0

I have an application that calls FCGI responder to process some tasks and I need to find whether the FCGI responder receives and returns same reqeust IDs.

The FCGI responder is written in Perl and uses FCGI module.

According to FastCGI specification, I can find the information by looking up FastCGI records.

I found Net::FastCGI library may be suitable for solving this issue, but I'm not sure how to utilize the library.

If my fcgi script looks like below, how can I use Net::FastCGI to dump contents of FastCGI record?

use FCGI;

my $count = 0;
my $request = FCGI::Request();

while($request->Accept() >= 0) {
    print("Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n", ++$count);
}

2 Answers 2

1

You can use Net::FastCGI if you want to dump FastCGI records. Net::FastCGI is very low level and requires understanding of the FastCGI protocol.

Following code shows a simple client that connects to a FastCGI application given as the first argument and outputs string representations of records sent by the application.

#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;
use warnings;

use IO::Socket             qw[];
use Net::FastCGI::Constant qw[:type :role];
use Net::FastCGI::IO       qw[read_record write_record write_stream];
use Net::FastCGI::Protocol qw[build_params dump_record build_begin_request_body];

use warnings FATAL => 'Net::FastCGI::IO';
use constant TRUE  => !!1;

my $command = shift @ARGV;

my $socket = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => 'tcp', Listen => 5)
  or die qq/Could not create a listener socket: '$!'/;

my $host = $socket->sockhost;
my $port = $socket->sockport;

defined(my $pid = fork())
  or die qq/Could not fork(): '$!'/;

if (!$pid) {
    close STDIN;

    open(STDIN, '+>&', $socket)
      or die qq/Could not dup socket to STDIN: '$!'/;

    exec { $command } $command 
      or die qq/Could not exec '$command': '$!'/;
}

close $socket;
$socket = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto => 'tcp', PeerHost => $host, PeerPort => $port)
  or die qq/Could not connect to '$host:$port': '$@'/;

write_record($socket, FCGI_BEGIN_REQUEST, 1, build_begin_request_body(FCGI_RESPONDER, 0));
write_stream($socket, FCGI_PARAMS, 1, build_params({}), TRUE);
write_stream($socket, FCGI_STDIN, 1, '', TRUE);
while () {
    my ($type, $request_id, $content) = read_record($socket)
      or exit;
    warn dump_record($type, $request_id, $content), "\n";
    last if $type == FCGI_END_REQUEST;
}

Example output:

fcgi-echo.pl is the example app you gave in your question and fcgi-dump.pl is the above code.

$ perl fcgi-dump.pl ./fcgi-echo.pl 
{FCGI_STDOUT, 1, "Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n1"}
{FCGI_STDOUT, 1, ""}
{FCGI_END_REQUEST, 1, {0, FCGI_REQUEST_COMPLETE}}
1
  • Thanks for your tip. I think I was trying to use Net::FastCGI inside my FCGI application and couldn't figure out how to implement.. Now I see that I'm supposed to create a client using Net::FastCGI. I'll give it a try and hopefully I can figure it out this time. For requestId, I end up using slightly modified FCGI.pm, which prints out ($type, $id, $body) in sub read_record to a log. (Thanks to my colleague!)
    – Ken
    Oct 4, 2013 at 19:57
0

You wouldn't. There's no sense in using Net::FastCGI when you're already using FCGI. The request ID, if you need it, is available in $request->{id} after calling $request->Accept. It's not clear what you mean by "receives and returns same request IDs" though.

5
  • I can't find documentation for $request->{id} in the FCGI manpage. Should it be documented? Sep 11, 2013 at 5:33
  • Thanks for your answer. It seems that $req->{id} is only used inside Accept subroutine in FCGI (cpansearch.perl.org/src/FLORA/FCGI-0.74/FCGI.PL). Won't it create error if I use $request->{id} after $request->Accept because $request is not a hashref? My apology in advance if I'm understanding this incorrectly.
    – Ken
    Sep 11, 2013 at 16:23
  • @Ken no, because $request is a hashref.
    – hobbs
    Sep 11, 2013 at 23:04
  • I'm still getting errors when I print $request->{id} to a log after $request->Accept() is called. My system keeps telling me it's not a hashref..but it's an another story. Thanks for answering my question. I chose yours as best answer since my question was whether I can use Net::FastCGI to dump FCGI record or not.
    – Ken
    Sep 12, 2013 at 22:35
  • @hobbs It's not a hashref, it's a blessed IV ref pointing to a memory address (T_PTROBJ). What you are referring to is the Pure Perl implementation which has never worked correctly and been experimental. It has been removed in the repository.
    – chansen
    Sep 29, 2013 at 18:07

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.