A CGI script is invoked by an HTTP server, usually to process user
input submitted through an HTML <FORM>
or <ISINPUT>
element.
Most often, CGI scripts live in the server's special cgi-bin
directory. The HTTP server places all sorts of information about the
request (such as the client's hostname, the requested URL, the query
string, and lots of other goodies) in the script's shell environment,
executes the script, and sends the script's output back to the client.
The script's input is connected to the client too, and sometimes the
form data is read this way; at other times the form data is passed via
the ``query string'' part of the URL. This module (cgi.py
) is intended
to take care of the different cases and provide a simpler interface to
the Python script. It also provides a number of utilities that help
in debugging scripts, and the latest addition is support for file
uploads from a form (if your browser supports it - Grail 0.3 and
Netscape 2.0 do).
The output of a CGI script should consist of two sections, separated by a blank line. The first section contains a number of headers, telling the client what kind of data is following. Python code to generate a minimal header section looks like this:
print "Content-type: text/html" # HTML is following print # blank line, end of headers
The second section is usually HTML, which allows the client software to display nicely formatted text with header, in-line images, etc. Here's Python code that prints a simple piece of HTML:
print "<TITLE>CGI script output</TITLE>" print "<H1>This is my first CGI script</H1>" print "Hello, world!"
(It may not be fully legal HTML according to the letter of the standard, but any browser will understand it.)