Variable IP address capability
[CGIscriptor.git] / CGIscriptor.pl
blob2c726eccb30063434ad9882d5ffc7aecf210ca4d
1 #! /usr/bin/perl
3 # (configure the first line to contain YOUR path to perl 5.000+)
5 # CGIscriptor.pl
6 # Version 2.3
7 # 15 January 2002
9 # YOU NEED:
11 # perl 5.0 or higher (see: "http://www.perl.org/")
13 # Notes:
15 if(grep(/\-\-help/i, @ARGV))
17 print << 'ENDOFPREHELPTEXT1';
18 # CGIscriptor.pl is a Perl program will run on any WWW server that
19 # runs Perl scripts, just add a line like the following to your
20 # httpd.conf file (Apache example):
22 # ScriptAlias /SHTML/ "/real-path/CGIscriptor.pl/"
24 # URL's that refer to http://www.your.address/SHTML/... will now be handled
25 # by CGIscriptor.pl, which can use a private directory tree (default is the
26 # DOCUMENT_ROOT directory tree, but it can be anywhere, see below).
27 # NOTE: if you cannot use a ScriptAlias, there is a way to use .htaccess
28 # instead. See below.
30 # This file contains all documentation as comments. These comments
31 # can be removed to speed up loading (e.g., `egrep -v '^#' CGIscriptor.pl` >
32 # leanScriptor.pl). A bare bones version of CGIscriptor.pl, lacking
33 # documentation, most comments, access control, example functions etc.
34 # (but still with the copyright notice and some minimal documentation)
35 # can be obtained by calling CGIscriptor.pl with the '-slim'
36 # command line argument, e.g.,
37 # >CGIscriptor.pl -slim >slimCGIscriptor.pl
39 # CGIscriptor.pl can be run from the command line as
40 # `CGIscriptor.pl <path> <query>`, inside a perl script with
41 # 'do CGIscriptor.pl' after setting $ENV{PATH_INFO} and $ENV{QUERY_STRING},
42 # or CGIscriptor.pl can be loaded with 'require "/real-path/CGIscriptor.pl"'.
43 # In the latter case, requests are processed by 'Handle_Request();'
44 # (again after setting $ENV{PATH_INFO} and $ENV{QUERY_STRING}).
46 # The --help command line switch will print the manual.
48 # Running demo's and more information can be found at
49 # http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl/rob/OSS/OSS.html
51 # A pocket-size HTTP daemon, CGIservlet.pl, is available from my web site
52 # or CPAN that can use CGIscriptor.pl as the base of a µWWW server and
53 # demonstrates its use.
55 ENDOFPREHELPTEXT1
58 # Configuration, copyright notice, and user manual follow the next
59 # (Changes) section.
61 ############################################################################
63 # Changes (document ALL changes with date, name and email here):
64 # 11 Jun 2012 - Securing CGIvariable setting. Made
65 # 'if($ENV{QUERY_STRING} =~ /$name/)' into elsif in
66 # defineCGIvariable/List/Hash to give precedence to ENV{$name}
67 # This was a very old security bug. Added ProtectCGIvariable($name).
68 # 06 Jun 2012 - Added IP only session types after login.
69 # 31 May 2012 - Session ticket system added for handling login sessions.
70 # 29 May 2012 - CGIsafeFileName does not accept filenames starting with '.'
71 # 29 May 2012 - Added CGIscriptor::BrowseAllDirs to handle browsing directories
72 # correctly.
73 # 22 May 2012 - Added Access control with Session Tickets linked to
74 # IP Address and PATH_INFO.
75 # 21 May 2012 - Corrected the links generated by CGIscriptor::BrowseDirs
76 # Will link to current base URL when the HTTP server is '.' or '~'
77 # 29 Oct 2009 - Adapted David A. Wheeler's suggestion about filenames:
78 # CGIsafeFileName does not accept filenames starting with '-'
79 # (http://www.dwheeler.com/essays/fixing-unix-linux-filenames.html)
80 # 08 Oct 2009 - Some corrections in the README.txt file, eg, new email address
81 # 28 Jan 2005 - Added a file selector to performTranslation.
82 # Changed %TranslationTable to @TranslationTable
83 # and patterns to lists.
84 # 27 Jan 2005 - Added a %TranslationTable with associated
85 # performTranslation(\$text) function to allow
86 # run changes in the web pages. Say, to translate
87 # legacy pages with <%=...%> delimiters to the new
88 # <SCRIPT TYPE=..></SCRIPT> format.
89 # 27 Jan 2005 - Small bug of extra '\n' in output removed from the
90 # Other Languages Code.
91 # 10 May 2004 - Belated upload of latest version (2.3) to CPAN
92 # 07 Oct 2003 - Corrected error '\s' -> '\\s' in rebol scripting
93 # language call
94 # 07 Oct 2003 - Corrected omitted INS tags in <DIV><INS> handling
95 # 20 May 2003 - Added a --help switch to print the manual.
96 # 06 Mar 2003 - Adapted the blurb at the end of the file.
97 # 03 Mar 2003 - Added a user definable dieHandler function to catch all
98 # "die" calls. Also "enhanced" the STDERR printout.
99 # 10 Feb 2003 - Split off the reading of the POST part of a query
100 # from Initialize_output. This was suggested by Gerd Franke
101 # to allow for the catching of the file_path using a
102 # POST based lookup. That is, he needed the POST part
103 # to change the file_path.
104 # 03 Feb 2003 - %{$name}; => %{$name} = (); in defineCGIvariableHash.
105 # 03 Feb 2003 - \1 better written as $1 in
106 # $directive =~ s/[^\\\$]\#[^\n\f\r]*([\n\f\r])/$1/g
107 # 29 Jan 2003 - This makes "CLASS="ssperl" CSS-compatible Gerd Franke
108 # added:
109 # $ServerScriptContentClass = "ssperl";
110 # changed in ProcessFile():
111 # unless(($CurrentContentType =~
112 # 28 Jan 2003 - Added 'INS' Tag! Gerd Franke
113 # 20 Dec 2002 - Removed useless $Directoryseparator variable.
114 # Update comments and documentation.
115 # 18 Dec 2002 - Corrected bug in Accept/Reject processing.
116 # Files didn't work.
117 # 24 Jul 2002 - Added .htaccess documentation (from Gerd Franke)
118 # Also added a note that RawFilePattern can be a
119 # complete file name.
120 # 19 Mar 2002 - Added SRC pseudo-files PREFIX and POSTFIX. These
121 # switch to prepending or to appending the content
122 # of the SRC attribute. Default is prefixing. You
123 # can add as many of these switches as you like.
124 # 13 Mar 2002 - Do not search for tag content if a tag closes with
125 # />, i.e., <DIV ... /> will be handled the XML/XHTML way.
126 # 25 Jan 2002 - Added 'curl' and 'snarf' to SRC attribute URL handling
127 # (replaces wget).
128 # 25 Jan 2002 - Found a bug in SAFEqx, now executes qx() in a scalar context
129 # (i.o. a list context). This is necessary for binary results.
130 # 24 Jan 2002 - Disambiguated -T $SRCfile to -T "$SRCfile" (and -e) and
131 # changed the order of if/elsif to allow removing these
132 # conditions in systems with broken -T functions.
133 # (I also removed a spurious ')' bracket)
134 # 17 Jan 2002 - Changed DIV tag SRC from <SOURCE> to sysread(SOURCE,...)
135 # to support binary files.
136 # 17 Jan 2002 - Removed WhiteSpace from $FileAllowedCharacters.
137 # 17 Jan 2002 - Allow "file://" prefix in SRC attribute. It is simply
138 # stipped from the path.
139 # 15 Jan 2002 - Version 2.2
140 # 15 Jan 2002 - Debugged and completed URL support (including
141 # CGIscriptor::read_url() function)
142 # 07 Jan 2002 - Added automatic (magic) URL support to the SRC attribute
143 # with the main::GET_URL function. Uses wget -O underlying.
144 # 04 Jan 2002 - Added initialization of $NewDirective in InsertForeignScript
145 # (i.e., my $NewDirective = "";) to clear old output
146 # (this was a realy anoying bug).
147 # 03 Jan 2002 - Added a <DIV CLASS='text/ssperl' ID='varname'></DIV>
148 # tags that assign the body text as-is (literally)
149 # to $varname. Allows standard HTML-tools to handle
150 # Cascading Style Sheet templates. This implements a
151 # design by Gerd Franke (franke@roo.de).
152 # 03 Jan 2002 - I finaly gave in and allowed SRC files to expand ~/.
153 # 12 Oct 2001 - Normalized spelling of "CGIsafFileName" in documentation.
154 # 09 Oct 2001 - Added $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} to log files to
155 # detect unwanted indexing of TAR files by webcrawlers.
156 # 10 Sep 2001 - Added $YOUR_SCRIPTS directory to @INC for 'require'.
157 # 22 Aug 2001 - Added .txt (Content-type: text/plain) as a default
158 # processed file type. Was processed via BinaryMapFile.
159 # 31 May 2001 - Changed =~ inside CGIsafeEmailAddress that was buggy.
160 # 29 May 2001 - Updated $CGI_HOME to point to $ENV{DOCUMENT_ROOT} io
161 # the root of PATH_TRANSLATED. DOCUMENT_ROOT can now
162 # be manipulated to achieve a "Sub Root".
163 # NOTE: you can have $YOUR_HTML_FILES != DOCUMENT_ROOT
164 # 28 May 2001 - Changed CGIscriptor::BrowsDirs function for security
165 # and debugging (it now works).
166 # 21 May 2001 - defineCGIvariableHash will ADD values to existing
167 # hashes,instead of replacing existing hashes.
168 # 17 May 2001 - Interjected a '&' when pasting POST to GET data
169 # 24 Apr 2001 - Blocked direct requests for BinaryMapFile.
170 # 16 Aug 2000 - Added hash table extraction for CGI parameters with
171 # CGIparseValueHash (used with structured parameters).
172 # Use: CGI='%<CGI-partial-name>' (fill in your name in <>)
173 # Will collect all <CGI-partial-name><key>=value pairs in
174 # $<CGI-partial-name>{<key>} = value;
175 # 16 Aug 2000 - Adapted SAFEqx to protect @PARAMETER values.
176 # 09 Aug 2000 - Added support for non-filesystem input by way of
177 # the CGI_FILE_CONTENTS and CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE
178 # environment variables.
179 # 26 Jul 2000 - On the command-line, file-path '-' indicates STDIN.
180 # This allows CGIscriptor to be used in pipes.
181 # Default, $BLOCK_STDIN_HTTP_REQUEST=1 will block this
182 # in an HTTP request (i.e., in a web server).
183 # 26 Jul 2000 - Blocked 'Content-type: text/html' if the SERVER_PROTOCOL
184 # is not HTTP or another protocol. Changed the default
185 # source directory to DOCUMENT_ROOT (i.o. the incorrect
186 # SERVER_ROOT).
187 # 24 Jul 2000 - -slim Command-line argument added to remove all
188 # comments, security, etc.. Updated documentation.
189 # 05 Jul 2000 - Added IF and UNLESS attributes to make the
190 # execution of all <META> and <SCRIPT> code
191 # conditional.
192 # 05 Jul 2000 - Rewrote and isolated the code for extracting
193 # quoted items from CGI and SRC attributes.
194 # Now all attributes expect the same set of
195 # quotes: '', "", ``, (), {}, [] and the same
196 # preceded by a \, e.g., "\((aap)\)" will be
197 # extracted as "(aap)".
198 # 17 Jun 2000 - Construct @ARGV list directly in CGIexecute
199 # name-space (i.o. by evaluation) from
200 # CGI attributes to prevent interference with
201 # the processing for non perl scripts.
202 # Changed CGIparseValueList to prevent runaway
203 # loops.
204 # 16 Jun 2000 - Added a direct (interpolated) display mode
205 # (text/ssdisplay) and a user log mode
206 # (text/sslogfile).
207 # 06 Jun 2000 - Replace "print $Result" with a syswrite loop to
208 # allow large string output.
209 # 02 Jun 2000 - Corrected shrubCGIparameter($CGI_VALUE) to realy
210 # remove all control characters. Changed Interpreter
211 # initialization to shrub interpolated CGI parameters.
212 # Added 'text/ssmailto' interpreter script.
213 # 22 May 2000 - Changed some of the comments
214 # 09 May 2000 - Added list extraction for CGI parameters with
215 # CGIparseValueList (used with multiple selections).
216 # Use: CGI='@<CGI-parameter>' (fill in your name in <>)
217 # 09 May 2000 - Added a 'Not Present' condition to CGIparseValue.
218 # 27 Apr 2000 - Updated documentation to reflect changes.
219 # 27 Apr 2000 - SRC attribute "cleaned". Supported for external
220 # interpreters.
221 # 27 Apr 2000 - CGI attribute can be used in <SCRIPT> tag.
222 # 27 Apr 2000 - Gprolog, M4 support added.
223 # 26 Apr 2000 - Lisp (rep) support added.
224 # 20 Apr 2000 - Use of external interpreters now functional.
225 # 20 Apr 2000 - Removed bug from extracting Content types (RegExp)
226 # 10 Mar 2000 - Qualified unconditional removal of '#' that preclude
227 # the use of $#foo, i.e., I changed
228 # s/[^\\]\#[^\n\f\r]*([\n\f\r])/\1/g
229 # to
230 # s/[^\\\$]\#[^\n\f\r]*([\n\f\r])/\1/g
231 # 03 Mar 2000 - Added a '$BlockPathAccess' variable to "hide"
232 # things like, e.g., CVS information in CVS subtrees
233 # 10 Feb 2000 - URLencode/URLdecode have been made case-insensitive
234 # 10 Feb 2000 - Added a BrowseDirs function (CGIscriptor package)
235 # 01 Feb 2000 - A BinaryMapFile in the ~/ directory has precedence
236 # over a "burried" BinaryMapFile.
237 # 04 Oct 1999 - Added two functions to check file names and email addresses
238 # (CGIscriptor::CGIsafeFileName and
239 # CGIscriptor::CGIsafeEmailAddress)
240 # 28 Sept 1999 - Corrected bug in sysread call for reading POST method
241 # to allow LONG posts.
242 # 28 Sept 1999 - Changed CGIparseValue to handle multipart/form-data.
243 # 29 July 1999 - Refer to BinaryMapFile from CGIscriptor directory, if
244 # this directory exists.
245 # 07 June 1999 - Limit file-pattern matching to LAST extension
246 # 04 June 1999 - Default text/html content type is printed only once.
247 # 18 May 1999 - Bug in replacement of ~/ and ./ removed.
248 # (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
249 # 15 May 1999 - Changed the name of the execute package to CGIexecute.
250 # Changed the processing of the Accept and Reject file.
251 # Added a full expression evaluation to Access Control.
252 # (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
253 # 27 Apr 1999 - Brought CGIscriptor under the GNU GPL. Made CGIscriptor
254 # Version 1.1 a module that can be called with 'require "CGIscriptor.pl"'.
255 # Requests are serviced by "Handle_Request()". CGIscriptor
256 # can still be called as a isolated perl script and a shell
257 # command.
258 # Changed the "factory default setting" so that it will run
259 # from the DOCUMENT_ROOT directory.
260 # (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
261 # 29 Mar 1999 - Remove second debugging STDERR switch. Moved most code
262 # to subroutines to change CGIscriptor into a module.
263 # Added mapping to process unsupported file types (e.g., binary
264 # pictures). See $BinaryMapFile.
265 # (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
266 # 24 Sept 1998 - Changed text of license (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
267 # Removed a double setting of filepatterns and maximum query
268 # size. Changed email address. Removed some typos from the
269 # comments.
270 # 02 June 1998 - Bug fixed in URLdecode. Changing the foreach loop variable
271 # caused quiting CGIscriptor.(Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
272 # 02 June 1998 - $SS_PUB and $SS_SCRIPT inserted an extra /, removed.
273 # (Rob van Son, R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
276 # Known Bugs:
278 # 23 Mar 2000
279 # It is not possible to use operators or variables to construct variable names,
280 # e.g., $bar = \@{$foo}; won't work. However, eval('$bar = \@{'.$foo.'};');
281 # will indeed work. If someone could tell me why, I would be obliged.
284 ############################################################################
286 # OBLIGATORY USER CONFIGURATION
288 # Configure the directories where all user files can be found (this
289 # is the equivalent of the server root directory of a WWW-server).
290 # These directories can be located ANYWHERE. For security reasons, it is
291 # better to locate them outside the WWW-tree of your HTTP server, unless
292 # CGIscripter handles ALL requests.
294 # For convenience, the defaults are set to the root of the WWW server.
295 # However, this might not be safe!
297 # ~/ text files
298 # $YOUR_HTML_FILES = "/usr/pub/WWW/SHTML"; # or SS_PUB as environment var
299 # (patch to use the parent directory of CGIscriptor as document root, should be removed)
300 if($ENV{'SCRIPT_FILENAME'}) # && $ENV{'SCRIPT_FILENAME'} !~ /\Q$ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'}\E/)
302 $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'} = $ENV{'SCRIPT_FILENAME'};
303 $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'} =~ s@/CGIscriptor.*$@@ig;
306 # Just enter your own directory path here
307 $YOUR_HTML_FILES = $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'}; # default is the DOCUMENT_ROOT
309 # ./ script files (recommended to be different from the previous)
310 # $YOUR_SCRIPTS = "/usr/pub/WWW/scripts"; # or SS_SCRIPT as environment var
311 $YOUR_SCRIPTS = $YOUR_HTML_FILES; # This might be a SECURITY RISK
313 # End of obligatory user configuration
314 # (note: there is more non-essential user configuration below)
316 ############################################################################
318 # OPTIONAL USER CONFIGURATION (all values are used CASE INSENSITIVE)
320 # Script content-types: TYPE="Content-type" (user defined mime-type)
321 $ServerScriptContentType = "text/ssperl"; # Server Side Perl scripts
322 # CSS require a simple class
323 $ServerScriptContentClass = $ServerScriptContentType =~ m!/! ?
324 $' : "ssperl"; # Server Side Perl CSS classes
326 $ShellScriptContentType = "text/osshell"; # OS shell scripts
327 # # (Server Side perl ``-execution)
329 # Accessible file patterns, block any request that doesn't match.
330 # Matches any file with the extension .(s)htm(l), .txt, or .xmr
331 # (\. is used in regexp)
332 # Note: die unless $PATH_INFO =~ m@($FilePattern)$@is;
333 $FilePattern = ".shtml|.htm|.html|.xml|.xmr|.txt|.js";
335 # The table with the content type MIME types
336 # (allows to differentiate MIME types, if needed)
337 %ContentTypeTable =
339 '.html' => 'text/html',
340 '.shtml' => 'text/html',
341 '.htm' => 'text/html',
342 '.xml' => 'text/xml',
343 '.txt' => 'text/plain',
344 '.js' => 'text/plain'
348 # File pattern post-processing
349 $FilePattern =~ s/([@.])/\\$1/g; # Convert . and @ to \. and \@
351 # SHAsum command needed for Authorization and Login
352 # (note, these have to be accessible in the HTML pages, ie, the CGIexecute environment)
353 my $shasum = "shasum -a 256";
354 if(qx{uname} =~ /Darwin/)
356 $shasum = "shasum-5.12 -a 256" unless `which shasum`;
358 my $SHASUMCMD = $shasum.' |cut -f 1 -d" "';
359 $ENV{"SHASUMCMD"} = $SHASUMCMD;
360 my $RANDOMHASHCMD = 'dd bs=1 count=64 if=/dev/urandom 2>/dev/null | '.$shasum.' -b |cut -f 1 -d" "';
361 $ENV{"RANDOMHASHCMD"} = $RANDOMHASHCMD;
363 # Hash a string, return hex of hash
364 sub hash_string # ($string) -> hex_hash
366 my $string = shift || "";
367 # Catch nasty \'-quotes, embed them in '..'"'"'..'
368 $string =~ s/\'/\'\"\'\"\'/isg;
369 my $hash = `printf '%s' '$string'| $ENV{"SHASUMCMD"}`;
370 chomp($hash);
371 return $hash;
374 # Generate random hex hash
375 sub get_random_hex # () -> hex
377 # Create Random Hash Salt
378 open(URANDOM, "$RANDOMHASHCMD |") || die "URANDOM; $RANDOMHASHCMD | $!\n";
379 my $RANDOMSALT= <URANDOM>;
380 close(URANDOM);
381 chomp($RANDOMSALT);
383 return $RANDOMSALT;
387 # File patterns of files which are handled by session tickets.
388 %TicketRequiredPatterns = (
389 '^/Private(/|$)' => "Private/.Sessions\tPrivate/.Passwords\t/Private/Login.html\t+36000"
391 # Used to set cookies, only session cookies supported
392 my %SETCOOKIELIST = ();
394 # Session Ticket Directory: Private/.Sessions
395 # Password Directory: Private/.Passwords
396 # Login page (url path): /Private/Login.html
397 # Expiration time (s): +3600
398 # +<seconds> = relative time <seconds> is absolute date-time
400 # Manage login
401 # Set up a valid ticket from a given text file
402 # Use from command line. DO NOT USE ONLINE
403 # Watch out for passwords that get stored in the history file
405 # perl CGIscriptor.pl --managelogin [options] [files]
406 # Options:
407 # salt={file or saltvalue}
408 # masterkey={file or plaintext}
409 # newmasterkey={file or plaintext}
410 # password={file or palintext}
412 # Followed by one or more file names.
413 # Options can be interspersed between filenames,
414 # e.g., password='plaintext'
415 # Note that passwords are only used once!
417 if($ARGV[0] =~ /^\-\-managelogin/i)
419 my @arguments = @ARGV;
420 shift(@arguments);
421 setup_ticket_file(@arguments);
422 # Should be run on the command line
423 exit;
428 # Raw files must contain their own Content-type (xmr <- x-multipart-replace).
429 # THIS IS A SUBSET OF THE FILES DEFINED IN $FilePattern
430 $RawFilePattern = ".xmr";
431 # (In principle, this could contain a full file specification, e.g.,
432 # ".xmr|relocated.html")
434 # Raw File pattern post-processing
435 $RawFilePattern =~ s/([@.])/\\$1/g; # Convert . and @ to \. and \@
437 # Server protocols for which "Content-type: text/html\n\n" should be printed
438 # (you should not bother with these, except for HTTP, they are mostly imaginary)
439 $ContentTypeServerProtocols = 'HTTP|MAIL|MIME';
441 # Block access to all (sub-) paths and directories that match the
442 # following (URL) path (is used as:
443 # 'die if $BlockPathAccess && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@$BlockPathAccess@;' )
444 $BlockPathAccess = '/(CVS|\.git)/'; # Protect CVS and .git information
446 # All (blocked) other file-types can be mapped to a single "binary-file"
447 # processor (a kind of pseudo-file path). This can either be an error
448 # message (e.g., "illegal file") or contain a script that serves binary
449 # files.
450 # Note: the real file path wil be stored in $ENV{CGI_BINARY_FILE}.
451 $BinaryMapFile = "/BinaryMapFile.xmr";
452 # Allow for the addition of a CGIscriptor directory
453 # Note that a BinaryMapFile in the root "~/" directory has precedence
454 $BinaryMapFile = "/CGIscriptor".$BinaryMapFile
455 if ! -e "$YOUR_HTML_FILES".$BinaryMapFile
456 && -e "$YOUR_HTML_FILES/CGIscriptor".$BinaryMapFile;
459 # List of all characters that are allowed in file names and paths.
460 # All requests containing illegal characters are blocked. This
461 # blocks most tricks (e.g., adding "\000", "\n", or other control
462 # characters, also blocks URI's using %FF)
463 # THIS IS A SECURITY FEATURE
464 # (this is also used to parse filenames in SRC= features, note the
465 # '-quotes, they are essential)
466 $FileAllowedChars = '\w\.\~\/\:\*\?\-'; # Covers Unix and Mac, but NO spaces
468 # Maximum size of the Query (number of characters clients can send
469 # covers both GET & POST combined)
470 $MaximumQuerySize = 2**20 - 1; # = 2**14 - 1
473 # Embeded URL get function used in SRC attributes and CGIscriptor::read_url
474 # (returns a string with the PERL code to transfer the URL contents, e.g.,
475 # "SAFEqx(\'curl \"http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl\"\')")
476 # "SAFEqx(\'wget --quiet --output-document=- \"http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl\"\')")
477 # Be sure to handle <BASE HREF='URL'> and allow BOTH
478 # direct printing GET_URL($URL [, 0]) and extracting the content of
479 # the $URL for post-processing GET_URL($URL, 1).
480 # You get the WHOLE file, including HTML header.
481 # The shell command Use $URL where the URL should go
482 # ('wget', 'snarf' or 'curl', uncomment the one you would like to use)
483 my $GET_URL_shell_command = 'wget --quiet --output-document=- $URL';
484 #my $GET_URL_shell_command = 'snarf $URL -';
485 #my $GET_URL_shell_command = 'curl $URL';
487 sub GET_URL # ($URL, $ValueNotPrint) -> content_of_url
489 my $URL = shift || return;
490 my $ValueNotPrint = shift || 0;
492 # Check URL for illegal characters
493 return "print '<h1>Illegal URL<h1>'\"\n\";" if $URL =~ /[^$FileAllowedChars\%]/;
495 # Include URL in final command
496 my $CurrentCommand = $GET_URL_shell_command;
497 $CurrentCommand =~ s/\$URL/$URL/g;
499 # Print to STDOUT or return a value
500 my $BlockPrint = "print STDOUT ";
501 $BlockPrint = "" if $ValueNotPrint;
503 my $Commands = <<"GETURLCODE";
504 # Get URL
506 my \$Page = "";
508 # Simple, using shell command
509 \$Page = SAFEqx('$CurrentCommand');
511 # Add a BASE tage to the header
512 \$Page =~ s!\\</head!\\<base href='$URL'\\>\\</head!ig unless \$Page =~ m!\\<base!;
514 # Print the URL value, or return it as a value
515 $BlockPrint\$Page;
517 GETURLCODE
518 return $Commands;
521 # As files can get rather large (and binary), you might want to use
522 # some more intelligent reading procedure, e.g.,
523 # Direct Perl
524 # # open(URLHANDLE, '/usr/bin/wget --quiet --output-document=- "$URL"|') || die "wget: \$!";
525 # #open(URLHANDLE, '/usr/bin/snarf "$URL" -|') || die "snarf: \$!";
526 # open(URLHANDLE, '/usr/bin/curl "$URL"|') || die "curl: \$!";
527 # my \$text = "";
528 # while(sysread(URLHANDLE,\$text, 1024) > 0)
530 # \$Page .= \$text;
531 # };
532 # close(URLHANDLE) || die "\$!";
533 # However, this doesn't work with the CGIexecute->evaluate() function.
534 # You get an error: 'No child processes at (eval 16) line 15, <file0> line 8.'
536 # You can forget the next two variables, they are only needed when
537 # you don't want to use a regular file system (i.e., with open)
538 # but use some kind of database/RAM image for accessing (generating)
539 # the data.
541 # Name of the environment variable that contains the file contents
542 # when reading directly from Database/RAM. When this environment variable,
543 # $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS}, is not false, no real file will be read.
544 $CGI_FILE_CONTENTS = 'CGI_FILE_CONTENTS';
545 # Uncomment the following if you want to force the use of the data access code
546 # $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS} = '-'; # Force use of $ENV{$CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE}
548 # Name of the environment variable that contains the RAM access perl
549 # code needed to read additional "files", i.e.,
550 # $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS} = eval("\@_=('$file_path'); do{$ENV{$CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE}}");
551 # When $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS} eq '-', this code is executed to generate the data.
552 $CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE = 'CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE';
554 # You can, of course, fill this yourself, e.g.,
555 # $ENV{$CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE} =
556 # 'open(INPUT, "<$_[0]"); while(<INPUT>){print;};close(INPUT);'
559 # DEBUGGING
561 # Suppress error messages, this can be changed for debugging or error-logging
562 #open(STDERR, "/dev/null"); # (comment out for use in debugging)
564 # SPECIAL: Remove Comments, security, etc. if the command line is
565 # '>CGIscriptor.pl -slim >slimCGIscriptor.pl'
566 $TrimDownCGIscriptor = 1 if $ARGV[0] =~ /^\-slim/i;
568 # If CGIscriptor is used from the command line, the command line
569 # arguments are interpreted as the file (1st) and the Query String (rest).
570 # Get the arguments
571 $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} = shift(@ARGV) unless exists($ENV{'PATH_INFO'}) || grep(/\-\-help/i, @ARGV);
572 $ENV{'QUERY_STRING'} = join("&", @ARGV) unless exists($ENV{'QUERY_STRING'});
575 # Handle bail-outs in a user definable way.
576 # Catch Die and replace it with your own function.
577 # Ends with a call to "die $_[0];"
579 sub dieHandler # ($ErrorCode, "Message", @_) -> DEAD
581 my $ErrorCode = shift;
582 my $ErrorMessage = shift;
584 # Place your own reporting functions here
586 # Now, kill everything (default)
587 print STDERR "$ErrorCode: $ErrorMessage\n";
588 die $ErrorMessage;
592 # End of optional user configuration
593 # (note: there is more non-essential user configuration below)
595 if(grep(/\-\-help/i, @ARGV))
597 print << 'ENDOFPREHELPTEXT2';
599 ###############################################################################
601 # Author and Copyright (c):
602 # Rob van Son, © 1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002-2012
603 # NKI-AVL Amsterdam
604 # r.v.son@nki.nl
605 # Institute of Phonetic Sciences & IFOTT/ACLS
606 # University of Amsterdam
607 # Email: R.J.J.H.vanSon@gmail.com
608 # Email: R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl
609 # WWW : http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl/rob/
611 # License for use and disclaimers
613 # CGIscriptor merges plain ASCII HTML files transparantly
614 # with CGI variables, in-line PERL code, shell commands,
615 # and executable scripts in other scripting languages.
617 # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
618 # modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
619 # as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
620 # of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
622 # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
623 # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
624 # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
625 # GNU General Public License for more details.
627 # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
628 # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
629 # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
632 # Contributors:
633 # Rob van Son (R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl)
634 # Gerd Franke franke@roo.de (designed the <DIV> behaviour)
636 #######################################################
637 ENDOFPREHELPTEXT2
639 #######################################################>>>>>>>>>>Start Remove
641 # You can skip the following code, it is an auto-splice
642 # procedure.
644 # Construct a slimmed down version of CGIscriptor
645 # (i.e., CGIscriptor.pl -slim > slimCGIscriptor.pl)
647 if($TrimDownCGIscriptor)
649 open(CGISCRIPTOR, "<CGIscriptor.pl")
650 || dieHandler(1, "<CGIscriptor.pl not slimmed down: $!\n");
651 my $SKIPtext = 0;
652 my $SKIPComments = 0;
654 while(<CGISCRIPTOR>)
656 my $SKIPline = 0;
658 ++$LineCount;
660 # Start of SKIP text
661 $SKIPtext = 1 if /[\>]{10}Start Remove/;
662 $SKIPComments = 1 if $SKIPtext == 1;
664 # Skip this line?
665 $SKIPline = 1 if $SKIPtext || ($SKIPComments && /^\s*\#/);
667 ++$PrintCount unless $SKIPline;
669 print STDOUT $_ unless $SKIPline;
671 # End of SKIP text ?
672 $SKIPtext = 0 if /[\<]{10}End Remove/;
674 # Ready!
675 print STDERR "\# Printed $PrintCount out of $LineCount lines\n";
676 exit;
679 #######################################################
681 if(grep(/\-\-help/i, @ARGV))
683 print << 'ENDOFHELPTEXT';
685 # HYPE
687 # CGIscriptor merges plain ASCII HTML files transparantly and safely
688 # with CGI variables, in-line PERL code, shell commands, and executable
689 # scripts in many languages (on-line and real-time). It combines the
690 # "ease of use" of HTML files with the versatillity of specialized
691 # scripts and PERL programs. It hides all the specifics and
692 # idiosyncrasies of correct output and CGI coding and naming. Scripts
693 # do not have to be aware of HTML, HTTP, or CGI conventions just as HTML
694 # files can be ignorant of scripts and the associated values. CGIscriptor
695 # complies with the W3C HTML 4.0 recommendations.
696 # In addition to its use as a WWW embeded CGI processor, it can
697 # be used as a command-line document preprocessor (text-filter).
699 # THIS IS HOW IT WORKS
701 # The aim of CGIscriptor is to execute "plain" scripts inside a text file
702 # using any required CGIparameters and environment variables. It
703 # is optimized to transparantly process HTML files inside a WWW server.
704 # The native language is Perl, but many other scripting languages
705 # can be used.
707 # CGIscriptor reads text files from the requested input file (i.e., from
708 # $YOUR_HTML_FILES$PATH_INFO) and writes them to <STDOUT> (i.e., the
709 # client requesting the service) preceded by the obligatory
710 # "Content-type: text/html\n\n" or "Content-type: text/plain\n\n" string
711 # (except for "raw" files which supply their own Content-type message
712 # and only if the SERVER_PROTOCOL supports HTTP, MAIL, or MIME).
714 # When CGIscriptor encounters an embedded script, indicated by an HTML4 tag
716 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl" [CGI="$VAR='default value'"] [SRC="ScriptSource"]>
717 # PERL script
718 # </SCRIPT>
720 # or
722 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/osshell" [CGI="$name='default value'"] [SRC="ScriptSource"]>
723 # OS Shell script
724 # </SCRIPT>
726 # construct (anything between []-brackets is optional, other MIME-types
727 # and scripting languages are supported), the embedded script is removed
728 # and both the contents of the source file (i.e., "do 'ScriptSource'")
729 # AND the script are evaluated as a PERL program (i.e., by eval()),
730 # shell script (i.e., by a "safe" version of `Command`, qx) or an external
731 # interpreter. The output of the eval() function takes the place of the
732 # original <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> construct in the output string. Any CGI
733 # parameters declared by the CGI attribute are available as simple perl
734 # variables, and can subsequently be made available as variables to other
735 # scripting languages (e.g., bash, python, or lisp).
737 # Example: printing "Hello World"
738 # <HTML><HEAD><TITLE>Hello World</TITLE>
739 # <BODY>
740 # <H1><SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">"Hello World"</SCRIPT></H1>
741 # </BODY></HTML>
743 # Save this in a file, hello.html, in the directory you indicated with
744 # $YOUR_HTML_FILES and access http://your_server/SHTML/hello.html
745 # (or to whatever name you use as an alias for CGIscriptor.pl).
746 # This is realy ALL you need to do to get going.
748 # You can use any values that are delivered in CGI-compliant form (i.e.,
749 # the "?name=value" type URL additions) transparently as "$name" variables
750 # in your scripts IFF you have declared them in the CGI attribute of
751 # a META or SCRIPT tag before e.g.:
752 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$name = `default value`'
753 # [SRC='ScriptSource']">
754 # or
755 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl" CGI="$name = 'default value'"
756 # [SRC='ScriptSource']>
757 # After such a 'CGI' attribute, you can use $name as an ordinary PERL variable
758 # (the ScriptSource file is immediately evaluated with "do 'ScriptSource'").
759 # The CGIscriptor script allows you to write ordinary HTML files which will
760 # include dynamic CGI aware (run time) features, such as on-line answers
761 # to specific CGI requests, queries, or the results of calculations.
763 # For example, if you wanted to answer questions of clients, you could write
764 # a Perl program called "Answer.pl" with a function "AnswerQuestion()"
765 # that prints out the answer to requests given as arguments. You then write
766 # an HTML page "Respond.html" containing the following fragment:
768 # <center>
769 # The Answer to your question
770 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$Question'">
771 # <h3><SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">$Question</SCRIPT></h3>
772 # is
773 # <h3><SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl" SRC="./PATH/Answer.pl">
774 # AnswerQuestion($Question);
775 # </SCRIPT></h3>
776 # </center>
777 # <FORM ACTION=Respond.html METHOD=GET>
778 # Next question: <INPUT NAME="Question" TYPE=TEXT SIZE=40><br>
779 # <INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT VALUE="Ask">
780 # </FORM>
782 # The output could look like the following (in HTML-speak):
784 # <CENTER>
785 # The Answer to your question
786 # <h3>What is the capital of the Netherlands?</h3>
787 # is
788 # <h3>Amsterdam</h3>
789 # </CENTER>
790 # <FORM ACTION=Respond.html METHOD=GET>
791 # Next question: <INPUT NAME="Question" TYPE=TEXT SIZE=40><br>
792 # <INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT VALUE="Ask">
794 # Note that the function "Answer.pl" does know nothing about CGI or HTML,
795 # it just prints out answers to arguments. Likewise, the text has no
796 # provisions for scripts or CGI like constructs. Also, it is completely
797 # trivial to extend this "program" to use the "Answer" later in the page
798 # to call up other information or pictures/sounds. The final text never
799 # shows any cue as to what the original "source" looked like, i.e.,
800 # where you store your scripts and how they are called.
802 # There are some extra's. The argument of the files called in a SRC= tag
803 # can access the CGI variables declared in the preceding META tag from
804 # the @ARGV array. Executable files are called as:
805 # `file '$ARGV[0]' ... ` (e.g., `Answer.pl \'$Question\'`;)
806 # The files called from SRC can even be (CGIscriptor) html files which are
807 # processed in-line. Furthermore, the SRC= tag can contain a perl block
808 # that is evaluated. That is,
809 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$Question' SRC='{$Question}'">
810 # will result in the evaluation of "print do {$Question};" and the VALUE
811 # of $Question will be printed. Note that these "SRC-blocks" can be
812 # preceded and followed by other file names, but only a single block is
813 # allowed in a SRC= tag.
815 # One of the major hassles of dynamic WWW pages is the fact that several
816 # mutually incompatible browsers and platforms must be supported. For example,
817 # the way sound is played automatically is different for Netscape and
818 # Internet Explorer, and for each browser it is different again on
819 # Unix, MacOS, and Windows. Realy dangerous is processing user-supplied
820 # (form-) values to construct email addresses, file names, or database
821 # queries. All Apache WWW-server exploits reported in the media are
822 # based on faulty CGI-scripts that didn't check their user-data properly.
824 # There is no panacee for these problems, but a lot of work and problems
825 # can be saved by allowing easy and transparent control over which
826 # <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> blocks are executed on what CGI-data. CGIscriptor
827 # supplies such a method in the form of a pair of attributes:
828 # IF='...condition..' and UNLESS='...condition...'. When added to a
829 # script tag, the whole block (including the SRC attribute) will be
830 # ignored if the condition is false (IF) or true (UNLESS).
831 # For example, the following block will NOT be evaluated if the value
832 # of the CGI variable FILENAME is NOT a valid filename:
834 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl' CGI='$FILENAME'
835 # IF='CGIscriptor::CGIsafeFileName($FILENAME)'>
836 # .....
837 # </SCRIPT>
839 # (the function CGIsafeFileName(String) returns an empty string ("")
840 # if the String argument is not a valid filename).
841 # The UNLESS attribute is the mirror image of IF.
843 # A user manual follows the HTML 4 and security paragraphs below.
845 ##########################################################################
847 # HTML 4 compliance
849 # In general, CGIscriptor.pl complies with the HTML 4 recommendations of
850 # the W3C. This means that any software to manage Web sites will be able
851 # to handle CGIscriptor files, as will web agents.
853 # All script code should be placed between <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> tags, the
854 # script type is indicated with TYPE="mime-type", the LANGUAGE
855 # feature is ignored, and a SRC feature is implemented. All CGI specific
856 # features are delegated to the CGI attribute.
858 # However, the behavior deviates from the W3C recommendations at some
859 # points. Most notably:
860 # 0- The scripts are executed at the server side, invissible to the
861 # client (i.e., the browser)
862 # 1- The mime-types are personal and idiosyncratic, but can be adapted.
863 # 2- Code in the body of a <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> tag-pair is still evaluated
864 # when a SRC feature is present.
865 # 3- The SRC attribute reads a list of files.
866 # 4- The files in a SRC attribute are processed according to file type.
867 # 5- The SRC attribute evaluates inline Perl code.
868 # 6- Processed META, DIV, INS tags are removed from the output
869 # document.
870 # 7- All attributes of the processed META tags, except CONTENT, are ignored
871 # (i.e., deleted from the output).
872 # 8- META tags can be placed ANYWHERE in the document.
873 # 9- Through the SRC feature, META tags can have visible output in the
874 # document.
875 # 10- The CGI attribute that declares CGI parameters, can be used
876 # inside the <SCRIPT> tag.
877 # 11- Use of an extended quote set, i.e., '', "", ``, (), {}, []
878 # and their \-slashed combinations: \'\', \"\", \`\`, \(\),
879 # \{\}, \[\].
880 # 12- IF and UNLESS attributes to <SCRIPT>, <META>, <DIV>, <INS> tags.
881 # 13- <DIV> tags cannot be nested, DIV tags are not
882 # rendered with new-lines.
883 # 14- The XML style <TAG .... /> is recognized and handled correctly.
884 # (i.e., no content is processed)
886 # The reasons for these choices are:
887 # You can still write completely HTML4 compliant documents. CGIscriptor
888 # will not force you to write "deviant" code. However, it allows you to
889 # do so (which is, in fact, just as bad). The prime design principle
890 # was to allow users to include plain Perl code. The code itself should
891 # be "enhancement free". Therefore, extra features were needed to
892 # supply easy access to CGI and Web site components. For security
893 # reasons these have to be declared explicitly. The SRC feature
894 # transparently manages access to external files, especially the safe
895 # use of executable files.
896 # The CGI attribute handles the declarations of external (CGI) variables
897 # in the SCRIPT and META tag's.
898 # EVERYTHING THE CGI ATTRIBUTE AND THE META TAG DO CAN BE DONE INSIDE
899 # A <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> TAG CONSTRUCT.
901 # The reason for the IF, UNLESS, and SRC attributes (and their Perl code
902 # evaluation) were build into the META and SCRIPT tags is part laziness,
903 # part security. The SRC blocks allows more compact documents and easier
904 # debugging. The values of the CGI variables can be immediately screened
905 # for security by IF or UNLESS conditions, and even SRC attributes (e.g.,
906 # email addresses and file names), and a few commands can be called
907 # without having to add another Perl TAG pair. This is especially important
908 # for documents that require the use of other (more restricted) "scripting"
909 # languages and facilities that lag transparent control structures.
911 ##########################################################################
913 # SECURITY
915 # Your WWW site is a few keystrokes away from a few hundred million internet
916 # users. A fair percentage of these users knows more about your computer
917 # than you do. And some of these just might have bad intentions.
919 # To ensure uncompromized operation of your server and platform, several
920 # features are incorporated in CGIscriptor.pl to enhance security.
921 # First of all, you should check the source of this program. No security
922 # measures will help you when you download programs from anonymous sources.
923 # If you want to use THIS file, please make sure that it is uncompromized.
924 # The best way to do this is to contact the source and try to determine
925 # whether s/he is reliable (and accountable).
927 # BE AWARE THAT ANY PROGRAMMER CAN CHANGE THIS PROGRAM IN SUCH A WAY THAT
928 # IT WILL SET THE DOORS TO YOUR SYSTEM WIDE OPEN
930 # I would like to ask any user who finds bugs that could compromise
931 # security to report them to me (and any other bug too,
932 # Email: R.J.J.H.vanSon@uva.nl or ifa@hum.uva.nl).
934 # Security features
936 # 1 Invisibility
937 # The inner workings of the HTML source files are completely hidden
938 # from the client. Only the HTTP header and the ever changing content
939 # of the output distinguish it from the output of a plain, fixed HTML
940 # file. Names, structures, and arguments of the "embedded" scripts
941 # are invisible to the client. Error output is suppressed except
942 # during debugging (user configurable).
944 # 2 Separate directory trees
945 # Directories containing Inline text and script files can reside on
946 # separate trees, distinct from those of the HTTP server. This means
947 # that NEITHER the text files, NOR the script files can be read by
948 # clients other than through CGIscriptor.pl, UNLESS they are
949 # EXPLICITELY made available.
951 # 3 Requests are NEVER "evaluated"
952 # All client supplied values are used as literal values (''-quoted).
953 # Client supplied ''-quotes are ALWAYS removed. Therefore, as long as the
954 # embedded scripts do NOT themselves evaluate these values, clients CANNOT
955 # supply executable commands. Be sure to AVOID scripts like:
957 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$UserValue'">
958 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">$dir = `ls -1 $UserValue`;</SCRIPT>
960 # These are a recipe for disaster. However, the following quoted
961 # form should be save (but is still not adviced):
963 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">$dir = `ls -1 \'$UserValue\'`;</SCRIPT>
965 # A special function, SAFEqx(), will automatically do exactly this,
966 # e.g., SAFEqx('ls -1 $UserValue') will execute `ls -1 \'$UserValue\'`
967 # with $UserValue interpolated. I recommend to use SAFEqx() instead
968 # of backticks whenever you can. The OS shell scripts inside
970 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/osshell">ls -1 $UserValue</SCRIPT>
972 # are handeld by SAFEqx and automatically ''-quoted.
974 # 4 Logging of requests
975 # All requests can be logged separate from the Host server. The level of
976 # detail is user configurable: Including or excluding the actual queries.
977 # This allows for the inspection of (im-) proper use.
979 # 5 Access control: Clients
980 # The Remote addresses can be checked against a list of authorized
981 # (i.e., accepted) or non-authorized (i.e., rejected) clients. Both
982 # REMOTE_HOST and REMOTE_ADDR are tested so clients without a proper
983 # HOST name can be (in-) excluded by their IP-address. Client patterns
984 # containing all numbers and dots are considered IP-addresses, all others
985 # domain names. No wild-cards or regexp's are allowed, only partial
986 # addresses.
987 # Matching of names is done from the back to the front (domain first,
988 # i.e., $REMOTE_HOST =~ /\Q$pattern\E$/is), so including ".edu" will
989 # accept or reject all clients from the domain EDU. Matching of
990 # IP-addresses is done from the front to the back (domain first, i.e.,
991 # $REMOTE_ADDR =~ /^\Q$pattern\E/is), so including "128." will (in-)
992 # exclude all clients whose IP-address starts with 128.
993 # There are two special symbols: "-" matches HOSTs with no name and "*"
994 # matches ALL HOSTS/clients.
995 # For those needing more expressional power, lines starting with
996 # "-e" are evaluated by the perl eval() function. E.g.,
997 # '-e $REMOTE_HOST =~ /\.edu$/is;' will accept/reject clients from the
998 # domain '.edu'.
1000 # 6 Access control: Files
1001 # In principle, CGIscriptor could read ANY file in the directory
1002 # tree as discussed in 1. However, for security reasons this is
1003 # restricted to text files. It can be made more restricted by entering
1004 # a global file pattern (e.g., ".html"). This is done by default.
1005 # For each client requesting access, the file pattern(s) can be made
1006 # more restrictive than the global pattern by entering client specific
1007 # file patterns in the Access Control files (see 5).
1008 # For example: if the ACCEPT file contained the lines
1009 # * DEMO
1010 # .hum.uva.nl LET
1011 # 145.18.230.
1012 # Then all clients could request paths containing "DEMO" or "demo", e.g.
1013 # "/my/demo/file.html" ($PATH_INFO =~ /\Q$pattern\E/), Clients from
1014 # *.hum.uva.nl could also request paths containing "LET or "let", e.g.
1015 # "/my/let/file.html", and clients from the local cluster
1016 # 145.18.230.[0-9]+ could access ALL files.
1017 # Again, for those needing more expressional power, lines starting with
1018 # "-e" are evaluated. For instance:
1019 # '-e $REMOTE_HOST =~ /\.edu$/is && $PATH_INFO =~ m@/DEMO/@is;'
1020 # will accept/reject requests for files from the directory "/demo/" from
1021 # clients from the domain '.edu'.
1023 # 7 Access control: Server side session tickets
1024 # Specific paths can be controlled by Session Tickets which must be
1025 # present as a SESSIONTICKET=<value> CGI variable in the request. These paths
1026 # are defined in %TicketRequiredPatterns as pairs of:
1027 # ('regexp' => 'SessionPath\tPasswordPath\tLogin.html\tExpiration').
1028 # Session Tickets are stored in a separate directory (SessionPath, e.g.,
1029 # "Private/.Session") as files with the exact same name of the SESSIONTICKET
1030 # CGI. The following is an example:
1031 # Type: SESSION
1032 # IPaddress: 127.0.0.1
1033 # AllowedPaths: ^/Private/Name/
1034 # Expires: 3600
1035 # Username: test
1036 # ...
1037 # Other content can follow.
1039 # It is adviced that Session Tickets should be deleted
1040 # after some (idle) time. The IP address should be the IP number at login, and
1041 # the SESSIONTICKET will be rejected if it is presented from another IP address.
1042 # AllowedPaths and DeniedPaths are perl regexps. Be careful how they match. Make sure to delimit
1043 # the names to prevent access to overlapping names, eg, "^/Private/Rob" will also
1044 # match "^/Private/Robert", however, "^/Private/Rob/" will not. Expires is the
1045 # time the ticket will remain valid after creation (file ctime). Time can be given
1046 # in s[econds] (default), m[inutes], h[hours], or d[ays], eg, "24h" means 24 hours.
1047 # None of these need be present, but the Ticket must have a non-zero size.
1049 # Next to Session Tickets, there are two other type of ticket files:
1050 # - LOGIN tickets store information about a current login request
1051 # - PASSWORD ticket store account information to authorize login requests
1053 # 8 Query length limiting
1054 # The length of the Query string can be limited. If CONTENT_LENGTH is larger
1055 # than this limit, the request is rejected. The combined length of the
1056 # Query string and the POST input is checked before any processing is done.
1057 # This will prevent clients from overloading the scripts.
1058 # The actual, combined, Query Size is accessible as a variable through
1059 # $CGI_Content_Length.
1061 # 9 Illegal filenames, paths, and protected directories
1062 # One of the primary security concerns in handling CGI-scripts is the
1063 # use of "funny" characters in the requests that con scripts in executing
1064 # malicious commands. Examples are inserting ';', null bytes, or <newline>
1065 # characters in URL's and filenames, followed by executable commands. A
1066 # special variable $FileAllowedChars stores a string of all allowed
1067 # characters. Any request that translates to a filename with a character
1068 # OUTSIDE this set will be rejected.
1069 # In general, all (readable files) in the DocumentRoot tree are accessible.
1070 # This might not be what you want. For instance, your DocumentRoot directory
1071 # might be the working directory of a CVS project and contain sensitive
1072 # information (e.g., the password to get to the repository). You can block
1073 # access to these subdirectories by adding the corresponding patterns to
1074 # the $BlockPathAccess variable. For instance, $BlockPathAccess = '/CVS/'
1075 # will block any request that contains '/CVS/' or:
1076 # die if $BlockPathAccess && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@$BlockPathAccess@;
1078 #10 The execution of code blocks can be controlled in a transparent way
1079 # by adding IF or UNLESS conditions in the tags themselves. That is,
1080 # a simple check of the validity of filenames or email addresses can
1081 # be done before any code is executed.
1083 ###############################################################################
1085 # USER MANUAL (sort of)
1087 # CGIscriptor removes embedded scripts, indicated by an HTML 4 type
1088 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'> </SCRIPT> or <SCRIPT TYPE='text/osshell'>
1089 # </SCRIPT> constructs. CGIscriptor also recognizes XML-type
1090 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'/> constructs. These are usefull when
1091 # the necessary code is already available in the TAG itself (e.g.,
1092 # using external files). The contents of the directive are executed by
1093 # the PERL eval() and `` functions (in a separate name space). The
1094 # result of the eval() function replaces the <SCRIPT> </SCRIPT> construct
1095 # in the output file. You can use the values that are delivered in
1096 # CGI-compliant form (i.e., the "?name=value&.." type URL additions)
1097 # transparently as "$name" variables in your directives after they are
1098 # defined in a <META> or <SCRIPT> tag.
1099 # If you define the variable "$CGIscriptorResults" in a CGI attribute, all
1100 # subsequent <SCRIPT> and <META> results (including the defining
1101 # tag) will also be pushed onto a stack: @CGIscriptorResults. This list
1102 # behaves like any other, ordinary list and can be manipulated.
1104 # Both GET and POST requests are accepted. These two methods are treated
1105 # equal. Variables, i.e., those values that are determined when a file is
1106 # processed, are indicated in the CGI attribute by $<name> or $<name>=<default>
1107 # in which <name> is the name of the variable and <default> is the value
1108 # used when there is NO current CGI value for <name> (you can use
1109 # white-spaces in $<name>=<default> but really DO make sure that the
1110 # default value is followed by white space or is quoted). Names can contain
1111 # any alphanumeric characters and _ (i.e., names match /[\w]+/).
1112 # If the Content-type: is 'multipart/*', the input is treated as a
1113 # MIME multipart message and automatically delimited. CGI variables get
1114 # the "raw" (i.e., undecoded) body of the corresponding message part.
1116 # Variables can be CGI variables, i.e., those from the QUERY_STRING,
1117 # environment variables, e.g., REMOTE_USER, REMOTE_HOST, or REMOTE_ADDR,
1118 # or predefined values, e.g., CGI_Decoded_QS (The complete, decoded,
1119 # query string), CGI_Content_Length (the length of the decoded query
1120 # string), CGI_Year, CGI_Month, CGI_Time, and CGI_Hour (the current
1121 # date and time).
1123 # All these are available when defined in a CGI attribute. All environment
1124 # variables are accessible as $ENV{'name'}. So, to access the REMOTE_HOST
1125 # and the REMOTE_USER, use, e.g.:
1127 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'>
1128 # ($ENV{'REMOTE_HOST'}||"-")." $ENV{'REMOTE_USER'}"
1129 # </SCRIPT>
1131 # (This will print a "-" if REMOTE_HOST is not known)
1132 # Another way to do this is:
1134 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$REMOTE_HOST = - $REMOTE_USER'">
1135 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'>"$REMOTE_HOST $REMOTE_USER"</SCRIPT>
1136 # or
1137 # <META CONTENT='text/ssperl; CGI="$REMOTE_HOST = - $REMOTE_USER"
1138 # SRC={"$REMOTE_HOST $REMOTE_USER\n"}'>
1140 # This is possible because ALL environment variables are available as
1141 # CGI variables. The environment variables take precedence over CGI
1142 # names in case of a "name clash". For instance:
1143 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='$HOME' SRC={$HOME}">
1144 # Will print the current HOME directory (environment) irrespective whether
1145 # there is a CGI variable from the query
1146 # (e.g., Where do you live? <INPUT TYPE="TEXT" NAME="HOME">)
1147 # THIS IS A SECURITY FEATURE. It prevents clients from changing
1148 # the values of defined environment variables (e.g., by supplying
1149 # a bogus $REMOTE_ADDR). Although $ENV{} is not changed by the META tags,
1150 # it would make the use of declared variables insecure. You can still
1151 # access CGI variables after a name clash with
1152 # CGIscriptor::CGIparseValue(<name>).
1154 # Some CGI variables are present several times in the query string
1155 # (e.g., from multiple selections). These should be defined as
1156 # @VARIABLENAME=default in the CGI attribute. The list @VARIABLENAME
1157 # will contain ALL VARIABLENAME values from the query, or a single
1158 # default value. If there is an ENVIRONMENT variable of the
1159 # same name, it will be used instead of the default AND the query
1160 # values. The corresponding function is
1161 # CGIscriptor::CGIparseValueList(<name>)
1163 # CGI variables collected in a @VARIABLENAME list are unordered.
1164 # When more structured variables are needed, a hash table can be used.
1165 # A variable defined as %VARIABLE=default will collect all
1166 # CGI-parameters whose name start with 'VARIABLE' in a hash table with
1167 # the remainder of the name as a key. For instance, %PERSON will
1168 # collect PERSONname='John Doe', PERSONbirthdate='01 Jan 00', and
1169 # PERSONspouse='Alice' into a hash table %PERSON such that $PERSON{'spouse'}
1170 # equals 'Alice'. Any default value or environment value will be stored
1171 # under the "" key. If there is an ENVIRONMENT variable of the same name,
1172 # it will be used instead of the default AND the query values. The
1173 # corresponding function is CGIscriptor::CGIparseValueHash(<name>)
1175 # This method of first declaring your environment and CGI variables
1176 # before being able to use them in the scripts might seem somewhat
1177 # clumsy, but it protects you from inadvertedly printing out the values of
1178 # system environment variables when their names coincide with those used
1179 # in the CGI forms. It also prevents "clients" from supplying CGI
1180 # parameter values for your private variables.
1181 # THIS IS A SECURITY FEATURE!
1184 # NON-HTML CONTENT TYPES
1186 # Normally, CGIscriptor prints the standard "Content-type: text/html\n\n"
1187 # message before anything is printed. This has been extended to include
1188 # plain text (.txt) files, for which the Content-type (MIME type)
1189 # 'text/plain' is printed. In all other respects, text files are treated
1190 # as HTML files (this can be switched off by removing '.txt' from the
1191 # $FilePattern variable) . When the content type should be something else,
1192 # e.g., with multipart files, use the $RawFilePattern (.xmr, see also next
1193 # item). CGIscriptor will not print a Content-type message for this file
1194 # type (which must supply its OWN Content-type message). Raw files must
1195 # still conform to the <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> and <META> tag specifications.
1198 # NON-HTML FILES
1200 # CGIscriptor is intended to process HTML and text files only. You can
1201 # create documents of any mime-type on-the-fly using "raw" text files,
1202 # e.g., with the .xmr extension. However, CGIscriptor will not process
1203 # binary files of any type, e.g., pictures or sounds. Given the sheer
1204 # number of formats, I do not have any intention to do so. However,
1205 # an escape route has been provided. You can construct a genuine raw
1206 # (.xmr) text file that contains the perl code to service any file type
1207 # you want. If the global $BinaryMapFile variable contains the path to
1208 # this file (e.g., /BinaryMapFile.xmr), this file will be called
1209 # whenever an unsupported (non-HTML) file type is requested. The path
1210 # to the requested binary file is stored in $ENV('CGI_BINARY_FILE')
1211 # and can be used like any other CGI-variable. Servicing binary files
1212 # then becomes supplying the correct Content-type (e.g., print
1213 # "Content-type: image/jpeg\n\n";) and reading the file and writing it
1214 # to STDOUT (e.g., using sysread() and syswrite()).
1217 # THE META TAG
1219 # All attributes of a META tag are ignored, except the
1220 # CONTENT='text/ssperl; CGI=" ... " [SRC=" ... "]' attribute. The string
1221 # inside the quotes following the CONTENT= indication (white-space is
1222 # ignored, "" '' `` (){}[]-quote pairs are allowed, plus their \ versions)
1223 # MUST start with any of the CGIscriptor mime-types (e.g.: text/ssperl or
1224 # text/osshell) and a comma or semicolon.
1225 # The quoted string following CGI= contains a white-space separated list
1226 # of declarations of the CGI (and Environment) values and default values
1227 # used when no CGI values are supplied by the query string.
1229 # If the default value is a longer string containing special characters,
1230 # possibly spanning several lines, the string must be enclosed in quotes.
1231 # You may use any pair of quotes or brackets from the list '', "", ``, (),
1232 # [], or {} to distinguish default values (or preceded by \, e.g., \(...\)
1233 # is different from (...)). The outermost pair will always be used and any
1234 # other quotes inside the string are considered to be part of the string
1235 # value, e.g.,
1237 # $Value = {['this'
1238 # "and" (this)]}
1239 # will result in $Value getting the default value: ['this'
1240 # "and" (this)]
1241 # (NOTE that the newline is part of the default value!).
1243 # Internally, for defining and initializing CGI (ENV) values, the META
1244 # and SCRIPT tags use the functions "defineCGIvariable($name, $default)"
1245 # (scalars) and "defineCGIvariableList($name, $default)" (lists).
1246 # These functions can be used inside scripts as
1247 # "CGIscriptor::defineCGIvariable($name, $default)" and
1248 # "CGIscriptor::defineCGIvariableList($name, $default)".
1249 # "CGIscriptor::defineCGIvariableHash($name, $default)".
1251 # The CGI attribute will be processed exactly identical when used inside
1252 # the <SCRIPT> tag. However, this use is not according to the
1253 # HTML 4.0 specifications of the W3C.
1256 # THE DIV/INS TAGS
1258 # There is a problem when constructing html files containing
1259 # server-side perl scripts with standard HTML tools. These
1260 # tools will refuse to process any text between <SCRIPT></SCRIPT>
1261 # tags. This is quite annoying when you want to use large
1262 # HTML templates where you will fill in values.
1264 # For this purpose, CGIscriptor will read the neutral
1265 # <DIV CLASS="ssperl" ID="varname"></DIV> or
1266 # <INS CLASS="ssperl" ID="varname"></INS>
1267 # tag (in Cascading Style Sheet manner) Note that
1268 # "varname" has NO '$' before it, it is a bare name.
1269 # Any text between these <DIV ...></DIV> or
1270 # <INS ...></INS>tags will be assigned to '$varname'
1271 # as is (e.g., as a literal).
1272 # No processing or interpolation will be performed.
1273 # There is also NO nesting possible. Do NOT nest a
1274 # </DIV> inside a <DIV></DIV>! Moreover, neither INS nor
1275 # DIV tags do ensure a block structure in the final
1276 # rendering (i.e., no empty lines).
1278 # Note that <DIV CLASS="ssperl" ID="varname"/>
1279 # is handled the XML way. No content is processed,
1280 # but varname is defined, and any SRC directives are
1281 # processed.
1283 # You can use $varname like any other variable name.
1284 # However, $varname is NOT a CGI variable and will be
1285 # completely internal to your script. There is NO
1286 # interaction between $varname and the outside world.
1288 # To interpolate a DIV derived text, you can use:
1289 # $varname =~ s/([\]])/\\\1/g; # Mark ']'-quotes
1290 # $varname = eval("qq[$varname]"); # Interpolate all values
1292 # The DIV tags will process IF, UNLESS, CGI and
1293 # SRC attributes. The SRC files will be pre-pended to the
1294 # body text of the tag. SRC blocks are NOT executed.
1296 # CONDITIONAL PROCESSING: THE 'IF' AND 'UNLESS' ATTRIBUTES
1298 # It is often necessary to include code-blocks that should be executed
1299 # conditionally, e.g., only for certain browsers or operating system.
1300 # Furthermore, quite often sanity and security checks are necessary
1301 # before user (form) data can be processed, e.g., with respect to
1302 # email addresses and filenames.
1304 # Checks added to the code are often difficult to find, interpret or
1305 # maintain and in general mess up the code flow. This kind of confussion
1306 # is dangerous.
1307 # Also, for many of the supported "foreign" scripting languages, adding
1308 # these checks is cumbersome or even impossible.
1310 # As a uniform method for asserting the correctness of "context", two
1311 # attributes are added to all supported tags: IF and UNLESS.
1312 # They both evaluate their value and block execution when the
1313 # result is <FALSE> (IF) or <TRUE> (UNLESS) in Perl, e.g.,
1314 # UNLESS='$NUMBER \> 100;' blocks execution if $NUMBER <= 100. Note that
1315 # the backslash in the '\>' is removed and only used to differentiate
1316 # this conditional '>' from the tag-closing '>'. For symmetry, the
1317 # backslash in '\<' is also removed. Inside these conditionals,
1318 # ~/ and ./ are expanded to their respective directory root paths.
1320 # For example, the following tag will be ignored when the filename is
1321 # invalid:
1323 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl' CGI='$FILENAME'
1324 # IF='CGIscriptor::CGIsafeFileName($FILENAME);'>
1325 # ...
1326 # </SCRIPT>
1328 # The IF and UNLESS values must be quoted. The same quotes are supported
1329 # as with the other attributes. The SRC attribute is ignored when IF and
1330 # UNLESS block execution.
1332 # NOTE: 'IF' and 'UNLESS' always evaluate perl code.
1335 # THE MAGIC SOURCE ATTRIBUTE (SRC=)
1337 # The SRC attribute inside tags accepts a list of filenames and URL's
1338 # separated by "," comma's (or ";" semicolons).
1339 # ALL the variable values defined in the CGI attribute are available
1340 # in @ARGV as if the file or block was executed from the command line,
1341 # in the exact order in which they were declared in the preceding CGI
1342 # attribute.
1344 # First, a SRC={}-block will be evaluated as if the code inside the
1345 # block was part of a <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> construct, i.e.,
1346 # "print do { code };'';" or `code` (i.e., SAFEqx('code)).
1347 # Only a single block is evaluated. Note that this is processed less
1348 # efficiently than <SCRIPT> </SCRIPT> blocks. Type of evaluation
1349 # depends on the content-type: Perl for text/ssperl and OS shell for
1350 # text/osshell. For other mime types (scripting languages), anything in
1351 # the source block is put in front of the code block "inside" the tag.
1353 # Second, executable files (i.e., -x filename != 0) are evaluated as:
1354 # print `filename \'$ARGV[0]\' \'$ARGV[1]\' ...`
1355 # That is, you can actually call executables savely from the SRC tag.
1357 # Third, text files that match the file pattern, used by CGIscriptor to
1358 # check whether files should be processed ($FilePattern), are
1359 # processed in-line (i.e., recursively) by CGIscriptor as if the code
1360 # was inserted in the original source file. Recursions, i.e., calling
1361 # a file inside itself, are blocked. If you need them, you have to code
1362 # them explicitely using "main::ProcessFile($file_path)".
1364 # Fourth, Perl text files (i.e., -T filename != 0) are evaluated as:
1365 # "do FileName;'';".
1367 # Last, URL's (i.e., starting with 'HTTP://', 'FTP://', 'GOPHER://',
1368 # 'TELNET://', 'WHOIS://' etc.) are loaded
1369 # and printed. The loading and handling of <BASE> and document header
1370 # is done by a command generated by main::GET_URL($URL [, 0]). You can enter your
1371 # own code (default is curl, wget, or snarf and some post-processing to add a <BASE> tag).
1373 # There are two pseudo-file names: PREFIX and POSTFIX. These implement
1374 # a switch from prefixing the SRC code/files (PREFIX, default) before the
1375 # content of the tag to appending the code after the content of the tag
1376 # (POSTFIX). The switches are done in the order in which the PREFIX and
1377 # POSTFIX labels are encountered. You can mix PREFIX and POSTFIX labels
1378 # in any order with the SRC files. Note that the ORDER of file execution
1379 # is determined for prefixed and postfixed files seperately.
1381 # File paths can be preceded by the URL protocol prefix "file://". This
1382 # is simply STRIPPED from the name.
1384 # Example:
1385 # The request
1386 # "http://cgi-bin/Action_Forms.pl/Statistics/Sign_Test.html?positive=8&negative=22
1387 # will result in printing "${SS_PUB}/Statistics/Sign_Test.html"
1388 # With QUERY_STRING = "positive=8&negative=22"
1390 # on encountering the lines:
1391 # <META CONTENT="text/osshell; CGI='$positive=11 $negative=3'">
1392 # <b><SCRIPT LANGUAGE=PERL TYPE="text/ssperl" SRC="./Statistics/SignTest.pl">
1393 # </SCRIPT></b><p>"
1395 # This line will be processed as:
1396 # "<b>`${SS_SCRIPT}/Statistics/SignTest.pl '8' '22'`</b><p>"
1398 # In which "${SS_SCRIPT}/Statistics/SignTest.pl" is an executable script,
1399 # This line will end up printed as:
1400 # "<b>p <= 0.0161</b><p>"
1402 # Note that the META tag itself will never be printed, and is invisible to
1403 # the outside world.
1405 # The SRC files in a DIV or INS tag will be added (pre-pended) to the body
1406 # of the <DIV></DIV> tag. Blocks are NOT executed! If you do not
1407 # need any content, you can use the <DIV...../> format.
1410 # THE CGISCRIPTOR ROOT DIRECTORIES ~/ AND ./
1412 # Inside <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> tags, filepaths starting
1413 # with "~/" are replaced by "$YOUR_HTML_FILES/", this way files in the
1414 # public directories can be accessed without direct reference to the
1415 # actual paths. Filepaths starting with "./" are replaced by
1416 # "$YOUR_SCRIPTS/" and this should only be used for scripts.
1418 # Note: this replacement can seriously affect Perl scripts. Watch
1419 # out for constructs like $a =~ s/aap\./noot./g, use
1420 # $a =~ s@aap\.@noot.@g instead.
1422 # CGIscriptor.pl will assign the values of $SS_PUB and $SS_SCRIPT
1423 # (i.e., $YOUR_HTML_FILES and $YOUR_SCRIPTS) to the environment variables
1424 # $SS_PUB and $SS_SCRIPT. These can be accessed by the scripts that are
1425 # executed.
1426 # Values not preceded by $, ~/, or ./ are used as literals
1429 # OS SHELL SCRIPT EVALUATION (CONTENT-TYPE=TEXT/OSSHELL)
1431 # OS scripts are executed by a "safe" version of the `` operator (i.e.,
1432 # SAFEqx(), see also below) and any output is printed. CGIscriptor will
1433 # interpolate the script and replace all user-supplied CGI-variables by
1434 # their ''-quoted values (actually, all variables defined in CGI attributes
1435 # are quoted). Other Perl variables are interpolated in a simple fasion,
1436 # i.e., $scalar by their value, @list by join(' ', @list), and %hash by
1437 # their name=value pairs. Complex references, e.g., @$variable, are all
1438 # evaluated in a scalar context. Quotes should be used with care.
1439 # NOTE: the results of the shell script evaluation will appear in the
1440 # @CGIscriptorResults stack just as any other result.
1441 # All occurrences of $@% that should NOT be interpolated must be
1442 # preceeded by a "\". Interpolation can be switched off completely by
1443 # setting $CGIscriptor::NoShellScriptInterpolation = 1
1444 # (set to 0 or undef to switch interpolation on again)
1445 # i.e.,
1446 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">
1447 # $CGIscriptor::NoShellScriptInterpolation = 1;
1448 # </SCRIPT>
1451 # RUN TIME TRANSLATION OF INPUT FILES
1453 # Allows general and global conversions of files using Regular Expressions.
1454 # Very handy (but costly) to rewrite legacy pages to a new format.
1455 # Select files to use it on with
1456 # my $TranslationPaths = 'filepattern';
1457 # This is costly. For efficiency, define:
1458 # $TranslationPaths = ''; when not using translations.
1459 # Accepts general regular expressions: [$pattern, $replacement]
1461 # Define:
1462 # my $TranslationPaths = 'filepattern'; # Pattern matching PATH_INFO
1464 # push(@TranslationTable, ['pattern', 'replacement']);
1465 # e.g. (for Ruby Rails):
1466 # push(@TranslationTable, ['<%=', '<SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssruby">']);
1467 # push(@TranslationTable, ['%>', '</SCRIPT>']);
1469 # Runs:
1470 # my $currentRegExp;
1471 # foreach $currentRegExp (@TranslationTable)
1473 # my ($pattern, $replacement) = @$currentRegExp;
1474 # $$text =~ s!$pattern!$replacement!msg;
1475 # };
1478 # EVALUATION OF OTHER SCRIPTING LANGUAGES
1480 # Adding a MIME-type and an interpreter command to
1481 # %ScriptingLanguages automatically will catch any other
1482 # scripting language in the standard
1483 # <SCRIPT TYPE="[mime]"></SCRIPT> manner.
1484 # E.g., adding: $ScriptingLanguages{'text/sspython'} = 'python';
1485 # will actually execute the folowing code in an HTML page
1486 # (ignore 'REMOTE_HOST' for the moment):
1487 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/sspython">
1488 # # A Python script
1489 # x = ["A","real","python","script","Hello","World","and", REMOTE_HOST]
1490 # print x[4:8] # Prints the list ["Hello","World","and", REMOTE_HOST]
1491 # </SCRIPT>
1493 # The script code is NOT interpolated by perl, EXCEPT for those
1494 # interpreters that cannot handle variables themselves.
1495 # Currently, several interpreters are pre-installed:
1497 # Perl test - "text/testperl" => 'perl',
1498 # Python - "text/sspython" => 'python',
1499 # Ruby - "text/ssruby" => 'ruby',
1500 # Tcl - "text/sstcl" => 'tcl',
1501 # Awk - "text/ssawk" => 'awk -f-',
1502 # Gnu Lisp - "text/sslisp" => 'rep | tail +5 '.
1503 # "| egrep -v '> |^rep. |^nil\\\$'",
1504 # XLispstat - "text/xlispstat" => 'xlispstat | tail +7 '.
1505 # "| egrep -v '> \\\$|^NIL'",
1506 # Gnu Prolog- "text/ssprolog" => 'gprolog',
1507 # M4 macro's- "text/ssm4" => 'm4',
1508 # Born shell- "text/sh" => 'sh',
1509 # Bash - "text/bash" => 'bash',
1510 # C-shell - "text/csh" => 'csh',
1511 # Korn shell- "text/ksh" => 'ksh',
1512 # Praat - "text/sspraat" => "praat - | sed 's/Praat > //g'",
1513 # R - "text/ssr" => "R --vanilla --slave | sed 's/^[\[0-9\]*] //g'",
1514 # REBOL - "text/ssrebol" =>
1515 # "rebol --quiet|egrep -v '^[> ]* == '|sed 's/^\s*\[> \]* //g'",
1516 # PostgreSQL- "text/postgresql" => 'psql 2>/dev/null',
1517 # (psql)
1519 # Note that the "value" of $ScriptingLanguages{mime} must be a command
1520 # that reads Standard Input and writes to standard output. Any extra
1521 # output of interactive interpreters (banners, echo's, prompts)
1522 # should be removed by piping the output through 'tail', 'grep',
1523 # 'sed', or even 'awk' or 'perl'.
1525 # For access to CGI variables there is a special hashtable:
1526 # %ScriptingCGIvariables.
1527 # CGI variables can be accessed in three ways.
1528 # 1. If the mime type is not present in %ScriptingCGIvariables,
1529 # nothing is done and the script itself should parse the relevant
1530 # environment variables.
1531 # 2. If the mime type IS present in %ScriptingCGIvariables, but it's
1532 # value is empty, e.g., $ScriptingCGIvariables{"text/sspraat"} = '';,
1533 # the script text is interpolated by perl. That is, all $var, @array,
1534 # %hash, and \-slashes are replaced by their respective values.
1535 # 3. In all other cases, the CGI and environment variables are added
1536 # in front of the script according to the format stored in
1537 # %ScriptingCGIvariables. That is, the following (pseudo-)code is
1538 # executed for each CGI- or Environment variable defined in the CGI-tag:
1539 # printf(INTERPRETER, $ScriptingCGIvariables{$mime}, $CGI_NAME, $CGI_VALUE);
1541 # For instance, "text/testperl" => '$%s = "%s";' defines variable
1542 # definitions for Perl, and "text/sspython" => '%s = "%s"' for Python
1543 # (note that these definitions are not save, the real ones contain '-quotes).
1545 # THIS WILL NOT WORK FOR @VARIABLES, the (empty) $VARIABLES will be used
1546 # instead.
1548 # The $CGI_VALUE parameters are "shrubed" of all control characters
1549 # and quotes (by &shrubCGIparameter($CGI_VALUE)) for the options 2 and 3.
1550 # Control characters are replaced by \0<octal ascii value> (the exception
1551 # is \015, the newline, which is replaced by \n) and quotes
1552 # and backslashes by their HTML character
1553 # value (' -> &#39; ` -> &#96; " -> &quot; \ -> &#92; & -> &amper;).
1554 # For example:
1555 # if a client would supply the string value (in standard perl, e.g.,
1556 # \n means <newline>)
1557 # "/dev/null';\nrm -rf *;\necho '"
1558 # it would be processed as
1559 # '/dev/null&#39;;\nrm -rf *;\necho &#39;'
1560 # (e.g., sh or bash would process the latter more according to your
1561 # intentions).
1562 # If your intepreter requires different protection measures, you will
1563 # have to supply these in %main::SHRUBcharacterTR (string => translation),
1564 # e.g., $SHRUBcharacterTR{"\'"} = "&#39;";
1566 # Currently, the following definitions are used:
1567 # %ScriptingCGIvariables = (
1568 # "text/testperl" => "\$\%s = '\%s';", # Perl $VAR = 'value' (for testing)
1569 # "text/sspython" => "\%s = '\%s'", # Python VAR = 'value'
1570 # "text/ssruby" => '@%s = "%s"', # Ruby @VAR = "value"
1571 # "text/sstcl" => 'set %s "%s"', # TCL set VAR "value"
1572 # "text/ssawk" => '%s = "%s";', # Awk VAR = "value";
1573 # "text/sslisp" => '(setq %s "%s")', # Gnu lisp (rep) (setq VAR "value")
1574 # "text/xlispstat" => '(setq %s "%s")', # Xlispstat (setq VAR "value")
1575 # "text/ssprolog" => '', # Gnu prolog (interpolated)
1576 # "text/ssm4" => "define(`\%s', `\%s')", # M4 macro's define(`VAR', `value')
1577 # "text/sh" => "\%s='\%s';", # Born shell VAR='value';
1578 # "text/bash" => "\%s='\%s';", # Born again shell VAR='value';
1579 # "text/csh" => "\$\%s = '\%s';", # C shell $VAR = 'value';
1580 # "text/ksh" => "\$\%s = '\%s';", # Korn shell $VAR = 'value';
1581 # "text/sspraat" => '', # Praat (interpolation)
1582 # "text/ssr" => '%s <- "%s";', # R VAR <- "value";
1583 # "text/ssrebol" => '%s: copy "%s"', # REBOL VAR: copy "value"
1584 # "text/postgresql" => '', # PostgreSQL (interpolation)
1585 # "" => ""
1586 # );
1588 # Four tables allow fine-tuning of interpreter with code that should be
1589 # added before and after each code block:
1591 # Code added before each script block
1592 # %ScriptingPrefix = (
1593 # "text/testperl" => "\# Prefix Code;", # Perl script testing
1594 # "text/ssm4" => 'divert(0)' # M4 macro's (open STDOUT)
1595 # );
1596 # Code added at the end of each script block
1597 # %ScriptingPostfix = (
1598 # "text/testperl" => "\# Postfix Code;", # Perl script testing
1599 # "text/ssm4" => 'divert(-1)' # M4 macro's (block STDOUT)
1600 # );
1601 # Initialization code, inserted directly after opening (NEVER interpolated)
1602 # %ScriptingInitialization = (
1603 # "text/testperl" => "\# Initialization Code;", # Perl script testing
1604 # "text/ssawk" => 'BEGIN {', # Server Side awk scripts
1605 # "text/sslisp" => '(prog1 nil ', # Lisp (rep)
1606 # "text/xlispstat" => '(prog1 nil ', # xlispstat
1607 # "text/ssm4" => 'divert(-1)' # M4 macro's (block STDOUT)
1608 # );
1609 # Cleanup code, inserted before closing (NEVER interpolated)
1610 # %ScriptingCleanup = (
1611 # "text/testperl" => "\# Cleanup Code;", # Perl script testing
1612 # "text/sspraat" => 'Quit',
1613 # "text/ssawk" => '};', # Server Side awk scripts
1614 # "text/sslisp" => '(princ "\n" standard-output)).' # Closing print to rep
1615 # "text/xlispstat" => '(print "" *standard-output*)).' # Closing print to xlispstat
1616 # "text/postgresql" => '\q',
1617 # );
1620 # The SRC attribute is NOT magical for these interpreters. In short,
1621 # all code inside a source file or {} block is written verbattim
1622 # to the interpreter. No (pre-)processing or executional magic is done.
1624 # A serious shortcomming of the described mechanism for handling other
1625 # (scripting) languages, with respect to standard perl scripts
1626 # (i.e., 'text/ssperl'), is that the code is only executed when
1627 # the pipe to the interpreter is closed. So the pipe has to be
1628 # closed at the end of each block. This means that the state of the
1629 # interpreter (e.g., all variable values) is lost after the closing of
1630 # the next </SCRIPT> tag. The standard 'text/ssperl' scripts retain
1631 # all values and definitions.
1633 # APPLICATION MIME TYPES
1635 # To ease some important auxilliary functions from within the
1636 # html pages I have added them as MIME types. This uses
1637 # the mechanism that is also used for the evaluation of
1638 # other scripting languages, with interpolation of CGI
1639 # parameters (and perl-variables). Actually, these are
1640 # defined exactly like any other "scripting language".
1642 # text/ssdisplay: display some (HTML) text with interpolated
1643 # variables (uses `cat`).
1644 # text/sslogfile: write (append) the interpolated block to the file
1645 # mentioned on the first, non-empty line
1646 # (the filename can be preceded by 'File: ',
1647 # note the space after the ':',
1648 # uses `awk .... >> <filename>`).
1649 # text/ssmailto: send email directly from within the script block.
1650 # The first line of the body must contain
1651 # To:Name@Valid.Email.Address
1652 # (note: NO space between 'To:' and the email adres)
1653 # For other options see the mailto man pages.
1654 # It works by directly sending the (interpolated)
1655 # content of the text block to a pipe into the
1656 # Linux program 'mailto'.
1658 # In these script blocks, all Perl variables will be
1659 # replaced by their values. All CGI variables are cleaned before
1660 # they are used. These CGI variables must be redefined with a
1661 # CGI attribute to restore their original values.
1662 # In general, this will be more secure than constructing
1663 # e.g., your own email command lines. For instance, Mailto will
1664 # not execute any odd (forged) email addres, but just stops
1665 # when the email address is invalid and awk will construct
1666 # any filename you give it (e.g. '<File;rm\\\040-f' would end up
1667 # as a "valid" UNIX filename). Note that it will also gladly
1668 # store this file anywhere (/../../../etc/passwd will work!).
1669 # Use the CGIscriptor::CGIsafeFileName() function to clean the
1670 # filename.
1672 # SHELL SCRIPT PIPING
1674 # If a shell script starts with the UNIX style "#! <shell command> \n"
1675 # line, the rest of the shell script is piped into the indicated command,
1676 # i.e.,
1677 # open(COMMAND, "| command");print COMMAND $RestOfScript;
1679 # In many ways this is equivalent to the MIME-type profiling for
1680 # evaluating other scripting languages as discussed above. The
1681 # difference breaks down to convenience. Shell script piping is a
1682 # "raw" implementation. It allows you to control all aspects of
1683 # execution. Using the MIME-type profiling is easier, but has a
1684 # lot of defaults built in that might get in the way. Another
1685 # difference is that shell script piping uses the SAFEqx() function,
1686 # and MIME-type profiling does not.
1688 # Execution of shell scripts is under the control of the Perl Script blocks
1689 # in the document. The MIME-type triggered execution of <SCRIPT></SCRIPT>
1690 # blocks can be simulated easily. You can switch to a different shell,
1691 # e.g. tcl, completely by executing the following Perl commands inside
1692 # your document:
1694 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">
1695 # $main::ShellScriptContentType = "text/ssTcl"; # Yes, you can do this
1696 # CGIscriptor::RedirectShellScript('/usr/bin/tcl'); # Pipe to Tcl
1697 # $CGIscriptor::NoShellScriptInterpolation = 1;
1698 # </SCRIPT>
1700 # After this script is executed, CGIscriptor will parse scripts of
1701 # TYPE="text/ssTcl" and pipe their contents into '|/usr/bin/tcl'
1702 # WITHOUT interpolation (i.e., NO substitution of Perl variables).
1703 # The crucial function is :
1704 # CGIscriptor::RedirectShellScript('/usr/bin/tcl')
1705 # After executing this function, all shell scripts AND all
1706 # calls to SAFEqx()) are piped into '|/usr/bin/tcl'. If the argument
1707 # of RedirectShellScript is empty, e.g., '', the original (default)
1708 # value is reset.
1710 # The standard output, STDOUT, of any pipe is send to the client.
1711 # Currently, you should be carefull with quotes in such a piped script.
1712 # The results of a pipe is NOT put on the @CGIscriptorResults stack.
1713 # As a result, you do not have access to the output of any piped (#!)
1714 # process! If you want such access, execute
1715 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/osshell">echo "script"|command</SCRIPT>
1716 # or
1717 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">
1718 # $resultvar = SAFEqx('echo "script"|command');
1719 # </SCRIPT>.
1721 # Safety is never complete. Although SAFEqx() prevents some of the
1722 # most obvious forms of attacks and security slips, it cannot prevent
1723 # them all. Especially, complex combinations of quotes and intricate
1724 # variable references cannot be handled safely by SAFEqx. So be on
1725 # guard.
1728 # PERL CODE EVALUATION (CONTENT-TYPE=TEXT/SSPERL)
1730 # All PERL scripts are evaluated inside a PERL package. This package
1731 # has a separate name space. This isolated name space protects the
1732 # CGIscriptor.pl program against interference from user code. However,
1733 # some variables, e.g., $_, are global and cannot be protected. You are
1734 # advised NOT to use such global variable names. You CAN write
1735 # directives that directly access the variables in the main program.
1736 # You do so at your own risk (there is definitely enough rope available
1737 # to hang yourself). The behavior of CGIscriptor becomes undefined if
1738 # you change its private variables during run time. The PERL code
1739 # directives are used as in:
1740 # $Result = eval($directive); print $Result;'';
1741 # ($directive contains all text between <SCRIPT></SCRIPT>).
1742 # That is, the <directive> is treated as ''-quoted string and
1743 # the result is treated as a scalar. To prevent the VALUE of the code
1744 # block from appearing on the client's screen, end the directive with
1745 # ';""</SCRIPT>'. Evaluated directives return the last value, just as
1746 # eval(), blocks, and subroutines, but only as a scalar.
1748 # IMPORTANT: All PERL variables defined are persistent. Each <SCRIPT>
1749 # </SCRIPT> construct is evaluated as a {}-block with associated scope
1750 # (e.g., for "my $var;" declarations). This means that values assigned
1751 # to a PERL variable can be used throughout the document unless they
1752 # were declared with "my". The following will actually work as intended
1753 # (note that the ``-quotes in this example are NOT evaluated, but used
1754 # as simple quotes):
1756 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI=`$String='abcdefg'`">
1757 # anything ...
1758 # <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl>@List = split('', $String);</SCRIPT>
1759 # anything ...
1760 # <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl>join(", ", @List[1..$#List]);</SCRIPT>
1762 # The first <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl></SCRIPT> construct will return the
1763 # value scalar(@List), the second <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl></SCRIPT>
1764 # construct will print the elements of $String separated by commas, leaving
1765 # out the first element, i.e., $List[0].
1767 # Another warning: './' and '~/' are ALWAYS replaced by the values of
1768 # $YOUR_SCRIPTS and $YOUR_HTML_FILES, respectively . This can interfere
1769 # with pattern matching, e.g., $a =~ s/aap\./noot\./g will result in the
1770 # evaluations of $a =~ s/aap\\${YOUR_SCRIPTS}noot\\${YOUR_SCRIPTS}g. Use
1771 # s@<regexp>.@<replacement>.@g instead.
1774 # SERVER SIDE SESSIONS AND ACCESS CONTROL (LOGIN)
1776 # An infrastructure for user acount authorization and file access control
1777 # is available. Each request is matched against a list of URL path patterns.
1778 # If the request matches, a Session Ticket is required to access the URL.
1779 # This Session Ticket should be present as a CGI parameter or Cookie, eg:
1781 # CGI: SESSIONTICKET=&lt;value&gt;
1782 # Cookie: CGIscriptorSESSION=&lt;value&gt;
1784 # The example implementation stores Session Tickets as files in a local
1785 # directory. To create Session Tickets, a Login request must be given
1786 # with a LOGIN=&lt;value&gt; CGI parameter, a user name and a (doubly hashed)
1787 # password. The user name and (singly hashed) password are stored in a
1788 # PASSWORD ticket with the same name as the user account (name cleaned up
1789 # for security).
1791 # The example session model implements 4 functions:
1792 # - Login
1793 # The password is hashed with the user name and server side salt, and then
1794 # hashed with a random salt. Client and Server both perform these actions
1795 # and the Server only grants access if restults are the same. The server
1796 # side only stores the password hashed with the user name and
1797 # server side salt. Neither the plain password, nor the hashed password is
1798 # ever exchanged. Only values hashed with the one-time salt are exchanged.
1799 # - Session
1800 # For every access to a restricted URL, the Session Ticket is checked before
1801 # access is granted. There are three session modes. The first uses a fixed
1802 # Session Ticket that is stored as a cookie value in the browser (actually,
1803 # as a sessionStorage value). The second uses only the IP address at login
1804 # to authenticate requests. The third
1805 # is a Challenge mode, where the client has to calculate the value of the
1806 # next one-time Session Ticket from a value derived from the password and
1807 # a random string.
1808 # - Password Change
1809 # A new password is hashed with the user name and server side salt, and
1810 # then encrypted (XORed)
1811 # with the old password hashed with the user name and salt. That value is
1812 # exchanged and XORed with the stored old hashed(salt+password+username).
1813 # Again, the stored password value is never exchanged unencrypted.
1814 # - New Account
1815 # The text of a new account (Type: PASSWORD) file is constructed from
1816 # the new username (CGI: NEWUSERNAME, converted to lowercase) and
1817 # hashed new password (CGI: NEWPASSWORD). The same process is used to encrypt
1818 # the new password as is used for the Password Change function.
1819 # Again, the stored password value is never exchanged unencrypted.
1820 # Some default setting are encoded. For display in the browser, the new password
1821 # is reencrypted (XORed) with a special key, the old password hash
1822 # hashed with a session specific random hex value sent initially with the
1823 # session login ticket ($RANDOMSALT).
1824 # For example for user "NewUser" and password "NewPassword" with filename
1825 # "newuser":
1827 # Type: PASSWORD
1828 # Username: newuser
1829 # Password: 84b26fd2aaacae1c2e42fe07da1793e8232ffe548eceb519b46646fe9ff32612
1830 # Salt: 970e68017413fb0ea84d7fe3c463077636dd6d53486910d4a53c693dd4109b1a
1831 # AllowedPaths: ^/Private/[\w\-]+\.html?
1832 # AllowedPaths: ^/Private/newuser/
1833 # Session: SESSION
1834 # Date: Thu Jun 14 12:34:40 2012 UTC
1835 # Time: 1339677280
1837 # The password is created with the Unix commands:
1838 # printf '%s' '970e68017413fb0ea84d7fe3c463077636dd6d53486910d4a53c693dd4109b1aNewPasswordnewuser'|shasum -a 256
1842 # Implementation
1844 # The session authentication mechanism is based on the exchange of ticket
1845 # identifiers. A ticket identifier is just a string of characters, a name
1846 # or a random 64 character hexadecimal string. Ticket identifiers should be
1847 # "safe" filenames (except user names). There are four types of tickets:
1848 # PASSWORD: User account descriptors, including a user name and password
1849 # LOGIN: Temporary anonymous tickets used during login
1850 # IPADDRESS: Authetication tokens that allow access based on the IP address of the request
1851 # SESSION: Reusable authetication tokens
1852 # CHALLENGE: One-time authetication tokens
1853 # All tickets can have an expiration date in the form of a time duration
1854 # from creation, in seconds, minutes, hours, or days (+duration[smhd]).
1855 # An absolute time can be given in seconds since the epoch of the server host.
1856 # Note that expiration times of CHALLENGE authetication tokens are calculated
1857 # from the last access time. Accounts can include a maximal lifetime
1858 # for session tickets (MaxLifetime).
1860 # A Login page should create a LOGIN ticket file locally and send a
1861 # server specific salt, a Random salt, and a LOGIN ticket
1862 # identifier. The server side compares the username and hashed password,
1863 # actually hashed(Random salt+hashed(serversalt+password)) from the client with
1864 # the values it calculates from the stored Random salt from the LOGIN
1865 # ticket and the hashed(serversalt+password) from the PASSWORD ticket. If
1866 # successful, a new SESSION ticket is generated as a hash sum of the LOGIN
1867 # ticket and the stored password. This SESSION ticket should also be
1868 # generated by the client and stored as sessionStorage and cookie values
1869 # as needed. The Username, IP address and Path are available as
1870 # $LoginUsername, $LoginIPaddress, and $LoginPath, respectively.
1872 # The CHALLENGE protocol stores the same value as the SESSION tickets.
1873 # However, this value is not exchanged, but kept secret in the JavaScript
1874 # sessionStorage object. Instead, every page returned from the
1875 # server will contain a one-time Challenge value ($CHALLENGETICKET) which
1876 # has to be hashed with the stored value to return the current ticket
1877 # id string.
1879 # In the current example implementation, all random values are created as
1880 # full, 256 bit SHA256 hash values (Hex strings) of 64 bytes read from
1881 # /dev/urandom.
1883 # Security considerations with Session tickets
1885 # For strong security, please use end-to-end encryption. This can be
1886 # achieved using a VPN (Virtual Private Network), SSH tunnel, or a HTTPS
1887 # capable server with OpenSSL. The session ticket system of CGIscriptor.pl
1888 # is intended to be used as a simple authentication mechanism WITHOUT
1889 # END-TO-END ENCRYPTION. The authenticating mechanism tries to use some
1890 # simple means to protect the authentication process from eavesdropping.
1891 # For this it uses a secure hash function, SHA256. For all practial purposes,
1892 # it is impossible to "decrypt" a SHA256 sum. But this login scheme is
1893 # only as secure as your browser. Which, in general, is not very secure.
1895 # Humans tend to reuse passwords. A compromise of a site running
1896 # CGIscriptor.pl could therefore lead to a compromise of user accounts at
1897 # other sites. Therefore, plain text passwords are never stored, used, or
1898 # exchanged. Instead, a server site salt value is "encrypted" with
1899 # the plain password and user name. Actually, all are concatenated and hashed
1900 # with a one-way secure hash function (SHA256) into a single string.
1901 # Whenever the word "password" is used, this hash sum is meant. Note that
1902 # the salts are generated from /dev/urandom. You should check whether the
1903 # implementation of /dev/urandom on your platform is secure before
1904 # relying on it. This might be a problem when running CGIscriptor under
1905 # Cygwin on MS Windows.
1906 # Note: no attempt is made to slow down the password hash, so bad
1907 # passwords can be cracked by brute force
1909 # As the (hashed) passwords are all that is needed to identify at the site,
1910 # these should not be stored in this form. A site specific passphrase
1911 # can be entered as an environment variable ($ENV{'CGIMasterKey'}). This
1912 # phrase is hashed with the server site salt and the result is hashed with
1913 # the user name and then XORed with the password when it is stored. Also, to
1914 # detect changes to the account (PASSWORD) and session tickets, a
1915 # (HMAC) hash of some of the contents of the ticket with the server salt and
1916 # CGIMasterKey is stored in each ticket.
1918 # Creating a valid (hashed) password, encrypt it with the CGIMasterKey and
1919 # construct a signature of the ticket are non-trivial. This has to be redone
1920 # with every change of the ticket file or CGIMasterKey change. CGIscriptor
1921 # can do this from the command line with the command:
1923 # perl CGIscriptor.pl --managelogin salt=Private/.Passwords/SALT \
1924 # masterkey='Sherlock investigates oleander curry in Bath' \
1925 # password='There is no password like more password' \
1926 # admin
1928 # CGIscriptor will exit after this command with the first option being
1929 # --managelogin. Options have the form:
1931 # salt=[file or string]
1932 # Server salt value to use io the value
1933 # stored in the ticket file. Will replace the stored value if a new
1934 # password is given. If you change the server salt, you have to
1935 # reset all the passwords. There is absolutely no procedure known
1936 # to recover plaintext passwords, except asking the account holders.
1937 # You are strongly adviced to make a backup before you apply such a change
1938 # masterkey=[file or string]
1939 # CGIMasterKey used to read and decrypt the ticket
1940 # newmasterkey=[file or string]
1941 # CGIMasterKey used to encrypt, sign,
1942 # and write the ticket. Defaults to the masterkey. If you change
1943 # the masterkey, you will have to reset all the accounts. You are strongly
1944 # adviced to make a backup before you apply such a change
1945 # password=[file or string]
1946 # New plaintext password
1948 # When the value of an option is a existing file path, the first line of
1949 # that file is used. Options are followed by one or more paths plus names
1950 # of existing ticket files. Each password option is only used for a single
1951 # ticket file. It is most definitely a bad idea to use a password that is
1952 # identical to an existing filepath, as the file will be read instead. Be
1953 # aware that the name of the file should be a cleaned up version of the
1954 # Username.This will not be checked.
1956 # For the authentication and a change of password, the (old) password
1957 # is used to "encrypt" a random one-time token or the new password,
1958 # respectively. For authentication, decryption is not needed, so a secure
1959 # hash function (SHA256) is used to create a one-way hash sum "encryption".
1960 # A new password must be decrypted. New passwords are encryped by XORing
1961 # them with the old password.
1963 # Strong Passwords: It is so easy
1964 # If you only could see what you are typing
1966 # Your password might be vulnerable to brute force guessing
1967 # (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brute_force_attack).
1968 # Protections against such attacks are costly in terms of code
1969 # complexity, bugs, and execution time. However, there is a very
1970 # simple and secure counter measure. See the XKCD comic
1971 # (http://xkcd.com/936/). The phrase, "There is no password like more
1972 # password" would be both much easier to remember, and still stronger
1973 # than "h4]D%@m:49", at least before this phrase was pasted as an
1974 # example on the Internet.
1976 # For the procedures used at this site, a basic computer setup can
1977 # check in the order of a billion passwords per second. You need a
1978 # password (or phrase) strength in the order of 56 bits to be a
1979 # little secure (one year on a single computer). Please be so kind
1980 # and add the name of your favorite flower, dish, fictional
1981 # character, or small town to your password. Say, Oleander, Curry,
1982 # Sherlock, or Bath (each adds ~12 bits) or even the phrase "Sherlock
1983 # investigates oleander curry in Bath" (adds > 56 bits, note that
1984 # oleander is poisonous, so do not try this curry at home). That
1985 # would be more effective than adding a thousand rounds of encryption.
1986 # Typing long passwords without seeing what you are typing is
1987 # problematic. So a button should be included to make password
1988 # visible.
1991 # Technical matters
1993 Client side JavaScript code definitions. Variable names starting with '$'
1994 # are CGIscriptor CGI variables. Some of the hashes could be strengthened
1995 # by switching to HMAC signatures. However, the security issues of
1996 # maintaining parallel functions for HMAC in both Perl and Javascript seem
1997 # to be more serious than the attack vectors against the hashes. But HMAC
1998 # is indeed used for the ticket signatures.
2000 # // On Login
2001 # HashPlaintextPassword() {
2002 # var plaintextpassword = document.getElementById('PASSWORD');
2003 # var serversalt = document.getElementById('SERVERSALT');
2004 # var username = document.getElementById('CGIUSERNAME');
2005 # return hex_sha256(serversalt.value+plaintextpassword.value+username.value.toLowerCase());
2007 # var randomsalt = $RANDOMSALT; // From CGIscriptor
2008 # var loginticket = $LOGINTICKET; // From CGIscriptor
2009 # // Hash plaintext password
2010 # var password = HashPlaintextPassword();
2011 # // Authorize login
2012 # var hashedpassword = hex_sha256(randomsalt+password);
2013 # // Sessionticket
2014 # var sessionticket = hex_sha256(loginticket+password);
2015 # sessionStorage.setItem("CGIscriptorPRIVATE", sessionticket);
2016 # // Secretkey for encrypting new passwords, acts like a one-time pad
2017 # // Is set anew with every login, ie, also whith password changes
2018 # // and for each create new user request
2019 # var secretkey = hex_sha256(randomsalt+loginticket+password);
2020 # sessionStorage.setItem("CGIscriptorSECRET", secretkey);
2022 # // For a SESSION type request
2023 # sessionticket = sessionStorage.getItem("CGIscriptorPRIVATE");
2024 # createCookie("CGIscriptorSESSION",sessionticket, 0, "");
2026 // For a CHALLENGE type request
2027 # var sessionset = "$CHALLENGETICKET"; // From CGIscriptor
2028 # var sessionkey = sessionStorage.getItem("CGIscriptorPRIVATE");
2029 # sessionticket = hex_sha256(sessionset+sessionkey);
2030 # createCookie("CGIscriptorCHALLENGE",sessionticket, 0, "");
2032 # // For transmitting a new password
2033 # HashPlaintextNewPassword() {
2034 # var plaintextpassword = document.getElementById('NEWPASSWORD');
2035 # var serversalt = document.getElementById('SERVERSALT');
2036 # var username = document.getElementById('NEWUSERNAME');
2037 # return hex_sha256(serversalt.value+plaintextpassword.value+username.value.toLowerCase());
2040 # var newpassword = document.getElementById('NEWPASSWORD');
2041 # var newpasswordrep = document.getElementById('NEWPASSWORDREP');
2042 # // Hash plaintext password
2043 # newpassword.value = HashPlaintextNewPassword();
2044 # var secretkey = sessionStorage.getItem("CGIscriptorSECRET");
2046 # var encrypted = XOR_hex_strings(secretkey, newpassword.value);
2047 # newpassword.value = encrypted;
2048 # newpasswordrep.value = encrypted;
2050 # // XOR of hexadecimal strings of equal length
2051 # function XOR_hex_strings(hex1, hex2) {
2052 # var resultHex = "";
2053 # var maxlength = Math.max(hex1.length, hex2.length);
2055 # for(var i=0; i &lt; maxlength; ++i) {
2056 # var h1 = hex1.charAt(i);
2057 # if(! h1) h1='0';
2058 # var h2 = hex2.charAt(i);
2059 # if(! h2) h2 ='0';
2060 # var d1 = parseInt(h1,16);
2061 # var d2 = parseInt(h2,16);
2062 # var resultD = d1^d2;
2063 # resultHex = resultHex+resultD.toString(16);
2064 # };
2065 # return resultHex;
2066 # };
2069 # USER EXTENSIONS
2071 # A CGIscriptor package is attached to the bottom of this file. With
2072 # this package you can personalize your version of CGIscriptor by
2073 # including often used perl routines. These subroutines can be
2074 # accessed by prefixing their names with CGIscriptor::, e.g.,
2075 # <SCRIPT LANGUAGE=PERL TYPE=text/ssperl>
2076 # CGIscriptor::ListDocs("/Books/*") # List all documents in /Books
2077 # </SCRIPT>
2078 # It already contains some useful subroutines for Document Management.
2079 # As it is a separate package, it has its own namespace, isolated from
2080 # both the evaluator and the main program. To access variables from
2081 # the document <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> blocks, use $CGIexecute::<var>.
2083 # Currently, the following functions are implemented
2084 # (precede them with CGIscriptor::, see below for more information)
2085 # - SAFEqx ('String') -> result of qx/"String"/ # Safe application of ``-quotes
2086 # Is used by text/osshell Shell scripts. Protects all CGI
2087 # (client-supplied) values with single quotes before executing the
2088 # commands (one of the few functions that also works WITHOUT CGIscriptor::
2089 # in front)
2090 # - defineCGIvariable ($name[, $default) -> 0/1 (i.e., failure/success)
2091 # Is used by the META tag to define and initialize CGI and ENV
2092 # name/value pairs. Tries to obtain an initializing value from (in order):
2093 # $ENV{$name}
2094 # The Query string
2095 # The default value given (if any)
2096 # (one of the few functions that also works WITHOUT CGIscriptor::
2097 # in front)
2098 # - CGIsafeFileName (FileName) -> FileName or ""
2099 # Check a string against the Allowed File Characters (and ../ /..).
2100 # Returns an empty string for unsafe filenames.
2101 # - CGIsafeEmailAddress (Email) -> Email or ""
2102 # Check a string against correct email address pattern.
2103 # Returns an empty string for unsafe addresses.
2104 # - RedirectShellScript ('CommandString') -> FILEHANDLER or undef
2105 # Open a named PIPE for SAFEqx to receive ALL shell scripts
2106 # - URLdecode (URL encoded string) -> plain string # Decode URL encoded argument
2107 # - URLencode (plain string) -> URL encoded string # Encode argument as URL code
2108 # - CGIparseValue (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Decoded value
2109 # Extract the value of a CGI variable from the global or a private
2110 # URL-encoded query (multipart POST raw, NOT decoded)
2111 # - CGIparseValueList (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString])
2112 # -> List of decoded values
2113 # As CGIparseValue, but now assembles ALL values of ValueName into a list.
2114 # - CGIparseHeader (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Header
2115 # Extract the header of a multipart CGI variable from the global or a private
2116 # URL-encoded query ("" when not a multipart variable or absent)
2117 # - CGIparseForm ([URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Decoded Form
2118 # Decode the complete global URL-encoded query or a private
2119 # URL-encoded query
2120 # - read_url(URL) # Returns the page from URL (with added base tag, both FTP and HTTP)
2121 # Uses main::GET_URL(URL, 1) to get at the command to read the URL.
2122 # - BrowseDirs(RootDirectory [, Pattern, Startdir, CGIname]) # print browsable directories
2123 # - ListDocs(Pattern [,ListType]) # Prints a nested HTML directory listing of
2124 # all documents, e.g., ListDocs("/*", "dl");.
2125 # - HTMLdocTree(Pattern [,ListType]) # Prints a nested HTML listing of all
2126 # local links starting from a given document, e.g.,
2127 # HTMLdocTree("/Welcome.html", "dl");
2130 # THE RESULTS STACK: @CGISCRIPTORRESULTS
2132 # If the pseudo-variable "$CGIscriptorResults" has been defined in a
2133 # META tag, all subsequent SCRIPT and META results are pushed
2134 # on the @CGIscriptorResults stack. This list is just another
2135 # Perl variable and can be used and manipulated like any other list.
2136 # $CGIscriptorResults[-1] is always the last result.
2137 # This is only of limited use, e.g., to use the results of an OS shell
2138 # script inside a Perl script. Will NOT contain the results of Pipes
2139 # or code from MIME-profiling.
2142 # USEFULL CGI PREDEFINED VARIABLES (DO NOT ASSIGN TO THESE)
2144 # $CGI_HOME - The DocumentRoot directory
2145 # $CGI_Decoded_QS - The complete decoded Query String
2146 # $CGI_Content_Length - The ACTUAL length of the Query String
2147 # $CGI_Date - Current date and time
2148 # $CGI_Year $CGI_Month $CGI_Day $CGI_WeekDay - Current Date
2149 # $CGI_Time - Current Time
2150 # $CGI_Hour $CGI_Minutes $CGI_Seconds - Current Time, split
2151 # GMT Date/Time:
2152 # $CGI_GMTYear $CGI_GMTMonth $CGI_GMTDay $CGI_GMTWeekDay $CGI_GMTYearDay
2153 # $CGI_GMTHour $CGI_GMTMinutes $CGI_GMTSeconds $CGI_GMTisdst
2156 # USEFULL CGI ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
2158 # Variables accessible (in APACHE) as $ENV{<name>}
2159 # (see: "http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/env.html"):
2161 # QUERY_STRING - The query part of URL, that is, everything that follows the
2162 # question mark.
2163 # PATH_INFO - Extra path information given after the script name
2164 # PATH_TRANSLATED - Extra pathinfo translated through the rule system.
2165 # (This doesn't always make sense.)
2166 # REMOTE_USER - If the server supports user authentication, and the script is
2167 # protected, this is the username they have authenticated as.
2168 # REMOTE_HOST - The hostname making the request. If the server does not have
2169 # this information, it should set REMOTE_ADDR and leave this unset
2170 # REMOTE_ADDR - The IP address of the remote host making the request.
2171 # REMOTE_IDENT - If the HTTP server supports RFC 931 identification, then this
2172 # variable will be set to the remote user name retrieved from
2173 # the server. Usage of this variable should be limited to logging
2174 # only.
2175 # AUTH_TYPE - If the server supports user authentication, and the script
2176 # is protected, this is the protocol-specific authentication
2177 # method used to validate the user.
2178 # CONTENT_TYPE - For queries which have attached information, such as HTTP
2179 # POST and PUT, this is the content type of the data.
2180 # CONTENT_LENGTH - The length of the said content as given by the client.
2181 # SERVER_SOFTWARE - The name and version of the information server software
2182 # answering the request (and running the gateway).
2183 # Format: name/version
2184 # SERVER_NAME - The server's hostname, DNS alias, or IP address as it
2185 # would appear in self-referencing URLs
2186 # GATEWAY_INTERFACE - The revision of the CGI specification to which this
2187 # server complies. Format: CGI/revision
2188 # SERVER_PROTOCOL - The name and revision of the information protocol this
2189 # request came in with. Format: protocol/revision
2190 # SERVER_PORT - The port number to which the request was sent.
2191 # REQUEST_METHOD - The method with which the request was made. For HTTP,
2192 # this is "GET", "HEAD", "POST", etc.
2193 # SCRIPT_NAME - A virtual path to the script being executed, used for
2194 # self-referencing URLs.
2195 # HTTP_ACCEPT - The MIME types which the client will accept, as given by
2196 # HTTP headers. Other protocols may need to get this
2197 # information from elsewhere. Each item in this list should
2198 # be separated by commas as per the HTTP spec.
2199 # Format: type/subtype, type/subtype
2200 # HTTP_USER_AGENT - The browser the client is using to send the request.
2201 # General format: software/version library/version.
2204 # INSTRUCTIONS FOR RUNNING CGIscriptor ON UNIX
2206 # CGIscriptor.pl will run on any WWW server that runs Perl scripts, just add
2207 # a line like the following to your srm.conf file (Apache example):
2209 # ScriptAlias /SHTML/ /real-path/CGIscriptor.pl/
2211 # URL's that refer to http://www.your.address/SHTML/... will now be handled
2212 # by CGIscriptor.pl, which can use a private directory tree (default is the
2213 # DOCUMENT_ROOT directory tree, but it can be anywhere, see manual).
2215 # If your hosting ISP won't let you add ScriptAlias lines you can use
2216 # the following "rewrite"-based "scriptalias" in .htaccess
2217 # (from Gerd Franke)
2219 # RewriteEngine On
2220 # RewriteBase /
2221 # RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} .html$
2222 # RewriteCond %{SCRIPT_FILENAME} !cgiscriptor.pl$
2223 # RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -f
2224 # RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /cgi-bin/cgiscriptor.pl/$1?&%{QUERY_STRING}
2226 # Everthing with the extension ".html" and not including "cgiscriptor.pl"
2227 # in the url and where the file "path/filename.html" exists is redirected
2228 # to "/cgi.bin/cgiscriptor.pl/path/filename.html?query".
2229 # The user configuration should get the same path-level as the
2230 # .htaccess-file:
2232 # # Just enter your own directory path here
2233 # $YOUR_HTML_FILES = "$ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'}";
2234 # # use DOCUMENT_ROOT only, if .htaccess lies in the root-directory.
2236 # If this .htaccess goes in a specific directory, the path to this
2237 # directory must be added to $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'}.
2239 # The CGIscriptor file contains all documentation as comments. These
2240 # comments can be removed to speed up loading (e.g., `egrep -v '^#'
2241 # CGIscriptor.pl` > leanScriptor.pl). A bare bones version of
2242 # CGIscriptor.pl, lacking documentation, most comments, access control,
2243 # example functions etc. (but still with the copyright notice and some
2244 # minimal documentation) can be obtained by calling CGIscriptor.pl on the
2245 # command line with the '-slim' command line argument, e.g.,
2247 # >CGIscriptor.pl -slim > slimCGIscriptor.pl
2249 # CGIscriptor.pl can be run from the command line with <path> and <query> as
2250 # arguments, as `CGIscriptor.pl <path> <query>`, inside a perl script
2251 # with 'do CGIscriptor.pl' after setting $ENV{PATH_INFO}
2252 # and $ENV{QUERY_STRING}, or CGIscriptor.pl can be loaded with 'require
2253 # "/real-path/CGIscriptor.pl"'. In the latter case, requests are processed
2254 # by 'Handle_Request();' (again after setting $ENV{PATH_INFO} and
2255 # $ENV{QUERY_STRING}).
2257 # Using the command line execution option, CGIscriptor.pl can be used as a
2258 # document (meta-)preprocessor. If the first argument is '-', STDIN will be read.
2259 # For example:
2261 # > cat MyDynamicDocument.html | CGIscriptor.pl - '[QueryString]' > MyStaticFile.html
2263 # This command line will produce a STATIC file with the DYNAMIC content of
2264 # MyDocument.html "interpolated".
2266 # This option would be very dangerous when available over the internet.
2267 # If someone could sneak a 'http://www.your.domain/-' URL past your
2268 # server, CGIscriptor could EXECUTE any POSTED contend.
2269 # Therefore, for security reasons, STDIN will NOT be read
2270 # if ANY of the HTTP server environment variables is set (e.g.,
2271 # SERVER_PORT, SERVER_PROTOCOL, SERVER_NAME, SERVER_SOFTWARE,
2272 # HTTP_USER_AGENT, REMOTE_ADDR).
2273 # This block on processing STDIN on HTTP requests can be lifted by setting
2274 # $BLOCK_STDIN_HTTP_REQUEST = 0;
2275 # In the security configuration. Butbe carefull when doing this.
2276 # It can be very dangerous.
2278 # Running demo's and more information can be found at
2279 # http://www.fon.hum.uva.nl/~rob/OSS/OSS.html
2281 # A pocket-size HTTP daemon, CGIservlet.pl, is available from my web site or
2282 # CPAN that can use CGIscriptor.pl as the base of a µWWW server and
2283 # demonstrates its use.
2286 # PROCESSING NON-FILESYSTEM DATA
2288 # Normally, HTTP (WWW) requests map onto file that can be accessed
2289 # using the perl open() function. That is, the web server runs on top of
2290 # some directory structure. However, we can envission (and put to good
2291 # use) other systems that do not use a normal file system. The whole CGI
2292 # was developed to make dynamic document generation possible.
2294 # A special case is where we want to have it both: A normal web server
2295 # with normal "file data", but not a normal files system. For instance,
2296 # we want or normal Web Site to run directly from a RAM hash table or
2297 # other database, instead of from disk. But we do NOT want to code the
2298 # whole site structure in CGI.
2300 # CGIscriptor can do this. If the web server fills an environment variable
2301 # $ENV{'CGI_FILE_CONTENT'} with the content of the "file", then the content
2302 # of this variable is processed instead of opening a file. If this environment
2303 # variable has the value '-', the content of another environment variable,
2304 # $ENV{'CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE'} is executed as:
2305 # eval("\@_ = ($file_path); do {$ENV{'CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE'}};")
2306 # and the result is processed as if it was the content of the requested
2307 # file.
2308 # (actually, the names of the environment variables are user configurable,
2309 # they are stored in the local variables $CGI_FILE_CONTENT and
2310 # $CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE)
2312 # When using this mechanism, the SRC attribute mechanism will only partially work.
2313 # Only the "recursive" calls to CGIscriptor (the ProcessFile() function)
2314 # will work, the automagical execution of SRC files won't. (In this case,
2315 # the SRC attribute won't work either for other scripting languages)
2318 # NON-UNIX PLATFORMS
2320 # CGIscriptor.pl was mainly developed and tested on UNIX. However, as I
2321 # coded part of the time on an Apple Macintosh under MacPerl, I made sure
2322 # CGIscriptor did run under MacPerl (with command line options). But only
2323 # as an independend script, not as part of a HTTP server. I have used it
2324 # under Apache in Windows XP.
2326 ENDOFHELPTEXT
2327 exit;
2329 ###############################################################################
2331 # SECURITY CONFIGURATION
2333 # Special configurations related to SECURITY
2334 # (i.e., optional, see also environment variables below)
2336 # LOGGING
2337 # Log Clients and the requested paths (Redundant when loging Queries)
2339 $ClientLog = "./Client.log"; # (uncomment for use)
2341 # Format: Localtime | REMOTE_USER REMOTE_IDENT REMOTE_HOST REMOTE_ADDRESS \
2342 # PATH_INFO CONTENT_LENGTH (actually, the real query+post length)
2344 # Log Clients and the queries, the CGIQUERYDECODE is required if you want
2345 # to log queries. If you log Queries, the loging of Clients is redundant
2346 # (note that queries can be quite long, so this might not be a good idea)
2348 #$QueryLog = "./Query.log"; # (uncomment for use)
2350 # ACCESS CONTROL
2351 # the Access files should contain Hostnames or IP addresses,
2352 # i.e. REMOTE_HOST or REMOTE_ADDR, each on a separate line
2353 # optionally followed by one ore more file patterns, e.g., "edu /DEMO".
2354 # Matching is done "domain first". For example ".edu" matches all
2355 # clients whose "name" ends in ".edu" or ".EDU". The file pattern
2356 # "/DEMO" matches all paths that contain the strings "/DEMO" or "/demo"
2357 # (both matchings are done case-insensitive).
2358 # The name special symbol "-" matches ALL clients who do not supply a
2359 # REMOTE_HOST name, "*" matches all clients.
2360 # Lines starting with '-e' are evaluated. A non-zero return value indicates
2361 # a match. You can use $REMOTE_HOST, $REMOTE_ADDR, and $PATH_INFO. These
2362 # lines are evaluated in the program's own name-space. So DO NOT assign to
2363 # variables.
2365 # Accept the following users (remove comment # and adapt filename)
2366 $CGI_Accept = -s "$YOUR_SCRIPTS/ACCEPT.lis" ? "$YOUR_SCRIPTS/ACCEPT.lis" : ''; # (uncomment for use)
2368 # Reject requests from the following users (remove comment # and
2369 # adapt filename, this is only of limited use)
2370 $CGI_Reject = -s "$YOUR_SCRIPTS/REJECT.lis" ? "$YOUR_SCRIPTS/REJECT.lis" : ''; # (uncomment for use)
2372 # Empty lines or comment lines starting with '#' are ignored in both
2373 # $CGI_Accept and $CGI_Reject.
2375 # Block STDIN (i.e., '-') requests when servicing an HTTP request
2376 # Comment this out if you realy want to use STDIN in an on-line web server
2377 $BLOCK_STDIN_HTTP_REQUEST = 1;
2380 # End of security configuration
2382 ##################################################<<<<<<<<<<End Remove
2384 # PARSING CGI VALUES FROM THE QUERY STRING (USER CONFIGURABLE)
2386 # The CGI parse commands. These commands extract the values of the
2387 # CGI variables from the URL encoded Query String.
2388 # If you want to use your own CGI decoders, you can call them here
2389 # instead, using your own PATH and commenting/uncommenting the
2390 # appropriate lines
2392 # CGI parse command for individual values
2393 # (if $List > 0, returns a list value, if $List < 0, a hash table, this is optional)
2394 sub YOUR_CGIPARSE # ($Name [, $List]) -> Decoded value
2396 my $Name = shift;
2397 my $List = shift || 0;
2398 # Use one of the following by uncommenting
2399 if(!$List) # Simple value
2401 return CGIscriptor::CGIparseValue($Name) ;
2403 elsif($List < 0) # Hash tables
2405 return CGIscriptor::CGIparseValueHash($Name); # Defined in CGIscriptor below
2407 else # Lists
2409 return CGIscriptor::CGIparseValueList($Name); # Defined in CGIscriptor below
2412 # return `/PATH/cgiparse -value $Name`; # Shell commands
2413 # require "/PATH/cgiparse.pl"; return cgivalue($Name); # Library
2415 # Complete queries
2416 sub YOUR_CGIQUERYDECODE
2418 # Use one of the following by uncommenting
2419 return CGIscriptor::CGIparseForm(); # Defined in CGIscriptor below
2420 # return `/PATH/cgiparse -form`; # Shell commands
2421 # require "/PATH/cgiparse.pl"; return cgiform(); # Library
2424 # End of configuration
2426 #######################################################################
2428 # Translating input files.
2429 # Allows general and global conversions of files using Regular Expressions
2430 # Translations are applied in the order of definition.
2432 # Define:
2433 # my $TranslationPaths = 'pattern'; # Pattern matching PATH_INFO
2435 # push(@TranslationTable, ['pattern', 'replacement']);
2436 # e.g. (for Ruby Rails):
2437 # push(@TranslationTable, ['<%=', '<SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssruby">']);
2438 # push(@TranslationTable, ['%>', '</SCRIPT>']);
2440 # Runs:
2441 # my $currentRegExp;
2442 # foreach $currentRegExp (keys(%TranslationTable))
2444 # my $currentRegExp;
2445 # foreach $currentRegExp (@TranslationTable)
2447 # my ($pattern, $replacement) = @$currentRegExp;
2448 # $$text =~ s!$pattern!$replacement!msg;
2449 # };
2450 # };
2452 # Configuration section
2454 #######################################################################
2456 # The file paths on which to apply the translation
2457 my $TranslationPaths = ''; # NO files
2458 #$TranslationPaths = '.'; # ANY file
2459 # $TranslationPaths = '\.html'; # HTML files
2461 my @TranslationTable = ();
2462 # Some legacy code
2463 push(@TranslationTable, ['\<\s*CGI\s+([^\>])*\>', '\<SCRIPT TYPE=\"text/ssperl\"\>$1\<\/SCRIPT>']);
2464 # Ruby Rails?
2465 push(@TranslationTable, ['<%=', '<SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssruby">']);
2466 push(@TranslationTable, ['%>', '</SCRIPT>']);
2468 sub performTranslation # (\$text)
2470 my $text = shift || return;
2471 if(@TranslationTable && $TranslationPaths && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m!$TranslationPaths!)
2473 my $currentRegExp;
2474 foreach $currentRegExp (@TranslationTable)
2476 my ($pattern, $replacement) = @$currentRegExp;
2477 $$text =~ s!$pattern!$replacement!msg;
2482 #######################################################################
2484 # Seamless access to other (Scripting) Languages
2485 # TYPE='text/ss<interpreter>'
2487 # Configuration section
2489 #######################################################################
2491 # OTHER SCRIPTING LANGUAGES AT THE SERVER SIDE (MIME => OScommand)
2492 # Yes, it realy is this simple! (unbelievable, isn't it)
2493 # NOTE: Some interpreters require some filtering to obtain "clean" output
2495 %ScriptingLanguages = (
2496 "text/testperl" => 'perl', # Perl for testing
2497 "text/sspython" => 'python', # Python
2498 "text/ssruby" => 'ruby', # Ruby
2499 "text/sstcl" => 'tcl', # TCL
2500 "text/ssawk" => 'awk -f-', # Awk
2501 "text/sslisp" => # lisp (rep, GNU)
2502 'rep | tail +4 '."| egrep -v '> |^rep. |^nil\\\$'",
2503 "text/xlispstat" => # xlispstat
2504 'xlispstat | tail +7 ' ."| egrep -v '> \\\$|^NIL'",
2505 "text/ssprolog" => # Prolog (GNU)
2506 "gprolog | tail +4 | sed 's/^| ?- //'",
2507 "text/ssm4" => 'm4', # M4 macro's
2508 "text/sh" => 'sh', # Born shell
2509 "text/bash" => 'bash', # Born again shell
2510 "text/csh" => 'csh', # C shell
2511 "text/ksh" => 'ksh', # Korn shell
2512 "text/sspraat" => # Praat (sound/speech analysis)
2513 "praat - | sed 's/Praat > //g'",
2514 "text/ssr" => # R
2515 "R --vanilla --slave | sed 's/^[\[0-9\]*] //'",
2516 "text/ssrebol" => # REBOL
2517 "rebol --quiet|egrep -v '^[> ]* == '|sed 's/^\\s*\[> \]* //'",
2518 "text/postgresql" => 'psql 2>/dev/null',
2520 # Not real scripting, but the use of other applications
2521 "text/ssmailto" => "awk 'NF||F{F=1;print \\\$0;}'|mailto >/dev/null", # Send mail from server
2522 "text/ssdisplay" => 'cat', # Display, (interpolation)
2523 "text/sslogfile" => # Log to file, (interpolation)
2524 "awk 'NF||L {if(!L){L=tolower(\\\$1)~/^file:\\\$/ ? \\\$2 : \\\$1;}else{print \\\$0 >> L;};}'",
2526 "" => ""
2529 # To be able to access the CGI variables in your script, they
2530 # should be passed to the scripting language in a readable form
2531 # Here you can enter how they should be printed (the first %s
2532 # is replaced by the NAME of the CGI variable as it apears in the
2533 # META tag, the second by its VALUE).
2534 # For Perl this would be:
2535 # "text/testperl" => '$%s = "%s";',
2536 # which would be executed as
2537 # printf('$%s = "%s";', $CGI_NAME, $CGI_VALUE);
2539 # If the hash table value doesn't exist, nothing is done
2540 # (you have to parse the Environment variables yourself).
2541 # If it DOES exist but is empty (e.g., "text/sspraat" => '',)
2542 # Perl string interpolation of variables (i.e., $var, @array,
2543 # %hash) is performed. This means that $@%\ must be protected
2544 # with a \.
2546 %ScriptingCGIvariables = (
2547 "text/testperl" => "\$\%s = '\%s';", # Perl $VAR = 'value'; (for testing)
2548 "text/sspython" => "\%s = '\%s'", # Python VAR = 'value'
2549 "text/ssruby" => '@%s = "%s"', # Ruby @VAR = 'value'
2550 "text/sstcl" => 'set %s "%s"', # TCL set VAR "value"
2551 "text/ssawk" => '%s = "%s";', # Awk VAR = 'value';
2552 "text/sslisp" => '(setq %s "%s")', # Gnu lisp (rep) (setq VAR "value")
2553 "text/xlispstat" => '(setq %s "%s")', # xlispstat (setq VAR "value")
2554 "text/ssprolog" => '', # Gnu prolog (interpolated)
2555 "text/ssm4" => "define(`\%s', `\%s')", # M4 macro's define(`VAR', `value')
2556 "text/sh" => "\%s='\%s'", # Born shell VAR='value'
2557 "text/bash" => "\%s='\%s'", # Born again shell VAR='value'
2558 "text/csh" => "\$\%s='\%s';", # C shell $VAR = 'value';
2559 "text/ksh" => "\$\%s='\%s';", # Korn shell $VAR = 'value';
2561 "text/ssrebol" => '%s: copy "%s"', # REBOL VAR: copy "value"
2562 "text/sspraat" => '', # Praat (interpolation)
2563 "text/ssr" => '%s <- "%s";', # R VAR <- "value";
2564 "text/postgresql" => '', # PostgreSQL (interpolation)
2566 # Not real scripting, but the use of other applications
2567 "text/ssmailto" => '', # MAILTO, (interpolation)
2568 "text/ssdisplay" => '', # Display, (interpolation)
2569 "text/sslogfile" => '', # Log to file, (interpolation)
2571 "" => ""
2574 # If you want something added in front or at the back of each script
2575 # block as send to the interpreter add it here.
2576 # mime => "string", e.g., "text/sspython" => "python commands"
2577 %ScriptingPrefix = (
2578 "text/testperl" => "\# Prefix Code;", # Perl script testing
2579 "text/ssm4" => 'divert(0)', # M4 macro's (open STDOUT)
2581 "" => ""
2583 # If you want something added at the end of each script block
2584 %ScriptingPostfix = (
2585 "text/testperl" => "\# Postfix Code;", # Perl script testing
2586 "text/ssm4" => 'divert(-1)', # M4 macro's (block STDOUT)
2588 "" => ""
2590 # If you need initialization code, directly after opening
2591 %ScriptingInitialization = (
2592 "text/testperl" => "\# Initialization Code;", # Perl script testing
2593 "text/ssawk" => 'BEGIN {', # Server Side awk scripts (VAR = "value")
2594 "text/sslisp" => '(prog1 nil ', # Lisp (rep)
2595 "text/xlispstat" => '(prog1 nil ', # xlispstat
2596 "text/ssm4" => 'divert(-1)', # M4 macro's (block STDOUT)
2598 "" => ""
2600 # If you need cleanup code before closing
2601 %ScriptingCleanup = (
2602 "text/testperl" => "\# Cleanup Code;", # Perl script testing
2603 "text/sspraat" => 'Quit',
2604 "text/ssawk" => '};', # Server Side awk scripts (VAR = "value")
2605 "text/sslisp" => '(princ "\n" standard-output)).', # Closing print to rep
2606 "text/xlispstat" => '(print ""))', # Closing print to xlispstat
2607 "text/postgresql" => '\q', # quit psql
2608 "text/ssdisplay" => "", # close cat
2610 "" => ""
2613 # End of configuration for foreign scripting languages
2615 ###############################################################################
2617 # Initialization Code
2620 sub Initialize_Request
2622 ###############################################################################
2624 # ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
2626 # Use environment variables to configure CGIscriptor on a temporary basis.
2627 # If you define any of the configurable variables as environment variables,
2628 # these are used instead of the "hard coded" values above.
2630 $SS_PUB = $ENV{'SS_PUB'} || $YOUR_HTML_FILES;
2631 $SS_SCRIPT = $ENV{'SS_SCRIPT'} || $YOUR_SCRIPTS;
2634 # Substitution strings, these are used internally to handle the
2635 # directory separator strings, e.g., '~/' -> 'SS_PUB:' (Mac)
2636 $HOME_SUB = $SS_PUB;
2637 $SCRIPT_SUB = $SS_SCRIPT;
2640 # Make sure all script are reliably loaded
2641 push(@INC, $SS_SCRIPT);
2644 # Add the directory separator to the "home" directories.
2645 # (This is required for ~/ and ./ substitution)
2646 $HOME_SUB .= '/' if $HOME_SUB;
2647 $SCRIPT_SUB .= '/' if $SCRIPT_SUB;
2649 $CGI_HOME = $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'};
2650 $ENV{'PATH_TRANSLATED'} =~ /$ENV{'PATH_INFO'}/is;
2651 $CGI_HOME = $` unless $ENV{'DOCUMENT_ROOT'}; # Get the DOCUMENT_ROOT directory
2652 $default_values{'CGI_HOME'} = $CGI_HOME;
2653 $ENV{'HOME'} = $CGI_HOME;
2654 # Set SS_PUB and SS_SCRIPT as Environment variables (make them available
2655 # to the scripts)
2656 $ENV{'SS_PUB'} = $SS_PUB unless $ENV{'SS_PUB'};
2657 $ENV{'SS_SCRIPT'} = $SS_SCRIPT unless $ENV{'SS_SCRIPT'};
2659 $FilePattern = $ENV{'FilePattern'} || $FilePattern;
2660 $MaximumQuerySize = $ENV{'MaximumQuerySize'} || $MaximumQuerySize;
2661 $ClientLog = $ENV{'ClientLog'} || $ClientLog;
2662 $QueryLog = $ENV{'QueryLog'} || $QueryLog;
2663 $CGI_Accept = $ENV{'CGI_Accept'} || $CGI_Accept;
2664 $CGI_Reject = $ENV{'CGI_Reject'} || $CGI_Reject;
2666 # Parse file names
2667 $CGI_Accept =~ s@^\~/@$HOME_SUB@g if $CGI_Accept;
2668 $CGI_Reject =~ s@^\~/@$HOME_SUB@g if $CGI_Reject;
2669 $ClientLog =~ s@^\~/@$HOME_SUB@g if $ClientLog;
2670 $QueryLog =~ s@^\~/@$HOME_SUB@g if $QueryLog;
2672 $CGI_Accept =~ s@^\./@$SCRIPT_SUB@g if $CGI_Accept;
2673 $CGI_Reject =~ s@^\./@$SCRIPT_SUB@g if $CGI_Reject;
2674 $ClientLog =~ s@^\./@$SCRIPT_SUB@g if $ClientLog;
2675 $QueryLog =~ s@^\./@$SCRIPT_SUB@g if $QueryLog;
2677 @CGIscriptorResults = (); # A stack of results
2679 # end of Environment variables
2681 #############################################################################
2683 # Define and Store "standard" values
2685 # BEFORE doing ANYTHING check the size of Query String
2686 length($ENV{'QUERY_STRING'}) <= $MaximumQuerySize || dieHandler(2, "QUERY TOO LONG\n");
2688 # The Translated Query String and the Actual length of the (decoded)
2689 # Query String
2690 if($ENV{'QUERY_STRING'})
2692 # If this can contain '`"-quotes, be carefull to use it QUOTED
2693 $default_values{CGI_Decoded_QS} = YOUR_CGIQUERYDECODE();
2694 $default_values{CGI_Content_Length} = length($default_values{CGI_Decoded_QS});
2697 # Get the current Date and time and store them as default variables
2699 # Get Local Time
2700 $LocalTime = localtime;
2702 # CGI_Year CGI_Month CGI_Day CGI_WeekDay CGI_Time
2703 # CGI_Hour CGI_Minutes CGI_Seconds
2705 $default_values{CGI_Date} = $LocalTime;
2706 ($default_values{CGI_WeekDay},
2707 $default_values{CGI_Month},
2708 $default_values{CGI_Day},
2709 $default_values{CGI_Time},
2710 $default_values{CGI_Year}) = split(' ', $LocalTime);
2711 ($default_values{CGI_Hour},
2712 $default_values{CGI_Minutes},
2713 $default_values{CGI_Seconds}) = split(':', $default_values{CGI_Time});
2715 # GMT:
2716 # CGI_GMTYear CGI_GMTMonth CGI_GMTDay CGI_GMTWeekDay CGI_GMTYearDay
2717 # CGI_GMTHour CGI_GMTMinutes CGI_GMTSeconds CGI_GMTisdst
2719 ($default_values{CGI_GMTSeconds},
2720 $default_values{CGI_GMTMinutes},
2721 $default_values{CGI_GMTHour},
2722 $default_values{CGI_GMTDay},
2723 $default_values{CGI_GMTMonth},
2724 $default_values{CGI_GMTYear},
2725 $default_values{CGI_GMTWeekDay},
2726 $default_values{CGI_GMTYearDay},
2727 $default_values{CGI_GMTisdst}) = gmtime;
2731 # End of Initialize Request
2733 ###################################################################
2735 # SECURITY: ACCESS CONTROL
2737 # Check the credentials of each client (use pattern matching, domain first).
2738 # This subroutine will kill-off (die) the current process whenever access
2739 # is denied.
2741 sub Access_Control
2743 # >>>>>>>>>>Start Remove
2745 # ACCEPTED CLIENTS
2747 # Only accept clients which are authorized, reject all unnamed clients
2748 # if REMOTE_HOST is given.
2749 # If file patterns are given, check whether the user is authorized for
2750 # THIS file.
2751 if($CGI_Accept)
2753 # Use local variables, REMOTE_HOST becomes '-' if undefined
2754 my $REMOTE_HOST = $ENV{REMOTE_HOST} || '-';
2755 my $REMOTE_ADDR = $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR};
2756 my $PATH_INFO = $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
2758 open(CGI_Accept, "<$CGI_Accept") || dieHandler(3, "$CGI_Accept: $!\n");
2759 $NoAccess = 1;
2760 while(<CGI_Accept>)
2762 next unless /\S/; # Skip empty lines
2763 next if /^\s*\#/; # Skip comments
2765 # Full expressions
2766 if(/^\s*-e\s/is)
2768 my $Accept = $'; # Get the expression
2769 $NoAccess &&= eval($Accept); # evaluate the expresion
2771 else
2773 my ($Accept, @FilePatternList) = split;
2774 if($Accept eq '*' # Always match
2775 ||$REMOTE_HOST =~ /\Q$Accept\E$/is # REMOTE_HOST matches
2776 || (
2777 $Accept =~ /^[0-9\.]+$/
2778 && $REMOTE_ADDR =~ /^\Q$Accept\E/ # IP address matches
2782 if($FilePatternList[0])
2784 foreach $Pattern (@FilePatternList)
2786 # Check whether this patterns is accepted
2787 $NoAccess &&= ($PATH_INFO !~ m@\Q$Pattern\E@is);
2790 else
2792 $NoAccess = 0; # No file patterns -> Accepted
2796 # Blocked
2797 last unless $NoAccess;
2799 close(CGI_Accept);
2800 if($NoAccess){ dieHandler(4, "No Access: $PATH_INFO\n");};
2804 # REJECTED CLIENTS
2806 # Reject named clients, accept all unnamed clients
2807 if($CGI_Reject)
2809 # Use local variables, REMOTE_HOST becomes '-' if undefined
2810 my $REMOTE_HOST = $ENV{'REMOTE_HOST'} || '-';
2811 my $REMOTE_ADDR = $ENV{'REMOTE_ADDR'};
2812 my $PATH_INFO = $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
2814 open(CGI_Reject, "<$CGI_Reject") || dieHandler(5, "$CGI_Reject: $!\n");
2815 $NoAccess = 0;
2816 while(<CGI_Reject>)
2818 next unless /\S/; # Skip empty lines
2819 next if /^\s*\#/; # Skip comments
2821 # Full expressions
2822 if(/^-e\s/is)
2824 my $Reject = $'; # Get the expression
2825 $NoAccess ||= eval($Reject); # evaluate the expresion
2827 else
2829 my ($Reject, @FilePatternList) = split;
2830 if($Reject eq '*' # Always match
2831 ||$REMOTE_HOST =~ /\Q$Reject\E$/is # REMOTE_HOST matches
2832 ||($Reject =~ /^[0-9\.]+$/
2833 && $REMOTE_ADDR =~ /^\Q$Reject\E/is # IP address matches
2837 if($FilePatternList[0])
2839 foreach $Pattern (@FilePatternList)
2841 $NoAccess ||= ($PATH_INFO =~ m@\Q$Pattern\E@is);
2844 else
2846 $NoAccess = 1; # No file patterns -> Rejected
2850 last if $NoAccess;
2852 close(CGI_Reject);
2853 if($NoAccess){ dieHandler(6, "Request rejected: $PATH_INFO\n");};
2856 ##########################################################<<<<<<<<<<End Remove
2859 # Get the filename
2861 # Does the filename contain any illegal characters (e.g., |, >, or <)
2862 dieHandler(7, "Illegal request: $ENV{'PATH_INFO'}\n") if $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ /[^$FileAllowedChars]/;
2863 # Does the pathname contain an illegal (blocked) "directory"
2864 dieHandler(8, "Illegal request: $ENV{'PATH_INFO'}\n") if $BlockPathAccess && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@$BlockPathAccess@; # Access is blocked
2865 # Does the pathname contain a direct referencer to BinaryMapFile
2866 dieHandler(9, "Illegal request: $ENV{'PATH_INFO'}\n") if $BinaryMapFile && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@\Q$BinaryMapFile\E@; # Access is blocked
2868 # SECURITY: Is PATH_INFO allowed?
2869 if($FilePattern && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} ne '-' &&
2870 ($ENV{'PATH_INFO'} !~ m@($FilePattern)$@is))
2872 # Unsupported file types can be processed by a special raw-file
2873 if($BinaryMapFile)
2875 $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} = $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
2876 $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} = $BinaryMapFile;
2878 else
2880 dieHandler(10, "Illegal file\n");
2886 # End of Security Access Control
2889 ############################################################################
2891 # Get the POST part of the query and add it to the QUERY_STRING.
2894 sub Get_POST_part_of_query
2897 # If POST, Read data from stdin to QUERY_STRING
2898 if($ENV{'REQUEST_METHOD'} =~ /POST/is)
2900 # SECURITY: Check size of Query String
2901 $ENV{'CONTENT_LENGTH'} <= $MaximumQuerySize || dieHandler(11, "Query too long: $ENV{'CONTENT_LENGTH'}\n"); # Query too long
2902 my $QueryRead = 0;
2903 my $SystemRead = $ENV{'CONTENT_LENGTH'};
2904 $ENV{'QUERY_STRING'} .= '&' if length($ENV{'QUERY_STRING'}) > 0;
2905 while($SystemRead > 0)
2907 $QueryRead = sysread(STDIN, $Post, $SystemRead); # Limit length
2908 $ENV{'QUERY_STRING'} .= $Post;
2909 $SystemRead -= $QueryRead;
2911 # Update decoded Query String
2912 $default_values{CGI_Decoded_QS} = YOUR_CGIQUERYDECODE();
2913 $default_values{CGI_Content_Length} =
2914 length($default_values{CGI_Decoded_QS});
2918 # End of getting POST part of query
2921 ############################################################################
2923 # Start (HTML) output and logging
2924 # (if there are irregularities, it can kill the current process)
2927 sub Initialize_output
2929 # Construct the REAL file path (except for STDIN on the command line)
2930 my $file_path = $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} ne '-' ? $SS_PUB . $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} : '-';
2931 $file_path =~ s/\?.*$//; # Remove query
2932 # This is only necessary if your server does not catch ../ directives
2933 $file_path !~ m@\.\./@ || dieHandler(12, "Illegal ../ Construct\n"); # SECURITY: Do not allow ../ constructs
2935 # Block STDIN use (-) if CGIscriptor is servicing a HTTP request
2936 if($file_path eq '-')
2938 dieHandler(13, "STDIN request in On Line system\n") if $BLOCK_STDIN_HTTP_REQUEST
2939 && ($ENV{'SERVER_SOFTWARE'}
2940 || $ENV{'SERVER_NAME'}
2941 || $ENV{'GATEWAY_INTERFACE'}
2942 || $ENV{'SERVER_PROTOCOL'}
2943 || $ENV{'SERVER_PORT'}
2944 || $ENV{'REMOTE_ADDR'}
2945 || $ENV{'HTTP_USER_AGENT'});
2950 if($ClientLog)
2952 open(ClientLog, ">>$ClientLog");
2953 print ClientLog "$LocalTime | ",
2954 ($ENV{REMOTE_USER} || "-"), " ",
2955 ($ENV{REMOTE_IDENT} || "-"), " ",
2956 ($ENV{REMOTE_HOST} || "-"), " ",
2957 $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR}, " ",
2958 $ENV{PATH_INFO}, " ",
2959 $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'}, " ",
2960 ($default_values{CGI_Content_Length} || "-"),
2961 "\n";
2962 close(ClientLog);
2964 if($QueryLog)
2966 open(QueryLog, ">>$QueryLog");
2967 print QueryLog "$LocalTime\n",
2968 ($ENV{REMOTE_USER} || "-"), " ",
2969 ($ENV{REMOTE_IDENT} || "-"), " ",
2970 ($ENV{REMOTE_HOST} || "-"), " ",
2971 $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR}, ": ",
2972 $ENV{PATH_INFO}, " ",
2973 $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'}, "\n";
2975 # Write Query to Log file
2976 print QueryLog $default_values{CGI_Decoded_QS}, "\n\n";
2977 close(QueryLog);
2980 # Return the file path
2981 return $file_path;
2984 # End of Initialize output
2987 ############################################################################
2989 # Handle login access
2991 # Access is based on a valid session ticket.
2992 # Session tickets should be dependend on user name
2993 # and IP address. The patterns of URLs for which a
2994 # session ticket is needed and the login URL are stored in
2995 # %TicketRequiredPatterns as:
2996 # 'RegEx pattern' -> 'SessionPath\tPasswordPath\tLogin URL\tExpiration'
2999 sub Log_In_Access # () -> 0 = Access Allowed, Login page if access is not allowed
3001 # No patterns, no login
3002 goto Return unless %TicketRequiredPatterns;
3004 # Get and initialize values (watch out for stuff processed by BinaryMap files)
3005 my ($SessionPath, $PasswordsPath, $Login, $valid_duration) = ("", "", "", 0);
3006 my $PATH_INFO = $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} ? $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} : $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
3007 my $REMOTE_ADDR = $ENV{'REMOTE_ADDR'};
3008 goto Return if $REMOTE_ADDR =~ /[^0-9\.]/;
3009 # Extract TICKETs, starting with returned cookies
3010 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('LOGINTICKET', "");
3011 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('SESSIONTICKET', "");
3012 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('CHALLENGETICKET', "");
3013 if($ENV{'COOKIE_JAR'})
3015 my $CurrentCookieJar = $ENV{'COOKIE_JAR'};
3016 $CurrentCookieJar =~ s/\w+\=\-\s*(\;\s*|$)//isg;
3017 if($CurrentCookieJar =~ /\s*CGIscriptorLOGIN\=\s*([^\;]+)/)
3019 ${"CGIexecute::LOGINTICKET"} = $1;
3021 if($CurrentCookieJar =~ /\s*CGIscriptorCHALLENGE\=\s*([^\;]+)/ && $1 ne '-')
3023 ${"CGIexecute::CHALLENGETICKET"} = $1;
3025 if($CurrentCookieJar =~ /\s*CGIscriptorSESSION\=\s*([^\;]+)/ && $1 ne '-')
3027 ${"CGIexecute::SESSIONTICKET"} = $1;
3030 # Get and check the tickets. Tickets are restricted to word-characters (alphanumeric+_+.)
3031 my $LOGINTICKET = ${"CGIexecute::LOGINTICKET"};
3032 goto Return if ($LOGINTICKET && $LOGINTICKET =~ /[^\w\.]/isg);
3033 my $SESSIONTICKET = ${"CGIexecute::SESSIONTICKET"};
3034 goto Return if ($SESSIONTICKET && $SESSIONTICKET =~ /[^\w\.]/isg);
3035 my $CHALLENGETICKET = ${"CGIexecute::CHALLENGETICKET"};
3036 goto Return if ($SESSIONTICKET && $SESSIONTICKET =~ /[^\w\.]/isg);
3037 # Look for a LOGOUT message
3038 my $LOGOUT = $ENV{QUERY_STRING} =~ /(^|\&)LOGOUT([\=\&]|$)/;
3039 # Username and password
3040 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('CGIUSERNAME', "");
3041 my $username = lc(${"CGIexecute::CGIUSERNAME"});
3042 goto Return if $username =~ m!^[^\w]!isg || $username =~ m![^\w \-]!isg;
3043 my $userfile = lc($username);
3044 $userfile =~ s/[^\w]/_/isg;
3045 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('PASSWORD', "");
3046 my $password = ${"CGIexecute::PASSWORD"};
3047 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('NEWUSERNAME', "");
3048 my $newuser = lc(${"CGIexecute::NEWUSERNAME"});
3049 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('NEWPASSWORD', "");
3050 my $newpassword = ${"CGIexecute::NEWPASSWORD"};
3052 foreach my $pattern (keys(%TicketRequiredPatterns))
3054 # Check BOTH the real PATH_INFO and the CGI_BINARY_FILE variable
3055 if($ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m#$pattern# || $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} =~ m#$pattern#)
3057 # Fall through a sieve of requirements
3058 ($SessionPath, $PasswordsPath, $Login, $validtime) = split(/\t/, $TicketRequiredPatterns{$pattern});
3059 # If a LOGOUT is present, remove everything
3060 if($LOGOUT && !$LOGINTICKET)
3062 unlink "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET" if $LOGINTICKET && (-s "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET");
3063 $LOGINTICKET = "";
3064 unlink "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET" if $SESSIONTICKET && (-s "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET");
3065 $SESSIONTICKET = "";
3066 unlink "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET" if $CHALLENGETICKET && (-s "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET");
3067 $CHALLENGETICKET = "";
3068 unlink "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR" if (-s "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR");
3069 $CHALLENGETICKET = "";
3070 goto Login;
3072 # Is there a change password request?
3073 if($newuser && $LOGINTICKET && $username)
3075 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET");
3076 goto Login unless (-s "$PasswordsPath/$userfile");
3077 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("PASSWORD", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3078 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3079 $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("LOGIN", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", $REMOTE_ADDR, ".", 1);
3080 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3082 my ($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("", "");
3083 if($CHALLENGETICKET) {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("CHALLENGE", $CHALLENGETICKET);}
3084 elsif($SESSIONTICKET) {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("SESSION", $SESSIONTICKET);}
3085 elsif(-s "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR") {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("IPADDRESS", $REMOTE_ADDR);
3087 if($sessiontype)
3089 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$currentticket");
3090 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity($sessiontype, "$SessionPath/$currentticket", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3091 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3093 # Authorize
3094 my $TMPTICKET = authorize_login("$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $password, $SessionPath);
3095 goto Login unless $TMPTICKET;
3097 # Create a new user account
3098 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('NEWSESSION', "");
3099 my $newsession = ${"CGIexecute::NEWSESSION"};
3100 my $newaccount = create_newuser("$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$SessionPath/$currentticket",
3101 "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $password, $newuser, $newpassword, $newsession);
3102 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('NEWACCOUNTTEXT', $newaccount);
3103 ${CGIexecute::NEWACCOUNTTEXT} = $newaccount;
3104 # NEWACCOUNTTEXT is NOT to be set by the query
3105 CGIexecute::ProtectCGIvariable('NEWACCOUNTTEXT');
3108 # Ready
3109 goto Return;
3111 # Is there a change password request?
3112 elsif($newpassword && $LOGINTICKET && $username)
3114 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET");
3115 goto Login unless (-s "$PasswordsPath/$userfile");
3116 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("PASSWORD", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3117 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3118 $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("LOGIN", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", $REMOTE_ADDR, ".", 1);
3119 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3121 my ($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("", "");
3122 if($CHALLENGETICKET) {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("CHALLENGE", $CHALLENGETICKET);}
3123 elsif($SESSIONTICKET) {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("SESSION", $SESSIONTICKET);}
3124 elsif(-s "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR") {($sessiontype, $currentticket) = ("IPADDRESS", $REMOTE_ADDR);
3126 if($sessiontype)
3128 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$currentticket");
3129 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity($sessiontype, "$SessionPath/$currentticket", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3130 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3132 # Authorize
3133 change_password("$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$SessionPath/$currentticket", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $password, $newpassword);
3134 # After a change of password, you have to login again for a CHALLENGE
3135 if($CHALLENGETICKET){$CHALLENGETICKET = "";};
3136 # Ready
3137 goto Return;
3139 # Is there a login ticket of this name?
3140 elsif($LOGINTICKET)
3142 my $tickets_removed = remove_expired_tickets($SessionPath);
3143 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET");
3144 goto Login unless (-s "$PasswordsPath/$userfile");
3145 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("PASSWORD", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3146 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3147 $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("LOGIN", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", $REMOTE_ADDR, ".");
3148 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3150 # Remove any lingering tickets
3151 unlink "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET" if $SESSIONTICKET && (-s "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET");
3152 $SESSIONTICKET = "";
3153 unlink "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET" if $CHALLENGETICKET && (-s "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET");
3154 $CHALLENGETICKET = "";
3157 # Authorize
3158 my $TMPTICKET = authorize_login("$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $password, $SessionPath);
3159 if($TMPTICKET)
3161 my $authorization = read_ticket("$PasswordsPath/$userfile");
3162 goto Login unless $authorization;
3163 # Session type is read from the userfile
3164 if($authorization->{"Session"} && $authorization->{"Session"}->[0] eq "CHALLENGE")
3166 # Create New Random CHALLENGETICKET
3167 $CHALLENGETICKET = $TMPTICKET;
3168 create_session_file("$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $PATH_INFO);
3170 elsif($authorization->{"Session"} && $authorization->{"Session"}->[0] eq "IPADDRESS")
3172 create_session_file("$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $PATH_INFO);
3174 else
3176 $SESSIONTICKET = $TMPTICKET;
3177 create_session_file("$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET", "$SessionPath/$LOGINTICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $PATH_INFO);
3178 $SETCOOKIELIST{"CGIscriptorSESSION"} = "-";
3181 # Login ticket file has been used, remove it
3182 unlink($loginfile);
3184 # Is there a session ticket of this name?
3185 # CHALLENGE
3186 if($CHALLENGETICKET)
3188 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET");
3189 my $address = $REMOTE_ADDR;
3190 if($sessionContent->{Type}->[0] eq 'CHALLENGE' && grep(/^VariableREMOTE_ADDR$/, @{$authorization->{'Capabilities'}}))
3192 $address = "";
3194 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("CHALLENGE", "$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET", $address, $PATH_INFO);
3195 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3197 my $oldchallenge = read_ticket("$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET");
3198 goto Login unless $oldchallenge;
3199 my $userfile = lc($oldchallenge->{"Username"}->[0]);
3200 $userfile =~ s/[^\w]/_/isg;
3201 goto Login unless (-s "$PasswordsPath/$userfile");
3203 $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("PASSWORD", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3204 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3206 my $NEWCHALLENGETICKET = "";
3207 $NEWCHALLENGETICKET = copy_challenge_file("$SessionPath/$CHALLENGETICKET", "$PasswordsPath/$userfile", $SessionPath);
3208 # Sessionticket is available to scripts, do NOT set the cookie
3209 $ENV{'CHALLENGETICKET'} = $NEWCHALLENGETICKET;
3210 goto Return;
3212 # IPADDRESS
3213 elsif(-s "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR")
3215 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("IPADDRESS", "$SessionPath/$REMOTE_ADDR", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3216 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3217 goto Return;
3219 # SESSION
3220 elsif($SESSIONTICKET)
3222 goto Login unless (-s "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET");
3223 my $ticket_valid = check_ticket_validity("SESSION", "$SessionPath/$SESSIONTICKET", $REMOTE_ADDR, $PATH_INFO);
3224 goto Login unless $ticket_valid;
3225 # Sessionticket is available to scripts
3226 $ENV{'SESSIONTICKET'} = $SESSIONTICKET;
3227 goto Return;
3230 goto Login;
3231 goto Return;
3234 Return:
3235 # The Masterkey should NOT be accessible by the parsed files
3236 $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'} = "" if $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3237 return 0;
3239 Login:
3240 create_login_file($PasswordsPath, $SessionPath, $REMOTE_ADDR);
3241 # Note, cookies are set only ONCE
3242 $SETCOOKIELIST{"CGIscriptorLOGIN"} = "-";
3243 # The Masterkey should NOT be accessible by the parsed files
3244 $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'} = "" if $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3245 return "$YOUR_HTML_FILES/$Login";
3248 sub authorize_login # ($loginfile, $authorizationfile, $password, $SessionPath) => SESSIONTICKET First two arguments are file paths
3250 my $loginfile = shift || "";
3251 my $authorizationfile = shift || "";
3252 my $password = shift || "";
3253 my $SessionPath = shift || "";
3255 # Get Login session ticket
3256 my $loginticket = read_ticket($loginfile);
3257 return 0 unless $loginticket;
3258 # Get User credentials for authorization
3259 my $authorization = read_ticket($authorizationfile);
3260 return 0 unless $authorization;
3262 # Get Randomsalt
3263 my $Randomsalt = $loginticket->{'Randomsalt'}->[0];
3264 return "" unless $Randomsalt;
3266 my $storedpassword = $authorization->{'Password'}->[0];
3267 return "" unless $storedpassword;
3268 my $Hashedpassword = hash_string("$Randomsalt$storedpassword");
3269 return "" unless $password eq $Hashedpassword;
3271 # Extract Session Ticket
3272 my $loginsession = $loginticket->{'Session'}->[0];
3273 my $sessionticket = hash_string("$loginsession$storedpassword");
3274 chomp($sessionticket);
3275 $sessionticket = "" if -x "$SessionPath/$sessionticket";
3277 return $sessionticket;
3280 sub change_password # ($loginfile, $sessionfile, $authorizationfile, $password, $newpassword) First three arguments are file paths
3282 my $loginfile = shift || "";
3283 my $sessionfile = shift || "";
3284 my $authorizationfile = shift || "";
3285 my $password = shift || "";
3286 my $newpassword = shift || "";
3287 # Get Login session ticket
3288 my $loginticket = read_ticket($loginfile);
3289 return "" unless $loginticket;
3290 # Login ticket file has been used, remove it
3291 unlink($loginfile);
3292 # Get Randomsalt
3293 my $Randomsalt = $loginticket->{'Randomsalt'}->[0];
3294 return "" unless $Randomsalt;
3295 my $LoginID = $loginticket->{'Session'}->[0];
3296 return "" unless $LoginID;
3298 # Get session ticket
3299 my $sessionticket = read_ticket($sessionfile);
3300 return "" unless $sessionticket;
3302 # Get User credentials for authorization
3303 my $authorization = read_ticket($authorizationfile);
3304 return "" unless $authorization && lc($authorization->{'Username'}->[0]) eq lc($sessionticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
3306 my $storedpassword = $authorization->{'Password'}->[0];
3307 my $Hashedpassword = hash_string("$Randomsalt$storedpassword");
3308 return "" unless $password eq $Hashedpassword;
3309 my $secretkey = hash_string("$Randomsalt$LoginID$storedpassword");
3311 # Decrypt the $newpassword
3312 my $decryptedPassword = XOR_hex_strings($secretkey, $newpassword);
3313 return "" unless $decryptedPassword;
3314 # Authorization succeeded, change password
3315 $authorization->{'Password'}->[0] = $decryptedPassword;
3316 # Write out
3317 write_ticket($authorizationfile, $authorization, $authorization->{'Salt'}->[0]);
3319 return $newpassword;
3322 sub create_newuser # ($loginfile, $sessionfile, $authorizationfile, $password, $newuser, $newpassword, $newsession) First two arguments are file paths
3324 my $loginfile = shift || "";
3325 my $sessionfile = shift || "";
3326 my $authorizationfile = shift || "";
3327 my $password = shift || "";
3328 my $newuser = shift || "";
3329 my $newpassword = shift || "";
3330 my $newsession = shift || "";
3332 # Get Login session ticket
3333 my $loginticket = read_ticket($loginfile);
3334 return "" unless $loginticket;
3335 # Login ticket file has been used, remove it
3336 unlink($loginfile);
3337 # Get Randomsalt
3338 my $Randomsalt = $loginticket->{'Randomsalt'}->[0];
3339 return "" unless $Randomsalt;
3340 my $LoginID = $loginticket->{'Session'}->[0];
3341 return "" unless $LoginID;
3343 # Get session ticket
3344 my $sessionticket = read_ticket($sessionfile);
3345 return "" unless $sessionticket;
3346 # Get User credentials for authorization
3347 my $authorization = read_ticket($authorizationfile);
3348 return "" unless $authorization && lc($authorization->{'Username'}->[0]) eq lc($sessionticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
3349 my $sessionkey = $sessionticket->{'Key'}->[0];
3350 my $serversalt = $authorization->{'Salt'}->[0];
3351 return "" unless $serversalt;
3353 my $storedpassword = $authorization->{'Password'}->[0];
3354 my $Hashedpassword = hash_string("$Randomsalt$storedpassword");
3355 return "" unless $password eq $Hashedpassword;
3356 my $secretkey = hash_string("$Randomsalt$LoginID$storedpassword");
3358 # Decrypt the $newpassword
3359 my $decryptedPassword = XOR_hex_strings($secretkey, $newpassword);
3360 return "" unless $decryptedPassword;
3362 # Authorization succeeded, create new account
3363 my $newaccount = {};
3364 $newaccount->{'Type'} = ['PASSWORD'];
3365 $newaccount->{'Username'} = [$newuser];
3366 $newaccount->{'Password'} = [$decryptedPassword];
3367 $newaccount->{'Salt'} = [$serversalt];
3368 $newaccount->{'Session'} = ['SESSION'];
3369 if($newsession eq 'IPADDRESS'){$newaccount->{'Session'} = ['IPADDRESS'];};
3370 if($newsession eq 'CHALLENGE'){$newaccount->{'Session'} = ['CHALLENGE'];};
3371 my $timesec = time();
3372 $newaccount->{'Time'} = [$timesec];
3374 # AllowedPaths
3375 my $NewAllowedPaths = "";
3376 my $PATH_INFO = $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} ? $ENV{'CGI_BINARY_FILE'} : $ENV{'PATH_INFO'};
3377 my $currentRoot = "";
3378 $currentRoot = $1 if $PATH_INFO =~ m!^([\w\-\. /]+)!isg;
3379 $currentRoot =~ s![^/]+$!!isg;
3380 if($currentRoot)
3382 $currentRoot .= '/' unless $currentRoot =~ m!/$!;
3383 my $newpath = "^".${currentRoot}.'[\w\-]+\.html?';
3384 $NewAllowedPaths .= 'AllowedPaths: ^'.${currentRoot}.'[\w\-]+\.html?'."\n";
3385 $newaccount->{'AllowedPaths'} = [$newpath];
3387 else
3389 # Tricky PATH_INFO, deny all
3390 $NewAllowedPaths .= "DeniedPaths: ^/\n";
3391 $newaccount->{'DeniedPaths'} = ["DeniedPaths: ^/\n"];
3394 # Construct home directory path
3395 my $currentHome = lc($newaccount->{'Username'}->[0]);
3396 $currentHome =~ s/[^\w]/_/isg;
3397 my $newpath = "^${currentRoot}$currentHome/";
3398 $NewAllowedPaths .= "AllowedPaths: $newpath\n";
3399 push(@{$newaccount->{'AllowedPaths'}}, $newpath);
3400 chomp($NewAllowedPaths);
3402 # Sign the new ticket
3403 my $Signature = SignTicketWithMasterkey($newaccount, $newaccount->{'Salt'}->[0]);
3405 # Write
3406 my $datetime = gmtime();
3407 my $passwordline = "<span id='newaccount'>".($newaccount->{'Password'}->[0])."</span>";
3408 my $newaccounttext = write_ticket("", $newaccount, $serversalt);
3410 # Re-encrypt the new password for transmission
3411 if($newaccounttext =~ /^(Password\:\s+)(\S+)\s*$/)
3413 my $passwordvalue = $1;
3414 my $reencryptedpassword = XOR_hex_strings($secretkey, $passwordvalue);
3415 my $encryptedpasswordline = "<span id='newaccount'>$reencryptedpassword</span>";
3416 $newaccounttext =~ s/^(Password\:\s+)(\S+)\s*$/\1$encryptedpasswordline/gim;
3418 return $newaccounttext;
3421 # Copy a Challenge ticket file to a new name which is the hash of the new $CHALLENGETICKET and the password
3422 sub copy_challenge_file #($oldchallengefile, $authorizationfile, $sessionpath) -> $CHALLENGETICKET
3424 my $oldchallengefile = shift || "";
3425 my $authorizationfile = shift || "";
3426 my $sessionpath = shift || "";
3427 $sessionpath =~ s!/+$!!g;
3429 # Get Login session ticket
3430 my $oldchallenge = read_ticket($oldchallengefile);
3431 return "" unless $oldchallenge;
3433 # Get Authorization (user) session file
3434 my $authorization = read_ticket($authorizationfile);
3435 return "" unless $authorization;
3436 my $storedpassword = $authorization->{'Password'}->[0];
3437 return "" unless $storedpassword;
3438 my $challengekey = $oldchallenge->{'Key'}->[0];
3439 return "" unless $challengekey;
3441 # Create Random Hash Salt
3442 my $NEWCHALLENGETICKET = get_random_hex();;
3443 my $newchallengefile = hash_string("$NEWCHALLENGETICKET$challengekey");
3444 return "" unless $newchallengefile;
3446 $ENV{'CHALLENGETICKET'} = $NEWCHALLENGETICKET;
3447 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('CHALLENGETICKET', "");
3448 ${"CGIexecute::CHALLENGETICKET"} = $NEWCHALLENGETICKET;
3450 # Write Session Ticket
3451 open(OLDCHALLENGE, "<$oldchallengefile") || die "<$oldchallengefile: $!\n";
3452 my @OldChallengeLines = <OLDCHALLENGE>;
3453 close(OLDCHALLENGE);
3454 # Old file should now be removed
3455 unlink($oldchallengefile);
3457 open(SESSION, ">$sessionpath/$newchallengefile") || die "$sessionpath/$newchallengefile: $!\n";
3458 foreach $line (@OldChallengeLines)
3460 print SESSION $line;
3462 close(SESSION);
3464 return $NEWCHALLENGETICKET;
3467 sub create_login_file #($PasswordDir, $SessionDir, $IPaddress)
3469 my $PasswordDir = shift || "";
3470 my $SessionDir = shift || "";
3471 my $IPaddress = shift || "";
3473 # Create Login Ticket
3474 my $LOGINTICKET= get_random_hex ();
3476 # Create Random Hash Salt
3477 my $RANDOMSALT= get_random_hex();
3479 # Create SALT file if it does not exist
3480 # Remove this, including test account for life system
3481 unless(-d "$SessionDir")
3483 `mkdir -p "$SessionDir"`;
3485 unless(-d "$PasswordDir")
3487 `mkdir -p "$PasswordDir"`;
3489 # Create SERVERSALT and default test account
3490 my $SERVERSALT = "";
3491 unless(-s "$PasswordDir/SALT")
3493 $SERVERSALT= get_random_hex();
3494 open(SALTFILE, ">$PasswordDir/SALT") || die ">$PasswordDir/SALT: $!\n";
3495 print SALTFILE "$SERVERSALT\n";
3496 close(SALTFILE);
3498 # Update test account (should be removed in live system)
3499 my @alltestusers = ("test", "testip", "testchallenge", "admin");
3500 foreach my $testuser (@alltestusers)
3502 if(-s "$PasswordDir/$testuser")
3504 my $plainpassword = $testuser eq 'admin' ? "There is no password like more password" : "testing";
3505 my $storedpassword = hash_string("${SERVERSALT}${plainpassword}${testuser}");
3506 # Encrypt the new password with the MasterKey
3507 my $authorization = read_ticket("$PasswordDir/$testuser") || return "";
3508 $authorization->{'Salt'} = [$SERVERSALT];
3509 set_password($authorization, $SERVERSALT, $plainpassword);
3510 write_ticket("$PasswordDir/$testuser", $authorization, $SERVERSALT);
3515 # Read in site Salt
3516 open(SALTFILE, "<$PasswordDir/SALT") || die "$PasswordDir/SALT: $!\n";
3517 $SERVERSALT=<SALTFILE>;
3518 close(SALTFILE);
3519 chomp($SERVERSALT);
3521 # Create login session ticket
3522 my $datetime = gmtime();
3523 my $timesec = time();
3524 my $loginticket = {};
3525 $loginticket->{Type} = ['LOGIN'];
3526 $loginticket->{IPaddress} = [$IPaddress];
3527 $loginticket->{Salt} = [$SERVERSALT];
3528 $loginticket->{Session} = [$LOGINTICKET];
3529 $loginticket->{Randomsalt} = [$RANDOMSALT];
3530 $loginticket->{Expires} = ['+600s'];
3531 $loginticket->{Date} = ["$datetime UTC"];
3532 $loginticket->{Time} = [$timesec];
3533 write_ticket("$SessionDir/$LOGINTICKET", $loginticket, $SERVERSALT);
3535 # Set global variables
3536 # $SERVERSALT
3537 $ENV{'SERVERSALT'} = $SERVERSALT;
3538 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('SERVERSALT', "");
3539 ${"CGIexecute::SERVERSALT"} = $SERVERSALT;
3541 # $SESSIONTICKET
3542 $ENV{'SESSIONTICKET'} = $SESSIONTICKET;
3543 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('SESSIONTICKET', "");
3544 ${"CGIexecute::SESSIONTICKET"} = $SESSIONTICKET;
3546 # $RANDOMSALT
3547 $ENV{'RANDOMSALT'} = $RANDOMSALT;
3548 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('RANDOMSALT', "");
3549 ${"CGIexecute::RANDOMSALT"} = $RANDOMSALT;
3551 # $LOGINTICKET
3552 $ENV{'LOGINTICKET'} = $LOGINTICKET;
3553 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable('LOGINTICKET', "");
3554 ${"CGIexecute::LOGINTICKET"} = $LOGINTICKET;
3556 return $ENV{'LOGINTICKET'};
3559 sub create_session_file #($sessionfile, $loginfile, $authorizationfile, $path) -> Is $loginfile deleted? 0/1
3561 my $sessionfile = shift || "";
3562 my $loginfile = shift || "";
3563 my $authorizationfile = shift || "";
3564 my $path = shift || "";
3566 # Get Login session ticket
3567 my $loginticket = read_ticket($loginfile);
3568 return unlink($loginfile) unless $loginticket;
3570 # Get Authorization (user) session file
3571 my $authorization = read_ticket($authorizationfile);
3572 return unlink($loginfile) unless $authorization;
3574 # For a Session or a Challenge, we need a stored key
3575 my $sessionkey = "";
3576 my $secretkey = "";
3577 if($authorization->{'Session'} && $authorization->{'Session'}->[0] ne 'IPADDRESS')
3579 my $storedpassword = $authorization->{'Password'}->[0];
3580 my $loginticketid = $loginticket->{'Session'}->[0];
3581 my $randomsalt = $loginticket->{'Randomsalt'}->[0];
3582 $sessionkey = hash_string("$loginticketid$storedpassword");
3583 $secretkey = hash_string("$randomsalt$loginticketid$storedpassword");
3585 # Get Session id
3586 my $sessionid = "";
3587 if($sessionfile =~ m!([^/]+)$!)
3589 $sessionid = $1;
3592 # Convert Authorization content to Session content
3593 my $sessionContent = {};
3594 my $SessionType = $authorization->{'Session'}->[0] ? $authorization->{'Session'}->[0] : "SESSION";
3595 $sessionContent->{Type} = [$SessionType];
3596 $sessionContent->{Username} = [lc($authorization->{'Username'}->[0])];
3597 $sessionContent->{Session} = [$sessionid];
3598 $sessionContent->{Time} = [time];
3599 # Allow use of Tor if Session Type is CHALLENGE
3600 $sessionContent->{IPaddress} = $loginticket->{'IPaddress'};
3601 $sessionContent->{Salt} = $authorization->{'Salt'};
3602 $sessionContent->{Randomsalt} = $loginticket->{'Randomsalt'};
3603 $sessionContent->{AllowedPaths} = $authorization->{'AllowedPaths'};
3604 $sessionContent->{DeniedPaths} = $authorization->{'DeniedPaths'};
3605 $sessionContent->{Expires} = $authorization->{'MaxLifetime'};
3606 $sessionContent->{Capabilities} = $authorization->{'Capabilities'};
3607 foreach my $pattern (keys(%TicketRequiredPatterns))
3609 if($path =~ m#$pattern#)
3611 my ($SessionPath, $PasswordsPath, $Login, $validtime) = split(/\t/, $TicketRequiredPatterns{$pattern});
3612 push(@{$sessionContent->{Expires}}, $validtime);
3615 $sessionContent->{Key} = [$sessionkey] if $sessionkey;
3616 $sessionContent->{Secretkey} = [$secretkey] if $secretkey;
3617 $sessionContent->{Date} = [gmtime()." UTC"];
3619 # Write Session Ticket
3620 write_ticket($sessionfile, $sessionContent, $authorization->{'Salt'}->[0]);
3622 # Login file should now be removed
3623 return unlink($loginfile);
3626 sub check_ticket_validity # ($type, $ticketfile, $address, $path [, $unsigned])
3628 my $type = shift || "SESSION";
3629 my $ticketfile = shift || "";
3630 my $address = shift || "";
3631 my $path = shift || "";
3632 my $unsigned = shift || 0;
3634 # Is there a session ticket of this name?
3635 return 0 unless -s "$ticketfile";
3637 # There is a session ticket, is it linked to this IP address?
3638 my $ticket = read_ticket($ticketfile);
3639 unless($ticket)
3641 print STDERR "Ticket expired or empty: $ticketfile\n";
3642 return;
3645 # Is this the right type of ticket
3646 unless($ticket && $ticket->{'Type'}->[0] eq $type)
3648 print STDERR "Wrong ticket type: $ticket->{'Type'}->[0] eq $type\n";
3649 return;
3652 # Does the IP address match?
3653 my $IPmatches = 0;
3654 for $IPpattern (@{$ticket->{"IPaddress"}})
3656 ++$IPmatches if $address =~ m#^$IPpattern#ig;
3658 if($address && ! $IPmatches)
3660 print STDERR "Wrong REMOTE ADDR for $ticket->{'Username'}->[0]: $ticket->{'IPaddress'}->[0] vs $address\n";
3661 return 0;
3664 # Is the path denied
3665 my $Pathmatches = 0;
3666 foreach $Pathpattern (@{$ticket->{"DeniedPaths"}})
3668 ++$Pathmatches if $path =~ m#$Pathpattern#ig;
3670 return 0 if @{$ticket->{"DeniedPaths"}} && $Pathmatches;
3672 # Is the path allowed
3673 $Pathmatches = 0;
3674 foreach $Pathpattern (@{$ticket->{"AllowedPaths"}})
3676 ++$Pathmatches if $path =~ m#$Pathpattern#ig;
3678 return 0 unless !@{$ticket->{"AllowedPaths"}} || $Pathmatches;
3680 # Check signature if not told to use an unsigned ticket (dangerous)
3681 my $Signature = TicketSignature($ticket, $ticket->{'Salt'}->[0]);
3682 if((! $unsigned) && $Signature && $Signature ne $ticket->{'Signature'}->[0])
3684 print STDERR "Invalid signature for $ticket->{'Type'}: $ticket->{'Username'}\n$ticketfile\n";
3685 return 0;
3688 # Make login values available (will also protect against resetting by query)
3689 $ENV{"LOGINUSERNAME"} = lc($ticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
3690 $ENV{"LOGINIPADDRESS"} = $address;
3691 $ENV{"LOGINPATH"} = $path;
3692 $ENV{"SESSIONTYPE"} = $type unless $type eq "PASSWORD";
3694 # Set Capabilities, if present
3695 if($ticket->{'Username'}->[0] && @{$ticket->{'Capabilities'}})
3697 $ENV{'CAPABILITIES'} = $ticket->{'Username'}->[0];
3698 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariableList('CAPABILITIES', "");
3699 @{"CGIexecute::CAPABILITIES"} = @{$ticket->{'Capabilities'}};
3700 # Capabilities should not be changed anymore by CGI query!
3702 # Capabilities are NOT to be set by the query
3703 CGIexecute::ProtectCGIvariable('CAPABILITIES');
3705 return 1;
3709 sub remove_expired_tickets # ($path) -> number of tickets removed
3711 my $path = shift || "";
3712 return 0 unless $path;
3713 $path =~ s!/+$!!g;
3714 my $removed_tickets = 0;
3715 my @ticketlist = glob("$path/*");
3716 foreach my $ticketfile (@ticketlist)
3718 my $ticket = read_ticket($ticketfile);
3719 unless($ticket)
3721 unlink $ticketfile;
3722 ++$removed_tickets;
3725 return $removed_tickets;
3728 sub set_password # ($ticket, $salt, $plainpassword) -> $password
3730 my $ticket = shift || "";
3731 my $salt = shift || "";
3732 my $plainpassword = shift || "";
3734 my $user = lc($ticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
3735 return "" unless $user;
3736 $salt = $ticket->{'Salt'}->[0] unless $salt;
3738 my $storedpassword = hash_string("${salt}${plainpassword}${user}");
3739 $ticket->{'Password'} = [$storedpassword];
3740 $ticket->{'Salt'} = [$salt];
3742 return $ticket->{'Password'}->[0];
3745 sub write_ticket # ($ticketfile, $ticket, $salt [, $masterkey]) -> &%ticket
3747 my $ticketfile = shift || "";
3748 my $ticket = shift || "";
3749 my $salt = shift || "";
3750 my $masterkey = shift || $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3752 # Encrypt password
3753 EncryptTicketWithMasterKey($ticket, $salt, $masterkey);
3755 # Sign the new ticket
3756 my $signature = SignTicketWithMasterkey($ticket, $salt, $masterkey);
3758 # Create ordered list with labels
3759 my @orderlist = ('Type', 'Username', 'Password', 'IPaddress', 'AllowedPaths', 'DeniedPaths',
3760 'Expires', 'Capabilities', 'Salt', 'Session', 'Randomsalt',
3761 'Date', 'Time', 'Signature', 'Key', 'Secretkey');
3762 my @labellist = keys(%{$ticket});
3763 foreach my $label (@orderlist)
3765 @labellist = grep(!/\b$label\b/, @labellist);
3768 # Create ticket in text
3769 my $TicketText = "";
3770 foreach my $label (@orderlist, @labellist)
3772 next unless exists($ticket->{$label}) && $ticket->{$label}->[0];
3773 foreach my $value (@{$ticket->{$label}})
3775 $TicketText .= "$label: $value\n";
3778 if($ticketfile)
3780 open(TICKET, ">$ticketfile") || die "$ticketfile: $!\n";
3781 print TICKET $TicketText;
3782 close(TICKET);
3785 return $TicketText;
3788 # Note, read_ticket will return 0 if the ticket has expired!
3789 sub read_ticket # ($ticketfile [, $salt, $masterkey]) -> &%ticket
3791 my $ticketfile = shift || "";
3792 my $serversalt = shift || "";
3793 my $masterkey = shift || $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3795 my $ticket = {};
3796 if($ticketfile && -s $ticketfile)
3798 open(TICKETFILE, "<$ticketfile") || die "$ticketfile: $!\n";
3799 my @alllines = <TICKETFILE>;
3800 close(TICKETFILE);
3801 foreach my $currentline (@alllines)
3803 # Skip empty lines and comments
3804 next unless $currentline =~ /\S/;
3805 next if $currentline =~ /^\s*\#/;
3807 if($currentline =~ /^\s*(\S[^\:]+)\:\s+(.*)\s*$/)
3809 my $Label = $1;
3810 my $Value = $2;
3811 $ticket->{$Label} = () unless exists($ticket->{$Label});
3812 push(@{$ticket->{$Label}}, $Value);
3816 if($masterkey && exists($ticket->{'Password'}) && $ticket->{'Password'}->[0])
3818 # Use the ServerSalt stored in the ticket, if present
3819 if(!$serversalt && exists($ticket->{Salt}) && $ticket->{Salt}->[0])
3821 $serversalt = $ticket->{Salt}->[0];
3823 # Decrypt all passwords
3824 DecryptTicketWithMasterKey($ticket, $serversalt, $masterkey) ||
3825 die "Decryption failed: DecryptTicketWithMasterKey ($ticket, $serversalt)\n";
3828 # Check whether the ticket has expired
3829 if(exists($ticket->{Expires}))
3831 my $StartTime = 0;
3832 if(exists($ticket->{Time}) && $ticket->{Time}->[0] > 0)
3834 $StartTime = [(sort(@{$ticket->{Time}}))]->[0];
3836 else
3838 # Get SessionTicket file stats
3839 my ($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size,$atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks)
3840 = stat($ticketfile);
3841 $StartTime = $ctime;
3843 foreach my $Value (@{$ticket->{'Expires'}})
3845 # Recalculate expire date from relative time
3846 if($Value =~ /^\+/)
3848 if($Value =~ /^\+(\d+)\s*d(ays)?\s*$/)
3850 $ExpireTime = 24*3600*$1;
3852 elsif($Value =~ /^\+(\d+)\s*m(inutes)?\s*$/)
3854 $ExpireTime = 60*$1;
3856 elsif($Value =~ /^\+(\d+)\s*h(ours)?\s*$/)
3858 $ExpireTime = 3600*$1;
3860 elsif($Value =~ /^\+(\d+)\s*s(econds)?\s*$/)
3862 $ExpireTime = $1;
3864 elsif($Value =~ /^\+(\d+)\s*$/)
3866 $ExpireTime = $1;
3869 my $absoluteTime = $Value =~ /^\+/ ? $StartTime + $ExpireTime : $Value;
3870 return 0 unless $absoluteTime > time;
3872 @{$ticket->{Expires}} = sort(@{$ticket->{Expires}});
3874 return $ticket;
3877 # Set up a valid ticket from a given text file
3878 # Use from command line. DO NOT USE ONLINE
3879 # Watch out for passwords that get stored in the history file
3881 # perl CGIscriptor.pl --managelogin [options] [files]
3882 # Options:
3883 # salt={file or saltvalue}
3884 # masterkey={file or plaintext}
3885 # newmasterkey={file or plaintext}
3886 # password={file or palintext}
3888 # Followed by one or more file names.
3889 # Options can be interspersed between filenames,
3890 # e.g., password='plaintext'
3891 # Note that passwords are only used once!
3893 sub setup_ticket_file # (@ARGV)
3895 # Stop when run on-line
3896 return if $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} || $ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
3898 my %Settings = ();
3899 foreach my $input (@_)
3901 if($input =~ /^([\w]+)\=/)
3903 my $name = lc($1);
3904 my $value = $';
3905 chomp($value);
3907 if($value !~ m![^\w\.\~\/\:\-]! && $value !~ /^[\-\.]/ && -s "$value" && ! -d "$value")
3909 open(INPUTVALUE, "<$value") || die "$value: $!\n";
3910 $value = <INPUTVALUE>;
3911 chomp($value);
3914 $value =~ s/(^\'([^\']*)\'$)/\1/g;
3915 $value =~ s/(^\"([^\"]*)\"$)/\1/g;
3916 $Settings{$name} = $value;
3918 elsif($input !~ m![^\w\.\~\/\:\-]!i && $input !~ /^[\-\.]/i && -s $input)
3920 # We MUST have a salt
3921 $Settings{'salt'} = $ticket->{'Salt'}->[0] unless $Settings{'salt'};
3923 # Set the new masterkey to the old masterkey if there is no new masterkey
3924 $Settings{'newmasterkey'} = $Settings{'masterkey'} unless exists($Settings{'newmasterkey'});
3926 # Get the ticket
3927 my $ticket = read_ticket($input, $Settings{'salt'}, $Settings{'masterkey'});
3929 # Set a new password from plaintext
3930 $ticket->{'Salt'}->[0] = $Settings{'salt'} if $Settings{'salt'} && $Settings{'password'};
3931 set_password ($ticket, $Settings{'salt'}, $Settings{'password'}) if $Settings{'password'};
3933 # Write the ticket back to file
3934 write_ticket($input, $ticket, $Settings{'salt'}, $Settings{'newmasterkey'});
3936 # A password is only used once
3937 $Settings{'password'} = "";
3942 # Add a signature from $masterkey to a ticket in the label $signlabel
3943 sub SignTicketWithMasterkey # ($ticket, $serversalt [, $masterkey, $signlabel]) -> $Signature
3945 my $ticket = shift || return 0;
3946 my $serversalt = shift || "";
3947 my $masterkey = shift || $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3948 my $signlabel = shift || 'Signature';
3950 my $Signature = TicketSignature($ticket, $serversalt, $masterkey);
3952 $ticket->{$signlabel} = [$Signature] if $Signature;
3954 return $Signature;
3957 # Determine ticket signature
3958 sub TicketSignature # ($ticket, $serversalt [, $masterkey]) -> $Signature
3960 my $ticket = shift || return 0;
3961 my $serversalt = shift || "";
3962 my $masterkey = shift || $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
3963 my $Signature = "";
3965 if($masterkey)
3967 # If the ServerSalt is not stored in the ticket, the SALT file has to be found
3968 if(!$serversalt && exists($ticket->{Salt}) && $ticket->{Salt}->[0])
3970 $serversalt = $ticket->{Salt}->[0];
3972 # Sign
3973 if($serversalt)
3975 my $username = lc($ticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
3976 my $hash1 = hash_string(${serversalt}.$masterkey);
3977 my $CryptKey = hash_string($username.${'hash1'});
3978 my $SignText = "Type: ".$ticket->{'Type'}->[0]."\n";
3979 my @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'Username'}});
3980 $SignText .= "Username: @tmp\n";
3981 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'IPaddress'}});
3982 $SignText .= "IPaddress: @tmp\n";
3983 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'AllowedPaths'}});
3984 $SignText .= "AllowedPaths: @tmp\n";
3985 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'DeniedPaths'}});
3986 $SignText .= "DeniedPaths: @tmp\n";
3987 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'Session'}});
3988 $SignText .= "Session: @tmp\n";
3989 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'Time'}});
3990 $SignText .= "Time: @tmp\n";
3991 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'Expires'}});
3992 $SignText .= "Expires: @tmp\n";
3993 @tmp = sort(@{$ticket->{'Capabilities'}});
3994 $SignText .= "Capabilities: @tmp\n";
3995 $Signature = HMAC_hex($CryptKey, $SignText);
3998 return $Signature;
4001 # Decrypts a password list IN PLACE
4002 sub DecryptTicketWithMasterKey # ($ticket, $serversalt [, $masterkey]) -> \@password_list
4004 my $ticket = shift || return 0;
4005 my $serversalt = shift || "";
4006 my $masterkey = shift || $ENV{'CGIMasterKey'};
4008 if($masterkey && exists($ticket->{Password}) && $ticket->{Password}->[0])
4010 # If the ServerSalt is not given, read it from the the ticket
4011 if(! $serversalt && exists($ticket->{Salt}) && $ticket->{Salt}->[0])
4013 $serversalt = $ticket->{Salt}->[0];
4015 # Decrypt password(s)
4016 if($serversalt)
4018 my $hash1 = hash_string(${serversalt}.$masterkey);
4019 my $username = lc($ticket->{'Username'}->[0]);
4020 my $CryptKey = hash_string(${'hash1'}.$username);
4021 foreach my $password (@{$ticket->{Password}})
4023 $password = XOR_hex_strings($CryptKey,$password);
4027 return $ticket->{'Password'};
4029 sub EncryptTicketWithMasterKey # ($ticket, $serversalt [, $masterkey]) -> \@password_list
4031 DecryptTicketWithMasterKey(@_);
4034 # Implement HMAC signature hash.
4035 # Blocksize is length in HEX characters, NOT bytes
4036 sub HMAC_hex # ($key, $message [, $blocksizehex]) -> $hex
4038 my $key = shift || "";
4039 my $message = shift || "";
4040 my $blocksizehex = shift || length($key);
4041 $key = hash_string($key) if length($key) > $blocksizehex;
4043 my $innerkey = XOR_hex_byte ($key, "36");
4044 my $outerkey = XOR_hex_byte ($key, "5c");
4045 my $innerhash = hash_string($innerkey.$message);
4046 my $outerhash = hash_string($outerkey.$innerhash);
4048 return $outerhash;
4051 # XOR input with equally long string of repeated 2 hex character (byte)
4052 # string. Input must have even number of hex characters
4053 sub XOR_hex_byte # ($hex1, $hexbyte) -> $hex
4055 my $hex1 = shift || "";
4056 my $hexbyte = shift || "";
4057 my $bytelength = length($hexbyte);
4058 my $hex2 = $hex1;
4059 $hex2 =~ s/.{$bytelength}/$hexbyte/ig;
4060 return XOR_hex_strings($hex1, $hex2);
4063 sub XOR_hex_strings # ($hex1, $hex2) -> $hex
4065 my $hex1 = shift || "";
4066 my $hex2 = shift || "";
4067 my @hex1list = split('', $hex1);
4068 my @hex2list = split('', $hex2);
4069 my @hexresultlist = ();
4070 for(my $i; $i < scalar(@hex1list); ++$i)
4072 my $d1 = hex($hex1list[$i]);
4073 my $d2 = hex($hex2list[$i]);
4074 my $dresult = ($d1 ^ $d2);
4075 $hexresultlist[$i] = sprintf("%x", $dresult);
4077 $hexresult = join('', @hexresultlist);
4078 return $hexresult;
4081 # End of Handle login access
4084 ############################################################################
4086 # Handle foreign interpreters (i.e., scripting languages)
4088 # Insert perl code to execute scripts in foreign scripting languages.
4089 # Actually, the scripts inside the <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> blocks are piped
4090 # into an interpreter.
4091 # The code presented here is fairly confusing because it
4092 # actually writes perl code code to the output.
4094 # A table with the file handles
4095 %SCRIPTINGINPUT = ();
4097 # A function to clean up Client delivered CGI parameter values
4098 # (i.e., quote all odd characters)
4099 %SHRUBcharacterTR =
4101 "\'" => '&#39;',
4102 "\`" => '&#96;',
4103 "\"" => '&quot;',
4104 '&' => '&amper;',
4105 "\\" => '&#92;'
4108 sub shrubCGIparameter # ($String) -> Cleaned string
4110 my $String = shift || "";
4112 # Change all quotes [`'"] into HTML character entities
4113 my ($Char, $Transcript) = ('&', $SHRUBcharacterTR{'&'});
4115 # Protect &
4116 $String =~ s/\Q$Char\E/$Transcript/isg if $Transcript;
4118 while( ($Char, $Transcript) = each %SHRUBcharacterTR)
4120 next if $Char eq '&';
4121 $String =~ s/\Q$Char\E/$Transcript/isg;
4124 # Replace newlines
4125 $String =~ s/[\n]/\\n/g;
4126 # Replace control characters with their backslashed octal ordinal numbers
4127 $String =~ s/([^\S \t])/(sprintf("\\0%o", ord($1)))/eisg; #
4128 $String =~ s/([\x00-\x08\x0A-\x1F])/(sprintf("\\0%o", ord($1)))/eisg; #
4130 return $String;
4134 # The initial open statements: Open a pipe to the foreign script interpreter
4135 sub OpenForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4137 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4138 my $NewDirective = "";
4140 return $NewDirective if($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType});
4142 # Construct a unique file handle name
4143 $SCRIPTINGFILEHANDLE = uc($ContentType);
4144 $SCRIPTINGFILEHANDLE =~ s/\W/\_/isg;
4145 $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} = $SCRIPTINGFILEHANDLE
4146 unless $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType};
4148 # Create the relevant script: Open the pipe to the interpreter
4149 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTOROPEN";
4150 # Open interpreter for '$ContentType'
4151 # Open pipe to interpreter (if it isn't open already)
4152 open($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}, "|$ScriptingLanguages{$ContentType}") || main::dieHandler(14, "$ContentType: \$!\\n");
4153 BLOCKCGISCRIPTOROPEN
4155 # Insert Initialization code and CGI variables
4156 $NewDirective .= InitializeForeignScript($ContentType);
4158 # Ready
4159 return $NewDirective;
4163 # The final closing code to stop the interpreter
4164 sub CloseForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4166 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4167 my $NewDirective = "";
4169 # Do nothing unless the pipe realy IS open
4170 return "" unless $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType};
4172 # Initial comment
4173 $NewDirective .= "\# Close interpreter for '$ContentType'\n";
4176 # Write the Postfix code
4177 $NewDirective .= CleanupForeignScript($ContentType);
4179 # Create the relevant script: Close the pipe to the interpreter
4180 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORCLOSE";
4181 close($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}) || main::dieHandler(15, \"$ContentType: \$!\\n\");
4182 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4184 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORCLOSE
4186 # Remove the file handler of the foreign script
4187 delete($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType});
4189 return $NewDirective;
4193 # The initialization code for the foreign script interpreter
4194 sub InitializeForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4196 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4197 my $NewDirective = "";
4199 # Add initialization code
4200 if($ScriptingInitialization{$ContentType})
4202 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINIT";
4203 # Initialization Code for '$ContentType'
4204 # Select relevant output filehandle
4205 select($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}); \$|=1;
4207 # The Initialization code (if any)
4208 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<'${ContentType}INITIALIZATIONCODE';
4209 $ScriptingInitialization{$ContentType}
4210 ${ContentType}INITIALIZATIONCODE
4212 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINIT
4215 # Add all CGI variables defined
4216 if(exists($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType}))
4218 # Start writing variable definitions to the Interpreter
4219 if($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType})
4221 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORVARDEF";
4222 # CGI variables (from the %default_values table)
4223 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} << '${ContentType}CGIVARIABLES';
4224 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORVARDEF
4227 my ($N, $V);
4228 foreach $N (keys(%default_values))
4230 # Determine whether the parameter has been defined
4231 # (the eval is a workaround to get at the variable value)
4232 next unless eval("defined(\$CGIexecute::$N)");
4234 # Get the value from the EXECUTION environment
4235 $V = eval("\$CGIexecute::$N");
4236 # protect control characters (i.e., convert them to \0.. form)
4237 $V = shrubCGIparameter($V);
4239 # Protect interpolated variables
4240 eval("\$CGIexecute::$N = '$V';") unless $ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType};
4242 # Print the actual declaration for this scripting language
4243 if($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType})
4245 $NewDirective .= sprintf($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType}, $N, $V);
4246 $NewDirective .= "\n";
4250 # Stop writing variable definitions to the Interpreter
4251 if($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType})
4253 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORVARDEFEND";
4254 ${ContentType}CGIVARIABLES
4255 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORVARDEFEND
4260 $NewDirective .= << "BLOCKCGISCRIPTOREND";
4262 # Select STDOUT filehandle
4263 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4265 BLOCKCGISCRIPTOREND
4267 return $NewDirective;
4271 # The cleanup code for the foreign script interpreter
4272 sub CleanupForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4274 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4275 my $NewDirective = "";
4277 # Return if not needed
4278 return $NewDirective unless $ScriptingCleanup{$ContentType};
4280 # Create the relevant script: Open the pipe to the interpreter
4281 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSTOP";
4282 # Cleanup Code for '$ContentType'
4283 # Select relevant output filehandle
4284 select($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}); \$|=1;
4285 # Print Cleanup code to foreign script
4286 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<'${ContentType}SCRIPTSTOP';
4287 $ScriptingCleanup{$ContentType}
4288 ${ContentType}SCRIPTSTOP
4290 # Select STDOUT filehandle
4291 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4292 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSTOP
4294 return $NewDirective;
4298 # The prefix code for each <script></script> block
4299 sub PrefixForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4301 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4302 my $NewDirective = "";
4304 # Return if not needed
4305 return $NewDirective unless $ScriptingPrefix{$ContentType};
4307 my $Quote = "\'";
4308 # If the CGIvariables parameter is defined, but empty, interpolate
4309 # code string (i.e., $var .= << "END" i.s.o. $var .= << 'END')
4310 $Quote = '"' if exists($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType}) &&
4311 !$ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType};
4313 # Add initialization code
4314 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORPREFIX";
4315 # Prefix Code for '$ContentType'
4316 # Select relevant output filehandle
4317 select($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}); \$|=1;
4319 # The block Prefix code (if any)
4320 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<$Quote${ContentType}PREFIXCODE$Quote;
4321 $ScriptingPrefix{$ContentType}
4322 ${ContentType}PREFIXCODE
4323 # Select STDOUT filehandle
4324 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4325 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORPREFIX
4327 return $NewDirective;
4331 # The postfix code for each <script></script> block
4332 sub PostfixForeignScript # ($ContentType) -> $DirectivePrefix
4334 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4335 my $NewDirective = "";
4337 # Return if not needed
4338 return $NewDirective unless $ScriptingPostfix{$ContentType};
4340 my $Quote = "\'";
4341 # If the CGIvariables parameter is defined, but empty, interpolate
4342 # code string (i.e., $var .= << "END" i.s.o. $var .= << 'END')
4343 $Quote = '"' if exists($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType}) &&
4344 !$ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType};
4346 # Create the relevant script: Open the pipe to the interpreter
4347 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORPOSTFIX";
4348 # Postfix Code for '$ContentType'
4349 # Select filehandle to interpreter
4350 select($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}); \$|=1;
4351 # Print postfix code to foreign script
4352 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<$Quote${ContentType}SCRIPTPOSTFIX$Quote;
4353 $ScriptingPostfix{$ContentType}
4354 ${ContentType}SCRIPTPOSTFIX
4355 # Select STDOUT filehandle
4356 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4357 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORPOSTFIX
4359 return $NewDirective;
4362 sub InsertForeignScript # ($ContentType, $directive, @SRCfile) -> $NewDirective
4364 my $ContentType = lc(shift) || return "";
4365 my $directive = shift || return "";
4366 my @SRCfile = @_;
4367 my $NewDirective = "";
4369 my $Quote = "\'";
4370 # If the CGIvariables parameter is defined, but empty, interpolate
4371 # code string (i.e., $var .= << "END" i.s.o. $var .= << 'END')
4372 $Quote = '"' if exists($ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType}) &&
4373 !$ScriptingCGIvariables{$ContentType};
4375 # Create the relevant script
4376 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINSERT";
4377 # Insert Code for '$ContentType'
4378 # Select filehandle to interpreter
4379 select($SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType}); \$|=1;
4380 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINSERT
4382 # Use SRC feature files
4383 my $ThisSRCfile;
4384 while($ThisSRCfile = shift(@_))
4386 # Handle blocks
4387 if($ThisSRCfile =~ /^\s*\{\s*/)
4389 my $Block = $';
4390 $Block = $` if $Block =~ /\s*\}\s*$/;
4391 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSRCBLOCK";
4392 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<$Quote${ContentType}SRCBLOCKCODE$Quote;
4393 $Block
4394 ${ContentType}SRCBLOCKCODE
4395 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSRCBLOCK
4397 next;
4400 # Handle files
4401 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSRCFILES";
4402 # Read $ThisSRCfile
4403 open(SCRIPTINGSOURCE, "<$ThisSRCfile") || main::dieHandler(16, "$ThisSRCfILE: \$!");
4404 while(<SCRIPTINGSOURCE>)
4406 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} \$_;
4408 close(SCRIPTINGSOURCE);
4410 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSRCFILES
4414 # Add the directive
4415 if($directive)
4417 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINSERT";
4418 print $SCRIPTINGINPUT{$ContentType} <<$Quote${ContentType}DIRECTIVECODE$Quote;
4419 $directive
4420 ${ContentType}DIRECTIVECODE
4421 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORINSERT
4425 $NewDirective .= <<"BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSELECT";
4426 # Select STDOUT filehandle
4427 select(STDOUT); \$|=1;
4428 BLOCKCGISCRIPTORSELECT
4430 # Ready
4431 return $NewDirective;
4434 sub CloseAllForeignScripts # Call CloseForeignScript on all open scripts
4436 my $ContentType;
4437 foreach $ContentType (keys(%SCRIPTINGINPUT))
4439 my $directive = CloseForeignScript($ContentType);
4440 print STDERR "\nDirective $CGI_Date: ", $directive;
4441 CGIexecute->evaluate($directive);
4446 # End of handling foreign (external) scripting languages.
4448 ############################################################################
4450 # A subroutine to handle "nested" quotes, it cuts off the leading
4451 # item or quoted substring
4452 # E.g.,
4453 # ' A_word and more words' -> @('A_word', ' and more words')
4454 # '"quoted string" The rest' -> @('quoted string', ' The rest')
4455 # (this is needed for parsing the <TAGS> and their attributes)
4456 my $SupportedQuotes = "\'\"\`\(\{\[";
4457 my %QuotePairs = ('('=>')','['=>']','{'=>'}'); # Brackets
4458 sub ExtractQuotedItem # ($String) -> @($QuotedString, $RestOfString)
4460 my @Result = ();
4461 my $String = shift || return @Result;
4463 if($String =~ /^\s*([\w\/\-\.]+)/is)
4465 push(@Result, $1, $');
4467 elsif($String =~ /^\s*(\\?)([\Q$SupportedQuotes\E])/is)
4469 my $BackSlash = $1 || "";
4470 my $OpenQuote = $2;
4471 my $CloseQuote = $OpenQuote;
4472 $CloseQuote = $QuotePairs{$OpenQuote} if $QuotePairs{$OpenQuote};
4474 if($BackSlash)
4476 $String =~ /^\s*\\\Q$OpenQuote\E/i;
4477 my $Onset = $';
4478 $Onset =~ /\\\Q$CloseQuote\E/i;
4479 my $Rest = $';
4480 my $Item = $`;
4481 push(@Result, $Item, $Rest);
4484 else
4486 $String =~ /^\s*\Q$OpenQuote\E([^\Q$CloseQuote\E]*)\Q$CloseQuote\E/i;
4487 push(@Result, $1, $');
4490 else
4492 push(@Result, "", $String);
4494 return @Result;
4497 # Now, start with the real work
4499 # Control the output of the Content-type: text/html\n\n message
4500 my $SupressContentType = 0;
4502 # Process a file
4503 sub ProcessFile # ($file_path)
4505 my $file_path = shift || return 0;
4508 # Generate a unique file handle (for recursions)
4509 my @SRClist = ();
4510 my $FileHandle = "file";
4511 my $n = 0;
4512 while(!eof($FileHandle.$n)) {++$n;};
4513 $FileHandle .= $n;
4515 # Start HTML output
4516 # Use the default Content-type if this is NOT a raw file
4517 unless(($RawFilePattern && $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@($RawFilePattern)$@i)
4518 || $SupressContentType)
4520 $ENV{'PATH_INFO'} =~ m@($FilePattern)$@i;
4521 my $ContentType = $ContentTypeTable{$1};
4522 print "Content-type: $ContentType\n";
4523 if(%SETCOOKIELIST && keys(%SETCOOKIELIST))
4525 foreach my $name (keys(%SETCOOKIELIST))
4527 my $value = $SETCOOKIELIST{$name};
4528 print "Set-Cookie: $name=$value\n";
4530 # Cookies are set only ONCE
4531 %SETCOOKIELIST = ();
4533 print "\n";
4534 $SupressContentType = 1; # Content type has been printed
4538 # Get access to the actual data. This can be from RAM (by way of an
4539 # environment variable) or by opening a file.
4541 # Handle the use of RAM images (file-data is stored in the
4542 # $CGI_FILE_CONTENTS environment variable)
4543 # Note that this environment variable will be cleared, i.e., it is strictly for
4544 # single-use only!
4545 if($ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS})
4547 # File has been read already
4548 $_ = $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS};
4549 # Sorry, you have to do the reading yourself (dynamic document creation?)
4550 # NOTE: you must read the whole document at once
4551 if($_ eq '-')
4553 $_ = eval("\@_=('$file_path'); do{$ENV{$CGI_DATA_ACCESS_CODE}}");
4555 else # Clear environment variable
4557 $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS} = '-';
4560 # Open Only PLAIN TEXT files (or STDIN) and NO executable files (i.e., scripts).
4561 # THIS IS A SECURITY FEATURE!
4562 elsif($file_path eq '-' || (-e "$file_path" && -r _ && -T _ && -f _ && ! (-x _ || -X _) ))
4564 open($FileHandle, $file_path) || dieHandler(17, "<h2>File not found</h2>\n");
4565 push(@OpenFiles, $file_path);
4566 $_ = <$FileHandle>; # Read first line
4568 else
4570 print "<h2>File not found</h2>\n";
4571 dieHandler(18, "$file_path\n");
4574 $| = 1; # Flush output buffers
4576 # Initialize variables
4577 my $METAarguments = ""; # The CGI arguments from the latest META tag
4578 my @METAvalues = (); # The ''-quoted CGI values from the latest META tag
4579 my $ClosedTag = 0; # <TAG> </TAG> versus <TAG/>
4582 # Send document to output
4583 # Process the requested document.
4584 # Do a loop BEFORE reading input again (this catches the RAM/Database
4585 # type of documents).
4586 do {
4589 # Handle translations if needed
4591 performTranslation(\$_) if $TranslationPaths;
4593 # Catch <SCRIPT LANGUAGE="PERL" TYPE="text/ssperl" > directives in $_
4594 # There can be more than 1 <SCRIPT> or META tags on a line
4595 while(/\<\s*(SCRIPT|META|DIV|INS)\s/is)
4597 my $directive = "";
4598 # Store rest of line
4599 my $Before = $`;
4600 my $ScriptTag = $&;
4601 my $After = $';
4602 my $TagType = uc($1);
4603 # The before part can be send to the output
4604 print $Before;
4606 # Read complete Tag from after and/or file
4607 until($After =~ /([^\\])\>/)
4609 $After .= <$FileHandle>;
4610 performTranslation(\$After) if $TranslationPaths;
4613 if($After =~ /([^\\])\>/)
4615 $ScriptTag .= $`.$&; # Keep the Script Tag intact
4616 $After = $';
4618 else
4620 dieHandler(19, "Closing > not found\n");
4623 # The tag could be closed by />, we handle this in the XML way
4624 # and don't process any content (we ignore whitespace)
4625 $ClosedTag = ($ScriptTag =~ m@[^\\]/\s*\>\s*$@) ? 1 : 0;
4628 # TYPE or CLASS?
4629 my $TypeName = ($TagType =~ /META/is) ? "CONTENT" : "TYPE";
4630 $TypeName = "CLASS" if $TagType eq 'DIV' || $TagType eq 'INS';
4632 # Parse <SCRIPT> or <META> directive
4633 # If NOT (TYPE|CONTENT)="text/ssperl" (i.e., $ServerScriptContentType),
4634 # send the line to the output and go to the next loop
4635 my $CurrentContentType = "";
4636 if($ScriptTag =~ /(^|\s)$TypeName\s*=\s*/is)
4638 my ($Type) = ExtractQuotedItem($');
4639 $Type =~ /^\s*([\w\/\-]+)\s*[\,\;]?/;
4640 $CurrentContentType = lc($1); # Note: mime-types are "case-less"
4641 # CSS classes are aliases of $ServerScriptContentType
4642 if($TypeName eq "CLASS" && $CurrentContentType eq $ServerScriptContentClass)
4644 $CurrentContentType = $ServerScriptContentType;
4649 # Not a known server-side content type, print and continue
4650 unless(($CurrentContentType =~
4651 /$ServerScriptContentType|$ShellScriptContentType/is) ||
4652 $ScriptingLanguages{$CurrentContentType})
4654 print $ScriptTag;
4655 $_ = $After;
4656 next;
4660 # A known server-side content type, evaluate
4662 # First, handle \> and \<
4663 $ScriptTag =~ s/\\\>/\>/isg;
4664 $ScriptTag =~ s/\\\</\</isg;
4666 # Extract the CGI, SRC, ID, IF and UNLESS attributes
4667 my %ScriptTagAttributes = ();
4668 while($ScriptTag =~ /(^|\s)(CGI|IF|UNLESS|SRC|ID)\s*=\s*/is)
4670 my $Attribute = $2;
4671 my $Rest = $';
4672 my $Value = "";
4673 ($Value, $ScriptTag) = ExtractQuotedItem($Rest);
4674 $ScriptTagAttributes{uc($Attribute)} = $Value;
4678 # The attribute used to define the CGI variables
4679 # Extract CGI-variables from
4680 # <META CONTENT="text/ssperl; CGI='' SRC=''">
4681 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl' CGI='' SRC=''>
4682 # <DIV CLASS='ssperl' CGI='' SRC='' ID=""> tags
4683 # <INS CLASS='ssperl' CGI='' SRC='' ID=""> tags
4684 if($ScriptTagAttributes{'CGI'})
4686 @ARGV = (); # Reset ARGV
4687 $ARGC = 0;
4688 $METAarguments = ""; # Reset the META CGI arguments
4689 @METAvalues = ();
4690 my $Meta_CGI = $ScriptTagAttributes{'CGI'};
4692 # Process default values of variables ($<name> = 'default value')
4693 # Allowed quotes are '', "", ``, (), [], and {}
4694 while($Meta_CGI =~ /(^\s*|[^\\])([\$\@\%]?)([\w\-]+)\s*/is)
4696 my $varType = $2 || '$'; # Variable or list
4697 my $name = $3; # The Name
4698 my $default = "";
4699 $Meta_CGI = $';
4701 if($Meta_CGI =~ /^\s*\=\s*/is)
4703 # Locate (any) default value
4704 ($default, $Meta_CGI) = ExtractQuotedItem($'); # Cut the parameter from the CGI
4706 $RemainingTag = $Meta_CGI;
4709 # Define CGI (or ENV) variable, initalize it from the
4710 # Query string or the default value
4712 # Also construct the @ARGV and @_ arrays. This allows other (SRC=) Perl
4713 # scripts to access the CGI arguments defined in the META tag
4714 # (Not for CGI inside <SCRIPT> tags)
4715 if($varType eq '$')
4717 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable($name, $default)
4718 || dieHandler(20, "INVALID CGI name/value pair ($name, $default)\n");
4719 push(@METAvalues, "'".${"CGIexecute::$name"}."'");
4720 # Add value to the @ARGV list
4721 push(@ARGV, ${"CGIexecute::$name"});
4722 ++$ARGC;
4724 elsif($varType eq '@')
4726 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariableList($name, $default)
4727 || dieHandler(21, "INVALID CGI name/value list pair ($name, $default)\n");
4728 push(@METAvalues, "'".join("'", @{"CGIexecute::$name"})."'");
4729 # Add value to the @ARGV list
4730 push(@ARGV, @{"CGIexecute::$name"});
4731 $ARGC = scalar(@CGIexecute::ARGV);
4733 elsif($varType eq '%')
4735 CGIexecute::defineCGIvariableHash($name, $default)
4736 || dieHandler(22, "INVALID CGI name/value hash pair ($name, $default)\n");
4737 my @PairList = map {"$_ => ".${"CGIexecute::$name"}{$_}} keys(%{"CGIexecute::$name"});
4738 push(@METAvalues, "'".join("'", @PairList)."'");
4739 # Add value to the @ARGV list
4740 push(@ARGV, %{"CGIexecute::$name"});
4741 $ARGC = scalar(@CGIexecute::ARGV);
4744 # Store the values for internal and later use
4745 $METAarguments .= "$varType".$name.","; # A string of CGI variable names
4747 push(@METAvalues, "\'".eval("\"$varType\{CGIexecute::$name\}\"")."\'"); # ALWAYS add '-quotes around values
4752 # The IF (conditional execution) Attribute
4753 # Evaluate the condition and stop unless it evaluates to true
4754 if($ScriptTagAttributes{'IF'})
4756 my $IFcondition = $ScriptTagAttributes{'IF'};
4758 # Convert SCRIPT calls, ./<script>
4759 $IFcondition =~ s@([\W]|^)\./([\S])@$1$SCRIPT_SUB$2@g;
4761 # Convert FILE calls, ~/<file>
4762 $IFcondition =~ s@([\W])\~/([\S])@$1$HOME_SUB$2@g;
4764 # Block execution if necessary
4765 unless(CGIexecute->evaluate($IFcondition))
4767 %ScriptTagAttributes = ();
4768 $CurrentContentType = "";
4772 # The UNLESS (conditional execution) Attribute
4773 # Evaluate the condition and stop if it evaluates to true
4774 if($ScriptTagAttributes{'UNLESS'})
4776 my $UNLESScondition = $ScriptTagAttributes{'UNLESS'};
4778 # Convert SCRIPT calls, ./<script>
4779 $UNLESScondition =~ s@([\W]|^)\./([\S])@$1$SCRIPT_SUB$2@g;
4781 # Convert FILE calls, ~/<file>
4782 $UNLESScondition =~ s@([\W])\~/([\S])@$1$HOME_SUB$2@g;
4784 # Block execution if necessary
4785 if(CGIexecute->evaluate($UNLESScondition))
4787 %ScriptTagAttributes = ();
4788 $CurrentContentType = "";
4792 # The SRC (Source File) Attribute
4793 # Extract any source script files and add them in
4794 # front of the directive
4795 # The SRC list should be emptied
4796 @SRClist = ();
4797 my $SRCtag = "";
4798 my $Prefix = 1;
4799 my $PrefixDirective = "";
4800 my $PostfixDirective = "";
4801 # There is a SRC attribute
4802 if($ScriptTagAttributes{'SRC'})
4804 $SRCtag = $ScriptTagAttributes{'SRC'};
4805 # Remove "file://" prefixes
4806 $SRCtag =~ s@([^\w\/\\]|^)file\://([^\s\/\@\=])@$1$2@gis;
4807 # Expand script filenames "./Script"
4808 $SRCtag =~ s@([^\w\/\\]|^)\./([^\s\/\@\=])@$1$SCRIPT_SUB/$2@gis;
4809 # Expand script filenames "~/Script"
4810 $SRCtag =~ s@([^\w\/\\]|^)\~/([^\s\/\@\=])@$1$HOME_SUB/$2@gis;
4813 # File source tags
4814 while($SRCtag =~ /\S/is)
4816 my $SRCdirective = "";
4818 # Pseudo file, just a switch to go from PREFIXING to POSTFIXING
4819 # SRC files
4820 if($SRCtag =~ /^[\s\;\,]*(POSTFIX|PREFIX)([^$FileAllowedChars]|$)/is)
4822 my $InsertionPlace = $1;
4823 $SRCtag = $2.$';
4825 $Prefix = $InsertionPlace =~ /POSTFIX/i ? 0 : 1;
4826 # Go to next round
4827 next;
4829 # {}-blocks are just evaluated by "do"
4830 elsif($SRCtag =~ /^[\s\;\,]*\{/is)
4832 my $SRCblock = $';
4833 if($SRCblock =~ /\}[\s\;\,]*([^\}]*)$/is)
4835 $SRCblock = $`;
4836 $SRCtag = $1.$';
4837 # SAFEqx shell script blocks
4838 if($CurrentContentType =~ /$ShellScriptContentType/is)
4840 # Handle ''-quotes inside the script
4841 $SRCblock =~ s/[\']/\\$&/gis;
4843 $SRCblock = "print do { SAFEqx(\'".$SRCblock."\'); };'';";
4844 $SRCdirective .= $SRCblock."\n";
4846 # do { SRCblocks }
4847 elsif($CurrentContentType =~ /$ServerScriptContentType/is)
4849 $SRCblock = "print do { $SRCblock };'';";
4850 $SRCdirective .= $SRCblock."\n";
4852 else # The interpreter should handle this
4854 push(@SRClist, "{ $SRCblock }");
4858 else
4859 { dieHandler(23, "Closing \} missing\n");};
4861 # Files are processed as Text or Executable files
4862 elsif($SRCtag =~ /[\s\;\,]*([$FileAllowedChars]+)[\;\,\s]*/is)
4864 my $SrcFile = $1;
4865 $SRCtag = $';
4867 # We are handling one of the external interpreters
4868 if($ScriptingLanguages{$CurrentContentType})
4870 push(@SRClist, $SrcFile);
4872 # We are at the start of a DIV tag, just load all SRC files and/or URL's
4873 elsif($TagType eq 'DIV' || $TagType eq 'INS') # All files are prepended in DIV's
4875 # $SrcFile is a URL pointing to an HTTP or FTP server
4876 if($SrcFile =~ m!^([a-z]+)\://!)
4878 my $URLoutput = CGIscriptor::read_url($SrcFile);
4879 $SRCdirective .= $URLoutput;
4881 # SRC file is an existing file
4882 elsif(-e "$SrcFile")
4884 open(DIVSOURCE, "<$SrcFile") || dieHandler(24, "<$SrcFile: $!\n");
4885 my $Content;
4886 while(sysread(DIVSOURCE, $Content, 1024) > 0)
4888 $SRCdirective .= $Content;
4890 close(DIVSOURCE);
4893 # Executable files are executed as
4894 # `$SrcFile 'ARGV[0]' 'ARGV[1]'`
4895 elsif(-x "$SrcFile")
4897 $SRCdirective .= "print \`$SrcFile @METAvalues\`;'';\n";
4899 # Handle 'standard' files, using ProcessFile
4900 elsif((-T "$SrcFile" || $ENV{$CGI_FILE_CONTENTS})
4901 && $SrcFile =~ m@($FilePattern)$@) # A recursion
4904 # Do not process still open files because it can lead
4905 # to endless recursions
4906 if(grep(/^$SrcFile$/, @OpenFiles))
4907 { dieHandler(25, "$SrcFile allready opened (endless recursion)\n")};
4908 # Prepare meta arguments
4909 $SRCdirective .= '@ARGV = (' .$METAarguments.");\n" if $METAarguments;
4910 # Process the file
4911 $SRCdirective .= "main::ProcessFile(\'$SrcFile\');'';\n";
4913 elsif($SrcFile =~ m!^([a-z]+)\://!) # URL's are loaded and printed
4915 $SRCdirective .= GET_URL($SrcFile);
4917 elsif(-T "$SrcFile") # Textfiles are "do"-ed (Perl execution)
4919 $SRCdirective .= '@ARGV = (' .$METAarguments.");\n" if $METAarguments;
4920 $SRCdirective .= "do \'$SrcFile\';'';\n";
4922 else # This one could not be resolved (should be handled by BinaryMapFile)
4924 $SRCdirective .= 'print "'.$SrcFile.' cannot be used"'."\n";
4929 # Postfix or Prefix
4930 if($Prefix)
4932 $PrefixDirective .= $SRCdirective;
4934 else
4936 $PostfixDirective .= $SRCdirective;
4939 # The prefix should be handled immediately
4940 $directive .= $PrefixDirective;
4941 $PrefixDirective = "";
4945 # Handle the content of the <SCRIPT></SCRIPT> tags
4946 # Do not process the content of <SCRIPT/>
4947 if($TagType =~ /SCRIPT/is && !$ClosedTag) # The <SCRIPT> TAG
4949 my $EndScriptTag = "";
4951 # Execute SHELL scripts with SAFEqx()
4952 if($CurrentContentType =~ /$ShellScriptContentType/is)
4954 $directive .= "SAFEqx(\'";
4957 # Extract Program
4958 while($After !~ /\<\s*\/SCRIPT[^\>]*\>/is && !eof($FileHandle))
4960 $After .= <$FileHandle>;
4961 performTranslation(\$After) if $TranslationPaths;
4964 if($After =~ /\<\s*\/SCRIPT[^\>]*\>/is)
4966 $directive .= $`;
4967 $EndScriptTag = $&;
4968 $After = $';
4970 else
4972 dieHandler(26, "Missing </SCRIPT> end tag in $ENV{'PATH_INFO'}\n");
4975 # Process only when content should be executed
4976 if($CurrentContentType)
4979 # Remove all comments from Perl scripts
4980 # (NOT from OS shell scripts)
4981 $directive =~ s/[^\\\$]\#[^\n\f\r]*([\n\f\r])/$1/g
4982 if $CurrentContentType =~ /$ServerScriptContentType/i;
4984 # Convert SCRIPT calls, ./<script>
4985 $directive =~ s@([\W]|^)\./([\S])@$1$SCRIPT_SUB$2@g;
4987 # Convert FILE calls, ~/<file>
4988 $directive =~ s@([\W])\~/([\S])@$1$HOME_SUB$2@g;
4990 # Execute SHELL scripts with SAFEqx(), closing bracket
4991 if($CurrentContentType =~ /$ShellScriptContentType/i)
4993 # Handle ''-quotes inside the script
4994 $directive =~ /SAFEqx\(\'/;
4995 $directive = $`.$&;
4996 my $Executable = $';
4997 $Executable =~ s/[\']/\\$&/gs;
4999 $directive .= $Executable."\');"; # Closing bracket
5002 else
5004 $directive = "";
5007 # Handle the content of the <DIV></DIV> tags
5008 # Do not process the content of <DIV/>
5009 elsif(($TagType eq 'DIV' || $TagType eq 'INS') && !$ClosedTag) # The <DIV> TAGs
5011 my $EndScriptTag = "";
5013 # Extract Text
5014 while($After !~ /\<\s*\/$TagType[^\>]*\>/is && !eof($FileHandle))
5016 $After .= <$FileHandle>;
5017 performTranslation(\$After) if $TranslationPaths;
5020 if($After =~ /\<\s*\/$TagType[^\>]*\>/is)
5022 $directive .= $`;
5023 $EndScriptTag = $&;
5024 $After = $';
5026 else
5028 dieHandler(27, "Missing </$TagType> end tag in $ENV{'PATH_INFO'}\n");
5031 # Add the Postfixed directives (but only when it contains something printable)
5032 $directive .= "\n".$PostfixDirective if $PostfixDirective =~ /\S/;
5033 $PostfixDirective = "";
5036 # Process only when content should be handled
5037 if($CurrentContentType)
5040 # Get the name (ID), and clean it (i.e., remove anything that is NOT part of
5041 # a valid Perl name). Names should not contain $, but we can handle it.
5042 my $name = $ScriptTagAttributes{'ID'};
5043 $name =~ /^\s*[\$\@\%]?([\w\-]+)/;
5044 $name = $1;
5046 # Assign DIV contents to $NAME value OUTSIDE the CGI values!
5047 CGIexecute::defineCGIexecuteVariable($name, $directive);
5048 $directive = "";
5051 # Nothing to execute
5052 $directive = "";
5056 # Handle Foreign scripting languages
5057 if($ScriptingLanguages{$CurrentContentType})
5059 my $newDirective = "";
5060 $newDirective .= OpenForeignScript($CurrentContentType); # Only if not already done
5061 $newDirective .= PrefixForeignScript($CurrentContentType);
5062 $newDirective .= InsertForeignScript($CurrentContentType, $directive, @SRClist);
5063 $newDirective .= PostfixForeignScript($CurrentContentType);
5064 $newDirective .= CloseForeignScript($CurrentContentType); # This shouldn't be necessary
5066 $newDirective .= '"";';
5068 $directive = $newDirective;
5072 # Add the Postfixed directives (but only when it contains something printable)
5073 $directive .= "\n".$PostfixDirective if $PostfixDirective =~ /\S/;
5074 $PostfixDirective = "";
5077 # EXECUTE the script and print the results
5079 # Use this to debug the program
5080 # print STDERR "Directive $CGI_Date: \n", $directive, "\n\n";
5082 my $Result = CGIexecute->evaluate($directive) if $directive; # Evaluate as PERL code
5083 $Result =~ s/\n$//g; # Remove final newline
5085 # Print the Result of evaluating the directive
5086 # (this will handle LARGE, >64 kB output)
5087 my $BytesWritten = 1;
5088 while($Result && $BytesWritten)
5090 $BytesWritten = syswrite(STDOUT, $Result, 64);
5091 $Result = substr($Result, $BytesWritten);
5093 # print $Result; # Could be used instead of above code
5095 # Store result if wanted, i.e., if $CGIscriptorResults has been
5096 # defined in a <META> tag.
5097 push(@CGIexecute::CGIscriptorResults, $Result)
5098 if exists($default_values{'CGIscriptorResults'});
5100 # Process the rest of the input line (this could contain
5101 # another directive)
5102 $_ = $After;
5104 print $_;
5105 } while(<$FileHandle>); # Read and Test AFTER first loop!
5107 close ($FileHandle);
5108 dieHandler(28, "Error in recursion\n") unless pop(@OpenFiles) == $file_path;
5112 ###############################################################################
5114 # Call the whole package
5116 sub Handle_Request
5118 my $file_path = "";
5120 # Initialization Code
5121 Initialize_Request();
5123 # SECURITY: ACCESS CONTROL
5124 Access_Control();
5126 # Read the POST part of the query, if there is one
5127 Get_POST_part_of_query();
5129 # Start (HTML) output and logging
5130 $file_path = Initialize_output();
5132 # Check login access or divert to login procedure
5133 $Use_Login = Log_In_Access();
5134 $file_path = $Use_Login if $Use_Login;
5136 # Record which files are still open (to avoid endless recursions)
5137 my @OpenFiles = ();
5139 # Record whether the default HTML ContentType has already been printed
5140 # but only if the SERVER uses HTTP or some other protocol that might interpret
5141 # a content MIME type.
5143 $SupressContentType = !("$ENV{'SERVER_PROTOCOL'}" =~ /($ContentTypeServerProtocols)/i);
5145 # Process the specified file
5146 ProcessFile($file_path) if $file_path ne $SS_PUB;
5148 # Cleanup all open external (foreign) interpreters
5149 CloseAllForeignScripts();
5152 "" # SUCCESS
5155 # Make a single call to handle an (empty) request
5156 Handle_Request();
5159 # END OF PACKAGE MAIN
5162 ####################################################################################
5164 # The CGIEXECUTE PACKAGE
5166 ####################################################################################
5168 # Isolate the evaluation of directives as PERL code from the rest of the program.
5169 # Remember that each package has its own name space.
5170 # Note that only the FIRST argument of execute->evaluate is actually evaluated,
5171 # all other arguments are accessible inside the first argument as $_[0] to $_[$#_].
5173 package CGIexecute;
5175 sub evaluate
5177 my $self = shift;
5178 my $directive = shift;
5179 $directive = eval($directive);
5180 warn $@ if $@; # Write an error message to STDERR
5181 $directive; # Return value of directive
5185 # defineCGIexecuteVariable($name [, $value]) -> 0/1
5187 # Define and intialize variables inside CGIexecute
5188 # Does no sanity checking, for internal use only
5190 sub defineCGIexecuteVariable # ($name [, $value]) -> 0/1
5192 my $name = shift || return 0; # The Name
5193 my $value = shift || ""; # The value
5195 ${$name} = $value;
5197 return 1;
5200 # Protect certain CGI variables values when set internally
5201 # If not defined internally, there will be no variable set AT ALL
5202 my %CGIprotectedVariable = ();
5203 sub ProtectCGIvariable # ($name) -> 0/1
5205 my $name = shift || "";
5206 return 0 unless $name && $name =~ /\w/;
5208 ++$CGIprotectedVariable{$name};
5210 return $CGIprotectedVariable{$name};
5213 # defineCGIvariable($name [, $default]) -> 0/1
5215 # Define and intialize CGI variables
5216 # Tries (in order) $ENV{$name}, the Query string and the
5217 # default value.
5218 # Removes all '-quotes etc.
5220 sub defineCGIvariable # ($name [, $default]) -> 0/1
5222 my $name = shift || return 0; # The Name
5223 my $default = shift || ""; # The default value
5225 # Protect variables set internally
5226 return 1 if !$name || exists($CGIprotectedVariable{$name});
5228 # Remove \-quoted characters
5229 $default =~ s/\\(.)/$1/g;
5230 # Store default values
5231 $::default_values{$name} = $default if $default;
5233 # Process variables
5234 my $temp = undef;
5235 # If there is a user supplied value, it replaces the
5236 # default value.
5238 # Environment values have precedence
5239 if(exists($ENV{$name}))
5241 $temp = $ENV{$name};
5243 # Get name and its value from the query string
5244 elsif($ENV{QUERY_STRING} =~ /$name/) # $name is in the query string
5246 $temp = ::YOUR_CGIPARSE($name);
5248 # Defined values must exist for security
5249 elsif(!exists($::default_values{$name}))
5251 $::default_values{$name} = undef;
5254 # SECURITY, do not allow '- and `-quotes in
5255 # client values.
5256 # Remove all existing '-quotes
5257 $temp =~ s/([\r\f]+\n)/\n/g; # Only \n is allowed
5258 $temp =~ s/[\']/&#8217;/igs; # Remove all single quotes
5259 $temp =~ s/[\`]/&#8216;/igs; # Remove all backtick quotes
5260 # If $temp is empty, use the default value (if it exists)
5261 unless($temp =~ /\S/ || length($temp) > 0) # I.e., $temp is empty
5263 $temp = $::default_values{$name};
5264 # Remove all existing '-quotes
5265 $temp =~ s/([\r\f]+\n)/\n/g; # Only \n is allowed
5266 $temp =~ s/[\']/&#8217;/igs; # Remove all single quotes
5267 $temp =~ s/[\`]/&#8216;/igs; # Remove all backtick quotes
5269 else # Store current CGI values and remove defaults
5271 $::default_values{$name} = $temp;
5273 # Define the CGI variable and its value (in the execute package)
5274 ${$name} = $temp;
5276 # return SUCCES
5277 return 1;
5280 sub defineCGIvariableList # ($name [, $default]) -> 0/1)
5282 my $name = shift || return 0; # The Name
5283 my $default = shift || ""; # The default value
5285 # Protect variables set internally
5286 return 1 if !$name || exists($CGIprotectedVariable{$name});
5288 # Defined values must exist for security
5289 if(!exists($::default_values{$name}))
5291 $::default_values{$name} = $default;
5294 my @temp = ();
5297 # For security:
5298 # Environment values have precedence
5299 if(exists($ENV{$name}))
5301 push(@temp, $ENV{$name});
5303 # Get name and its values from the query string
5304 elsif($ENV{QUERY_STRING} =~ /$name/) # $name is in the query string
5306 push(@temp, ::YOUR_CGIPARSE($name, 1)); # Extract LIST
5308 else
5310 push(@temp, $::default_values{$name});
5314 # SECURITY, do not allow '- and `-quotes in
5315 # client values.
5316 # Remove all existing '-quotes
5317 @temp = map {s/([\r\f]+\n)/\n/g; $_} @temp; # Only \n is allowed
5318 @temp = map {s/[\']/&#8217;/igs; $_} @temp; # Remove all single quotes
5319 @temp = map {s/[\`]/&#8216;/igs; $_} @temp; # Remove all backtick quotes
5321 # Store current CGI values and remove defaults
5322 $::default_values{$name} = $temp[0];
5324 # Define the CGI variable and its value (in the execute package)
5325 @{$name} = @temp;
5327 # return SUCCES
5328 return 1;
5331 sub defineCGIvariableHash # ($name [, $default]) -> 0/1) Note: '$name{""} = $default';
5333 my $name = shift || return 0; # The Name
5334 my $default = shift || ""; # The default value
5336 # Protect variables set internally
5337 return 1 if !$name || exists($CGIprotectedVariable{$name});
5339 # Defined values must exist for security
5340 if(!exists($::default_values{$name}))
5342 $::default_values{$name} = $default;
5345 my %temp = ();
5348 # For security:
5349 # Environment values have precedence
5350 if(exists($ENV{$name}))
5352 $temp{""} = $ENV{$name};
5354 # Get name and its values from the query string
5355 elsif($ENV{QUERY_STRING} =~ /$name/) # $name is in the query string
5357 %temp = ::YOUR_CGIPARSE($name, -1); # Extract HASH table
5359 elsif($::default_values{$name} ne "")
5361 $temp{""} = $::default_values{$name};
5365 # SECURITY, do not allow '- and `-quotes in
5366 # client values.
5367 # Remove all existing '-quotes
5368 my $Key;
5369 foreach $Key (keys(%temp))
5371 $temp{$Key} =~ s/([\r\f]+\n)/\n/g; # Only \n is allowed
5372 $temp{$Key} =~ s/[\']/&#8217;/igs; # Remove all single quotes
5373 $temp{$Key} =~ s/[\`]/&#8216;/igs; # Remove all backtick quotes
5376 # Store current CGI values and remove defaults
5377 $::default_values{$name} = $temp{""};
5379 # Define the CGI variable and its value (in the execute package)
5380 %{$name} = ();
5381 my $tempKey;
5382 foreach $tempKey (keys(%temp))
5384 ${$name}{$tempKey} = $temp{$tempKey};
5387 # return SUCCES
5388 return 1;
5392 # SAFEqx('CommandString')
5394 # A special function that is a safe alternative to backtick quotes (and qx//)
5395 # with client-supplied CGI values. All CGI variables are surrounded by
5396 # single ''-quotes (except between existing \'\'-quotes, don't try to be
5397 # too smart). All variables are then interpolated. Simple (@) lists are
5398 # expanded with join(' ', @List), and simple (%) hash tables expanded
5399 # as a list of "key=value" pairs. Complex variables, e.g., @$var, are
5400 # evaluated in a scalar context (e.g., as scalar(@$var)). All occurrences of
5401 # $@% that should NOT be interpolated must be preceeded by a "\".
5402 # If the first line of the String starts with "#! interpreter", the
5403 # remainder of the string is piped into interpreter (after interpolation), i.e.,
5404 # open(INTERPRETER, "|interpreter");print INTERPRETER remainder;
5405 # just like in UNIX. There are some problems with quotes. Be carefull in
5406 # using them. You do not have access to the output of any piped (#!)
5407 # process! If you want such access, execute
5408 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/osshell">echo "script"|interpreter</SCRIPT> or
5409 # <SCRIPT TYPE="text/ssperl">$resultvar = SAFEqx('echo "script"|interpreter');
5410 # </SCRIPT>.
5412 # SAFEqx ONLY WORKS WHEN THE STRING ITSELF IS SURROUNDED BY SINGLE QUOTES
5413 # (SO THAT IT IS NOT INTERPOLATED BEFORE IT CAN BE PROTECTED)
5414 sub SAFEqx # ('String') -> result of executing qx/"String"/
5416 my $CommandString = shift;
5417 my $NewCommandString = "";
5419 # Only interpolate when required (check the On/Off switch)
5420 unless($CGIscriptor::NoShellScriptInterpolation)
5423 # Handle existing single quotes around CGI values
5424 while($CommandString =~ /\'[^\']+\'/s)
5426 my $CurrentQuotedString = $&;
5427 $NewCommandString .= $`;
5428 $CommandString = $'; # The remaining string
5429 # Interpolate CGI variables between quotes
5430 # (e.g., '$CGIscriptorResults[-1]')
5431 $CurrentQuotedString =~
5432 s/(^|[^\\])([\$\@])((\w*)([\{\[][\$\@\%]?[\:\w\-]+[\}\]])*)/if(exists($main::default_values{$4})){
5433 "$1".eval("$2$3")}else{"$&"}/egs;
5435 # Combine result with previous result
5436 $NewCommandString .= $CurrentQuotedString;
5438 $CommandString = $NewCommandString.$CommandString;
5440 # Select known CGI variables and surround them with single quotes,
5441 # then interpolate all variables
5442 $CommandString =~
5443 s/(^|[^\\])([\$\@\%]+)((\w*)([\{\[][\w\:\$\"\-]+[\}\]])*)/
5444 if($2 eq '$' && exists($main::default_values{$4}))
5445 {"$1\'".eval("\$$3")."\'";}
5446 elsif($2 eq '@'){$1.join(' ', @{"$3"});}
5447 elsif($2 eq '%'){my $t=$1;map {$t.=" $_=".${"$3"}{$_}}
5448 keys(%{"$3"});$t}
5449 else{$1.eval("${2}$3");
5450 }/egs;
5452 # Remove backslashed [$@%]
5453 $CommandString =~ s/\\([\$\@\%])/$1/gs;
5456 # Debugging
5457 # return $CommandString;
5459 # Handle UNIX style "#! shell command\n" constructs as
5460 # a pipe into the shell command. The output cannot be tapped.
5461 my $ReturnValue = "";
5462 if($CommandString =~ /^\s*\#\!([^\f\n\r]+)[\f\n\r]/is)
5464 my $ShellScripts = $';
5465 my $ShellCommand = $1;
5466 open(INTERPRETER, "|$ShellCommand") || dieHandler(29, "\'$ShellCommand\' PIPE not opened: &!\n");
5467 select(INTERPRETER);$| = 1;
5468 print INTERPRETER $ShellScripts;
5469 close(INTERPRETER);
5470 select(STDOUT);$| = 1;
5472 # Shell scripts which are redirected to an existing named pipe.
5473 # The output cannot be tapped.
5474 elsif($CGIscriptor::ShellScriptPIPE)
5476 CGIscriptor::printSAFEqxPIPE($CommandString);
5478 else # Plain ``-backtick execution
5480 # Execute the commands
5481 $ReturnValue = qx/$CommandString/;
5483 return $ReturnValue;
5486 ####################################################################################
5488 # The CGIscriptor PACKAGE
5490 ####################################################################################
5492 # Isolate the evaluation of CGIscriptor functions, i.e., those prefixed with
5493 # "CGIscriptor::"
5495 package CGIscriptor;
5498 # The Interpolation On/Off switch
5499 my $NoShellScriptInterpolation = undef;
5500 # The ShellScript redirection pipe
5501 my $ShellScriptPIPE = undef;
5503 # Open a named PIPE for SAFEqx to receive ALL shell scripts
5504 sub RedirectShellScript # ('CommandString')
5506 my $CommandString = shift || undef;
5508 if($CommandString)
5510 $ShellScriptPIPE = "ShellScriptNamedPipe";
5511 open($ShellScriptPIPE, "|$CommandString")
5512 || main::dieHandler(30, "\'|$CommandString\' PIPE open failed: $!\n");
5514 else
5516 close($ShellScriptPIPE);
5517 $ShellScriptPIPE = undef;
5519 return $ShellScriptPIPE;
5522 # Print to redirected shell script pipe
5523 sub printSAFEqxPIPE # ("String") -> print return value
5525 my $String = shift || undef;
5527 select($ShellScriptPIPE); $| = 1;
5528 my $returnvalue = print $ShellScriptPIPE ($String);
5529 select(STDOUT); $| = 1;
5531 return $returnvalue;
5534 # a pointer to CGIexecute::SAFEqx
5535 sub SAFEqx # ('String') -> result of qx/"String"/
5537 my $CommandString = shift;
5538 return CGIexecute::SAFEqx($CommandString);
5542 # a pointer to CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable
5543 sub defineCGIvariable # ($name[, $default]) ->0/1
5545 my $name = shift;
5546 my $default = shift;
5547 return CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable($name, $default);
5551 # a pointer to CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable
5552 sub defineCGIvariableList # ($name[, $default]) ->0/1
5554 my $name = shift;
5555 my $default = shift;
5556 return CGIexecute::defineCGIvariableList($name, $default);
5560 # a pointer to CGIexecute::defineCGIvariable
5561 sub defineCGIvariableHash # ($name[, $default]) ->0/1
5563 my $name = shift;
5564 my $default = shift;
5565 return CGIexecute::defineCGIvariableHash($name, $default);
5569 # Decode URL encoded arguments
5570 sub URLdecode # (URL encoded input) -> string
5572 my $output = "";
5573 my $char;
5574 my $Value;
5575 foreach $Value (@_)
5577 my $EncodedValue = $Value; # Do not change the loop variable
5578 # Convert all "+" to " "
5579 $EncodedValue =~ s/\+/ /g;
5580 # Convert all hexadecimal codes (%FF) to their byte values
5581 while($EncodedValue =~ /\%([0-9A-F]{2})/i)
5583 $output .= $`.chr(hex($1));
5584 $EncodedValue = $';
5586 $output .= $EncodedValue; # The remaining part of $Value
5588 $output;
5591 # Encode arguments as URL codes.
5592 sub URLencode # (input) -> URL encoded string
5594 my $output = "";
5595 my $char;
5596 my $Value;
5597 foreach $Value (@_)
5599 my @CharList = split('', $Value);
5600 foreach $char (@CharList)
5602 if($char =~ /\s/)
5603 { $output .= "+";}
5604 elsif($char =~ /\w\-/)
5605 { $output .= $char;}
5606 else
5608 $output .= uc(sprintf("%%%2.2x", ord($char)));
5612 $output;
5615 # Extract the value of a CGI variable from the URL-encoded $string
5616 # Also extracts the data blocks from a multipart request. Does NOT
5617 # decode the multipart blocks
5618 sub CGIparseValue # (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString [, \$QueryReturnReference]]) -> Decoded value
5620 my $ValueName = shift;
5621 my $QueryString = shift || $main::ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
5622 my $ReturnReference = shift || undef;
5623 my $output = "";
5625 if($QueryString =~ /(^|\&)$ValueName\=([^\&]*)(\&|$)/)
5627 $output = URLdecode($2);
5628 $$ReturnReference = $' if ref($ReturnReference);
5630 # Get multipart POST or PUT methods
5631 elsif($main::ENV{'CONTENT_TYPE'} =~ m@(multipart/([\w\-]+)\;\s+boundary\=([\S]+))@i)
5633 my $MultipartType = $2;
5634 my $BoundaryString = $3;
5635 # Remove the boundary-string
5636 my $temp = $QueryString;
5637 $temp =~ /^\Q--$BoundaryString\E/m;
5638 $temp = $';
5640 # Identify the newline character(s), this is the first character in $temp
5641 my $NewLine = "\r\n"; # Actually, this IS the correct one
5642 unless($temp =~ /^(\-\-|\r\n)/) # However, you never realy can be sure
5644 # Is this correct??? I have to check.
5645 $NewLine = "\r\n" if $temp =~ /^(\r\n)/; # Double (CRLF, the correct one)
5646 $NewLine = "\n\r" if $temp =~ /^(\n\r)/; # Double
5647 $NewLine = "\n" if $temp =~ /^([\n])/; # Single Line Feed
5648 $NewLine = "\r" if $temp =~ /^([\r])/; # Single Return
5651 # search through all data blocks
5652 while($temp =~ /^\Q--$BoundaryString\E/m)
5654 my $DataBlock = $`;
5655 $temp = $';
5656 # Get the empty line after the header
5657 $DataBlock =~ /$NewLine$NewLine/;
5658 $Header = $`;
5659 $output = $';
5660 my $Header = $`;
5661 $output = $';
5663 # Remove newlines from the header
5664 $Header =~ s/$NewLine/ /g;
5666 # Look whether this block is the one you are looking for
5667 # Require the quotes!
5668 if($Header =~ /name\s*=\s*[\"\']$ValueName[\"\']/m)
5670 my $i;
5671 for($i=length($NewLine); $i; --$i)
5673 chop($output);
5675 # OK, get out
5676 last;
5678 # reinitialize the output
5679 $output = "";
5681 $$ReturnReference = $temp if ref($ReturnReference);
5683 elsif($QueryString !~ /(^|\&)$ValueName\=/) # The value simply isn't there
5685 return undef;
5686 $$ReturnReference = undef if ref($ReturnReference);
5688 else
5690 print "ERROR: $ValueName $main::ENV{'CONTENT_TYPE'}\n";
5692 return $output;
5696 # Get a list of values for the same ValueName. Uses CGIparseValue
5698 sub CGIparseValueList # (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> List of decoded values
5700 my $ValueName = shift;
5701 my $QueryString = shift || $main::ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
5702 my @output = ();
5703 my $RestQueryString;
5704 my $Value;
5705 while($QueryString &&
5706 (($Value = CGIparseValue($ValueName, $QueryString, \$RestQueryString))
5707 || defined($Value)))
5709 push(@output, $Value);
5710 $QueryString = $RestQueryString; # QueryString is consumed!
5712 # ready, return list with values
5713 return @output;
5716 sub CGIparseValueHash # (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Hash table of decoded values
5718 my $ValueName = shift;
5719 my $QueryString = shift || $main::ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
5720 my $RestQueryString;
5721 my %output = ();
5722 while($QueryString && $QueryString =~ /(^|\&)$ValueName([\w]*)\=/)
5724 my $Key = $2;
5725 my $Value = CGIparseValue("$ValueName$Key", $QueryString, \$RestQueryString);
5726 $output{$Key} = $Value;
5727 $QueryString = $RestQueryString; # QueryString is consumed!
5729 # ready, return list with values
5730 return %output;
5733 sub CGIparseForm # ([URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Decoded Form (NO multipart)
5735 my $QueryString = shift || $main::ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
5736 my $output = "";
5738 $QueryString =~ s/\&/\n/g;
5739 $output = URLdecode($QueryString);
5741 $output;
5744 # Extract the header of a multipart CGI variable from the POST input
5745 sub CGIparseHeader # (ValueName [, URL_encoded_QueryString]) -> Decoded value
5747 my $ValueName = shift;
5748 my $QueryString = shift || $main::ENV{'QUERY_STRING'};
5749 my $output = "";
5751 if($main::ENV{'CONTENT_TYPE'} =~ m@(multipart/([\w\-]+)\;\s+boundary\=([\S]+))@i)
5753 my $MultipartType = $2;
5754 my $BoundaryString = $3;
5755 # Remove the boundary-string
5756 my $temp = $QueryString;
5757 $temp =~ /^\Q--$BoundaryString\E/m;
5758 $temp = $';
5760 # Identify the newline character(s), this is the first character in $temp
5761 my $NewLine = "\r\n"; # Actually, this IS the correct one
5762 unless($temp =~ /^(\-\-|\r\n)/) # However, you never realy can be sure
5764 $NewLine = "\n" if $temp =~ /^([\n])/; # Single Line Feed
5765 $NewLine = "\r" if $temp =~ /^([\r])/; # Single Return
5766 $NewLine = "\r\n" if $temp =~ /^(\r\n)/; # Double (CRLF, the correct one)
5767 $NewLine = "\n\r" if $temp =~ /^(\n\r)/; # Double
5770 # search through all data blocks
5771 while($temp =~ /^\Q--$BoundaryString\E/m)
5773 my $DataBlock = $`;
5774 $temp = $';
5775 # Get the empty line after the header
5776 $DataBlock =~ /$NewLine$NewLine/;
5777 $Header = $`;
5778 my $Header = $`;
5780 # Remove newlines from the header
5781 $Header =~ s/$NewLine/ /g;
5783 # Look whether this block is the one you are looking for
5784 # Require the quotes!
5785 if($Header =~ /name\s*=\s*[\"\']$ValueName[\"\']/m)
5787 $output = $Header;
5788 last;
5790 # reinitialize the output
5791 $output = "";
5794 return $output;
5798 # Checking variables for security (e.g., file names and email addresses)
5799 # File names are tested against the $::FileAllowedChars and $::BlockPathAccess variables
5800 sub CGIsafeFileName # FileName -> FileName or ""
5802 my $FileName = shift || "";
5803 return "" if $FileName =~ m?[^$::FileAllowedChars]?;
5804 return "" if $FileName =~ m!(^|/|\:)[\-\.]!;
5805 return "" if $FileName =~ m@\.\.\Q$::DirectorySeparator\E@; # Higher directory not allowed
5806 return "" if $FileName =~ m@\Q$::DirectorySeparator\E\.\.@; # Higher directory not allowed
5807 return "" if $::BlockPathAccess && $FileName =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@; # Invisible (blocked) file
5809 return $FileName;
5812 sub CGIsafeEmailAddress # email -> email or ""
5814 my $Email = shift || "";
5815 return "" unless $Email =~ m/^[\w\.\-]+[\@][\w\.\-\:]+$/;
5816 return $Email;
5819 # Get a URL from the web. Needs main::GET_URL($URL) function
5820 # (i.e., curl, snarf, or wget)
5821 sub read_url # ($URL) -> page/file
5823 my $URL = shift || return "";
5825 # Get the commands to read the URL, do NOT add a print command
5826 my $URL_command = main::GET_URL($URL, 1);
5827 # execute the commands, i.e., actually read it
5828 my $URLcontent = CGIexecute->evaluate($URL_command);
5830 # Ready, return the content.
5831 return $URLcontent;
5834 ################################################>>>>>>>>>>Start Remove
5836 # BrowseAllDirs(Directory, indexfile)
5838 # usage:
5839 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'>
5840 # CGIscriptor::BrowseAllDirs('Sounds', 'index.html', '\.wav$')
5841 # </SCRIPT>
5843 # Allows to browse all directories. Stops at '/'. If the directory contains
5844 # an indexfile, eg, index.html, that file will be used instead. Files must match
5845 # the $Pattern, if it is given. Default is
5846 # CGIscriptor::BrowseAllDirs('/', 'index.html', '')
5848 sub BrowseAllDirs # (Directory, indexfile, $Pattern) -> Print HTML code
5850 my $Directory = shift || '/';
5851 my $indexfile = shift || 'index.html';
5852 my $Pattern = shift || '';
5853 $Directory =~ s!/$!!g;
5855 # If the index directory exists, use that one
5856 if(-s "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$indexfile")
5858 return main::ProcessFile("$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$indexfile");
5861 # No indexfile, continue
5862 my @DirectoryList = glob("$::CGI_HOME$Directory");
5863 $CurrentDirectory = shift(@DirectoryList);
5864 $CurrentDirectory = $' if $CurrentDirectory =~ m@(/\.\./)+@;
5865 $CurrentDirectory =~ s@^$::CGI_HOME@@g;
5866 print "<h1>";
5867 print "$CurrentDirectory" if $CurrentDirectory;
5868 print "</h1>\n";
5870 opendir(BROWSE, "$::CGI_HOME$Directory") || main::dieHandler(31, "$::CGI_HOME$Directory $!");
5871 my @AllFiles = sort grep(!/^([\.]+[^\.]|\~)/, readdir(BROWSE));
5873 # Print directories
5874 my $file;
5875 print "<pre><ul TYPE='NONE'>\n";
5876 foreach $file (@AllFiles)
5878 next unless -d "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file";
5879 # Check whether this file should be visible
5880 next if $::BlockPathAccess &&
5881 "$Directory/$file/" =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
5882 print "<dt><a href='$Directory/$file'>$file</a></dt>\n";
5884 print "</ul></pre>\n";
5886 # Print files
5887 print "<pre><ul TYPE='CIRCLE'>\n";
5888 my $TotalSize = 0;
5889 foreach $file (@AllFiles)
5891 next if $file =~ /^\./;
5892 next if -d "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file";
5893 next if -l "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file";
5894 # Check whether this file should be visible
5895 next if $::BlockPathAccess &&
5896 "$Directory/$file" =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
5898 if(!$Pattern || $file =~ m@$Pattern@)
5900 my $Date = localtime($^T - (-M "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file")*3600*24);
5901 my $Size = -s "$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file";
5902 $Size = sprintf("%6.0F kB", $Size/1024);
5903 my $Type = `file $::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file`;
5904 $Type =~ s@\s*$::CGI_HOME$Directory/$file\s*\:\s*@@ig;
5905 chomp($Type);
5907 print "<li>";
5908 print "<a href='$Directory/$file'>";
5909 printf("%-40s", "$file</a>");
5910 print "\t$Size\t$Date\t$Type";
5911 print "</li>\n";
5914 print "</ul></pre>";
5916 return 1;
5920 ################################################
5922 # BrowseDirs(RootDirectory [, Pattern, Start])
5924 # usage:
5925 # <SCRIPT TYPE='text/ssperl'>
5926 # CGIscriptor::BrowseDirs('Sounds', '\.aifc$', 'Speech', 'DIRECTORY')
5927 # </SCRIPT>
5929 # Allows to browse subdirectories. Start should be relative to the RootDirectory,
5930 # e.g., the full path of the directory 'Speech' is '~/Sounds/Speech'.
5931 # Only files which fit /$Pattern/ and directories are displayed.
5932 # Directories down or up the directory tree are supplied with a
5933 # GET request with the name of the CGI variable in the fourth argument (default
5934 # is 'BROWSEDIRS'). So the correct call for a subdirectory could be:
5935 # CGIscriptor::BrowseDirs('Sounds', '\.aifc$', $DIRECTORY, 'DIRECTORY')
5937 sub BrowseDirs # (RootDirectory [, Pattern, Start, CGIvariable, HTTPserver]) -> Print HTML code
5939 my $RootDirectory = shift; # || return 0;
5940 my $Pattern = shift || '\S';
5941 my $Start = shift || "";
5942 my $CGIvariable = shift || "BROWSEDIRS";
5943 my $HTTPserver = shift || '';
5945 $Start = CGIscriptor::URLdecode($Start); # Sometimes, too much has been encoded
5946 $Start =~ s@//+@/@g;
5947 $Start =~ s@[^/]+/\.\.@@ig;
5948 $Start =~ s@^\.\.@@ig;
5949 $Start =~ s@/\.$@@ig;
5950 $Start =~ s!/+$!!g;
5951 $Start .= "/" if $Start;
5953 my @Directory = glob("$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start");
5954 $CurrentDirectory = shift(@Directory);
5955 $CurrentDirectory = $' if $CurrentDirectory =~ m@(/\.\./)+@;
5956 $CurrentDirectory =~ s@^$::CGI_HOME@@g;
5957 print "<h1>";
5958 print "$CurrentDirectory" if $CurrentDirectory;
5959 print "</h1>\n";
5960 opendir(BROWSE, "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start") || main::dieHandler(31, "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start $!");
5961 my @AllFiles = sort grep(!/^([\.]+[^\.]|\~)/, readdir(BROWSE));
5963 # Print directories
5964 my $file;
5965 print "<pre><ul TYPE='NONE'>\n";
5966 foreach $file (@AllFiles)
5968 next unless -d "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file";
5969 # Check whether this file should be visible
5970 next if $::BlockPathAccess &&
5971 "/$RootDirectory/$Start$file/" =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
5973 my $NewURL = $Start ? "$Start$file" : $file;
5974 $NewURL = CGIscriptor::URLencode($NewURL);
5975 print "<dt><a href='";
5976 print "$ENV{SCRIPT_NAME}" if $ENV{SCRIPT_NAME} !~ m@[^\w+\-/]@;
5977 print "$ENV{PATH_INFO}?$CGIvariable=$NewURL'>$file</a></dt>\n";
5979 print "</ul></pre>\n";
5981 # Print files
5982 print "<pre><ul TYPE='CIRCLE'>\n";
5983 my $TotalSize = 0;
5984 foreach $file (@AllFiles)
5986 next if $file =~ /^\./;
5987 next if -d "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file";
5988 next if -l "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file";
5989 # Check whether this file should be visible
5990 next if $::BlockPathAccess &&
5991 "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file" =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
5993 if($file =~ m@$Pattern@)
5995 my $Date = localtime($^T - (-M "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file")*3600*24);
5996 my $Size = -s "$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file";
5997 $Size = sprintf("%6.0F kB", $Size/1024);
5998 my $Type = `file $::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file`;
5999 $Type =~ s@\s*$::CGI_HOME/$RootDirectory/$Start$file\s*\:\s*@@ig;
6000 chomp($Type);
6002 print "<li>";
6003 if($HTTPserver =~ /^\s*[\.\~]\s*$/)
6005 print "<a href='$RootDirectory/$Start$file'>";
6007 elsif($HTTPserver)
6009 print "<a href='$HTTPserver/$RootDirectory/$Start$file'>";
6011 printf("%-40s", "$file</a>") if $HTTPserver;
6012 printf("%-40s", "$file") unless $HTTPserver;
6013 print "\t$Size\t$Date\t$Type";
6014 print "</li>\n";
6017 print "</ul></pre>";
6019 return 1;
6023 # ListDocs(Pattern [,ListType])
6025 # usage:
6026 # <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl>
6027 # CGIscriptor::ListDocs("/*", "dl");
6028 # </SCRIPT>
6030 # This subroutine is very usefull to manage collections of independent
6031 # documents. The resulting list will display the tree-like directory
6032 # structure. If this routine is too slow for online use, you can
6033 # store the result and use a link to that stored file.
6035 # List HTML and Text files with title and first header (HTML)
6036 # or filename and first meaningfull line (general text files).
6037 # The listing starts at the ServerRoot directory. Directories are
6038 # listed recursively.
6040 # You can change the list type (default is dl).
6041 # e.g.,
6042 # <dt><a href=<file.html>>title</a>
6043 # <dd>First Header
6044 # <dt><a href=<file.txt>>file.txt</a>
6045 # <dd>First meaningfull line of text
6047 sub ListDocs # ($Pattern [, prefix]) e.g., ("/Books/*", [, "dl"])
6049 my $Pattern = shift;
6050 $Pattern =~ /\*/;
6051 my $ListType = shift || "dl";
6052 my $Prefix = lc($ListType) eq "dl" ? "dt" : "li";
6053 my $URL_root = "http://$::ENV{'SERVER_NAME'}\:$::ENV{'SERVER_PORT'}";
6054 my @FileList = glob("$::CGI_HOME$Pattern");
6055 my ($FileName, $Path, $Link);
6057 # Print List markers
6058 print "<$ListType>\n";
6060 # Glob all files
6061 File: foreach $FileName (@FileList)
6063 # Check whether this file should be visible
6064 next if $::BlockPathAccess && $FileName =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
6066 # Recursively list files in all directories
6067 if(-d $FileName)
6069 $FileName =~ m@([^/]*)$@;
6070 my $DirName = $1;
6071 print "<$Prefix>$DirName\n";
6072 $Pattern =~ m@([^/]*)$@;
6073 &ListDocs("$`$DirName/$1", $ListType);
6074 next;
6076 # Use textfiles
6077 elsif(-T "$FileName")
6079 open(TextFile, $FileName) || next;
6081 # Ignore all other file types
6082 else
6083 { next;};
6085 # Get file path for link
6086 $FileName =~ /$::CGI_HOME/;
6087 print "<$Prefix><a href=$URL_root$'>";
6088 # Initialize all variables
6089 my $Line = "";
6090 my $TitleFound = 0;
6091 my $Caption = "";
6092 my $Title = "";
6093 # Read file and step through
6094 while(<TextFile>)
6096 chop $_;
6097 $Line = $_;
6098 # HTML files
6099 if($FileName =~ /\.ht[a-zA-Z]*$/i)
6101 # Catch Title
6102 while(!$Title)
6104 if($Line =~ m@<title>([^<]*)</title>@i)
6106 $Title = $1;
6107 $Line = $';
6109 else
6111 $Line .= <TextFile> || goto Print;
6112 chop $Line;
6115 # Catch First Header
6116 while(!$Caption)
6118 if($Line =~ m@</h1>@i)
6120 $Caption = $`;
6121 $Line = $';
6122 $Caption =~ m@<h1>@i;
6123 $Caption = $';
6124 $Line = $`.$Caption.$Line;
6126 else
6128 $Line .= <TextFile> || goto Print;
6129 chop $Line;
6133 # Other text files
6134 else
6136 # Title equals file name
6137 $FileName =~ /([^\/]+)$/;
6138 $Title = $1;
6139 # Catch equals First Meaningfull line
6140 while(!$Caption)
6142 if($Line =~ /[A-Z]/ &&
6143 ($Line =~ /subject|title/i || $Line =~ /^[\w,\.\s\?\:]+$/)
6144 && $Line !~ /Newsgroup/ && $Line !~ /\:\s*$/)
6146 $Line =~ s/\<[^\>]+\>//g;
6147 $Caption = $Line;
6149 else
6151 $Line = <TextFile> || goto Print;
6155 Print: # Print title and subject
6156 print "$Title</a>\n";
6157 print "<dd>$Caption\n" if $ListType eq "dl";
6158 $TitleFound = 0;
6159 $Caption = "";
6160 close TextFile;
6161 next File;
6164 # Print Closing List Marker
6165 print "</$ListType>\n";
6166 ""; # Empty return value
6170 # HTMLdocTree(Pattern [,ListType])
6172 # usage:
6173 # <SCRIPT TYPE=text/ssperl>
6174 # CGIscriptor::HTMLdocTree("/Welcome.html", "dl");
6175 # </SCRIPT>
6177 # The following subroutine is very usefull for checking large document
6178 # trees. Starting from the root (s), it reads all files and prints out
6179 # a nested list of links to all attached files. Non-existing or misplaced
6180 # files are flagged. This is quite a file-i/o intensive routine
6181 # so you would not like it to be accessible to everyone. If you want to
6182 # use the result, save the whole resulting page to disk and use a link
6183 # to this file.
6185 # HTMLdocTree takes an HTML file or file pattern and constructs nested lists
6186 # with links to *local* files (i.e., only links to the local server are
6187 # followed). The list entries are the document titles.
6188 # If the list type is <dl>, the first <H1> header is used too.
6189 # For each file matching the pattern, a list is made recursively of all
6190 # HTML documents that are linked from it and are stored in the same directory
6191 # or a sub-directory. Warnings are given for missing files.
6192 # The listing starts for the ServerRoot directory.
6193 # You can change the default list type <dl> (<dl>, <ul>, <ol>).
6195 %LinkUsed = ();
6197 sub HTMLdocTree # ($Pattern [, listtype])
6198 # e.g., ("/Welcome.html", [, "ul"])
6200 my $Pattern = shift;
6201 my $ListType = shift || "dl";
6202 my $Prefix = lc($ListType) eq "dl" ? "dt" : "li";
6203 my $URL_root = "http://$::ENV{'SERVER_NAME'}\:$::ENV{'SERVER_PORT'}";
6204 my ($Filename, $Path, $Link);
6205 my %LocalLinks = {};
6207 # Read files (glob them for expansion of wildcards)
6208 my @FileList = glob("$::CGI_HOME$Pattern");
6209 foreach $Path (@FileList)
6211 # Get URL_path
6212 $Path =~ /$::CGI_HOME/;
6213 my $URL_path = $';
6214 # Check whether this file should be visible
6215 next if $::BlockPathAccess && $URL_path =~ m@$::BlockPathAccess@;
6217 my $Title = $URL_path;
6218 my $Caption = "";
6219 # Current file should not be used again
6220 ++$LinkUsed{$URL_path};
6221 # Open HTML doc
6222 unless(open(TextFile, $Path))
6224 print "<$Prefix>$Title <blink>(not found)</blink><br>\n";
6225 next;
6227 while(<TextFile>)
6229 chop $_;
6230 $Line = $_;
6231 # Catch Title
6232 while($Line =~ m@<title>@i)
6234 if($Line =~ m@<title>([^<]*)</title>@i)
6236 $Title = $1;
6237 $Line = $';
6239 else
6241 $Line .= <TextFile>;
6242 chop $Line;
6245 # Catch First Header
6246 while(!$Caption && $Line =~ m@<h1>@i)
6248 if($Line =~ m@</h[1-9]>@i)
6250 $Caption = $`;
6251 $Line = $';
6252 $Caption =~ m@<h1>@i;
6253 $Caption = $';
6254 $Line = $`.$Caption.$Line;
6256 else
6258 $Line .= <TextFile>;
6259 chop $Line;
6262 # Catch and print Links
6263 while($Line =~ m@<a href\=([^>]*)>@i)
6265 $Link = $1;
6266 $Line = $';
6267 # Remove quotes
6268 $Link =~ s/\"//g;
6269 # Remove extras
6270 $Link =~ s/[\#\?].*$//g;
6271 # Remove Servername
6272 if($Link =~ m@(http://|^)@i)
6274 $Link = $';
6275 # Only build tree for current server
6276 next unless $Link =~ m@$::ENV{'SERVER_NAME'}|^/@;
6277 # Remove server name and port
6278 $Link =~ s@^[^\/]*@@g;
6280 # Store the current link
6281 next if $LinkUsed{$Link} || $Link eq $URL_path;
6282 ++$LinkUsed{$Link};
6283 ++$LocalLinks{$Link};
6287 close TextFile;
6288 print "<$Prefix>";
6289 print "<a href=http://";
6290 print "$::ENV{'SERVER_NAME'}\:$::ENV{'SERVER_PORT'}$URL_path>";
6291 print "$Title</a>\n";
6292 print "<br>$Caption\n"
6293 if $Caption && $Caption ne $Title && $ListType =~ /dl/i;
6294 print "<$ListType>\n";
6295 foreach $Link (keys(%LocalLinks))
6297 &HTMLdocTree($Link, $ListType);
6299 print "</$ListType>\n";
6303 ###########################<<<<<<<<<<End Remove
6305 # Make require happy
6308 =head1 NAME
6310 CGIscriptor -
6312 =head1 DESCRIPTION
6314 A flexible HTML 4 compliant script/module for CGI-aware
6315 embeded Perl, shell-scripts, and other scripting languages,
6316 executed at the server side.
6318 =head1 README
6320 Executes embeded Perl code in HTML pages with easy
6321 access to CGI variables. Also processes embeded shell
6322 scripts and scripts in any other language with an
6323 interactive interpreter (e.g., in-line Python, Tcl,
6324 Ruby, Awk, Lisp, Xlispstat, Prolog, M4, R, REBOL, Praat,
6325 sh, bash, csh, ksh).
6327 CGIscriptor is very flexible and hides all the specifics
6328 and idiosyncrasies of correct output and CGI coding and naming.
6329 CGIscriptor complies with the W3C HTML 4.0 recommendations.
6331 This Perl program will run on any WWW server that runs
6332 Perl scripts, just add a line like the following to your
6333 srm.conf file (Apache example):
6335 ScriptAlias /SHTML/ /real-path/CGIscriptor.pl/
6337 URL's that refer to http://www.your.address/SHTML/... will
6338 now be handled by CGIscriptor.pl, which can use a private
6339 directory tree (default is the DOCUMENT_ROOT directory tree,
6340 but it can be anywhere).
6342 =head1 PREREQUISITES
6345 =head1 COREQUISITES
6348 =pod OSNAMES
6350 Linux, *BSD, *nix, MS WinXP
6352 =pod SCRIPT CATEGORIES
6354 Servers
6358 =cut