1665 lines
69 KiB
TeX
1665 lines
69 KiB
TeX
\section{API description}
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\label{sec:surflet-api}
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The \surflet server comes with an extensive set of modules. This
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section describes the modules and the programming interfaces. See the
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howto section \ref{sec:surflethowto} for a practical guide. Note that
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most of the procedures mentioned here are meant to be called from
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within a \surflet.
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\subsection{The \surflet server}
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The \surflet server provides basic procedures to send web content to a
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client. To enable the SUnet webserver to serve \surflets, you have to
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add the \surflet handler to it, which resides in the
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\exi{surflet-handler} structure. \Eg:
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\begin{alltt}
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(httpd
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(make-httpd-options
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\dots
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with-request-handler
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(alist-path-dispatcher
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(list
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(cons "surflet" (surflet-handler (with-surflet-path
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"web-server/root/surflets"))))
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(rooted-file-or-directory-handler "web-server/root/htdocs"))))
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\end{alltt}
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This will set up the \surflet handler to handle requests directed to
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the directory \ex{/surflet/}. The \surflet handler can only handle
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requests directed to \surflets. Here's the interface description:
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\defun{surflet-handler}{options}{request-handler}
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\begin{desc}
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This procedures sets up the \surflet handler and returns the request
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handler for the SUnet webserver. The options argument is similar to
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the one passed to \ex{httpd} and is exlpained below.
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The \surflet handler accepts requests (solely) to \surflets whose
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file name must have the extension \ex{.scm}. The structure of
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\surflets is explained below. The \surflet handler receives the
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\ex{request} from \ex{httpd}, translates it to a
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\ex{surflet-request} and passes it to the requested \surflet. The
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\surflet in turn is expected to return a \ex{surflet-response},
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which the \surflet handler translates to a \ex{repsonse} for
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\ex{httpd}. Thus, the \surflet deals only with \ex{surflet-request}
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and \ex{surflet-response} objects. The structure of these objects
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and how they are passed around is explained below.
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A \surflet may also return a \ex{redirect} \ex{response}, which the
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\surflet handler passes to the \ex{httpd} untouched. See
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\ref{sec:http-responses} for details.
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The \surflet handler calls the \surflet wrapped into an error
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handler that catches any error the \surflet may yield. In this
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case, it terminates the \surflets session (see below for more on
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sessions) and returns an \ex{error} \ex{response} to \ex{httpd} with
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the error code 500 "Internal Server Error" and a description of
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the error.
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\end{desc}
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The \var{options} argument can be constructed in a similar way to the
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options argument of \ex{httpd}. The procedures' names are of the form
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\ex{with-\ldots} and they all either create a new option or add a
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new parameter to a given option. The new parameter is always the
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first argument while the (old) option the optional second one. The
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following procedures reside in the \exi{surflet-handler/options}
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structure.
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\defun{with-surflet-path}{surflet-path [options]}{options}
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\begin{desc}
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This specifies the path in which the \surflet handler looks for
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\surflets. The \var{surflet-path} is a string. This option must be
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given for the handler to work.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{with-session-lifetime}{seconds [options]}{options}
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\begin{desc}
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This specifies the initial lifetime of a session. The lifetime of a
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session is the number of seconds the \surflet handler waits for a
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response from a client for that session, before she automatically
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finishes it. See below for details on sessions. Defaults to 600,
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\ie 10 minutes.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{with-cache-surflets?}{cache-surflets? [options]}{options}
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\begin{desc}
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This specifices whether the \surflet handler caches \surflets. The
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caching of \surflets is a prerequisite for \surflet wide global
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variables. See below for details on the scope of variables in
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\surflets. Defaults to \sharpt.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{with-make-session-timeout-text}{timeout-text-procedure
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[options]}{options}
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\begin{desc}
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This specifies a procedure that generates the timeout text. The
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\surflet handler displays the timeout text when she receives a
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request for a \surflet session that does not exist, either because
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the \surflet finished its session, the session has timed out, or the
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URL is illformed. The default is an English text with an
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explanation of the possible reasons and a link to a new session of
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the requested \surflet. \var{timeout-text-procedure} accepts the
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string path to the \surflet that was requested and returns a string.
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\end{desc}
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Similar to the \ex{httpd} options there exists a procedure to avoid
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parenthisis:
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\defun{make-surflet-options} {transformer value \ldots}{options}
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\begin{desc}
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This constructs an options value from an argument list of parameter
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transformers and parameter values. The arguments come in pairs,
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each an option transformer from the list above, and a value for that
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parameter. \ex{make-surflet-options} returns the resulting options
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value.
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\end{desc}
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For example,
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\begin{alltt}
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(surflet-handler
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(make-surflet-options
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with-surflet-path "root/surflets"
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with-session-timeout 3600))
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\end{alltt}
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defines the \surflet handler to serve \surflets from the directory
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\ex{root/surflets} and to timeout unused session after one hour.
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The \surflet handler allows runtime read and write access to her
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options:
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\defun{options-surflet-path}{options}{string}
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\defunx{options-session-lifetime}{options}{integer}
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\defunx{options-cache-surflets?}{options}{boolean}
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\defunx{options-make-session-timeout-text}{options}{procedure}
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\begin{desc}
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These procedures return the stored value for the respective option.
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See above for the description of the options.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{set-options-surflet-path!}{options surflet-path}{\undefined}
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\defunx{set-options-session-lifetime!}{options seconds}{\undefined}
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\defunx{set-options-cache-surflets?!}{options cache-surflets?}{\undefined}
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\defunx{set-options-make-session-timeout-text!}
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{options timeout-text-procedure} {\undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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These procedures change the respective option value. See above for
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the description of the arguments. Note that changing the
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\var{surflet-path} within a \surflet may result in the \surflets
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being unreachable. Turning the cache off will not empty the
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\surflet cache.
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\end{desc}
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\subsection{\surflets}
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Technically, \surflets are Scheme48 structures, that have the name
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\ex{surflet} and export a \ex{main} procedure. The file in which their
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definition reside must have the extension \ex{.scm}. The \ex{main}
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procedure must accept the initial \ex{surflet-request} as an argument.
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She may or may not return, but if she does, she must return either a
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\ex{surflet response} or a \ex{redirect response}. For example, this
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is a valid \surflet definition:
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\begin{alltt}
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(define-structure surflet surflet-interface
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(open scheme-with-scsh
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surflets)
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(begin
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(define (main req)
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(send-html/finish
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'(html (body (p "Hello world!")))))
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))
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\end{alltt}
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\ex{surflet-interface} is a predefined interface description that
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exports the \ex{main} procedure. It is recommended to use this
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interface. \exi{surflets} is a structure that combines the most
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commonly used structures to write \surflets. \ex{send-html/finish} is
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one of the procedures that sends HTML to the client. More on this
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below.
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As \surflets are Scheme48 structures, you can use all capabilities of
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the Scheme48 module language. See the documentation of Scheme48 for
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details.
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\surflets should not use the \ex{shift-reset} structure, as this might
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confuse the \surflet handler.
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\subsection{\surflet management}
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Upon an initial client request, the \surflet handler looks for the
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requested \surflet, dynamically loads it, installs an error handler
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and calls the \ex{main} function of the \surflet with the initial
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\ex{surflet-request}. To minimize the time of loading a \surflet,
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the \surflet handler caches the structure of the \surflet in a cache,
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the \surflet cache. As the \surflet is cached, its global values will
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remain unchanged even through times when there are no active sessions
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of the \surflet. Changing global \surflet values is a possibility to
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exchange data between different sessions of the same \surflet. Note
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that you have to take care to serialize the access to commonly shared,
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mutated data.
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The \surflet handler allows access to its cache via the following
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procedures. The access to these procedures is currently
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unrestricted but may be restricted in future versions of the
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\surflet server.
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\defun{get-loaded-surflets}{}{list}
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\begin{desc}
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This returns a list of the file names of the loaded \surflets.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{unload-surflet}{surflet}{undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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This removes the \var{surflet} from the \surflet cache. The
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\var{surflet} is identified by its file name, as returned from
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\ex{get-loaded-surflets}.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{reset-surflet-cache!}{}{undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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This empties the \surflet cache.
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\end{desc}
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Of course, when a \surflet is removed from the cache, the values in
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its sessions remain untouched. However, if the \surflet is newly
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loaded into the \surflet cache, the \surflet handler treats it like a
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new \surflet, \ie the sessions of the "old" and the "new" \surflet
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(though physically the same) do \emph{not} share their global data in
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any way.
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\subsection{Surflet Request}
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\surflets get their input from \ex{surflet-request} objects. The
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relevant procedures are the following. They are all exported by the
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\exi{surflet-handler/requests} alias \exi{surflet-requests} structure.
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\defun{surflet-request?}{object}{boolean}
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\defunx{surflet-request-method}{surflet-request}{string}
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\defunx{surflet-request-input-port}{surflet-request}{input-port/undefined}
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\defunx{surflet-request-uri}{surflet-request}{string}
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\defunx{surflet-request-url}{surflet-request}{url}
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\defunx{surflet-request-version}{surflet-request}{pair}
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\defunx{surflet-request-headers}{surflet-request}{alist}
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\begin{desc}
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The procedures inspect \ex{surflet-request} values. Most of them
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return the values of the underlying \ex{request} object from
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\ex{httpd}. \ex{surflet-request?} is a predicate for \ex{surflet
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request}s. \ex{surflet-request-method} extracts the method of the
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HTTP request; it's a string and either \ex{"GET"} or \ex{"POST"}.
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\surflets won't receive requests with other methods.
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\ex{surflet-request-input-port} returns an input-port that contains
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data from the client on \ex{POST} requests and that the \surflet can
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safely read. If the request is no \ex{POST} request, its value is
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undefined. \ex{surflet-request-uri} returns the escaped URI string
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as read from the request line. \ex{surflet-request-url} returns the
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respective HTTP URL value (see the description of the \ex{url}
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structure in chapter \ref{cha:url}). \ex{surflet-request-version}
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returns a \verb|(major . minor)| integer pair representing the
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version specified in the HTTP request. \ex{surflet-request-headers}
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returns an association lists of header field names and their values,
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each represented by a list of strings, one for each line.
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\end{desc}
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For some unknown weird cases, there are also these two procedures:
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\defun{surflet-request-socket}{surflet-request}{socket}
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\defunx{surflet-request-request}{surflet-request}{request}
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\begin{desc}
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\ex{surflet-request-socket} returns the socket connected to the
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client. As with \ex{request}s, \surflets should not perform I/O on
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this socket. See section \ref{httpd:requests} for reasoning.
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\ex{surflet-request-requst} allows access to the underlying
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\ex{request} object from \ex{httpd}. Both procedures should not be
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necessary in normal operation and their usage is discouraged.
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\end{desc}
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\subsection{Surflet Response}
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\surflets answer to a request by sending an \ex{surflet-response} to
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the \surflet handler. The next section deals with how the surflet
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responses are sent to the \surflet handler. The relevant procedures
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for \ex{surflet-response} are the following. They are all exported by
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the \exi{surflet-handler/responses} alias \exi{surflet-response}
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structure.
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\defun{make-surflet-response}{status content-type headers
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data}{surflet-response}
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\begin{desc}
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This creates a \ex{surflet-response}. \var{status} is the status
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code of the response. See section \ref{sec:http-responses} for
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details on this. \var{content-type} is the MIME type of the data,
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\eg \ex{"text/html"}. \var{headers} is an association list of
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headers to be added to the response, each of which consists of a
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symbol representing the field name and a string representing the
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field value. \var{data} is the actual data. It must be either a
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string or a list of values that will be \ex{display}ed.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{valid-surflet-response-data?}{object}{boolean}
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\begin{desc}
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This is a predicate on objects that may be surflet data, \ie a
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string or a list (of objects that will be \ex{display}ed).
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\end{desc}
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\defun{surflet-response?}{object}{boolean}
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\defunx{surflet-response-status}{surflet-response}{status-code}
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\defunx{surflet-response-content-type}{surflet-response}{string}
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\defunx{surflet-response-headers}{surflet-response}{alist}
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\defunx{surflet-response-data}{surflet-response}{surflet-data}
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\begin{desc}
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The procedures return \ex{surflet-response} values.
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\ex{surflet-response?} is a predicate for \ex{surflet-response}s.
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\ex{surflet-response-status} returns the status code of the
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response. See section \ref{sec:http-responses} for details on the
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status code. \ex{surflet-response-content-type} returns the MIME
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type of the response. \ex{surflet-response-headers} returns the
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association list of header field names and their values, each
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represented by a list of strings, one for each line.
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\ex{surflet-response-data} returns the data of the
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\ex{surflet-response}, the actual answer of the \surflet.
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\end{desc}
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\subsection{Sessions}
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A \keyword{session} is a set of web pages that logically belong
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together, \eg a user surfing through her webmail. A session starts
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with the initial request for a \surflet and ends either explicitly by
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the \surflet, or implicitly after a timeout. A third, not so common
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case is its deletion from the session table.
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The procedures presented in this subsection are all accessible via the
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\exi{surflets/sessions} structure.
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\subsubsection{Session management}
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The \surflet handler automatically manages the sessions for each
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\surflet, thus the \surflet does not have to deal with sessions or
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state control (as it is the case with most other programming
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interfaces for web applications). In particular, a \surflet does not
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have to take care of saving the contents of variables before emitting
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a web page and restoring the values later upon the next request, or
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determining how far the user has proceeded in the application. The
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only thing a \surflet may want to do is to tell the \surflet handler
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when a session finished by calling \ex{send/finish} or an equivalent
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procedure (see below).
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Although a \surflet does not have to deal with the management of the
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sessions, the \surflet handler allows access to its management
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structures.
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\defun{instance-session-id}{}{session-id}
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\begin{desc}
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This returns the session ID for the current session. The current
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session is the session from which the function is called.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{get-session}{session-id}{session}
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\begin{desc}
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This returns the session for the given session ID.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{get-sessions}{}{alist}
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\begin{desc}
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This returns the complete list of all active session of the \surflet
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handler. The list is an association list with the session-id as key
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and the session as value.
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The access to this procedure is currently unrestricted but may be
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restricted in future versions of the \surflet server.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{delete-session!}{session}{undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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This deletes the specified session from the session table. Future
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requests to the session are answered with the timeout text.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{session-alive?}{session}{boolean}
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\begin{desc}
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This returns \sharpt, if the specified session is alive, \ie
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requests to it will be answered by the appropriate \surflet.
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Otherwise, she returns \sharpf.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{session-surflet-name}{session}{string}
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\defunx{session-session-id}{session}{session-id}
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\begin{desc}
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These procedures inspect values of a session.
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\ex{session-surflet-name} returns the name of the \surflet for which
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the session was created. \ex{session-session-id} returns the
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session ID of the session.
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\end{desc}
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For each session, the \surflet handler has a counter running. She
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resets the counter each time she receives a request for the session.
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When the counter reaches a particular number of seconds, the
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\keyword{lifetime} of the session, the \surflet handler deletes the
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session and removes it from its session table. She will answer all
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future requests for the session with the timeout text. The following
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procedures deal with the lifetime of a session.
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\defun{session-lifetime}{session}{integer}
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\defunx{set-session-lifetime!}{session new-lifetime}{undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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\ex{session-lifetime} returns the number of seconds the \surflet
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handler will initially wait before she automatically finishes the
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session. \ex{set-session-lifetime!} changes the initial lifetime of
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the \var{session} to \var{new-lifetime} and also resets the counter
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for that session.
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\end{desc}
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\defun{session-adjust-timeout!}{session [lifetime]}{undefined}
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\defunx{adjust-timeout!}{[lifetime]}{undefined}
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\begin{desc}
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These reset the counter for the lifetime of either the given
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\var{session} (\ex{session-adjust-timeout!}) or the current session
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(\ex{adjust-timeout!}). Both procedures give the session a lifetime
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of either \var{lifetime} seconds or of the lifetime seconds stored
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for the according \var{session}.
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\end{desc}
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In order to allow easy web programming, the \surflet handler
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automatically saves and reifies continuations of a session. This is
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totally transparent to the web programmer. For adminstration
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purposes, the \surflet handler offers access to the continuation table
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of a session via the following procedures.
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|
|
\defun{session-continuation-table}{session}{table}
|
|
\defunx{session-continuation-table-lock}{session}{lock}
|
|
\defunx{session-continuation-counter}{session}{thread-safe-counter}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These functions the continuation table, the lock for the
|
|
continuation table and the counter for the continuations. The
|
|
continuation \var{table} is a hash table with the continuation ID as
|
|
key and the continuation as value, based on the \ex{tables}
|
|
structure of Scheme48. The \var{lock} is based on the \ex{locks}
|
|
structure of Scheme48. The \var{thread-safe-counter} is based on
|
|
the \ex{thread-safe-counter} structure that is part of the
|
|
\surflets.
|
|
|
|
The access to these functions is currently unrestricted but may be
|
|
restricted in future versions of the \surflet server.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/continuations} also offers procedures to access the
|
|
continuations.
|
|
|
|
\defun{get-continuations}{session}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Returns a list of all continuations of the \var{session}. The list
|
|
elements are pairs with the \ex{car} being the session and the
|
|
\ex{cdr} being the continuation.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{delete-continuation!}{session-continuation}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Removes the specified continuation from the continuation table.
|
|
\var{session-continuation} is a pair as returned from
|
|
\ex{get-continuations}. It is no error if the session or the
|
|
continuation does not exist anymore.
|
|
|
|
The access to this functions is currently unrestricted but may be
|
|
restricted in future versions of the \surflet server.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{continuation-id}{session-continuation}{number}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Returns the continuation ID of the continuation specified by
|
|
\var{session-continuation} which is a pair as returned by
|
|
\ex{get-continuations}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/ids} structure provides procedures to determine the
|
|
session and continuation IDs of the current session. See also the
|
|
entry for \ex{resume-url-ids} some where else in this document.
|
|
|
|
\defun{my-session-id}{surlfet-request}{number}
|
|
\defunx{my-continuation-id}{surlfet-request}{number}
|
|
\defunx{my-ids}{surlfet-request}{number number}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These return the session and continuation ID that where used to
|
|
access the current session. The procedures work for every
|
|
\var{surflet-request} except for the inital one that \ex{main}
|
|
gets. The values returned by \ex{my-ids} are the session and the
|
|
continuation ID in this order.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{surflet-file-name}{surlfet-request}{string}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This returns the name of the \surflet of the current session.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Session data}
|
|
The \surflet handler distinguishes three kinds of \keyword{session
|
|
data}: session data that is local to a session of a \surflet and not
|
|
mutated, session data that is local to a session of a \surflet and
|
|
mutated and session data that is global to all sessions of a \surflet.
|
|
Every variable value that is never mutated is automatically local to
|
|
the session of the \surflet. Variable values that are mutated are
|
|
automatically global to all sessions of the \surflet. Values that
|
|
have to be mutated but should be local to a session of the \surflet
|
|
must be stored in a special place, the session data field of the
|
|
\surflet handler.\footnote{The reason for this distinction is the fact
|
|
that the \surflet handler saves and reifies the continuation of a
|
|
\surflet to realize the easy programming of web applications.
|
|
Mutations of values remain visible after reifying the continuation.}
|
|
|
|
\defun{get-session-data}{}{object}
|
|
\defunx{set-session-data!}{new-value}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These procedures allow read/write access to the session data field
|
|
of the \surflet handler. The \surflet handler installs a session
|
|
data field for each session she creates. \ex{get-session-data}
|
|
reads the contents of this field, which is initially \sharpf.
|
|
\ex{set-session-data!} sets the contents of the field to
|
|
\var{new-value}. Mutations to the values, no matter when they
|
|
occur, are local to the session from which the procedures are
|
|
called, \ie the changes are only visible within a particular session
|
|
of the \surflet. The procedures are exported by the
|
|
\exi{surflet-handler/session-data} structure.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Basic I/O}
|
|
|
|
The \surflet communicates with the web client basically with the
|
|
following \ex{send} primitives. They are exported by the
|
|
\exi{surflet-handler/primitives} structure along with the procedures
|
|
from \ex{surflet-handler/requests}, \ex{surflet-handler/responses} and
|
|
the \ex{status-code} syntax.
|
|
|
|
\defun{send}{surflet-response}{\noreturn}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This procedure send the data of the \var{surflet-response} to the
|
|
client and does not return.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{send/finish}{surflet-response}{\noreturn}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This procedure does the same as \ex{send}, but it also finishes the
|
|
session of the \surflet. Future requests to the \surflet will be
|
|
answered with the timeout text (see above).
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{send/suspend}{surflet-response-maker}{surflet-request}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This procedure suspends the current computation of the \surflet and
|
|
calls \var{surflet-response-maker} with the continuation-URL of the
|
|
current session to create the actual \ex{surflet-response}. When a
|
|
client requests the continuation-URL, the computation of the
|
|
\surflet will resume with \ex{send/suspend} returning that request
|
|
of the client. See \ref{sec:continuation-url} for details on
|
|
continuation-URLs.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{send-error}{status-code surflet-request [messages]}{\noreturn}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This sends an error response to the client. \var{status-code} is
|
|
the status code of the error, see section \ref{sec:http-responses} for
|
|
details. \var{surflet-request} is the last \ex{surflet-request} the
|
|
\surflet received; if unknown this argument may be \sharpf.
|
|
\var{messages} may contain some further information about the cause
|
|
of the error.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Web I/O}
|
|
|
|
Most of the time, a \surflet won't send arbitrary data but HTML to the
|
|
client. For this purpose, the \surflets provide extensive support.
|
|
First of all, they provide procedures specially designed for
|
|
submitting HTML.
|
|
|
|
\defun{send-html}{sxml}{\noreturn}
|
|
\defunx{send-html/finish}{sxml}{\noreturn}
|
|
\defunx{send-html/suspend}{sxml-maker}{surflet-request}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are the equivalent procedures to the \ex{send} primitives.
|
|
\ex{send-html} and \ex{send-html/finish} accept an SXML object (more
|
|
on that below), translate it into HTML and send it to the client,
|
|
the latter finishing the session. \ex{send-html/suspend} suspends
|
|
the current computation, calls \var{sxml-maker} with the
|
|
continuation-URL, translates the resulting SXML into HTML and sends
|
|
it to the client. When the client requests the continuation-URL,
|
|
the computation is resumed and \ex{send-html/suspend} returns with
|
|
the \ex{surflet-request}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{SXML}
|
|
|
|
For easy creation of HTML output, the \ex{send-html} procedures
|
|
mentioned above represent the HTML in SXML. SXML is a creation of
|
|
Oleg Kiselyov. Basically, SXML is a list whose \ex{car} is an SXML
|
|
tag, a symbol representing the HTML tag, and the \ex{cdr} are other
|
|
SXML elements that will be enclosed by the HTML tag. For example,
|
|
|
|
\codex{'(h2 "Result")}
|
|
represents the tag \ex{h2}, that encloses the text "Result". The
|
|
represented HTML is
|
|
\codex{<h2>Result</h2>\textnormal{.}}
|
|
|
|
As in HTML, elements may be nested:
|
|
\codex{'(body (h2 "Result") (p "Example"))}
|
|
represents
|
|
\codex{<body><h2>Result</h2><p>Example</p>\textnormal{.}}
|
|
|
|
The @ symbol marks HTML attributes. The attributes follow the @
|
|
symbol in two element lists, the first element being the name of the
|
|
attribute and the last its value. For example, this is a link:
|
|
\codex{'(a (@ (href "add-surflet.scm") (name "linklist")) "Make new calculation.")}
|
|
representing the following HTML
|
|
\codex{<a href="add-surflet.scm"
|
|
name="linklist">Make new calculation.</a>\textnormal{.}} The
|
|
attributes form will only be recognized as such if it is the second
|
|
element of a list, right after the SXML tag.
|
|
|
|
\defun{sxml-attribute?}{object}{boolean}
|
|
\defunx{sxml-attribute-attributes}{sxml-attribute}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are procedures on SXML attribute forms. \ex{sxml-attribute?}
|
|
is a predicate for SXML attribute forms.
|
|
\ex{sxml-attribute-attributes} returns the list of name-value-lists
|
|
of the attributes form. Both procedures are exported by the
|
|
\exi{surflets/sxml} structure.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
The translator translates list elements which are numbers and symbols
|
|
to their string representation (except for the first element, of
|
|
course). She scans strings for the special characters \verb'&',
|
|
\verb'"', \verb'>' and \verb'<' and replaces them by their HTML
|
|
equivalents, and she ignores \sharpf and the emtpy list. See below
|
|
the special SXML tag \ex{plain-html} to see how to insert HTML code
|
|
untranslated. Furthermore, the translator accepts \ex{input-fields}
|
|
as list elements, which are translated to their HTML representation.
|
|
See below for details on input fields.
|
|
|
|
Using lists to represent HTML allows the programmer to define
|
|
operations on it. Most programmers construct their lists dynamically,
|
|
often by using \ex{quasiquote} (the symbol \ex{`}) and \ex{unquote}
|
|
(the symbol \ex{,}). \Eg
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
`(html (title ,my-title)
|
|
(body (p "Hello, " ,(get-user-full-name))))
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
See below for how to create your own SXML.
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Special SXML tags}
|
|
|
|
The SXML to HTML translator accepts some special SXML tags that don't
|
|
directly translate to an HTML tag.
|
|
|
|
\newcommand{\defsxmltag} {\par\medskip\defsxmltagx}
|
|
\newcommand{\defsxmltagx}[2]%
|
|
{\hbox to \linewidth{\ttchars%
|
|
{\ttt(#1\testvoid{#2}{}{\ }{\sem{#2}}\testvoid{#2}{}{\/})
|
|
%\hskip 1em minus 0.5em$\longrightarrow$\hskip 1em minus 0.5em
|
|
%{\sem{#3}}
|
|
\hfill\quad\textnormal{SXML-tag}}}\index{#1}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\defsxmltag{url}{URL [text]}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Inserts a link to \var{URL}, named with \var{text}. \var{text}
|
|
defaults to \var{URL}. Takes at least one argument. \Eg
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
(url "/" "Main menu") \ensuremath{\Longrightarrow} <a href="/">Main menu</a>
|
|
(url "go.html") \ensuremath{\Longrightarrow} <a href="go.html">go.html</a>
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
\oops{\ex{url} does not accept extra attributes for the `\ex{A}' tag of
|
|
HTML. This should be fixed in a future version.}
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defsxmltag{nbsp}{}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Inserts the HTML sequence \ex{"\ "}. Takes no arguments.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defsxmltag{plain-html}{html \ldots}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Inserts \var{html} without any changes, thus it works like a quote.
|
|
Takes any number of arguments.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defsxmltag{*COMMENT*}{comment \ldots}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Inserts a comment, \ie \var{comment} enclosed between \verb|<!--|
|
|
and \verb|-->|. Takes any number of arguments.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defsxmltag{surflet-form}{k-url [method] [attributes] [SXML \ldots]}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Inserts HTML code for a web form. See below for details.
|
|
\var{k-url} usually is a continuation-URL. \var{method} is the
|
|
method to be used by the client to transfer the webform data.
|
|
Possible values are the symbols \ex{GET}, \ex{get}, \ex{POST},
|
|
\ex{post}, the first two specifying the GET method, the last two the
|
|
POST method. \var{method} defaults to the GET method.
|
|
\ex{attributes} are attributes for the created web form, \eg \ex{(@
|
|
(enc-type "text/plain"))}. The remaining arguments are taken as
|
|
SXML and translated as usually. Takes at least one argument. Note
|
|
that the attributes form may come at position three.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Do it yourself: your own SXML}
|
|
|
|
The \ex{send-html} procedures use a standard set of translation rules
|
|
to translate from SXML to HTML. However, you may define your own set
|
|
of translation rules or extend the given ones as you see fit. For
|
|
this, a short introduction to the translation process.
|
|
|
|
The translation process takes place in two steps. Step one translates
|
|
the given SXML to low level SXML, essentially a rough form of HTML in
|
|
list notation. Step two takes this low level SXML and prints to a
|
|
port. Step one is performed by \ex{sxml->low-level-sxml}, step two by
|
|
\ex{display-low-level-sxml}. All procedures and rules presented in
|
|
this subsection are exported from \exi{surflets/sxml}.
|
|
|
|
\defun{sxml->low-level-sxml}{sxml rules}{low-level-sxml}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Takes an SXML object (which essentially is a list) and a list of
|
|
SXML rules (more on this below) and translates it to low level SXML.
|
|
This procedure is an alias to the \ex{pre-post-order} procedure of
|
|
Oleg Kiselyov's SSAX module. It is an error if no rule triggers
|
|
(see below for when a rule triggers). However, it is no error if
|
|
multiple rules trigger; the first rule in the \var{rules} list wins.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{display-low-level-sxml}{low-level-sxml port}{boolean}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Takes low level SXML and \ex{display}s it to a port. She traverses
|
|
the list \var{low-level-sxml} depth-first, ignores the empty list
|
|
and \sharpf, executes thunks and \ex{display}s all other elements,
|
|
usually strings and characters, to \var{port}. Returns \sharpt if
|
|
she wrote anything, \sharpf otherwise. This function is basically
|
|
the \ex{SRV:send-reply} procedure of Oleg Kiselyov's SSAX module.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{sxml->string}{sxml rules}{string}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Combines step one and two of the translation process and returns the
|
|
resulting string, \ie it calls \ex{display-low-level-sxml} with the
|
|
result of a call to \ex{sxml->low-level-sxml} and a string port,
|
|
returning the content of the string port.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
%\defun{sxml->string/internal}{sxml rules}{list}
|
|
%\begin{desc}
|
|
% I forgot what this function was good for. I probably used it
|
|
% internally in one of the \surflet rules.
|
|
%\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
An \keyword{SXML-rule} consists of a \textit{trigger}, which is a
|
|
symbol, and the \textit{handler}, which is a translation procedure.
|
|
|
|
There are three types of rules, each of which is a dotted list:
|
|
\begin{description}
|
|
\item[\ex{(\synvar{trigger} *preorder* . \synvar{handler})}] \mbox{}\\
|
|
When \ex{sxml->low-level-sxml} sees the \synvar{trigger} as the
|
|
first element of a list, she calls \synvar{handler} with the
|
|
\emph{whole} list as arguments and replaces the list with the result
|
|
of that call (which must be a single value). Note that the arity of
|
|
the handler determines how many elements the list with the trigger may
|
|
or must contain.
|
|
|
|
\item[\ex{(\synvar{trigger} . \synvar{handler})}] \mbox{}\\
|
|
When \ex{sxml->low-level-sxml} sees the \synvar{trigger} as the first
|
|
element of a list, she calls herself on the remaining elements of the
|
|
list and then calls the \synvar{handler} with the trigger and the
|
|
results of those calls as arguments.
|
|
|
|
\item[\ex{(\synvar{trigger} \synvar{new-rules} . \synvar{handler})}] \mbox{} \\
|
|
When \ex{sxml->low-level-sxml} sees the \synvar{trigger} as the first
|
|
element of a list, she temporarily prepends \synvar{new-rules} to the
|
|
current rule set while calling herself on the remaining elements of
|
|
the list. She then calls the \synvar{handler} with the trigger and
|
|
the results of those calls as arguments. As the new rules are
|
|
prepended, this rule allows the temporary override of some rules.
|
|
\end{description}
|
|
|
|
There are two special triggers, who may trigger for all elements of
|
|
the SXML, not only the first element of a list:
|
|
\begin{itemize}
|
|
\item \ex{*text*} triggers for atoms in the SXML list, \ie usually
|
|
strings and characters. The handler is called with the symbol
|
|
\ex{*text*} and the atom as arguments.
|
|
|
|
\item \ex{*default*} triggers whenever no rule triggered, including
|
|
\ex{*text*}. If called for a list whose first element did not trigger
|
|
a rule, the handler is called with the whole list. If called for an
|
|
atom, the handler is called with the symbol \ex{*text*} and the atom
|
|
as arguments.
|
|
\end{itemize}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/sxml} structure defines some basic rules:
|
|
|
|
\defvar{default-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{text-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{attribute-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are the three basic rules exported by the \ex{surflets/sxml}
|
|
structure. \ex{default-rule} creates the leading and trailing HTML
|
|
tag and encloses the attributes. \ex{text-rule} just inserts the
|
|
given text with the special HTML characters \verb'&', \verb'"',
|
|
\verb'>' and \verb'<' escaped. \ex{attribute-rule} triggers for the
|
|
attributes form and creates attributes like \ex{selected} or
|
|
\ex{color="red"}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/surflet-sxml} add the rules for the special SXML
|
|
tags to this list:
|
|
|
|
\defvar{url-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{nbsp-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{plain-html-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{comment-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\defvarx{surflet-form-rule}{SXML-rule}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are the rules for the special SXML tags mentioned above,
|
|
namely \ex{url}, \ex{nbsp}, \ex{plain-html}, \ex{*COMMENT*} and
|
|
\ex{surflet-form}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defvar{default-rules}{list}
|
|
\defvarx{surflet-sxml-rules}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are rule sets. \ex{default-rule} contains the rulese
|
|
\ex{default-rule}, \ex{attribute-rule}, \ex{text-rule},
|
|
\ex{comment-rule}, \ex{url-rule}, \ex{plain-html-rule} and
|
|
\ex{nbsp-rule}. \ex{surflet-sxml-rules} extends this list by
|
|
\ex{surflet-form-rule} and a rule for input fields.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{surflet-sxml->low-level-sxml}{sxml}{low-level-sxml}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This uses the \ex{surflet-sxml-rules} to translate \var{sxml} to low
|
|
level SXML, performin step one of the translation process.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Continuation-URL}
|
|
\label{sec:continuation-url}
|
|
|
|
The \keyword{continuation-URL} represents the point in the computation
|
|
of a session of a \surflet where the computation was halted by the
|
|
\surflet handler. When a browser requests a continuation-URL, the
|
|
\surflet handler looks up the continuation in its tables and reifies
|
|
it, allowing the session of the \surflet to resume its computation.
|
|
|
|
The procedures to access the continuation-URL are the following. They
|
|
are exported by the \exi{surflet-handler/resume-url} structure. Sorry
|
|
for the double naming \ex{resume-url} and continuation-URL.
|
|
|
|
\defun{resume-url?}{string}{boolean}
|
|
\defunx{resume-url-ids}{resume-url}{session-id continuation-id}
|
|
\defunx{resume-url-session-id}{resume-url}{session-id}
|
|
\defunx{resume-url-continuation-id}{resume-url}{continuation-id}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These inspect values of a resume url. \ex{resume-url?} is predicate
|
|
for resume urls. Note that it only operates on strings.
|
|
\ex{resume-url-ids} returns the session- and the continuation-id
|
|
that is stored in the \var{resume-url}. \ex{resume-url-session-id}
|
|
and \ex{resume-url-continuation-id} return only the session- or the
|
|
continuation-id, respectively.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Input fields}
|
|
|
|
The \surflets support all input fields defined for HTML~2.0 and allow
|
|
the creation of own input fields. \ex{input-field}s are first order
|
|
values, that represent the actual input field of the web page in the
|
|
\surflet. For that, this documentation distinguishes the
|
|
\emph{browser} value from the \emph{Scheme} value of an input field.
|
|
The browser value is the string representation of the input field
|
|
data the browser sends. The Scheme value is the value in the
|
|
\surflet the input field reports as its value, which may be of any
|
|
type, not only strings.
|
|
|
|
Here is a short overview, how to use input fields. See also the howto
|
|
for more informations. First, you create the \ex{input-field} that
|
|
represents the input field you want to use. Then you put this
|
|
\ex{input-field} into the SXML of the web page at the place the
|
|
input field shall appear. After \ex{send-html/suspend} has returned
|
|
with the next \ex{surflet-request}, you call \ex{get-bindings} with
|
|
that \ex{surlfet-request} and collect the resulting bindings. Last,
|
|
you call \ex{input-field-value} (or \ex{raw-input-field-value}) with
|
|
your \ex{input-field} and the collected bindings to get the Scheme
|
|
representation of the value the user has entered. Here is a small
|
|
example:
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
(define-structure surflets surflet-interface
|
|
(open scheme-with-scsh
|
|
surflets)
|
|
(begin
|
|
|
|
(define (main req)
|
|
(let* ((text-input (make-text-field))
|
|
(req (send-html/suspend
|
|
(lambda (k-url)
|
|
`(html
|
|
(body
|
|
(surflet-form
|
|
,k-url
|
|
(p "Enter some asd text: " ,text-input)
|
|
,(make-submit-button)))))))
|
|
(bindings (get-bindings req))
|
|
(text (input-field-value text-input bindings)))
|
|
(send-html/finish
|
|
`(html
|
|
(body
|
|
(p "You've entered `" ,text "'."))))))
|
|
))
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
\paragraph{Getting the bindings}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/bindings} structures exports the necessary functions
|
|
to create bindings and extract values from them:
|
|
|
|
\defun{get-bindings}{surflet-request}{bindings}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This returns an association list representing the data the browser
|
|
has sent, usually the content of a webform. The name of the input
|
|
fields are the keys, their browser values the values. The values
|
|
are already unescaped. \ex{get-bindings} can (currently) only
|
|
handle \ex{application/x-www-form-urlencoded} data. You can call
|
|
\ex{get-bindings} on both \ex{GET} and \ex{POST} requests, even
|
|
multiple times (even on \ex{POST} requests).
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{extract-bindings}{key bindings}{list}
|
|
\defunx{extract-single-binding}{key bindings}{string}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These extract values from the \var{bindings} as returned by
|
|
\ex{get-bindings}. \var{key} may be a string or a symbol which will
|
|
be translated to a string before use. \ex{extract-bindings} returns
|
|
a list of all values from \var{bindings} whose key is \var{key}.
|
|
\ex{extract-single-binding} returns the value from the binding whose
|
|
key is \var{key} and raises an error if there more than one such
|
|
binding. The two procedures are the same as in PLT's webserver.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\ex{get-bindings} must acces the "Content-length" header field to
|
|
handle \ex{POST} request. \ex{surflets/bindings} therefore also
|
|
exports the procedure that does that job:
|
|
|
|
\defun{get-content-length}{headers}{number}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Returns the value of the "Content-length" header as a number, as
|
|
present in \var{headers}, \eg from \ex{surflet-request-headers}.
|
|
Will raise an error if there is no "Content-length" header or the
|
|
header is illformed, \eg contains no number.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\paragraph{Retrieving the Scheme values}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/input-field-value} structure provides the functions
|
|
necessary to retrieve the Scheme value of input fields.
|
|
|
|
\defun{raw-input-field-value}{input-field bindings}{any type}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-value}{input-field bindings [error-value]}{any type}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These extract the Scheme value of an \var{input-field}, given the
|
|
\var{bindings} of the last request. Asking for a Scheme value may
|
|
raise an error. Some error conditions are: the input field was not
|
|
present in the bindings, the transformer could not generate a Scheme
|
|
value for the browser value, or some other error occured in a maybe
|
|
malfunctioning transformer. In any case, \ex{raw-input-field-value}
|
|
won't catch that error, while \ex{input-field-value} will catch it
|
|
and provide \var{error-value} as the \var{input-field}'s Scheme
|
|
value, which defaults to \sharpf.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{input-field-binding}{input-field bindings}{binding}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This returns the first binding in \var{bindings} that belongs to the
|
|
given \var{input-field} (\ie has \var{input-field}'s name as key).
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\paragraph{Creating and using input fields}
|
|
|
|
The procedures for the creation of the input fields mentioned in
|
|
HTML~2.0 are the following. They are exported by the
|
|
\exi{surflets/surflet-input-fields}. Note that most of the time,
|
|
you may omit any of the optional arguments, \eg you may only specify
|
|
some further attributes to \ex{make-text-field} without specifying a
|
|
default value. Keep in mind that \ex{input-field-value} catches the
|
|
error that may occur if an \ex{input-field} is asked for its Scheme
|
|
value and may return any (previously chosen) value instead.
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-text-field}{[default] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-number-field}{[value] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-password-field}{[default] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-textarea}{[default] [rows] [columns] [readonly?] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These create various input field where the user types something in.
|
|
\var{default} is the text or the number that the browser initially
|
|
displays in the input field. \var{attributes} are some further
|
|
attributes for the input field in SXML notation.
|
|
\ex{make-text-field} creates a regular text input field. Its Scheme
|
|
value is a string. \ex{make-number-field} creates a regular text
|
|
input field, whose Scheme value is a number. It is an error if the
|
|
input field does not contain a number. \ex{make-password-field}
|
|
creates a text input field that will display stars instead of the
|
|
typed text. Its Scheme value is a string. \ex{make-textarea}
|
|
creates a possibly multi line text input field. \var{rows}
|
|
specifies how many rows of the text the browser will display at once
|
|
and defaults to 5. \var{columns} specifies how many columns the
|
|
browser will display at once and defaults to 20. Note that if you
|
|
only supply one number, it will be interpreted as the \var{rows}
|
|
argument. \var{readonly?} is a boolean that tells the browser
|
|
whether to disallow changes of the displayed text.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-hidden-input-field}{[default] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Creates a hidden input field, \ie a input field that the browser
|
|
won't display but whose value the browser will send. This input
|
|
field is provided for completeness; you usually won't need it, as
|
|
all values in your \surflet will survive the emission of a web page.
|
|
\var{default} is this value the browser will send. Note that
|
|
although the argument is marked as optional you usually want to
|
|
provide it. \var{attributes} are some further attributes for the
|
|
input field in SXML notation.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{set-text-field-value!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-number-field-value!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-hidden-field-value!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-password-field-value!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-textarea-value!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These set the default value of the according input field after it
|
|
has been created. Although the procedure may not complain, it is an
|
|
error, if \var{input-field} is not the expected type of
|
|
\ex{input-field}, \eg if the argument to \ex{set-text-field-value}
|
|
was not created by \ex{make-text-field}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-submit-button}{[caption] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-reset-button}{[caption] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-image-button}{image-source [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These create buttons on the web page which the user can click on.
|
|
\var{caption} is the text that is displayed on the button. If not
|
|
specified, the browser will choose a text, usually depending on the
|
|
local language setting on the browser side. \var{attributes} are
|
|
some further attributes for the input field in SXML notation.
|
|
\ex{make-submit-button} creates the regular button to submit the web
|
|
form data. As HTML~2.0 specifies that the value of a submit button
|
|
is its caption, its Scheme value is its caption, too.
|
|
\ex{make-reset-button} creates the button to reset all input fields
|
|
of the web form to their default values. As the browser does not
|
|
send data for reset buttons, it does not have a Scheme value, \ie
|
|
asking for a value will raise an error. \ex{make-image-button}
|
|
creates a picture button. Its Scheme value is a pair indicating the
|
|
x- and y-coordinates of the picture where the user has clicked to.
|
|
The argument \var{image-source} is not optional and is the string
|
|
URL of the displayed picture.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-checkbox}{[checked?] [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-annotated-checkbox}{value [checked?]
|
|
[attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These create checkboxes. \var{checked?} says whether the browser
|
|
should initially mark the checkbox as checked. \var{attributes} are
|
|
some further attributes for the input field in SXML notation. If it
|
|
was checked the Scheme value of a checkbox made by
|
|
\ex{make-checkbox} is \sharpt. If it was checked, the Scheme value
|
|
of a checkbox made by \ex{make-annotated-checkbox} is its
|
|
\var{value} provided during its creation where \var{value} may be
|
|
chosen arbitrarily. Note that HTML~2.0 specifies that browsers
|
|
should not send data for unmarked checkboxes, thus asking for the
|
|
Scheme value of an unmarked checkbox will raise an error. It is
|
|
recommended to use \ex{input-field-value} to ask for the Scheme
|
|
value of a checkbox. This will catch the error and will instead
|
|
return \sharpf by default.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{check-checkbox!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{uncheck-checkbox!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-checkbox-checked?!}{input-field checked?}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These change the \ex{checked?} field of a checkbox that tells the
|
|
browser whether it should initially mark the checkbox as checked.
|
|
\ex{check-checkbox!} tells the browser to do so,
|
|
\ex{uncheck-checkbox!} does not tell the browser to do so, and
|
|
\ex{set-checkbox-checked?!} does so depending on \var{checked?}. It
|
|
is an error if \var{input-field} was not created by
|
|
\ex{make-checkbox} or \ex{make-annotated-checkbox}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-radio-group}{}{procedure}
|
|
\defunx{make-annotated-radio-group}{}{procedure}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These return generators for radio buttons. Radio buttons usually
|
|
are part of a group of radio buttons of which only one may be
|
|
selected at any time. The procedures return a procedure that
|
|
creates radio button \ex{input-field}s that belong to the same
|
|
group.
|
|
|
|
The returned procedures accept a \var{value} argument, an optional
|
|
\var{checked?} argument and an optional \var{attributes} argument.
|
|
They return an \ex{input-field}, the actual radio button. For
|
|
\ex{make-radio-group}, \var{value} must be a string, for
|
|
\ex{make-annotated-radio-group}, \var{value} may be any Scheme
|
|
value. The Scheme value of any member of the group of radio buttons
|
|
is the \var{value} of the marked radio button that was provided
|
|
during its creation. \var{checked?} determines whether the browser
|
|
will initially mark the radio button. Note that you are able to
|
|
tell the browser to initially mark more than one radio button, but
|
|
in which case the browser's behavior is undefined. \var{attributes}
|
|
are some further attributes for the input field in SXML notation.
|
|
|
|
%The procedure returned by \ex{make-radio-group} is of the
|
|
% form of \ex{\textit{radio-generator}} explained below, the one
|
|
% returned by \ex{make-annotated-radio-group} is of the form of
|
|
% \ex{\textit{annotated-radio-generator}}.
|
|
|
|
%\defun{\textit{radio-generator}}{text [checked?]
|
|
% [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
%\defunx{\textit{annotated-radio-generator}}{value [checked?]
|
|
% [attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
%\begin{desc}
|
|
% A further description.
|
|
%\end{desc}
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{check-radio!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{uncheck-radio!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-radio-checked?!}{input-field \var{checked?}}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These change the \ex{checked?} field of a radio button that tells
|
|
the browser whether it should initially mark the radio button as
|
|
checked. \ex{check-radio!} tells the browser to do so,
|
|
\ex{uncheck-radio!} does not tell the browser to do so, and
|
|
\ex{set-radio-checked?!} does so depending on \var{checked?}. It is
|
|
an error if \var{input-field} was not created by the procedures
|
|
returned by \ex{make-radio-group} or
|
|
\ex{make-annotated-radio-group}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-select}{select-options [multiple?]
|
|
[attributes]}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This creates a select boxes. Other names are ``drop down menu'' or
|
|
simply ``list''. \var{select-options} is either a list of
|
|
\ex{select-options} created with the procedures presented below or a
|
|
list of strings. In the latter case the strings are automatically
|
|
translated into \ex{select-options}. \var{multiple?} allows
|
|
multiple selections in the select box. \var{attributes} are some
|
|
further attributes for the input field in SXML notation. Note that
|
|
you will only get multiple Scheme values for a select box that
|
|
allows multiple selections, if you specify the \var{multiple?}
|
|
argument; providing the according attribute in \var{attributes}
|
|
won't work (you will get the value of the first selection only).
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-simple-select-option}{tag [selected?]
|
|
[attributes]}{select-option}
|
|
\defunx{make-annotated-select-option}{tag value [selected?]
|
|
[attributes]}{select-option}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These create the options for a select box, to be used as arguments
|
|
to \ex{make-select}. \var{tag} is a string that will be displayed
|
|
as an option of a select box. \var{value} is an arbitrary Scheme
|
|
value that will be the Scheme value of the select input field
|
|
that contains the option. For simple select options this is the same as
|
|
\var{tag}. \var{selected?} determines whether the browser should
|
|
preselect the option. \var{attributes} are some further attributes
|
|
for the input field in SXML notation.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{select-option?}{object}{boolean}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This is a predicate for \ex{select-option}s.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{select-select-option!}{tag input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{unselect-select-option!}{tag input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{set-select-option-selected?!}{tag input-field
|
|
selected?}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These change the \ex{selected?} field of a select option that tells
|
|
the browser to preselect it. \ex{select-select-option!} tells the
|
|
browser to preselect it, \ex{unselect-select-option!} does not tell
|
|
it to do so and \ex{set-select-option-selected!} does so depending
|
|
on \var{selected?}. Note that you access the select option by
|
|
providing the \var{tag} and the select \var{input-field} in which
|
|
the select option is saved. \var{tag} is either the tag of the
|
|
select option or an index with 0 being the first select option of
|
|
that select input field. However, the change will affect all select
|
|
input fields that use the same select option. If there are
|
|
different select options with the same tag in a select input field,
|
|
the procedures will only touch one of them.
|
|
|
|
\oops{Unfortunetaly, the order of the arguments (index, object) is the
|
|
opposite of what is usual in Scheme (object, index). This should be
|
|
fixed in a future version.}
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{add-select-option!}{input-field select-option}{undefined}
|
|
\defunx{delete-select-option!}{input-field select-option}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These add or remove \var{select-option} to or from the select
|
|
\var{input-field}, respectively.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Do it yourself: your own input fields}
|
|
|
|
The \surflets library allows the creation of arbitrary own input
|
|
fields. The relevant procedures are exported by the
|
|
\exi{surflets/my-input-fields} structure.
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-input-field}{name type transformer attributes
|
|
html-tree-maker}{input-field}
|
|
\defunx{make-multi-input-field}{name type transformer attributes
|
|
html-tree-maker}{input-field}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These are the two constructors for \ex{input-field}s.
|
|
|
|
\var{name} is the name of the input field as used in the HTML. You
|
|
have to make sure that this name is unique across your web page, \eg
|
|
by using \ex{generate-input-field-name} presented below.
|
|
|
|
\var{type} is the type of the input field and mainly meant as a
|
|
label for debugging. You may choose an arbitrary value for it.
|
|
|
|
\var{transformer} is a procedure that accepts the created
|
|
\ex{input-field} and some other value as arguments and returns the
|
|
(single) Scheme value of the input field. For
|
|
\ex{make-input-field}, the other value is the string representation
|
|
of the value the user has entered in the represented input field, as
|
|
sent by the browser. For \ex{make-multi-input-field}, the other
|
|
value is an association list of all data the browser has sent, the
|
|
names being the key and the entered data being the value. This is
|
|
the very same list as returned by \ex{get-bindings}, see above.
|
|
When the \var{transformer} cannot create a Scheme value for the
|
|
\ex{input-field}, she should raise an error.
|
|
|
|
\var{attributes} takes some extra information you want to store
|
|
along with the \ex{input-field}. You may choose an arbitrary value
|
|
for it.
|
|
|
|
\var{html-tree-maker} is a procedure that takes the created
|
|
\ex{input-field} as argument and returns its representation in SXML.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{generate-input-field-name}{prefix}{string}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This generates a pseudo unique name based on prefix. Subsequent
|
|
calls with the same prefix are guaranteed to never return the same
|
|
string.\footnote{Well, never say never: if the structure is
|
|
reloaded, the counter is reset and \ex{generate-input-field-name}
|
|
will return the same names again.}
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\defun{input-field-name}{input-field}{string}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-type}{input-field}{any type}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-transformer}{input-field}{procedure}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-attributes }{input-field}{any type}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-html-tree-maker}{input-field}{procedure}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-html-tree}{input-field}{sxml}
|
|
\defunx{input-field-multi?}{input-field}{boolean}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These inspect input field values. \ex{input-field-name} returns the
|
|
name of the input field as used in its HTML representation.
|
|
\ex{input-field-type} returns a string indicating the type of the
|
|
input field, \eg "\ex{radio}" or "\ex{text}". For individual input
|
|
fields it may return a value of any type.
|
|
\ex{input-field-transformer} returns the transformer procedure that
|
|
is used the transform the browser value of the input field to a
|
|
Scheme value. \ex{input-field-attributes} returns the attributes
|
|
that were stored along with the input field.
|
|
\ex{input-field-html-tree-maker} returns the procedure that creates
|
|
the SXML representation of the input field.
|
|
\ex{input-field-html-tree} returns the SXML representation of the
|
|
input field. \ex{input-field-multi?} returns \sharpt if the input
|
|
field was created with \ex{make-multi-input-field}, \sharpf
|
|
otherwise. The transformer of an multi-\ex{input-field} gets the
|
|
browser bindings as second argument while the transformer of a
|
|
normal (non-multi) \ex{input-field} gets the string representation
|
|
of the entered data as second argument.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\defun{set-input-field-attributes!}{input-field
|
|
new-attributes}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This allows the mutation of the attributes of the \var{input-field}
|
|
to \var{new-attributes}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{touch-input-field!}{input-field}{undefined}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This forces the recalculation of the SXML representation of the
|
|
\var{input-field} using its html-tree-maker procedure.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Web addresses}
|
|
|
|
The \surflets library allow you to determine which link or button a
|
|
user used to leave a page. The links are called evaluatable web
|
|
addresses. The \exi{surflets/returned-via} structure provides
|
|
procedures and syntax for this.
|
|
|
|
\defun{returned-via}{return-object bindings}{any value}
|
|
\defunx{returned-via?}{return-object bindings}{any value}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Determines, whether the user left the web page using
|
|
\var{return-object}. \var{bindings} are the bindings as returned by
|
|
\ex{get-bindings}. If \var{return-object} is an \ex{input-field},
|
|
\ex{returned-via} returns its Scheme value as reported by
|
|
\ex{input-field-value}. The input field usually can only be a
|
|
submit or an image button. If \var{return-object} is not an
|
|
\ex{input-field}, \ex{returned-via} assumes it is an evaluatable web
|
|
address. If the user did not use the evaluatable web address to
|
|
leave the web page, \ex{returned-via} returns \sharpf. Otherwise,
|
|
when the evaluatable web address is annotated, \ex{returned-via}
|
|
returns its annotation, otherwise just \sharpt. \ex{returned-via?}
|
|
is an alias for \ex{returned-via}. The type of the return value
|
|
depends on the type of \var{return-object}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
% There is \defsyn or \defsyntax command yet, so I hack it on my own.
|
|
\defsyn{case-returned-via}{\synvar{key} \synvar{clause} \ldots}
|
|
% This said:
|
|
% (case-returned-via \synvar{key} \synvar{clause} \ldots) syntax
|
|
%\defvar{(case-returned-via \synvar{key} \synvar{clause} \ldots)}{syntax}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This works like \ex{case} with some flavor of \ex{cond}. Instead of
|
|
\ex{eq?} it uses \ex{returned-via} to determine which
|
|
\synvar{clause} applies. \synvar{key} is the \var{bindings}
|
|
argument to \ex{returned-via} (see above for the arguments of
|
|
\ex{returned-via}).
|
|
|
|
A clause is of the form
|
|
\codex{((\synvar{datum} \ldots) \synvar{expression} \ldots)}
|
|
where each \synvar{datum} is the \var{return-object} argument of
|
|
\ex{returned-via}. If for any of the \synvar{datum}
|
|
\ex{returned-via} returns a true value, the \synvar{expression}s are
|
|
evaluated.
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, a clause may be of the form
|
|
\codex{((\synvar{datum} \ldots) => \synvar{procedure} \ldots)}
|
|
If for any of the \synvar{datum} \ex{returned-via} returns a true
|
|
value, \synvar{proc} is called with that value.
|
|
|
|
The last possible clause is an "else" clause of the form
|
|
\codex{(else \synvar{expression} \ldots)}
|
|
which applies when the previous clauses don't apply.
|
|
|
|
\ex{case-returned-via} returns the value(s) of the
|
|
\synvar{expression} that was evaluated last.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\subsubsection{Evaluatable web addresses}
|
|
|
|
The \exi{surflets/addresses} structure provides procedures to create
|
|
evaluatable web addresses. Evaluatable web addresses are used just
|
|
like web addresses with the difference that \ex{returned-via} can
|
|
tell whether the user used this web address to leave the web page.
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-address}{}{address-procedure}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This creates an evaluatable web address. \var{address-procedure} is
|
|
a procedure that accepts messages. If the message is a string,
|
|
\var{address-procedure} will assume it is a continuation URL and
|
|
will return a web address that can be used as a link. If the
|
|
message is the symbol \ex{address}, \var{address-procedure} will
|
|
return the real \ex{address} object.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-annotated-address}{}{address-procedure}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This creates an annotated evaluatable wewb address.
|
|
\var{address-procedure} is a procedure that accepts messages. The
|
|
procedure accepts either a string and an optional annotation which
|
|
may be any Scheme value, or it accepts only the symbol \ex{address}.
|
|
In the first case, it will assume the string is a continuation URL
|
|
and will return a web address that can be used as a link. In the
|
|
latter case, it will return the real \ex{address} object.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\oops{Evaluatable web address cannot be used as the action URL of web
|
|
forms.}
|
|
|
|
\defun{address-name}{address}{string}
|
|
\defunx{address-annotated?}{address}{boolean}
|
|
\defunx{address-annotation}{address}{any type}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These inspect real \ex{address} objects as returned by the
|
|
evaluatable web addresses when given the symbol \ex{address}.
|
|
\ex{address-name} returns the name of the \var{address} as used in
|
|
the browser data. \ex{address-annotated?} indicates whether
|
|
\var{address} is annotated. \ex{address-annotation} returns the
|
|
annotation of \var{address}. If \var{address} is not annotated, it
|
|
returns \sharpf.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Callbacks}
|
|
|
|
The \surflets library allows to add a callback to a link. When the
|
|
user of a web page clicks on the link, the callback will be
|
|
executed. \ex{send-html/suspend} (usually) won't return in that
|
|
case.
|
|
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-callback}{callback-procedure}{continuation-URL}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This creates a callback. When a user clicks on a link to the
|
|
continuation URL \ex{make-callback} has returned,
|
|
\var{callback-procedure} will be called with the according
|
|
\ex{surflet-request}. \var{callback-procedure} should not return.
|
|
|
|
\ex{make-callback} works with continuations. Therefore, it is not
|
|
sensible to create callbacks on toplevel, nor is it sensible to
|
|
reuse callbacks. Instead, create your callback every time and right
|
|
before you need it.
|
|
|
|
If \var{callback-procedure} returns, \ex{make-callback} will return
|
|
\emph{again}, this time with the value returned by
|
|
\var{callback-procedure}. Note that in this case the continuation
|
|
that was active at the time of the call to \ex{make-callback} is
|
|
restored. Or, in short, don't let \var{callback-procedure} return
|
|
if you want to avoid headaches.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-annotated-callback}{callback-procedure}{procedure}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This creates a callback generator. The returned procedure accepts
|
|
any number of arguments \var{args} and returns a continuation URL.
|
|
When the user clicks on a link to the continuation URL,
|
|
\var{callback-procedure} will be called with the arguments
|
|
\var{args} previously provided.
|
|
|
|
It is an error, if \var{callback-procedure} returns. You should
|
|
create a fresh annotated callback every time and right before you
|
|
need it, as the continuation that was active at the time of the call
|
|
to \ex{make-annotated-callback} is restored.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defvar{callback-function}{procedure}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Use this procedure as the \var{callback-procedure} argument to
|
|
\ex{make-annotated-callback} to call arbitrary procedures with
|
|
arbitrary arguments.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
Here are some examples. The first example shows how you can use an
|
|
annotated callback. Note that it does not need to use
|
|
\ex{send-html/suspend}.
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
(define-structure surflet surflet-interface
|
|
(open surflets
|
|
surflets/callbacks
|
|
scheme-with-scsh)
|
|
(begin
|
|
|
|
(define (main req)
|
|
(let ((language (make-annotated-callback result-page)))
|
|
(send-html
|
|
`(html
|
|
(head (title "Multi-lingual"))
|
|
(body
|
|
(h2 "Select your language:")
|
|
(ul
|
|
(li (url ,(language "Hello, how are you?")
|
|
"English")
|
|
(li (url ,(language "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?")
|
|
"Deutsch")))))))))
|
|
|
|
(define (result-page req text)
|
|
(send-html/finish
|
|
`(html
|
|
(head (title "Greeting"))
|
|
(body
|
|
(h2 ,text)))))
|
|
|
|
))
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
|
|
Replacing the \ex{main} procedure with the following definition will
|
|
have the same result:
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
(define (main req)
|
|
(let ((language (make-annotated-callback callback-function)))
|
|
(send-html
|
|
`(html
|
|
(head (title "Multi-lingual"))
|
|
(body
|
|
(h2 "Select your language:")
|
|
(ul
|
|
(li (url ,(language result-page "Hello, how are you?")
|
|
"English")
|
|
(li (url ,(language result-page "Hallo, wie geht es Ihnen?")
|
|
"Deutsch")))))))))
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Outdater}
|
|
|
|
The \surflets library allows the user to navigate through the web
|
|
pages back and forth as she sees fit. However, sometimes you want
|
|
to make sure, that a submission is done only once. For this, the
|
|
\surflets provide \ex{outdater} objects that take care of this.
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-outdater}{}{outdater}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Creates an outdater object.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defsyn{if-outdated}{\synvar{outdater} \synvar{consequence}
|
|
\synvar{alternative}}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Using the \synvar{outdater}, this makes sure, the
|
|
\synvar{alternative} is executed at most once, \ie the first time
|
|
the \synvar{outdater} is used in such a form, the
|
|
\synvar{alternative} is evaluated. Every subsequent evaluation of
|
|
the \ex{if-outdated} form with the \synvar{outdater} will evaluate
|
|
the \synvar{consequence}, usually something similar to what
|
|
\ex{show-outdated} does.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{show-outdated}{url}{\noreturn}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Emits a regular web page to the client informing the user (in
|
|
English) that ``the page or action you requested relies on outdated
|
|
data''. It offers a ``reload'' link that points to \var{url} to get
|
|
current data. Usually, \var{url} is a callback URL the calls the
|
|
according procedure. See the admin \surlets for examples, \eg
|
|
\ex{scheme/web-server/root/surlfets/admin-surflet.scm}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
|
|
\subsection{Simple SUrflets}
|
|
|
|
PLT offers an API to create simple servlets (which are their analogues
|
|
to our \surflets). The \exi{simple-surflet-api} structure offers
|
|
the procedures with the same name as in the PLT API. With that,
|
|
\surflets can look as simple as this
|
|
(\ex{scheme/web-server/root/surlfets/add-simple.scm, see also
|
|
\ex{simple-surflet.scm} in the same directory for a larger example}:
|
|
|
|
\begin{alltt}
|
|
(define-structure surflet surflet-interface
|
|
(open scheme-with-scsh
|
|
surflets
|
|
simple-surflet-api
|
|
)
|
|
(begin
|
|
|
|
(define (main req)
|
|
(let* ((number-1 (single-query (make-number "First number:")))
|
|
(number-2 (single-query (make-number "Second number:"))))
|
|
(inform (format #f "~a + ~a = ~a"
|
|
number-1
|
|
number-2
|
|
(+ number-1 number-2))))
|
|
(final-page "Session finished."))
|
|
|
|
))
|
|
\end{alltt}
|
|
|
|
The procedures are the following.
|
|
|
|
\defun{single-query}{query}{any type}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Asks the user one single questions based on \var{query} and returns
|
|
her answer.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{queries}{queries}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Asks the user multiple questions based on the list of \var{queries}
|
|
and returns her answers in a list.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{form-query}{named-queries}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Asks the user multiple queries based on the list of
|
|
\var{named-queries} and returns her answers in a pseudo association
|
|
list. \var{named-queries} is a list of two element lists. The
|
|
first element of those lists is a symbol identifying the query, the
|
|
second is the query. The resulting pseudo association list contains
|
|
two element lists, where the first element is the symbol and the
|
|
second element the user's answer to the query. The result can be
|
|
read using the \ex{extract/single} and \ex{extract} procedures.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{inform}{title [text \ldots]}{surflet-request}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Sends a web page title \var{title} with the \var{text} to the user
|
|
as an information. The returned \ex{surflet-request} is usually
|
|
discarded. Takes at least one argument.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{final-page}{title [text \ldots]}{\noreturn}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
This sends the last page of the session to the user, titled
|
|
\var{title} and containing \var{text}. This is the analog to
|
|
\ex{send/finish}. Takes at least one argument.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{make-text}{invitation}{query}
|
|
\defun{make-number}{invitation}{query}
|
|
\defun{make-password}{text}{query}
|
|
\defun{make-boolean}{invitation}{query}
|
|
\defun{make-radio}{invitation choices}{query}
|
|
\defun{make-yes-no}{invitation yes-text no-text}{query}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
These create the various queries. \var{invitation} is a text
|
|
displayed in front of the input field, \eg ``Please enter your
|
|
password:''. \ex{make-text} creates a text input field,
|
|
\ex{make-number} creates a number input field (\ie a text input field
|
|
that only accepts numbers as inputs), \ex{make-password} creates a
|
|
password input field, \ex{make-boolean} creates a checkbox,
|
|
\ex{make-radio} creates a group of radio buttons of which only one
|
|
can be selected and \ex{make-yes-no} creates a radio group that
|
|
allows the choices \var{yes-text} and \var{no-text}.
|
|
|
|
The value of \ex{make-text}, \ex{make-number} and \ex{make-password}
|
|
is the text or number entered into the input field. The value of
|
|
\ex{make-boolean} is \sharpt or \sharpf. The value of
|
|
\ex{make-radio} and \ex{make-yes-no} is the selected choice, a
|
|
string.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
\defun{extract/single}{symbol table}{any value}
|
|
\defunx{extract}{symbol table}{list}
|
|
\begin{desc}
|
|
Return the answer of a user to a query. \var{table} is the result
|
|
of \ex{form-query}, \var{symbol} the symbol used to identify the
|
|
query of interest. For \ex{extract/single}, it is an error if there
|
|
is more than one query in \var{table} that is identified by
|
|
\var{symbol}.
|
|
\end{desc}
|
|
|
|
% shift-reset
|
|
% profiling
|
|
% handle-fatal
|
|
% thread safe counter
|