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Apache Server Configuration Customization in Perl | ||||
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mod_perl provides several ways to pass custom configuration information to the modules.
The simplest way to pass custom information from the configuration
file to the Perl module is to use the
PerlSetVar
and
PerlAddVar
directives. For example:
PerlSetVar Secret "Matrix is us"
and in the mod_perl code this value can be retrieved as:
my $secret = $r->dir_config("Secret");
Another alternative is to add custom configuration directives. There are several reasons for choosing this approach:
When the expected value is not a simple argument, but must be supplied using a certain syntax, Apache can verify at startup time that this syntax is valid and abort the server start up if the syntax is invalid.
Custom configuration directives are faster because their values are
parsed at the startup time, whereas PerlSetVar
and PerlAddVar
values are parsed at the request time.
It's possible that some other modules have accidentally chosen to use the same key names but for absolutely different needs. So the two now can't be used together. Of course this collision can be avoided if a unique to your module prefix is used in the key names. For example:
PerlSetVar ApacheFooSecret "Matrix is us"
Finally, modules can be configured in pure Perl using
<Perl> Sections
or a startup file, by simply
modifying the global variables in the module's package. This approach
could be undesirable because it requires a use of globals, which we
all try to reduce. A bigger problem with this approach is that you
can't have different settings for different sections of the site
(since there is only one version of a global variable), something that
the previous two approaches easily achieve.
In mod_perl 2.0, adding new configuration directives is a piece of cake, because it requires no XS code and Makefile.PL, needed in case of mod_perl 1.0. In mod_perl 2.0, custom directives are implemented in pure Perl.
Here is a very basic module that declares two new configuration
directives: MyParameter
, which accepts one or more arguments, and
MyOtherParameter
which accepts a single argument. MyParameter
validates that its arguments are valid strings.
#file:MyApache2/MyParameters.pm #----------------------------- package MyApache2::MyParameters; use strict; use warnings FATAL => 'all'; use Apache::Test; use Apache::TestUtil; use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(OR_ALL ITERATE); use Apache2::CmdParms (); use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::Directive (); my @directives = ( { name => 'MyParameter', func => __PACKAGE__ . '::MyParameter', req_override => Apache2::Const::OR_ALL, args_how => Apache2::Const::ITERATE, errmsg => 'MyParameter Entry1 [Entry2 ... [EntryN]]', }, { name => 'MyOtherParameter', }, ); Apache2::Module::add(__PACKAGE__, \@directives); sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, @args) = @_; $self->{MyParameter} = \@args; # validate that the arguments are strings for (@args) { unless (/^\w+$/) { my $directive = $parms->directive; die sprintf "error: MyParameter at %s:%d expects " . "string arguments: ('$_' is not a string)\n", $directive->filename, $directive->line_num; } } } 1;
And here is how to use it in httpd.conf:
# first load the module so Apache will recognize the new directives PerlLoadModule MyApache2::MyParameters MyParameter one two three MyOtherParameter Foo <Location /perl> MyParameter eleven twenty MyOtherParameter Bar </Location>
The following sections discuss this and more advanced modules in detail.
A minimal configuration module is comprised of three groups of elements:
@directives
for declaring the new
directives and their behavior.
Apache2::Module::add()
to
register the new directives with apache.
@directives
@directives
is an array of hash references. Each
hash represents a separate new configuration directive. In our example
we had:
my @directives = ( { name => 'MyParameter', func => __PACKAGE__ . '::MyParameter', req_override => Apache2::Const::OR_ALL, args_how => Apache2::Const::ITERATE, errmsg => 'MyParameter Entry1 [Entry2 ... [EntryN]]', }, { name => 'MyOtherParameter', }, );
This structure declares two new directives: MyParameter
and
MyOtherParameter
. You have to declare at least the name of the new
directive, which is how we have declared the MyOtherParameter
directive. mod_perl will fill in the rest of the configuration using
the defaults described next.
These are the attributes that can be used to define the directives behavior: name, func, args_how, req_override and errmsg. They are discussed in the following sections.
It is worth noting that in previous versions of mod_perl, it was necessary to call this variable @APACHE_MODULE_COMMANDS. It is not the case anymore, and we consistently use the name @directives in the documentation for clarity. It can be named anything at all.
name
This is the only required attribute. And it declares the name of the new directive as it'll be used in httpd.conf.
func
The func attribute expects a reference to a function or a function name. This function is called by httpd every time it encounters the directive that is described by this entry while parsing the configuration file. Therefore it's invoked once for every instance of the directive at the server startup, and once per request per instance in the .htaccess file.
This function accepts two or more arguments, depending on the args_how attribute's value.
This attribute is optional. If not supplied, mod_perl will try to use
a function in the current package whose name is the same as of the
directive in question. In our example with MyOtherParameter
,
mod_perl will use:
__PACKAGE__ . '::MyOtherParameter'
as a name of a subroutine and it anticipates that it exists in that package.
req_override
The attribute defines the valid scope in which this directive can
appear. There are several constants which map onto the
corresponding Apache macros. These constants should be imported from
the Apache2::Const
package.
For example, to use the OR_ALL
constant, which allows directives to
be defined anywhere, first, it needs to be imported:
use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(OR_ALL);
and then assigned to the req_override attribute:
req_override => Apache2::Const::OR_ALL,
It's possible to combine several options using the unary operators. For example, the following setting:
req_override => Apache2::Const::RSRC_CONF | Apache2::Const::ACCESS_CONF
will allow the directive to appear anywhere in httpd.conf, but forbid it from ever being used in .htaccess files:
This attribute is optional. If not supplied, the default value of
Apache2::Const::OR_ALL
is used.
args_how
Directives can receive zero, one or many arguments. In order to help
Apache validate that the number of arguments is valid, the args_how
attribute should be set to the desired value. Similar to the
req_override attribute, the
Apache2::Const
package provides a
special :cmd_how
constants group which maps to the corresponding Apache macros. There
are several constants to choose from.
In our example, the directive MyParameter
accepts one or more
arguments, therefore we have the
Apache2::Const::ITERATE
constant:
args_how => Apache2::Const::ITERATE,
This attribute is optional. If not supplied, the default value of
Apache2::Const::TAKE1
is used.
errmsg
The errmsg attribute provides a short but succinct usage statement that summarizes the arguments that the directive takes. It's used by Apache to generate a descriptive error message, when the directive is configured with a wrong number of arguments.
In our example, the directive MyParameter
accepts one or more
arguments, therefore we have chosen the following usage string:
errmsg => 'MyParameter Entry1 [Entry2 ... [EntryN]]',
This attribute is optional. If not supplied, the default value of will be a string based on the directive's name and args_how attributes.
cmd_data
Sometimes it is useful to pass information back to the directive handler callback. For instance, if you use the func parameter to specify the same callback for two different directives you might want to know which directive is being called currently. To do this, you can use the cmd_data parameter, which allows you to store arbitrary strings for later retrieval from your directive handler. For instance:
my @directives = ( { name => '<Location', # func defaults to Location() req_override => Apache2::Const::RSRC_CONF, args_how => Apache2::Const::RAW_ARGS, }, { name => '<LocationMatch', func => Location, req_override => Apache2::Const::RSRC_CONF, args_how => Apache2::Const::RAW_ARGS, cmd_data => '1', }, );
Here, we are using the Location()
function to process both
the Location
and LocationMatch
directives. In the
Location()
callback we can check the data in the cmd_data slot
to see whether the directive being processed is LocationMatch
and alter our logic accordingly. How? Through the
info()
method exposed by the Apache2::CmdParms
class.
use Apache2::CmdParms (); sub Location { my ($cfg, $parms, $data) = @_; # see if we were called via LocationMatch my $regex = $parms->info; # continue along }
In case you are wondering, Location
and LocationMatch
were
chosen for a reason - this is exactly how httpd core handles these
two directives.
Once the @directives
array is populated, it needs to be
registered with apache using
Apache2::Module::add()
Apache2::Module::add(__PACKAGE__, \@directives);
The req_override attribute specifies the configuration scope in which it's valid to use a given configuration directive. This attribute's value can be any of or a combination of the following constants:
(these constants are declared in httpd-2.0/include/http_config.h.)
Apache2::Const::OR_LIMIT
The directive can appear within directory sections, but not outside
them. It is also allowed within .htaccess files, provided that
AllowOverride Limit
is set for the current directory.
Apache2::Const::OR_OPTIONS
The directive can appear anywhere within httpd.conf, as well as
within .htaccess files provided that AllowOverride Options
is
set for the current directory.
Apache2::Const::OR_FILEINFO
The directive can appear anywhere within httpd.conf, as well as
within .htaccess files provided that AllowOverride FileInfo
is
set for the current directory.
Apache2::Const::OR_AUTHCFG
The directive can appear within directory sections, but not outside
them. It is also allowed within .htaccess files, provided that
AllowOverride AuthConfig
is set for the current directory.
Apache2::Const::OR_INDEXES
The directive can appear anywhere within httpd.conf, as well as
within .htaccess files provided that AllowOverride Indexes
is
set for the current directory.
Apache2::Const::ACCESS_CONF
The directive can appear within directory sections. The directive is not allowed in .htaccess files.
Apache2::Const::RSRC_CONF
The directive can appear in httpd.conf outside a directory section
(<Directory>
, <Location>
or <Files>
;
also <FilesMatch>
and kin). The directive is not allowed
in .htaccess files.
Apache2::Const::EXEC_ON_READ
Force directive to execute a command which would modify the
configuration (like including another file, or IFModule
).
Normally, Apache first parses the configuration tree and then executes
the directives it has encountered (e.g., SetEnv
). But there are
directives that must be executed during the initial parsing, either
because they affect the configuration tree (e.g., Include
may load
extra configuration) or because they tell Apache about new directives
(e.g., IfModule
or PerlLoadModule
, may load a module, which
installs handlers for new directives). These directives must have the
Apache2::Const::EXEC_ON_READ
turned on.
Depending on the value of the args_how attribute
the callback subroutine, specified with the func
attribute, will be called with two or more arguments. The first two
arguments are always $self
and $parms
. A typical callback
function which expects a single value
(Apache2::Const::TAKE1
) might look like the following:
sub MyParam { my ($self, $parms, $arg) = @_; $self->{MyParam} = $arg; }
In this function we store the passed single value in the configuration
object, using the directive's name (assuming that it was MyParam
)
as the key.
Let's look at the subroutine arguments in detail:
$self
is the current container's configuration object.
This configuration object is a reference to a hash, in which you can
store arbitrary key/value pairs. When the directive callback function
is invoked it may already include several key/value pairs inserted by
other directive callbacks or during the
SERVER_CREATE
and
DIR_CREATE
functions, which will be explained
later.
Usually the callback function stores the passed argument(s), which
later will be read by SERVER_MERGE
and
DIR_MERGE
, which will be explained later, and of
course at request time.
The convention is use the name of the directive as the hash key, where the received values are stored. The value can be a simple scalar, or a reference to a more complex structure. So for example you can store a reference to an array, if there is more than one value to store.
This object can be later retrieved at request time via:
my $dir_cfg = $self->get_config($s, $r->per_dir_config);
You can retrieve the server configuration object via:
my $srv_cfg = $self->get_config($s);
if invoked inside the virtual host, the virtual host's configuration object will be returned.
$parms
is an
Apache2::CmdParms
object from which you can retrieve various other information about the
configuration. For example to retrieve the server object:
my $s = $parms->server;
See
Apache2::CmdParms
for more information.
The rest of the arguments whose number depends on the args_how's value are covered in the next section.
The following values of the args_how attribute
define how many arguments and what kind of arguments directives can
accept. These values are constants that can be imported from the
Apache2::Const
package
(:cmd_how constants group
).
For example:
use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(TAKE1 TAKE23);
Apache2::Const::NO_ARGS
The directive takes no arguments. The callback will be invoked once each time the directive is encountered. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms) = @_; $self->{MyParameter}++; }
Apache2::Const::TAKE1
The directive takes a single argument. The callback will be invoked once each time the directive is encountered, and its argument will be passed as the third argument. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $arg) = @_; $self->{MyParameter} = $arg; }
Apache2::Const::TAKE2
The directive takes two arguments. They are passed to the callback as the third and fourth arguments. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $arg1, $arg2) = @_; $self->{MyParameter} = {$arg1 => $arg2}; }
Apache2::Const::TAKE3
This is like Apache2::Const::TAKE1
and
Apache2::Const::TAKE2
, but the directive takes three
mandatory arguments. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, @args) = @_; $self->{MyParameter} = \@args; }
Apache2::Const::TAKE12
This directive takes one mandatory argument, and a second optional one. This can be used when the second argument has a default value that the user may want to override. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $arg1, $arg2) = @_; $self->{MyParameter} = {$arg1 => $arg2||'default'}; }
Apache2::Const::TAKE23
Apache2::Const::TAKE23
is just like
Apache2::Const::TAKE12
, except now there are two
mandatory arguments and an optional third one.
Apache2::Const::TAKE123
In the Apache2::Const::TAKE123
variant, the first argument is mandatory and
the other two are optional. This is useful for providing defaults for
two arguments.
Apache2::Const::ITERATE
Apache2::Const::ITERATE
is used when a directive can take an unlimited
number of arguments. The callback is invoked repeatedly with a single
argument, once for each argument in the list. It's done this way for
interoperability with the C API, which doesn't have the flexible
argument passing that Perl provides. For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $args) = @_; push @{ $self->{MyParameter} }, $arg; }
Apache2::Const::ITERATE2
Apache2::Const::ITERATE2
is used for directives that take a mandatory first
argument followed by a list of arguments to be applied to the first.
A familiar example is the AddType
directive, in which a series of
file extensions are applied to a single MIME type:
AddType image/jpeg JPG JPEG JFIF jfif
Apache will invoke your callback once for each item in the list. Each time Apache runs your callback, it passes the routine the constant first argument ("image/jpeg" in the example above), and the current item in the list ("JPG" the first time around, "JPEG" the second time, and so on). In the example above, the configuration processing routine will be run a total of four times.
For example:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $key, $val) = @_; push @{ $self->{MyParameter}{$key} }, $val; }
Apache2::Const::RAW_ARGS
An args_how of Apache2::Const::RAW_ARGS
instructs
Apache to turn off parsing altogether. Instead it simply passes your
callback function the line of text following the directive. Leading
and trailing whitespace is stripped from the text, but it is not
otherwise processed. Your callback can then do whatever processing it
wishes to perform.
This callback receives three arguments (similar to
Apache2::Const::TAKE1
), the third of which is a
string-valued scalar containing the remaining text following the
directive line.
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $val) = @_; # process $val }
If this mode is used to implement a custom "container" directive, the
attribute req_override needs to OR
Apache2::Const::EXEC_ON_READ
. e.g.:
req_override => Apache2::Const::OR_ALL | Apache2::Const::EXEC_ON_READ,
META: complete the details, which are new to 2.0.
To retrieve the contents of a custom "container" directive, use the
Apache2::Directive
object's methods
as_hash
or as_string
:
sub MyParameter { my ($self, $parms, $val) = @_; my $directive = $parms->directive; my $content = $directive->as_string; }
There is one other trick to making configuration containers work. In
order to be recognized as a valid directive, the name
attribute must contain the leading <
. This token will be
stripped by the code that handles the custom directive callbacks to
Apache. For example:
name => '<MyContainer',
One other trick that is not required, but can provide some more user
friendliness is to provide a handler for the container end token. In
our example, the Apache configuration gears will never see the
</MyContainer>
token, as our
Apache2::Const::RAW_ARGS
handler will read in that
line and stop reading when it is seen. However in order to catch
cases in which the </MyContainer>
text appears without a
preceding <MyContainer>
opening section, we need to turn
the end token into a directive that simply reports an error and
exits. For example:
{ name => '</MyContainer>', func => __PACKAGE__ . "::MyContainer_END", errmsg => 'end of MyContainer without beginning?', args_how => Apache2::Const::NO_ARGS, req_override => Apache2::Const::OR_ALL, }, ... my $EndToken = "</MyContainer>"; sub MyContainer_END { die "$EndToken outside a <MyContainer> container\n"; }
Now, should the server administrator misplace the container end token, the server will not start, complaining with this error message:
Syntax error on line 54 of httpd.conf: </MyContainer> outside a <MyContainer> container
Apache2::Const::FLAG
When Apache2::Const::FLAG
is used, Apache will only allow the argument to
be one of two values, On
or Off
. This string value will be
converted into an integer, 1
if the flag is On
, 0
if it is
Off
. If the configuration argument is anything other than On
or
Off
, Apache will complain:
Syntax error on line 73 of httpd.conf: MyFlag must be On or Off
For example:
sub MyFlag { my ($self, $parms, $arg) = @_; $self->{MyFlag} = $arg; # 1 or 0 }
As seen in the first example, the module needs to be loaded before the
new directives can be used. A special directive PerlLoadModule
is
used for this purpose. For example:
PerlLoadModule MyApache2::MyParameters
This directive is similar to PerlModule
, but it require()'s the
Perl module immediately, causing an early mod_perl startup. After
loading the module it let's Apache know of the new directives and
installs the callbacks to be called when the corresponding directives
are encountered.
By default mod_perl creates a simple hash to store each container's
configuration values, which are populated by directive callbacks,
invoked when the httpd.conf and the .htaccess files are parsed
and the corresponding directive are encountered. It's possible to
pre-populate the hash entries when the data structure is created, e.g.,
to provide reasonable default values for cases where they weren't set
in the configuration file. To accomplish that the optional
SERVER_CREATE
and
DIR_CREATE
functions can be supplied.
When a request is mapped to a container, Apache checks if that
container has any ancestor containers. If that's the case, it allows
mod_perl to call special merging functions, which decide whether
configurations in the parent containers should be inherited, appended
or overridden in the child container. The custom configuration module
can supply custom merging functions
SERVER_MERGE
and DIR_MERGE
,
which can override the default behavior. If these functions are not
supplied the following default behavior takes place: The child
container inherits its parent configuration, unless it specifies its
own and then it overrides its parent configuration.
SERVER_CREATE
SERVER_CREATE
is called once for the main server, and once more for
each virtual host defined in httpd.conf. It's called with two
arguments: $class
, the package name it was created in and $parms
the already familiar
Apache2::CmdParms
object. The object is expected to return a reference to a blessed
hash, which will be used by configuration directives callbacks to set
the values assigned in the configuration file. But it's possible to
preset some values here:
For example, in the following example the object assigns a default value, which can be overridden during merge if a the directive was used to assign a custom value:
package MyApache2::MyParameters; ... use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::CmdParms (); my @directives = (...); Apache2::Module::add(__PACKAGE__, \@directives); ... sub SERVER_CREATE { my ($class, $parms) = @_; return bless { name => __PACKAGE__, }, $class; }
To retrieve that value later, you can use:
use Apache2::Module (); ... my $srv_cfg = Apache2::Module::get_config('MyApache2::MyParameters', $s); print $srv_cfg->{name};
If a request is made to a resource inside a virtual host, $srv_cfg
will contain the object of the virtual host's server. To reach the
main server's configuration object use:
use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::ServerRec (); use Apache2::ServerUtil (); ... if ($s->is_virtual) { my $base_srv_cfg = Apache2::Module::get_config('MyApache2::MyParameters', Apache2::ServerUtil->server); print $base_srv_cfg->{name}; }
If the function SERVER_CREATE
is not supplied by the module, a
function that returns a blessed into the current package reference to
a hash is used.
SERVER_MERGE
During the configuration parsing virtual hosts are given a chance to
inherit the configuration from the main host, append to or override
it. The SERVER_MERGE
subroutine can be supplied to override the
default behavior, which simply overrides the main server's
configuration.
The custom subroutine accepts two arguments: $base
, a blessed
reference to the main server configuration object, and $add
, a
blessed reference to a virtual host configuration object. It's
expected to return a blessed object after performing the merge of the
two objects it has received. Here is the skeleton of a merging
function:
sub merge { my ($base, $add) = @_; my %mrg = (); # code to merge %$base and %$add return bless \%mrg, ref($base); }
The section Merging at Work provides an extensive example of a merging function.
DIR_CREATE
Similarly to SERVER_CREATE
, this optional
function, is used to create an object for the directory resource. If
the function is not supplied mod_perl will use an empty hash variable
as an object.
Just like SERVER_CREATE
, it's called once for
the main server and one more time for each virtual host. In addition
it'll be called once more for each resource (<Location>
,
<Directory>
and others). All this happens during the
startup. At request time it might be called for each parsed
.htaccess file and for each resource defined in it.
The DIR_CREATE
function's skeleton is identical to
SERVER_CREATE
. Here is an example:
package MyApache2::MyParameters; ... use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::CmdParms (); my @directives = (...); Apache2::Module::add(__PACKAGE__, \@directives); ... sub DIR_CREATE { my ($class, $parms) = @_; return bless { foo => 'bar', }, $class; }
To retrieve that value later, you can use:
use Apache2::Module (); ... my $dir_cfg = Apache2::Module::get_config('MyApache2::MyParameters', $s, $r->per_dir_config); print $dir_cfg->{foo};
The only difference in the retrieving the directory configuration
object. Here the third argument $r->per_dir_config
tells
Apache2::Module
to
get the directory configuration object.
DIR_MERGE
Similarly to SERVER_MERGE
, DIR_MERGE
merges
the ancestor and the current node's directory configuration objects.
At the server startup DIR_MERGE
is called once for each virtual
host. At request time, the merging of the objects of resources, their
sub-resources and the virtual host/main server merge happens. Apache
caches the products of merges, so you may see certain merges happening
only once.
The section Merging Order Consequences discusses in detail the merging order.
The section Merging at Work provides an extensive example of a merging function.
In the following example we are going to demonstrate in details how merging works, by showing various merging techniques.
Here is an example Perl module, which, when loaded, installs four custom directives into Apache.
#file:MyApache2/CustomDirectives.pm #--------------------------------- package MyApache2::CustomDirectives; use strict; use warnings FATAL => 'all'; use Apache2::CmdParms (); use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::ServerUtil (); use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(OK); my @directives = ( { name => 'MyPlus' }, { name => 'MyList' }, { name => 'MyAppend' }, { name => 'MyOverride' }, ); Apache2::Module::add(__PACKAGE__, \@directives); sub MyPlus { set_val('MyPlus', @_) } sub MyAppend { set_val('MyAppend', @_) } sub MyOverride { set_val('MyOverride', @_) } sub MyList { push_val('MyList', @_) } sub DIR_MERGE { merge(@_) } sub SERVER_MERGE { merge(@_) } sub set_val { my ($key, $self, $parms, $arg) = @_; $self->{$key} = $arg; unless ($parms->path) { my $srv_cfg = Apache2::Module::get_config($self, $parms->server); $srv_cfg->{$key} = $arg; } } sub push_val { my ($key, $self, $parms, $arg) = @_; push @{ $self->{$key} }, $arg; unless ($parms->path) { my $srv_cfg = Apache2::Module::get_config($self, $parms->server); push @{ $srv_cfg->{$key} }, $arg; } } sub merge { my ($base, $add) = @_; my %mrg = (); for my $key (keys %$base, keys %$add) { next if exists $mrg{$key}; if ($key eq 'MyPlus') { $mrg{$key} = ($base->{$key}||0) + ($add->{$key}||0); } elsif ($key eq 'MyList') { push @{ $mrg{$key} }, @{ $base->{$key}||[] }, @{ $add->{$key}||[] }; } elsif ($key eq 'MyAppend') { $mrg{$key} = join " ", grep defined, $base->{$key}, $add->{$key}; } else { # override mode $mrg{$key} = $base->{$key} if exists $base->{$key}; $mrg{$key} = $add->{$key} if exists $add->{$key}; } } return bless \%mrg, ref($base); } 1; __END__
It's probably a good idea to specify all the attributes for the
@directives
entries, but here for simplicity we have
only assigned to the name directive, which is a
must. Since all our directives take a single argument,
Apache2::Const::TAKE1
, the default
args_how, is what we need. We also allow the
directives to appear anywhere, so
Apache2::Const::OR_ALL
, the default for
req_override, is good for us as well.
We use the same callback for the directives MyPlus
, MyAppend
and
MyOverride
, which simply assigns the specified value to the hash
entry with the key of the same name as the directive.
The MyList
directive's callback stores the value in the list, a
reference to which is stored in the hash, again using the name of the
directive as the key. This approach is usually used when the directive
is of type Apache2::Const::ITERATE
, so you may have
more than one value of the same kind inside a single container. But in
our example we choose to have it of the type
Apache2::Const::TAKE1
.
In both callbacks in addition to storing the value in the current
directory configuration, if the value is configured in the main
server or the virtual host (which is when $parms->path
is
false), we also store the data in the same way in the server
configuration object. This is done in order to be able to query the
values assigned at the server and virtual host levels, when the
request is made to one of the sub-resources. We will show how to
access that information in a moment.
Finally we use the same merge function for merging directory and
server configuration objects. For the key MyPlus
(remember we have
used the same key name as the name of the directive), the merging
function performs, the obvious, summation of the ancestor's merged
value (base) and the current resource's value (add). MyAppend
joins
the values into a string, MyList
joins the lists and finally
MyOverride
(the default) overrides the value with the current one
if any. Notice that all four merging methods take into account that
the values in the ancestor or the current configuration object might
be unset, which is the case when the directive wasn't used by all
ancestors or for the current resource.
At the end of the merging, a blessed reference to the merged hash is
returned. The reference is blessed into the same class, as the base or
the add objects, which is MyApache2::CustomDirectives
in our
example. That hash is used as the merged ancestor's object for a
sub-resource of the resource that has just undergone merging.
Next we supply the following httpd.conf configuration section, so we can demonstrate the features of this example:
PerlLoadModule MyApache2::CustomDirectives MyPlus 5 MyList "MainServer" MyAppend "MainServer" MyOverride "MainServer" Listen 8081 <VirtualHost _default_:8081> MyPlus 2 MyList "VHost" MyAppend "VHost" MyOverride "VHost" <Location /custom_directives_test> MyPlus 3 MyList "Dir" MyAppend "Dir" MyOverride "Dir" SetHandler modperl PerlResponseHandler MyApache2::CustomDirectivesTest </Location> <Location /custom_directives_test/subdir> MyPlus 1 MyList "SubDir" MyAppend "SubDir" MyOverride "SubDir" </Location> </VirtualHost> <Location /custom_directives_test> SetHandler modperl PerlResponseHandler MyApache2::CustomDirectivesTest </Location>
PerlLoadModule
loads the Perl module MyApache2::CustomDirectives
and then installs a new Apache module named
MyApache2::CustomDirectives
, using the callbacks provided by the
Perl module. In our example functions SERVER_CREATE
and
DIR_CREATE
aren't provided, so by default an empty hash will be
created to represent the configuration object for the merging
functions. If we don't provide merging functions, Apache will simply
skip the merging. Though you must provide a callback function for each
directive you add.
After installing the new module, we add a virtual host container, containing two resources (which at other times called locations, directories, sections, etc.), one being a sub-resource of the other, plus one another resource which resides in the main server.
We assign different values in all four containers, but the last
one. Here we refer to the four containers as MainServer, VHost,
Dir and SubDir, and use these names as values for all
configuration directives, but MyPlus
, to make it easier understand
the outcome of various merging methods and the merging order. In the
last container used by <Location /custom_directives_test>
,
we don't specify any directives so we can verify that all the values
are inherited from the main server.
For all three resources we are going to use the same response handler, which will dump the values of configuration objects that in its reach. As we will see that different resources will see see certain things identically, while others differently. So here it the handler:
#file:MyApache2/CustomDirectivesTest.pm #------------------------------------- package MyApache2::CustomDirectivesTest; use strict; use warnings FATAL => 'all'; use Apache2::RequestRec (); use Apache2::RequestIO (); use Apache2::ServerRec (); use Apache2::ServerUtil (); use Apache2::Module (); use Apache2::Const -compile => qw(OK); sub get_config { Apache2::Module::get_config('MyApache2::CustomDirectives', @_); } sub handler { my ($r) = @_; my %secs = (); $r->content_type('text/plain'); my $s = $r->server; my $dir_cfg = get_config($s, $r->per_dir_config); my $srv_cfg = get_config($s); if ($s->is_virtual) { $secs{"1: Main Server"} = get_config(Apache2::ServerUtil->server); $secs{"2: Virtual Host"} = $srv_cfg; $secs{"3: Location"} = $dir_cfg; } else { $secs{"1: Main Server"} = $srv_cfg; $secs{"2: Location"} = $dir_cfg; } $r->printf("Processing by %s.\n", $s->is_virtual ? "virtual host" : "main server"); for my $sec (sort keys %secs) { $r->print("\nSection $sec\n"); for my $k (sort keys %{ $secs{$sec}||{} }) { my $v = exists $secs{$sec}->{$k} ? $secs{$sec}->{$k} : 'UNSET'; $v = '[' . (join ", ", map {qq{"$_"}} @$v) . ']' if ref($v) eq 'ARRAY'; $r->printf("%-10s : %s\n", $k, $v); } } return Apache2::Const::OK; } 1; __END__
The handler is relatively simple. It retrieves the current resource (directory) and the server's configuration objects. If the server is a virtual host, it also retrieves the main server's configuration object. Once these objects are retrieved, we simply dump the contents of these objects, so we can verify that our merging worked correctly. Of course we nicely format the data that we print, taking a special care of array references, which we know is the case with the key MyList, but we use a generic code, since Perl tells us when a reference is a list.
It's a show time. First we issue a request to a resource residing in the main server:
% GET http://localhost:8002/custom_directives_test/ Processing by main server. Section 1: Main Server MyAppend : MainServer MyList : ["MainServer"] MyOverride : MainServer MyPlus : 5 Section 2: Location MyAppend : MainServer MyList : ["MainServer"] MyOverride : MainServer MyPlus : 5
Since we didn't have any directives in that resource's configuration, we confirm that our merge worked correctly and the directory configuration object contains the same data as its ancestor, the main server. In this case the merge has simply inherited the values from its ancestor.
The next request is for the resource residing in the virtual host:
% GET http://localhost:8081/custom_directives_test/ Processing by virtual host. Section 1: Main Server MyAppend : MainServer MyList : ["MainServer"] MyOverride : MainServer MyPlus : 5 Section 2: Virtual Host MyAppend : MainServer VHost MyList : ["MainServer", "VHost"] MyOverride : VHost MyPlus : 7 Section 3: Location MyAppend : MainServer VHost Dir MyList : ["MainServer", "VHost", "Dir"] MyOverride : Dir MyPlus : 10
That's where the real fun starts. We can see that the merge worked
correctly in the virtual host, and so it did inside the
<Location>
resource. It's easy to see that MyAppend
and
MyList
are correct, the same for MyOverride
. For MyPlus
, we
have to work harder and perform some math. Inside the virtual host we
have main(5)+vhost(2)=7, and inside the first resource
vhost_merged(7)+resource(3)=10.
So far so good, the last request is made to the sub-resource of the resource we have requested previously:
% GET http://localhost:8081/custom_directives_test/subdir/ Processing by virtual host. Section 1: Main Server MyAppend : MainServer MyList : ["MainServer"] MyOverride : MainServer MyPlus : 5 Section 2: Virtual Host MyAppend : MainServer VHost MyList : ["MainServer", "VHost"] MyOverride : VHost MyPlus : 7 Section 3: Location MyAppend : MainServer VHost Dir SubDir MyList : ["MainServer", "VHost", "Dir", "SubDir"] MyOverride : SubDir MyPlus : 11
No surprises here. By comparing the configuration sections and the
outcome, it's clear that the merging is correct for most
directives. The only harder verification is for MyPlus
, all we need
to do is to add 1 to 10, which was the result we saw in the previous
request, or to do it from scratch, summing up all the ancestors of
this sub-resource: 5+2+3+1=11.
When merging entries whose values are references and not scalars, it's important to make a deep copy and not a shallow copy, when the references gets copied. In our example we merged two references to lists, by explicitly extracting the values of each list:
push @{ $mrg{$key} }, @{ $base->{$key}||[] }, @{ $add->{$key}||[] };
While seemingly the following snippet is doing the same:
$mrg{$key} = $base->{$key}; push @{ $mrg{$key} }, @{ $add->{$key}||[] };
it won't do what you expect if the same merge (with the same $base
and $add
arguments) is called more than once, which is the case in
certain cases. What happens in the latter implementation, is that the
first line makes both $mrg{$key}
and $base->{$key}
point to
the same reference. When the second line expands the @{ $mrg{$key}
}
, it also affects @{ $base->{$key} }
. Therefore when the same
merge is called second time, the $base
argument is not the same
anymore.
Certainly we could workaround this problem in the mod_perl core, by freezing the arguments before the merge call and restoring them afterwards, but this will incur a performance hit. One simply has to remember that the arguments and the references they point to, should stay unmodified through the function call, and then the right code can be supplied.
Sometimes the merging logic can be influenced by the order of merging. It's desirable that the logic will work properly regardless of the merging order.
In Apache 1.3 the merging was happening in the following order:
(((base_srv -> vhost) -> section) -> subsection)
Whereas as of this writing Apache 2.0 performs:
((base_srv -> vhost) -> (section -> subsection))
A product of subsections merge (which happen during the request) is merged with the product of the server and virtual host merge (which happens at the startup time). This change was done to improve the configuration merging performance.
So for example, if you implement a directive MyExp
which performs
the exponential: $mrg=$base**$add
, and let's say there directive is
used four times in httpd.conf:
MyExp 5 <VirtualHost _default_:8001> MyExp 4 <Location /section> MyExp 3 </Location> <Location /section/subsection> MyExp 2 </Location>
The merged configuration for a request http://localhost:8001/section/subsection will see:
(5 ** 4) ** (3 ** 2) = 1.45519152283669e+25
under Apache 2.0, whereas under Apache 1.3 the result would be:
( (5 ** 4) ** 3) ** 2 = 5.96046447753906e+16
which is not quite the same.
Chances are that your merging rules work identically, regardless of the merging order. But you should be aware of this behavior.
Maintainer is the person(s) you should contact with updates, corrections and patches.
Stas Bekman [http://stason.org/]
Stas Bekman [http://stason.org/]
Only the major authors are listed above. For contributors see the Changes file.
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