CGI::Push(3p) Perl Programmers Reference Guide CGI::Push(3p)NAMECGI::Push - Simple Interface to Server Push
SYNOPSIS
use CGI::Push qw(:standard);
do_push(-next_page=>\&next_page,
-last_page=>\&last_page,
-delay=>0.5);
sub next_page {
my($q,$counter) = @_;
return undef if $counter >= 10;
return start_html('Test'),
h1('Visible'),"\n",
"This page has been called ", strong($counter)," times",
end_html();
}
sub last_page {
my($q,$counter) = @_;
return start_html('Done'),
h1('Finished'),
strong($counter - 1),' iterations.',
end_html;
}
DESCRIPTIONCGI::Push is a subclass of the CGI object created by CGI.pm.
It is specialized for server push operations, which allow
you to create animated pages whose content changes at regu-
lar intervals.
You provide CGI::Push with a pointer to a subroutine that
will draw one page. Every time your subroutine is called,
it generates a new page. The contents of the page will be
transmitted to the browser in such a way that it will
replace what was there beforehand. The technique will work
with HTML pages as well as with graphics files, allowing you
to create animated GIFs.
Only Netscape Navigator supports server push. Internet
Explorer browsers do not.
USING CGI::PushCGI::Push adds one new method to the standard CGI suite,
do_push(). When you call this method, you pass it a refer-
ence to a subroutine that is responsible for drawing each
new page, an interval delay, and an optional subroutine for
drawing the last page. Other optional parameters include
most of those recognized by the CGI header() method.
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You may call do_push() in the object oriented manner or not,
as you prefer:
use CGI::Push;
$q = new CGI::Push;
$q->do_push(-next_page=>\&draw_a_page);
-or-
use CGI::Push qw(:standard);
do_push(-next_page=>\&draw_a_page);
Parameters are as follows:
-next_page
do_push(-next_page=>\&my_draw_routine);
This required parameter points to a reference to a sub-
routine responsible for drawing each new page. The sub-
routine should expect two parameters consisting of the
CGI object and a counter indicating the number of times
the subroutine has been called. It should return the
contents of the page as an array of one or more items to
print. It can return a false value (or an empty array)
in order to abort the redrawing loop and print out the
final page (if any)
sub my_draw_routine {
my($q,$counter) = @_;
return undef if $counter > 100;
return start_html('testing'),
h1('testing'),
"This page called $counter times";
}
You are of course free to refer to create and use global
variables within your draw routine in order to achieve
special effects.
-last_page
This optional parameter points to a reference to the
subroutine responsible for drawing the last page of the
series. It is called after the -next_page routine
returns a false value. The subroutine itself should
have exactly the same calling conventions as the
-next_page routine.
-type
This optional parameter indicates the content type of
each page. It defaults to "text/html". Normally the
module assumes that each page is of a homogenous MIME
type. However if you provide either of the magic values
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"heterogeneous" or "dynamic" (the latter provided for
the convenience of those who hate long parameter names),
you can specify the MIME type -- and other header fields
-- on a per-page basis. See "heterogeneous pages" for
more details.
-delay
This indicates the delay, in seconds, between frames.
Smaller delays refresh the page faster. Fractional
values are allowed.
If not specified, -delay will default to 1 second
-cookie, -target, -expires, -nph
These have the same meaning as the like-named parameters
in CGI::header().
If not specified, -nph will default to 1 (as needed for
many servers, see below).
Heterogeneous Pages
Ordinarily all pages displayed by CGI::Push share a common
MIME type. However by providing a value of "heterogeneous"
or "dynamic" in the do_push()-type parameter, you can
specify the MIME type of each page on a case-by-case basis.
If you use this option, you will be responsible for produc-
ing the HTTP header for each page. Simply modify your draw
routine to look like this:
sub my_draw_routine {
my($q,$counter) = @_;
return header('text/html'), # note we're producing the header here
start_html('testing'),
h1('testing'),
"This page called $counter times";
}
You can add any header fields that you like, but some (cook-
ies and status fields included) may not be interpreted by
the browser. One interesting effect is to display a series
of pages, then, after the last page, to redirect the browser
to a new URL. Because redirect() does b<not> work, the
easiest way is with a -refresh header field, as shown below:
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sub my_draw_routine {
my($q,$counter) = @_;
return undef if $counter > 10;
return header('text/html'), # note we're producing the header here
start_html('testing'),
h1('testing'),
"This page called $counter times";
}
sub my_last_page {
return header(-refresh=>'5; URL=http://somewhere.else/finished.html',
-type=>'text/html'),
start_html('Moved'),
h1('This is the last page'),
'Goodbye!'
hr,
end_html;
}
Changing the Page Delay on the Fly
If you would like to control the delay between pages on a
page-by-page basis, call push_delay() from within your draw
routine. push_delay() takes a single numeric argument
representing the number of seconds you wish to delay after
the current page is displayed and before displaying the next
one. The delay may be fractional. Without parameters,
push_delay() just returns the current delay.
INSTALLING CGI::Push SCRIPTS
Server push scripts must be installed as no-parsed-header
(NPH) scripts in order to work correctly on many servers.
On Unix systems, this is most often accomplished by prefix-
ing the script's name with "nph-". Recognition of NPH
scripts happens automatically with WebSTAR and Microsoft
IIS. Users of other servers should see their documentation
for help.
Apache web server from version 1.3b2 on does not need server
push scripts installed as NPH scripts: the -nph parameter to
do_push() may be set to a false value to disable the extra
headers needed by an NPH script.
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Copyright 1995-1998, Lincoln D. Stein. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Address bug reports and comments to: lstein@cshl.org
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SEE ALSO
CGI::Carp, CGI
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