module Netcgi_scgi:SCGI connector.sig
..end
The SCGI connects your web applications through a TCP/IP socket (thus the application can run on a machine different from the web server).
See the Setup section at the end of this file to know
how to configure your web server.
val run : ?config:Netcgi.config ->
?allow:(Unix.sockaddr -> bool) ->
?output_type:Netcgi.output_type ->
?arg_store:Netcgi.arg_store ->
?exn_handler:Netcgi.exn_handler -> port:int -> (Netcgi.cgi -> unit) -> unit
run f
executes f cgi
for each SCGI request.config
: Default: Netcgi.default_config
allow
: Tells whether a connection from the socket is allowed.
Default: allow from all.output_type
: Default: `Direct ""
arg_store
: Default: `Automatic
for all arguments.exn_handler
: See Netcgi.exn_handler
. Default: delegate
all exceptions to the default handler.val handle_request : Netcgi.config ->
Netcgi.output_type ->
Netcgi.arg_store ->
Netcgi.exn_handler ->
(Netcgi.cgi -> unit) ->
log:(string -> unit) option -> Unix.file_descr -> Netcgi.connection_directive
handle_request config output_type arg_store eh f ~log fd
:
This is a
lower-level interface that processes exactly one request arriving
on the existing connection fd
.
log
is the error logger function or None
, in which case
errors are passed through to the FCGI client.
The other arguments are just like for run
.
The return value indicates whether the connection can be kept
open or must be closed.
Add to httpd.conf or to, say, scgi.conf in /etc/apache/conf.d
LoadModule scgi_module /usr/lib/apache/1.3/mod_scgi.so
# Serve the URL /scgi by contacting 127.0.0.1 on port 8888
SCGIMount /scgi 127.0.0.1:8888