CGI::Info - Information about the CGI environment
Version 0.86
All too often Perl programs have information such as the script's name hard-coded into their source. Generally speaking, hard-coding is bad style since it can make programs difficult to read and it reduces readability and portability. CGI::Info attempts to remove that.
Furthermore, to aid script debugging, CGI::Info attempts to do sensible things when you're not running the program in a CGI environment.
CGI::Info also provides a simple web application firewall. Whilst you shouldn't rely on it alone to provide security to your website, it is another layer and every little helps.
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
# ...
Creates a CGI::Info object.
It takes four optional arguments allow, logger, expect and upload_dir, which are documented in the params() method.
Takes an optional parameter syslog, to log messages to Sys::Syslog. It can be a boolean to enable/disable logging to syslog, or a reference to a hash to be given to Sys::Syslog::setlogsock.
Takes optional parameter logger, an object which is used for warnings
Takes optional parameter cache, an object which is used to cache IP lookups. This cache object is an object that understands get() and set() messages, such as a CHI object.
Takes optional parameter max_upload, which is the maximum file size you can upload (-1 for no limit), the default is 512MB.
Returns the name of the CGI script. This is useful for POSTing, thus avoiding putting hardcoded paths into forms
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $script_name = $info->script_name();
# ...
print "<form method=\"POST\" action=$script_name name=\"my_form\">\n";
Finds the full path name of the script.
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $fullname = $info->script_path();
my @statb = stat($fullname);
if(@statb) {
my $mtime = localtime $statb[9];
print "Last-Modified: $mtime\n";
# TODO: only for HTTP/1.1 connections
# $etag = Digest::MD5::md5_hex($html);
printf "ETag: \"%x\"\n", $statb[9];
}
Returns the file system directory containing the script.
use CGI::Info;
use File::Spec;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
print 'HTML files are normally stored in ', $info->script_dir(), '/', File::Spec->updir(), "\n";
# or
use lib CGI::Info::script_dir() . '../lib';
Return the host-name of the current web server, according to CGI. If the name can't be determined from the web server, the system's host-name is used as a fall back. This may not be the same as the machine that the CGI script is running on, some ISPs and other sites run scripts on different machines from those delivering static content. There is a good chance that this will be domain_name() prepended with either 'www' or 'cgi'.
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $host_name = $info->host_name();
my $protocol = $info->protocol();
# ...
print "Thank you for visiting our <A HREF=\"$protocol://$host_name\">Website!</A>";
Domain_name is the name of the controlling domain for this website. Usually it will be similar to host_name, but will lack the http:// or www prefixes.
Return the URL of the machine running the CGI script.
Returns a reference to a hash list of the CGI arguments.
CGI::Info helps you to test your script prior to deployment on a website: if it is not in a CGI environment (e.g. the script is being tested from the command line), the program's command line arguments (a list of key=value pairs) are used, if there are no command line arguments then they are read from stdin as a list of key=value lines. Also you can give one of --tablet, --search-engine, --mobile and --robot to mimic those agents. For example:
./script.cgi --mobile name=Nigel
Returns undef if the parameters can't be determined or if none were given.
If an argument is given twice or more, then the values are put in a comma separated string.
The returned hash value can be passed into CGI::Untaint.
Takes four optional parameters: allow, expect, logger and upload_dir. The parameters are passed in a hash, or a reference to a hash. The latter is more efficient since it puts less on the stack.
Allow is a reference to a hash list of CGI parameters that you will allow. The value for each entry is a regular expression of permitted values for the key. A undef value means that any value will be allowed. Arguments not in the list are silently ignored. This is useful to help to block attacks on your site.
Expect is a reference to a list of arguments that you expect to see and pass on. Arguments not in the list are silently ignored. This is useful to help to block attacks on your site. Its use is deprecated, use allow instead. Expect will be removed in a later version.
Upload_dir is a string containing a directory where files being uploaded are to be stored.
Takes optional parameter logger, an object which is used for warnings and traces. This logger object is an object that understands warn() and trace() messages, such as a Log::Log4perl or Log::Any object.
The allow, expect, logger and upload_dir arguments can also be passed to the constructor.
use CGI::Info;
use CGI::Untaint;
# ...
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my %params;
if($info->params()) {
%params = %{$info->params()};
}
# ...
foreach(keys %params) {
print "$_ => $params{$_}\n";
}
my $u = CGI::Untaint->new(%params);
use CGI::Info;
use CGI::IDS;
# ...
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $allowed = {
foo => qr/^\d*$/, # foo must be a number, or empty
bar => undef, # bar can be given and be any value
xyzzy => qr/^[\w\s-]+$/, # must be alphanumeric
# to prevent XSS, and non-empty
# as a sanity check
};
my $paramsref = $info->params(allow => $allowed);
# or
my @expected = ('foo', 'bar');
my $paramsref = $info->params({
expect => \@expected,
upload_dir = $info->tmpdir()
});
if(defined($paramsref)) {
my $ids = CGI::IDS->new();
$ids->set_scan_keys(scan_keys => 1);
if($ids->detect_attacks(request => $paramsref) > 0) {
die 'horribly';
}
}
If the request is an XML request (i.e. the content type of the POST is text/xml), CGI::Info will put the request into the params element 'XML', thus:
use CGI::Info;
# ...
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $paramsref = $info->params(); # See BUGS below
my $xml = $$paramsref{'XML'};
# ... parse and process the XML request in $xml
Get a single parameter. Takes an optional single string parameter which is the argument to return. If that parameter is not given param() is a wrapper to params() with no arguments.
use CGI::Info;
# ...
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $bar = $info->param('foo');
If the requested parameter isn't in the allowed list, an error message will be thrown:
use CGI::Info;
my $allowed = {
foo => qr/\d+/
};
my $xyzzy = $info->params(allow => $allowed);
my $bar = $info->param('bar'); # Gives an error message
Returns undef if the requested parameter was not given
Returns a boolean if the website is being viewed on a mobile device such as a smart-phone. All tablets are mobile, but not all mobile devices are tablets.
Returns a boolean if the website is being viewed on a tablet such as an iPad.
Returns the parameters as a string, which is useful for debugging or generating keys for a cache.
Returns the connection protocol, presumably 'http' or 'https', or undef if it can't be determined.
Returns the name of a directory that you can use to create temporary files in.
The routine is preferable to "tmpdir" in File::Spec since CGI programs are often running on shared servers. Having said that, tmpdir will fall back to File::Spec->tmpdir() if it can't find somewhere better.
If the parameter 'default' is given, then use that directory as a fall-back rather than the value in File::Spec->tmpdir(). No sanity tests are done, so if you give the default value of '/non-existant', that will be returned.
Tmpdir allows a reference of the options to be passed.
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $dir = $info->tmpdir(default => '/var/tmp');
$dir = $info->tmpdir({ default => '/var/tmp' });
# or
my $dir = CGI::Info->tmpdir();
Returns the document root. This is preferable to looking at DOCUMENT_ROOT in the environment because it will also work when we're not running as a CGI script, which is useful for script debugging.
This can be run as a class or object method.
use CGI::Info;
print CGI::Info->rootdir();
Synonym of rootdir(), for compatibility with CHI.
Synonym of rootdir(), for compatibility with Apache.
Gets and sets the name of a directory that you can use to store logs in.
Is the visitor a real person or a robot?
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
unless($info->is_robot()) {
# update site visitor statistics
}
Is the visitor a search engine?
use CGI::Info;
if(CGI::Info->new()->is_search_engine()) {
# display generic information about yourself
} else {
# allow the user to pick and choose something to display
}
Returns one of 'web', 'search', 'robot' and 'mobile'.
# Code to display a different web page for a browser, search engine and
# smartphone
use Template;
use CGI::Info;
my $info = CGI::Info->new();
my $dir = $info->rootdir() . '/templates/' . $info->browser_type();
my $filename = ref($self);
$filename =~ s/::/\//g;
$filename = "$dir/$filename.tmpl";
if((!-f $filename) || (!-r $filename)) {
die "Can't open $filename";
}
my $template = Template->new();
$template->process($filename, {}) || die $template->error();
Returns a cookie's value, or undef if no name is given, or the requested cookie isn't in the jar.
Deprecated - use cookie() instead.
use CGI::Info;
my $i = CGI::Info->new();
my $name = $i->get_cookie(cookie_name => 'name');
print "Your name is $name\n";
my $address = $i->get_cookie('address');
print "Your address is $address\n";
Returns a cookie's value, or undef if no name is given, or the requested cookie isn't in the jar. API is the same as "param", it will replace the "get_cookie" method in the future.
use CGI::Info;
my $name = CGI::Info->new()->cookie('name');
print "Your name is $name\n";
Sets or returns the status of the object, 200 for OK, otherwise an HTTP error code
Returns the warnings that the object has generated
Sometimes you don't know what the logger is until you've instantiated the class. This function fixes the catch22 situation.
Class method to reset the class. You should do this in an FCGI environment before instantiating, but nowhere else.
Nigel Horne, <njh at bandsman.co.uk>
is_tablet() only currently detects the iPad and Windows PCs. Android strings don't differ between tablets and smart-phones.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-cgi-info at rt.cpan.org
,
or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=CGI-Info.
I will be notified, and then you'll
automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
params() returns a ref which means that calling routines can change the hash for other routines. Take a local copy before making amendments to the table if you don't want unexpected things to happen.
HTTP::BrowserDetect, https://github.com/mitchellkrogza/apache-ultimate-bad-bot-blocker
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc CGI::Info
You can also look for information at:
-
MetaCPAN
-
RT: CPAN's request tracker
-
CPAN Testers' Matrix
-
CPAN Testers Dependencies
Copyright 2010-2024 Nigel Horne.
This program is released under the following licence: GPL2