NAME

LWP::ConsoleLogger - LWP tracing and debugging

VERSION

version 1.000001

SYNOPSIS

The simplest way to get started is by adding LWP::ConsoleLogger::Everywhere to your code and then just watching your output.

If you need more control, look at LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy.

use LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy qw( debug_ua );
my $mech = WWW::Mechanize->new; # or LWP::UserAgent->new() etc
my $console_logger = debug_ua( $mech );
$mech->get( 'https://metacpan.org' );
# now watch the console for debugging output
# turn off header dumps
$console_logger->dump_headers( 0 );
$mech->get( $some_other_url );

To get down to the lowest level, use LWP::ConsoleLogger directly.

my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new( cookie_jar => {} );
my $console_logger = LWP::ConsoleLogger->new(
dump_content => 1,
dump_text => 1,
content_pre_filter => sub {
my $content = shift;
my $content_type = shift;
# mangle content here
# ...
return $content;
},
);
$ua->default_header(
'Accept-Encoding' => scalar HTTP::Message::decodable() );
$ua->add_handler( 'response_done',
sub { $console_logger->response_callback( @_ ) } );
$ua->add_handler( 'request_send',
sub { $console_logger->request_callback( @_ ) } );
# now watch debugging output to your screen
$ua->get( 'http://nytimes.com/' );

Sample output might look like this.

GET params:
.-----+-------.
| Key | Value |
+-----+-------+
| _r | 1 |
| hp | |
'-----+-------'
.-----------------+--------------------------------.
| Request Header | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------+
| Accept-Encoding | gzip |
| Cookie2 | $Version="1" |
| User-Agent | WWW-Mechanize/1.73 |
'-----------------+--------------------------------'
==> 200 OK
Title: The New York Times - Breaking News, World News & Multimedia
.--------------------------+-------------------------------.
| Response Header | Value |
+--------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Accept-Ranges | bytes |
| Age | 176 |
| Cache-Control | no-cache |
| Channels | NytNow |
| Client-Date | Fri, 30 May 2014 22:37:42 GMT |
| Client-Peer | 170.149.172.130:80 |
| Client-Response-Num | 1 |
| Client-Transfer-Encoding | chunked |
| Connection | keep-alive |
| Content-Encoding | gzip |
| Content-Type | text/html; charset=utf-8 |
| Date | Fri, 30 May 2014 22:37:41 GMT |
| NtCoent-Length | 65951 |
| Server | Apache |
| Via | 1.1 varnish |
| X-Cache | HIT |
| X-Varnish | 1142859770 1142854917 |
'--------------------------+-------------------------------'
.--------------------------+-------------------------------.
| Text |
+--------------------------+-------------------------------+
| F.C.C., in a Shift, Backs Fast Lanes for Web Traffic... |
'--------------------------+-------------------------------'

DESCRIPTION

It can be hard (or at least tedious) to debug mechanize scripts. LWP::Debug is deprecated. It suggests you write your own debugging handlers, set up a proxy or install Wireshark. Those are all workable solutions, but this module exists to save you some of that work. The guts of this module are stolen from Plack::Middleware::DebugLogging, which in turn stole most of its internals from Catalyst. If you're new to LWP::ConsoleLogger, I suggest getting started with the LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy wrapper. This will get you up and running in minutes. If you need to tweak the settings that LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy chooses for you (or if you just want to be fancy), please read on.

Since this is a debugging library, I've left as much mutable state as possible, so that you can easily toggle output on and off and otherwise adjust how you deal with the output.

CONSTRUCTOR

new()

The following arguments can be passed to new(), although none are required. They can also be called as methods on an instantiated object. I'll list them here and discuss them in detail below.

  • dump_content => 0|1

  • dump_cookies => 0|1

  • dump_headers => 0|1

  • dump_params => 0|1

  • dump_status => 0|1

  • dump_text => 0|1

  • dump_title => 0|1

  • dump_text => 0|1

  • dump_uri => 0|1

  • content_pre_filter => sub { ... }

  • headers_to_redact => ['Authentication', 'Foo']

  • params_to_redact => ['token', 'password']

  • text_pre_filter => sub { ... }

  • html_restrict => HTML::Restrict->new( ... )

  • logger => Log::Dispatch->new( ... )

  • pretty => 0|1

  • term_width => $integer

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

dump_content( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, the actual content of your response (HTML, JSON, etc) will be dumped to your screen. Defaults to false.

dump_cookies( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, the content of your cookies will be dumped to your screen. Defaults to false.

dump_headers( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, both request and response headers will be dumped to your screen. Defaults to true.

Headers are dumped in alphabetical order.

dump_params( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, both GET and POST params will be dumped to your screen. Defaults to true.

Params are dumped in alphabetical order.

dump_status( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, dumps the HTTP response code for each page being visited. Defaults to true.

dump_text( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, dumps the text of your page after both the content_pre_filter and text_pre_filters have been applied. Defaults to true.

dump_title( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, dumps the titles of HTML pages if your UserAgent has a title method and if it returns something useful. Defaults to true.

dump_uri( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If true, dumps the URI of each page being visited. Defaults to true.

pretty ( 0|1 )

Boolean value. If disabled, request headers, response headers, content and text sections will be dumped without using tables. Handy for copy/pasting JSON etc for faking responses later. Defaults to true.

content_pre_filter( sub { ... } )

Subroutine reference. This allows you to manipulate content before it is dumped. A common use case might be stripping headers and footers away from HTML content to make it easier to detect changes in the body of the page.

$easy_logger->content_pre_filter(
sub {
my $content = shift;
my $content_type = shift; # the value of the Content-Type header
if ( $content_type =~ m{html}i
&& $content =~ m{<!--\scontent\s-->(.*)<!--\sfooter}msx ) {
return $1;
}
return $content;
}
);

Try to make sure that your content mangling doesn't return broken HTML as that may not play well with HTML::Restrict.

request_callback

Use this handler to set up console logging on your requests.

my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new;
$ua->add_handler(
'request_send',
sub { $console_logger->request_callback(@_) }
);

This is done for you by default if you set up your logging via LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy.

response_callback

Use this handler to set up console logging on your responses.

my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new;
$ua->add_handler(
'response_done',
sub { $console_logger->response_callback(@_) }
);

This is done for you by default if you set up your logging via LWP::ConsoleLogger::Easy.

text_pre_filter( sub { ... } )

Subroutine reference. This allows you to manipulate text before it is dumped. A common use case might be stripping away duplicate whitespace and/or newlines in order to improve formatting. Keep in mind that the content_pre_filter will have been applied to the content which is passed to the text_pre_filter. The idea is that you can strip away an HTML you don't care about in the content_pre_filter phase and then process the remainder of the content in the text_pre_filter.

$easy_logger->text_pre_filter(
sub {
my $content = shift;
my $content_type = shift; # the value of the Content-Type header
my $base_url = shift;
# do something with the content
# ...
return ( $content, $new_content_type );
}
);

If your text_pre_filter() converts from HTML to plain text, be sure to return the new content type (text/plain) when you exit the sub. If you do not do this, HTML formatting will then be applied to your plain text as is explained below.

If this is HTML content, HTML::Restrict will be applied after the text_pre_filter has been run. LWP::ConsoleLogger will then strip away some whitespace and newlines from processed HTML in its own opinionated way, in order to present you with more readable text.

html_restrict( HTML::Restrict->new( ... ) )

If the content_type indicates HTML then HTML::Restrict will be used to strip tags from your content in the text rendering process. You may pass your own HTML::Restrict object, if you like. This would be helpful in situations where you still do want to have some tags in your text.

logger( Log::Dispatch->new( ... ) )

By default all data will be dumped to your console (as the name of this module implies) using Log::Dispatch. However, you may use your own Log::Dispatch module in order to facilitate logging to files or any other output which Log::Dispatch supports.

term_width( $integer )

By default this module will try to find the maximum width of your terminal and use all available space when displaying tabular data. You may use this parameter to constrain the tables to an arbitrary width.

CAVEATS

I've written this to suit my needs and there are a lot of things I haven't considered. For example, I'm mostly assuming that the content will be text, HTML, JSON or XML.

The test suite is not very robust either. If you'd like to contribute to this module and you can't find an appropriate test, do add something to the example folder (either a new script or alter an existing one), so that I can see what your patch does.

AUTHOR

Olaf Alders <olaf@wundercounter.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2014 by MaxMind, Inc.

This is free software, licensed under:

The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)