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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<meta name="generator" content=
"HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 14 June 2007), see www.w3.org" />
<title>C CGI Library 1.2</title>
<style type="text/css">
/*<![CDATA[*/
pre {
font-family:courier;
background-color:#FFFFCC;
}
dd, li {
margin-top: 0.5em;
}
dt {
margin-top: 1em;
}
/*]]>*/
</style>
</head>
<body style="width:100ex;margin-left:3em">
<h1 style="text-align:center">C CGI Library 1.2</h1>
<h2>Contents</h2>
<ul>
<li><a href="#intro">Introduction</a></li>
<li><a href="#types">C CGI Library Data Types</a></li>
<li><a href="#func">C CGI Library Functions</a></li>
<li><a href="#using">Using the C CGI Library</a></li>
<li><a href="#upload">Uploading Files</a></li>
<li><a href="#crypto">Simple Cryptography Support</a></li>
<li><a href="#prefork">Pre Forking SCGI Server</a></li>
</ul>
<h2><a name="intro" id="intro"></a>Introduction</h2>
<p><i>C CGI</i> is a C language library for decoding, storing,
and retrieving CGI data passed by the web server via the CGI
interface. The library also has several handy data conversion
functions.</p>
<p>Author: Stephen C. Losen, University of Virginia</p>
<h3>C CGI Library Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>Decodes and stores CGI variables in <a href=
"#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a> format, which
may come from the <i>QUERY_STRING</i> environment variable or
from standard input.</li>
<li>Decodes and stores CGI variables in
<i>multipart/form-data</i> format from standard input.</li>
<li>Handles <a href="#upload">file uploads</a>.</li>
<li>Parses and stores HTTP <i>cookies</i> from the
<i>HTTP_COOKIE</i> environment variable.</li>
<li>Stores CGI data in lookup tables, which can be accessed
directly by variable name, or accessed iteratively.</li>
<li>Allows strings to be stored in lookup tables.</li>
<li>Encodes/decodes strings in <a href=
"#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a> format.</li>
<li>Encodes/decodes data in base64 format.</li>
<li>Encodes/decodes data in hexadecimal format.</li>
<li>Encodes text strings using HTML entity encodings such as
<b>&lt;</b> and <b>&amp;</b>.</li>
<li>Provides <i>openssl</i> <a href="#crypto">cryptography</a>
to encrypt/decrypt and verify data.</li>
<li>Provides a <a href="#prefork">pre forking SCGI
server</a>.</li>
</ul>
<h3><a name="query" id="query"></a>Query Strings and URL
Encoding</h3>
<p>A <i>query string</i> is a list of CGI variable names and
values in <i>application/x-www-form-urlencoded</i> format, which
looks like this:
<b>name1=value1&name2=value2&name3=value3</b> ...
Each name and value is <i>URL encoded</i> as follows. Letters and
digits are not changed. Each <i>space</i> is converted to
<b>+</b>. Most other characters become <b>%xx</b> (percent
followed by two hexadecimal digits) where <i>xx</i> is the
numeric code of the character. For example, <b>Help Me!</b>
is URL encoded as <b>Help+Me%21</b>. Note that in a query string
the <b>=</b> and <b>&</b> characters <b>between</b> names and
values are <b>not</b> URL encoded. However, if a name or value
itself contains a <b>=</b> or <b>&</b>, then it is URL
encoded using <b>%xx</b>.</p>
<p>When decoding query strings, the C CGI Library is tolerant of
lax <b>%xx</b> encoding. It accepts most literal punctuation
characters except for <b>+</b> and <b>&</b>, which must be
encoded. It accepts literal <b>=</b> in variable values and it
accepts literal <b>%</b> when not followed by two hexadecimal
digits. For example, <b>var=20%=1/5</b> is treated like
<b>var=20%25%3D1%2F5</b> and sets the value of <i>var</i> to
<b>20%=1/5</b>. A string that is not followed by <b>=</b> is a
variable name whose value is <b>""</b>, a zero length string. For
example, <b>str1&str2&</b> ... is the same as
<b>str1=&str2=&</b> ..., where <i>str1</i> and
<i>str2</i> are variable names whose value is <b>""</b>.</p>
<h3>CGI Data Representation and Conversion</h3>
<p>For simplicity and ease of use, most C CGI Library functions
accept and/or return null terminated strings. You can easily
convert a string to a numeric data type with the standard C
library functions <i>atoi()</i>, <i>atof()</i>, <i>strtol()</i>,
<i>strtod()</i>, etc. And you can convert a numeric data type to
a string with <i>sprintf()</i>.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, null terminated strings are not suitable for
storing raw binary data, because a null byte in the data is
mistaken for the string terminator. URL encoded strings
containing <b>%00</b> do not decode correctly because <b>%00</b>
results in a null byte. You can still manipulate binary data if
you encode it beforehand, and the C CGI library has functions for
encoding/decoding <a href="#CGI_encode_base64">base64</a> and
<a href="#CGI_encode_hex">hexadecimal</a>.</p>
<h2><a name="types" id="types"></a>C CGI Library Data Types</h2>
<p>In your C source you include the <i>ccgi.h</i> header file,
which declares these data types.</p>
<dl>
<dt>CGI_varlist</dt>
<dd>is a list (lookup table) of CGI variables and/or cookies.
Each list entry is a name and one or more values, where names
and values are all null terminated strings. A name may have
multiple values because 1) some HTML form elements, such as
<i>checkboxes</i> and <i>selections</i> allow the user to
choose multiple values and 2) the same name can be given to
multiple form input elements. A CGI_varlist lists variable
names and values in the same order that they are stored. In
practice this ends up being the order of the input tags in the
HTML form, but there is no requirement that browsers must
preserve this ordering.</dd>
<dt>CGI_value</dt>
<dd>is a read only pointer to a read only null terminated
string (<i>const char * const</i>). The <a href=
"#CGI_lookup_all">CGI_lookup_all()</a> function returns a null
terminated array of these pointers.</dd>
</dl>
<h2><a name="func" id="func"></a>C CGI Library Functions</h2>
<p>The C CGI library provides these functions.</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="#CGI_get_query">CGI_get_query()</a> decodes CGI
variables from the <i>QUERY_STRING</i> environment variable and
adds them to a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_get_post">CGI_get_post()</a> decodes CGI
variables from standard input and adds them to a
CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_get_cookie">CGI_get_cookie()</a> parses
cookies from the <i>HTTP_COOKIE</i> environment variable and
adds them to a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_get_all">CGI_get_all()</a> decodes all CGI
variables and cookies and returns them in a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_decode_query">CGI_decode_query()</a> decodes
CGI variables in a null terminated <a href="#query">query
string</a> and adds them to a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_add_var">CGI_add_var()</a> adds a variable
name and value to a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_lookup_all">CGI_lookup_all()</a> looks up a
name in a CGI_varlist and returns all of its values in an
array.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_lookup">CGI_lookup()</a> looks up a name in a
CGI_varlist and returns its first (or only) value.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_first_name">CGI_first_name()</a> returns the
first name in a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_next_name">CGI_next_name()</a> returns the
next name in a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_free_varlist">CGI_free_varlist()</a> frees
memory used by a CGI_varlist.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_query">CGI_encode_query()</a> URL
encodes a list of strings into a <a href="#query">query
string</a>.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_varlist">CGI_encode_varlist()</a> URL
encodes a CGI_varlist into a <a href="#query">query
string</a>.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encrypt">CGI_encrypt()</a> encrypts data
bytes into a secure string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_decrypt">CGI_decrypt()</a> decrypts a secure
string and verifies the contents.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_decode_url">CGI_decode_url()</a> decodes a
URL encoded string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_url">CGI_encode_url()</a> URL encodes
a string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_entity">CGI_encode_entity()</a> HTML
entity encodes a string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_base64">CGI_encode_base64()</a> base64
encodes data bytes.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_decode_base64">CGI_decode_base64()</a>
decodes a base64 encoded string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_encode_hex">CGI_encode_hex()</a> hexadecimal
encodes data bytes.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_decode_hex">CGI_decode_hex()</a> decodes a
hexadecimal encoded string.</li>
<li><a href="#CGI_prefork_server">CGI_prefork_server()</a>
implements a pre forking SCGI server.</li>
</ul>
<p>Except for <i>CGI_prefork_server()</i>, the C CGI library
functions are reentrant because they do not modify any global
variables or use any static local variables, so you can use these
functions with threads.</p>
<p>Some functions accept null terminated string parameters of
type <i>const char *</i>. These functions make copies
of strings as necessary so that after the function returns you
can safely do anything you want with any string that you have
passed as a parameter. Some functions return null terminated
strings of type <i>const char *</i> and you should not
modify these strings.</p>
<dl>
<dt><a name="CGI_get_query" id="CGI_get_query"></a> CGI_varlist
*CGI_get_query (CGI_varlist *varlist);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_get_query()</i> decodes CGI variables in the
<i>QUERY_STRING</i> environment variable and adds them to
variable list <i>varlist</i>. <i>QUERY_STRING</i> is presumed
to be in <a href="#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a>
format. If <i>varlist</i> is null then a new variable list is
created and returned, otherwise <i>varlist</i> is returned.
Null is returned if <i>varlist</i> is null and
<i>QUERY_STRING</i> does not exist or contains no CGI
variables.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_get_post" id="CGI_get_post"></a> CGI_varlist
*CGI_get_post(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char *template);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_get_post()</i> reads and decodes CGI variables from
standard input and adds them to variable list <i>varlist</i>.
If <i>varlist</i> is null then a new variable list is created
and returned, otherwise <i>varlist</i> is returned. Null is
returned if <i>varlist</i> is null and standard input is empty
or contains no CGI variables. The <i>template</i> parameter
(which may be null) is a file name template string that is
passed to the standard C library function <i>mkstemp()</i> when
uploading a file. (See the <a href="#upload">file upload</a>
section for more information.) <i>CGI_get_post()</i> checks the
<i>CONTENT_TYPE</i> environment variable to get the data
encoding, which is either <a href=
"#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a> or
<i>multipart/form-data</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_get_cookie" id="CGI_get_cookie"></a>
CGI_varlist *CGI_get_cookie(CGI_varlist *varlist);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_get_cookie()</i> parses HTTP cookies from the
<i>HTTP_COOKIE</i> environment variable and adds them to
variable list <i>varlist</i>. If <i>varlist</i> is null then a
new variable list is created and returned, otherwise
<i>varlist</i> is returned. Returns null if <i>varlist</i> is
null and <i>HTTP_COOKIE</i> does not exist or contains no
cookies.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_get_all" id="CGI_get_all"></a> CGI_varlist
*CGI_get_all(const char *template);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_get_all()</i> calls <a href=
"#CGI_get_cookie">CGI_get_cookie()</a>, <a href=
"#CGI_get_query">CGI_get_query()</a> and <a href=
"#CGI_get_post">CGI_get_post()</a>, returning all of the CGI
variables and cookies in one variable list. The <i>template</i>
parameter (which may be null) is passed on to
<i>CGI_get_post()</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_decode_query" id="CGI_decode_query"></a>
CGI_varlist *CGI_decode_query(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char
*query);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_decode_query()</i> decodes CGI variables in null
terminated <a href="#query">query string</a> <i>query</i>
(which is in <i>application/x-www-urlencoded</i> format) and
adds the CGI variables to <i>varlist</i>. If <i>varlist</i> is
null then a new variable list is created and returned,
otherwise <i>varlist</i> is returned. Returns null if
<i>varlist</i> is null and <i>query</i> is null or has no CGI
variables.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_add_var" id="CGI_add_var"></a> CGI_varlist
*CGI_add_var(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char *name, const char
*value);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_add_var()</i> adds an entry named <i>name</i> with
value <i>value</i> to variable list <i>varlist</i>. If
<i>varlist</i> is null, then a new variable list is created and
returned, otherwise <i>varlist</i> is returned. If the variable
list already has an entry named <i>name</i>, then the value is
added to that entry. This function is provided so that you can
add data to a variable list by hand, or create a variable list
for other purposes.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_lookup_all" id="CGI_lookup_all"></a> CGI_value
*CGI_lookup_all(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char *name);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_lookup_all()</i> searches <i>varlist</i> for an
entry whose name matches <i>name</i> case sensitively and
returns all the values of the entry, or returns null if no
entry is found. If <i>name</i> is null, then the values of the
entry most recently visited by <a href=
"#CGI_first_name">CGI_first_name()</a> or <a href=
"#CGI_next_name">CGI_next_name()</a> are returned. The return
value is a null terminated array of pointers to null terminated
strings. The array and strings are stored in memory allocated
to <i>varlist</i>, which you should not modify. The return type
<i>CGI_value *</i>
(<i>const char * const *</i>) declares the
array and strings to be read only to discourage
modification.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_lookup" id="CGI_lookup"></a> const char
*CGI_lookup(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char *name);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_lookup()</i> searches <i>varlist</i> for an entry
whose name matches <i>name</i> case sensitively and returns the
first (or only) value of the entry, or returns null if no entry
is found. If <i>name</i> is null, then the first value of the
entry most recently visited by <a href=
"#CGI_first_name">CGI_first_name()</a> or <a href=
"#CGI_next_name">CGI_next_name()</a> is returned. If you expect
an entry to have a single value, then this function is easier
to use than <i>CGI_lookup_all()</i> and it is more efficient
because it doesn't construct an array to return multiple
values. You should not modify the string returned by this
function.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_first_name" id="CGI_first_name"></a> const
char *CGI_first_name(CGI_varlist *varlist);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_first_name()</i> begins an iteration of
<i>varlist</i> and returns the name of the first entry, or
returns null if <i>varlist</i> is null. You can get all the
values of this entry with
<i>CGI_lookup_all(varlist, 0);</i> You should not modify
the string returned by this function.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_next_name" id="CGI_next_name"></a> const char
*CGI_next_name(CGI_varlist *varlist);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_next_name()</i> continues an iteration of
<i>varlist</i> and returns the name of the next entry. You can
get all the values of this entry with
<i>CGI_lookup_all(varlist, 0);</i> Returns null if 1)
there are no more entries, or 2) <i>varlist</i> is null, or 3)
no iteration was started with <i>CGI_first_name()</i>, or 4)
new data was added to <i>varlist</i> during the iteration. You
should not modify the string returned by this function.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_free_varlist" id="CGI_free_varlist"></a> void
CGI_free_varlist(CGI_varlist *varlist);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_free_varlist()</i> frees all memory used by variable
list <i>varlist</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_query" id="CGI_encode_query"></a> char
*CGI_encode_query(const char *keep, const char *name1, const
char *value1, ..., (char *)0);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_query()</i> returns a query string in
<a href="#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a> format
that is built from a null terminated list of null terminated
string arguments. The first argument <i>keep</i> (which may be
null) is a null terminated string that specifies characters
that you do not want to <a href="#query">URL encode</a> with
<b>%xx</b>. You do not need to specify letters or digits
because they are never encoded. The first two arguments after
<i>keep</i> are a name and value pair, the next two are a
second name and value pair, etc. <b>Be sure to terminate the
argument list with (char *)0</b>. (When passing a variable
length argument list, the C compiler does not automatically
cast <b>0</b> to <b>(char *)0</b>, which is necessary
on 64 bit platforms.) In the result the names
and values are URL encoded and separated with literal
<b>&</b> and <b>=</b> characters like this:
<b>name1=value1&name2=value2</b> ... Memory is
allocated with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you
should free with <i>free()</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_varlist" id="CGI_encode_varlist"></a>
char *CGI_encode_varlist(CGI_varlist *varlist, const char
*keep);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_varlist()</i> returns a query string in
<a href="#query">application/x-www-form-urlencoded</a> format
that is built from CGI_varlist <i>varlist</i>. The argument
<i>keep</i> (which may be null) is a null terminated string
that specifies characters that you do not want to <a href=
"#query">URL encode</a> with <b>%xx</b>. You do not need to
specify letters or digits because they are never encoded. The
names and values in <i>varlist</i> are URL encoded and
separated with literal <b>&</b> and <b>=</b> characters
like this: <b>name1=value1&name2=value2</b> ... Memory
is allocated with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you
should free with <i>free()</i>. You can use <a href=
"#CGI_add_var">CGI_add_var()</a> to build <i>varlist</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encrypt" id="CGI_encrypt"></a> char
*CGI_encrypt(const void *p, int len, const char
*password);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encrypt()</i> encrypts input <i>p</i> of length
<i>len</i> bytes using <i>password</i> to generate the cipher
key. Also computes a <i>message digest</i> using the input
data. Returns the encrypted digest and encrypted data in a
base64 encoded string, which must be decrypted with <a href=
"#CGI_decrypt">CGI_decrypt()</a> and the same password. Returns
null if <i>p</i> is null or if <i>len</i> is less than one or
if <i>password</i> is null or zero length. Memory is allocated
with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you should free
with <i>free()</i>. (See the <a href="#crypto">cryptography</a>
section for more information.)</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_decrypt" id="CGI_decrypt"></a> void
*CGI_decrypt(const char *p, int *len, const char
*password);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_decrypt()</i> decrypts input <i>p</i>, which was
encrypted with <a href="#CGI_encrypt">CGI_encrypt()</a>, using
<i>password</i> to generate the cipher key. The output is a
<i>message digest</i> and decrypted data bytes. Verifies the
data using the message digest and returns the data. Returns the
length of the data in <i>*len</i>. Returns null if <i>p</i>
cannot be decrypted and verified. Also returns null if <i>p</i>
or <i>password</i> is null or zero length. Memory is allocated
with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you should free
with <i>free()</i>. (See the <a href="#crypto">cryptography</a>
section for more information.)</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_decode_url" id="CGI_decode_url"></a> char
*CGI_decode_url(const char *p);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_decode_url()</i> returns a <a href="#query">URL
decoded</a> copy of input string <i>p</i>. Memory is allocated
with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you should free
with <i>free()</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_url" id="CGI_encode_url"></a> char
*CGI_encode_url(const char *p, const char *keep);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_url()</i> returns a <a href="#query">URL
encoded</a> copy of input string <i>p</i>. Memory is allocated
with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you should free
with <i>free()</i>. The <i>keep</i> argument (which may be
null) is a null terminated string that specifies characters
that you do not want to URL encode with <b>%xx</b>. You do not
need to specify letters or digits because they are never
encoded.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_entity" id="CGI_encode_entity"></a>
char *CGI_encode_entity(const char *p);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_entity()</i> returns a HTTP entity encoded
copy of input string <i>p</i>. Memory is allocated with
<i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you should free with
<i>free()</i>. <i>CGI_encode_entity()</i> makes the following
conversions: <b><</b> becomes <b>&lt;</b>, <b>></b>
becomes <b>&gt;</b>, <b>&</b> becomes <b>&amp;</b>,
<b>"</b> becomes <b>&quot;</b>, <b>'</b> becomes
<b>&#39;</b>, <i>newline</i> becomes <b>&#10;</b>, and
<i>return</i> becomes <b>&#13;</b>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_base64" id="CGI_encode_base64"></a>
char *CGI_encode_base64(const void *p, int len);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_base64()</i> encodes input <i>p</i> of length
<i>len</i> bytes, and returns the result, which is a null
terminated base64 encoded string. Memory is allocated for the
result with <i>malloc()</i>, which you should free with
<i>free()</i>. Base64 is a commonly used encoding that
represents arbitrary bytes of data using the following
printable characters: upper case, lower case, digits, <b>+</b>,
<b>/</b>, and <b>=</b>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_decode_base64" id="CGI_decode_base64"></a>
void *CGI_decode_base64(const char *p, int *len);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_decode_base64()</i> decodes <i>p</i>, which is a
null terminated base64 encoded string, and returns the result.
The length of the result is stored in <i>*len</i> and a null
byte is written just after the last byte of the result. Memory
is allocated with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you
should free with <i>free()</i>.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_encode_hex" id="CGI_encode_hex"></a> char
*CGI_encode_hex(const void *p, int len);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_encode_hex()</i> encodes input <i>p</i>, of length
<i>len</i> bytes, and returns the result, which is a null
terminated hexadecimal encoded string. Memory is allocated for
the result with <i>malloc()</i>, which you should free with
<i>free()</i>. Hexadecimal is a commonly used encoding that
represents arbitrary bytes of data using two hexadecimal digits
for each byte.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_decode_hex" id="CGI_decode_hex"></a> void
*CGI_decode_hex(const char *p, int *len);</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_decode_hex()</i> decodes <i>p</i>, which is a null
terminated hexadecimal encoded string, and returns the result.
The length of the result is stored in <i>*len</i> and a null
byte is written just after the last byte of the result. Memory
is allocated with <i>malloc()</i> to hold the result, which you
should free with <i>free()</i>. Returns null if <i>p</i> is
null, or if the length of <i>p</i> is odd, or if <i>p</i>
contains characters other than hexadecimal digits.</dd>
<dt><a name="CGI_prefork_server" id="CGI_prefork_server"></a>
void CGI_prefork_server(const char *host, int port, const char
*pidfile, int maxproc, int minidle, int maxidle, int maxreq,
void (*callback)(void));</dt>
<dd><i>CGI_prefork_server()</i> implements a <a href=
"http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/scgi/">SCGI</a> (Simple
CGI) pre forking server. The <i>host</i> specifies a local
network address, either by hostname or dotted decimal IP
address, and <i>port</i> specifies a TCP port number. The SCGI
server listens for requests on the specified address and port.
If <i>host</i> is null, then the server listens on all local
addresses. The <i>pidfile</i> (which may be null) is an
optional file name where the server writes its process ID. The
SCGI server forks up to <i>maxproc</i> child processes to
handle requests. It forks and destroys processes to maintain
between <i>minidle</i> and <i>maxidle</i> idle processes. Each
process exits after handling <i>maxreq</i> requests. If
<i>maxreq</i> is less than one, then it is unlimited. You
provide the <i>callback</i> function, which the SCGI server
calls to process each web request. <i>CGI_prefork_server()</i>
does not return unless it fails. (See the <a href=
"#prefork">SCGI server</a> section for more information.)</dd>
</dl>
<h2><a name="using" id="using"></a>Using the C CGI Library</h2>
<p>Here is an example program that outputs all of its CGI data.
In your C source, include <i>ccgi.h</i> and link your program
with <i>libccgi.a</i>. (If you use <i>CGI_encrypt()</i> or
<i>CGI_decrypt()</i> then you must also link with the
<i>openssl</i> library <i>libcrypto</i>.) The simplest way to
obtain your CGI data is with <i>CGI_get_all()</i>. If you are not
uploading any files, then just pass it a null argument.</p>
<pre>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ccgi.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
CGI_varlist *varlist;
const char *name;
CGI_value *value;
int i;
fputs("Content-type: text/plain\r\n\r\n", stdout);
if ((varlist = CGI_get_all(0)) == 0) {
printf("No CGI data received\r\n");
return 0;
}
/* output all values of all variables and cookies */
for (name = CGI_first_name(varlist); name != 0;
name = CGI_next_name(varlist))
{
value = CGI_lookup_all(varlist, 0);
/* CGI_lookup_all(varlist, name) could also be used */
for (i = 0; value[i] != 0; i++) {
printf("%s [%d] = %s\r\n", name, i, value[i]);
}
}
CGI_free_varlist(varlist); /* free variable list */
return 0;
}
</pre>
<h2><a name="upload" id="upload"></a>File Uploads</h2>
<p>To upload files to your CGI program, your HTML form must use
the <i>post</i> method and must specify
<i>multipart/form-data</i> encoding, so the form tag looks like
this:</p>
<pre>
<form method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data"
action="url-for-your-CGI">
</pre>
<p>Within the HTML form a file upload tag looks like this:</p>
<pre>
<input type="file" name="uploadfield" />
</pre>
<p>Most browsers render this tag with a file browse button and a
text field to enter and/or display the name of the file being
uploaded.</p>
<p>When the user submits the form, the browser sends the file
data together with any CGI form variables using
<i>multipart/form-data</i> encoding. To receive uploaded file
data you must call <a href="#CGI_get_post">CGI_get_post()</a> or
<a href="#CGI_get_all">CGI_get_all()</a>, and pass a file name
template string, a copy of which is passed on to standard C
function <i>mkstemp()</i>. The final six characters of the
template string must be <b>XXXXXX</b> and <i>mkstemp()</i>
replaces these with random characters to create a new file with a
unique name. If you pass a null or invalid template string, then
uploaded file data is silently discarded.</p>
<p><i>CGI_get_post()</i> or <i>CGI_get_all()</i> stores two names
for the uploaded file in the variable list, which you can
retrieve with</p>
<pre>
value = CGI_lookup_all(varlist, "uploadfield");
</pre>
<p>This returns an array of two strings (provided no other form
input tags are named <i>uploadfield</i>). In <i>value[0]</i> is
the name of the uploaded file on the web server, which is derived
from the template string. In <i>value[1]</i> is the name of the
file specified by the user in the browser. If the user has not
uploaded a file, then <i>varlist</i> has no entry named
<i>uploadfield</i> and <i>CGI_lookup_all()</i> returns null.</p>
<p>We use <i>mkstemp()</i> to guarantee unique file names because
a form may have multiple file upload fields, resulting in
multiple files. Furthermore, multiple users can upload files to
multiple instances of the CGI at the same time. Here is an
example CGI program that uploads a file.</p>
<pre>
#include <ccgi.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
CGI_varlist *varlist;
CGI_value *value;
fputs("Content-type: text/plain\r\n\r\n", stdout);
varlist = CGI_get_all("/tmp/cgi-upload-XXXXXX");
value = CGI_lookup_all(varlist, "uploadfield");
if (value == 0 || value[1] == 0) {
fputs("No file was uploaded\r\n", stdout);
}
else {
printf("Your file \"%s\" was uploaded to my file \"%s\"\r\n",
value[1], value[0]);
/* Do something with the file here */
unlink(value[0]);
}
CGI_free_varlist(varlist);
return 0;
}
</pre>
<h2><a name="crypto" id="crypto"></a>Simple Cryptography
Support</h2>
<p>HTML and HTTP provide no native support for protecting and
verifying CGI data. Many web applications pass state data to the
browser in cookies or form variables. When the browser passes
this data back, the web application cannot tell if it has been
tampered with. An attacker can easily handcraft a web request
that includes forged cookies or forged form data.</p>
<p>The C CGI Library addresses this problem with <a href=
"#CGI_encrypt">CGI_encrypt()</a> and <a href=
"#CGI_decrypt">CGI_decrypt()</a>. <i>CGI_encrypt()</i> computes a
<i>SHA1 message digest</i> from the input data, encrypts the
digest and the input data, and returns the result in a base64
encoded string. (Raw encrypted output is binary.)
<i>CGI_decrypt()</i> reverses the process. It decrypts the digest
and the data, and recomputes the digest. If the two digests
match, then it returns the data. Otherwise it returns null to
indicate failure. <i>CGI_encrypt()</i> and <i>CGI_decrypt()</i>
use a password that you provide, which is a null terminated
string of arbitrary length (the longer the better). It is
essentially impossible to tamper with the data without knowing
the password. If the output of <i>CGI_encrypt()</i> is modified
in any way, then <i>CGI_decrypt()</i> computes a message digest
that does not match and returns null.</p>
<p>To protect state data, simply encrypt it with
<i>CGI_encrypt()</i> and a password before passing it to the
browser. When the browser passes the encrypted data back, decrypt
with <i>CGI_decrypt()</i> and the same password. If
<i>CGI_decrypt()</i> succeeds, then you know that the data has
not changed. Of course the security of the data depends on the
security of the password, which should be very difficult to guess
and very difficult to steal.</p>
<p><i>CGI_encrypt()</i> uses the <i>openssl</i> library
<i>libcrypto</i> and has these features:</p>
<ul>
<li>Uses the <i>AES-256-CBC</i> cipher.</li>
<li>Generates the cipher key by feeding the password and a
random <i>salt</i> to a hash function. One password results in
a huge number of different cipher keys.</li>
<li>Uses the <i>SHA1</i> message digest algorithm to verify the
input data. Feeds the salt, the password, and the input data to
<i>SHA1</i> to generate the message digest.</li>
<li>Encrypts the message digest and the input data. (Does not
encrypt the salt because decryption needs it.)</li>
<li>Returns a base64 encoded string consisting of the salt,
encrypted digest and encrypted input data.</li>
</ul>
<h2><a name="prefork" id="prefork"></a>Pre Forking SCGI
Server</h2>
<p>Usually when a web server receives a request for a CGI
resource, the web server executes a CGI program, which handles
the request and exits. This does not perform well under high
load. <a href=
"http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/scgi/">SCGI</a> (Simple
CGI) is a protocol for running a persistent CGI server. When a
web server receives a request for a SCGI resource, the web server
connects to a <i>SCGI Server</i> and forwards the request using
the SCGI protocol. The SCGI server responds to the web server,
which forwards the response back to the user's browser. This is
much more efficient than executing a CGI program for each
request. To configure the Apache httpd web server to use SCGI,
see the <a href=
"http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/scgi/">mod_scgi</a>
module.</p>
<p>Under high load a SCGI server must be able to handle multiple
requests concurrently. The SCGI server provided here <i>pre
forks</i> a specified number of child processes that all wait for
requests. The parent process monitors how many child processes
are busy and creates more if necessary. If too many processes are
idle, then the parent terminates some of them.</p>
<p>You provide the code that handles web requests in a
<i>callback</i> function, which is called once for each request.
The environment, standard input, and standard output are set up
so that your <i>callback</i> can be written very much like a
traditional CGI program. All the functions in the C CGI library
work as specified when using the SCGI server.</p>
<p>To start the SCGI server, call <a href=
"#CGI_prefork_server">CGI_prefork_server()</a> and pass it a
pointer to your <i>callback</i> function. The SCGI server puts
itself into the background, and forks child processes to handle
web requests. If <i>CGI_prefork_server()</i> returns, then it has
failed. The web server does not automatically start the SCGI
server program, so you must start it. You control which user
account runs the SCGI server and what privileges it has.</p>
<p>To terminate the SCGI server, send the <i>SIGTERM</i> signal
to the parent process and it sends the signal on to its child
processes and exits. The parent process writes its process ID in
a file if you pass the file name to <a href=
"#CGI_prefork_server">CGI_prefork_server()</a> in
<i>pidfile</i>.</p>
<p>The <i>callback</i> function operates very much like a
traditional CGI program, except that it gets called multiple
times. When writing your <i>callback</i> consider the
following.</p>
<ul>
<li>The <i>callback</i> function should not call <i>exit()</i>
(unless it encounters a serious error). You defeat the purpose
of a persistent process if you exit. The parent process
replaces exited children, so calling <i>exit()</i> does not
cause the SCGI server to fail.</li>
<li>Be careful to free memory that you have allocated and close
files that you have opened inside the <i>callback</i> function.
Otherwise the process will consume memory and/or file
descriptors with each call to <i>callback</i>, and eventually
fail. It may be too difficult to track down all memory leaks.
You can call <a href=
"#CGI_prefork_server">CGI_prefork_server()</a> with
<i>maxreq</i> greater than zero, which causes the child process
to exit after handling <i>maxreq</i> requests, which releases
all its resources.</li>
<li>You may need to handle initialization code differently.
Initializations made before you call
<i>CGI_prefork_server()</i> are inherited by all child
processes. If you open any files or sockets, then the
corresponding file descriptors are inherited and shared. You
may not get the behavior you want when multiple processes share
a file descriptor.</li>
<li>To initialize each child process individually, place
initialization code in <i>callback</i> inside an <i>if</i>
statement that executes the first time <i>callback</i> is
called. The <i>if</i> statement can test a <i>static</i>
variable and reset it to prevent executing the body of the
<i>if</i> statement again.</li>
<li>Each SCGI request includes a full set of environment
variables. The SCGI server replaces the entire environment with
these variables before each call to <i>callback</i>. If you
need anything from the original environment, then you should
save it before calling <i>CGI_prefork_server()</i>. If you need
to manipulate the environment, then the standard C function
<i>putenv()</i> allows you to add or modify environment
variables, and the global C variable
<i>extern char **environ;</i> is a pointer to the
current environment.</li>
<li>If you read standard input directly (rather than using
<i>CGI_get_all()</i> or <i>CGI_get_post()</i>) then use
<i>stdio</i> library functions. In particular you should not
use the <i>read()</i> system call because the SCGI server reads
environment data from standard input using <i>stdio</i> before
calling <i>callback</i>. Use <i>fread()</i> instead.</li>
<li>The SCGI server uses <i>syslog()</i> to log error messages.
If you do not want the default syslog parameters, then
initialize the logging system with <i>openlog()</i> before
calling <i>CGI_prefork_server()</i>. Use <i>syslog()</i> inside
<i>callback</i> to log any errors.</li>
</ul>
<p>Here is an example SCGI server.</p>
<pre>
#include <ccgi.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <syslog.h>
static void
cgi_callback() {
static int first_call = 1;
CGI_varlist *varlist;
if (first_call) {
first_call = 0;
/* initializations for each child process go here */
}
varlist = CGI_get_all(0);
fputs("Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n", stdout);
/* write the rest of the web response to stdout */
/* free memory and close open files */
CGI_free_varlist(varlist);
}
int
main(int argc, char **argv) {
/* initializations before forking child processes go here */
openlog("my-scgi-server", 0, LOG_DAEMON);
CGI_prefork_server("localhost", 4000, "/var/run/my-scgi-server.pid",
/* maxproc */ 100, /* minidle */ 8, /* maxidle */ 16,
/* maxreq */ 1000, cgi_callback);
/* if CGI_prefork_server() returns, then it failed */
return 0;
}
</pre>
</body>
</html>