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6.1 Configuring AutoGen | ||
6.2 AutoGen as a CGI server | ||
6.3 Signal Names | ||
6.4 Installing AutoGen |
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AutoGen is configured and built using Libtool, Automake and Autoconf. Consequently, you can install it wherever you wish using the various `--prefix' options. To the various configuration options supplied by these tools, AutoGen adds a few of its own:
AutoGen is now capable of acting as a CGI forms server, See section AutoGen as a CGI server. As such, it will gather its definitions using either `GET' or `POST' methods. All you need to do is have a template named `cgi.tpl' handy or specify a different one with a command line option.
However, doing this without disabling the server shell brings considerable risk. If you were to pass user input to a script that contained, say, the classic "``rm -rf /`'", you might have a problem. This configuration option will cause shell template commands to simply return the command string as the result. No mistakes. Much safer. Strongly recommended. The default is to have server shell scripting enabled.
Disabling the shell will have some build side effects, too.
Turning on AutoGen debugging enables very detailed inspection of the input definitions and monitoring shell script processing. These options are not particularly useful to anyone not directly involved in maintaining AutoGen. If you do choose to enable AutoGen debugging, be aware that the usage page was generated without these options, so when the build process reaches the documentation rebuild, there will be a failure. `cd' into the `agen5' build directory, `make' the `autogen.texi' file and all will be well thereafter.
These three work together to specify how to compile with and link to
a particular POSIX regular expression library. The value for
`--with-regex-header=value' must be the name of the relevant header
file. The AutoGen sources will attempt to include that source with
a #include <value>
C preprocessing statement. The path
from the
`--with-header-path=path' will be added to CPPFLAGS
as `-Ipath'.
The lib-specs
from `--with-regex-lib=lib-specs' will be added
to LDFLAGS
without any adornment.
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AutoGen is now capable of acting as a CGI forms server.
It behaves as a CGI server if the definitions input is from stdin
and the environment variable REQUEST_METHOD
is defined
and set to either "GET" or "POST". If set to anything else,
AutoGen will exit with a failure message. When set to one of those
values, the CGI data will be converted to AutoGen definitions
(see section Definitions File) and the template named "cgi.tpl
"
will be processed.
This works by including the name of the real template to process
in the form data and having the "cgi.tpl
" template include
that template for processing. I do this for processing the form
http://autogen.sourceforge.net/conftest.html. The "cgi.tpl
"
looks approximately like this:
<? AutoGen5 Template ?> <? IF (not (exist? "template")) ?><? form-error ?><? ELIF (=* (get "template") "/") ?><? form-error ?><? ELIF (define tpl-file (string-append "cgi-tpl/" (get "template"))) (access? tpl-file R_OK) ?><? INCLUDE (. tpl-file) ?><? ELIF (set! tpl-file (string-append tpl-file ".tpl")) (access? tpl-file R_OK) ?><? INCLUDE (. tpl-file) ?><? ELSE ?><? form-error ?><? ENDIF ?> |
This forces the template to be found in the "cgi-tpl/
"
directory. Note also that there is no suffix specified in the
pseudo macro (see section Format of the Pseudo Macro). That tells AutoGen to emit
the output to stdout.
The output is actually spooled until it is complete so that, in the case of an error, the output can be discarded and a proper error message can be written in its stead.
Please also note that it is advisable, especially for network
accessible machines, to configure AutoGen (see section Configuring AutoGen) with
shell processing disabled (--disable-shell
). That will make it
impossible for any referenced template to hand data to a subshell for
interpretation.
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When AutoGen is first built, it tries to use psignal(3)
,
sys_siglist
, strsigno(3)
and strsignal(3)
from the
host operating system. If your system does not supply these, the
AutoGen distribution will. However, it will use the distributed mapping
and this mapping is unlikely to match what your system uses. This can
be fixed. Once you have installed autogen, the mapping can be rebuilt
on the host operating system. To do so, you must perform the
following steps:
cd ${top_srcdir}/compat
autogen strsignal.def
If you have any problems or peculiarities that cause this process to fail on your platform, please send me copies of the header files containing the signal names and numbers, along with the full path names of these files. I will endeavor to fix it. There is a shell script inside of `strsignal.def' that tries to hunt down the information.
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There are several files that get installed. The number depend
whether or not both shared and archive libraries are to be
installed. The following assumes that everything is installed
relative to $prefix
. You can, of course, use
configure
to place these files where you wish.
NB AutoGen does not contain any compiled-in path names.
All support directories are located via option processing,
the environment variable HOME
or finding the directory where
the executable came from.
The installed files are:
This program, library and supporting files can be installed with three commands:
However, you may wish to insert make check
before the make install
command.
If you do perform a make check
and there are any failures, you
will find the results in <module>/test/FAILURES
. Needless to say, I
would be interested in seeing the contents of those files and any
associated messages. If you choose to go on and analyze one of these
failures, you will need to invoke the test scripts individually. You
may do so by specifying the test (or list of test) in the TESTS make
variable, thus:
gmake TESTS=test-name.test check |
I specify gmake
because most makes will not let you override
internal definitions with command line arguments. gmake
does.
All of the AutoGen tests are written to honor the contents of the VERBOSE environment variable. Normally, any commentary generated during a test run is discarded unless the VERBOSE environment variable is set. So, to see what is happening during the test, you might invoke the following with bash or ksh:
VERBOSE=1 gmake TESTS="for.test forcomma.test" check |
Or equivalently with csh:
env VERBOSE=1 gmake TESTS="for.test forcomma.test" check |
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This document was generated by Bruce Korb on September, 30 2006 using texi2html 1.76.