(params->{file}, content_type => 'png');

   For files outside your public folder, you can use the system_path
   switch. Just bear in mind that its use needs caution as it can be
   dangerous.

      send_file('/etc/passwd', system_path => 1);

   If you have your data in a scalar variable, send_file can be useful as
   well. Pass a reference to that scalar, and send_file will behave as if
   there were a file with that contents:

      send_file( \$data, content_type => 'image/png' );

   Note that Dancer is unable to guess the content type from the data
   contents. Therefore you might need to set the content_type properly.
   For this kind of usage an attribute named filename can be useful. It is
   used as the Content-Disposition header, to hint the browser about the
   filename it should use.

      send_file( \$data, content_type => 'image/png'
                                filename     => 'onion.png' );

set

   Defines a setting:

       set something => 'value';

   You can set more than one value at once:

       set something => 'value', otherthing => 'othervalue';

setting

   Returns the value of a given setting:

       setting('something'); # 'value'

set_cookie

   Creates or updates cookie values:

       get '/some_action' => sub {
           set_cookie name => 'value',
                      expires => (time + 3600),
                      domain  => '.foo.com';
       };

   In the example above, only 'name' and 'value' are mandatory.

   You can also store more complex structure in your cookies:

       get '/some_auth' => sub {
           set_cookie oauth => {
               token        => $twitter->request_token,
               token_secret => $twitter->secret_token,
               ...
           };
       };

   You can't store more complex structure than this. All keys in the
   HashRef should be Scalars; storing references will not work.

   See Dancer::Cookie for further options when creating your cookie.

   Note that this method will be eventually deprecated in favor of the new
   cookie method.

session

   Provides access to all data stored in the user's session (if any).

   It can also be used as a setter to store data in the session:

       # getter example
       get '/user' => sub {
           if (session('user')) {
               return "Hello, ".session('user')->name;
           }
       };

       # setter example
       post '/user/login' => sub {
           ...
           if ($logged_in) {
               session user => $user;
           }
           ...
       };

   You may also need to clear a session:

       # destroy session
       get '/logout' => sub {
           ...
           session->destroy;
           ...
       };

   If you need to fetch the session ID being used for any reason:

       my $id = session->id;

   In order to be able to use sessions, first you need to enable session
   support in one of the configuration files. A quick way to do it is to
   add

       session: "YAML"

   to config.yml.

   For more details, see Dancer::Session.

splat

   Returns the list of captures made from a route handler with a route
   pattern which includes wildcards:

       get '/file/*.*' => sub {
           my ($file, $extension) = splat;
           ...
       };

   There is also the extensive splat (A.K.A. "megasplat"), which allows
   extensive greedier matching, available using two asterisks. The
   additional path is broken down and returned as an ArrayRef:

       get '/entry/*/tags/**' => sub {
           my ( $entry_id, $tags ) = splat;
           my @tags = @{$tags};
       };

   This helps with chained actions:

       get '/team/*/**' => sub {
           my ($team) = splat;
           var team => $team;
           pass;
       };

       prefix '/team/*';

       get '/player/*' => sub {
           my ($player) = splat;

           # etc...
       };

       get '/score' => sub {
           return score_for( vars->{'team'} );
       };

start

   Starts the application or the standalone server (depending on the
   deployment choices).

   This keyword should be called at the very end of the script, once all
   routes are defined. At this point, Dancer takes over control.

status

   Changes the status code provided by an action. By default, an action
   will produce an HTTP 200 OK status code, meaning everything is OK:

       get '/download/:file' => {
           if (! -f params->{file}) {
               status 'not_found';
               return "File does not exist, unable to download";
           }
           # serving the file...
       };

   In that example Dancer will notice that the status has changed, and
   will render the response accordingly.

   The status keyword receives either a numeric status code or its name in
   lower case, with underscores as a separator for blanks. See the list in
   "HTTP CODES" in Dancer::HTTP.

template

   Returns the response of processing the given template with the given
   parameters (and optional settings), wrapping it in the default or
   specified layout too, if layouts are in use.

   An example of a route handler which returns the result of using
   template to build a response with the current template engine:

       get '/' => sub {
           ...
           return template 'some_view', { token => 'value'};
       };

   Note that template simply returns the content, so when you use it in a
   route handler, if execution of the route handler should stop at that
   point, make sure you use 'return' to ensure your route handler returns
   the content.

   Since template just returns the result of rendering the template, you
   can also use it to perform other templating tasks, e.g. generating
   emails:

       post '/some/route' => sub {
           if (...) {
               email {
                   to      => '[email protected]',
                   from    => '[email protected]',
                   subject => 'Hello there',
                   msg     => template('emails/foo', { name => params->{name} }),
               };

               return template 'message_sent';
           } else {
               return template 'error';
           }
       };

   Compatibility notice: template was changed in version 1.3090 to
   immediately interrupt execution of a route handler and return the
   content, as it's typically used at the end of a route handler to return
   content. However, this caused issues for some people who were using
   template to generate emails etc, rather than accessing the template
   engine directly, so this change has been reverted in 1.3091.

   The first parameter should be a template available in the views
   directory, the second one (optional) is a HashRef of tokens to
   interpolate, and the third (again optional) is a HashRef of options.

   For example, to disable the layout for a specific request:

       get '/' => sub {
           template 'index', {}, { layout => undef };
       };

   Or to request a specific layout, of course:

       get '/user' => sub {
           template 'user', {}, { layout => 'user' };
       };

   Some tokens are automatically added to your template (perl_version,
   dancer_version, settings, request, params, vars and, if you have
   sessions enabled, session). Check Dancer::Template::Abstract for
   further details.

to_dumper ($structure)

   Serializes a structure with Data::Dumper.

to_json ($structure, \%options)

   Serializes a structure to JSON. Can receive optional arguments. Thoses
   arguments are valid JSON arguments to change the behaviour of the
   default JSON::to_json function.

   Compatibility notice: to_json changed in 1.3002 to take a hashref as
   options, instead of a hash.

to_yaml ($structure)

   Serializes a structure to YAML.

to_xml ($structure, %options)

   Serializes a structure to XML. Can receive optional arguments. Thoses
   arguments are valid XML::Simple arguments to change the behaviour of
   the default XML::Simple::XMLout function.

true

   Constant that returns a true value (1).

upload

   Provides access to file uploads. Any uploaded file is accessible as a
   Dancer::Request::Upload object. You can access all parsed uploads via:

       post '/some/route' => sub {
           my $file = upload('file_input_foo');
           # file is a Dancer::Request::Upload object
       };

   If you named multiple inputs of type "file" with the same name, the
   upload keyword will return an Array of Dancer::Request::Upload objects:

       post '/some/route' => sub {
           my ($file1, $file2) = upload('files_input');
           # $file1 and $file2 are Dancer::Request::Upload objects
       };

   You can also access the raw HashRef of parsed uploads via the current
   request object:

       post '/some/route' => sub {
           my $all_uploads = request->uploads;
           # $all_uploads->{'file_input_foo'} is a Dancer::Request::Upload object
           # $all_uploads->{'files_input'} is an ArrayRef of Dancer::Request::Upload objects
       };

   Note that you can also access the filename of the upload received via
   the params keyword:

       post '/some/route' => sub {
           # params->{'files_input'} is the filename of the file uploaded
       };

   See Dancer::Request::Upload for details about the interface provided.

uri_for

   Returns a fully-qualified URI for the given path:

       get '/' => sub {
           redirect uri_for('/path');
           # can be something like: http://localhost:3000/path
       };

   Querystring parameters can be provided by passing a hashref as a second
   param, and URL-encoding can be disabled via a third parameter:

       uri_for('/path', { foo => 'bar' }, 1);
       # would return e.g. http://localhost:3000/path?foo=bar

captures

   Returns a reference to a copy of %+, if there are named captures in the
   route Regexp.

   Named captures are a feature of Perl 5.10, and are not supported in
   earlier versions:

       get qr{
           / (?<object> user   | ticket | comment )
           / (?<action> delete | find )
           / (?<id> \d+ )
           /?$
       }x
       , sub {
           my $value_for = captures;
           "i don't want to $$value_for{action} the $$value_for{object} $$value_for{id} !"
       };

var

   Provides an accessor for variables shared between filters and route
   handlers. Given a key/value pair, it sets a variable:

       hook before sub {
           var foo => 42;
       };

   Later, route handlers and other filters will be able to read that
   variable:

       get '/path' => sub {
           my $foo = var 'foo';
           ...
       };

vars

   Returns the HashRef of all shared variables set during the filter/route
   chain with the var keyword:

       get '/path' => sub {
           if (vars->{foo} eq 42) {
               ...
           }
       };

warning

   Logs a warning message through the current logger engine:

       warning "This is a warning";

   See Dancer::Logger for details on how to configure where log messages
   go.

AUTHOR

   This module has been written by Alexis Sukrieh <[email protected]> and
   others, see the AUTHORS file that comes with this distribution for
   details.

SOURCE CODE

   The source code for this module is hosted on GitHub
   https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer. Feel free to fork the repository
   and submit pull requests! (See Dancer::Development for details on how
   to contribute).

   Also, why not watch the repo
   <https://github.com/PerlDancer/Dancer/toggle_watch> to keep up to date
   with the latest upcoming changes?

GETTING HELP / CONTRIBUTING

   The Dancer development team can be found on #dancer on irc.perl.org:
   irc://irc.perl.org/dancer

   If you don't have an IRC client installed/configured, there is a simple
   web chat client at http://www.perldancer.org/irc for you.

   There is also a Dancer users mailing list available. Subscribe at:

   http://lists.preshweb.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/dancer-users

   If you'd like to contribute to the Dancer project, please see
   http://www.perldancer.org/contribute for all the ways you can help!

DEPENDENCIES

   The following modules are mandatory (Dancer cannot run without them):

   HTTP::Server::Simple::PSGI

   HTTP::Tiny

   MIME::Types

   URI

   The following modules are optional:

   JSON : needed to use JSON serializer

   Plack : in order to use PSGI

   Template : in order to use TT for rendering views

   XML::Simple and XML:SAX or XML:Parser for XML serialization

   YAML : needed for configuration file support

SEE ALSO

   Main Dancer web site: http://perldancer.org/.

   The concept behind this module comes from the Sinatra ruby project, see
   http://www.sinatrarb.com/ for details.

AUTHOR

   Dancer Core Developers

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

   This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Alexis Sukrieh.

   This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
   the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.