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Tcl 8.5 Network Programming

You're reading from   Tcl 8.5 Network Programming Learn Tcl and you‚Äôll never look back when it comes to developing network-aware applications. This book is the perfect way in, taking you from the basics to more advanced topics in easy, logical steps.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849510967
Length 588 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Tcl 8.5 Network Programming
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
1. Preface
1. Introducing Tcl FREE CHAPTER 2. Advanced Tcl Features 3. Tcl Standalone Binaries 4. Troubleshooting Tcl applications 5. Data Storage 6. Networking in Tcl 7. Using Common Internet Services 8. Using Additional Internet Services 9. Learning SNMP 10. Web Programming in Tcl 11. TclHttpd in Client-Server Applications 12. SOAP and XML-RPC 13. SSL and Security

Tcl scripts as CGI application


The Common Gateway Interface (CGI) is the standardized way the CGI-compliant web server can use external application to do some tasks, and essentially to generate the HTML output to the client. We do not intend to describe CGI itself—as it is beyond the scope of this book, but to focus how Tcl can be arranged here. The full specification of CGI, is described in detail in RFC 3875 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3875.txt).

The CGI standard defines that the application may be written in any language. The communication between the server and the application is as follows:

  • The input for the application is provided in terms of environmental variables (see CGI manual for detailed list of these variables). In the case of HTTP POST request, the content of that request is available as standard input.

  • The application writes the resulting document to standard output. This output must contain at least the HTTP header defining the MIME type of the document, and the content.

To...

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