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Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +00001\section{Standard Module \sectcode{cgi}}
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +00002\stmodindex{cgi}
3\indexii{WWW}{server}
4\indexii{CGI}{protocol}
5\indexii{HTTP}{protocol}
6\indexii{MIME}{headers}
7\index{URL}
8
Guido van Rossum86751151995-02-28 17:14:32 +00009\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module cgi)}
10
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000011Support module for CGI (Common Gateway Interface) scripts.
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +000012
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000013This module defines a number of utilities for use by CGI scripts
14written in Python.
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +000015
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000016\subsection{Introduction}
17\nodename{Introduction to the CGI module}
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +000018
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000019A CGI script is invoked by an HTTP server, usually to process user
20input submitted through an HTML \code{<FORM>} or \code{<ISINPUT>} element.
21
22Most often, CGI scripts live in the server's special \code{cgi-bin}
23directory. The HTTP server places all sorts of information about the
24request (such as the client's hostname, the requested URL, the query
25string, and lots of other goodies) in the script's shell environment,
26executes the script, and sends the script's output back to the client.
27
28The script's input is connected to the client too, and sometimes the
29form data is read this way; at other times the form data is passed via
30the ``query string'' part of the URL. This module (\code{cgi.py}) is intended
31to take care of the different cases and provide a simpler interface to
32the Python script. It also provides a number of utilities that help
33in debugging scripts, and the latest addition is support for file
34uploads from a form (if your browser supports it -- Grail 0.3 and
35Netscape 2.0 do).
36
37The output of a CGI script should consist of two sections, separated
38by a blank line. The first section contains a number of headers,
39telling the client what kind of data is following. Python code to
40generate a minimal header section looks like this:
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +000041
42\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000043 print "Content-type: text/html" # HTML is following
44 print # blank line, end of headers
Guido van Rossuma12ef941995-02-27 17:53:25 +000045\end{verbatim}
46
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000047The second section is usually HTML, which allows the client software
48to display nicely formatted text with header, in-line images, etc.
49Here's Python code that prints a simple piece of HTML:
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000050
51\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000052 print "<TITLE>CGI script output</TITLE>"
53 print "<H1>This is my first CGI script</H1>"
54 print "Hello, world!"
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000055\end{verbatim}
56
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000057(It may not be fully legal HTML according to the letter of the
58standard, but any browser will understand it.)
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000059
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000060\subsection{Using the cgi module}
61\nodename{Using the cgi module}
62
63Begin by writing \code{import cgi}. Don't use \code{from cgi import *} -- the
64module defines all sorts of names for its own use or for backward
65compatibility that you don't want in your namespace.
66
67It's best to use the \code{FieldStorage} class. The other classes define in this
68module are provided mostly for backward compatibility. Instantiate it
69exactly once, without arguments. This reads the form contents from
70standard input or the environment (depending on the value of various
71environment variables set according to the CGI standard). Since it may
72consume standard input, it should be instantiated only once.
73
74The \code{FieldStorage} instance can be accessed as if it were a Python
75dictionary. For instance, the following code (which assumes that the
76\code{Content-type} header and blank line have already been printed) checks that
77the fields \code{name} and \code{addr} are both set to a non-empty string:
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000078
79\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000080 form = cgi.FieldStorage()
81 form_ok = 0
82 if form.has_key("name") and form.has_key("addr"):
83 if form["name"].value != "" and form["addr"].value != "":
84 form_ok = 1
85 if not form_ok:
86 print "<H1>Error</H1>"
87 print "Please fill in the name and addr fields."
88 return
89 ...further form processing here...
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000090\end{verbatim}
91
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000092Here the fields, accessed through \code{form[key]}, are themselves instances
93of \code{FieldStorage} (or \code{MiniFieldStorage}, depending on the form encoding).
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000094
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +000095If the submitted form data contains more than one field with the same
96name, the object retrieved by \code{form[key]} is not a \code{(Mini)FieldStorage}
97instance but a list of such instances. If you expect this possibility
98(i.e., when your HTML form comtains multiple fields with the same
99name), use the \code{type()} function to determine whether you have a single
100instance or a list of instances. For example, here's code that
101concatenates any number of username fields, separated by commas:
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +0000102
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +0000103\begin{verbatim}
104 username = form["username"]
105 if type(username) is type([]):
106 # Multiple username fields specified
107 usernames = ""
108 for item in username:
109 if usernames:
110 # Next item -- insert comma
111 usernames = usernames + "," + item.value
112 else:
113 # First item -- don't insert comma
114 usernames = item.value
115 else:
116 # Single username field specified
117 usernames = username.value
118\end{verbatim}
119
120If a field represents an uploaded file, the value attribute reads the
121entire file in memory as a string. This may not be what you want. You can
122test for an uploaded file by testing either the filename attribute or the
123file attribute. You can then read the data at leasure from the file
124attribute:
125
126\begin{verbatim}
127 fileitem = form["userfile"]
128 if fileitem.file:
129 # It's an uploaded file; count lines
130 linecount = 0
131 while 1:
132 line = fileitem.file.readline()
133 if not line: break
134 linecount = linecount + 1
135\end{verbatim}
136
137The file upload draft standard entertains the possibility of uploading
138multiple files from one field (using a recursive \code{multipart/*}
139encoding). When this occurs, the item will be a dictionary-like
140FieldStorage item. This can be determined by testing its type
141attribute, which should have the value \code{multipart/form-data} (or
142perhaps another string beginning with \code{multipart/} It this case, it
143can be iterated over recursively just like the top-level form object.
144
145When a form is submitted in the ``old'' format (as the query string or as a
146single data part of type \code{application/x-www-form-urlencoded}), the items
147will actually be instances of the class \code{MiniFieldStorage}. In this case,
148the list, file and filename attributes are always \code{None}.
149
150
151\subsection{Old classes}
152
153These classes, present in earlier versions of the \code{cgi} module, are still
Guido van Rossuma5a4c2a1996-10-24 14:47:44 +0000154supported for backward compatibility. New applications should use the
155FieldStorage class.
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +0000156
157\code{SvFormContentDict}: single value form content as dictionary; assumes each
158field name occurs in the form only once.
159
160\code{FormContentDict}: multiple value form content as dictionary (the form
161items are lists of values). Useful if your form contains multiple
162fields with the same name.
163
164Other classes (\code{FormContent}, \code{InterpFormContentDict}) are present for
165backwards compatibility with really old applications only. If you still
166use these and would be inconvenienced when they disappeared from a next
167version of this module, drop me a note.
168
169
170\subsection{Functions}
171
172These are useful if you want more control, or if you want to employ
173some of the algorithms implemented in this module in other
174circumstances.
175
176\begin{funcdesc}{parse}{fp}: Parse a query in the environment or from a file (default \code{sys.stdin}).
177\end{funcdesc}
178
179\begin{funcdesc}{parse_qs}{qs}: parse a query string given as a string argument (data of type
180\code{application/x-www-form-urlencoded}).
181\end{funcdesc}
182
183\begin{funcdesc}{parse_multipart}{fp\, pdict}: parse input of type \code{multipart/form-data} (for
184file uploads). Arguments are \code{fp} for the input file and
185 \code{pdict} for the dictionary containing other parameters of \code{content-type} header
186
187 Returns a dictionary just like \code{parse_qs()}: keys are the field names, each
188 value is a list of values for that field. This is easy to use but not
189 much good if you are expecting megabytes to be uploaded -- in that case,
190 use the \code{FieldStorage} class instead which is much more flexible. Note
191 that \code{content-type} is the raw, unparsed contents of the \code{content-type}
192 header.
193
194 Note that this does not parse nested multipart parts -- use \code{FieldStorage} for
195 that.
196\end{funcdesc}
197
198\begin{funcdesc}{parse_header}{string}: parse a header like \code{Content-type} into a main
199content-type and a dictionary of parameters.
200\end{funcdesc}
201
202\begin{funcdesc}{test}{}: robust test CGI script, usable as main program.
203 Writes minimal HTTP headers and formats all information provided to
204 the script in HTML form.
205\end{funcdesc}
206
207\begin{funcdesc}{print_environ}{}: format the shell environment in HTML.
208\end{funcdesc}
209
210\begin{funcdesc}{print_form}{form}: format a form in HTML.
211\end{funcdesc}
212
213\begin{funcdesc}{print_directory}{}: format the current directory in HTML.
214\end{funcdesc}
215
216\begin{funcdesc}{print_environ_usage}{}: print a list of useful (used by CGI) environment variables in
217HTML.
218\end{funcdesc}
219
220\begin{funcdesc}{escape}{}: convert the characters ``\code{\&}'', ``\code{<}'' and ``\code{>}'' to HTML-safe
221sequences. Use this if you need to display text that might contain
222such characters in HTML. To translate URLs for inclusion in the HREF
223attribute of an \code{<A>} tag, use \code{urllib.quote()}.
224\end{funcdesc}
225
226
227\subsection{Caring about security}
228
229There's one important rule: if you invoke an external program (e.g.
230via the \code{os.system()} or \code{os.popen()} functions), make very sure you don't
231pass arbitrary strings received from the client to the shell. This is
232a well-known security hole whereby clever hackers anywhere on the web
233can exploit a gullible CGI script to invoke arbitrary shell commands.
234Even parts of the URL or field names cannot be trusted, since the
235request doesn't have to come from your form!
236
237To be on the safe side, if you must pass a string gotten from a form
238to a shell command, you should make sure the string contains only
239alphanumeric characters, dashes, underscores, and periods.
240
241
242\subsection{Installing your CGI script on a Unix system}
243
244Read the documentation for your HTTP server and check with your local
245system administrator to find the directory where CGI scripts should be
246installed; usually this is in a directory \code{cgi-bin} in the server tree.
247
248Make sure that your script is readable and executable by ``others''; the
249Unix file mode should be 755 (use \code{chmod 755 filename}). Make sure
250that the first line of the script contains \code{\#!} starting in column 1
251followed by the pathname of the Python interpreter, for instance:
252
253\begin{verbatim}
254 #!/usr/local/bin/python
255\end{verbatim}
256
257Make sure the Python interpreter exists and is executable by ``others''.
258
259Make sure that any files your script needs to read or write are
260readable or writable, respectively, by ``others'' -- their mode should
261be 644 for readable and 666 for writable. This is because, for
262security reasons, the HTTP server executes your script as user
263``nobody'', without any special privileges. It can only read (write,
264execute) files that everybody can read (write, execute). The current
265directory at execution time is also different (it is usually the
266server's cgi-bin directory) and the set of environment variables is
267also different from what you get at login. in particular, don't count
268on the shell's search path for executables (\code{\$PATH}) or the Python
269module search path (\code{\$PYTHONPATH}) to be set to anything interesting.
270
271If you need to load modules from a directory which is not on Python's
272default module search path, you can change the path in your script,
273before importing other modules, e.g.:
274
275\begin{verbatim}
276 import sys
277 sys.path.insert(0, "/usr/home/joe/lib/python")
278 sys.path.insert(0, "/usr/local/lib/python")
279\end{verbatim}
280
281(This way, the directory inserted last will be searched first!)
282
283Instructions for non-Unix systems will vary; check your HTTP server's
284documentation (it will usually have a section on CGI scripts).
285
286
287\subsection{Testing your CGI script}
288
289Unfortunately, a CGI script will generally not run when you try it
290from the command line, and a script that works perfectly from the
291command line may fail mysteriously when run from the server. There's
292one reason why you should still test your script from the command
293line: if it contains a syntax error, the python interpreter won't
294execute it at all, and the HTTP server will most likely send a cryptic
295error to the client.
296
297Assuming your script has no syntax errors, yet it does not work, you
298have no choice but to read the next section:
299
300
301\subsection{Debugging CGI scripts}
302
303First of all, check for trivial installation errors -- reading the
304section above on installing your CGI script carefully can save you a
305lot of time. If you wonder whether you have understood the
306installation procedure correctly, try installing a copy of this module
307file (\code{cgi.py}) as a CGI script. When invoked as a script, the file
308will dump its environment and the contents of the form in HTML form.
309Give it the right mode etc, and send it a request. If it's installed
310in the standard \code{cgi-bin} directory, it should be possible to send it a
311request by entering a URL into your browser of the form:
312
313\begin{verbatim}
314 http://yourhostname/cgi-bin/cgi.py?name=Joe+Blow&addr=At+Home
315\end{verbatim}
316
317If this gives an error of type 404, the server cannot find the script
318-- perhaps you need to install it in a different directory. If it
319gives another error (e.g. 500), there's an installation problem that
320you should fix before trying to go any further. If you get a nicely
321formatted listing of the environment and form content (in this
322example, the fields should be listed as ``addr'' with value ``At Home''
323and ``name'' with value ``Joe Blow''), the \code{cgi.py} script has been
324installed correctly. If you follow the same procedure for your own
325script, you should now be able to debug it.
326
327The next step could be to call the \code{cgi} module's test() function from
328your script: replace its main code with the single statement
329
330\begin{verbatim}
331 cgi.test()
332\end{verbatim}
333
334This should produce the same results as those gotten from installing
335the \code{cgi.py} file itself.
336
337When an ordinary Python script raises an unhandled exception
338(e.g. because of a typo in a module name, a file that can't be opened,
339etc.), the Python interpreter prints a nice traceback and exits.
340While the Python interpreter will still do this when your CGI script
341raises an exception, most likely the traceback will end up in one of
342the HTTP server's log file, or be discarded altogether.
343
344Fortunately, once you have managed to get your script to execute
345*some* code, it is easy to catch exceptions and cause a traceback to
346be printed. The \code{test()} function below in this module is an example.
347Here are the rules:
348
349\begin{enumerate}
350 \item Import the traceback module (before entering the
351 try-except!)
352
353 \item Make sure you finish printing the headers and the blank
354 line early
355
356 \item Assign \code{sys.stderr} to \code{sys.stdout}
357
358 \item Wrap all remaining code in a try-except statement
359
360 \item In the except clause, call \code{traceback.print_exc()}
361\end{enumerate}
362
363For example:
364
365\begin{verbatim}
366 import sys
367 import traceback
368 print "Content-type: text/html"
369 print
370 sys.stderr = sys.stdout
371 try:
372 ...your code here...
373 except:
374 print "\n\n<PRE>"
375 traceback.print_exc()
376\end{verbatim}
377
378Notes: The assignment to \code{sys.stderr} is needed because the traceback
379prints to \code{sys.stderr}. The \code{print "$\backslash$n$\backslash$n<PRE>"} statement is necessary to
380disable the word wrapping in HTML.
381
382If you suspect that there may be a problem in importing the traceback
383module, you can use an even more robust approach (which only uses
384built-in modules):
385
386\begin{verbatim}
387 import sys
388 sys.stderr = sys.stdout
389 print "Content-type: text/plain"
390 print
391 ...your code here...
392\end{verbatim}
393
394This relies on the Python interpreter to print the traceback. The
395content type of the output is set to plain text, which disables all
396HTML processing. If your script works, the raw HTML will be displayed
397by your client. If it raises an exception, most likely after the
398first two lines have been printed, a traceback will be displayed.
399Because no HTML interpretation is going on, the traceback will
400readable.
401
402
403\subsection{Common problems and solutions}
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +0000404
405\begin{itemize}
Guido van Rossuma29cc971996-07-30 18:22:07 +0000406\item Most HTTP servers buffer the output from CGI scripts until the
407script is completed. This means that it is not possible to display a
408progress report on the client's display while the script is running.
409
410\item Check the installation instructions above.
411
412\item Check the HTTP server's log files. (\code{tail -f logfile} in a separate
413window may be useful!)
414
415\item Always check a script for syntax errors first, by doing something
416like \code{python script.py}.
417
418\item When using any of the debugging techniques, don't forget to add
419\code{import sys} to the top of the script.
420
421\item When invoking external programs, make sure they can be found.
422Usually, this means using absolute path names -- \code{\$PATH} is usually not
423set to a very useful value in a CGI script.
424
425\item When reading or writing external files, make sure they can be read
426or written by every user on the system.
427
428\item Don't try to give a CGI script a set-uid mode. This doesn't work on
429most systems, and is a security liability as well.
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +0000430\end{itemize}
431