The Idiot's Guide to Solving Perl CGI Problems

If you're like most people on the newsgroup, you've presented us with the clasiquísimo CGI problem: ``it doesn't work'', without providing us sufficient background to divine what the real problem is. This is infuriating, because is makes you come off like some drooling idiot begging for free consulting help without having done any investigation on your own part. This drives people away who could otherwise help you and impoverishes the Net by exacerbating the already annoyingly low signal-to-noise ratio.

For a start, you need to look through the checklist below for a few simple questions that need answering. While some sample answers are provided, you'll have to figure them out on your own.


Q:
Who owns the script?
A:
I do.

Q:
What are the script's permissions?
A:
They were 0600, but I just realized that's not executable. I'd better make it 0755 instead.

Q:
Is your script in the right directory?
A:
No, I forgot to put it in /usr/local/etc/httpd/cgi-bin/.

Q:
Is CGI execution enabled in your server for that directory and/or file suffix?
A:
No, my sysadmin forgot to configure it that way; he thought that GET would be enough, and didn't include POST capabilities.

Q:
Under what uid does the server runs its CGI programs?
A:
wwwuser (Oops, it can't write my files or directories.)

Q:
Can the server's uid write any files you're trying to write?
A:
Nope - I own the files, but it doesn't run as me and the permissions are 0600 instead of 0666. I guess that's why it can't open my own files.

Q:
What happens when you run it interactively?
A:
I didn't know you could run these interactively because I never bothered to read the documentation for the CGI.pm library.

Q:
What's in the server error log?
A:
I never thought to look. Oh, there it is - never mind.

Q:
Where's the server log?
A:
(No way to know - it's system dependent. Check with your admin if you can't find it in /usr/local/etc/httpd/logs/error_log)

Q:
What's the Perl version and OS version?
A:
Perl version 5.002, SunOS version 4.1.3
(Try using perl -v and uname -a to find out, and if your Perl is below 5.002 in version, UPGRADE NOW!)

Q:
What's the library version?
A:
grep -i version in the library, or for CGI.pm, do this:
$ perl -le 'use CGI; print $CGI::VERSION'
2.21

Q:
What's the path to your perl executable on the server?
A:
/contrib/bin/perl

Q:
What's the path to your perl executable specified in your script?
A:
/usr/bin/perl (oops, of course it can't find it)

Q:
What's the http daemon server's version number so people who might help you have a better clue about your local environment?
A:
NCSA 1.5

Q:
What happens when you add Perl's -w flag?
A:
It tells me about my silly mistakes that are listed in detail in the perldiag manpage where I diligently looked them up.

Q:
What happens when you add Perl's -T flag?
A:
It tells me about security problems as described in the perlsec manpage, which I've carefully read and understood. I even read the CGI Security FAQ.

Q:
What happens when you add use strict?
A:
It makes me declare my variables and quote my strings and finds all these silly errors which I've carefully corrected using my() declarations, use vars, and quotes.

Q:
Did you remember to output the MIME type before any other non-header output (other headers might be Location: or Set-Cookie:)
A:
Oh, right. It has to be a valid header and then a valid body. I guess I need to say this stuff earlier than I was doing: and make sure I actually put two newlines out, not just one. print "Set-cookie: GroversDelight\n"; print "Content-Type: text/html\n\n"; # <-- two newlines print "<TITLE>Sample Title<TITLE>\n";

Q:
Did you remember to flush STDOUT at the top of your script so the MIME type gets out before any errors?
A:
Nope - gosh, no wonder it doesn't get out before it bombs! I guess I better add this to the top:
$| = 1

Q:
What happens when you check return values of each and every one of your syscalls?
A:
That seems like way too much work, but sure enough, just as soon as I added something like
open(FILE, ">some_file")
|| die("can't write some_file: $!");
the error log showed that $! contains ``Permission denied'' or ``No such file or directory'', and everything became clear.

Q:
Did you use the standard CGI.pm module to do this for you instead of parsing by hand (which would be a really idiotic idea) or use the more limited cgi-lib.pl library?
A:
Gee, you mean somebody else has actually done this kind of thing before? I had no idea I didn't know I didn't have to do it all myself, and and that I could get the latest version of the neat CGI module from http://www.perl.com/cgi-bin/cgi_mod?modules=CGI.

Q:
If you used a library, did you type make install to place it in the proper system directory (somewhere in @INC, probably a lot like /usr/local/lib/perl/site_perl/CGI.pm) so it can be properly found and have its set permissions to 0644, or did you just blindly do a manual copy and screw up the path, permissions, or both?
A:
What's make? Look, like I just (mis)installed it myself by a silly copy to cgi-bin and then I made it mode 0700. I guess that doesn't work at all, does it?

Q:
Did you remember to post to comp.infosystems.www.authoring.misc, instead of blasting the comp.lang.perl.* groups with questions that aren't related to Perl in the least?
A:
Nope - is that why I don't get any useful answers but just a bunch of flames instead?

Q:
If you're running some brain-dead, bondage-and-discipline pseudo-operating system from The Evil Empire, did you bother to read what the Windoze Perl FAQ says about the Web?
A:
No, I didn't know about http://www.endcontsw.com/people/evangelo/Perl_for_Win32_FAQ.html.

Q:
Did you avoid placing an interpreter in your cgi-bin the way you're warned about at http://www.perl.com/perl/news/latro-announce.html and from CERT?
A:
No, what's wrong with that? (noise of disk grinding to dust after corporate secrets stolen heard in the background)

Odds are that if you'd merely answer these questions and carry out the specified steps, you yourself would solve your very own problem without having to come begging for help and pissing off the Net.

Once you have thoroughly investigated ALL of these matters on your own and then asked your buddy in the next cubicle whether he's seen anything like it, should you find that it's still a problem, then by all means do go ahead and post, but make certain you provide us with plenty of details, including your own answers to all (or at least most) of the questions listed above.

On the other hand, if most of those questions don't even begin to make the least bit of sense to you, then you're already in way over your head. Should this be the case, you'd better hold off on CGI programming for a spell. Go find yourself a local guru and check out some of the many books listed at

http://wwwiz.com/books/cgi-perl.html

IM!HO, the Addison-Wesley and O'Reilly books tend to be the most thorough, but there are so many out there that you'd do well to look them over yourself. Remember that thickness needn't imply clarity, completeness, or correctness.


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Copyright 1996 Tom Christiansen.
All rights reserved.