CGI
- CGI-bin Applications
CGI stands for "Common Gateway Inferface," a fancy
name meaning computer programs running on the webserver that can
be invoked from a www page at the browser. The "bin" part alludes
to the binary executables that result from compiled or assembled
programs. It is a bit misleading because cgi's can also be Unix
shell scripts or interpreted languages like Perl. CGI scripts need
to be saved in ASCII format and uploaded to your server's cgi-bin
in ASCII or text format. This is very important.
We don't provide free support for CGI scripts which
we did not install on your server. So if you are not already familiar
with CGI scripting, you may want to read a book on the subject or
find places on the Internet with CGI scripting information. There
are many good resources for CGI scripts found on the web. The scripts
at Matt's Script Archive found at http://www.worldwidemart.com/scripts/
are very good. Many of our scripts come from here. Another excellent
resource is The CGI Resource Index found at http://www.cgi-perl.com/
-- if you are not an expert, look for scripts that are very well
documented and come with step-by-step instructions, or contact us
for help or installation.
Where to Put CGI-bin Scripts
Put your cgi-bin scripts in the www subdirectory named
"cgi-bin". If you have given full POP/FTP/Telnet accounts to other
people, each of them will have their own separate cgi-bin inside
the main cgi-bin. When they login with their username and password,
they will only have access to their own cgi-bin.
Paths to Date, Mail, Perl, etc.
Here are your paths to the common server resources
that CGI scripts often require:
| Sendmail: |
/usr/sbin/sendmail |
| Perl5.003: |
/usr/bin/perl |
| Perl5.004: |
/usr/bin/perl5.004 |
| Date: |
/bin/date |
| Java: |
/usr/local/java/bin/java |
| Python: |
/usr/bin/python |
| Domain path: |
/www/yourdomain |
| |
(puts you in your web directory) |
| Cgi-bin path: |
/www/yourdomain/cgi-bin |
| |
(puts you in your cgi-bin) |
Look at the window in your FTP or Telnet client to
see whether your site resides on /home/ or /home2/.
Setting Permissions
The following is a simple explanation of file permissions
in Unix. To list the access permissions of a file or directory,
telnet to your server, then:
cd directoryname
to change the directory until you are either in the
directory above the file you are interested in, or above the directory
you are checking.
Type: ls -l filename
and you will see what the current permission settings
are for that file, along with a bunch of other stuff.
Examples of using chmod:
| PEOPLE |
PERMISSIONS |
| u = the
file's user (you) |
r = read
access |
| g = the
file's group |
x = execute
access |
| o = others |
w = write
access |
| a = the
user, the group, and others |
|
To change permissions for a file named filename.cgi,
you need to chmod the file (change mode). For example, when you
type this:
chmod u=rwx,g=rx,o=rx filename.cgi
you've given:
read, execute, and write access to the user (that's you)
read and execute access to the group and
read and execute access to others
Some scripts will tell you to chmod 775 (for example). Doing
the above is the same thing as typing chmod 775. You can use either
method with our Unix servers. Let me explain:
When using the numeric system, the code for permissions
is as follows:
r = 4 w = 2 x = 1 rwx = 7
The first 7 of our chmod775 tells Unix to change the
user's permissions to rxw (because r=4 + w=2 + x=1 adds up to 7.
The second 7 applies to the group, and the last number 5, refers
to others (4+1=5).
When doing an ls
-l on the file, telnet always shows the permissions
this way:
-rwxr-xr-x
Ignore the first dash, then break up the above into
three groups of letters. If there's a dash where a letter should
be, it means that there is no permission for those people.
Remember: the first 3 apply to user, the second 3
apply to group, and the third 3 apply to others.
Some FTP clients support changing permissions in a
more graphical way. If you have Fetch for the Mac, you have an easy
way to change permissions. Go to the file you want to change the
permissions on, and highlight it. Under the Remote menu, select
Change Permissions. A window will pop up showing the current permissions
for the file you had highlighted, as in Figure 3A below.
Click on the boxes to change permissions as needed.

Figure 3A
WS_FTP accomplishes the same task as above. Just highlight
the file you want to check, and right-click on it. A menu will pop
up, then select CHMOD. You will see the window below, as in Figure
3B.

Figure 3B
Appendix
Permission Settings for the scripts provided
Troubleshooting CGI-bin Problems
Below are solutions to some of the more common CGI
script problems, in question and answer format.
When I activate my CGI program, I get back a
page that says "Internal Server Error. The server encountered an
internal error or misconfiguration and was unable to complete your
request."
This is generally caused by a problem within the script.
Log in via Telnet and test your script in local mode to get a better
idea of what the problem is. To do this, go into the directory in
which your script is located, then execute the script. To execute
the script, you can do it by two ways:
1) Type "perl myscript.pl" (Perl being the language
interpreter in this case).
2) Or simply type "myscript.pl" alone, that will work
if the first line is well written to indicate the location of Perl.
The first one is useful to see if there's any error
IN your script. The second one is useful to test if your "calling
line" (the first line of the script) is okay, i.e. if you entered
the right location of Perl.
I am being told "File Not Found," or "No Such
File or Directory."
Upload your Perl or CGI script in ASCII mode, not
binary mode.
When I test my Perl script in local mode (by
Telnet), I have the following error: "Literal @domain now requires
backslash at myscript.pl line 3, within string. Execution of myscript.pl
aborted due to compilation errors."
This is caused by a misinterpretation by Perl. You
see, the "@" sign has a special meaning in Perl; it identifies an
array (a table of elements). Since it cannot find the array named
domain, it generates an error. You should place a backslash (\)
before the "@" symbol to tell Perl to see it as a regular symbol,
as in an email address.
I am getting the message "POST not implemented."
You are probably using the wrong reference for cgiemail.
Use the reference /cgi-bin/cgiemail/mail.txt. Another possibility
is that you are pointing to a cgi-bin script that you have not put
in your cgi-bin directory. In general, this message really means
that the web server is not recognizing the cgi-bin script you are
calling as a program. It thinks it is a regular text file.
It's saying I don't have permission to access
/
This error message means that you are missing your
index.htm file. Note that files that start with a "." are hidden
files. To see them, type ls -al.
If you wish to FTP this file in, go to the home/yourdomain directory.
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