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FastCGI Programmer's Guide - Chapter 4, Developing FastCGI Applications in Tcl
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<H1>
4 Developing FastCGI<BR>
Applications in Tcl
</H1>
</DIV>
<A NAME="4835"></A>
<P>
This chapter explains how to code FastCGI applications in Tcl. Prior to creating a FastCGI application, you
must have a FastCGI-savvy version of the Tcl interpreter. Open Market develops Tcl binaries for popular
platforms and makes them available with our developer's kit.
</P>
<P>
<A NAME="4943"></A> The FastCGI-savvy binaries are extensions of standard Tcl, and are intended to replace
your existing Tcl installation. There is no need to maintain two versions of Tcl: the version that we supply
will work fine when invoked from a shell or a CGI program. There are also directions in the developer's
kit for how to make your own FastCGI-savvy Tcl, if you need a version for some platform that we don't
supply.
</P>
<P>
<A NAME="4221"></A> In many cases, you can convert a Tcl script from CGI to FastCGI by adding a few lines of
code to an existing script. For more complex scripts, you may also need to rearrange some existing code.
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
<H1>
Getting Started
</H1>
<A NAME="4223"></A>
<P>
The first line of any Tcl script typically specifies the pathname of the Tcl interpreter itself. You must
specify the pathname of a FastCGI-savvy Tcl.
</P>
<P>
<A NAME="4226"></A> Then, you have to divide FastCGI scripts into the following two sections:
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
<UL>
<LI CLASS="c2">
<A NAME="4227"></A>
</LI>
<LI>
Initialization section, which is executed only once. <A NAME="4228"></A>
</LI>
<LI>
Response loop section, which gets executed every time the FastCGI script gets called.
</LI>
</UL>
<A NAME="4229"></A>
<P>
A response loop typically has the following format:
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
<PRE>
<A NAME="4923">while {[FCGI_Accept] >= 0 } {
</A>
<A NAME="4925"># body of response loop
</A>
<A NAME="4367">}
</A>
</PRE>
<A NAME="4233"></A>
<P>
The <CODE>FCGI_Accept</CODE> call returns 0 whenever a client requests the FastCGI script. Otherwise, the
<CODE>FCGI_Accept</CODE> call returns -1.
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
<H1>
Example: TinyFastCGI
</H1>
<A NAME="4343"></A>
<P>
Here is a simple example of a FastCGI application written in Tcl:
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
<PRE>
<A NAME="4344"></A>
#!fcgi-savvy-tcl
set count 0
# Response Loop
while {[FCGI_Accept] >= 0 } {
incr count
puts -nonewline "Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n"
puts "<title>FastCGI Hello! (Tcl)</title>"
puts "<h1>FastCGI Hello! (Tcl)</h1>"
puts "Request number $count running on host <i>$env(SERVER_NAME)</i>"
}
</PRE>
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