Frontier::RPC2(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Frontier::RPC2(3)NAMEFrontier::RPC2 - encode/decode RPC2 format XML
SYNOPSIS
use Frontier::RPC2;
$coder = Frontier::RPC2->new;
$xml_string = $coder->encode_call($method, @args);
$xml_string = $coder->encode_response($result);
$xml_string = $coder->encode_fault($code, $message);
$call = $coder->decode($xml_string);
$response_xml = $coder->serve($request_xml, $methods);
$boolean_object = $coder->boolean($boolean);
$date_time_object = $coder->date_time($date_time);
$base64_object = $coder->base64($base64);
$int_object = $coder->int(42);
$float_object = $coder->float(3.14159);
$string_object = $coder->string("Foo");
DESCRIPTIONFrontier::RPC2 encodes and decodes XML RPC calls.
$coder = Frontier::RPC2->new( OPTIONS )
Create a new encoder/decoder. The following option is supported:
encoding
The XML encoding to be specified in the XML declaration of
encoded RPC requests or responses. Decoded results may have a
different encoding specified; XML::Parser will convert decoded
data to UTF-8. The default encoding is none, which uses XML
1.0's default of UTF-8. For example:
$server = Frontier::RPC2->new( 'encoding' => 'ISO-8859-1' );
use_objects
If set to a non-zero value will convert incoming <i4>, <float>,
and <string> values to objects instead of scalars. See int(),
float(), and string() below for more details.
$xml_string = $coder->encode_call($method, @args)
`"encode_call"' converts a method name and it's arguments into an
RPC2 `"methodCall"' element, returning the XML fragment.
$xml_string = $coder->encode_response($result)
`"encode_response"' converts the return value of a procedure into
an RPC2 `"methodResponse"' element containing the result, returning
the XML fragment.
$xml_string = $coder->encode_fault($code, $message)
`"encode_fault"' converts a fault code and message into an RPC2
`"methodResponse"' element containing a `"fault"' element,
returning the XML fragment.
$call = $coder->decode($xml_string)
`"decode"' converts an XML string containing an RPC2 `"methodCall"'
or `"methodResponse"' element into a hash containing three members,
`"type"', `"value"', and `"method_name"'. `"type"' is one of
`"call"', `"response"', or `"fault"'. `"value"' is array
containing the parameters or result of the RPC. For a `"call"'
type, `"value"' contains call's parameters and `"method_name"'
contains the method being called. For a `"response"' type, the
`"value"' array contains call's result. For a `"fault"' type, the
`"value"' array contains a hash with the two members `"faultCode"'
and `"faultMessage"'.
$response_xml = $coder->serve($request_xml, $methods)
`"serve"' decodes `$request_xml', looks up the called method name
in the `$methods' hash and calls it, and then encodes and returns
the response as XML.
$boolean_object = $coder->boolean($boolean);
$date_time_object = $coder->date_time($date_time);
$base64_object = $coder->base64($base64);
These methods create and return XML-RPC-specific datatypes that can
be passed to the encoder. The decoder may also return these
datatypes. The corresponding package names (for use with
`"ref()"', for example) are `"Frontier::RPC2::Boolean"',
`"Frontier::RPC2::DateTime::ISO8601"', and
`"Frontier::RPC2::Base64"'.
You can change and retrieve the value of boolean, date/time, and
base64 data using the `"value"' method of those objects, i.e.:
$boolean = $boolean_object->value;
$boolean_object->value(1);
Note: `"base64()"' does not encode or decode base64 data for you,
you must use MIME::Base64 or similar module for that.
$int_object = $coder->int(42);
$float_object = $coder->float(3.14159);
$string_object = $coder->string("Foo");
By default, you may pass ordinary Perl values (scalars) to be
encoded. RPC2 automatically converts them to XML-RPC types if they
look like an integer, float, or as a string. This assumption
causes problems when you want to pass a string that looks like
"0096", RPC2 will convert that to an <i4> because it looks like an
integer. With these methods, you could now create a string object
like this:
$part_num = $coder->string("0096");
and be confident that it will be passed as an XML-RPC string. You
can change and retrieve values from objects using value() as
described above.
SEE ALSOperl(1), Frontier::Daemon(3), Frontier::Client(3)
<http://www.scripting.com/frontier5/xml/code/rpc.html>
AUTHOR
Ken MacLeod <ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us>
perl v5.10.1 2010-12-13 Frontier::RPC2(3)