Mod cgi » History » Revision 14
Revision 13 (lighthouse, 2009-06-14 17:28) → Revision 14/32 (nitrox, 2009-06-14 17:49)
h1. The CGI-Module *Module: mod_cgi* {{>toc}} h2. Description CGI programs allow you to enhance the functionality of the server in a very straight-forward and simple way. h2. Options *cgi.assign* file-extensions that are handled by a CGI program <pre> cgi.assign = ( ".pl" => "/usr/bin/perl", ".cgi" => "/usr/bin/perl" ) </pre> For PHP don't forget to set cgi.fix_pathinfo = 1 in the php.ini. To get the old cgi-bin behavior of apache: <pre> #Note: make sure that mod_alias is loaded if you use this: alias.url += ( "/cgi-bin" => server_root + "/cgi-bin" ) $HTTP["url"] =~ "^/cgi-bin" { cgi.assign = ( "" => "" ) } </pre> According to http://redmine.lighttpd.net/issues/1062 this syntax was broken until 1.5.0 *cgi.execute-all* In 1.5.0 and later you can use: :: <pre> $PHYSICAL["existing-path"] =~ "^/var/www/myvhost/cgi-bin/" { cgi.execute-all = "enable" } </pre> which does the same thing as cgi.assign = ("" => "") but is more obvious to use. h2. Examples To setup an executable which can run on its own (e.g. binaries, scripts with a shebang line) you just don't specify a handler for the extension: <pre> cgi.assign = ( ".sh" => "" ) </pre> If the file has no extension keep in mind that lighttpd matches not the extension itself but the right part of the URL: <pre> cgi.assign = ( "/testfile" => "" ) </pre>