Provided by: libapreq2-doc_2.17-5build2_all bug

NAME

       Apache2::Request - Methods for dealing with client request data

SYNOPSIS

           use Apache2::Request;
           $req = Apache2::Request->new($r);
           @foo = $req->param("foo");
           $bar = $req->args("bar");

DESCRIPTION

       The Apache2::Request module provides methods for parsing GET and POST parameters encoded with either
       application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data.  Although Apache2::Request provides a few new
       APIs for accessing the parsed data, it remains largely backwards-compatible with the original 1.X API.
       See the "PORTING from 1.X" section below for a list of known issues.

       This manpage documents the Apache2::Request package.

Apache2::Request

       The interface is designed to mimic the CGI.pm routines for parsing query parameters. The main differences
       are

       •   "Apache2::Request::new" takes an environment-specific
                   object $r as (second) argument.  Newer versions of CGI.pm also accept
                   this syntax within modperl.

       •   The query parameters are stored in APR::Table derived objects, and
                   are therefore retrieved from the table by using case-insensitive keys.

       •   The query string is always parsed immediately, even for POST requests.

   new
           Apache2::Request->new($r, %args)

       Creates a new Apache2::Request object.

           my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r, POST_MAX => "1M");

       With  mod_perl2,  the  environment  object  $r  must be an Apache2::RequestRec object.  In that case, all
       methods from Apache2::RequestRec are inherited.   In  the  (default)  CGI  environment,  $r  must  be  an
       APR::Pool object.

       The following args are optional:

       •   "POST_MAX", "MAX_BODY"

           Limit the size of POST data (in bytes).

       •   "DISABLE_UPLOADS"

           Disable file uploads.

       •   "TEMP_DIR"

           Sets  the  directory  where  upload  files  are  spooled.   On a *nix-like that supports link(2), the
           TEMP_DIR should be located on the same file system as the final destination file:

            use Apache2::Upload;
            my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r, TEMP_DIR => "/home/httpd/tmp");
            my $upload = $req->upload('file');
            $upload->link("/home/user/myfile");

           For more details on "link", see Apache2::Upload.

       •   "HOOK_DATA"

           Extra configuration info passed as the fourth argument to an upload hook.  See  the  description  for
           the next item, "UPLOAD_HOOK".

       •   "UPLOAD_HOOK"

           Sets  up  a  callback to run whenever file upload data is read. This can be used to provide an upload
           progress meter during file uploads.  Apache will automatically continue writing the original data  to
           $upload->fh after the hook exits.

             my $transparent_hook = sub {
               my ($upload, $data, $data_len, $hook_data) = @_;
               warn "$hook_data: got $data_len bytes for " . $upload->name;
             };

             my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r,
                                             HOOK_DATA => "Note",
                                             UPLOAD_HOOK => $transparent_hook,
                                            );

   instance
           Apache2::Request->instance($r)

       The  default (and only) behavior of Apache2::Request is to intelligently cache POST data for the duration
       of the request.  Thus there is no longer the  need  for  a  separate  instance()  method  as  existed  in
       Apache2::Request  for Apache 1.3 - all POST data is always available from each and every Apache2::Request
       object created during the request's lifetime.

       However an instance() method is aliased to new() in this release to ease the pain of porting from 1.X  to
       2.X.

   param
           $req->param()
           $req->param($name)

       Get the request parameters (using case-insensitive keys) by mimicking the OO interface of "CGI::param".

           # similar to CGI.pm

           my $foo_value   = $req->param('foo');
           my @foo_values  = $req->param('foo');
           my @param_names = $req->param;

           # the following differ slightly from CGI.pm

           # returns ref to APR::Request::Param::Table object representing
           # all (args + body) params
           my $table = $req->param;
           @table_keys = keys %$table;

       In  list context, or when invoked with no arguments as "$req->param()", "param" induces libapreq2 to read
       and parse all remaining data  in  the  request  body.   However,  "scalar  $req->param("foo")"  is  lazy:
       libapreq2 will only read and parse more data if

           1) no "foo" param appears in the query string arguments, AND
           2) no "foo" param appears in the previously parsed POST data.

       In  this  circumstance libapreq2 will read and parse additional blocks of the incoming request body until
       either

           1) it has found the the "foo" param, or
           2) parsing is completed.

       Observe that "scalar $req->param("foo")" will not raise an exception  if  it  can  locate  "foo"  in  the
       existing  body  or  args  tables,  even if the query-string parser or the body parser has failed.  In all
       other circumstances "param" will throw an Apache2::Request::Error object into  $@  should  either  parser
       fail.

           $req->args_status(1); # set error state for query-string parser
           ok $req->param_status == 1;

           $foo = $req->param("foo");
           ok $foo == 1;
           eval { @foo = $req->param("foo") };
           ok $@->isa("Apache2::Request::Error");
           undef $@;
           eval { my $not_found = $req->param("non-existent-param") };
           ok $@->isa("Apache2::Request::Error");

           $req->args_status(0); # reset query-string parser state to "success"

       Note:  modifications  to  the  "scalar  $req->param()"  table  only affect the returned table object (the
       underlying C apr_table_t is generated from the parse  data  by  apreq_params()).   Modifications  do  not
       affect the actual request data, and will not be seen by other libapreq2 applications.

   parms, params
       The  functionality of these functions is assumed by "param", so they are no longer necessary.  Aliases to
       "param" are provided in this release for backwards compatibility, however they are deprecated and may  be
       removed from a future release.

   body
           $req->body()
           $req->body($name)

       Returns  an APR::Request::Param::Table object containing the POST data parameters of the Apache2::Request
       object.

           my $body = $req->body;

       An optional name parameter can be passed to return the POST data  parameter  associated  with  the  given
       name:

           my $foo_body = $req->body("foo");

       More generally, body() follows the same pattern as param() with respect to its return values and argument
       list.  The main difference is that modifications to the "scalar $req->body()" table affect the underlying
       apr_table_t  attribute  in apreq_request_t, so their impact will be noticed by all libapreq2 applications
       during this request.

   upload
           $req->upload()
           $req->upload($name)

       Requires "Apache2::Upload".  With no arguments, this method returns an APR::Request::Param::Table  object
       in scalar context, or the names of all Apache2::Upload objects in list context.

       An  optional  name parameter can be passed to return the Apache2::Upload object associated with the given
       name:

           my $upload = $req->upload($name);

       More generally, upload() follows the same pattern as param()  with  respect  to  its  return  values  and
       argument  list.   The  main  difference  is that its returned values are Apache2::Upload object refs, not
       simple scalars.

       Note: modifications to the "scalar $req->upload()" table only  affect  the  returned  table  object  (the
       underlying  C  apr_table_t is generated by apreq_uploads()).  They do not affect the actual request data,
       and will not be seen by other libapreq2 applications.

   args_status
           $req->args_status()

       Get the APR status code of the query-string parser.  APR_SUCCESS on success, error otherwise.

   body_status
           $req->body_status()

       Get the current APR status code of  the  parsed  POST  data.   APR_SUCCESS  when  parser  has  completed,
       APR_INCOMPLETE  if  parser  has  more  data  to  parse,  APR_EINIT if no post data has been parsed, error
       otherwise.

   param_status
           $req->param_status()

       In scalar context, this returns "args_status" if there  was  an  error  during  the  query-string  parse,
       otherwise this returns "body_status", ie

           $req->args_status || $req->body_status

       In list context "param_status" returns the list "(args_status, body_status)".

   parse
           $req->parse()

       Forces  the  request  to  be parsed immediately.  In void context, this will throw an APR::Request::Error
       should the either the query-string or body parser fail. In all other contexts  it  will  return  the  two
       parsers' combined APR status code

           $req->body_status || $req->args_status

       However  "parse" should be avoided in most normal situations.  For example, in a mod_perl content handler
       it is more efficient to write

           sub handler {
               my $r = shift;
               my $req = Apache2::Request->new($r);
               $r->discard_request_body;   # efficiently parses the request body
               my $parser_status = $req->body_status;

               #...
           }

       Calling  "$r->discard_request_body"  outside  the  content  handler  is  generally  a  mistake,  so   use
       "$req->parse"  there,  but  only  as  a last resort.  The Apache2::Request API is designed around a lazy-
       parsing scheme, so calling "parse" should not affect the behavior of any other methods.

SUBCLASSING Apache2::Request

       If the instances of your subclass are hash references then you can actually inherit from Apache2::Request
       as  long  as  the  Apache2::Request  object  is  stored  in  an  attribute  called  "r"  or  "_r".   (The
       Apache2::Request  class  effectively does the delegation for you automagically, as long as it knows where
       to find the Apache2::Request object to delegate to.)  For example:

               package MySubClass;
               use Apache2::Request;
               our @ISA = qw(Apache2::Request);
               sub new {
                       my($class, @args) = @_;
                       return bless { r => Apache2::Request->new(@args) }, $class;
               }

PORTING from 1.X

       This is the complete list of changes to existing methods from Apache2::Request 1.X.  These issues need to
       be addressed when porting 1.X apps to the new 2.X API.

       •   Apache2::Upload is now a separate module.  Applications
                   requiring the upload API must "use Apache2::Upload" in 2.X.
                   This is easily addressed by preloading the modules during
                   server startup.

       •   You can no longer add (or set or delete) parameters in the
                   "scalar $req->param", "scalar $req->args" or
                   "scalar $req->body" tables.  Nor can you add (or set or delete)
                   cookies in the "scalar $req->jar" table.

       •   instance() is now identical to new(), and is now deprecated.  It
                   may be removed from a future 2.X release.

       •   "param" includes the functionality of parms() and params(), so
                   they are now deprecated and may be removed from a future 2.X release.

       •   "param" called in a list context no longer returns a unique list of
                   parameters.  The returned list contains multiple instances of the
                   parameter name for multivalued fields.

SEE ALSO

       APR::Request::Param, APR::Request::Error, Apache2::Upload, Apache2::Cookie, APR::Table(3).

COPYRIGHT

         Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
         contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
         this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
         The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
         (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
         the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at

             http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

         Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
         distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
         WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
         See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
         limitations under the License.

perl v5.38.2                                       2024-03-31                              Apache2::Request(3pm)