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#============================================================= -*-perl-*- # # Template # # DESCRIPTION # Module implementing a simple, user-oriented front-end to the Template # Toolkit. # # AUTHOR # Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org> # # COPYRIGHT # Copyright (C) 1996-2012 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved. # # This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. # #======================================================================== package Template; use strict; use warnings; use 5.006; use base 'Template::Base'; use Template::Config; use Template::Constants; use Template::Provider; use Template::Service; use File::Basename; use File::Path; use Scalar::Util qw(blessed); our $VERSION = '2.24'; our $ERROR = ''; our $DEBUG = 0; our $BINMODE = 0 unless defined $BINMODE; our $AUTOLOAD; # preload all modules if we're running under mod_perl Template::Config->preload() if $ENV{ MOD_PERL }; #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # process($input, \%replace, $output) # # Main entry point for the Template Toolkit. The Template module # delegates most of the processing effort to the underlying SERVICE # object, an instance of the Template::Service class. #------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub process { my ($self, $template, $vars, $outstream, @opts) = @_; my ($output, $error); my $options = (@opts == 1) && ref($opts[0]) eq 'HASH' ? shift(@opts) : { @opts }; $options->{ binmode } = $BINMODE unless defined $options->{ binmode }; # we're using this for testing in t/output.t and t/filter.t so # don't remove it if you don't want tests to fail... $self->DEBUG("set binmode\n") if $DEBUG && $options->{ binmode }; $output = $self->{ SERVICE }->process($template, $vars); if (defined $output) { $outstream ||= $self->{ OUTPUT }; unless (ref $outstream) { my $outpath = $self->{ OUTPUT_PATH }; $outstream = "$outpath/$outstream" if $outpath; } # send processed template to output stream, checking for error return ($self->error($error)) if ($error = &_output($outstream, \$output, $options)); return 1; } else { return $self->error($self->{ SERVICE }->error); } } #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # service() # # Returns a reference to the the internal SERVICE object which handles # all requests for this Template object #------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub service { my $self = shift; return $self->{ SERVICE }; } #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # context() # # Returns a reference to the the CONTEXT object withint the SERVICE # object. #------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub context { my $self = shift; return $self->{ SERVICE }->{ CONTEXT }; } sub template { shift->context->template(@_); } #======================================================================== # -- PRIVATE METHODS -- #======================================================================== #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # _init(\%config) #------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub _init { my ($self, $config) = @_; # convert any textual DEBUG args to numerical form my $debug = $config->{ DEBUG }; $config->{ DEBUG } = Template::Constants::debug_flags($self, $debug) || return if defined $debug && $debug !~ /^\d+$/; # prepare a namespace handler for any CONSTANTS definition if (my $constants = $config->{ CONSTANTS }) { my $ns = $config->{ NAMESPACE } ||= { }; my $cns = $config->{ CONSTANTS_NAMESPACE } || 'constants'; $constants = Template::Config->constants($constants) || return $self->error(Template::Config->error); $ns->{ $cns } = $constants; } $self->{ SERVICE } = $config->{ SERVICE } || Template::Config->service($config) || return $self->error(Template::Config->error); $self->{ OUTPUT } = $config->{ OUTPUT } || \*STDOUT; $self->{ OUTPUT_PATH } = $config->{ OUTPUT_PATH }; return $self; } #------------------------------------------------------------------------ # _output($where, $text) #------------------------------------------------------------------------ sub _output { my ($where, $textref, $options) = @_; my $reftype; my $error = 0; # call a CODE reference if (($reftype = ref($where)) eq 'CODE') { &$where($$textref); } # print to a glob (such as \*STDOUT) elsif ($reftype eq 'GLOB') { print $where $$textref; } # append output to a SCALAR ref elsif ($reftype eq 'SCALAR') { $$where .= $$textref; } # push onto ARRAY ref elsif ($reftype eq 'ARRAY') { push @$where, $$textref; } # call the print() method on an object that implements the method # (e.g. IO::Handle, Apache::Request, etc) elsif (blessed($where) && $where->can('print')) { $where->print($$textref); } # a simple string is taken as a filename elsif (! $reftype) { local *FP; # make destination directory if it doesn't exist my $dir = dirname($where); eval { mkpath($dir) unless -d $dir; }; if ($@) { # strip file name and line number from error raised by die() ($error = $@) =~ s/ at \S+ line \d+\n?$//; } elsif (open(FP, ">$where")) { # binmode option can be 1 or a specific layer, e.g. :utf8 my $bm = $options->{ binmode }; if ($bm && $bm eq 1) { binmode FP; } elsif ($bm){ binmode FP, $bm; } print FP $$textref; close FP; } else { $error = "$where: $!"; } } # give up, we've done our best else { $error = "output_handler() cannot determine target type ($where)\n"; } return $error; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Template - Front-end module to the Template Toolkit =head1 SYNOPSIS use Template; # some useful options (see below for full list) my $config = { INCLUDE_PATH => '/search/path', # or list ref INTERPOLATE => 1, # expand "$var" in plain text POST_CHOMP => 1, # cleanup whitespace PRE_PROCESS => 'header', # prefix each template EVAL_PERL => 1, # evaluate Perl code blocks }; # create Template object my $template = Template->new($config); # define template variables for replacement my $vars = { var1 => $value, var2 => \%hash, var3 => \@list, var4 => \&code, var5 => $object, }; # specify input filename, or file handle, text reference, etc. my $input = 'myfile.html'; # process input template, substituting variables $template->process($input, $vars) || die $template->error(); =head1 DESCRIPTION This documentation describes the Template module which is the direct Perl interface into the Template Toolkit. It covers the use of the module and gives a brief summary of configuration options and template directives. Please see L<Template::Manual> for the complete reference manual which goes into much greater depth about the features and use of the Template Toolkit. The L<Template::Tutorial> is also available as an introductory guide to using the Template Toolkit. =head1 METHODS =head2 new(\%config) The C<new()> constructor method (implemented by the L<Template::Base|Template::Base#new()> base class) instantiates a new C<Template> object. A reference to a hash array of configuration items may be passed as a parameter. my $tt = Template->new({ INCLUDE_PATH => '/usr/local/templates', EVAL_PERL => 1, }) || die $Template::ERROR, "\n"; A reference to a new C<Template> object is returned, or undef on error. In the latter case, the error message can be retrieved by calling L<error()> as a class method or by examining the C<$Template::ERROR> package variable directly. my $tt = Template->new(\%config) || die Template->error(), "\n"; my $tt = Template->new(\%config) || die $Template::ERROR, "\n"; For convenience, configuration items may also be specified as a list of items instead of a hash array reference. These are automatically folded into a hash array by the constructor. my $tt = Template->new(INCLUDE_PATH => '/tmp', POST_CHOMP => 1) || die $Template::ERROR, "\n"; =head2 process($template, \%vars, $output, %options) The C<process()> method is called to process a template. The first parameter indicates the input template as one of: a filename relative to C<INCLUDE_PATH>, if defined; a reference to a text string containing the template text; or a file handle reference (e.g. C<IO::Handle> or sub-class) or C<GLOB> (e.g. C<\*STDIN>), from which the template can be read. A reference to a hash array may be passed as the second parameter, containing definitions of template variables. # filename $tt->process('welcome.tt2') || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # text reference $text = "[% INCLUDE header %]\nHello world!\n[% INCLUDE footer %]"; $tt->process(\$text) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # file handle (GLOB) $tt->process(\*DATA) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; __END__ [% INCLUDE header %] This is a template defined in the __END__ section which is accessible via the DATA "file handle". [% INCLUDE footer %] By default, the processed template output is printed to C<STDOUT>. The C<process()> method then returns C<1> to indicate success. A third parameter may be passed to the C<process()> method to specify a different output location. This value may be one of: a plain string indicating a filename which will be opened (relative to C<OUTPUT_PATH>, if defined) and the output written to; a file GLOB opened ready for output; a reference to a scalar (e.g. a text string) to which output/error is appended; a reference to a subroutine which is called, passing the output as a parameter; or any object reference which implements a C<print()> method (e.g. C<IO::Handle>, C<Apache::Request>, etc.) which will be called, passing the generated output as a parameter. Examples: # output filename $tt->process('welcome.tt2', $vars, 'welcome.html') || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # reference to output subroutine sub myout { my $output = shift; ... } $tt->process('welcome.tt2', $vars, \&myout) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # reference to output text string my $output = ''; $tt->process('welcome.tt2', $vars, \$output) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; print "output: $output\n"; In an Apache/mod_perl handler: sub handler { my $req = shift; # ...your code here... # direct output to Apache::Request via $req->print($output) $tt->process($file, $vars, $req) || do { $req->log_reason($tt->error()); return SERVER_ERROR; }; return OK; } After the optional third output argument can come an optional reference to a hash or a list of C<(name, value)> pairs providing further options for the output. The only option currently supported is C<binmode> which, when set to any true value will ensure that files created (but not any existing file handles passed) will be set to binary mode. # either: hash reference of options $tt->process($infile, $vars, $outfile, { binmode => 1 }) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # or: list of name, value pairs $tt->process($infile, $vars, $outfile, binmode => 1) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; Alternately, the C<binmode> argument can specify a particular IO layer such as C<:utf8>. $tt->process($infile, $vars, $outfile, binmode => ':utf8') || die $tt->error(), "\n"; The C<OUTPUT> configuration item can be used to specify a default output location other than C<\*STDOUT>. The C<OUTPUT_PATH> specifies a directory which should be prefixed to all output locations specified as filenames. my $tt = Template->new({ OUTPUT => sub { ... }, # default OUTPUT_PATH => '/tmp', ... }) || die Template->error(), "\n"; # use default OUTPUT (sub is called) $tt->process('welcome.tt2', $vars) || die $tt->error(), "\n"; # write file to '/tmp/welcome.html' $tt->process('welcome.tt2', $vars, 'welcome.html') || die $tt->error(), "\n"; The C<process()> method returns C<1> on success or C<undef> on error. The error message generated in the latter case can be retrieved by calling the L<error()> method. See also L<CONFIGURATION SUMMARY> which describes how error handling may be further customised. =head2 error() When called as a class method, it returns the value of the C<$ERROR> package variable. Thus, the following are equivalent. my $tt = Template->new() || die Template->error(), "\n"; my $tt = Template->new() || die $Template::ERROR, "\n"; When called as an object method, it returns the value of the internal C<_ERROR> variable, as set by an error condition in a previous call to process(). $tt->process('welcome.tt2') || die $tt->error(), "\n"; Errors are represented in the Template Toolkit by objects of the L<Template::Exception> class. If the L<process()> method returns a false value then the C<error()> method can be called to return an object of this class. The L<type()|Template::Exception#type()> and L<info()|Template::Exception#info()> methods can called on the object to retrieve the error type and information string, respectively. The L<as_string()|Template::Exception#as_string()> method can be called to return a string of the form C<$type - $info>. This method is also overloaded onto the stringification operator allowing the object reference itself to be printed to return the formatted error string. $tt->process('somefile') || do { my $error = $tt->error(); print "error type: ", $error->type(), "\n"; print "error info: ", $error->info(), "\n"; print $error, "\n"; }; =head2 service() The C<Template> module delegates most of the effort of processing templates to an underlying L<Template::Service> object. This method returns a reference to that object. =head2 context() The L<Template::Service> module uses a core L<Template::Context> object for runtime processing of templates. This method returns a reference to that object and is equivalent to C<< $template-E<gt>service-E<gt>context() >>. =head2 template($name) This method is a simple wrapper around the L<Template::Context> method of the same name. It returns a compiled template for the source provided as an argument. =head1 CONFIGURATION SUMMARY The following list gives a short summary of each Template Toolkit configuration option. See L<Template::Manual::Config> for full details. =head2 Template Style and Parsing Options =head3 START_TAG, END_TAG Define tokens that indicate start and end of directives (default: 'C<[%>' and 'C<%]>'). =head3 TAG_STYLE Set C<START_TAG> and C<END_TAG> according to a pre-defined style (default: 'C<template>', as above). =head3 PRE_CHOMP, POST_CHOMP Removes whitespace before/after directives (default: 0/0). =head3 TRIM Remove leading and trailing whitespace from template output (default: 0). =head3 INTERPOLATE Interpolate variables embedded like C<$this> or C<${this}> (default: 0). =head3 ANYCASE Allow directive keywords in lower case (default: 0 - UPPER only). =head2 Template Files and Blocks =head3 INCLUDE_PATH One or more directories to search for templates. =head3 DELIMITER Delimiter for separating paths in C<INCLUDE_PATH> (default: 'C<:>'). =head3 ABSOLUTE Allow absolute file names, e.g. C</foo/bar.html> (default: 0). =head3 RELATIVE Allow relative filenames, e.g. C<../foo/bar.html> (default: 0). =head3 DEFAULT Default template to use when another not found. =head3 BLOCKS Hash array pre-defining template blocks. =head3 AUTO_RESET Enabled by default causing C<BLOCK> definitions to be reset each time a template is processed. Disable to allow C<BLOCK> definitions to persist. =head3 RECURSION Flag to permit recursion into templates (default: 0). =head2 Template Variables =head3 VARIABLES Hash array of variables and values to pre-define in the stash. =head2 Runtime Processing Options =head3 EVAL_PERL Flag to indicate if C<PERL>/C<RAWPERL> blocks should be processed (default: 0). =head3 PRE_PROCESS, POST_PROCESS Name of template(s) to process before/after main template. =head3 PROCESS Name of template(s) to process instead of main template. =head3 ERROR Name of error template or reference to hash array mapping error types to templates. =head3 OUTPUT Default output location or handler. =head3 OUTPUT_PATH Directory into which output files can be written. =head3 DEBUG Enable debugging messages. =head2 Caching and Compiling Options =head3 CACHE_SIZE Maximum number of compiled templates to cache in memory (default: undef - cache all) =head3 COMPILE_EXT Filename extension for compiled template files (default: undef - don't compile). =head3 COMPILE_DIR Root of directory in which compiled template files should be written (default: undef - don't compile). =head2 Plugins and Filters =head3 PLUGINS Reference to a hash array mapping plugin names to Perl packages. =head3 PLUGIN_BASE One or more base classes under which plugins may be found. =head3 LOAD_PERL Flag to indicate regular Perl modules should be loaded if a named plugin can't be found (default: 0). =head3 FILTERS Hash array mapping filter names to filter subroutines or factories. =head2 Customisation and Extension =head3 LOAD_TEMPLATES List of template providers. =head3 LOAD_PLUGINS List of plugin providers. =head3 LOAD_FILTERS List of filter providers. =head3 TOLERANT Set providers to tolerate errors as declinations (default: 0). =head3 SERVICE Reference to a custom service object (default: L<Template::Service>). =head3 CONTEXT Reference to a custom context object (default: L<Template::Context>). =head3 STASH Reference to a custom stash object (default: L<Template::Stash>). =head3 PARSER Reference to a custom parser object (default: L<Template::Parser>). =head3 GRAMMAR Reference to a custom grammar object (default: L<Template::Grammar>). =head1 DIRECTIVE SUMMARY The following list gives a short summary of each Template Toolkit directive. See L<Template::Manual::Directives> for full details. =head2 GET Evaluate and print a variable or value. [% GET variable %] # 'GET' keyword is optional [% variable %] [% hash.key %] [% list.n %] [% code(args) %] [% obj.meth(args) %] [% "value: $var" %] =head2 CALL As per L<GET> but without printing result (e.g. call code) [% CALL variable %] =head2 SET Assign a values to variables. [% SET variable = value %] # 'SET' also optional [% variable = other_variable variable = 'literal text @ $100' variable = "interpolated text: $var" list = [ val, val, val, val, ... ] list = [ val..val ] hash = { var => val, var => val, ... } %] =head2 DEFAULT Like L<SET>, but variables are only set if currently unset (i.e. have no true value). [% DEFAULT variable = value %] =head2 INSERT Insert a file without any processing performed on the contents. [% INSERT legalese.txt %] =head2 PROCESS Process another template file or block and insert the generated output. Any template L<BLOCK>s or variables defined or updated in the C<PROCESS>ed template will thereafter be defined in the calling template. [% PROCESS template %] [% PROCESS template var = val, ... %] =head2 INCLUDE Similar to C<PROCESS>, but using a local copy of the current variables. Any template C<BLOCK>s or variables defined in the C<INCLUDE>d template remain local to it. [% INCLUDE template %] [% INCLUDE template var = val, ... %] =head2 WRAPPER The content between the C<WRAPPER> and correspondng C<END> directives is first evaluated, with the output generated being stored in the C<content> variable. The named template is then process as per C<INCLUDE>. [% WRAPPER layout %] Some template markup [% blah %]... [% END %] A simple F<layout> template might look something like this: Your header here... [% content %] Your footer here... =head2 BLOCK Define a named template block for L<INCLUDE>, L<PROCESS> and L<WRAPPER> to use. [% BLOCK hello %] Hello World [% END %] [% INCLUDE hello %] =head2 FOREACH Repeat the enclosed C<FOREACH> ... C<END> block for each value in the list. [% FOREACH variable IN [ val, val, val ] %] # either [% FOREACH variable IN list %] # or The variable is set to [% variable %] [% END %] =head2 WHILE The block enclosed between C<WHILE> and C<END> block is processed while the specified condition is true. [% WHILE condition %] content [% END %] =head2 IF / UNLESS / ELSIF / ELSE The enclosed block is processed if the condition is true / false. [% IF condition %] content [% ELSIF condition %] content [% ELSE %] content [% END %] [% UNLESS condition %] content [% # ELSIF/ELSE as per IF, above %] content [% END %] =head2 SWITCH / CASE Multi-way switch/case statement. [% SWITCH variable %] [% CASE val1 %] content [% CASE [ val2, val3 ] %] content [% CASE %] # or [% CASE DEFAULT %] content [% END %] =head2 MACRO Define a named macro. [% MACRO name <directive> %] [% MACRO name(arg1, arg2) <directive> %] ... [% name %] [% name(val1, val2) %] =head2 FILTER Process enclosed C<FILTER> ... C<END> block then pipe through a filter. [% FILTER name %] # either [% FILTER name( params ) %] # or [% FILTER alias = name( params ) %] # or content [% END %] =head2 USE Load a plugin module (see C<Template::<Manual::Plugins>), or any regular Perl module when the C<LOAD_PERL> option is set. [% USE name %] # either [% USE name( params ) %] # or [% USE var = name( params ) %] # or ... [% name.method %] [% var.method %] =head2 PERL / RAWPERL Evaluate enclosed blocks as Perl code (requires the C<EVAL_PERL> option to be set). [% PERL %] # perl code goes here $stash->set('foo', 10); print "set 'foo' to ", $stash->get('foo'), "\n"; print $context->include('footer', { var => $val }); [% END %] [% RAWPERL %] # raw perl code goes here, no magic but fast. $output .= 'some output'; [% END %] =head2 TRY / THROW / CATCH / FINAL Exception handling. [% TRY %] content [% THROW type info %] [% CATCH type %] catch content [% error.type %] [% error.info %] [% CATCH %] # or [% CATCH DEFAULT %] content [% FINAL %] this block is always processed [% END %] =head2 NEXT Jump straight to the next item in a C<FOREACH> or C<WHILE> loop. [% NEXT %] =head2 LAST Break out of C<FOREACH> or C<WHILE> loop. [% LAST %] =head2 RETURN Stop processing current template and return to including templates. [% RETURN %] =head2 STOP Stop processing all templates and return to caller. [% STOP %] =head2 TAGS Define new tag style or characters (default: C<[%> C<%]>). [% TAGS html %] [% TAGS <!-- --> %] =head2 COMMENTS Ignored and deleted. [% # this is a comment to the end of line foo = 'bar' %] [%# placing the '#' immediately inside the directive tag comments out the entire directive %] =head1 SOURCE CODE REPOSITORY The source code for the Template Toolkit is held in a public git repository on Github: L<https://github.com/abw/Template2> =head1 AUTHOR Andy Wardley E<lt>abw@wardley.orgE<gt> L<http://wardley.org/> =head1 VERSION Template Toolkit version 2.23, released January 2012. =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 1996-2012 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut # Local Variables: # mode: perl # perl-indent-level: 4 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: # # vim: expandtab shiftwidth=4: