Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Apache module & perl problem
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Apache module & perl problem Post 302299492 by Neo on Friday 20th of March 2009 08:41:56 AM
Old 03-20-2009
It would be helpful if you could post:

1. Sample output of your process table output so we can see the process uid and group of your apache processes; and
2. The output of ls -la of your file /usr/bin/check; and
3. The uid and gid of any files called by /usr/bin/check

Thanks.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Mog_Gzip a Module For Apache

Mod_gzip, at http://www.remotecommunications.com/apache/mod_gzip/ is a module for Apache that allows you to compress content from an Apache web server on-the-fly. It uses the same compression as gzip and no plugins or extra software is needed by your browser to take advantage of this product.... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: binhnx2000
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Howto locate locally installed Perl module for a CGI script in APACHE .htaccess

Hi, I have the following simple CGI script, just containg header: #!/usr/bin/perl -w use CGI ':standard'; use lib "/home/myname/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.8.5/"; use Mail::Sendmail; I also have included this directive in ~/public_html/.htaccess : SetEnv PERL5LIB... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: monkfan
0 Replies

3. UNIX and Linux Applications

Apache module compilation error

I'm trying to compile an apache module (a tutorial module, Apache 2 Module Tutorial - GNU Build Tools and the Development Environment) and I get errors like this: apr.h:273: error: expected ´=´, ´,´,´;´,´asm´ or ´__attribute__´ before ´apr_off_t´ those errors occur like 30 times in different... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: hjalle
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl - problem with CPAN module XML::Simple

Hi All, I am trying to run the following program #!/usr/bin/perl # use module use XML::Simple; use Data::Dumper; # create object $xml = new XML::Simple; # read XML file $data = $xml->XMLin("dump.xml"); # print output print Dumper($dump); At first i had the error mesage saying... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: userscript
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Facing problem in XML::parser module in PERL

HI, I have XML file which is having values as Spanish character (UTF-8 encoding). I am using XML::parser module but my code is not able to read those characters. I did goggling but not able to find suitable solution. Anybody please help me out. XML file having characters like: ñ I am... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jatanig
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem during perl module installation

Hi 'm getting error while installing perl mdule on linux.can any one tell me how to resolve that error? problem is: CPAN: File::Temp loaded ok (v0.22) CPAN.pm: Going to build J/JD/JDB/Win32-OLE-0.1709.tar.gz OS unsupported Warning: No success on command Warning (usually harmless):... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kavi.mogu
1 Replies

7. Web Development

Apache module development on apache 2.2

Hi, I'm new to developing modules for Apache. I understand the basics now and can develop something simple which allows a 'GET' request to happen, but what I want to do is actually 'POST' information to my site. I know the basic POST Request works and I can see that it is post by looking at... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fishman2001
2 Replies

8. Proxy Server

Problem with Installing Perl Module in Fedora 20

Hi, I have downloaded Audio::Beep. I tried to install it through CPAN but i got YAML error. Then I have tried to install it manually. I tried all the instructions provided in README file. It worked but when i am compiling , it still gives me error: # ls acct21.pl~ imap(2).pl ... (15 Replies)
Discussion started by: zak100
15 Replies

9. Solaris

Compile PHP as an Apache module on Solaris

Hi, I need to install php 5.5.30 as an apache (2.4.17) module on Solaris 10. Please any help is wellcome. Some aditional info: /usr/sfw/bin/gcc -v Reading specs from /usr/sfw/lib/gcc/sparc-sun-solaris2.10/3.4.3/specs bash-3.2# g++ -v Reading specs from... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: lbslbs
0 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl Oracle DBI through Apache problem

Experts, I've been struggling with making a Perl Oracle DBI script to work through my Apache webserver. Mysql DBI scripts work fine, but I'm having issue's with Oracle. The oracle script works on command line, but I'm getting an "Internal Server Error" with apache Sourcing the oracle... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: timj123
0 Replies
Tie::DxHash(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					    Tie::DxHash(3)

NAME
Tie::DxHash - keeps insertion order; allows duplicate keys SYNOPSIS
use Tie::DxHash; my(%vhost); tie %vhost, 'Tie::DxHash' [, LIST]; %vhost = ( ServerName => 'foo', RewriteCond => 'bar', RewriteRule => 'bletch', RewriteCond => 'phooey', RewriteRule => 'squelch', ); DESCRIPTION
This module was written to allow the use of rewrite rules in Apache configuration files written with Perl Sections. However, a potential user has stated that he needs it to support the use of multiple ScriptAlias directives within a single Virtual Host (which is required by FrontPage, apparently). If you find a completely different use for it, great. The original purpose of this module is not quite so obscure as it might sound. Perl Sections bring the power of a general-purpose programming language to Apache configuration files and, having used them once, many people use them throughout. (I take this approach since, even in sections of the configuration where I do not need the flexibility, I find it easier to use a consistent syntax. This also makes the code easier for XEmacs to colour in ;-) Similarly, mod_rewrite is easily the most powerful way to perform URL rewriting and I tend to use it exclusively, even when a simpler directive would do the trick, in order to group my redirections together and keep them consistent. So, I came up against the following problem quite early on. The synopsis shows some syntax which might be needed when using mod_rewrite within a Perl Section. Clearly, using an ordinary hash will not do what you want. The two additional features we need are to preserve insertion order and to allow duplicate keys. When retrieving an element from the hash by name, successive requests for the same name must iterate through the duplicate entries (and, presumably, wrap around when the end of the chain is reached). This is where Tie::DxHash comes in. Simply by tying the offend- ing hash, the corresponding configuration directives work as expected. Running an Apache syntax check (with docroot check) on your configuration file (with "httpd -t") and checking virtual host settings (with "httpd -S") succeed without complaint. Incidentally, I strongly recommend building your Apache configuration files with make (or equivalent) in order to enforce the above two checks, preceded by a Perl syntax check (with "perl -cx"). INTERNALS
For those interested, Tie::IxHash works by storing the hash data in an array of hash references (containing the key/value pairs). This preserves insertion order. A separate set of iterators (one per distinct key) keeps track of the last retrieved value for a given key, thus allowing the successive retrieval of multiple values for the same key to work as expected. SEE ALSO
perltie(1), for information on ties generally. Tie::IxHash(3), by Gurusamy Sarathy, if you need to preserve insertion order but not allow duplicate keys. For information on Ralf S. Engelschall's powerful URL rewriting module, mod_rewrite, check out the reference documentation at "http://httpd.apache.org/docs/mod/mod_rewrite.html" and the URL Rewriting Guide at "http://httpd.apache.org/docs/misc/rewriteguide.html". For help in using Perl Sections to configure Apache, take a look at the section called "Apache Configuration in Perl" at "http://perl.apache.org/guide/config.html#Apache_Configuration_in_Perl", part of the mod_perl guide, by Stas Bekman. Alternatively, buy the O'Reilly book Writing Apache Modules with Perl and C, by Lincoln Stein & Doug MacEachern, and study Chapter 8: Customizing the Apache Configuration Process. BUGS
The algorithms used to retrieve and delete elements by key run in O(N) time, so do not expect this module to work well on large data sets. This is not a problem for the module's intended use. If you find another use for the module which involves larger quantities of data, let me know and I will put some effort into optimising for speed. The mod_rewrite directives for which this module was written (primarily RewriteCond and RewriteRule) can occur in all four con- figuration file contexts (i.e. server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess). However, Tie::DxHash only helps when you are using a directive which is mapped onto a Perl hash. This limits you to directives which are block sections with begin and end tags (like <VirtualHost> and <Directory>). I get round this by sticking my mod_rewrite directives in a name-based virtual host container (as shown in the synopsis) even in the degenerate case where the web server only has one virtual host. AUTHOR
Kevin Ruscoe perl v5.8.0 2001-06-15 Tie::DxHash(3)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:11 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy