Frontier::Client - issue Frontier XML RPC requests to a server
use Frontier::Client;
$server = Frontier::Client->new( I<OPTIONS> );
$result = $server->call($method, @args);
$boolean = $server->boolean($value);
$date_time = $server->date_time($value);
$base64 = $server->base64($value);
$value = $boolean->value;
$value = $date_time->value;
$value = $base64->value;
Frontier::Client is an XML-RPC client over HTTP.
Frontier::Client instances are used to make calls to XML-RPC
servers and as shortcuts for creating XML-RPC special data types.
- new( OPTIONS )
-
Returns a new instance of Frontier::Client and associates it with
an XML-RPC server at a URL. OPTIONS may be a list of key, value
pairs or a hash containing the following parameters:
- url
-
The URL of the server. This parameter is required. For example:
$server = Frontier::Client->new( 'url' => 'http://betty.userland.com/RPC2' );
- proxy
-
A URL of a proxy to forward XML-RPC calls through.
- encoding
-
The XML encoding to be specified in the XML declaration of outgoing
RPC requests. Incoming results may have a different encoding
specified; XML::Parser will convert incoming data to UTF-8. The
default outgoing encoding is none, which uses XML 1.0's default of
UTF-8. For example:
$server = Frontier::Client->new( 'url' => 'http://betty.userland.com/RPC2',
'encoding' => 'ISO-8859-1' );
- use_objects
-
If set to a non-zero value will convert incoming <i4>,
<float>, and <string> values to objects instead of
scalars. See int(), float(), and
string() below for more details.
- debug
-
If set to a non-zero value will print the encoded XML request and the
XML response received.
- call($method, @args)
-
Forward a procedure call to the server, either returning the value
returned by the procedure or failing with exception. `
$method' is
the name of the server method, and `@args' is a list of arguments
to pass. Arguments may be Perl hashes, arrays, scalar values, or the
XML-RPC special data types below.
- boolean( $value )
-
- date_time( $value )
-
- base64( $base64 )
-
The methods `
boolean()', `date_time()', and `base64()' create
and return XML-RPC-specific datatypes that can be passed to
`call()'. Results from servers may also contain these datatypes.
The corresponding package names (for use with `ref()', for example)
are `Frontier::RPC2::Boolean',
`Frontier::RPC2::DateTime::ISO8601', and
`Frontier::RPC2::Base64'.
The value of boolean, date/time, and base64 data can be set or
returned using the `value()' method. For example:
# To set a value:
$a_boolean->value(1);
# To retrieve a value
$base64 = $base64_xml_rpc_data->value();
Note: `base64()' does not encode or decode base64 data for you,
you must use MIME::Base64 or similar module for that.
- int( 42 );
-
- float( 3.14159 );
-
- string( "Foo" );
-
By default, you may pass ordinary Perl values (scalars) to be encoded.
RPC2 automatically converts them to XML-RPC types if they look like an
integer, float, or as a string. This assumption causes problems when
you want to pass a string that looks like ``0096'', RPC2 will convert
that to an <i4> because it looks like an integer. With these
methods, you could now create a string object like this:
$part_num = $server->string("0096");
and be confident that it will be passed as an XML-RPC string. You can
change and retrieve values from objects using value() as described
above.
perl(1), Frontier::RPC2(3)
<http://www.scripting.com/frontier5/xml/code/rpc.html>
Ken MacLeod <ken@bitsko.slc.ut.us>
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