NAME¶
POE::Component::Server::TCP - a simplified TCP server
SYNOPSIS¶
#!perl
use warnings;
use strict;
use POE qw(Component::Server::TCP);
POE::Component::Server::TCP->new(
Port => 12345,
ClientConnected => sub {
print "got a connection from $_[HEAP]{remote_ip}\n";
$_[HEAP]{client}->put("Smile from the server!");
},
ClientInput => sub {
my $client_input = $_[ARG0];
$client_input =~ tr[a-zA-Z][n-za-mN-ZA-M];
$_[HEAP]{client}->put($client_input);
},
);
POE::Kernel->run;
exit;
DESCRIPTION¶
POE::Component::Server::TCP implements a generic multi-Session server. Simple
services may be put together in a few lines of code. For example, a server
that echoes input back to the client:
use POE qw(Component::Server::TCP);
POE::Component::Server::TCP->new(
Port => 12345,
ClientInput => sub { $_[HEAP]{client}->put($_[ARG0]) },
);
POE::Kernel->run();
Accepting Connections Yourself¶
POE::Component::Server::TCP has a default mode where it accepts new connections
and creates the sessions to handle them. Programs can do this themselves by
providing their own "Acceptor" callbacks. See "Acceptor"
for details.
Master Listener Session¶
At creation time, POE::Component::Server::TCP starts one POE::Session to listen
for new connections. The component's "Alias" refers to this master
session.
If "Acceptor" is specified, then it's up to that callback to deal with
newly accepted sockets. Its parameters are that of POE::Wheel::SocketFactory's
"SuccessEvent".
Otherwise, the default "Acceptor" callback will start a new session to
handle each connection. These child sessions do not have their own aliases,
but their "ClientConnected" and "ClientDisconnected"
callbacks may be used to register and unregister the sessions with a shared
namespace, such as a hash keyed on session IDs, or an object that manages such
a hash.
my %client_namespace;
sub handle_client_connected {
my $client_session_id = $_[SESSION]->ID;
$client_namespace{$client_session_id} = \%anything;
}
sub handle_client_disconnected {
my $client_session_id = $_[SESSION]->ID;
$client_namespace{$client_session_id} = \%anything;
}
The component's "Started" callback is invoked at the end of the master
session's start-up routine. The @_[ARG0..$#_] parameters are set to a copy of
the values in the server's "ListenerArgs" constructor parameter. The
other parameters are standard for POE::Session's _start handlers.
The component's "Stopped" callback is invoked at the beginning of the
master session's _stop routine. The parameters are standard for POE::Session's
_stop handlers.
The component's "Error" callback is invoked when the server has a
problem listening for connections. "Error" may also be called if the
component's default acceptor has trouble accepting a connection.
"Error" receives the usual ones for "FailureEvent" in
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory and "ErrorEvent" in POE::Wheel::ReadWrite.
Default Child Connection Sessions¶
If "Acceptor" isn't specified, POE::Component::Server::TCP's default
handler will start a new session for each new client connection. As mentioned
above, these child sessions have no aliases of their own, but they may set
aliases or register themselves another way during their
"ClientConnected" and "ClientDisconnected" callbacks.
It can't be stressed enough that the following callbacks are executed within the
context of dynamic child sessions---one per client connection---and not in the
master listening session. This has been a major point of confusion. We welcome
suggestions for making this clearer.
The component's "ClientInput" callback defines how child sessions will
handle input from their clients. Its parameters are that of
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's "InputEvent".
As mentioned "ClientConnected" is called at the end of the child
session's "_start" routine. The "ClientConneted" callback
receives the same parameters as the client session's _start does. The arrayref
passed to the constructor's "Args" parameter is flattened and
included in "ClientConnected"'s parameters as @_[ARG0..$#_].
sub handle_client_connected {
my @constructor_args = @_[ARG0..$#_];
...
}
"ClientPreConnect" is called before "ClientConnected", and
its purpose is to allow programs to reject connections or condition sockets
before they're given to POE::Wheel::ReadWrite for management.
The "ClientPreConnect" handler is called with the client socket in
$_[ARG0], and its return value is significant. It must return a valid client
socket if the connection is acceptable. It must return undef to reject the
connection.
Most $_[HEAP] values are valid in the "ClientPreConnect" handler.
Obviously, $_[HEAP]{client} is not because that wheel hasn't been created yet.
In the following example, the "ClientPreConnect" handler returns the
client socket after it has been upgraded to an SSL connection.
sub handle_client_pre_connect {
# Make sure the remote address and port are valid.
return undef unless validate(
$_[HEAP]{remote_ip}, $_[HEAP]{remote_port}
);
# SSLify the socket, which is in $_[ARG0].
my $socket = eval { Server_SSLify($_[ARG0]) };
return undef if $@;
# Return the SSL-ified socket.
return $socket;
}
"ClientDisconnected" is called when the client has disconnected,
either because the remote socket endpoint has closed or the local endpoint has
been closed by the server. This doesn't mean the client's session has ended,
but the session most likely will very shortly. "ClientDisconnected"
is called from a couple disparate places within the component, so its
parameters are neither consistent nor generally useful.
"ClientError" is called when an error has occurred on the socket. Its
parameters are those of POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's "ErrorEvent".
"ClientFlushed" is called when all pending output has been flushed to
the client socket. Its parameters come from POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's
"ErrorEvent".
This ease of use comes at a price: POE::Component::Server::TCP often performs
significantly slower than a comparable server written with
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory and POE::Wheel::ReadWrite.
If performance is your primary goal, POE::Kernel's
select_read() and
select_write() perform about the same as IO::Select, but your code will
be portable across every event loop POE supports.
Special Needs Considerations¶
POE::Component::Server::TCP is written to be easy for the most common use cases.
Programs with more special needs should consider using
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory and POE::Wheel::ReadWrite instead. These are
lower-level modules, and using them requires more effort. They are more
flexible and customizable, however.
PUBLIC METHODS¶
new¶
new() starts a server based on POE::Component::Server::TCP and returns a
session ID for the master listening session. All error handling is done within
the server, via the "Error" and "ClientError" callbacks.
The server may be shut down by posting a "shutdown" event to the
master session, either by its ID or the name given to it by the
"Alias" parameter.
POE::Component::Server::TCP does a lot of work in its constructor. The design
goal is to push as much overhead into one-time construction so that ongoing
run-time has less overhead. Because of this, the server's constructor can take
quite a daunting number of parameters.
POE::Component::Server::TCP always returns a POE::Session ID for the session
that will be listening for new connections.
Many of the constructor parameters have been previously described. They are
covered briefly again below.
Server Session Configuration
These constructor parameters affect POE::Component::Server::TCP's main listening
session.
Acceptor
"Acceptor" defines a CODE reference that POE::Wheel::SocketFactory's
"SuccessEvent" will trigger to handle new connections. Therefore the
parameters passed to "Acceptor" are identical to those given to
"SuccessEvent".
"Acceptor" is optional; the default handler will create a new session
for each connection. All the "Client" constructor parameters are
used to customize this session. In other words, "ClientInput" and
such
are not used when "Acceptor" is set.
The default "Acceptor" adds significant convenience and flexibility to
POE::Component::Server::TCP, but it's not always a good fit for every
application. In some cases, a custom "Acceptor" or even rolling
one's own server with POE::Wheel::SocketFactory and POE::Wheel::ReadWrite may
be better and/or faster.
Acceptor => sub {
my ($socket, $remote_address, $remote_port) = @_[ARG0..ARG2];
# Set up something to interact with the client.
}
Address
"Address" defines a single interface address the server will bind to.
It defaults to INADDR_ANY or INADDR6_ANY, when using IPv4 or IPv6,
respectively. It is often used with "Port".
The value in "Address" is passed to POE::Wheel::SocketFactory's
"BindAddress" parameter, so it may be in whatever form that module
supports. At the time of this writing, that may be a dotted IPv4 quad, an IPv6
address, a host name, or a packed Internet address. See also
"Hostname".
Address => '127.0.0.1' # Localhost IPv4
Address => "::1" # Localhost IPv6
Alias
"Alias" is an optional name that will be given to the server's master
listening session. Events sent to this name will not be delivered to
individual connections.
The server's "Alias" may be important if it's necessary to shut a
server down.
sub sigusr1_handler {
$_[KERNEL]->post(chargen_server => 'shutdown');
$_[KERNEL]->sig_handled();
}
Concurrency
"Concurrency" controls how many connections may be active at the same
time. It defaults to -1, which allows POE::Component::Server::TCP to accept
concurrent connections until the process runs out of resources.
Setting "Concurrency" to 0 prevents the server from accepting new
connections. This may be useful if a server must perform lengthy
initialization before allowing connections. When the initialization finishes,
it can yield(set_concurrency => -1) to enable connections. Likewise, a
running server may yield(set_concurrency => 0) or any other number to
dynamically tune its concurrency. See "EVENTS" for more about the
set_concurrency event.
Note: For "Concurrency" to work with a custom "Acceptor",
the server's listening session must receive a "disconnected" event
whenever clients disconnect. Otherwise the listener cannot mediate between its
connections.
Example:
Acceptor => sub {
# ....
POE::Session->create(
# ....
inline_states => {
_start => sub {
# ....
# remember who our parent is
$_[HEAP]->{server_tcp} = $_[SENDER]->ID;
# ....
},
got_client_disconnect => sub {
# ....
$_[KERNEL]->post( $_[HEAP]->{server_tcp} => 'disconnected' );
# ....
}
}
);
}
Domain
"Domain" sets the address or protocol family within which to operate.
The "Domain" may be any value that POE::Wheel::SocketFactory
supports. AF_INET (Internet address space) is used by default.
Use AF_INET6 for IPv6 support. This constant is exported by Socket or Socket6,
depending on your version of Perl. Also be sure to have Socket::GetAddrInfo
installed, which is required by POE::Wheel::SocketFactory for IPv6 support.
Error
"Error" is the callback that will be invoked when the server socket
reports an error. The Error callback will be used to handle
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory's FailureEvent, so it will receive the same
parameters as discussed there.
A default error handler will be provided if Error is omitted. The default
handler will log the error to STDERR and shut down the server. Active
connections will be permitted to complete their transactions.
Error => sub {
my ($syscall_name, $err_num, $err_str) = @_[ARG0..ARG2];
# Handle the error.
}
Hostname
"Hostname" is the optional non-packed name of the interface the TCP
server will bind to. The hostname will always be resolved via
inet_aton() and so can either be a dotted quad or a name. Name
resolution is a one-time start-up action; there are no ongoing run-time
penalties for using it.
"Hostname" guarantees name resolution, where "Address" does
not. It's therefore preferred to use "Hostname" in cases where
resolution must always be done.
InlineStates
"InlineStates" is optional. If specified, it must hold a hashref of
named callbacks. Its syntax is that of POE:Session->
create()'s
inline_states parameter.
Remember: These InlineStates handlers will be added to the client sessions, not
to the main listening session. A
yield() in the listener will not reach
these handlers.
If POE::Kernel::ASSERT_USAGE is enabled, the constructor will
croak() if
it detects a state that it uses internally. For example, please use the
"Started" and "Stopped" callbacks if you want to specify
your own "_start" and "_stop" events respectively.
ObjectStates
If "ObjectStates" is specified, it must holde an arrayref of objects
and the events they will handle. The arrayref must follow the syntax for
POE::Session->
create()'s object_states parameter.
Remember: These ObjectStates handlers will be added to the client sessions, not
to the main listening session. A
yield() in the listener will not reach
these handlers.
If POE::Kernel::ASSERT_USAGE is enabled, the constructor will
croak() if
it detects a state that it uses internally. For example, please use the
"Started" and "Stopped" callbacks if you want to specify
your own "_start" and "_stop" events respectively.
PackageStates
When the optional "PackageStates" is set, it must hold an arrayref of
package names and the events they will handle The arrayref must follow the
syntax for POE::Session->
create()'s package_states parameter.
Remember: These PackageStates handlers will be added to the client sessions, not
to the main listening session. A
yield() in the listener will not reach
these handlers.
If POE::Kernel::ASSERT_USAGE is enabled, the constructor will
croak() if
it detects a state that it uses internally. For example, please use the
"Started" and "Stopped" callbacks if you want to specify
your own "_start" and "_stop" events respectively.
Port
"Port" contains the port the listening socket will be bound to. It
defaults to 0, which usually lets the operating system pick a port at random.
Port => 30023
It is often used with "Address".
Started
"Started" sets an optional callback that will be invoked within the
main server session's context. It notifies the server that it has fully
started. The callback's parameters are the usual for a session's _start
handler.
Stopped
"Stopped" sets an optional callback that will be invoked within the
main server session's context. It notifies the server that it has fully
stopped. The callback's parameters are the usual for a session's _stop
handler.
ListenerArgs
"ListenerArgs" is passed to the listener session as the
"args" parameter. In other words, it must be an arrayref, and the
values are passed into the "Started" handler as ARG0, ARG1, etc.
Connection Session Configuration
These constructor parameters affect the individual sessions that interact with
established connections.
ClientArgs
"ClientArgs" is optional. When specified, it holds an ARRAYREF that
will be expanded one level and passed to the "ClientConnected"
callback in @_[ARG0..$#_].
ClientConnected
Each new client connection is handled by a new POE::Session instance.
"ClientConnected" is a callback that notifies the application when a
client's session is started and ready for operation. Banners are often sent to
the remote client from this callback.
The @_[ARG0..$#_] parameters to "ClientConnected" are a copy of the
values in the "ClientArgs" constructor parameter's array reference.
The other @_ members are standard for a POE::Session _start handler.
"ClientConnected" is called once per session start-up. It will never
be called twice for the same connection.
ClientConnected => sub {
$_[HEAP]{client}->put("Hello, client!");
# Other client initialization here.
},
ClientDisconnected
"ClientDisconnected" is a callback that will be invoked when the
client disconnects or has been disconnected by the server. It's useful for
cleaning up global client information, such as chat room structures.
"ClientDisconnected" callbacks receive the usual POE parameters, but
nothing special is included.
ClientDisconnected => sub {
warn "Client disconnected"; # log it
}
ClientError
The "ClientError" callback is invoked when a client socket reports an
error. "ClientError" is called with POE's usual parameters, plus the
common error parameters: $_[ARG0] describes what was happening at the time of
failure. $_[ARG1] and $_[ARG2] contain the numeric and string versions of $!,
respectively.
"ClientError" is optional. If omitted, POE::Component::Server::TCP
will provide a default callback that logs most errors to STDERR.
If "ClientShutdownOnError" is set, the connection will be shut down
after "ClientError" returns. If "ClientDisconnected" is
specified, it will be called as the client session is cleaned up.
"ClientError" is triggered by POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's ErrorEvent, so
it follows that event's form. Please see the ErrorEvent documentation in
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite for more details.
ClientError => sub {
my ($syscall_name, $error_num, $error_str) = @_[ARG0..ARG2];
# Handle the client error here.
}
ClientFilter
"ClientFilter" specifies the POE::Filter object or class that will
parse input from each client and serialize output before it's sent to each
client.
"ClientFilter" may be a SCALAR, in which case it should name the
POE::Filter class to use. Each new connection will be given a freshly
instantiated filter of that class. No constructor parameters will be passed.
ClientFilter => "POE::Filter::Stream",
Some filters require constructor parameters. These may be specified by an
ARRAYREF. The first element is the POE::Filter class name, and subsequent
elements are passed to the class' constructor.
ClientFilter => [ "POE::Filter::Line", Literal => "\n" ],
"ClientFilter" may also be given an archetypical POE::Filter OBJECT.
In this case, each new client session will receive a
clone() of the
given object.
ClientFilter => POE::Filter::Line->new(Literal => "\n"),
"ClientFilter" is optional. The component will use
"POE::Filter::Line" if it is omitted. There is
"ClientInputFilter" and "ClientOutputFilter" if you want
to specify a different filter for both directions.
Filter modules are not automatically loaded. Be sure that the program loads the
class before using it.
ClientFlushed
"ClientFlushed" exposes POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's
"FlushedEvent" as a callback. It is called whenever the client's
output buffer has been fully flushed to the client socket. At this point it's
safe to shut down the socket without losing data.
"ClientFlushed" is useful for streaming servers, where a
"flushed" event signals the need to send more data.
ClientFlushed => sub {
my $data_source = $_[HEAP]{file_handle};
my $read_count = sysread($data_source, my $buffer = "", 65536);
if ($read_count) {
$_[HEAP]{client}->put($buffer);
}
else {
$_[KERNEL]->yield("shutdown");
}
},
POE::Component::Server::TCP's default "Acceptor" ensures that data is
flushed before finishing a client shutdown.
ClientInput
"ClientInput" defines a per-connection callback to handle client
input. This callback receives its parameters directly from
POE::Wheel::ReadWrite's "InputEvent". ARG0 contains the input
record, the format of which is defined by "ClientFilter" or
"ClientInputFilter". ARG1 has the wheel's unique ID, and so on.
Please see POE:Wheel::ReadWrite for an in-depth description of
"InputEvent".
"ClientInput" and "Acceptor" are mutually exclusive.
Enabling one prohibits the other.
ClientInput => sub {
my $input = $_[ARG0];
$_[HEAP]{wheel}->put("You said: $input");
},
ClientInputFilter
"ClientInputFilter" is used with "ClientOutputFilter" to
specify different protocols for input and output. Both must be used together.
Both follow the same usage as "ClientFilter". Overrides the filter
set by "ClientFilter".
ClientInputFilter => [ "POE::Filter::Line", Literal => "\n" ],
ClientOutputFilter => 'POE::Filter::Stream',
ClientOutputFilter
"ClientOutputFilter" is used with "ClientInputFilter" to
specify different protocols for input and output. Both must be used together.
Both follow the same usage as "ClientFilter". Overrides the filter
set by "ClientFilter".
ClientInputFilter => POE::Filter::Line->new(Literal => "\n"),
ClientOutputFilter => 'POE::Filter::Stream',
ClientShutdownOnError
"ClientShutdownOnError" tells the component whether client connections
should be shut down automatically if an error is detected. It defaults to
"true". Setting it to false (0, undef, "") turns off this
feature.
The application is responsible for dealing with client errors if this feature is
disabled. Not doing so may cause the component to emit a constant stream of
errors, eventually bogging down the application with dead connections that
spin out of control.
Yes, this is terrible. You have been warned.
SessionParams
"SessionParams" specifies additional parameters that will be passed to
the "SessionType" constructor at creation time. It must be an array
reference.
SessionParams => [ options => { debug => 1, trace => 1 } ],
Note: POE::Component::Server::TCP supplies its own POE::Session constructor
parameters. Conflicts between them and "SessionParams" may cause the
component to behave erratically. To avoid such problems, please limit
SessionParams to the "options" hash. See POE::Session for an known
options.
We may enable other options later. Please let us know if you need something.
SessionType
"SessionType" specifies the POE::Session subclass that will be created
for each new client connection. "POE::Session" is the default.
SessionType => "POE::Session::MultiDispatch"
EVENTS¶
It's possible to manipulate a TCP server component by sending it messages.
Main Server Commands¶
These events must be sent to the main server, usually by the alias set in its
Alias parameter.
disconnected
The "disconnected" event informs the TCP server that a connection was
closed. It is needed when using "Concurrency" with an
"Acceptor" callback. The custom Acceptor must provide its own
disconnect notification so that the server's connection counting logic works.
Otherwise Concurrency clients will be accepted, and then no more. The server
will never know when clients have disconnected.
set_concurrency
"set_concurrency" set the number of simultaneous connections the
server will be willing to accept. See "Concurrency" for more
details. "set_concurrency" must have one parameter: the new maximum
connection count.
$kernel->call("my_server_alias", "set_concurrency", $max_count);
shutdown
The "shutdown" event starts a graceful server shutdown. No new
connections will be accepted. Existing connections will be allowed to finish.
The server will be destroyed after the last connection ends.
Per-Connection Commands¶
These commands affect each client connection session.
shutdown
Sending "shutdown" to an individual client session instructs the
server to gracefully shut down that connection. No new input will be received,
and any buffered output will be sent before the session ends.
Client sessions usually yield("shutdown") when they wish to disconnect
the client.
ClientInput => sub {
if ($_[ARG0] eq "quit") {
$_[HEAP]{client}->put("B'bye!");
$_[KERNEL]->yield("shutdown");
return;
}
# Handle other input here.
},
Reserved HEAP Members¶
Unlike most POE modules, POE::Component::Server::TCP stores data in the client
sessions' HEAPs. These values are provided as conveniences for application
developers.
HEAP Members for Master Listening Sessions¶
The master listening session holds different data than client connections.
alias
$_[HEAP]{alias} contains the server's Alias.
concurrency
$_[HEAP]{concurrency} remembers the server's "Concurrency" parameter.
connections
$_[HEAP]{connections} is used to track the current number of concurrent client
connections. It's incremented whenever a new connection is accepted, and it's
decremented whenever a client disconnects.
listener
$_[HEAP]{listener} contains the POE::Wheel::SocketFactory object used to listen
for connections and accept them.
HEAP Members for Connection Sessions¶
These data members exist within the individual connections' sessions.
client
$_[HEAP]{client} contains a POE::Wheel::ReadWrite object used to interact with
the client. All POE::Wheel::ReadWrite methods work.
got_an_error
$_[HEAP]{got_an_error} remembers whether the client connection has already
encountered an error. It is part of the shutdown-on-error procedure.
remote_ip
$_[HEAP]{remote_ip} contains the remote client's numeric address in
human-readable form.
remote_port
$_[HEAP]{remote_port} contains the remote client's numeric socket port in
human-readable form.
remote_addr
$_[HEAP]{remote_addr} contains the remote client's packed socket address in
computer-readable form.
shutdown
$_[HEAP]{shutdown} is true if the client is in the process of shutting down. The
component uses it to ignore client input during shutdown, and to close the
connection after pending output has been flushed.
shutdown_on_error
$_[HEAP]{shutdown_on_error} remembers whether the client connection should
automatically shut down if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO¶
The SEE ALSO section in POE contains a table of contents covering the entire POE
distribution.
POE::Component::Client::TCP is the client-side counterpart to this module.
This component uses and exposes features from POE::Filter,
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory, and POE::Wheel::ReadWrite.
BUGS¶
This looks nothing like what Ann envisioned.
This component currently does not accept many of the options that
POE::Wheel::SocketFactory does.
This component will not bind to several addresses at once. This may be a
limitation in SocketFactory, but it's not by design.
This component needs better error handling.
Some use cases require different session classes for the listener and the
connection handlers. This isn't currently supported. Please send patches. :)
AUTHORS & COPYRIGHTS¶
POE::Component::Server::TCP is Copyright 2000-2013 by Rocco Caputo. All rights
are reserved. POE::Component::Server::TCP is free software, and it may be
redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.
POE::Component::Server::TCP is based on code, used with permission, from Ann
Barcomb <kudra@domaintje.com>.
POE::Component::Server::TCP is based on code, used with permission, from Jos
Boumans <kane@cpan.org>.