RPC::PlClient(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation RPC::PlClient(3)
NAME
RPC::PlClient - Perl extension for writing PlRPC clients
SYNOPSIS
require RPC::PlClient;
# Create a client object and connect it to the server
my $client = RPC::PlClient->new('peeraddr' => 'joes.host.de',
'peerport' => 2570,
'application' => 'My App',
'version' => '1.0',
'user' => 'joe',
'password' => 'hello!');
# Create an instance of $class on the server by calling $class->new()
# and an associated instance on the client.
my $object = $client->Call('NewHandle', $class, 'new', @args);
# Call a method on $object, effectively calling the same method
# on the associated server instance.
my $result = $object->do_method(@args);
DESCRIPTION
PlRPC (Perl RPC) is a package that simplifies the writing of Perl based
client/server applications. RPC::PlServer is the package used on the
server side, and you guess what RPC::PlClient is for. See
RPC::PlServer(3) for this part.
PlRPC works by defining a set of methods that may be executed by the
client. For example, the server might offer a method "multiply" to the
client. Now a function call
@result = $client->Call('multiply', $a, $b);
on the client will be mapped to a corresponding call
$server->multiply($a, $b);
on the server. The function calls result will be transferred to the
client and returned as result of the clients method. Simple, eh? :-)
Client methods
$client = new(%attr);
(Class method) The client constructor. Returns a client object,
connected to the server. A Perl exception is thrown in case of
errors, thus you typically use it like this:
$client = eval { RPC::PlClient->new ( ... ) };
if ($@) {
print STDERR "Cannot create client object: $@\n";
exit 0;
}
The method accepts a list of key/value pairs as arguments. Known
arguments are:
peeraddr
peerport
socket_proto
socket_type
timeout These correspond to the attributes PeerAddr, PeerPort,
Proto, Type and Timeout of IO::Socket::INET. The server
connection will be established by passing them to
IO::Socket::INET->new().
socket After a connection was established, the IO::Socket instance
will be stored in this attribute. If you prefer
establishing the connection on your own, you may as well
create an own instance of IO::Socket and pass it as
attribute socket to the new method. The above attributes
will be ignored in that case.
application
version
user
password
it is part of the PlRPC authorization process, that the
client must obeye a login procedure where he will pass an
application name, a protocol version and optionally a user
name and password. These arguments are handled by the
servers Application, Version and User methods.
compression
Set this to off (default, no compression) or gzip (requires
the Compress::Zlib module).
cipher This attribute can be used to add encryption quite easily.
PlRPC is not bound to a certain encryption method, but to a
block encryption API. The attribute is an object supporting
the methods blocksize, encrypt and decrypt. For example,
the modules Crypt::DES and Crypt::IDEA support such an
interface.
Note that you can set or remove encryption on the fly
(putting "undef" as attribute value will stop encryption),
but you have to be sure, that both sides change the
encryption mode.
Example:
use Crypt::DES;
$cipher = Crypt::DES->new(pack("H*", "0123456789abcdef"));
$client = RPC::PlClient->new('cipher' => $cipher,
...);
maxmessage
The size of messages exchanged between client and server is
restricted, in order to omit denial of service attacks. By
default the limit is 65536 bytes.
debug Enhances logging level by emitting debugging messages.
logfile By default the client is logging to syslog (Unix) or the
event log (Windows). If neither is available or you pass a
TRUE value as logfile, then logging will happen to the
given file handle, an instance of IO::Handle. If the value
is scalar, then logging will occur to stderr.
Examples:
# Logging to stderr:
my $client = RPC::PlClient->new('logfile' => 1, ...);
# Logging to 'my.log':
my $file = IO::File->new('my.log', 'a')
|| die "Cannot create log file 'my.log': $!";
my $client = RPC::PlClient->new('logfile' => $file, ...);
@result = $client->Call($method, @args);
(Instance method) Calls a method on the server; the arguments are a
method name of the server class and the method call arguments. It
returns the method results, if successfull, otherwise a Perl
exception is thrown.
Example:
@results = eval { $client->Call($method, @args };
if ($@) {
print STDERR "An error occurred while executing $method: $@\n";
exit 0;
}
$cobj = $client->ClientObject($class, $method, @args)
(Instance method) A set of predefined methods is available that
make dealing with client side objects incredibly easy: In short the
client creates a representation of the server object for you. Say
we have an object $sobj on the server and an associated object
$cobj on the client: Then a call
@results = $cobj->my_method(@args);
will be immediately mapped to a call
@results = $sobj->my_method(@args);
on the server and the results returned to you without any
additional programming. Here's how you create $cobj, an instance of
RPC::PlClient::Object:
my $cobj = $client->ClientObject($class, 'new', @args);
This will trigger a call
my $sobj = $class->new(@args);
on the server for you. Note that the server has the ability to
restrict access to both certain classes and methods by setting
$server->{'methods'} appropriately.
EXAMPLE
We'll create a simple example application, an MD5 client. The server
will have installed the MD5 module and create digests for us. We
present the client part only, the server example is part of the
RPC::PlServer man page. See RPC::PlServer(3).
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
use strict; # Always a good choice.
require RPC::PlClient;
# Constants
my $MY_APPLICATION = "MD5_Server";
my $MY_VERSION = 1.0;
my $MY_USER = ""; # The server doesn't require user
my $MY_PASSWORD = ""; # authentication.
my $hexdigest = eval {
my $client = RPC::PlClient->new
('peeraddr' => '127.0.0.1',
'peerport' => 2000,
'application' => $MY_APPLICATION,
'version' => $MY_VERSION,
'user' => $MY_USER,
'password' => $MY_PASSWORD);
# Create an MD5 object on the server and an associated
# client object. Executes a
# $context = MD5->new()
# on the server.
my $context = $client->ClientObject('MD5', 'new');
# Let the server calculate a digest for us. Executes a
# $context->add("This is a silly string!");
# $context->hexdigest();
# on the server.
$context->add("This is a silly string!");
$context->hexdigest();
};
if ($@) {
die "An error occurred: $@";
}
print "Got digest $hexdigest\n";
AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
The PlRPC-modules are
Copyright (C) 1998, Jochen Wiedmann
Email: jochen.wiedmann at freenet.de
All rights reserved.
You may distribute this package under the terms of either the GNU
General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the
Perl README file.
SEE ALSO
PlRPC::Server(3), Net::Daemon(3), Storable(3), Sys::Syslog(3),
Win32::EventLog
An example application is the DBI Proxy client:
DBD::Proxy(3).
perl v5.16.3 2007-06-17 RPC::PlClient(3)