HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete - A filter that passes on a complete body or nothing |
HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete - A filter that passes on a complete body or nothing
use HTTP::Proxy; use HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::simple; use HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete;
my $proxy = HTTP::Proxy->new;
# pass the complete response body to our filter (in one pass) $proxy->push_filter( mime => 'text/html', response => HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete->new, response => HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::simple->new( sub { my ( $self, $dataref, $message, $protocol, $buffer ) = @_; # some complex processing that needs # the whole response body } ); );
$proxy->start;
The HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete filter will ensure that the next filter in the filter chain will only receive complete message bodies (either request or response).
It will store the chunks of data as they arrive, only to pass the entire message body after the whole message has been received by the proxy.
Subsequent filters is the chain will receive the whole body as a big piece of data.
This consumes memory and time.
Use with caution, otherwise your client will timeout, or your proxy will run out of memory.
Also note that all filters after complete
are still called when the
proxy receives data: they just receive empty data. They will receive
the complete data when the filter chain is called for the very last time
(the $buffer
parameter is undef
). (See the documentation of
the HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter manpage for details about the $buffer
parameter.)
This filter defines two methods, called automatically:
filter()
will_modify()
Philippe ``BooK'' Bruhat, <book@cpan.org>.
Thanks to Simon Cozens and Merijn H. Brandt, who needed this almost at
the same time. ;-)
Copyright 2004-2008, Philippe Bruhat.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
HTTP::Proxy::BodyFilter::complete - A filter that passes on a complete body or nothing |