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Okay , I'm giving up and asking for help;

I have a script to access info in my MySQL database. I want my credentials buried in a file I can include for security. To make it even I little neater, I tried to create a sub directory (include) in my cgi-bin directory.

This is a simple example omitting all the db stuff (because that's not my problem).

config.pl (inside the include dir)

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;


$data_base = 'dbi::mysql::test_db';
$db_user = 'some_user';
$db_pw = 'password';    

test_driver.pl (inside the cgi-bin directory)

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use DBI;

require'/include/config.pl';

$param1 = $data_base;
$param2 = $db_user;
$param3 = $db_pw;

The first error I'm getting is cannot find include. I've also seen many posts that show adding our in front of the vars. Also most posts mention not using require at all, but for simple things I would rather.

I ended up following some tutorials on how to make a Module. I got it to work but that seems like a lot of effort for a simple config file.

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2 Answers 2

5

Let's get back to what you're doing, though...

When you use require, it actually reads in the file during execution. However, as the Perldoc for require state:

The file is included via the do-FILE mechanism, which is essentially just a variety of "eval" with the caveat that lexical variables in the invoking script will be invisible to the included code.

Lexical (aka local variables, aka my variables) won't work. You need package (aka global, aka our) variables.

Here's a simple test:

test.pl

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use 5.10.0;
use warnings;

our $variable;

require 'include.pl';
say "The value of \$foo is $foo";

include.pl

$foo = "I am foo (honest!)";

1;

And if I run test.pl, I get:

The value of $foo is I am foo (honest!)

I see a few issues. First of all, you are forcing yourself to use a particular variable for your account and password. This is not really a great programming idea. It's basically invisible stuff happening out of sight.

Instead of including in a file, why not use a real INI file. There's a Perl module I've used before called Config::Ini that is fairly easy to use. You create a Windows like INI file, and read your information from that.

If you don't want to use an INI file, use subroutines. This way, you don't have to use our variables, and you're not stuck saying that your password must be $password. After all, it's very likely that this configuration file will be used for multiple programs. It's just better programming:

test_driver.pl

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use 5.10.1;
use warnings;

require "config.pl";

my $password = get_password();
my $account  = get_account();

config.pl

use 5.10.1;
use warnings;

sub get_password { return "swordfish" );
sub get_account { return "some_user" };
sub get_db      { return "database_name" };

1;
0
2

The path you provided in the require is off: You specified an absolute path, but you mistook the docroot of the server for the actual filesystem root.

/include/config.pl is anchored at the filesystem root, the same way /usr/bin/perl is.

./include/config.pl would be a path relative to the current dir (presumably the cgi-bin folder) and might work better. If you know the absolute path of the cgi-bin dir, you can use an absolute path: /var/www/whatever/structure/the/host/has/htdocs/cgi-bin/include/config.pl

If you are using a web framework (I hope you are) instead of plain, dated, CGI, there may already be a configuration file present. E.g. Dancer has a YAML file with lots of settings you could expand.

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  • Ive only been learning perl for a week. I use the term config file loosely. If this is anything like php, I could potentially have a very large directory of includes. Yea , for the moment, I'm learning perl and CGI.
    – Miek
    Apr 12, 2013 at 18:58

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