Pre-Installed
CGI-bin Script
Formmail.cgi
The script
is one from Matt's Script Archive which we have installed and preconfigured
for your domain. FormMail is a generic www form to e-mail gateway, which
will parse the results of any form and send them to the specified user.
This script has many formatting and operational options, most of which
can be specified through the form, meaning you don't need any programming
knowledge or multiple scripts for multiple forms. This also makes FormMail
the perfect system-wise solution for allowing users form-based user feedback
capabilities without the risks of allowing freedom of CGI access.
There is
only one form field that you must have in your form, for FormMail to work
correctly. This is the recipient field. Other hidden configuration fields
can also be used to enhance the operation of FormMail on your site. The
action of your form needs to point towards this script (obviously), and
the method must be POST in capital letters.
Here's an
example of the form fields to put in your form:
<FORM
METHOD=POST ACTION="http://yourdomain.com/cgi-bin/formmail.cgi">
<input
type=hidden name="recipient" value="whoever@yourdomain.com">
<input
type=hidden name="subject" value="Order">
<input
type=hidden name="return_link_url" value="http://yourdomain.com/">
<input
type=hidden name="return_link_title" value="Back to Main Page">
The following
are descriptions and proper syntax for fields you can use with FormMail.
Recipient
Field
Description:
This form field allows you to specify to whom you wish for your form results
to be mailed. Most likely you will want to configure this option as a
hidden form field with a value equal to that of your email address.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="recipient" value="email@yourdomain.com">
Subject
Field
Description:
The subject field will allow you to specify the subject that you wish
to appear in the email that is sent to you after this form has been filled
out. If you do not have this option turned on, then the script will default
to a message subject: "WWW Form Submission".
Syntax:
If you wish to choose what the subject is:
<input
type=hidden name="subject" value="Your Subject">
To allow
the user to choose a subject:
<input
type=text name="subject">
Email
Field
Description:
This form field will allow the user to specify their return email address.
If you want to be able to return e-mail to your user, I strongly suggest
that you include this form field and allow them to fill it in. This will
be put into the From: field of the message you receive. If you want to
require an email address with valid syntax, add this field name to the
'required' field.
Syntax:
<input type=text name="email">
Realname
Field
Description:
The realname form field will allow the user to input their real name.
This field is useful for identification purposes and will also be put
into the From: line of your message header.
Syntax:
<input type=text name="realname">
Redirect
Field
Description:
If you wish to redirect the user to a different URL, rather than having
them see the default response to the fill-out form, you can use this hidden
variable to send them to a pre-made HTML page.
Syntax:
To choose the URL they will end up at:
<input
type=hidden name="redirect" value="http://yourdomain.com/to/file.html">
To allow
them to specify a URL they wish to travel to once the form is filled out:
<input
type=text name="redirect">
Required
Field
Description:
You can require certain fields in your form to be filled in before the
user can successfully submit the form. Simply place all field names that
you want to be mandatory into this field, separated by commas. If the
required fields are not filled in, the user will be notified of what they
need to fill in, and a link back to the form they just submitted will
be provided.
To use a
customized error page, see 'missing_fields_redirect'
Syntax:
If you want to require that they fill in the email and phone fields in
your form, so that you can reach them once you have received the mail,
use the syntax like:
<input
type=hidden name="required" value="email,phone">
Env_report
Field
Description:
Allows you to have Environment variables included in the email message
you receive after a user has filled out your form. Useful if you wish
to know what browser they were using, what domain they were coming from
or any other attributes associated with environment variables. The following
is a short list of valid environment variables that might be useful:
REMOTE_HOST
- Sends the hostname making the request.
REMOTE_ADDR
- Sends the IP address of the remote host.
HTTP_USER_AGENT
- The browser the client is using.
(Note: In
our case, both REMOTE_HOST and REMOTE_ADDR are the same, since our servers
don't do the reverse DNS lookup needed to generate the true REMOTE_HOST
string).
Syntax:
If you wanted to find all the above variables, you would put the following
into your form:
<input
type=hidden name="env_report" value="REMOTE_HOST,REMOTE_ADDR,HTTP_USER_AGENT">
Sort Field
Description:
This field allows you to choose the order in which you wish for your variables
to appear in the email form that FormMail generates. You can choose to
have the field sorted alphabetically or specify a set order in which you
want the fields to appear in your mail message. By leaving this field
out, the order will simply default to the order in which the browsers
send the information to the script (which is usually the exact same order
as they appeared in the form). When sorting by a set order of fields,
you should include the phrase "order:" as the first part of your value
for the sort field, and then follow that with the field names you want
to be listed in the email message, separated by commas.
Syntax:
To sort alphabetically:
<input
type=hidden name="sort" value="alphabetic">
To sort by
a set field order:
<input
type=hidden name="sort" value="order:name1,name2,etc...">
Print_config
Field
Description:
print_config allows you to specify which of the config variables you would
like to have printed in your e-mail message. By default, no config fields
are printed to your email. This is because the important form fields,
like email, subject, etc. are included in the header of the message. However
some users have asked for this option so they can have these fields printed
in the body of the message. The config fields that you wish to have printed
should be in the value attribute of your input tag separated by commas.
Syntax:
If you want to print the email and subject fields in the body of your
message, you would place the following form tag:
<input
type=hidden name="print config" value="email, subject">
Print_blank_fields
Field
Description:
print_blank_fields allows you to request that all form fields are printed
in the return HTML, regardless of whether or not they were filled in.
FormMail defaults to turning this off, so that unused form fields aren't
emailed.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="print_blank_fields" value="1">
Title
Field
Description:
This form field allows you to specify the title and header that will appear
on the resulting page if you do not specify a redirect URL.
Syntax:
If you wanted a title of 'Feedback Form Results':
<input
type=hidden name="title" value="Feedback Form Results">
Return_link_url
Field
Description:
This field allows you to specify a URL that will appear, as return_link_title,
on the following report page. This field will not be used if you have
the redirect field set, but it is useful if you allow the user to receive
the report on the following page, but want to offer them a way to get
back to your main page.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="return_link_url" value="http://yourdomain.com/index.htm">
Return_link_title
Description:
This is the title that will be used to link the user back to the page
you specify with return_link_url. The two fields will be shown on the
resulting form page as:
Back to
Main Page
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="return_link_title" value="Back to Main Page">
Cgiemail
Cgiemail
is another form processing script, totally different than FormMail, discussed
above. It is a program written in the C language that takes the contents
of fill-in boxes on a form and emails them to a specified location. In
addition to the form specification in the .html file, a mail specification
in a .txt file is required to format the resulting email message.
We provide
the cgiemail in the cgi-bin directory of your server. You need to have
an action in your order.htm file to call it. It should look like this:
<form
method=post action="http://www.yourdomain.com/cgi-bin/cgiemail/order.txt">
Details are
provided below. While there are a number of subsections below this one,
they all work together and are meant to be read from start to finish.
order.htm
Look for
a file in your www directory called order.htm. This is our example form
we put on your site that shows how a form should be configured to work
with Cgiemail. Look at it in a browser, and download it to your hard drive
using FTP so you can see how it works. If you've never dealt with HTML
forms before, don't worry, they're easy to create and understand.
The form
prompts the user for data which is sent to the server as simple key-value
pairs. Each <input> tag specifies a record. The key is given by
the name attribute, and the value is given by the value
attribute. The type attribute tells the browser what kind of data
to expect. Now, try looking at the example.
Please note
that the hidden items are used to transmit critical info to Cgiemail.
They provide the location of the success file, the name of the person
the results should be sent to, and the subject of the form. When making
your own forms, you may want to change the email address in the "required-to"
field, and likely the subject in the "subject" field. The first item tells
Cgiemail what to show the user after successfully completing the form.
You can, but don't need to customize this.
After that
come the items that are actually presented to the user. You'll want to
use type=text input items with cgiemail: it's a simple tool. The size=60
tells the browser how big to make the box. The name=something is required
in each input tag, otherwise the browser wouldn't know how to send the
data to the server. The value=" " attribute is correct in most cases,
unless you want a default value in the form.
Note that
if a field begins with required-, cgiemail will require that the user
enter a value for this field. This is particularly useful if you want
to require a user to submit their email address.
When the
user presses the Submit button, the data goes to our machine where cgiemail
starts doing something with it. What is does is controlled by the order.txt
file discussed below.
By the way,
you can name your HTML form anything you want to.
order.txt
Now that
we have all this data, what do we do with it? Mail it, of course! But
for flexibility, cgiemail requires that you create a mail.txt file to
show it what to send. (If you didn't want flexibility you'd use a mailto
link.) The program will read this file, perform substitutions, and pass
it to the mail system.
Make sure
that you upload mail.txt in ASCII mode. Failure to upload mail.txt in
ASCII mode will generate the message:
"Server Error:
The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable
to complete your request."
There is
already an example order.txt document in the forms directory in your www
directory.
By the way,
there's nothing magical about the name order.txt. Feel free to call it
mail1.txt or form1.mail, or whatever suits you, as long as the form has
the correct name for what you uploaded.
Note that
the first several lines are mail headers. You probably shouldn't change
that part, or the corresponding parts in your form. In particular, there
must be a To: header or the mail won't go anywhere!
What cgiemail
does is simply replace every string that looks like [key] with the value
the user typed into the field with name=key. That's all. You can lay out
your form as is best for your users, but lay out your mail.txt as is best
for you to read. You can even insert gobs of text to help format the output.
Only the [key] parts will be replaced by cgiemail.
Cgiemail
does not report environmental variables like FormMail will, but other
than that, it is an excellent program, allowing you more flexibility in
the way you want your data returned by the form.
Secure
Server Order Forms
Normally,
any text (such as your credit card number) sent from your browser to the
web server is sent as plain text. This means that a hacker could potentially
intercept (however unlikely) the information sent from your browser and
read it. However, by using the secure server, the information is encrypted
before it is sent from your browser. It would be practically impossible
for anyone to decrypt it without knowing the key. Please use the secure
server only when necessary, as when requesting sensitive information from
your visitors.
The domains
hosted by us are housed on any number of computers and all of them have
a different machine name. To find out what machine name to use for your
secure order access calls, check the faq file of your domain at:
http://www.yourdomain.com/faq.html
Each server
has its own site-secure.net site, and although you will be putting your
form on your own domain, it must be called through the site-secure.net
server in order for the form to be secure.
To do this,
create your form as usual and put it somewhere in your www directory.
You can put your form anywhere you want to, but for this example, let's
assume the normal URL for your form can be accessed from a browser with
this URL:
http://www.yourdomain.com/signup/secureform.html
To call the
form through the secure-order server, you need to use the following URL
to access your pages via the secure server (even though your form resides
on your own domain space): https://machinename.site-secure.net/yourdomain/signup/secureform.html.
That would
be the URL you would put as an <HREF> to link to your form from
whatever page you have your visitors link from. Don't forget the "s" in
"https."
Your cgi-bin
dir is: https://machinename.site-secure.net/yourdomain/cgi-bin/
-------------------------------------
Special
instructions for using FormMail.cgi with the Secure Server
If you are
using formmail.cgi through the secure server, you can still place your
form anywhere on your webspace you want to, but you MUST use the following
URL as the ACTION of your form: https://crimson.site-secure.net/cgi-bin/formmail.cgi
Here's an
example of how the first parts of your form might look:
<FORM
METHOD=POST ACTION="https://crimson.site-secure.net/cgi-bin/formmail.cgi">
<input
type=hidden name="recipient" value="whoever@yourdomain.com">
<input
type=hidden name="subject" value="Order">
<input
type=hidden name="return_link_url" value="http://yourdomain.com/">
<input
type=hidden name="return_link_title" value="Back to Main Page">
It is still
important that you call your order page through a secure URL in order
to work properly. For example: https://crimson.site-secure.net/yourdomain/order.htm.
Guestbook
Guestbook
allows you to set up your own comments page. From there, visitors can
add entries to your guestbook and they will be displayed with the most
recent at the top and scrolling down, or vice versa. Other options include
the ability to limit HTML in the entry, link to e-mail address with mailto
tag, use a log to log entries, redirect to a different page after signing,
emailing whenever a new entry is added, and much more.
Guestbook
is already set up for use on your server. You can simply use the following
URL to access it: http://yourdomain.com/Guestbook/guestbook.html
If you want
to change any of the configuration options, locate the guestbook.cgi file
in your Guestbook directory (inside your www directory). Download it to
your hard drive in ASCII mode, and save it somewhere safe. Create a copy
of the file and give it the same name, then edit the options as specified
below. Keep your backup of the original guestbook.cgi in case you run
into problems.
Option
1: $mail
This option
will allow you to be notified via an E-mail address when a new entry arrives
in your guestbook. The entry will be mailed to you as a notification.
If you should choose to turn this variable on you will need to fill in
the 2 variables that go along with it:
$recipient
- Your email address, so that the mailing program will know who to mail
the entry to.
$mailprog
- The location of your sendmail program on your host machine.
Option
2: $uselog
This will
allow you the ability to use the short log feature. It is already turned
on so you will have to change it to 0 if you do not wish to use it. It
has been implemented since there are probably many people who feel no
need to have a log when people are making entries to a file anyway. Keep
in mind that it will show errors which is one nice aspect about it.
Option
3: $linkmail
Turning this
option on will make the address links in your guestbook become hyperlinked.
So instead of simply having (name@some.host) it will put (<a href="mailto:name@some.host">name@somehost</a>
so that anyone can simply click on the address to email them.
Option
4: $separator
This allows
you to choose whether you want guestbook entries to be separated by a
Paragraph Separator <p>, or a Horizontal Rule <hr>. By changing
the 0 in the script to a 1, you will turn on the <hr> separator
and turn off the <p> separator. The 0 option will do the reverse
of that; turn on the <p> and turn off the <hr>.
Option
5: $redirection
By choosing
1 you will enable auto redirection and 0 will return a page to the user
telling them their entry has been received and click here to get back
to the guestbook.
Option
6: $entry_order
Set this
option to 0 and the newest entries will be added below the rest of the
entries. Keep this option at 1 and the guestbook will add the newest entries
at the top.
Option
7: $remote_mail
Many users
of the guestbook have requested that a form letter be automatically sent
to the remote user when they fill in the guestbook. Turning this option
on will tell the script to automatically mail any user who leaves an email
address. You can specify the contents of the mail message by editing the
section of the script that sends mail to the remote user. By default it
sends a message that says, "Thank you for adding to my guestbook." and
then shows them their entry. If you should choose to turn this variable
on, you will need to fill in the 2 variables that go along with it:
$recipient
- Your email address so that the mailing program will know who to mail
the entry to.
$mailprog
- The location of your sendmail program on your host machine.
Option
8: $allow_html
This option
allows you to turn on or off the use of HTML tags by users of your guestbook.
Setting this variable to 1 allows users to embed html tags such as <b>
or <H1> or <a href=" "></a> into your html document.
Setting this variable to 0 will not allow them to use any html syntax
in their comments or any other field. You can still link to their comments
or any other field. You can still link to their email address by turning
$link_mail to 1.
There is
also the ability for users to add their own URL and then their name is
referenced to their URL in the guestbook.html file. This helps to eliminate
the need for allow_html to be turned on, and lets users point you to a
spot that will tell you more about them. Several users of the guestbook
script have asked for this option. If you wish to disable the option,
simply delete the following line from your addguest.html file:
URL: <input
type=text name=url size=50><br>
These are
the rest of the important guestbook files found in your Guestbook directory:
guestbook.html
This is the
file that you will link to that will contain the Guestbook Entries. You
may want to edit the title and heading spaces and customize the look any
way you desire. Do not delete the line <!--begin--> from this guestbook,
or else the script will have no way of knowing where to begin the editing.
The <!--begin--> line is the only necessary line in your guestbook.html
file, but the link to the addguest.html file is also a good idea. :-)
addguest.html
This is a
fill-out form to add a new entry into the guestbook. This is also customizable
as long as the action tags and basic field names in the form remain the
same.
guestlog.html
This is a
short log that lists domains and times that entries were created. Much
easier to browse and it will point out those failed entries when users
did not specify a name or comments. You will need to give the file read/write
access.
Visitor
Links Page
Visitor Link
Page allows you to set up a web page which your users can then add links
to in specified categories. Newest links are added to the top of each
category. A running total of the number of links present as well as the
time when the last link was added is shown at the top of the page. Your
preconfigured Visitor Links page is already set up on your server at http://www.yourdomain.com/links/links.htm.
The only configuration you may want to do is to customize the look of
the links.htm page. Just leave the method and input tags the way they
are. If you decide to change the category names, you must do so in the
links.htm document, AS WELL AS the links.pl file in your cgi-bin.
Random
Text Generator
This script
is preconfigured for your server. There is a directory in your www directory
called "random." Inside that directory is a file called random.txt. Just
download this file to your hard drive and edit it with any random text
you would like placed in an html document. Remember to keep the %% separator
between quotes. You can use any html formatting tags you want to, including
<href> tags so you can configure it as a random link generator.
You can put in as many quotes as you wish. Upload the random.txt file
to your server in the same location you found it, remembering to upload
it in ASCII or text mode.
The script
uses SSI (Server Side Includes) so the page you want to use random text
on must have the .sht, .shtm, or .shtml extension. On your page, just
put this tag wherever you want the random text to appear:
<!--#exec
cgi="/cgi-bin/randomtext.cgi"-->
That's all
there is to it!
WWW
Board
WWW Board
is a threaded World Wide Web discussion forum and message board, which
allows users to post new messages, follow-up to existing ones and more.
It is already preconfigured for your server. Just go to http://www.yourdomain.com/bbs
to post your messages there.
There are
several options you may want to configure. First of all, the index.sht
file in the bbs directory can be customized any way you wish as long as
you leave the method and input tags the way they are.
Additionally,
here are some options contained in the wwwboard.pl script itself (located
in your cgi-bin directory) which you may want to change, depending on
your needs:
$show_faq
= 1;
This option
allows you to choose whether or not you want to display a link to the
FAQ on every individual message page or not. It defaults to 1 and the
link will be put in at the top of the message along with links to Followups,
Post Followup and Back to $title. Setting this to 0 will turn it off,
and keeping it at 1 will keep the link. You need to create a faq.html
file and put it inside the bbs directory. The FAQ can contain any information
you want to give your visitors about how the board works, your organization,
types of postings that will be allowed, etc.
$allow_html
= 1;
This option
lets you choose whether or not you want to allow HTML mark-up in your
posts. If you do not want to allow it, then everything that a user submits
that has <>'s around it will be cut out of the message. Setting
this option to 1 will allow HTML in the posts and you can turn this option
off by setting it to 0.
$quote_text
= 1;
By keeping
this option set to 1, the previous message will be quoted in the followup
text input box. The quoted text will have a ':' placed in front of it
so you can distinguish what had been said in the previous posts from what
the current poster is trying to get across. Setting this option to 0 will
leave the followup text box empty for the new poster.
$subject_line
= 0;
There are
three options for the way that you can display the subject line for the
user posting a followup. Leaving this option at 0 which is the default
value, will put the previous subject line into the followup form and allow
users to edit the subject however they like. Setting this option to 1,
however, will quote the subject, but simply display it to the user, not
allowing him or her to edit the subject line. The third and final option
can be achieved by setting the $subject_line variable to 2. If it is set
to 2, the subject will not be quoted and instead the user will be prompted
with an empty subject block in their followup subject line.
$use_time
= 1;
This option
allows you to choose whether or not you want to use the hour:minute:second
time with the day/month/year time on the main page. Day/Month/Year will
automatically be placed on the main wwwboard.html page when a new entry
is added, but if you leave this variable at 1, the hour:minute:second
time will also be put there. This is very useful for message boards that
get a lot of posts, but if you would like to save space on your main page,
you can set this to 0, causing the hour:minute:second display not to be
added.
Search.cgi
Search will
look at all your html pages for words you enter, and return all pages
on a list with links. This program is completely configured and ready
to run, but for Search.cgi to return a response, it need to be activated.
This is easily done by logging in via telnet and at the prompt after login
type the following command:
chmod +r
/www/yourdomain
Now you can
access search.cgi with the following URL: http://yourdomain.com/cgi-bin/search.cgi.
There is
a configuration file called search_define.pl which accompanies search.cgi
and sets up the variables for it. You can customize which files you wish
to exclude from searches, and also the cosmetics of the search and results
pages.
Single
Page Shopping Cart (on qualifying accounts only)
There should
be a Single Page Shopping Cart program installed on your server. You can
see what it looks like by going to this URL with your browser:
http://www.yourdomain.com/shop/boutique.html
If you want
to customize the shopping cart, (and you will if you want to sell products
using this program), you can visit:
http://virtualpublisher.com/
The Virtual
Publisher Shopping Cart program is sophisticated and complex. Rather than
reprint all their directions here, please go to their website and download
the help files associated with it.
If the Single
Page Shopping Cart program wasn't installed on your server and you want
it, please send us email and we'll make sure it's installed right away!
Page
Counters
There are
3 different types of page counters you can place on your pages. The first
is a no-frills graphical counter which looks like this:

To use this
one, put the following tag somewhere on your page, but change the yourpage.htm
to be the address of the actual page you are putting this counter on.
Also, don't break up the tag like we did. We had to do that to fit it
on the page. The width=5 part refers to how many digits you want in your
counter.
<IMG SRC="/cgi-bin/nph-count?width=5&link=http://yourdomain/yourpage.htm">
-------------------------------
Another
page counter you may want to use is the Virtual Publisher Counter (on
qualifying accounts only). It is another graphical counter, but it will
give you all kinds of stats such as time and date of visits, and domains
that your visitors come from. It looks like this:

To put this
counter on your page, insert the following tag somewhere... please note
that the line had to be broken up to fit on this page, but the line should
not be broken on your page.
<img src="http://yourdomain.com/cgi-bin/counter/counter.cgi?
fram=testcount&viz=yes&isinv=yes&setup=/home/www/yourdomain/cgi-bin/counter/setup.txt">
Where you
see fram=testcount, put in the name of the page you want to put the counter
on instead of the word testcount. The viz=yes part tells the counter script
whether your counter should be invisible or not. If you want the counter
to be visible, leave it as yes. If you want it to be invisible, make it
say viz=no.
The isinv=yes
part is for whether you want the counter to be inverted or not. The default
as below means that it is inverted (as shown in the graphic above). If
you wish for it to be just a black number against a white background,
make it say isinv=no.
Another great
thing about this one is that you can access the log files for each page
you have the counter on, and also reset the count to any number you wish.
To see the instruction page, go to http://yourdomain.com/counter/ with
your web browser.
Please be
aware that a count file will not be created until a page is accessed for
the first time.
-------------------------------
Finally,
the simplest kind of page counter is a text-based counter. It uses SSI
so the page you are putting it on must have the .sht, .shtm, or .shtml
extension. It will look like whatever text and size attributes you give
it on your page. The tag looks like this:
<!--#exec
cgi="/cgi-yourdomain/counters/counter.cgi"-->
After you've
put the counter on your page, look at it with your browser. If you don't
see the counter the first time, hit reload. Then you should see the number
1. If you want to change the page count, FTP to your site, and look in
the counters directory in your cgi-bin. There will be a file there with
the name of whatever page you placed this counter on. Just upload a new
text file with a new number on it, and that will be the new count on the
page next time you hit reload. Remember to upload the file in ASCII or
text format.
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