On Mon, Nov 22, 2004 at 01:21:35PM -0700, Siegfried Heintze wrote:
> In my perl script I have put my javascript code in a separate file with the
> extension of js. I reference it with a javascript tag in the HTML. I have
> some code in there that is not in a procedure: it just executes prior to the
On Nov 22, 2004, at 5:30 AM, Bob Showalter wrote:
Kevin Bass wrote:
I have a slight problem that I am attemping to solve. I am using
CGI/Perl (DBD Oracle) on Linux AS 2.1 to access to the database. When
users encounter problems on the web, they cancel (or press stop) in
their browsers. This will st
On Nov 22, 2004, at 5:30 AM, Bob Showalter wrote:
Kevin Bass wrote:
I have a slight problem that I am attemping to solve. I am using
CGI/Perl (DBD Oracle) on Linux AS 2.1 to access to the database. When
users encounter problems on the web, they cancel (or press stop) in
their browsers. This will st
In my perl script I have put my javascript code in a separate file with the
extension of js. I reference it with a javascript tag in the HTML. I have
some code in there that is not in a procedure: it just executes prior to the
body of the page loading as inline statements.
Now I discover I need so
NAME
beginners-faq - FAQ for the beginners-cgi mailing list
1 - Administriva
1.1 - I'm not subscribed - how do I subscribe?
Send mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
You can also specify your subscription email address by sending email to
(assuming [EMAIL PROTECTED] is your email addres
Hi,
You might need to set the execute permission on the pkunzip exe for the
iusr_local_machine or whatever user it is that IIS uses. Or maybe even try
fiddling with permissions on the files that the program works on - just
because your user can run the programs and access the files, doesn't mean
t
I use the object-oriented interface pretty much exclusively. There are good
examples of creating a popup menu in the documentation for CGI. (You know
about http://search.cpan.org?) Also, there are multiple websites describing
use of CGI.pm. I would suggest that you start with a simple cgi sc
Kevin Bass wrote:
> I have a slight problem that I am attemping to solve. I am using
> CGI/Perl (DBD Oracle) on Linux AS 2.1 to access to the database. When
> users encounter problems on the web, they cancel (or press stop) in
> their browsers. This will stop there browser interaction and also
> ca
There ought to be a better way. I'm not very familar with web issues
but for plain CGI I'd have expected a SIGHUP and/or SIGPIPE to be
delivered to the process. Those could be caught and trigger cleanup.
Tim.
On Sun, Nov 21, 2004 at 09:12:30AM -0700, Reidy, Ron wrote:
> Look at setting the sqlnet