Dancer::Config(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Dancer::Config(3)NAMEDancer::Config - how to configure Dancer to suit your needs
DESCRIPTIONDancer::Config handles reading and changing the configuration of your
Dancer apps. The documentation for this module aims to describe how to
change settings, and which settings are available.
SETTINGS
You can change a setting with the keyword set, like the following:
use Dancer;
# changing default settings
set port => 8080;
set content_type => 'text/plain';
set startup_info => 0;
A better way of defining settings exists: using YAML file. For this to
be possible, you have to install the YAML module. If a file named
config.yml exists in the application directory, it will be loaded, as a
setting group.
The same is done for the environment file located in the environments
directory.
SUPPORTED SETTINGS
Run mode and listening interface/port
server (string)
The IP address that the Dancer app should bind to. Default is 0.0.0.0,
i.e. bind to all available interfaces.
port (int)
The port Dancer will listen to.
Default value is 3000. This setting can be changed on the command-line
with the --port switch.
daemon (boolean)
If set to true, runs the standalone webserver in the background. This
setting can be changed on the command-line with the --daemon flag.
behind_proxy (boolean)
If set to true, Dancer will look to "X-Forwarded-Protocol" and
"X-Forwarded-host" when constructing URLs (for example, when using
"redirect". This is useful if your application is behind a proxy.
Content type / character set
content_type (string)
The default content type of outgoing content. Default value is
'text/html'.
charset (string)
This setting has multiple effects:
· It sets the default charset of outgoing content. "charset=" item
will be added to Content-Type response header.
· It makes Unicode bodies in HTTP responses of "text/*" types to be
encoded to this charset.
· It also indicates to Dancer in which charset the static files and
templates are encoded.
· If you're using Dancer::Plugin::Database, UTF-8 support will
automatically be enabled for your database - see "AUTOMATIC UTF-8
SUPPORT" in Dancer::Plugin::Database
Default value is empty which means don't do anything. HTTP responses
without charset will be interpreted as ISO-8859-1 by most clients.
You can cancel any charset processing by specifying your own charset in
Content-Type header or by ensuring that response body leaves your
handler without Unicode flag set (by encoding it into some 8bit
charset, for example).
Also, since automatically serialized JSON responses have
"application/json" Content-Type, you should always encode them by hand.
default_mime_type (string)
Dancer's Dancer::MIME module uses "application/data" as a default mime
type. This setting lets the user change it. For example, if you have a
lot of files being served in the public folder that do not have an
extension, and are text files, set the "default_mime_type" to
"text/plain".
File / directory locations
environment (string)
This is the name of the environment that should be used. Standard
Dancer applications have a "environments" folder with specific
configuration files for different environments (usually development and
production environments). They specify different kind of error
reporting, deployment details, etc. These files are read after the
generic "config.yml" configuration file.
The running environment can be set with:
set environment => "production";
Note that this variable is also used as a default value if other values
are not defined.
appdir (directory)
This is the path where your application will live. It's where Dancer
will look by default for your config files, templates and static
content.
It is typically set by "use Dancer" to use the same directory as your
script.
public (directory)
This is the directory, where static files are stored. Any existing file
in that directory will be served as a static file, before matching any
route.
By default, it points to $appdir/public.
views (directory)
This is the directory where your templates and layouts live. It's the
"view" part of MVC (model, view, controller).
This defaults to $appdir/views.
Templating & layouts
template
Allows you to configure which template engine should be used. For
instance, to use Template Toolkit, add the following to "config.yml":
template: template_toolkit
layout (string)
The name of the layout to use when rendering view. Dancer will look for
a matching template in the directory $views/layout.
Logging, debugging and error handling
startup_info (boolean)
If set to true, prints a banner at the server start with information
such as versions and the environment (or "dancerfloor").
Conforms to the environment variable DANCER_STARTUP_INFO.
warnings (boolean)
If set to true, tells Dancer to consider all warnings as blocking
errors.
traces (boolean)
If set to true, Dancer will display full stack traces when a warning or
a die occurs. (Internally sets Carp::Verbose). Default to false.
log_path (string)
Folder where the ``file "logger"'' saves logfiles.
log_file (string)
Name of the file to create when ``file "logger"'' is active. It
defaults to the "environment" setting contents.
logger (enum)
Select which logger to use. For example, to write to log files in
"log_path":
logger: file
Or to direct log messages to the console from which you started your
Dancer app in standalone mode,
logger: console
Various other logger backends are available on CPAN, including
Dancer::Logger::Syslog, Dancer::Logger::Log4perl, Dancer::Logger::PSGI
(which can, with the aid of Plack middlewares, send log messages to a
browser's console window) and others.
log (enum)
Tells which log messages should be actually logged. Possible values are
core, debug, warning or error.
core : all messages are logged, including some from Dancer itself
debug : all messages are logged
warning : only warning and error messages are logged
error : only error messages are logged
During development, you'll probably want to use "debug" to see your own
debug messages, and "core" if you need to see what Dancer is doing. In
production, you'll likely want "error" or "warning" only, for less-
chatty logs.
show_errors (boolean)
If set to true, Dancer will render a detailed debug screen whenever an
error is caught. If set to false, Dancer will render the default error
page, using $public/$error_code.html if it exists or the template
specified by the "error_template" setting.
The error screen attempts to sanitise sensitive looking information
(passwords / card numbers in the request, etc) but you still should not
have show_errors enabled whilst in production, as there is still a risk
of divulging details.
error_template (template path)
This setting lets you specify a template to be used in case of runtime
error. At the present moment the template can use three variables:
title
The error title.
message
The error message.
code
The code throwing that error.
auto_reload (boolean)
Requires Module::Refresh and Clone.
If set to true, Dancer will reload the route handlers whenever the file
where they are defined is changed. This is very useful in development
environment but should not be enabled in production. Enabling this flag
in production yields a major negative effect on performance because of
Module::Refresh.
When this flag is set, you don't have to restart your webserver
whenever you make a change in a route handler.
Note that Module::Refresh only operates on files in %INC, so if the
script your Dancer app is started from changes, even with auto_reload
enabled, you will still not see the changes reflected until you start
your app.
Session engine
session (enum)
This setting lets you enable a session engine for your web application.
Be default, sessions are disabled in Dancer, you must choose a session
engine to use them.
See Dancer::Session for supported engines and their respective
configuration.
session_expires
The session expiry time in seconds, or as e.g. "2 hours" (see "expires"
in Dancer::Cookie. By default, there is no specific expiry time.
session_name
The name of the cookie to store the session ID in. Defaults to
"dancer.session". This can be overridden by certain session engines.
session_secure
The user's session ID is stored in a cookie. If the "session_secure"
setting is set to a true value, the cookie will be marked as secure,
meaning it should only be sent over HTTPS connections.
session_is_http_only
This setting defaults to 1 and instructs the session cookie to be
created with the "HttpOnly" option active, meaning that JavaScript will
not be able to access to its value.
auto_page (boolean)
For simple pages where you're not doing anything dynamic, but still
want to use the template engine to provide headers etc, you can use the
auto_page feature to avoid the need to create a route for each page.
With "auto_page" enabled, if the requested path does not match any
specific route, Dancer will check in the views directory for a matching
template, and use it to satisfy the request if found.
Simply enable auto_page in your config:
auto_page: 1
Then, if you request "/foo/bar", Dancer will look in the views dir for
"/foo/bar.tt".
Dancer will honor your "before_template" code, and all default
variables. They will be accessible and interpolated on automatic served
pages.
AUTHOR
This module has been written by Alexis Sukrieh <sukria@cpan.org> and
others, see the AUTHORS file that comes with this distribution for
details.
LICENSE
This module is free software and is released under the same terms as
Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
Dancer
perl v5.14.1 2011-07-26 Dancer::Config(3)