Provided by: libscgi-perl_0.6-3_all bug

NAME

       SCGI::Request - the part of the SCGI protocol that reads the environment

SYNOPISIS

         # $request got from SCGI
         $request->read_env;

         read $request->connection, my $body, $request->env->{CONTENT_LENGTH};

DESCRIPTION

       This module implements the part of the SCGI protocol that reads the environment. All that remains after
       this is the content of the request. The protocol and this module guarantee that there will be a
       CONTENT_LENGTH for the body of the request in the environment.

   public methods
       read_env
           Read the environment in a blocking or non-blocking manner, per parameter to "SCGI-"new>. Returns true
           if it has finished.

       env Gets the environment for this request after it has been read. This will return undef until "read_env"
           or "sysread_env" has been called and returned true.

       connection
           Returns the open connection to the client.

       close
           Closes the connection.

       blocking
           Returns true if the connection is blocking.

       set_blocking
           If boolean argument is true turns on blocking, otherwise turns it off.

   private methods
       _new
           Creates a new SCGI::Request. This is used by SCGI in the "accept" method, so if you are considering
           using this, use that instead.

       _decode_env
           Takes the encoded environment as a string and sets the env ready for access with "env".

       _set_env
           Sets the environment for this request.

       _blocking_read_env
           Reads and decodes the environment in one go. Returns true on success, raises an exception on
           failiure.

AUTHOR

       Thomas Yandell <mailto:tom+scgi@vipercode.com>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2005, 2006 Viper Code Limited. All rights reserved.

LICENSE

       This file is part of SCGI (perl SCGI library).

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.