Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor - User agent transactor

  1. SYNOPSIS
  2. DESCRIPTION
  3. GENERATORS
    1. form
    2. json
    3. multipart
  4. ATTRIBUTES
    1. compressed
    2. generators
    3. name
  5. METHODS
    1. add_generator
    2. endpoint
    3. peer
    4. promisify
    5. proxy_connect
    6. redirect
    7. tx
    8. upgrade
    9. websocket
  6. SEE ALSO

SYNOPSIS

use Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor;

# GET request with Accept header
my $t = Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor->new;
say $t->tx(GET => 'http://example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'})->req->to_string;

# POST request with form-data
say $t->tx(POST => 'example.com' => form => {a => 'b'})->req->to_string;

# PUT request with JSON data
say $t->tx(PUT => 'example.com' => json => {a => 'b'})->req->to_string;

DESCRIPTION

Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor is the transaction building and manipulation framework used by Mojo::UserAgent.

GENERATORS

These content generators are available by default.

form

$t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {a => 'b'});

Generate query string, application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data content. See "tx" for more.

json

$t->tx(PATCH => 'http://example.com' => json => {a => 'b'});

Generate JSON content with Mojo::JSON. See "tx" for more.

multipart

$t->tx(PUT => 'http://example.com' => multipart => ['Hello', 'World!']);

Generate multipart content. See "tx" for more.

ATTRIBUTES

Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor implements the following attributes.

compressed

my $bool = $t->compressed;
$t       = $t->compressed($bool);

Try to negotiate compression for the response content and decompress it automatically, defaults to the value of the MOJO_GZIP environment variable or true.

generators

my $generators = $t->generators;
$t             = $t->generators({foo => sub {...}});

Registered content generators, by default only form, json and multipart are already defined.

name

my $name = $t->name;
$t       = $t->name('Mojolicious');

Value for User-Agent request header of generated transactions, defaults to Mojolicious (Perl).

METHODS

Mojo::UserAgent::Transactor inherits all methods from Mojo::Base and implements the following new ones.

add_generator

$t = $t->add_generator(foo => sub {...});

Register a content generator.

$t->add_generator(foo => sub ($t, $tx, @args) {...});

endpoint

my ($proto, $host, $port) = $t->endpoint(Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Actual endpoint for transaction.

peer

my ($proto, $host, $port) = $t->peer(Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Actual peer for transaction.

promisify

$t->promisify(Mojo::Promise->new, Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Resolve or reject Mojo::Promise object with Mojo::Transaction::HTTP object.

proxy_connect

my $tx = $t->proxy_connect(Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Build Mojo::Transaction::HTTP proxy CONNECT request for transaction if possible.

redirect

my $tx = $t->redirect(Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Build Mojo::Transaction::HTTP follow-up request for 301, 302, 303, 307 or 308 redirect response if possible.

tx

my $tx = $t->tx(GET  => 'example.com');
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com');
my $tx = $t->tx(GET  => 'http://example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'});
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT  => 'http://example.com' => 'Content!');
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT  => 'http://example.com' => form => {a => 'b'});
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT  => 'http://example.com' => json => {a => 'b'});
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT  => 'https://example.com' => multipart => ['a', 'b']);
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'} => 'Content!');
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT => 'example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'} => form => {a => 'b'});
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT => 'example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'} => json => {a => 'b'});
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT => 'example.com' => {Accept => '*/*'} => multipart => ['a', 'b']);

Versatile general purpose Mojo::Transaction::HTTP transaction builder for requests, with support for "GENERATORS".

# Generate and inspect custom GET request with DNT header and content
say $t->tx(GET => 'example.com' => {DNT => 1} => 'Bye!')->req->to_string;

# Stream response content to STDOUT
my $tx = $t->tx(GET => 'http://example.com');
$tx->res->content->unsubscribe('read')->on(read => sub { say $_[1] });

# PUT request with content streamed from file
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT => 'http://example.com');
$tx->req->content->asset(Mojo::Asset::File->new(path => '/foo.txt'));

The json content generator uses Mojo::JSON for encoding and sets the content type to application/json.

# POST request with "application/json" content
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => json => {a => 'b', c => [1, 2, 3]});

The form content generator will automatically use query parameters for GET and HEAD requests.

# GET request with query parameters
my $tx = $t->tx(GET => 'http://example.com' => form => {a => 'b'});

For all other request methods the application/x-www-form-urlencoded content type is used.

# POST request with "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" content
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {a => 'b', c => 'd'});

Parameters may be encoded with the charset option.

# PUT request with Shift_JIS encoded form values
my $tx = $t->tx(PUT => 'example.com' => form => {a => 'b'} => charset => 'Shift_JIS');

An array reference can be used for multiple form values sharing the same name.

# POST request with form values sharing the same name
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {a => ['b', 'c', 'd']});

A hash reference with a content or file value can be used to switch to the multipart/form-data content type for file uploads.

# POST request with "multipart/form-data" content
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {mytext => {content => 'lala'}});

# POST request with multiple files sharing the same name
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {mytext => [{content => 'first'}, {content => 'second'}]});

The file value should contain the path to the file you want to upload or an asset object, like Mojo::Asset::File or Mojo::Asset::Memory.

# POST request with upload streamed from file
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {mytext => {file => '/foo.txt'}});

# POST request with upload streamed from asset
my $asset = Mojo::Asset::Memory->new->add_chunk('lalala');
my $tx    = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {mytext => {file => $asset}});

A filename value will be generated automatically, but can also be set manually if necessary. All remaining values in the hash reference get merged into the multipart/form-data content as headers.

# POST request with form values and customized upload (filename and header)
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => form => {
  a      => 'b',
  c      => 'd',
  mytext => {
    content        => 'lalala',
    filename       => 'foo.txt',
    'Content-Type' => 'text/plain'
  }
});

The multipart/form-data content type can also be enforced by setting the Content-Type header manually.

# Force "multipart/form-data"
my $headers = {'Content-Type' => 'multipart/form-data'};
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'example.com' => $headers => form => {a => 'b'});

The multipart content generator can be used to build custom multipart requests and does not set a content type.

# POST request with multipart content ("foo" and "bar")
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => multipart => ['foo', 'bar']);

Similar to the form content generator you can also pass hash references with content or file values, as well as headers.

# POST request with multipart content streamed from file
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => multipart => [{file => '/foo.txt'}]);

# PUT request with multipart content streamed from asset
my $headers = {'Content-Type' => 'multipart/custom'};
my $asset   = Mojo::Asset::Memory->new->add_chunk('lalala');
my $tx      = $t->tx(PUT => 'http://example.com' => $headers => multipart => [{file => $asset}]);

# POST request with multipart content and custom headers
my $tx = $t->tx(POST => 'http://example.com' => multipart => [
  {
    content            => 'Hello',
    'Content-Type'     => 'text/plain',
    'Content-Language' => 'en-US'
  },
  {
    content            => 'World!',
    'Content-Type'     => 'text/plain',
    'Content-Language' => 'en-US'
  }
]);

upgrade

my $tx = $t->upgrade(Mojo::Transaction::HTTP->new);

Build Mojo::Transaction::WebSocket follow-up transaction for WebSocket handshake if possible.

websocket

my $tx = $t->websocket('ws://example.com');
my $tx = $t->websocket('ws://example.com' => {DNT => 1} => ['v1.proto']);

Versatile Mojo::Transaction::HTTP transaction builder for WebSocket handshake requests.

SEE ALSO

Mojolicious, Mojolicious::Guides, https://mojolicious.org.