#!/usr/local/bin/perl use Frontier::Client; my $serverURL='http://phpxmlrpc.sourceforge.net/server.php'; # try the simplest example my $client = Frontier::Client->new( 'url' => $serverURL, 'debug' => 0, 'encoding' => 'iso-8859-1' ); my $resp = $client->call("examples.getStateName", 32); print "Got '${resp}'\n"; # now send a mail to nobody in particular $resp = $client->call("mail.send", ("edd", "Test", "Bonjour. Je m'appelle Gérard. Mañana. ", "freddy", "", "", 'text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"')); if ($resp->value()) { print "Mail sent OK.\n"; } else { print "Error sending mail.\n"; } # test echoing of characters works fine $resp = $client->call("examples.echo", 'Three "blind" mice - ' . "See 'how' they run"); print $resp . "\n"; # test name and age example. this exercises structs and arrays $resp = $client->call("examples.sortByAge", [ { 'name' => 'Dave', 'age' => 35}, { 'name' => 'Edd', 'age' => 45 }, { 'name' => 'Fred', 'age' => 23 }, { 'name' => 'Barney', 'age' => 36 } ] ); my $e; foreach $e (@$resp) { print $$e{'name'} . ", " . $$e{'age'} . "\n"; } # test base64 $resp = $client->call("examples.decode64", $client->base64("TWFyeSBoYWQgYSBsaXR0bGUgbGFtYiBTaGUgd" . "GllZCBpdCB0byBhIHB5bG9u")); print $resp . "\n";