<html><head><title>CGI Command line options</title></head><body><h1><img alt="" src="cl_files/CGIlogo.gif"> CGI Command line options</h1> <hr> <p> </p><h2>Specification</h2> The command line is only used in the case of an ISINDEX query. It is not used in the case of an HTML form or any as yet undefined query type. The server should search the query information (the <code>QUERY_STRING</code> environment variable) for a non-encoded = character to determine if the command line is to be used, if it finds one, the command line is not to be used. This trusts the clients to encode the = sign in ISINDEX queries, a practice which was considered safe at the time of the design of this specification. <p> For example, use the <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/finger">finger script</a> and the ISINDEX interface to look up "httpd". You will see that the script will call itself with <code>/cgi-bin/finger?httpd</code> and will actually execute "finger httpd" on the command line and output the results to you. </p><p> If the server does find a "=" in the <code>QUERY_STRING</code>, then the command line will not be used, and no decoding will be performed. The query then remains intact for processing by an appropriate FORM submission decoder. Again, as an example, use <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi-bin/finger?httpd=name">this hyperlink</a> to submit <code>"httpd=name"</code> to the finger script. Since this <code>QUERY_STRING</code> contained an unencoded "=", nothing was decoded, the script didn't know it was being submitted a valid query, and just gave you the default finger form. </p><p> If the server finds that it cannot send the string due to internal limitations (such as exec() or /bin/sh command line restrictions) the server should include NO command line information and provide the non-decoded query information in the environment variable <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/env.html#query"><code>QUERY_STRING</code></a>. </p><p> </p><hr> <h2>Examples</h2> Examples of the command line usage are much better <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/examples.html">demonstrated</a> than explained. For these examples, pay close attention to the script output which says what argc and argv are. <p> </p><hr> <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/interface.html"><img alt="[Back]" src="cl_files/back.gif">Return to the interface specification</a> <p> CGI - Common Gateway Interface </p><address><a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/mailtocgi.html">cgi@ncsa.uiuc.edu</a></address> </body></html>