From deandre at deandrecarroll.com Fri Aug 13 08:53:16 2010 From: deandre at deandrecarroll.com (DeAndre Carroll) Date: Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:53:16 -0600 Subject: [Boulder.pm] Enterprise design patterns in Perl Message-ID: <4C656A6C.5000400@deandrecarroll.com> Hi Boulder Perl Mongers, Can anyone recommend a good resource for enterprise design patterns in Perl? I'm engineering a system using a/an MVC architecture without an established frame work. Within that I have established a data access layer and a business logic layer. I'm looking for a good architectural pattern that allows for authorization on the execution of each business process by a user. Is there a better way to do this (still without using a framework such as Catalyst - don't want the overhead)? Sincerely, DeAndr? Carroll From matt at beldyk.org Fri Aug 13 09:42:58 2010 From: matt at beldyk.org (Matthew Beldyk) Date: Fri, 13 Aug 2010 10:42:58 -0600 Subject: [Boulder.pm] Enterprise design patterns in Perl In-Reply-To: <4C656A6C.5000400@deandrecarroll.com> References: <4C656A6C.5000400@deandrecarroll.com> Message-ID: Hi DeAndr?, I'm not sure if this is specifically what you are looking for, but there is a website that documents a number of design patterns for Perl: http://perldesignpatterns.com/?PerlDesignPatterns It seems to be more cookbook than the gang of four book (and some sections are just stubs,) but it is interesting to browse to see how other people have approached a problem. Specifically, you might be interested in http://perldesignpatterns.com/?WebAuthentication or could use that as a starting point to do the authorization you want without using a large framework. Best regards, -Matt On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 9:53 AM, DeAndre Carroll wrote: > Hi Boulder Perl Mongers, > > Can anyone recommend a good resource for enterprise design patterns in Perl? > I'm engineering a system using a/an MVC architecture without an established > frame work. Within that I have established a data access layer and a > business logic layer. I'm looking for a good architectural pattern that > allows for authorization on the execution of each business process by a > user. Is there a better way to do this (still without using a framework such > as Catalyst - don't want the overhead)? > > Sincerely, > > DeAndr? Carroll > _______________________________________________ > Boulder-pm mailing list > Boulder-pm at pm.org > http://mail.pm.org/mailman/listinfo/boulder-pm > -- Calvin: Know what I pray for? Hobbes: What? Calvin: The strength to change what I can, the inability to accept what I can't, and the incapacity to tell the difference. From deandre at deandrecarroll.com Fri Aug 13 09:46:04 2010 From: deandre at deandrecarroll.com (DeAndre Carroll) Date: Fri, 13 Aug 2010 10:46:04 -0600 Subject: [Boulder.pm] Enterprise design patterns in Perl In-Reply-To: References: <4C656A6C.5000400@deandrecarroll.com> Message-ID: <4C6576CC.1020204@deandrecarroll.com> Thanks Matt! I'll check that out. -DeAndr? Matthew Beldyk wrote: > Hi DeAndr?, > > I'm not sure if this is specifically what you are looking for, but > there is a website that documents a number of design patterns for > Perl: http://perldesignpatterns.com/?PerlDesignPatterns It seems to be > more cookbook than the gang of four book (and some sections are just > stubs,) but it is interesting to browse to see how other people have > approached a problem. > > Specifically, you might be interested in > http://perldesignpatterns.com/?WebAuthentication or could use that as > a starting point to do the authorization you want without using a > large framework. > > Best regards, > -Matt > > On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 9:53 AM, DeAndre Carroll > wrote: > >> Hi Boulder Perl Mongers, >> >> Can anyone recommend a good resource for enterprise design patterns in Perl? >> I'm engineering a system using a/an MVC architecture without an established >> frame work. Within that I have established a data access layer and a >> business logic layer. I'm looking for a good architectural pattern that >> allows for authorization on the execution of each business process by a >> user. Is there a better way to do this (still without using a framework such >> as Catalyst - don't want the overhead)? >> >> Sincerely, >> >> DeAndr? Carroll >> _______________________________________________ >> Boulder-pm mailing list >> Boulder-pm at pm.org >> http://mail.pm.org/mailman/listinfo/boulder-pm >> >> > > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From wpiencia at thunderdome.ieee.org Mon Aug 23 14:42:01 2010 From: wpiencia at thunderdome.ieee.org (Walter Pienciak) Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2010 15:42:01 -0600 Subject: [Boulder.pm] job available Message-ID: <20100823214200.GB28106@thunderdome.ieee.org> Posting for a non member. Walter Hi Boulder Perl Mongers, Return Path, Inc. has a Software Engineer ? Continuous Integration position open and would love to hear from you. The full job description can be found here. Know someone who might be perfect for this role? Pass along referrals to Aaron Smith at +aaron.smith at returnpath.net. Thanks, Aaron From Jeff.Stampes at xilinx.com Wed Aug 25 19:58:58 2010 From: Jeff.Stampes at xilinx.com (Jeff Stampes) Date: Wed, 25 Aug 2010 20:58:58 -0600 Subject: [Boulder.pm] Job opening Message-ID: <36b66a01-8e34-4918-96cc-f4608e162515@SG2EHSMHS005.ehs.local> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: