SCGI library for Common Lisp. This repository is an archive copy. The files were retrieved from http://www.randallsquared.com/download/scgi/ as linked to from a Linux Journal article: Faster Web Applications with SCGI.
All files in this repository are in the public domain.
Excerpt from trivial-scgi-0.2c.lisp:
Releases of trivial-scgi will track trivial-sockets releases on which they depend. Any improvement to this package will be released with a letter upgrade (e.g. 0.2g), but no numerical upgrade until trivial-sockets by Daniel Barlow moves to a new version.
This package depends on trvial-sockets, which you can find through this link: http://www.cliki.net/trivial-sockets (if not, please let me know so I can update this).
SCGI is a fast, simple replacement for traditional CGI, in the mode of FastCGI, but easier to implement. There exists a mod_scgi for Apache 1 and 2, and a CGI translator for those sites unable to access Apache directly. More information can be found here: http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/scgi/.
This file contains no code, explicitly or by inclusion, from the SCGI codebase, and was produced by reference to http://python.ca/nas/scgi/protocol.txt.
To use, read the docstring for WITH-SCGI-SERVER
, and documentation for your
copy of SCGI. An example is provided that works with the examples in the SCGI
package noted above.
No threading or other multi-processing support is included in this. Such things
are currently beyond the scope of trivial-sockets, and therefore this package.
If you need to use this with multi-processing, you'll want to pass
:INPUT :STREAM
to WITH-SCGI-SERVER
, so that it doesn't try to output to and
clean up the request stream itself.
If you're building a web application from scratch, you might well want to use mod_lisp (http://www.fractalconcept.com/). This package is for those who already have projects which are using CGI and want to convert relatively painlessly, or who are comfortable with developing in a CGI-centric way, or who may find themselves deploying in situations where they have no control over the web server (and so require CGI), but who would like to use the same code in their CGI and non-CGI systems. The SCGI package mentioned above contains a CGI-to-SCGI translator for just this purpose.
Changes:
- 0.2a initial release
- 0.2b added an option to
WITH-SCGI-SERVER
to get the stream, rather than a vector, to ease working with uploaded files added rationale - 0.2c added more rationale ;)
- messed around with support for
WITH-SCGI-SERVER
's body handling the stream itself - exported
EXAMPLE
,ASCII-CODE
, andCODE-ASCII
- Added a
:PORT
keyword toEXAMPLE
- messed around with support for