Squatting is a web microframework written in Perl that is based on
Ruby's Camping. It originally used Continuity as its foundation, but it
has since been generalized such that it can squat on top of any
Perl-based web framework (in theory).
Starlet is a standalone HTTP/1.0 server.
The server supports several features, and is suitable for running HTTP
application servers behind a reverse proxy.
High-performance preforking PSGI web server.
This module is designed to take raw HTML input and highlight it (using a
CSS stylesheet). The returned HTML code is ready for inclusion in a web
page.
This module is designed to take shell scripts and highlight them in HTML
with meaningful colours using CSS. The resulting HTML output is ready
for inclusion in a web page. Note that no reformating is done, all
spaces are preserved.
Installs everything you need to write serious Catalyst applications.
Tatsumaki is a toy port of Tornado for Perl using Plack (with
non-blocking extensions) and AnyEvent.
It allows you to write a web application that does a immediate
response with template rendering, IO-bound delayed response (like
fetching third party API or XML feeds), server push streaming and
long-poll Comet in a clean unified API.
The Template-GD distribution provides a number of Template Toolkit
plugin modules to interface with Lincoln Stein's GD modules. These in
turn provide an interface to Thomas Boutell's GD graphics library.
This module allows a Class::AlzaboWrapper::Cursor object to be used as
a TT2 iterator.
For a cursor which returns one object at a time, the iterator simply
returns one object per iteration. When the cursor returns multiple
objects, the iterator returns a hash reference where the keys are the
table name of the object's class in lower-case, with camel-casing
turned into underscores. The values of the hash are the objects.
So if the cursor returns Foo::User and Foo::Page objects, the keys are
"user" and "page".