| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Amelior Interface Gateway engine integration hospital solutions pcts.com | DNA Gateway International -- The BioPharma Gateway to the US Market dnagateway.com | Cosmetic Dentist Harbor Gateway Richard Haber DDS, Harbor Gateway... beverly-hills-cosmetic-de... |
For other uses, see CGI. The Common Gateway Interface (CGI) is a standard protocol that defines how webserver software can delegate the generation of webpages to a console application. Such applications are known as CGI scripts - they are usually written in a scripting language.
[edit] PurposeThe task of a webserver is to respond to requests for webpages issued by clients (usually web browsers) by analyzing the content of the request (which is mostly in its URL), determining an appropriate document to send in response, and returning it to the client. If the request identifies a file on disk, the server can just return the file's contents. Alternatively, the document's content can be composed on the fly. One way of doing this is to let a console application compute the document's contents, and tell the web server to use that console application. CGI specifies which information is communicated between the webserver and such a console application, and how. The webserver software will invoke the console application as a command. CGI defines how information about the request (such as the URL) is passed to the command in the form of arguments and environment variables. The application is supposed to write the output document to standard output; CGI defines how it can pass back extra information about the output (such as the MIME type, which defines the type of document being returned) by prepending it with headers. [edit] HistoryIn 1993, the World Wide Web (WWW) was small but booming. WWW software developers and web site developers kept in touch on the www-talk mailing list, so it was there that a standard for calling command line executables was agreed upon. Specifically mentioned in RFC 3875[1] are the following contributors:
The NCSA team wrote the specification[2], and NCSA still hosts it at its original location [3][4]. The other webserver developers adopted it, and it has been a standard for webservers ever since. [edit] ExampleAn example of a CGI program is one implementing a wiki. The user agent requests the name of an entry; the server will retrieve the source of that entry's page (if one exists), transform it into HTML, and send the result. [edit] More detailsFrom the Web server's point of view, certain locators, e.g. http://www.example.com/wiki.cgi, are defined as corresponding to a program to execute via CGI. When a request for the URL is received, the corresponding program is executed. Data is passed into the program using environment variables. This is in contrast to typical execution, where Command-line arguments are used. In the case of HTTP PUT or POSTs, the user-submitted data is provided to the program via the standard input.[5] Web servers often have a cgi-bin directory at the base of the directory tree to hold executable files called with CGI. The program returns the result to the web server in the form of standard output, prefixed by a header and a blank line. [edit] Header formatThe header is encoded in the same way as an HTTP header and must include the MIME type of the document returned.[6] The headers are generally forwarded with the response back to the user, supplemented by the web server. [edit] DrawbacksIn the case that a CGI call involves use of a scripting language such as csh or perl, coding errors are highly likely to result in a code injection vulnerability. Calling a command generally means the invocation of a newly created process. Starting up the process can take up much more time and memory than the actual work of generating the output, especially when the program still needs to be interpreted or compiled. If the command is called often, the resulting workload can quickly overwhelm the web server. The overhead involved in interpretation may be reduced by using compiled CGI programs, such as those in C/C++, rather than using Perl or other scripting languages. The overhead involved in process creation can be reduced by solutions such as FastCGI, or by running the application code entirely within the webserver using special extension modules. [edit] AlternativesSeveral approaches can be adopted for remedying this:
The optimal configuration for any web application depends on application-specific details, amount of traffic, and complexity of the transaction; these tradeoffs need to be analyzed to determine the best implementation for a given task and time budget. [edit] See also[edit] References[edit] External links
| |||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |