Hi All,
I got a strange problem here. I have a perl script which is fetching data from a database table and writing a file with that data.
If i run that script from linux command line, the file it creates is a normal ascii text file without any binary character in it.But if i run it the same script through crontab, it is creating a data file with some binary characters appended in the data.
Did anybody faced this kind of situation before? Please help me if so?
Thanks in Advance!
Hi there,
first of all, here is my conf of a uname -a
Linux SAMBA 2.4.18-4GB #1 Wed Mar 27 13:57:05 UTC 2002 i686 unknown
on a fedora machine.
Here is my problem: every once in a while, the line containing root disappears in the /etc/passwd, disabling all logging on my server. Any one have... (0 Replies)
Can some-one give me a view to this :
I have a directory in an unix server, having permissions r-xr-xr-x .This directory is basically a source directory.
Now there is another directory basically the destination directory which has all the permissions.
Note:I log in as not the owner,but user... (5 Replies)
$ echo a.bc | sed -e "s/\|/\\|/g"
|a|.|b|c|
$
Is the behavior of the sed statement expected ? Or is this a bug in sed ?
OS details
Linux 2.6.9-55.0.0.0.2.ELsmp #1 SMP Wed May 2 14:59:56 PDT 2007 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux (8 Replies)
Hi all,
I want to do a very simple thing with sed. I want to print out the line number of a disk I have defined in /etc/exports, so I do:
It's all good, but here's the problem. When I define md0 in a variable, I get nothing from sed:
Why is that? can anybody please help?
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I am using HP-UX and I have just noticed that when I log into the network it seems to save the previous windows that were subsequently closed on previous occasions. Does anyone know when I log in, it seems to display these previous windows, e.g. nedit windows open again?
Does... (1 Reply)
Hello,
I was trying to identify lines who has a word of the following pattern "xyyx" (where x, and ys are different characters).
I was trying the following grep -
egrep '(\S)()\2\1'
This pattern do catches the wanted pattern, but it also catches "GGGG" or "CCCC" patterns. I was trying to... (5 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm having this scenario which for the moment I cannot resolve. :(
I wrote a script to make a dump/export of the oracle database. and then put this entry on crontab to be executed daily for example.
The script is like below:
cat /home/oracle/scripts/db_backup.sh
#!/bin/ksh
... (3 Replies)
Hi,
Today I have found the following case in perl:
print "length:$lengths\tsum:". $count{$lengths}+$count_pair{$lengths}."\tindi:$count{$lengths}\t$count_pair{$lengths}\n";This give output as That means the first part of print is not printing. Only the values after the additions are printed.... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gvj
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plack::app::cgibin
Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm)NAME
Plack::App::CGIBin - cgi-bin replacement for Plack servers
SYNOPSIS
use Plack::App::CGIBin;
use Plack::Builder;
my $app = Plack::App::CGIBin->new(root => "/path/to/cgi-bin")->to_app;
builder {
mount "/cgi-bin" => $app;
};
# Or from the command line
plackup -MPlack::App::CGIBin -e 'Plack::App::CGIBin->new(root => "/path/to/cgi-bin")->to_app'
DESCRIPTION
Plack::App::CGIBin allows you to load CGI scripts from a directory and convert them into a PSGI application.
This would give you the extreme easiness when you have bunch of old CGI scripts that is loaded using cgi-bin of Apache web server.
HOW IT WORKS
This application checks if a given file path is a perl script and if so, uses CGI::Compile to compile a CGI script into a sub (like
ModPerl::Registry) and then run it as a persistent application using CGI::Emulate::PSGI.
If the given file is not a perl script, it executes the script just like a normal CGI script with fork & exec. This is like a normal web
server mode and no performance benefit is achieved.
The default mechanism to determine if a given file is a Perl script is as follows:
o Check if the filename ends with ".pl". If yes, it is a Perl script.
o Open the file and see if the shebang (first line of the file) contains the word "perl" (like "#!/usr/bin/perl"). If yes, it is a Perl
script.
You can customize this behavior by passing "exec_cb" callback, which takes a file path to its first argument.
For example, if your perl-based CGI script uses lots of global variables and such and are not ready to run on a persistent environment, you
can do:
my $app = Plack::App::CGIBin->new(
root => "/path/to/cgi-bin",
exec_cb => sub { 1 },
)->to_app;
to always force the execute option for any files.
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
SEE ALSO
Plack::App::File CGI::Emulate::PSGI CGI::Compile Plack::App::WrapCGI
See also Plack::App::WrapCGI if you compile one CGI script into a PSGI application without serving CGI scripts from a directory, to remove
overhead of filesystem lookups, etc.
perl v5.14.2 2011-11-02 Plack::App::CGIBin(3pm)