>Where can I find those Docs? at your prompt (unix) type exactly what David showed you, ie.,
perldoc -f system ;) >Brady Fausett wrote: > >> David, >> >> Ok here is a step by step of what I am trying to do. >> >> 1- User goes to a web page that has a file upload system on it. >> >> 2- User uploads file from their computer to the server via the web page >> (already built) >> >> 3- After file is uploaded another web page is automatically loaded >> (already built) that executes my perl script. >> >> 4- When the perl script is executed nothing changes on the web page. >> However the script parses the file/s and, checks for errors, and enters >> the data extracted from the files into a database. >> >> I hope that makes sense. The perl script/program I wrote contains the >> following: >> >> 1- File.pm (module to parse files, (3 different kind at this time) >> >> 2- Database.pm (module to connect to any database, check for db errors >> etc...and push data into database) >> >> 3- Error.pm (module to print out specific errors and warnings, and test >> certain functions in perl script) >> >> 4- script.pl (not the actual name) (script written to call methods from >> the modules...this is the one that needs executing) >> >> I hope this information helps. Again, thanks for your time and help! >> >> Brady > >i see that you are very organize. most beginners will probably just throw >evrything into a big script but you actually have all of your logic and >pieces modulize for reuseability. that's great! > >yes, you can execute something in the background while your CGI script >continue to serve other request. instead of giving you exact code, i will >refer you to read the following: > >perldoc -f system >perldoc -f exec >perldoc -f fork > >hope that help! > >david -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]