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PLACKUP(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PLACKUP(1)
NAME
plackup - Run PSGI application with Plack handlers
SYNOPSIS
# read your app from app.psgi file
plackup
# choose .psgi file from ARGV[0] (or with -a option)
plackup hello.psgi
# switch server implementation with --server (or -s)
plackup --server HTTP::Server::Simple --port 9090 --host 127.0.0.1 test.psgi
# use UNIX socket to run FCGI daemon
plackup -s FCGI --listen /tmp/fcgi.sock myapp.psgi
# launch FCGI external server on port 9090
plackup -s FCGI --port 9090
DESCRIPTION
plackup is a command line utility to run PSGI applications from the
command line.
plackup automatically figures out the environment it is run in, and
runs your application in that environment. FastCGI, CGI, AnyEvent and
others can all be detected. See Plack::Loader for the authoritative
list.
"plackup" assumes you have an "app.psgi" script in your current
directory. The last statement of "app.psgi" should be a code reference
that is a PSGI application:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use MyApp;
my $application = MyApp->new;
my $app = sub { $application->run_psgi(@_) };
ARGUMENTS
.psgi
plackup --host 127.0.0.1 --port 9090 /path/to/app.psgi
The first non-option argument is used as a ".psgi" file path. You
can also set this path with "-a" or "--app". If omitted, the
default file path is "app.psgi" in the current directory.
OPTIONS
-a, --app
Specifies the full path to a ".psgi" script. You may alternately
provide this path as the first argument to "plackup".
-e Evaluates the given perl code as a PSGI app, much like perl's "-e"
option:
plackup -e 'sub { my $env = shift; return [ ... ] }'
It is also handy when you want to run a custom application like
Plack::App::*.
plackup -MPlack::App::File -e 'Plack::App::File->new(...)->to_app'
You can also specify "-e" option with ".psgi" file path to wrap the
application with middleware configuration from the command line.
You can also use Plack::Builder DSL syntax inside "-e" code. For
example:
plackup -e 'enable "Auth::Basic", authenticator => ...;' myapp.psgi
is equivalent to the PSGI application:
use Plack::Builder;
use Plack::Util;
builder {
enable "Auth::Basic", authenticator => ...;
Plack::Util::load_psgi("myapp.psgi");
};
Note that when you use "-e" option to enable middleware, plackup
doesn't assume the implicit "app.psgi" path. You must either pass
the path to your ".psgi" file in the command line arguments or load
the application inside "-e" after the "enable".
plackup # Runs app.psgi
plackup -e 'enable "Foo"' # Doesn't work!
plackup -e 'enable "Foo"' app.psgi # Works
plackup -e 'enable "Foo"; sub { ... }' # Works
-o, --host
Binds to a TCP interface. Defaults to undef, which lets most server
backends bind to the any (*) interface. This option is only valid
for servers which support TCP sockets.
-p, --port
Binds to a TCP port. Defaults to 5000. This option is only valid
for servers which support TCP sockets.
-s, --server, the "PLACK_SERVER" environment variable
Selects a specific server implementation to run on. When provided,
the "-s" or "--server" flag will be preferred over the environment
variable.
If no option is given, plackup will try to detect the best server
implementation based on the environment variables as well as
modules loaded by your application in %INC. See Plack::Loader for
details.
-S, --socket
Listens on a UNIX domain socket path. Defaults to undef. This
option is only valid for servers which support UNIX sockets.
-l, --listen
Listens on one or more addresses, whether "HOST:PORT", ":PORT", or
"PATH" (without colons). You may use this option multiple times to
listen on multiple addresses, but the server will decide whether it
supports multiple interfaces.
-D, --daemonize
Makes the process run in the background. It's up to the backend
server/handler implementation whether this option is respected or
not.
-I Specifies Perl library include paths, like "perl"'s -I option. You
may add multiple paths by using this option multiple times.
-M Loads the named modules before loading the app's code. You may load
multiple modules by using this option multiple times.
-E, --env, the "PLACK_ENV" environment variable.
Specifies the environment option. Setting this value with "-E" or
"--env" also writes to the "PLACK_ENV" environment variable. This
allows applications or frameworks to tell which environment setting
the application is running on.
# These two are the same
plackup -E deployment
env PLACK_ENV=deployment plackup
Common values are "development", "deployment", and "test". The
default value is "development", which causes "plackup" to load the
middleware components: AccessLog, StackTrace, and Lint unless
"--no-default-middleware" is set.
--no-default-middleware
This prevents loading the default middleware stack even when Plack
environment (i.e. "-E" or "PLACK_ENV") is set to "development".
-r, --reload
Makes plackup restart the server whenever a file in your
development directory changes. This option by default watches the
"lib" directory and the base directory where .psgi file is located.
Use "-R" to watch other directories.
Reloading will delay the compilation of your application. Automatic
server detection (see "-s" above) may not behave as you expect, if
plackup needs to scan your application for the modules it uses.
Avoid problems by specifying "-s" explicitly when using "-r" or
"-R".
-R, --Reload
Makes plackup restart the server whenever a file in any of the
given directories changes. "-R" and "--Reload" take a comma-
separated list of paths:
plackup -R /path/to/project/lib,/path/to/project/templates
-L, --loader
Specifies the server loading subclass that implements how to run
the server. Available options are Plack::Loader (default),
Restarter (automatically set when "-r" or "-R" is used), Delayed,
and Shotgun.
See Plack::Loader::Delayed and Plack::Loader::Shotgun for more
details.
--access-log
Specifies the pathname of a file where the access log should be
written. By default, in the development environment access logs
will go to STDERR.
--path
Specify the root path of your app ("SCRIPT_NAME" in PSGI env) to
run. The following two commands are roughly the same.
plackup --path /foo app.psgi
plackup -e 'mount "/foo" => Plack::Util::load_psgi("app.psgi")'
Other options that starts with "--" are passed through to the backend
server. See each Plack::Handler backend's documentation for more
details on their available options.
SEE ALSO
Plack::Runner Plack::Loader
perl v5.20.2 2015-06-03 PLACKUP(1)