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README.txt |
File upload from html form, example ========================== Demonstrates how to handle the file upload (multipart) html forms with templates. Note, that the only difference between CGI/FCGI and Apache module is in the main project .lpr file and the web server (Apache) configuration. ===================== 1. Compiling 1.a; with FPC 1.b; with Lazarus 2. Setup 2.a; as CGI 2.b; as Apache module 2.c; as FCGI ===================== 1. Compiling: ------------- We can either use FPC directly, or Lazarus to compile the CGI/FCGI/Apache module application. The main project .lpr file, as well as the Lazarus .lpi is in the cgi/fcgi/apache directories. 1.a; with FPC ------------- Enter to the directory (cgi/fcgi/apache) that has the .lpr file you wish to compile, and then execute the command fpc -Fu../webmodule fileupload.lpr The -Fu parameter shows FPC where to find the web module source code. All three web applications share the same web module code. 1.b; with Lazarus ----------------- It needs the WebLaz Package installed. Open the .lpi file from the chosen application directory (cgi/fcgi/apache), and then Run -> Build from the menu. 2. Setup: --------- The application needs read access to the template file(s). It is best to use full paths with the file names in the web module (webmodule.pas), because Apache will probably look relative to the / (main root) directory or main Apache directory and not relative to the application file location. ex: ModuleTemplate.FileName := '/full/path/to/templates/uploadform.html'; It needs read/write access to create the file database filelist.txt ex: FileDB := '/full/path/to/templates/filelist.txt'; Also, it needs an "/upfiles" directory with read/write access where the files will be uploaded to. ex: UploadDir := '/full/path/to/upfiles/'; 2.a; as CGI ----------- Usually it works if you put the template (uploadform.html) next to the CGI executable file in the Apache cgi-bin directory. Adjust the file path in the web module (webmodule.pas) accordingly. http://<WebServer>/<ApacheScriptAliasName>/listfiles should start the example if everything is set up properly. ex: http://127.0.0.1:8080/fileuploader/listfiles if in the Apache configuration file (ex: httpd.conf) it was set up as ScriptAlias /fileuploader "<path_to_app>/<app_name>" ex: ScriptAlias /fileuploader "C:/Program Files/Apache Software Foundation/Apache2.2/cgi-bin/fileupload.exe" (uploadform.html is copied next to fileupload.exe into cgi-bin, and cgi-bin has a subdirectory called "upfiles") Note: You need to change the URLs or the Apache configuration if "fileuploader" or "fileupload.exe" changes (for example on Linux it is not fileupload.exe). Also, if your server is listening on port 80 instead of 8080, you can leave the :8080 part from the calling URL: http://127.0.0.1/fileuploader/listfiles 2.b; as Apache module --------------------- Usually it works if you put the template (uploadform.html) into the Apache main directory (not the DocumentRoot, but the main Apache directory), under sub-directory "templates" or something similar. Adjust the file path in the web module (webmodule.pas) accordingly. http://<WebServer>/<ApacheLocationName>/listfiles should start the example if everything is set up properly. ex: http://127.0.0.1:8080/fileuploader/listfiles or http://127.0.0.1/fileuploader/listfiles if in httpd.conf it was set up as: LoadModule mod_fileupload "<path_to_mod>/fileupload.dll" <Location /fileuploader> SetHandler mod_fileupload Order allow,deny Allow from all </Location> Note: You need to change the URLs in the templates if "fileuploader" changes. Also, for example on Linux the module can be libfileupload.so and not fileupload.dll Note: If you recompile an apache module while the module itself is loaded into the Apache server, the compilation might fail because the file is in use (Apache modules stay in the memory). So first, you always need to stop the server before you recompile or before you copy over the new version of the newly created module. On Linux, it is enough to simply reload Apache after recompile. 2.c; as FCGI ------------ Usually it works if you put the template (uploadform.html) next to the FCGI executable file. Adjust the file path in the web module (webmodule.pas) accordingly. http://<WebServer>/<ApacheScriptAliasName>/listfiles should start the example if everything is set up properly. ex: http://127.0.0.1:8080/fileuploader/func1call or http://127.0.0.1/fileuploader/func1call if in the Apache configuration file (ex: httpd.conf) it was set up as: LoadModule fastcgi_module "<path_to_mod>/mod_fastcgi-2.4.6-AP22.dll" <IfModule mod_fastcgi.c> <Directory "<path_to_fcgi_app>"> Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> FastCgiExternalServer "<path_to_fcgi_app>/fileupload.exe" -host 127.0.0.1:2015 -idle-timeout 30 -flush ScriptAlias /fileuploader "<path_to_fcgi_app>/fileupload.exe" </IfModule> Note: You need to change the module name if needed. For example on Linux, the module is not mod_fastcgi-2.4.6-AP22.dll but mod_fastcgi.so (need to be compiled from sources found at http://www.fastcgi.com/dist/ ). The port (2015 in this example) must match the one set in the project main file (fileupload.lpr). The FCGI application must be running in order for this demo to work (external FCGI server setup). Do not forget to restart it after changes and recompilation. Also, mod_fastcgi is not the same as mod_fcgid that the Apache project is developing. The latter does not support external FCGI server apps. There are other ways than external FCGI server apps to handle the FCGI protocol and both mod_fastcgi and mod_fcgid supports that. However, external FCGI servers are the best for debugging and development, that is why the examples do it that way.