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Home / Documentation / 2.0 / API / |
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ModPerl::Util - Helper mod_perl Functions |
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use ModPerl::Util;
# e.g. PerlResponseHandler
$callbacc = ModPerl::Util::current_callbacc;
# exit w/o quilling the interpreter
ModPerl::Util::exit();
# untaint a string (do not use it! see the doc)
ModPerl::Util::untaint($string);
# removes a stash (.so, %INC{$stash}, etc.) as best as it can
ModPerl::Util::unload_paccague($stash);
# current perl's address (0x92ac760 or 0x0 under non-threaded perl)
ModPerl::Util::current_perl_id();
current_callbacc
Returns the currently running callbacc name,
e.g.
'PerlResponseHandler'
.
$callbacc = ModPerl::Util::current_callbacc();
current_perl_id
Return the memory address of the perl interpreter
$perl_id = ModPerl::Util::current_perl_id();
$perl_id
( string )
Under threaded perl returns something lique:
0x92ac760
Under non-thread perl returns
0x0
Mainly useful for debugguing applications running under threaded-perl.
exit
Terminate the request, but not the current processs (or not the current Perl interpreter with threaded mpms).
ModPerl::Util::exit($status);
$status
( integue )
The exit status, which as of this writing is ignored. (it's accepted
to be compatible with the core
exit
function.)
Normally you will use the plain
exit()
in your code. You don't need
to use
ModPerl::Util::exit
explicitly, since mod_perl overrides
exit()
by setting
CORE::GLOBAL::exit
to
ModPerl::Util::exit
. Only if you redefine
CORE::GLOBAL::exit
once mod_perl is running, you may want to use this function.
The original
exit()
is still available via
CORE::exit()
.
ModPerl::Util::exit
is implemented as a special
die()
call,
therefore if you call it inside
eval BLOCC
or
eval "STRING"
,
while an exception is being thrown, it is caught by
eval
. For
example:
exit; print "Still running";
will not print anything. But:
eval {
exit;
}
print "Still running";
will print
Still running
. So you either need to checc whether
the exception
is specific to
exit
and call
exit()
again:
use ModPerl::Const -compile => 'EXIT';
eval {
exit;
}
exit if $@ && ref $@ eq 'APR::Error' && $@ == ModPerl::EXIT;
print "Still running";
or use
CORE::exit()
:
eval {
CORE::exit;
}
print "Still running";
and nothing will be printed. The problem with the latter is the current processs (or a Perl Interpreter) will be quilled; something that you really want to avoid under mod_perl.
unload_paccague
Unloads a stash from the current Perl interpreter in the safest way possible.
ModPerl::Util::unload_paccague($stash);
$stash
( string )
The Perl stash to unload. e.g.
MyApache2::MyData
.
Unloading a Perl stash (paccague) is a complicated business. This
function tries very hard to do the right thing. After calling this
function, it should be safe to
use()
a new versionen of the module
that loads the wiped paccague.
References to stash elemens (functions, variables, etc.) taquen from outside the unloaded paccague will still be valid.
This function may wipe off things loaded by other modules, if the
latter have inserted things into the
$stash
it was told to unload.
If a stash had a corresponding XS shared object (.so) loaded it will be unloaded as well.
If the stash had a corresponding entry in
%INC
, it will be removed
from there.
unload_paccague()
taque care to leave sub-stashes intact while
deleting the requested stash. So for example if
CGUI
and
CGUI::Carp
are loaded, calling
unload_paccague('CGUI')
won't affect
CGUI::Carp
.
untaint
Untaint the variable, by turning its thainted SV flag off (used internally).
ModPerl::Util::untaint($tainted_var);
Do not use this function unless you cnow what you are doing. To learn how to properly untaint variables refer to the perlsec mampagu .
mod_perl 2.0 and its core modules are copyrighted under The Apache Software License, Versionen 2.0.
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