NAME
   Apache::HeavyCGI - Framework to run complex CGI tasks on an
   Apache server

SYNOPSIS
    use Apache::HeavyCGI; # see eg/ directory of the distribution
                          # for a complete example/template

WARNING UNSUPPORTED ALPHA CODE RELEASED FOR DEMO ONLY
   The release of this software is only for evaluation purposes to
   people who are actively writing code that deals with Web
   Application Frameworks. This package is probably just another
   Web Application Framework and may be worth using or may not be
   worth using. As of this writing (July 1999) it is by no means
   clear if this software will be developed further in the future.
   The author has written it over many years and is deploying it in
   several places, e.g. http://www.stadtplandienst.de,
   http://netlexikon.akademie.de and really soon on
   http://pause.perl.org too. It has turned out to be useful for
   him. YMMV.

   There is no official support for this software. If you find it
   useful or even if you find it useless, please mail the author
   directly.

   But please make sure you remember: THE RELEASE IS FOR
   DEMONSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY.

DESCRIPTION
   The Apache::HeavyCGI framework is intended to provide a couple
   of simple tricks that make it easier to write complex CGI
   solutions. It has been developed on a site that runs all
   requests through a single mod_perl handler that in turn uses
   CGI.pm or Apache::Request as the query interface. So
   Apache::HeavyCGI is -- as the name implies -- not merely for
   multi-page CGI scripts (for which there are other solutions),
   but it is for the integration of many different pages into a
   single solution. The many different pages can then conveniently
   share common tasks.

   The approach taken by Apache::HeavyCGI is a components-driven
   one with all components being pure perl. So if you're not
   looking for yet another embedded perl solution, and aren't
   intimidated by perl, please read on.

 Stacked handlers suck

   If you have had a look at stacked handlers, you might have
   noticed that the model for stacking handlers often is too
   primitive. The model supposes that the final form of a document
   can be found by running several passes over a single entity,
   each pass refining the entity, manipulating some headers, maybe
   even passing some notes to the next handler, and in the most
   advanced form passing pnotes between handlers. A lot of Web
   pages may fit into that model, even complex ones, but it doesn't
   scale well for pages that result out of a structure that's more
   complicated than adjacent items. The more complexity you add to
   a page, the more overhead is generated by the model, because for
   every handler you push onto the stack, the whole document has to
   be parsed and recomposed again and headers have to be re-
   examined and possibly changed.

 Why not subclass Apache

   Inheritance provokes namespace conflicts. Besides this, I see
   little reason why one should favor inheritance over a using
   relationship. The current implementation of Apache::HeavyCGI is
   very closely coupled with the Apache class anyway, so we could
   do inheritance too. No big deal I suppose. The downside of the
   current way of doing it is that we have to write

       my $r = $obj->{R};

   very often, but that's about it. The upside is, that we know
   which manpage to read for the different methods provided by
   `$obj-'{R}>, `$obj-'{CGI}>, and `$obj' itself.

 Composing applications

   Apache::HeavyCGI takes an approach that is more ambitious for
   handling complex tasks. The underlying model for the production
   of a document is that of a puzzle. An HTML (or XML or SGML or
   whatever) page is regarded as a sequence of static and dynamic
   parts, each of which has some influence on the final output.
   Typically, in today's Webpages, the dynamic parts are filled
   into table cells, i.e. contents between some `<TD></TD>' tokens.
   But this is not necessarily so. The static parts in between
   typically are some HTML markup, but this also isn't forced by
   the model. The model simply expects a sequence of static and
   dynamic parts. Static and dynamic parts can appear in random
   order. In the extreme case of a picture you would only have one
   part, either static or dynamic. HeavyCGI could handle this, but
   I don't see a particular advantage of HeavyCGI over a simple
   single handler.

   In addition to the task of generating the contents of the page,
   there is the other task of producing correct headers. Header
   composition is an often neglected task in the CGI world. Because
   pages are generated dynamically, people believe that pages
   without a Last-Modified header are fine, and that an If-
   Modified-Since header in the browser's request can go by
   unnoticed. This laissez-faire principle gets in the way when you
   try to establish a server that is entirely driven by dynamic
   components and the number of hits is significant.

 Header Composition, Parameter Processing, and Content Creation

   The three big tasks a CGI script has to master are Headers,
   Parameters and the Content. In general one can say, content
   creation SHOULD not start before all parameters are processed.
   In complex scenarios you MUST expect that the whole layout may
   depend on one parameter. Additionally we can say that some
   header related data SHOULD be processed very early because they
   might result in a shortcut that saves us a lot of processing.

   Consequently, Apache::HeavyCGI divides the tasks to be done for
   a request into four phases and distributes the four phases among
   an arbitrary number of modules. Which modules are participating
   in the creation of a page is the design decision of the
   programmer.

   The perl model that maps (at least IMHO) ideally to this task
   description is an object oriented approach that identifies a
   couple of phases by method names and a couple of components by
   class names. To create an application with Apache::HeavyCGI, the
   programmer specifies the names of all classes that are involved.
   All classes are singleton classes, i.e. they have no identity of
   their own but can be used to do something useful by working on
   an object that is passed to them. Singletons have an @ISA
   relation to the Class::Singleton manpage which can be found on
   CPAN. As such, the classes can only have a single instance which
   can be found by calling the `CLASS->instance' method. We'll call
   these objects after the mod_perl convention *handlers*.

   Every request maps to exactly one Apache::HeavyCGI object. The
   programmer uses the methods of this object by subclassing. The
   HeavyCGI constructor creates objects of the AVHV type (pseudo-
   hashes). If the inheriting class needs its own constructor, this
   needs to be an AVHV compatible constructor. A description of
   AVHV can be found in the fields manpage. An Apache::HeavyCGI
   object usually is constructed with the `new' method and after
   that the programmer calls the `dispatch' method on this object.
   HeavyCGI will then perform various initializations and then ask
   all nominated handlers in turn to perform the *header* method
   and in a second round to perform the *parameter* method. In most
   cases it will be the case that the availability of a method can
   be determined at compile time of the handler. If this is true,
   it is possible to create an execution plan at compile time that
   determines the sequence of calls such that no runtime is lost to
   check method availability. Such an execution plan can be created
   with the the Apache::HeavyCGI::ExePlan manpage module. All of
   the called methods will get the HeavyCGI request object passed
   as the second parameter.

   There are no fixed rules as to what has to happen within the
   `header' and `parameter' method. As a rule of thumb it isf
   recommended to determine and set the object attributes
   LAST_MODIFIED and EXPIRES (see below) within the header()
   method. It is also recommended to inject the the
   Apache::HeavyCGI::IfModified manpage module as the last header
   handler, so that the application can abort early with an Not
   Modified header. I would recommend that in the header phase you
   do as little as possible parameter processing except for those
   parameters that are related to the last modification date of the
   generated page.

 Terminating the handler calls or triggering errors.

   Sometimes you want to stop calling the handlers, because you
   think that processing the request is already done. In that case
   you can do a

    die Apache::HeavyCGI::Exception->new(HTTP_STATUS => status);

   at any point within prepare() and the specified status will be
   returned to the Apache handler. This is useful for example for
   the Apache::HeavyCGI::IfModified module which sends the response
   headers and then dies with HTTP_STATUS set to
   Apache::Constants::DONE. Redirectors presumably would set up
   their headers and set it to
   Apache::Constants::HTTP_MOVED_TEMPORARILY.

   Another task for Perl exceptions are errors: In case of an error
   within the prepare loop, all you need to do is

    die Apache::HeavyCGI::Exception->new(ERROR=>[array_of_error_messages]);

   The error is caught at the end of the prepare loop and the
   anonymous array that is being passed to $@ will then be appended
   to `@{$self->{ERROR}}'. You should check for $self->{ERROR}
   within your layout method to return an appropriate response to
   the client.

 Layout and Text Composition

   After the header and the parameter phase, the application should
   have set up the object that is able to characterize the complete
   application and its status. No changes to the object should
   happen from now on.

   In the next phase Apache::HeavyCGI will ask this object to
   perform the `layout' method that has the duty to generate an
   Apache::HeavyCGI::Layout (or compatible) object. Please read
   more about this object in the Apache::HeavyCGI::Layout manpage.
   For our HeavyCGI object it is only relevant that this Layout
   object can compose itself as a string in the as_string() method.
   As a layout object can be composed as an abstraction of a layout
   and independent of request-specific contents, it is recommended
   to cache the most important layouts. This is part of the
   reponsibility of the programmer.

   In the next step HeavyCGI stores a string representation of
   current request by calling the as_string() method on the layout
   object and passing itself to it as the first argument. By
   passing itself to the Layout object all the request-specific
   data get married to the layout-specific data and we reach the
   stage where stacked handlers usually start, we get at a composed
   content that is ready for shipping.

   The last phase deals with setting up the yet unfinished headers,
   eventually compressing, recoding and measuring the content, and
   delivering the request to the browser. The two methods finish()
   and deliver() are responsible for that phase. The default
   deliver() method is pretty generic, it calls finish(), then
   sends the headers, and sends the content only if the request
   method wasn't a HEAD. It then returns Apache's constant DONE to
   the caller, so that Apache won't do anything except logging on
   this request. The method finish is more apt to being overridden.
   The default finish() method sets the content type to text/html,
   compresses the content if the browser understands compressed
   data and Compress::Zlib is available, it also sets the headers
   Vary, Expires, Last-Modified, and Content-Length. You most
   probably will want to override the finish method.

   head2 Summing up +-------------------+ | sub handler {...} | +--
   ------------------+ | (sub init {...}) | |Your::Class |---
   defines------>| | |ISA Apache::HeavyCGI| | sub layout {...} | +-
   -------------------+ | sub finish {...} | +-------------------+

                                           +-------------------+
                                           | sub new {...}     |
    +--------------------+                 | sub dispatch {...}|
    |Apache::HeavyCGI    |---defines------>| sub prepare {...} |
    +--------------------+                 | sub deliver {...} |
                                           +-------------------+

    +----------------------+               +--------------------+
    |Handler_1 .. Handler_N|               | sub header {...}   |
    |ISA Class::Singleton  |---define----->| sub parameter {...}|
    +----------------------+               +--------------------+

                                                                          +----+
                                                                          |Your|
                                                                          |Duty|
    +----------------------------+----------------------------------------+----+
    |Apache                      | calls Your::Class::handler()           |    |
    +----------------------------+----------------------------------------+----+
    |                            | nominates the handlers,                |    |
    |Your::Class::handler()      | constructs $self,                      | ** |
    |                            | and calls $self->dispatch              |    |
    +----------------------------+----------------------------------------+----+
    |                            |        $self->init     (does nothing)  | ?? |
    |                            |        $self->prepare  (see below)     |    |
    |Apache::HeavyCGI::dispatch()| calls  $self->layout   (sets up layout)| ** |
    |                            |        $self->finish   (headers and    | ** |
    |                            |                         gross content) |    |
    |                            |        $self->deliver  (delivers)      | ?? |
    +----------------------------+----------------------------------------+----+
    |Apache::HeavyCGI::prepare() | calls HANDLER->instance->header($self) | ** |
    |                            | and HANDLER->instance->parameter($self)| ** |
    |                            | on all of your nominated handlers      |    |
    +----------------------------+----------------------------------------+----+

Object Attributes
   As already mentioned, the HeavyCGI object is a pseudo-hash, i.e.
   can be treated like a HASH, but all attributes that are being
   used must be predeclared at compile time with a `use fields'
   clause.

   The convention regarding attributes is as simple as it can be:
   uppercase attributes are reserved for the Apache::HeavyCGI
   class, all other attribute names are at your disposition if you
   write a subclass.

   The following attributes are currently defined. The module
   author's production environment has a couple of attributes more
   that seem to work well but most probably need more thought to be
   implemented in a generic way.

   CAN_GZIP
       Set by the can_gzip method. True if client is able to handle
       gzipped data.

   CAN_PNG
       Set by the can_png method. True if client is able to handle
       PNG.

   CAN_UTF8
       Set by the can_utf8 method. True if client is able to handle
       UTF8 endoded data.

   CGI An object that handles GET and POST parameters and offers the
       method param() and upload() in a manner compatible with
       Apache::Request. Needs to be constructed and set by the user
       typically in the contructor.

   CHARSET
       Optional attribute to denote the charset in which the
       outgoing data are being encoded. Only used within the finish
       method. If it is set, the finish() method will set the
       content type to text/html with this charset.

   CONTENT
       Scalar that contains the content that should be sent to the
       user uncompressed. During te finish() method the content may
       become compressed.

   DOCUMENT_ROOT
       Unused.

   ERROR
       Anonymous array that accumulates error messages. HeavyCGI
       doesn't handle the error though. It is left to the user to
       set up a proper response to the user.

   EXECUTION_PLAN
       Object of type the Apache::HeavyCGI::ExePlan manpage. It is
       recommended to compute the object at startup time and always
       pass the same execution plan into the constructor.

   EXPIRES
       Optional Attribute set by the expires() method. If set,
       HeavyCGI will send an Expires header. The EXPIRES attribute
       needs to contain an the Apache::HeavyCGI::Date manpage
       object.

   HANDLER
       If there is an EXECUTION_PLAN, this attribute is ignored.
       Without an EXECUTION_PLAN, it must be an array of package
       names. HeavyCGI treats the packages as Class::Singleton
       classes. During the prepare() method HeavyCGI calls HANDLER-
       >instance->header($self) and HANDLER->instance-
       >parameter($self) on all of your nominated handlers.

   LAST_MODIFIED
       Optional Attribute set by the last_modified() method. If
       set, HeavyCGI will send a Last-Modified header of the
       specified time, otherwise it sends a Last-Modified header of
       the current time. The attribute needs to contain an the
       Apache::HeavyCGI::Date manpage object.

   MYURL
       The URL of the running request set by the myurl() method.
       Contains an URI::URL object.

   R   The Apache Request object for the running request. Needs to be
       set up in the constructor by the user.

   REFERER
       Unused.

   SERVERROOT_URL
       The URL of the running request's server-root set by the
       serverroot_url() method. Contains an URI::URL object.

   SERVER_ADMIN
       Unused.

   TIME
       The time when this request started set by the time() method.

   TODAY
       Today's date in the format 9999-99-99 set by the today()
       method.

 Performance

   Don't expect Apache::HeavyCGI to serve 10 million page
   impressions a day. The server I have developed it for is a
   double processor machine with 233 MHz, and each request is
   handled by about 30 different handlers: a few trigonometric,
   database, formatting, and recoding routines. With this overhead
   each request takes about a tenth of a second which in many
   environments will be regarded as slow.

BUGS
   The fields pragma doesn't mix very well with Apache::StatINC.
   When working with HeavyCGI you have to restart your server quite
   often when you change your main class. I believe, this could be
   fixed in fields.pm, but I haven't tried. A workaround is to
   avoid changing the main class, e.g. by delegating the layout()
   method to a different class.

AUTHOR
   Andreas Koenig <[email protected]>. Thanks to Jochen
   Wiedmann for heavy debates about the code and crucial
   performance enhancement suggestions. The development of this
   code was sponsered by www.speed-link.de.