AnyEvent-JSONRPC
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});
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module is the HTTP client part of L<AnyEvent::JSONRPC>.
=head2 AnyEvent condvars
The main thing you have to remember is that all the data retrieval methods
return an AnyEvent condvar, C<$cv>. If you want the actual data from the
request, there are a few things you can do.
You may have noticed that many of the examples in the SYNOPSIS call C<recv>
on the condvar. You're allowed to do this under 2 circumstances:
=over 4
=item Either you're in a main program,
Main programs are "allowed to call C<recv> blockingly", according to the
author of L<AnyEvent>.
=item or you're in a Coro + AnyEvent environment.
When you call C<recv> inside a coroutine, only that coroutine is blocked
while other coroutines remain active. Thus, the program as a whole is
still responsive.
=back
If you're not using Coro, and you don't want your whole program to block,
what you should do is call C<cb> on the condvar, and give it a coderef to
execute when the results come back. The coderef will be given a condvar
as a parameter, and it can call C<recv> on it to get the data. The final
example in the SYNOPSIS gives a brief example of this.
Also note that C<recv> will throw an exception if the request fails, so be
prepared to catch exceptions where appropriate.
Please read the L<AnyEvent> documentation for more information on the proper
use of condvars.
=head1 METHODS
=head2 new (%options)
Create new client object and return it.
my $client = AnyEvent::JSONRPC::HTTP::Client->new(
host => '127.0.0.1',
port => 4423,
%options,
);
Available options are:
=over 4
=item url => 'Str'
URL to json-RPC endpoint to connect. (Required)
=item username => 'Str'
Username to use for authorization (Optional).
If this is set an Authorization header containing basic auth credential is
always sent with request.
=item password => 'Str'
Password used for authorization (optional)
=back
=head2 call ($method, @params)
Call remote method named C<$method> with parameters C<@params>. And return condvar object for response.
my $cv = $client->call( echo => 'Hello!' );
my $res = $cv->recv;
If server returns an error, C<< $cv->recv >> causes croak by using C<< $cv->croak >>. So you can handle this like following:
my $res;
eval { $res = $cv->recv };
if (my $error = $@) {
# ...
}
=head2 notify ($method, @params)
Same as call method, but not handle response. This method just notify to server.
$client->notify( echo => 'Hello' );
=head1 AUTHOR
Peter Makholm <peter@makholm.net>
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2010 by Peter Makholm.
This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the
LICENSE file included with this module.
=cut
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