Provided by: libhtml-mason-perl_1.60-2_all bug

NAME

       HTML::Mason::Compiler - Compile Mason component source

SYNOPSIS

         package My::Funky::Compiler;

         use base qw(HTML::Mason::Compiler);

DESCRIPTION

       The compiler starts the compilation process by calling its lexer's "lex" method and passing itself as the
       "compiler" parameter.  The lexer then calls various methods in the compiler as it parses the component
       source.

PARAMETERS TO THE new() CONSTRUCTOR

       allow_globals
           List  of  variable  names,  complete  with  prefix  ("$@%"),  that  you  intend  to use as globals in
           components.  Normally global variables are forbidden by "strict", but any variable mentioned in  this
           list is granted a reprieve via a "use vars" statement. For example:

               allow_globals => [qw($DBH %session)]

           In a mod_perl environment, $r (the request object) is automatically added to this list.

       default_escape_flags
           Escape flags to apply to all <% %> expressions by default. The current valid flags are

               h - escape for HTML ('<' => '&lt;', etc.)
               u - escape for URL (':' => '%3A', etc.)

           The  developer  can  override  default  escape  flags  on  a  per-expression  basis; see the escaping
           expressions section of the developer's manual.

           If you want to set multiple flags as the default, this should be given as a reference to an array  of
           flags.

       enable_autoflush
           True or false, default is true. Indicates whether components are compiled with support for autoflush.
           The  component  can  be  compiled to a more efficient form if it does not have to check for autoflush
           mode, so you should set this to 0 if you can.

       lexer
           The Lexer object to associate with this Compiler. By default a new object of class  lexer_class  will
           be created.

       lexer_class
           The class to use when creating a lexer. Defaults to HTML::Mason::Lexer.

       preprocess
           Sub  reference  that is called to preprocess each component before the compiler does it's magic.  The
           sub is called with a single parameter, a scalar reference to the script.   The  sub  is  expected  to
           process  the script in-place.   This is one way to extend the HTML::Mason syntax with new tags, etc.,
           although  a  much  more  flexible  way  is  to  subclass  the  Lexer  or  Compiler  class.  See  also
           postprocess_text and postprocess_perl.

       postprocess_text
           Sub  reference that is called to postprocess the text portion of a compiled component, just before it
           is assembled into its final subroutine form.  The sub is called with a  single  parameter,  a  scalar
           reference  to the text portion of the component.  The sub is expected to process the string in-place.
           See also preprocess and postprocess_perl.

       postprocess_perl
           Sub reference that is called to postprocess the Perl portion of a compiled component, just before  it
           is  assembled  into  its  final subroutine form.  The sub is called with a single parameter, a scalar
           reference to the Perl portion of the component.  The sub is expected to process the string  in-place.
           See also preprocess and postprocess_text.

       use_source_line_numbers
           True  or  false,  default  is  true.  Indicates  whether  component line numbers that appear in error
           messages, stack traces, etc. are in terms of the source file instead of the object file.  Mason  does
           this  by  inserting  '#line' directives into compiled components.  While source line numbers are more
           immediately helpful, object file  line  numbers  may  be  more  appropriate  for  in-depth  debugging
           sessions.

ACCESSOR METHODS

       All of the above properties have read-only accessor methods of the same name.

       You  cannot  change any property of a compiler after it has been created - among other things, this would
       potentially invalidate any existing cached component objects or object files. Your best bet is to  create
       different compiler objects and load them into different interpreters.

METHODS

       There  are  several  methods  besides  the  compilation callbacks below that a Compiler subclass needs to
       implement.

       compile(...)
           This method has several parameters:

           •       comp_source (required)

                   Either a scalar or reference to a scalar containing the component source.

           •       name (required)

                   The name of the component. This should be the filename of the component if it is  file-based,
                   or some other clear identifier of the component source.

           •       comp_path (required)

                   This should be the component's path.

           •       fh (optional)

                   If this is given then the output of the compiler will be sent directly to this handle, rather
                   than being buffered in memory. This is an optimization to avoid memory usage.

       object_id
           This method should return a unique id for the given compiler object.  This is used by the interpreter
           when determining the object directory, for example.

   Compilation Callbacks
       These are methods called by the Lexer while processing a component source.  You may wish to override some
       of these methods if you're implementing your own custom Compiler class.

       start_component()
           This method is called by the Lexer when it starts processing a component.

       end_component()
           This method is called by the Lexer when it finishes processing a component.

       start_block(block_type => <string>)
           This  method  is  called by the Lexer when it encounters an opening Mason block tag like "<%perl>" or
           "<%args>".  Its main purpose is to keep track of the nesting of different kinds of blocks within each
           other.  The type of block ("init", "once", etc.) is passed via the "block_type" parameter.

       end_block(block_type => <string>)
           This method is called by the Lexer when it encounters a closing Mason block tag  like  "</%perl>"  or
           "</%args>".  Like start_block(), its main purpose is to help maintain syntactic integrity.

       *_block(block => <string>, [ block_type => <string> ])
           Several  compiler  methods  like  doc_block(),  text_block(), and raw_block() are called by the Lexer
           after start_block() when it encounters blocks of certain types.  These methods actually do  the  work
           of putting the body of a block into the compiled data structure.

           The  methods  that follow this pattern are init_block(), perl_block(), doc_block(), text_block(), and
           raw_block().  The last method is called for  all  "<%once>",  "<%cleanup>",  "<%filter>",  "<%init>",
           "<%perl>", and "<%shared>" blocks.

       text(text => <string>)
           Inserts the text contained in a "text" parameter into the component for verbatim output.

           This is called when the lexer finds plain text in a component.

       variable_declaration( type => <string>, name => <string>, default => <string> )
           Inserts a variable declaration from the "<%args>" section into the component.

           The  type  will  be  either  "$",  "@", or "%", indicating a scalar, array, or hash.  The name is the
           variable name without the leading sigil.  The default is everything found after the first "=>" on  an
           "<%args>" block line, and may include a comment.

       key_value_pair(block_type => <string>, key => <string>, value => <string>)
           Inserts a key-value pair from a "<%flags>" or "<%attr>" section into the component.

           The "block_type" parameter will be either "flags" or "attr".

       start_named_block(block_type => <string>, name => <name>)
           Analogous to item_start_block, but starts a "named" block ("<%method>" or "<%def>").

       end_named_block()
           Called by the Lexer to end a "named" block.

       substitution(substitution => <string>, escape => <string>)
           Called by the Lexer when it encounters a substitution tag ("<% ... %>").

           The  value  of the "escape" parameter will be everything found after the pipe (|) in the substitution
           tag, and may be more than one character such as "nh".

       component_call(call => <string>)
           Called by the Lexer when it encounters a component call tag without embedded content ("<& ... &>").

           The "call" parameter contains the entire contents of the tag.

       component_content_call(call => <string>)
           Called by the Lexer when it encounters a component call tag with embedded content ("<&| ... &>").

       component_content_call_end()
           Called by the Lexer when it encounters an ending tag for a  component  call  with  content  ("</&>").
           Note  that there is no corresponding component_call_end() method for component calls without content,
           because these calls don't have ending tags.

       perl_line(line => <string>)
           Called by the Lexer when it encounters a "%"-line.

SUBCLASSING

       We recommend that any parameters you add to Compiler be read-only, because the compiler object_id is only
       computed once on creation and would not reflect any changes to Lexer parameters.

perl v5.38.2                                       2024-03-05                         HTML::Mason::Compiler(3pm)