RPC::XML::Client - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION DIAGNOSTICS CAVEATS BUGS SUPPORT LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT CREDITS SEE ALSO AUTHOR
NAME
    RPC::XML::Client - An XML-RPC client class

SYNOPSIS
        require RPC::XML;
        require RPC::XML::Client;

        $cli = RPC::XML::Client->new('http://www.localhost.net/RPCSERV');
        $resp = $cli->send_request('system.listMethods');

        print ref $resp ? join(', ', @{$resp->value}) : "Error: $resp";

DESCRIPTION
    This is an XML-RPC client built upon the RPC::XML data classes, and
    using LWP::UserAgent and HTTP::Request for the communication layer. This
    client supports the full XML-RPC specification.

SUBROUTINES/METHODS
    The following methods are available:

    new (URI [, ARGS])
        Creates a new client object that will route its requests to the URL
        provided. The constructor creates a HTTP::Request object and a
        LWP::UserAgent object, which are stored on the client object. When
        requests are made, these objects are ready to go, with the headers
        set appropriately. The return value of this method is a reference to
        the new object. The "URI" argument may be a string or an object from
        the URI class from CPAN.

        Any additional arguments are treated as key-value pairs. Most are
        attached to the object itself without change. The following are
        recognized by "new" and treated specially:

        parser
            If this parameter is passed, the value following it is expected
            to be an array reference. The contents of that array are passed
            to the new method of the RPC::XML::ParserFactory-generated
            object that the client object caches for its use. See the
            RPC::XML::ParserFactory manual page for a list of recognized
            parameters to the constructor.

        useragent
            This is similar to the "parser" argument above, and also expects
            an array reference to follow it. The contents are passed to the
            constructor of the LWP::UserAgent class when creating that
            component of the client object. See the manual page for
            LWP::UserAgent for supported values.

        error_handler
            If passed, the value must be a code reference that will be
            invoked when a request results in a transport-level error. The
            closure will receive a single argument, the text of the error
            message from the failed communication attempt. It is expected to
            return a single value (assuming it returns at all).

        fault_handler
            If passed, the value must be a code reference. This one is
            invoked when a request results in a fault response from the
            server. The closure will receive a single argument, a
            RPC::XML::fault instance that can be used to retrieve the code
            and text-string of the fault. It is expected to return a single
            value (if it returns at all).

        combined_handler
            If this parameter is specified, it too must have a code
            reference as a value. It is installed as the handler for both
            faults and errors. Should either of the other parameters be
            passed in addition to this one, they will take precedence over
            this (more-specific wins out over less). As a combined handler,
            the closure will get a string (non-reference) in cases of
            errors, and an instance of RPC::XML::fault in cases of faults.
            This allows the developer to install a simple default handler,
            while later providing a more specific one by means of the
            methods listed below.

        message_file_thresh
            If this key is passed, the value associated with it is assumed
            to be a numerical limit to the size of in-memory messages. Any
            out-bound request that would be larger than this when
            stringified is instead written to an anonynous temporary file,
            and spooled from there instead. This is useful for cases in
            which the request includes RPC::XML::base64 objects that are
            themselves spooled from file-handles. This test is independent
            of compression, so even if compression of a request would drop
            it below this threshold, it will be spooled anyway. The file
            itself is created via File::Temp with UNLINK=>1, so once it is
            freed the disk space is immediately freed.

        message_temp_dir
            If a message is to be spooled to a temporary file, this key can
            define a specific directory in which to open those files. If
            this is not given, then the "tmpdir" method from the File::Spec
            package is used, instead.

        request_as_string
            For aiding in debugging, you can pass this key with a non-false
            value to enable a step in each request cycle that saves a
            stringified version of the request XML as a private key on the
            client object. The request will be saved to the key
            "_xmlrpc_request_as_string", and will endure until the next
            request is made by the client object.

        See the section on the effects of callbacks on return values, below.

    uri ([URI])
        Returns the URI that the invoking object is set to communicate with
        for requests. If a string or "URI" class object is passed as an
        argument, then the URI is set to the new value. In either case, the
        pre-existing value is returned.

    useragent
        Returns the LWP::UserAgent object instance stored on the client
        object. It is not possible to assign a new such object, though
        direct access to it should allow for any header modifications or
        other needed operations.

    request
        Returns the HTTP::Request object. As with the above, it is not
        allowed to assign a new object, but access to this value should
        allow for any needed operations.

    simple_request (ARGS)
        This is a somewhat friendlier wrapper around the next routine
        ("send_request") that returns Perl-level data rather than an object
        reference. The arguments may be the same as one would pass to the
        RPC::XML::request constructor, or there may be a single request
        object as an argument. The return value will be a native Perl value.
        If the return value is "undef", an error has occurred and
        "simple_request" has placed the error message in the global variable
        $RPC::XML::ERROR.

    send_request (ARGS)
        Sends a request to the server and attempts to parse the returned
        data. The argument may be an object of the RPC::XML::request class,
        or it may be the arguments to the constructor for the request class.
        The return value will be either an error string or a data-type
        object. If the error encountered was a run-time error within the RPC
        request itself, then the call will return a "RPC::XML::fault" value
        rather than an error string.

        If the return value from "send_request" is not a reference, then it
        can only mean an error on the client-side (a local problem with the
        arguments and/or syntax, or a transport problem). All data-type
        classes now support a method called "is_fault" that may be easily
        used to determine if the "successful" return value is actually a
        "RPC::XML::fault" without the need to use "UNIVERSAL::ISA".

    error_handler ([CODEREF])
    fault_handler ([CODEREF])
    combined_handler ([CODEREF])
        These accessor methods get (and possibly set, if CODEREF is passed)
        the specified callback/handler. The return value is always the
        current handler, even when setting a new one (allowing for later
        restoration, if desired).

    credentials (REALM, USERNAME, PASSWORD)
        This sets the username and password for a given authentication realm
        at the location associated with the current request URL. Needed if
        the RPC location is protected by Basic Authentication. Note that
        changing the target URL of the client object to a different
        (protected) location would require calling this with new credentials
        for the new realm (even if the value of $realm is identical at both
        locations).

    timeout ([INTEGER])
        Get or set the current time-out value on the underlying
        LWP::UserAgent object that this object uses for sending requests.
        This is just a proxy through to the method of the same name in the
        LWP::UserAgent class. The return value is the current time-out value
        (prior to change, if a new value is given).

    message_file_thresh
    message_temp_dir
        These methods may be used to retrieve or alter the values of the
        given keys as defined earlier for the "new" method.

  Support for Content Compression
    The RPC::XML::Server class supports compression of requests and
    responses via the Compress::Zlib module available from CPAN.
    Accordingly, this class also supports compression. The methods used for
    communicating compression support should be compatible with the server
    and client classes from the XMLRPC::Lite class that is a part of the
    SOAP::Lite package (also available from CPAN).

    Compression support is enabled (or not) behind the scenes; if the Perl
    installation has Compress::Zlib, then RPC::XML::Client can deal with
    compressed responses. However, since outgoing messages are sent before a
    client generally has the chance to see if a server supports compression,
    these are not compressed by default.

    compress_requests(BOOL)
        If a client is communicating with a server that is known to support
        compressed messages, this method can be used to tell the client
        object to compress any outgoing messages that are longer than the
        threshold setting in bytes.

    compress_thresh([MIN_LIMIT])
        With no arguments, returns the current compression threshold;
        messages smaller than this number of bytes will not be compressed,
        regardless of the above method setting. If a number is passed, this
        is set to the new lower-limit. The default value is 4096 (4k).

  Callbacks and Return Values
    If a callback is installed for errors or faults, it will be called
    before either of "send_request" or "simple_request" return. If the
    callback calls die or otherwise interrupts execution, then there is no
    need to worry about the effect on return values. Otherwise, the return
    value of the callback becomes the return value of the original method
    ("send_request" or "simple_request"). Thus, all callbacks are expected,
    if they return at all, to return exactly one value. It is recommended
    that any callback return values conform to the expected return values.
    That is, an error callback would return a string, a fault callback would
    return the fault object.

DIAGNOSTICS
    All methods return some type of reference on success, or an error string
    on failure. Non-reference return values should always be interpreted as
    errors, except in the case of "simple_request".

CAVEATS
    This began as a reference implementation in which clarity of process and
    readability of the code took precedence over general efficiency. It is
    now being maintained as production code, but may still have parts that
    could be written more efficiently.

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-rpc-xml at
    rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
    <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=RPC-XML>. I will be
    notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your
    bug as I make changes.

SUPPORT
    *   RT: CPAN's request tracker

        <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=RPC-XML>

    *   AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation

        <http://annocpan.org/dist/RPC-XML>

    *   CPAN Ratings

        <http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/RPC-XML>

    *   Search CPAN

        <http://search.cpan.org/dist/RPC-XML>

    *   MetaCPAN

        <https://metacpan.org/release/RPC-XML>

    *   Source code on GitHub

        <http://github.com/rjray/rpc-xml>

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
    This file and the code within are copyright (c) 2011 by Randy J. Ray.

    Copying and distribution are permitted under the terms of the Artistic
    License 2.0
    (<http://www.opensource.org/licenses/artistic-license-2.0.php>) or the
    GNU LGPL 2.1 (<http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php>).

CREDITS
    The XML-RPC standard is Copyright (c) 1998-2001, UserLand Software, Inc.
    See <http://www.xmlrpc.com> for more information about the XML-RPC
    specification.

SEE ALSO
    RPC::XML, RPC::XML::Server

AUTHOR
    Randy J. Ray "<rjray AT blackperl.com>"


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 06:08 @216.73.217.24 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top