Net::OpenID::Extension(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Net::OpenID::Extension(3) |
NAME¶
Net::OpenID::Extension - Base class for OpenID extensions
VERSION¶
version 1.20
METHODS¶
CLASS->namespace_uris¶
Return a hashref mapping namespace URIs to the aliases you will use to refer to them in the other methods. For example:
return { 'http://example.com/some-extension' => 'someext', };
CLASS->new_request(@parameters)¶
When your extension is added to the Net::OpenID::ClaimedIdentity object in consumer-land, this method will be called to create a request object. Any additional arguments passed when adding the extension will be passed through verbatim in @parameters.
The object you return here should at minimum provide the interface defined in Net::OpenID::ExtensionMessage.
You can return "undef" here if you have nothing useful to return.
CLASS->received_request(\%args)¶
In server-land, when a caller asks for the request object for your extension this method will be called to create a request object. %args maps the aliases you returned from the "namespace_uris" method to a hashref of the key-value pairs provided in that namespace.
The object you return here should at minimum provide the interface defined in Net::OpenID::ExtensionMessage, and should behave identically to the corresponding object returned from "new_request".
You can return "undef" here if you have nothing useful to return.
CLASS->new_response(@parameters)¶
When your extension is added to the response in server-land, this method will be called to create a response object. Any additional arguments passed when adding the extension will be passed through verbatim in @parameters.
You can return "undef" here if you have nothing useful to return.
CLASS->received_response(\%args)¶
In consumer-land, when a caller asks for the request object for your extension in Net::OpenID::VerifiedIdentity this method will be called to create a response object. %args maps the aliases you returned from the "namespace_uris" method to a hashref of the key-value pairs provided in that namespace.
You can return "undef" here if you have nothing useful to return.
2016-02-13 | perl v5.40.0 |