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AxPoint(3)





NAME

       Apache - Perl interface to the Apache server API


SYNOPSIS

          use Apache ();


DESCRIPTION

       This module provides a Perl interface the Apache API.  It is here
       mainly for mod_perl, but may be used for other Apache modules that wish
       to embed a Perl interpreter.  We suggest that you also consult the
       description of the Apache C API at http://www.apache.org/docs/.


THE REQUEST OBJECT

       The request object holds all the information that the server needs to
       service a request.  Apache Perl*Handlers will be given a reference to
       the request object as parameter and may choose to update or use it in
       various ways.  Most of the methods described below obtain information
       from or update the request object.  The perl version of the request
       object will be blessed into the Apache package, it is really a
       "request_rec*" in disguise.

       Apache->request([$r])
           The Apache->request method will return a reference to the request
           object.

           Perl*Handlers can obtain a reference to the request object when it
           is passed to them via @_.  However, scripts that run under
           Apache::Registry, for example, need a way to access the request
           object.  Apache::Registry will make a request object available to
           these scripts by passing an object reference to
           "Apache->request($r)".  If handlers use modules such as CGI::Apache
           that need to access "Apache->request", they too should do this
           (e.g. Apache::Status).

       $r->as_string
           Returns a string representation of the request object.  Mainly use-
           ful for debugging.

       $r->main
           If the current request is a sub-request, this method returns a
           blessed reference to the main request structure.  If the current
           request is the main request, then this method returns "undef".

       $r->prev
           This method returns a blessed reference to the previous (internal)
           request structure or "undef" if there is no previous request.

       $r->next
           This method returns a blessed reference to the next (internal)
           request structure or "undef" if there is no next request.

       $r->last
           This method returns a blessed reference to the last (internal)
           request structure.  Handy for logging modules.

       $r->is_main
           Returns true if the current request object is for the main request.
           (Should give the same result as "!$r->main", but will be more effi-
           cient.)

       $r->is_initial_req
           Returns true if the current request is the first internal request,
           returns false if the request is a sub-request or internal redirect.

       $r->allowed($bitmask)
           Get or set the allowed methods bitmask. This allowed bitmask should
           be set whenever a 405 (method not allowed) or 501 (method not
           implemented) answer is returned. The bit corresponding to the
           method number should be et.

              unless ($r->method_number == M_GET) {
                $r->allowed($r->allowed | (1<<M_GET) | (1<<M_HEAD) | (1<<M_OPTIONS));
                return HTTP_METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED;
              }


SUB REQUESTS

       Apache provides a sub-request mechanism to lookup a uri or filename,
       performing all access checks, etc., without actually running the
       response phase of the given request.  Notice, we have dropped the
       "sub_req_" prefix here.  The "request_rec*" returned by the lookup
       methods is blessed into the Apache::SubRequest class.  This way,
       "destroy_sub_request()" is called automatically during "Apache::SubRe-
       quest->DESTROY" when the object goes out of scope.  The Apache::SubRe-
       quest class inherits all the methods from the Apache class.

       $r->lookup_uri($uri)
              my $subr = $r->lookup_uri($uri);
              my $filename = $subr->filename;

              unless(-e $filename) {
                  warn "can't stat $filename!\n";
              }

       $r->lookup_file($filename)
              my $subr = $r->lookup_file($filename);

       $subr->run
              if($subr->run != OK) {
                  $subr->log_error("something went wrong!");
              }


CLIENT REQUEST PARAMETERS

       In this section we will take a look at various methods that can be used
       to retrieve the request parameters sent from the client.  In the fol-
       lowing examples, $r is a request object blessed into the Apache class,
       obtained by the first parameter passed to a handler subroutine or
       Apache->request

       $r->method( [$meth] )
           The $r->method method will return the request method.  It will be a
           string such as "GET", "HEAD" or "POST".  Passing an argument will
           set the method, mainly used for internal redirects.

       $r->method_number( [$num] )
           The $r->method_number method will return the request method number.
           The method numbers are defined by the M_GET, M_POST,... constants
           available from the Apache::Constants module.  Passing an argument
           will set the method_number, mainly used for internal redirects and
           testing authorization restriction masks.

       $r->bytes_sent
           The number of bytes sent to the client, handy for logging, etc.

       $r->the_request
           The request line sent by the client, handy for logging, etc.

       $r->proxyreq
           Returns true if the request is proxy http.  Mainly used during the
           filename translation stage of the request, which may be handled by
           a "PerlTransHandler".

       $r->header_only
           Returns true if the client is asking for headers only, e.g. if the
           request method was HEAD.

       $r->protocol
           The $r->protocol method will return a string identifying the proto-
           col that the client speaks.  Typical values will be "HTTP/1.0" or
           "HTTP/1.1".

       $r->hostname
           Returns the server host name, as set by full URI or Host: header.

       $r->request_time
           Returns the time that the request was made.  The time is the local
           unix time in seconds since the epoch.

       $r->uri( [$uri] )
           The $r->uri method will return the requested URI minus optional
           query string, optionally changing it with the first argument.

       $r->filename( [$filename] )
           The $r->filename method will return the result of the URI --> file-
           name translation, optionally changing it with the first argument if
           you happen to be doing the translation.

       $r->location
           The $r->location method will return the path of the <Location> sec-
           tion from which the current "Perl*Handler" is being called.

       $r->path_info( [$path_info] )
           The $r->path_info method will return what is left in the path after
           the URI --> filename translation, optionally changing it with the
           first argument if you happen to be doing the translation.

       $r->args( [$query_string] )
           The $r->args method will return the contents of the URI query
           string.  When called in a scalar context, the entire string is
           returned.  When called in a list context, a list of parsed key =>
           value pairs are returned, i.e. it can be used like this:

              $query = $r->args;
              %in    = $r->args;

           $r->args can also be used to set the query string. This can be use-
           ful when redirecting a POST request.

       $r->headers_in
           The $r->headers_in method will return a %hash of client request
           headers.  This can be used to initialize a perl hash, or one could
           use the $r->header_in() method (described below) to retrieve a spe-
           cific header value directly.

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. This
           requires Apache::Table.

       $r->header_in( $header_name, [$value] )
           Return the value of a client header.  Can be used like this:

              $ct = $r->header_in("Content-type");
              $r->header_in($key, $val); #set the value of header '$key'

       $r->content
           The $r->content method will return the entity body read from the
           client, but only if the request content type is "applica-
           tion/x-www-form-urlencoded".  When called in a scalar context, the
           entire string is returned.  When called in a list context, a list
           of parsed key => value pairs are returned.  *NOTE*: you can only
           ask for this once, as the entire body is read from the client.

       $r->read($buf, $bytes_to_read, [$offset])
           This method is used to read data from the client, looping until it
           gets all of $bytes_to_read or a timeout happens.

           An offset may be specified to place the read data at some other
           place than the beginning of the string.

           In addition, this method sets a timeout before reading with
           "$r->soft_timeout".

       $r->get_remote_host
           Lookup the client's DNS hostname. If the configuration directive
           HostNameLookups is set to off, this returns the dotted decimal rep-
           resentation of the client's IP address instead. Might return undef
           if the hostname is not known.

       $r->get_remote_logname
           Lookup the remote user's system name.  Might return undef if the
           remote system is not running an RFC 1413 server or if the configu-
           ration directive IdentityCheck is not turned on.

       More information about the client can be obtained from the Apache::Con-
       nection object, as described below.

       $c = $r->connection
           The $r->connection method will return a reference to the request
           connection object (blessed into the Apache::Connection package).
           This is really a "conn_rec*" in disguise.  The following methods
           can be used on the connection object:

           $c->remote_host
               If the configuration directive HostNameLookups is set to on:
               then the first time "$r->get_remote_host" is called the server
               does a DNS lookup to get the remote client's host name.  The
               result is cached in "$c->remote_host" then returned. If the
               server was unable to resolve the remote client's host name this
               will be set to "". Subsequent calls to "$r->get_remote_host"
               return this cached value.

               If the configuration directive HostNameLookups is set to off:
               calls to "$r->get_remote_host" return a string that contains
               the dotted decimal representation of the remote client's IP
               address. However this string is not cached, and
               "$c->remote_host" is undefined. So, it's best to to call
               "$r->get_remote_host" instead of directly accessing this vari-
               able.

           $c->remote_ip
               The dotted decimal representation of the remote client's IP
               address.  This is set by the server when the connection record
               is created so is always defined.

               You can also set this value by providing an argument to it.
               This is helpful if your server is behind a squid accelerator
               proxy which adds a X-Forwarded-For header.

           $c->local_addr
               A packed SOCKADDR_IN in the same format as returned by
               "pack_sockaddr_in" in Socket, containing the port and address
               on the local host that the remote client is connected to.  This
               is set by the server when the connection record is created so
               it is always defined.

           $c->remote_addr
               A packed SOCKADDR_IN in the same format as returned by
               "pack_sockaddr_in" in Socket, containing the port and address
               on the remote host that the server is connected to.  This is
               set by the server when the connection record is created so it
               is always defined.

               Among other things, this can be used, together with
               "$c->local_addr", to perform RFC1413 ident lookups on the
               remote client even when the configuration directive Identity-
               Check is turned off.

               Can be used like:

                  use Net::Ident qw (lookupFromInAddr);
                  ...
                  my $remoteuser = lookupFromInAddr ($c->local_addr,
                                                     $c->remote_addr, 2);

               Note that the lookupFromInAddr interface does not currently
               exist in the Net::Ident module, but the author is planning on
               adding it soon.

           $c->remote_logname
               If the configuration directive IdentityCheck is set to on:
               then the first time "$r->get_remote_logname" is called the
               server does an RFC 1413 (ident) lookup to get the remote users
               system name. Generally for UNI* systems this is their login.
               The result is cached in "$c->remote_logname" then returned.
               Subsequent calls to "$r->get_remote_host" return the cached
               value.

               If the configuration directive IdentityCheck is set to off:
               then "$r->get_remote_logname" does nothing and "$c->remote_log-
               name" is always undefined.

           $c->user( [$user] )
               If an authentication check was successful, the authentication
               handler caches the user name here. Sets the user name to the
               optional first argument.

           $c->auth_type
               Returns the authentication scheme that successfully authenti-
               cate "$c->user", if any.

           $c->aborted
               Returns true if the client stopped talking to us.

           $c->fileno( [$direction] )
               Returns the client file descriptor. If $direction is 0, the
               input fd is returned. If $direction is not null or ommitted,
               the output fd is returned.

               This can be used to detect client disconnect without doing any
               I/O, e.g. using IO::Select.


SERVER CONFIGURATION INFORMATION

       The following methods are used to obtain information from server con-
       figuration and access control files.

       $r->dir_config( $key )
           Returns the value of a per-directory variable specified by the
           "PerlSetVar" directive.

              # <Location /foo/bar>
              # PerlSetVar  Key  Value
              # </Location>

              my $val = $r->dir_config('Key');

           Keys are case-insensitive.

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. See
           Apache::Table.

       $r->dir_config->get( $key )
           Returns the value of a per-directory array variable specified by
           the "PerlAddVar" directive.

              # <Location /foo/bar>
              # PerlAddVar  Key  Value1
              # PerlAddVar  Key  Value2
              # </Location>

              my @val = $r->dir_config->get('Key');

           Alternatively in your code you can extend the setting with:

             $r->dir_config->add(Key => 'Value3');

           Keys are case-insensitive.

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. See
           Apache::Table.

       $r->requires
           Returns an array reference of hash references, containing informa-
           tion related to the require directive.  This is normally used for
           access control, see Apache::AuthzAge for an example.

       $r->auth_type
           Returns a reference to the current value of the per directory con-
           figuration directive AuthType. Normally this would be set to
           "Basic" to use the basic authentication scheme defined in RFC 1945,
           Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0. However, you could set to
           something else and implement your own authentication scheme.

       $r->auth_name
           Returns a reference to the current value of the per directory con-
           figuration directive AuthName.  The AuthName directive creates pro-
           tection realm within the server document space. To quote RFC 1945
           "These realms allow the protected resources on a server to be par-
           titioned into a set of protection spaces, each with its own authen-
           tication scheme and/or authorization database." The client uses the
           root URL of the server to determine which authentication creden-
           tials to send with each HTTP request. These credentials are tagged
           with the name of the authentication realm that created them.  Then
           during the authentication stage the server uses the current authen-
           tication realm, from "$r->auth_name", to determine which set of
           credentials to authenticate.

       $r->document_root( [$docroot] )
           When called with no argument, returns a reference to the current
           value of the per server configuration directive DocumentRoot. To
           quote the Apache server documentation, "Unless matched by a direc-
           tive like Alias, the server appends the path from the requested URL
           to the document root to make the path to the document."  This same
           value is passed to CGI scripts in the "DOCUMENT_ROOT" environment
           variable.

           You can also set this value by providing an argument to it. The
           following example dynamically sets the document root based on the
           request's "Host:" header:

              sub trans_handler
                {
                   my $r = shift;
                   my ($user) = ($r->header_in('Host') =~ /^[^\.]+/);
                   $r->document_root("/home/$user/www");
                   return DECLINED;
                }

              PerlTransHandler trans_handler

       $r->server_root_relative( [$relative_path] )
           If called without any arguments, this method returns the value of
           the currently-configured "ServerRoot" directory.

           If a single argument is passed, it concatenates it with the value
           of "ServerRoot". For example here is how to get the path to the
           error_log file under the server root:

            my $error_log = $r->server_root_relative("logs/error_log");

           See also the next item.

       Apache->server_root_relative( [$relative_path] )
           Same as the previous item, but this time it's used without a
           request object. This method is usually needed in a startup file.
           For example the following startup file modifies @INC to add a local
           directory with perl modules located under the server root and after
           that loads a module from that directory.

             BEGIN {
                 use Apache():
                 use lib Apache->server_root_relative("lib/my_project");
             }
             use MyProject::Config ();

       $r->allow_options
           The "$r->allow_options" method can be used for checking if it is OK
           to run a perl script.  The Apache::Options module provides the con-
           stants to check against.

              if(!($r->allow_options & OPT_EXECCGI)) {
                  $r->log_reason("Options ExecCGI is off in this directory",
                                 $filename);
              }

       $r->get_server_port
           Returns the port number on which the server is listening.

       $s = $r->server
           Return a reference to the server info object (blessed into the
           Apache::Server package).  This is really a "server_rec*" in dis-
           guise.  The following methods can be used on the server object:

       $s = Apache->server
           Same as above, but only available during server startup for use in
           "<Perl>" sections, PerlRequire or PerlModule.

       $s->server_admin
           Returns the mail address of the person responsible for this server.

       $s->server_hostname
           Returns the hostname used by this server.

       $s->port
           Returns the port that this servers listens too.

       $s->is_virtual
           Returns true if this is a virtual server.

       $s->names
           Returns the wild-carded names for ServerAlias servers.

       $s->dir_config( $key )
           Alias for Apache::dir_config.

       $s->warn
           Alias for Apache::warn.

       $s->log_error
           Alias for Apache::log_error.

       $s->uid
           Returns the numeric user id under which the server answers
           requests.  This is the value of the User directive.

       $s->gid
           Returns the numeric group id under which the server answers
           requests.  This is the value of the Group directive.

       $s->loglevel
           Get or set the value of the current LogLevel. This method is added
           by the Apache::Log module, which needs to be pulled in.

               use Apache::Log;
               print "LogLevel = ", $s->loglevel;
               $s->loglevel(Apache::Log::DEBUG);

           If using Perl 5.005+, the following constants are defined (but not
           exported):

               Apache::Log::EMERG
               Apache::Log::ALERT
               Apache::Log::CRIT
               Apache::Log::ERR
               Apache::Log::WARNING
               Apache::Log::NOTICE
               Apache::Log::INFO
               Apache::Log::DEBUG

       $r->get_handlers( $hook )
           Returns a reference to a list of handlers enabled for $hook. $hook
           is a string representing the phase to handle. The returned list is
           a list of references to the handler subroutines.

                   $list = $r->get_handlers( 'PerlHandler' );

       $r->set_handlers( $hook, [\&handler, ... ] )
           Sets the list if handlers to be called for $hook. $hook is a string
           representing the phase to handle. The list of handlers is an anony-
           mous array of code references to the handlers to install for this
           request phase. The special list "[ \&OK ]" can be used to disable a
           particular phase.

                   $r->set_handlers( PerlLogHandler => [ \&myhandler1, \&myhandler2 ] );
                   $r->set_handlers( PerlAuthenHandler => [ \&OK ] );

       $r->push_handlers( $hook, \&handler )
           Pushes a new handler to be called for $hook. $hook is a string rep-
           resenting the phase to handle. The handler is a reference to a sub-
           routine to install for this request phase. This handler will be
           called before any configured handlers.

                   $r->push_handlers( PerlHandler => \&footer);

       $r->current_callback
           Returns the name of the handler currently being run. This method is
           most useful to PerlDispatchHandlers who wish to only take action
           for certain phases.

                   if($r->current_callback eq "PerlLogHandler") {
                           $r->warn("Logging request");
                   }


SETTING UP THE RESPONSE

       The following methods are used to set up and return the response back
       to the client.  This typically involves setting up $r->status(), the
       various content attributes and optionally some additional
       $r->header_out() calls before calling $r->send_http_header() which will
       actually send the headers to the client.  After this a typical applica-
       tion will call the $r->print() method to send the response content to
       the client.

       $r->send_http_header( [$content_type] )
           Send the response line and all headers to the client.  Takes an
           optional parameter indicating the content-type of the response,
           i.e. 'text/html'.

           This method will create headers from the $r->content_xxx() and
           $r->no_cache() attributes (described below) and then append the
           headers defined by $r->header_out (or $r->err_header_out if status
           indicates an error).

       $r->get_basic_auth_pw
           If the current request is protected by Basic authentication, this
           method will return OK.  Otherwise, it will return a value that
           ought to be propagated back to the client (typically
           AUTH_REQUIRED).  The second return value will be the decoded pass-
           word sent by the client.

              ($ret, $sent_pw) = $r->get_basic_auth_pw;

       $r->note_basic_auth_failure
           Prior to requiring Basic authentication from the client, this
           method will set the outgoing HTTP headers asking the client to
           authenticate for the realm defined by the configuration directive
           "AuthName".

       $r->handler( [$meth] )
           Set the handler for a request.  Normally set by the configuration
           directive "AddHandler".

              $r->handler( "perl-script" );

       $r->notes( $key, [$value] )
           Return the value of a named entry in the Apache "notes" table, or
           optionally set the value of a named entry.  This table is used by
           Apache modules to pass messages amongst themselves. Generally if
           you are writing handlers in mod_perl you can use Perl variables for
           this.

              $r->notes("MY_HANDLER" => OK);
              $val = $r->notes("MY_HANDLER");

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. This
           requires Apache::Table.

       $r->pnotes( $key, [$value] )
           Like $r->notes, but takes any scalar as an value.

              $r->pnotes("MY_HANDLER" => [qw(one two)]);
              my $val = $r->pnotes("MY_HANDLER");
              print $val->[0];     # prints "one"

           Advantage over just using a Perl variable is that $r->pnotes gets
           cleaned up after every request.

       $r->subprocess_env( $key, [$value] )
           Return the value of a named entry in the Apache "subprocess_env"
           table, or optionally set the value of a named entry. This table is
           used by mod_include.  By setting some custom variables inside a
           perl handler it is possible to combine perl with mod_include
           nicely.  If you say, e.g. in a PerlHeaderParserHandler

              $r->subprocess_env(MyLanguage => "de");

           you can then write in your .shtml document:

              <!--#if expr="$MyLanguage = en" -->
              English
              <!--#elif expr="$MyLanguage = de" -->
              Deutsch
              <!--#else -->
              Sorry
              <!--#endif -->

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. This
           requires Apache::Table.

       $r->content_type( [$newval] )
           Get or set the content type being sent to the client.  Content
           types are strings like "text/plain", "text/html" or "image/gif".
           This corresponds to the "Content-Type" header in the HTTP protocol.
           Example of usage is:

              $previous_type = $r->content_type;
              $r->content_type("text/plain");

       $r->content_encoding( [$newval] )
           Get or set the content encoding.  Content encodings are string like
           "gzip" or "compress".  This correspond to the "Content-Encoding"
           header in the HTTP protocol.

       $r->content_languages( [$array_ref] )
           Get or set the content languages.  The content language corresponds
           to the "Content-Language" HTTP header and is an array reference
           containing strings such as "en" or "no".

       $r->status( $integer )
           Get or set the reply status for the client request.  The
           Apache::Constants module provide mnemonic names for the status
           codes.

       $r->status_line( $string )
           Get or set the response status line.  The status line is a string
           like "200 Document follows" and it will take precedence over the
           value specified using the $r->status() described above.

       $r->headers_out
           The $r->headers_out method will return a %hash of server response
           headers.  This can be used to initialize a perl hash, or one could
           use the $r->header_out() method (described below) to retrieve or
           set a specific header value directly.

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. This
           requires Apache::Table.

       $r->header_out( $header, $value )
           Change the value of a response header, or create a new one.  You
           should not define any "Content-XXX" headers by calling this method,
           because these headers use their own specific methods.  Example of
           use:

              $r->header_out("WWW-Authenticate" => "Basic");
              $val = $r->header_out($key);

       $r->err_headers_out
           The $r->err_headers_out method will return a %hash of server
           response headers.  This can be used to initialize a perl hash, or
           one could use the $r->err_header_out() method (described below) to
           retrieve or set a specific header value directly.

           The difference between headers_out and err_headers_out is that the
           latter are printed even on error, and persist across internal redi-
           rects (so the headers printed for ErrorDocument handlers will have
           them).

           Will return a HASH reference blessed into the Apache::Table class
           when called in a scalar context with no "key" argument. This
           requires Apache::Table.

       $r->err_header_out( $header, [$value] )
           Change the value of an error response header, or create a new one.
           These headers are used if the status indicates an error.

              $r->err_header_out("Warning" => "Bad luck");
              $val = $r->err_header_out($key);

       $r->no_cache( $boolean )
           This is a flag that indicates that the data being returned is
           volatile and the client should be told not to cache it.
           "$r->no_cache(1)" adds the headers "Pragma: no-cache" and
           "Cache-control: no-cache" to the reponse, therefore it must be
           called before "$r->send_http_header".

       $r->print( @list )
           This method sends data to the client with "$r->write_client", but
           first sets a timeout before sending with "$r->soft_timeout". This
           method is called instead of CORE::print when you use print() in
           your mod_perl programs.

           This method treats scalar references specially. If an item in @list
           is a scalar reference, it will be dereferenced before printing.
           This is a performance optimization which prevents unneeded copying
           of large strings, and it is subtly different from Perl's standard
           print() behavior.

           Example:

              $foo = \"bar"; print($foo);

           The result is "bar", not the "SCALAR(0xDEADBEEF)" you might have
           expected. If you really want the reference to be printed out, force
           it into a scalar context by using "print(scalar($foo))".

       $r->send_fd( $filehandle )
           Send the contents of a file to the client.  Can for instance be
           used like this:

             open(FILE, $r->filename) || return 404;
             $r->send_fd(FILE);
             close(FILE);

       $r->internal_redirect( $newplace )
           Redirect to a location in the server namespace without telling the
           client. For instance:

              $r->internal_redirect("/home/sweet/home.html");

       $r->internal_redirect_handler( $newplace )
           Same as internal_redirect, but the handler from $r is preserved.

       $r->custom_response($code, $uri)
           This method provides a hook into the ErrorDocument mechanism,
           allowing you to configure a custom response for a given response
           code at request-time.

           Example:

               use Apache::Constants ':common';

               sub handler {
                   my($r) = @_;

                   if($things_are_ok) {
                       return OK;
                   }

                   #<Location $r->uri>
                   #ErrorDocument 401 /error.html
                   #</Location>

                   $r->custom_response(AUTH_REQUIRED, "/error.html");

                   #can send a string too
                   #<Location $r->uri>
                   #ErrorDocument 401 "sorry, go away"
                   #</Location>

                   #$r->custom_response(AUTH_REQUIRED, "sorry, go away");

                   return AUTH_REQUIRED;
               }


SERVER CORE FUNCTIONS

       $r->soft_timeout($message)
       $r->hard_timeout($message)
       $r->kill_timeout
       $r->reset_timeout
           (Documentation borrowed from http_main.h)

           There are two functions which modules can call to trigger a timeout
           (with the per-virtual-server timeout duration); these are
           hard_timeout and soft_timeout.

           The difference between the two is what happens when the timeout
           expires (or earlier than that, if the client connection aborts) ---
           a soft_timeout just puts the connection to the client in an
           "aborted" state, which will cause http_protocol.c to stop trying to
           talk to the client, but otherwise allows the code to continue nor-
           mally.  hard_timeout(), by contrast, logs the request, and then
           aborts it completely --- longjmp()ing out to the accept() loop in
           http_main.  Any resources tied into the request resource pool will
           be cleaned up; everything that is not will leak.

           soft_timeout() is recommended as a general rule, because it gives
           your code a chance to clean up.  However, hard_timeout() may be the
           most convenient way of dealing with timeouts waiting for some
           external resource other than the client, if you can live with the
           restrictions.

           When a hard timeout is in scope, critical sections can be guarded
           with block_alarms() and unblock_alarms() --- these are declared in
           alloc.c because they are most often used in conjunction with rou-
           tines to allocate something or other, to make sure that the cleanup
           does get registered before any alarm is allowed to happen which
           might require it to be cleaned up; they * are, however, implemented
           in http_main.c.

           kill_timeout() will disarm either variety of timeout.

           reset_timeout() resets the timeout in progress.

       $r->post_connection($code_ref)
       $r->register_cleanup($code_ref)
           Register a cleanup function which is called just before $r->pool is
           destroyed.

              $r->register_cleanup(sub {
                  my $r = shift;
                  warn "registered cleanup called for ", $r->uri, "\n";
              });

           Cleanup functions registered in the parent process (before forking)
           will run once when the server is shut down:

              #PerlRequire startup.pl
              warn "parent pid is $$\n";
              Apache->server->register_cleanup(sub { warn "server cleanup in $$\n"});

           The post_connection method is simply an alias for register_cleanup,
           as this method may be used to run code after the client connection
           is closed, which may not be a cleanup.


CGI SUPPORT

       We also provide some methods that make it easier to support the CGI
       type of interface.

       $r->send_cgi_header()
           Take action on certain headers including Status:, Location: and
           Content-type: just as mod_cgi does, then calls
           $r->send_http_header().  Example of use:

              $r->send_cgi_header(<<EOT);
              Location: /foo/bar
              Content-type: text/html

              EOT


ERROR LOGGING

       The following methods can be used to log errors.

       $r->log_reason($message, $file)
           The request failed, why??  Write a message to the server errorlog.

              $r->log_reason("Because I felt like it", $r->filename);

       $r->log_error($message)
           Uh, oh.  Write a message to the server errorlog.

              $r->log_error("Some text that goes in the error_log");

       $r->warn($message)
           For pre-1.3 versions of apache, this is just an alias for
           "log_error".  With 1.3+ versions of apache, this message will only
           be send to the error_log if LogLevel is set to warn or higher.


UTILITY FUNCTIONS

       Apache::unescape_url($string)
             $unescaped_url = Apache::unescape_url($string)

           Handy function for unescapes.  Use this one for filenames/paths.
           Notice that the original $string is mangled in the process (because
           the string part of PV shrinks, but the variable is not updated, to
           speed things up).

           Use unescape_url_info for the result of submitted form data.

       Apache::unescape_url_info($string)
           Handy function for unescapes submitted form data.  In opposite to
           unescape_url it translates the plus sign to space.

       Apache::perl_hook($hook)
           Returns true if the specified callback hook is enabled:

              for (qw(Access Authen Authz ChildInit Cleanup Fixup
                      HeaderParser Init Log Trans Type))
              {
                  print "$_ hook enabled\n" if Apache::perl_hook($_);
              }


GLOBAL VARIABLES

       $Apache::Server::Starting
           Set to true when the server is starting.

       $Apache::Server::ReStarting
           Set to true when the server is starting.


SEE ALSO

       perl(1), Apache::Constants(3), Apache::Registry(3), Apache::Debug(3),
       Apache::Options(3), CGI::Apache(3)

       Apache C API notes at "http://www.apache.org/docs/"


AUTHORS

       Perl interface to the Apache C API written by Doug MacEachern with con-
       tributions from Gisle Aas, Andreas Koenig, Eric Bartley, Rob Hartill,
       Gerald Richter, Salvador Ortiz and others.

perl v5.8.8                       2003-02-19                         Apache(3)
See also Apache::ASP(3)
See also Apache::ASP::CGI::Table(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language::HtmlDoc(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language::SAXMachines(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language::XPathScript(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language::XSP(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Language::XSP::SimpleTaglib(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::LibXMLSupport(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::MediaChooser::WAPCheck(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Plugin::Fragment(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Plugin::Passthru(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Plugin::QueryStringCache(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Provider(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::Provider::FileWrite(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::StyleChooser::Cookie(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::StyleChooser::FileSuffix(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::StyleChooser::PathInfo(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::StyleChooser::QueryString(3)
See also Apache::AxKit::StyleChooser::UserAgent(3)
See also Apache::Compress(3)
See also Apache::Constants(3)
See also Apache::Cookie(3)
See also Apache::Debug(3)
See also Apache::ExtUtils(3)
See also Apache::FakeRequest(3)
See also Apache::File(3)
See also Apache::Filter(3)
See also Apache::Include(3)
See also Apache::Leak(3)
See also Apache::Log(3)
See also Apache::MyConfig(3)
See also Apache::Options(3)
See also Apache::PerlRun(3)
See also Apache::PerlRunFilter(3)
See also Apache::PerlRunXS(3)
See also Apache::PerlSections(3)
See also Apache::RPC::Server(3)
See also Apache::RPC::Status(3)
See also Apache::RedirectLogFix(3)
See also Apache::Registry(3)
See also Apache::RegistryFilter(3)
See also Apache::RegistryLoader(3)
See also Apache::Request(3)
See also Apache::Resource(3)
See also Apache::SIG(3)
See also Apache::SOAP(3)
See also Apache::Session(3)
See also Apache::Session::CacheAny(3)
See also Apache::Session::DB_File(3)
See also Apache::Session::File(3)
See also Apache::Session::Flex(3)
See also Apache::Session::Generate::MD5(3)
See also Apache::Session::Generate::ModUniqueId(3)
See also Apache::Session::Generate::ModUsertrack(3)
See also Apache::Session::Informix(3)
See also Apache::Session::Lock::File(3)
See also Apache::Session::Lock::MySQL(3)
See also Apache::Session::Lock::Null(3)
See also Apache::Session::Lock::Semaphore(3)
See also Apache::Session::Lock::Sybase(3)
See also Apache::Session::MySQL(3)
See also Apache::Session::Oracle(3)
See also Apache::Session::Postgres(3)
See also Apache::Session::Serialize::Base64(3)
See also Apache::Session::Serialize::Storable(3)
See also Apache::Session::Serialize::Sybase(3)
See also Apache::Session::Serialize::UUEncode(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::CacheAny(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::DB_File(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::File(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::Informix(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::MySQL(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::Oracle(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::Postgres(3)
See also Apache::Session::Store::Sybase(3)
See also Apache::Session::Sybase(3)
See also Apache::SizeLimit(3)
See also Apache::StatINC(3)
See also Apache::Status(3)
See also Apache::Symbol(3)
See also Apache::Symdump(3)
See also Apache::Table(3)
See also Apache::URI(3)
See also Apache::Util(3)
See also Apache::XMLRPC::Lite(3)
See also Apache::httpd_conf(3)
See also Apache::libapreq(3)
See also Apache::src(3)
See also Apache::testold(3)
See also Bundle::Apache(3)
See also Bundle::Apache::ASP(3)
See also Bundle::Apache::ASP::Extra(3)
See also CGI::Apache(3)
See also DBI::ProfileDumper::Apache(3)
See also SOAP::Transport::HTTP::Apache(3)

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