Webhosting Perl and CGI Scripts
You can upload any perl scripts to anywhere on your web site. You can make a cgi-bin directory if you like, but scripts can be included anywhere on your web site.
For perl, the script should start with #!/usr/bin/perl
Particularly for perl scripts uploaded from windows machines, please upload in ASCII mode not BINARY.
Within the script, the mail program used for sending mail is /usr/lib/sendmail . You should not use this with the -t argument (which find the From and To in the email) but use -f 'from-email-address' 'to-email-address' in place of the -t argument.
A simple mailer is available - see below.
There are various perl scripts available on the internet, and many books on the subject. You do not have access to php or mysql on the server, and you may have to change the use of sendmail as above.
Your scripts have access to the following environment variables :-
QUERY_STRING | The query string (bit after the ? in the
URI) |
PATH_INFO | If after the script there is a / and more
of a path then this is that path |
PARAMS | The parameters (bit after a ; in the URI) |
REQUEST_METHOD | PUT or GET |
REQUEST_URI | The URI (web page) requested |
HTTP_HOST | Host: header contents
Your web site name |
HTTP_AGENT | User-Agent: header contents
The browser being used |
CONTENT_TYPE | Content-type: header contents
Used for form postings |
CONTENT_LENGTH | Content-length: header contents
Number of bytes in PUT file |
SCRIPT_NAME | The name of the script being run |
HTTP_COOKIE | Cookie: header contents |
HTTP_FROM | From: header contents |
HTTP_REFERER | Referer: header contents
The page this link came from |
REMOTE_USER | If a login was required, this is set to the
user name |
REMOTE_ADDR | The remote IP address.
This could be an IP6 or IP4 address. |
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