NAME
    Jifty - an application framework

SYNOPSIS
     # Object containing lots of web related goodies...
     my $web      = Jifty->web;
     my $request  = Jifty->web->request;
     my $response = Jifty->web->response;
     my $link     = Jifty->web->link( label => _('W00t'), url => '/whatsit' );

     # Retrieve information from your application's etc/config.yml file.
     my $config   = Jifty->config;

     # Retrieve the Jifty::DBI handle
     my $handle   = Jifty->handle;

     # Load an application class, very handy in plugins
     my $class    = Jifty->app_class('Model', 'Foo');
     my $foo      = $class->new;
     $foo->create( frobnicate => 42 );

     # Configure information related to your application's actions
     my $api      = Jifty->api;

     # Make parts of your page "subscribe" to information in a fragment
     my $subs     = Jifty->subs;

     # Share information via IPC::PubSub in your application
     my $bus      = Jifty->bus;

     # Retrieve general information about Mason
     my $handler  = Jifty->handler;

DESCRIPTION
    Yet another web framework.

  What's cool about Jifty? (Buzzwords)
    DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself)
        Jifty tries not to make you say things more than once.

    Full-stack
        Out of the proverbial box, Jifty comes with one way to do everything
        you should need to do: One database mapper, one templating system,
        one web services layer, one AJAX toolkit, one set of handlers for
        standalone or FastCGI servers. We work hard to make all the bits
        play well together, so you don't have to.

    Continuations
        With Jifty, it's easy to let the user go off and do something else,
        like fill out a wizard, look something up in the help system or go
        twiddle their preferences and come right back to where they were.

    Form-based dispatch
        This is one of the things that Jifty does that we've not seen
        anywhere else. Jifty owns your form rendering and processing. This
        means you never need to write form handling logic. All you say is "I
        want an input for this argument here" and Jifty takes care of the
        rest. (Even autocomplete and validation)

    A Pony
        Jifty is the only web application framework that comes with a pony.

  Introduction
    If this is your first time using Jifty, Jifty::Manual::Tutorial is
    probably a better place to start.

METHODS
  new PARAMHASH
    This class method instantiates a new "Jifty" object. This object deals
    with configuration files, logging and database handles for the system.
    Before this method returns, it calls the application's "start" method
    (i.e. "MyApp->start") to handle any application-specific startup.

    Most of the time, the server will call this for you to set up your
    "Jifty" object. If you are writing command-line programs that want to
    use your libraries (as opposed to web services) you will need to call
    this yourself.

    See Jifty::Config for details on how to configure your Jifty
    application.

   Arguments
    no_handle
        If this is set to true, Jifty will not create a Jifty::Handle and
        connect to a database. Only use this if you're about to drop the
        database or do something extreme like that; most of Jifty expects
        the handle to exist. Defaults to false.

    logger_component
        The name that Jifty::Logger will log under. If you don't specify
        anything Jifty::Logger will log under the empty string. See
        Jifty::Logger for more information.

  config
    An accessor for the Jifty::Config object that stores the configuration
    for the Jifty application.

  logger
    An accessor for our Jifty::Logger object for the application.

    You probably aren't interested in this. See "log" for information on how
    to make log messages.

  handler
    An accessor for our Jifty::Handler object.

    This is another method that you usually don't want to mess with too
    much. Most of the interesting web bits are handled by "web".

  handle
    An accessor for the Jifty::Handle object that stores the database handle
    for the application.

  api
    An accessor for the Jifty::API object that publishes and controls
    information about the application's Jifty::Actions.

  app_class(@names)
    Return Class in application space. For example "app_class('Model',
    'Foo')" returns YourApp::Model::Foo.

    By the time you get it back, the class will have already been required

    Is you pass a hashref as the first argument, it will be treated as
    configuration parameters. The only existing parameter is "require",
    which defaults to true.

  web
    An accessor for the Jifty::Web object that the web interface uses.

  subs
    An accessor for the Jifty::Subs object that the subscription uses.

  bus
    Returns an IPC::PubSub object for the current application.

  plugins
    Returns a list of Jifty::Plugin objects for this Jifty application.

  find_plugin
    Find plugins by name.

  class_loader
    An accessor for the Jifty::ClassLoader object that stores the loaded
    classes for the application.

  setup_database_connection
    Set up our database connection. Optionally takes a paramhash with a
    single argument. This method is automatically called by "new".

    no_handle
        Defaults to false. If true, Jifty won't try to set up a database
        handle

    pre_init
        Defaults to false. If true, plugins are notified that this is a
        pre-init, any trigger registration in "init()" should not happen
        during this stage. Note that model mixins' "register_triggers" is
        unrelated to this.

    If "no_handle" is set or our application's config file is missing a
    "Database" configuration section or *has* a "SkipDatabase: 1" directive
    in its framework configuration, does nothing.

  app_instance_id
    Returns a globally unique id for this instance of this jifty
    application. This value is generated the first time it's accessed

  background SUB
    Forks a background process, and ensures that database connections and
    sockets are not shared with the parent process.

  admin_mode
    Returns true if the application is in admin mode. This should be used
    instead of "Jifty->config->framework('AdminMode')".

SEE ALSO
    <http://jifty.org>, Jifty::Manual::Tutorial, Jifty::Everything,
    Jifty::Config, Jifty::Handle, Jifty::Logger, Jifty::Handler, Jifty::Web,
    Jifty::API, Jifty::Subs, IPC::PubSub, Jifty::Plugin, Jifty::ClassLoader

AUTHORS
    Jesse Vincent, Alex Vandiver and David Glasser.

LICENSE
    Jifty is Copyright 2005-2010 Best Practical Solutions, LLC. Jifty is
    distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.