POE::Filter::Stackable - combine multiple POE::Filter objects
#!perl
use POE qw(
Wheel::FollowTail
Filter::Line Filter::Grep Filter::Stackable
);
POE::Session->create(
inline_states => {
_start => sub {
my $parse_input_as_lines = POE::Filter::Line->new();
my $select_sudo_log_lines = POE::Filter::Grep->new(
Put => sub { 1 },
Get => sub {
my $input = shift;
return $input =~ /sudo\[\d+\]/i;
},
);
my $filter_stack = POE::Filter::Stackable->new(
Filters => [
$parse_input_as_lines, # first on get, last on put
$select_sudo_log_lines, # first on put, last on get
]
);
$_[HEAP]{tailor} = POE::Wheel::FollowTail->new(
Filename => "/var/log/system.log",
InputEvent => "got_log_line",
Filter => $filter_stack,
);
},
got_log_line => sub {
print "Log: $_[ARG0]\n";
}
}
);
POE::Kernel->run();
exit;
POE::Filter::Stackable combines multiple filters together in such a
way that they appear to be a single filter. All the usual POE::Filter
methods work, but data is secretly passed through the stacked filters
before it is returned. POE::Wheel objects and stand-alone programs
need no modifications to work with a filter stack.
In the SYNOPSIS, POE::Filter::Line and POE::Filter::Grep are
combined into one filter that only returns a particular kind of line.
This can be more efficient than filtering lines in application space,
as fewer events may need to be dispatched and handled.
Internally, filters are stored in an array.
Data added by get_one_start() will flow through the filter array in
increasing index order. Filter #0 will have first crack at it,
followed by filter #1 and so. The get_one() call will return an item
after it has passed through the last filter.
put() passes data through the filters in descending index order. Data
will go through the filter with the highest index first, and put()
will return the results after data has passed through filter #0.
In addition to the usual POE::Filter methods, POE::Filter::Stackable
also supports the following.
By default, new() creates an empty filter stack that behaves like
POE::Filter::Stream. It may be given optional parameters to
initialize the stack with an array of filters.
my $sudo_lines = POE::Filter::Stackable->new(
Filters => [
POE::Filter::Line->new(),
POE::Filter::Grep->new(
Put => sub { 1 }, # put all items
Get => sub { shift() =~ /sudo\[\d+\]/i },
),
]
);
Behaves like Perl's built-in pop() for the filter stack. The
highest-indexed filter is removed from the stack and returned. Any
data remaining in the filter's input buffer is lost, but an
application may always call get_pending in the POE::Filter manpage on the returned
filter.
my $last_filter = $stackable->pop();
my $last_buffer = $last_filter->get_pending();
Behaves like Perl's built-in shift() for the filter stack. The 0th
filter is removed from the stack and returned. Any data remaining in
the filter's input buffer is passed to the new head of the stack, or
it is lost if the stack becomes empty. An application may also call
get_pending in the POE::Filter manpage on the returned filter to examine the
filter's input buffer.
my $first_filter = $stackable->shift();
my $first_buffer = $first_filter->get_pending();
push() adds one or more new FILTERs to the end of the stack. The
newly pushed FILTERs will process input last, and they will handle
output first.
# Reverse data read through the stack.
# rot13 encode data sent through the stack.
$stackable->push(
POE::Filter::Map->(
Get => sub { return scalar reverse shift() },
Put => sub { local $_ = shift(); tr[a-zA-Z][n-za-mN-ZA-M]; $_ },
)
);
unshift() adds one or more new FILTERs to the beginning of the stack.
The newly unshifted FILTERs will process input first, and they will
handle output last.
filters() returns a list of the filters inside the Stackable filter,
in the stack's native order.
Calling $filter_stack->filters() in the SYNOPSIS would return
a list of two filter objects:
POE::Filter::Line=ARRAY(0x8b5ee0)
POE::Filter::Grep=ARRAY(0x8b5f7c)
filter_types() returns a list of class names for each filter in the
stack, in the stack's native order.
Calling $filter_stack->filter_types() in the SYNOPSIS would
return a list of two class names:
POE::FIlter::Line
POE::Filter::Grep
It could easily be replaced by:
my @filter_types = map { ref } $filter_stack->filters;
the POE::Filter manpage for more information about filters in general.
Specific filters, amongst which are:
the POE::Filter::Block manpage,
the POE::Filter::Grep manpage,
the POE::Filter::HTTPD manpage,
the POE::Filter::Line manpage,
the POE::Filter::Map manpage,
the POE::Filter::RecordBlock manpage,
the POE::Filter::Reference manpage,
the POE::Filter::Stream manpage
None currently known.
The Stackable filter was contributed by Dieter Pearcey. Documentation
provided by Rocco Caputo.
Please see the POE manpage for more information about authors and
contributors.
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