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package Kelp::Exception; |
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use Kelp::Base; |
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use Carp; |
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attr -code => sub { croak 'code is required' }; |
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attr 'body'; |
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sub new { |
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my ($class, $code, %params) = @_; |
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croak 'Kelp::Exception can only accept 4XX or 5XX codes' |
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unless defined $code && $code =~ /^[45]\d\d$/; |
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$params{code} = $code; |
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return $class->SUPER::new(%params); |
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} |
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sub throw { |
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my $class = shift; |
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my $ex = $class->new(@_); |
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die $ex; |
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} |
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1; |
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__END__ |
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=pod |
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=head1 NAME |
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Kelp::Exception - Tiny HTTP exceptions |
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=head1 SYNOPSIS |
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Exception->throw(400, body => 'The request was malformed'); |
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# code is optional - 500 by default |
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Kelp::Exception->throw; |
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# can control what user sees - even in deployment (unlike string exceptions) |
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Kelp::Exception->throw(501, body => { |
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status => \0, |
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error => 'This method is not yet implemented' |
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}); |
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=head1 DESCRIPTION |
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This module offers a fine-grained control of what the user sees when an |
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exception occurs. Generally, this could also be done by setting the |
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result code manually, but that requires passing the Kelp instance around and |
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does not immediately end the handling code. Exceptions are a way to end route |
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handler execution from deep within the call stack. |
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This implementation is very incomplete and can only handle 4XX and 5XX status |
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codes, meaning that you can't do redirects and normal responses like this. It |
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also tries to maintain some degree of compatibility with L<HTTP::Exception> |
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without its complexity. |
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=head1 ATTRIBUTES |
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=head2 code |
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HTTP status code. Only possible are 5XX and 4XX. |
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Readonly. |
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=head2 body |
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Required. Body of the request - can be a string for HTML and a hashref / |
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arrayref for JSON responses. |
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A string will be passed to C<< $response->render_error >> to be rendered inside |
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an error template, if available. A reference will be JSON encoded if JSON is |
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available, otherwise will produce an exception. |
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Content type for the response will be set accordingly. |
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=head1 METHODS |
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84
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=head2 throw |
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86
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# both do exactly the same |
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Kelp::Exception->throw(...); |
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die Kelp::Exception->new(...); |
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90
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Same as simply constructing and calling die on an object. |
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=head1 CAVEATS |
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=over |
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96
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=item |
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Code 500 exceptions will not be logged, as it is considered something that a |
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web developer know about. They are not thrown anywhere in Kelp internal code, |
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so only user code can fall victim to this. |
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102
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=item |
103
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104
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If there is no content type set, and the exception body is not a reference, |
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then a C<text/html> content type will be guessed and the body text will be |
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passed to an error template, if available. |
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108
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=back |
109
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110
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=cut |
111
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112
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