Provided by: libbobcat-dev_3.19.01-1ubuntu1_amd64
NAME
FBB::CGI - handles GET and POST submitted form data
SYNOPSIS
#include <bobcat/cgi> Linking option: -lbobcat
DESCRIPTION
The class CGI offers an interface to data submitted by web-forms. The data is sent to a script handling the data using a <form action="/path/to/form/script"> stanza. Very often this is indeed a script, like a Perl script, but there is no need to use a scripting language. The class CGI allows C++ programmers to process the form by an executable usually resulting in faster processing and in construction time benefits from the type safety offered by C++. The class CGI automatically handles data submitted using the GET method as well as data submitted using the POST method. By default the class’s constructor writes the customary Content-type header lines to the standard output stream. Additional (html) output of a reply page must be provided by other code. Therefore, a program processing an uploaded form will have an organization comparable to the following basic setup: // assume includes and namespace std/FBB were defined int main() { CGI cgi; cout << "<html><body>\n"; if (parametersOK(cgi)) { process(cgi); generateReplyPage(); } else generateErrorPage(); cout << "</body></html>\n; } When errors in the received form-data are detected an error message is written to the standard output stream and an FBB::Exception exception is thrown.
NAMESPACE
FBB All constructors, members, operators and manipulators, mentioned in this man-page, are defined in the namespace FBB.
INHERITS FROM
-
TYPEDEF
o CGI::MapStringVector: A shorthand for std::unordered_map<std::string, std::vector<std::string> >, which is the data type in which form-variables are stored.
ENUMERATIONS
The CGI::Method enumeration specifies values indicating the way the form’s data were submitted: o CGI::UNDETERMINED: Used internally indicating that the form’s method was neither GET nor POST. o CGI::GET: Indicates that the GET method was used when submitting the form’s data; o CGI::POST: Indicates that the POST method was used when submitting the form’s data. The CGI::Create enumeration is used to request or suppress creation of the directory to contain any file uploaded by a form: o CGI::DONT_CREATE_PATH: When uploading files, the destination directory must exist; o CGI::CREATE_PATH: When uploading files, the destination directory will be created.
CONSTRUCTORS
o CGI(bool defaultEscape = true, char const *header = "Content-type: text/html", std::ostream &out = std::cout): The default constructor writes the standard content type header to the standard output stream and will use std::cout for output. Specifying 0 as header suppresses outputting the Content-type line. Otherwise the content type line is also followed by two \r\n character combinations. By default all characters in retrieved form-variables are escaped. The overloaded insertion operators (see below) can be used to modify the default set of characters to escape. The backslash is used as the escape character. The escape-prefix is not used if the defaultEscape value is specified as false and if no insertions into the CGI object were performed. The copy and move constructors are available.
OERLOADED OPERATORS
Note: the following three insertion operators, defining sets of characters that should be escaped, can only be used before calling any of the param, begin or end members. As soon as one of these latter three members has been called the set of characters to be escaped is fixed and attempts to modify that set is silently ignored. o char const *operator[](std::string const &key) const: The index operator returns the value of the environment variable specified as the index. 0 is returned if the variable specified at key is not defined. o CGI &operator<<(std::string const &accept): This member’s actions are suppressed once param, begin or end (see below) has been called. The insertion operator can be used to fine-tune the set of characters that are escaped in strings returned by param (see below). Depending on the value of the constructor’s defaultEscape parameter characters inserted into the CGI object will or will not be escaped by a backslash. If the constructor’s defaultEscape parameter was specified as true then the insertion operator can be used to define a set of characters that are not escaped. If defaultEscape was specified as false then the insertion operator will define a set of characters that will be escaped. The backlash itself is always escaped and a request to use it unescaped is silently ignored. The accept string can be specified as a regular expression character set, without the usual surrounding square brackets. E.g., an insertion like cgi << "-a-z0-9" defines the set consisting of the dash, the lower case letters and the digits. Individual characters, character ranges (using the dash to specify a range) and all standard character classes ([:alnum:], [:alpha:], [:cntrl:], [:digit:], [:graph:], [:lower:], [:print:], [:punct:], [:space:], [:upper:], and [:xdigit:]) can be used to specify a set of characters. In addition to these standard character classes the class [:cgi:] can be used to define the set consisting of the characters " ’ ` ; and \. Note that standard and [:cgi:] character classes do require square brackets. When a series of insertions are performed then the union of the sets defined by these insertions are used. Note: using unescaped single quotes, the double quotes, backtick characters and semicolons in CGI-programs might be risky and is not advised. o CGI &operator<<(int c): This member’s actions are suppressed once param, begin or end (see below) has been called. This insertion operator is used to change the default escape handling of a single character c. The int parameter is cast internally to a char. o CGI &operator<<(std::pair<char, char> range): This member’s actions are suppressed once param, begin or end (see below) has been called. This insertion operator can be used to change the default escape handling of a range of characters. The pair’s second character must be equal to or exceed the position of the pair’s first character in the ASCII collating sequence or the member will have no effect. o std::ostream &std::operator<<(std::ostream &out, CGI const &cgi): CGI objects can be inserted into ostreams to display the characters that will appear escaped in strings returned by the param() member function. Each character for which isprint() returns true will be displayed as character, surrounded by single quotes. For all other characters their ASCII values are displayed. Each character is displayed on a line by itself. The copy and move assignment operators are available.
MEMBER FUNCTIONS
o CGI::MapStringVector::const_iterator begin(): Returns the begin iterator of the form’s parameter map. Iterator values unequal to end (see below) point to a pair of values, the first of which is the name of a field defined by the form, the second is a vector of strings containing the field’s value(s). See also the description of the param member below. o CGI::MapStringVector::const_iterator end(): Returns the end iterator of the form’s parameter map. o unsigned long long maxUploadSize() const: Returns the current maximum file upload size in bytes. o CGI::Method method() const: Returns the method that was used when the form was submitted (either CGI::GET or CGI::POST). o std::vector<std::string> const ¶m(std::string const &variable): Returns the value of the form-variable specified by the function’s argument. An empty vector is returned if the variable was not provided by the form’s data. If the same variable was specified multiple times or if its value extends over multiple lines (only with multipart/form-data) then the vector contains multiple strings. With GET and POST methods not using multipart/form-data input fields extending over multiple lines are stored in one string, using \r\n combinations between those lines. When files are uploaded the vectors contain sets of four strings. The first string provides the path nme of the uploaded file; the second string provides the file name specified in the form itself (so it is the name of the file at the remote location); the third string shows the content type specified by the remote browser (e.g., application/octet-stream), the fourth string contains OK if the file was successfully uploaded and truncated if the file was truncated. Existing files will not be overwritten. When uploading a file a usable filename must be found within 100 trials. o std::string param1(std::string const &variable) const: Returns the first element of the vector<string> returned by the param member or an empty string if variable was not defined by the received form. o std::string const &query() const: Returns the query-string submitted with CGI::GET or CGI::POST forms (if the POSTed form specified ENCTYPE="multipart/form-data" the query string is empty). o report(): The report member silently returns if no errors were encountered while processing form-data. Otherwise, the html file generated by the CGI program displays a line starting with FBB::CGI, followed by the status report. The following status report messages are presently defined: Content-Disposition not recognized in:, which is followed by the line where the Content-Disposition was expected. This may occur when processing multipart/form data. Invalid multipart/form-data. This message can be generated when readling lines while processing multipart/form data. GET/POST REQUEST_METHOD not found. This message is shown if the program couldn’t find the form’s REQUEST_METHOD type (i.e., GET or POST). Invalid CONTENT_LENGHT in POSTed form. This message is shown if the content-length header has an incorrect value. Content-Type not found for file-field, followed by the file’s field name. This message is shown if no Content-Type specification was found in an uploaded form. Can’t open a file to write an uploaded file. This message indicates that the CGI program was unable to open a file to write an uploaded file to. This can be caused by an overfull disk or partition or by incorrect write-permissions. multipart/form-data: no end-boundary found. This message is shown if the end-boundary was missing in a multipart/form-data form. o void setFileDestination(std::string const &path, std::string const &prefix = "", Create create = CREATE_PATH): This member is used to specify the path and prefix of uploaded files. Uploaded files will be stored at path/prefixNr where Nr is an internally used number starting at one. When CREATE_PATH is specified path must be available or the CGI object must be able to create the path. If DONT_CREATE_PATH is specified the specified path must be available. If not, an FBB::Exception exception will be thrown. o void setMaxUploadSize(size_t maxSize, int unit = ’M’): This member can be used to change the maximum size of uploaded files. Its default value is 100Mb. The unit can be one of b (bytes, the default), K (Kbytes), M (Mbytes) or G (Gbytes). Unit-specifiers are interpreted case insensitively. File uploads will continue until the maximum upload size is exceeded, followed by discarding any remainder. The first time one of the param(), begin() or end() members is called these members may detect errors in the the received form data. If so, an error message is written to the standard output stream and an FBB::Exception exception will be thrown.
STATIC MEMBERS
o std::string dos2unix(std::string const &text): This member converts all \r\n character combinations in text into plain \n characters, returning the converted text. o std::string unPercent(std::string const &text): This member converts all %xx encoded characters into their corresponding ASCII values. Also, + characters are converted to single blank spaces. The converted string is returned.
EXAMPLE
#include "main.ih" void showParam(CGI::MapStringVector::value_type const &mapValue) { cout << "Param: " << mapValue.first << ’\n’; for (auto &str: mapValue.second) cout << " " << CGI::dos2unix(str) << "\n" " "; cout << ’\n’; } int main(int argc, char **argv) try { Arg &arg = Arg::initialize("evhm:", argc, argv); // usage and version are in the source archive in .../cgi/driver // arg.versionHelp(usage, version, 2); ifstream in(arg[0]); string line; while (getline(in, line)) { size_t pos = line.find(’=’); if (pos == string::npos) continue; // set environment vars simulating // a GET form if (setenv(line.substr(0, pos).c_str(), line.substr(pos + 1).c_str(), true) == 0) { if (arg.option(’e’)) cout << line.substr(0, pos).c_str() << ’=’ << line.substr(pos + 1).c_str() << ’\n’; } else cout << "FAILED: setenv " << line << ’\n’; } CGI cgi(false); // chars are not escaped cgi << arg[1]; if (arg.option(&line, ’m’)) cgi.setMaxUploadSize(A2x(line), *line.rbegin()); cout << "Max upload size (b): " << cgi.maxUploadSize() << ’\n’; CGI::Method method = cgi.method(); cout << "To escape:\n" << cgi << "\n" "Method: " << (method == CGI::GET ? "GET" : "POST") << ’\n’; cout << "Query string: " << cgi.query() << ’\n’; cout << "Submit string: `" << cgi.param1("submit") << "’\n"; for (auto &mapElement: cgi) showParam(mapElement); cout << "END OF PROGRAM\n"; } catch (exception const &err) { cout << err.what() << ’\n’; return 1; } catch (...) { return 1; } To test the program’s get form processing, call it as driver get ’[:cgi:]’, with the file get containing: INFO=This is an abbreviated set of environment variables SERVER_ADMIN=f.b.brokken@rug.nl GATEWAY_INTERFACE=CGI/1.1 SERVER_PROTOCOL=HTTP/1.1 REQUEST_METHOD=GET QUERY_STRING=hidden=hidval&submit=Submit+%20Query To test the program’s post form processing, call it as driver post1 ’[:cgi:]’, using post1 and post1.cin found in Bobcat’s source archive under ../cgi/driver.
FILES
bobcat/cgi - defines the class interface
SEE ALSO
bobcat(7)
BUGS
None Reported.
DISTRIBUTION FILES
o bobcat_3.19.01-x.dsc: detached signature; o bobcat_3.19.01-x.tar.gz: source archive; o bobcat_3.19.01-x_i386.changes: change log; o libbobcat1_3.19.01-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries; o libbobcat1-dev_3.19.01-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries, headers and manual pages; o http://sourceforge.net/projects/bobcat: public archive location;
BOBCAT
Bobcat is an acronym of `Brokken’s Own Base Classes And Templates’.
COPYRIGHT
This is free software, distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
AUTHOR
Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl).