mod_cgi.c
file, and
is compiled in by default. It provides for execution of CGI scripts.
Any file with mime type application/x-httpd-cgi
will be
processed by this module.
application/x-httpd-cgi
or handler cgi-script
(Apache 1.1 or later)
will be treated as a CGI script, and run by the server, with its output
being returned to the client. Files acquire this type either by
having a name containing an extension defined by the
AddType directive, or by being in
a ScriptAlias directory.
When the server invokes a CGI script, it will add a variable called
DOCUMENT_ROOT
to the environment. This variable will contain the
value of the DocumentRoot
configuration variable.
HostnameLookups
is set to on
(it is off by default), and if a reverse DNS
lookup of the accessing host's address indeed finds a host name.
on
and the accessing host supports the ident protocol. Note that the contents
of this variable cannot be relied upon because it can easily be faked, and if
there is a proxy between the client and the server, it is usually
totally useless.
%% [time] request-line %% HTTP-status CGI-script-filenameIf the error is that CGI script cannot be run, the log file will contain an extra two lines:
%%error error-messageAlternatively, if the error is the result of the script returning incorrect header information (often due to a bug in the script), the following information is logged:
%request All HTTP request headers received POST or PUT entity (if any) %response All headers output by the CGI script %stdout CGI standard output %stderr CGI standard error(The %stdout and %stderr parts may be missing if the script did not output anything on standard output or standard error).
The ScriptLog directive sets the CGI script error logfile. If no ScriptLog is given, no error log is created. If given, any CGI errors are logged into the filename given as argument. If this is a relative file or path it is taken relative to the server root.
This log will be opened as the user the child processes run as, ie. the user specified in the main User directive. This means that either the directory the script log is in needs to be writable by that user or the file needs to be manually created and set to be writable by that user. If you place the script log in your main logs directory, do NOT change the directory permissions to make it writable by the user the child processes run as.
Note that script logging is meant to be a debugging feature when writing CGI scripts, and is not meant to be activated continuously on running servers. It is not optimized for speed or efficiency, and may have security problems if used in a manner other than that for which it was designed.
ScriptLogLength can be used to limit the size of the CGI script logfile. Since the logfile logs a lot of information per CGI error (all request headers, all script output) it can grow to be a big file. To prevent problems due to unbounded growth, this directive can be used to set an maximum file-size for the CGI logfile. If the file exceeds this size, no more information will be written to it.
The size of any PUT or POST entity body that is logged to the file is limited, to prevent the log file growing too big too quickly if large bodies are being received. By default, up to 1024 bytes are logged, but this can be changed with this directive.