package FS::XMLRPC; use strict; use vars qw( $DEBUG ); use Frontier::RPC2; # Instead of 'use'ing freeside modules on the fly below, just preload them now. use FS; use FS::CGI; use FS::Conf; use FS::Record; use FS::cust_main; use FS::Maestro; use Data::Dumper; $DEBUG = 0; =head1 NAME FS::XMLRPC - Object methods for handling XMLRPC requests =head1 SYNOPSIS use FS::XMLRPC; $xmlrpc = new FS::XMLRPC; ($error, $response_xml) = $xmlrpc->serve($request_xml); =head1 DESCRIPTION The FS::XMLRPC object is a mechanisim to access read-only data from freeside's subroutines. It does not, at least not at this point, give you the ability to access methods of freeside objects remotely. It can, however, be used to call subroutines such as FS::cust_main::smart_search and FS::Record::qsearch. See the serve method below for calling syntax. =head1 METHODS =over 4 =item new Provides a FS::XMLRPC object used to handle incoming XMLRPC requests. =cut sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = {}; bless($self, $class); $self->{_coder} = new Frontier::RPC2; return $self; } =item serve REQUEST_XML_SCALAR The serve method takes a scalar containg an XMLRPC request for one of freeside's subroutines (not object methods). Parameters passed in the 'methodCall' will be passed as a list to the subroutine untouched. The return value of the called subroutine _must_ be a freeside object reference (eg. qsearchs) or a list of freeside object references (eg. qsearch, smart_search), _and_, the object(s) returned must support the hashref method. This will be checked first by calling UNIVERSAL::can('FS::class::subroutine', 'hashref'). Return value is an XMLRPC methodResponse containing the results of the call. The result of the subroutine call itself will be coded in the methodResponse as an array of structs, regardless of whether there was many or a single object returned. In other words, after you decode the response, you'll always have an array. =cut sub serve { my ($self, $request_xml) = (shift, shift); my $response_xml; my $coder = $self->{_coder}; my $call = $coder->decode($request_xml); warn "Got methodCall with method_name='" . $call->{method_name} . "'" if $DEBUG; $response_xml = $coder->encode_response(&_serve($call->{method_name}, $call->{value})); return ('', $response_xml); } sub _serve { #Subroutine, not method my ($method_name, $params) = (shift, shift); #die 'Called _serve without parameters' unless ref($params) eq 'ARRAY'; $params = [] unless (ref($params) eq 'ARRAY'); if ($method_name =~ /^(\w+)\.(\w+)/) { #my ($class, $sub) = split(/\./, $method_name); my ($class, $sub) = ($1, $2); my $fssub = "FS::${class}::${sub}"; warn "fssub: ${fssub}" if $DEBUG; warn "params: " . Dumper($params) if $DEBUG; my @result; if ($class eq 'Conf') { #Special case for FS::Conf because we need an obj. if ($sub eq 'config') { my $conf = new FS::Conf; @result = ($conf->config(@$params)); } else { warn "FS::XMLRPC: Can't call undefined subroutine '${fssub}'"; } } else { unless (UNIVERSAL::can("FS::${class}", $sub)) { warn "FS::XMLRPC: Can't call undefined subroutine '${fssub}'"; # Should we encode an error in the response, # or just break silently to the remote caller and complain locally? return []; } eval { no strict 'refs'; my $fssub = "FS::${class}::${sub}"; @result = (&$fssub(@$params)); }; if ($@) { warn "FS::XMLRPC: Error while calling '${fssub}': $@"; return []; } } if ( scalar(@result) == 1 && ref($result[0]) eq 'HASH' ) { return $result[0]; } elsif (grep { UNIVERSAL::can($_, 'hashref') ? 0 : 1 } @result) { #warn "FS::XMLRPC: One or more objects returned from '${fssub}' doesn't " . # "support the 'hashref' method."; # If they're not FS::Record decendants, just return the results unmap'd? # This is more flexible, but possibly more error-prone. return [ @result ]; } else { return [ map { $_->hashref } @result ]; } } elsif ($method_name eq 'version') { return [ $FS::VERSION ]; } # else... warn "Unhandled XMLRPC request '${method_name}'"; return {}; } =head1 BUGS Probably lots. =head1 SEE ALSO L. =cut 1;