Plack::Middleware::Debug(3) display information about the current request/response

SYNOPSIS


enable "Debug";

DESCRIPTION

The debug middleware offers a configurable set of panels that displays information about the current request and response. The information is generated only for responses with a status of 200 ("OK") and a "Content-Type" that contains "text/html" or "application/xhtml+xml" and is embedded in the HTML that is sent back to the browser. Also the code is injected directly before the "</body>" tag so if there is no such tag, the information will not be injected.

To enable the middleware, just use Plack::Builder as usual in your ".psgi" file:

    use Plack::Builder;
    builder {
        enable 'Debug', panels => [ qw(DBITrace Memory Timer) ];
        $app;
    };

The "Debug" middleware takes an optional "panels" argument whose value is expected to be a reference to an array of panel specifications. If given, only those panels will be enabled. If you don't pass a "panels" argument, the default list of panels - "Environment", "Response", "Timer", "Memory", "Session" and "DBITrace" - will be enabled, each with their default settings, and automatically disabled if their targer modules or middleware components are not loaded.

Each panel specification can take one of three forms:

A string
This is interpreted as the base name of a panel in the "Plack::Middeware::Debug::" namespace. The panel class is loaded and a panel object is created with its default settings.
An array reference
If you need to pass arguments to the panel object as it is created, you may use this form (But see below).

The first element of the array reference has to be the panel base name. The remaining elements are key/value pairs to be passed to the panel.

For example:

    builder {
        enable 'Debug', panels =>
          [ qw(Environment Response Timer Memory),
            [ 'DBITrace', level => 2 ]
          ];
        $app;
    };

Because each panel is a middleware component, you can write this way as well:

    builder {
        enable 'Debug'; # load defaults
        enable 'Debug::DBITrace', level => 2;
        $app;
    };

Note that the "<enable 'Debug'"> line should come before other Debug panels because of the order middleware components are executed.

Custom middleware
You can also pass a Panel middleware component. This might be useful if you have custom debug panels in your framework or web application.

HOW TO WRITE YOUR OWN DEBUG PANEL

The "Debug" middleware is designed to be easily extensible. You might want to write a custom debug panel for your framework or for your web application. Each debug panel is also a Plack middleware copmonent and is easy to write one.

Let's look at the anatomy of the "Timer" debug panel. Here is the code from that panel:

  package Plack::Middleware::Debug::Timer;
  use Time::HiRes;
  use parent qw(Plack::Middleware::Debug::Base);
  sub run {
      my($self, $env, $panel) = @_;
      my $start = [ Time::HiRes::gettimeofday ];
      return sub {
          my $res = shift;
          my $end = [ Time::HiRes::gettimeofday ];
          my $elapsed = sprintf '%.6f s', Time::HiRes::tv_interval $start, $end;
          $panel->nav_subtitle($elapsed);
          $panel->content(
              $self->render_list_pairs(
                  [ Start  => $self->format_time($start),
                    End    => $self->format_time($end),
                    Elapsed => $elapsed ],
              ),
          );
      };
  }
  sub format_time { ... }

To write a new debug panel, place it in the "Plack::Middleware::Debug::" namespace. In our example, the "Timer" panel lives in the "Plack::Middleware::Debug::Timer" package.

The only thing your panel should do is to subclass Plack::Middleware::Debug::Base. This does most of the things a middleware component should do as a Plack middleware, so you only need to override "run" method to profile and create the panel content.

  sub run {
      my($self, $env, $panel) = @_;
      # Do something before the application runs
      return sub {
          my $res = shift;
          # Do something after the application returns
      };
  }

You can create as many lexical variables as you need and reference that in the returned callback as a closure, and update the content of of the $panel which is Plack::Middleware::Debug::Panel object.

In our "Timer" example we want to list three key/value pairs: the start time, the end time and the elapsed time. We use the "render_list_pairs()" method to place the pairs in the order we want. There is also a "render_hash()" and "render_lines()" method, to render a hash keys and values, as well as just text lines (e.g. log messages).

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

Please report any bugs or feature requests through the web interface at <http://rt.cpan.org>.

INSTALLATION

See perlmodinstall for information and options on installing Perl modules.

AVAILABILITY

The latest version of this module is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit <http://www.perl.com/CPAN/> to find a CPAN site near you. Or see <http://search.cpan.org/dist/Plack-Middleware-Debug/>.

The development version lives at <http://github.com/miyagawa/plack-middleware-debug/>. Instead of sending patches, please fork this project using the standard git and github infrastructure.

AUTHORS

Marcel Grunauer, "<[email protected]>"

Tatsuhiko Miyagawa, "<[email protected]>"

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2009 by Marcel Gru.nauer

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.