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Commonly-Asked CGI Script Questions> Do you include access to CGI scripts for sites that > you are hosting? Yes. > Do you have a formmail script for FreeNet users? WE NO LONGER ALLOW USE OF FORMMAIL SCRIPTS BECAUSE THEY CAN EASILY BE USED TO RELAY SPAM THROUGH THE SERVER ------------------------------------------------------------- > Do you have provisions for CGI/BIN? Yes on both counts. For CGIs, we support Perl 5 and compiled C scripts (optimized to BSD/OS 4.x or FreeBSD 3.x). ------------------------------------------------------------- > What CGI scripts are supported? (I'm only interested in providing them > with a form) Any Perl or C CGI script should be fine. ------------------------------------------------------------- > I finally found a guestbook, a wwwboard, and a forms script for our Freenet > site. I have designed the html for these but they all require that some code > files be modified then go into the cgi-bin. I can't seem to access a cgi-bin > from my account. I certainly hope you or one of the volunteers can help me. We don't have CGI-BINs for freenet accounts, per se. By default, we allow you to execute CGI scripts from anywhere within your account. However, it's often nice to have a cgi-bin directory just for organizational purposes, so I've taken the liberty of creating one in your account. For modifying your CGI scripts so they will run, there are a couple of common things you might need to know: * the path to Perl on the server is #!/usr/bin/perl * you may need to reference your html directory, or one of its subdirectories. Your html directory is located at /usr/home/yourusername/public_html ------------------------------------------------------------- > On http://www.XXXXXXX.org/other_chapters.html I have a link (the first one) > that uses the redirect.cgi script found at > http://www.technotrade.com/cgi/redirect.html. I installed it to our > cgi-local directory, but it doesn't seem to work now, even though I've > chmod'ed the files to 666. I get an Internal Server Error. Is Perl > installed? I am sure there is something very simple I'm doing wrong, but > wondered if you could look at it when you get a chance. Thanks in advance. > Much appreciated! I'm guessing that the problem is happening because any executable CGI script should be chmod'ed 755 rather than 666. Let me know if this solves the problem. FOLLOWUP: > I set it to 755 and got this error: > > Internal Server Error > The server encountered an internal error or misconfiguration and was unable > to complete your request. > Please contact the server administrator, wmdc01@dcfree.net and inform them > of the time the error occurred, and anything you might have done that may > have caused the error. > > Premature end of script headers: > /usr/home/XXXXXXX/public_html/cgi-local/redirect.cgi The 'premature end of script headers' error means that the CGI started to execute and then didn't get far enough to provide a 'Location:' or 'Content Type: Text/HTML' header for the webserver. When I telnetted in and ran: dcfree:/usr/home/XXXXXXX/public_html/cgi-local# perl -c redirect.cgi I got the following error: Illegal character \015 (carriage return) at redirect.cgi line 13. (Maybe you didn't strip carriage returns after a network transfer?) I put a couple of hard returns in the file, and the syntax then checked OK. I've also taken the liberty of adding a -w flag to the Perl invocation at the beginning of the script, so you error logs should now provide more verbose messages. ------------------------------------------------------------- > The faq also mentions the possiblity of having an E-mail AutoResponder. > We would like to have the ability let people request information or a visit. > Is it possible to set up a request or feedback form that provides an email > message back to the organizaitonal email account? From what you're describing, you're looking for more a "feedback form" CGI script than an autoresponder. See #4 below. > Is it possible to incorporate pearl or cgi scripts in our site? Yes! Perl scripts are certainly allowed. They can be executed from anywhere within your public_html directory, or we can create a cgi-bin directory for you if you'd like to keep them there for organizational purposes. ------------------------------------------------------------- > can you install a cgi-bin on my site? (you can overwrite anything that > is already there) > where in my usr/home folder is the bin? CGI execution is enabled from any directory; however, if you prefer to put your CGIs in a cgi-bin directory for organization's sake, there is already a cgi-bin directory there. Currently, its only contents are a file caller counter.cgi. The full path to the cgi-bin directory is: /usr/home/XXXXXXX/public_html/cgi-bin ------------------------------------------------------------- > > I have written a perl script that uses the Perl > localtime function: > > ($sec,$min,$hour,$mday,$mon,$year,$wday, > $yday,$isdst)=localtime(time); > > I find that when I use it the day and year values > are correct, the month is off by one (I get 7 > rather than 8) and the time is + 50 minutes from > the true time. Do you know why that might be? Yes and no. Offhand, I'm not sure why the month is coming up short. I can tell you that the "50 minutes" problem is caused by the server's clock being 50 minutes off. Unfortunately, this can only be reset when the server is in "single-user" mode (and thus not of much use to the outside world). If I find out anything useful about the $mon problem, I'll let you know. ------------------------------------------------------------- > I am trying to send email from within a CGI script. > I would like to use the To:, From:, adn Subject lines > >From what I've read it seems to me that this should work: > > open (MAIL, "|mail -t") || &ErrorMessage; > print MAIL "To: webmaster\@actorscenter.org\n"; > print MAIL "From: $from\n"; > print MAIL "Subject: Casting Profile\n"; Try putting an extra empty space after the subject (e.g., \n\n). I think that needs to be there to be recognized. You also (although I'm not sure why this would make a difference) may want to invoke mail -t as: (MAIL, "|/usr/sbin/sendmail -t") ------------------------------------------------------------- ServInt FreeNet Terms &
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