Mojolicious

Mojolicious
Original author(s) Sebastian Riedel
Initial release September 24, 2008 (2008-09-24)[1]
Stable release
8.0[2] / September 17, 2018 (2018-09-17)
Repository Edit this at Wikidata
Written in Perl
Type Web application framework
License PAL
Website mojolicious.org

Mojolicious is a real-time web application framework, written by Sebastian Riedel, creator of the web application framework Catalyst.[3] Licensed as free software under the Artistic License v 2.0, it is written in the Perl programming language, and is designed for use in both simple and complex web applications, based on Riedel's previous experience developing Catalyst.[4] Documentation for the framework was partly funded by a grant from The Perl Foundation.[5]

As it is written in Perl, Mojolicious can run on any of the many operating systems for which Perl is available, and can be installed directly from CPAN.[6] Prebuilt packages of Mojolicious are also available for NetBSD from pkgsrc[7] and for Microsoft Windows and other operating systems from ActiveState's Perl package manager.[8]

Features

References

  1. "Mojolicious change log".
  2. "Mojolicious change log". Mojolicious. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  3. "Mojolicious 2.0: Modern Perl For the Web". Slashdot. 17 Oct 2011.
  4. Tara Gibbs (17 February 2011). "Mojolicious - An Interview with Sebastian Riedel". ActiveState.
  5. Alberto Simões (16 Dec 2010). "Mojolicious Documentation Closing Grant Report". The Perl Foundation.
  6. "Mojolicious". CPAN.
  7. "The NetBSD Packages Collection: www/p5-Mojolicious". pkgsrc.
  8. "Mojolicious". Perl package manager.
  9. "Mojolicious - Perl real-time web framework". Mojolicious.
  10. "Updating the Duct Tape for HTML5: Websockets in Perl (Mojolicious)". DZone. 1 Nov 2011. Archived from the original on 8 October 2017.
  11. McDaniel, Adam (November 2011). HTML5: Your Visual Blueprint for Designing Rich Web Pages and Applications. Visual. ISBN 978-0-470-95222-1.
  12. Jamie Popkin (July 2011). "Watch your processes remotely with Mojolicious and a smartphone". 2011 (207). Linux Journal.
  13. Marcus Ramberg (4 Dec 2010). "Mojolicious". Yet Another Perl Conference.


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