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1 package CGI::Carp;
3 =head1 NAME
5 B<CGI::Carp> - CGI routines for writing to the HTTPD (or other) error log
7 =head1 SYNOPSIS
9 use CGI::Carp;
11 croak "We're outta here!";
12 confess "It was my fault: $!";
13 carp "It was your fault!";
14 warn "I'm confused";
15 die "I'm dying.\n";
17 use CGI::Carp qw(cluck);
18 cluck "I wouldn't do that if I were you";
20 use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser);
21 die "Fatal error messages are now sent to browser";
23 =head1 DESCRIPTION
25 CGI scripts have a nasty habit of leaving warning messages in the error
26 logs that are neither time stamped nor fully identified. Tracking down
27 the script that caused the error is a pain. This fixes that. Replace
28 the usual
30 use Carp;
32 with
34 use CGI::Carp
36 And the standard warn(), die (), croak(), confess() and carp() calls
37 will automagically be replaced with functions that write out nicely
38 time-stamped messages to the HTTP server error log.
40 For example:
42 [Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: I'm confused at test.pl line 3.
43 [Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: Got an error message: Permission denied.
44 [Fri Nov 17 21:40:43 1995] test.pl: I'm dying.
46 =head1 REDIRECTING ERROR MESSAGES
48 By default, error messages are sent to STDERR. Most HTTPD servers
49 direct STDERR to the server's error log. Some applications may wish
50 to keep private error logs, distinct from the server's error log, or
51 they may wish to direct error messages to STDOUT so that the browser
52 will receive them.
54 The C<carpout()> function is provided for this purpose. Since
55 carpout() is not exported by default, you must import it explicitly by
56 saying
58 use CGI::Carp qw(carpout);
60 The carpout() function requires one argument, which should be a
61 reference to an open filehandle for writing errors. It should be
62 called in a C<BEGIN> block at the top of the CGI application so that
63 compiler errors will be caught. Example:
65 BEGIN {
66 use CGI::Carp qw(carpout);
67 open(LOG, ">>/usr/local/cgi-logs/mycgi-log") or
68 die("Unable to open mycgi-log: $!\n");
69 carpout(LOG);
72 carpout() does not handle file locking on the log for you at this point.
74 The real STDERR is not closed -- it is moved to CGI::Carp::SAVEERR. Some
75 servers, when dealing with CGI scripts, close their connection to the
76 browser when the script closes STDOUT and STDERR. CGI::Carp::SAVEERR is there to
77 prevent this from happening prematurely.
79 You can pass filehandles to carpout() in a variety of ways. The "correct"
80 way according to Tom Christiansen is to pass a reference to a filehandle
81 GLOB:
83 carpout(\*LOG);
85 This looks weird to mere mortals however, so the following syntaxes are
86 accepted as well:
88 carpout(LOG);
89 carpout(main::LOG);
90 carpout(main'LOG);
91 carpout(\LOG);
92 carpout(\'main::LOG');
94 ... and so on
96 FileHandle and other objects work as well.
98 Use of carpout() is not great for performance, so it is recommended
99 for debugging purposes or for moderate-use applications. A future
100 version of this module may delay redirecting STDERR until one of the
101 CGI::Carp methods is called to prevent the performance hit.
103 =head1 MAKING PERL ERRORS APPEAR IN THE BROWSER WINDOW
105 If you want to send fatal (die, confess) errors to the browser, ask to
106 import the special "fatalsToBrowser" subroutine:
108 use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser);
109 die "Bad error here";
111 Fatal errors will now be echoed to the browser as well as to the log. CGI::Carp
112 arranges to send a minimal HTTP header to the browser so that even errors that
113 occur in the early compile phase will be seen.
114 Nonfatal errors will still be directed to the log file only (unless redirected
115 with carpout).
117 =head2 Changing the default message
119 By default, the software error message is followed by a note to
120 contact the Webmaster by e-mail with the time and date of the error.
121 If this message is not to your liking, you can change it using the
122 set_message() routine. This is not imported by default; you should
123 import it on the use() line:
125 use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser set_message);
126 set_message("It's not a bug, it's a feature!");
128 You may also pass in a code reference in order to create a custom
129 error message. At run time, your code will be called with the text
130 of the error message that caused the script to die. Example:
132 use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser set_message);
133 BEGIN {
134 sub handle_errors {
135 my $msg = shift;
136 print "<h1>Oh gosh</h1>";
137 print "Got an error: $msg";
139 set_message(\&handle_errors);
142 In order to correctly intercept compile-time errors, you should call
143 set_message() from within a BEGIN{} block.
145 =head1 MAKING WARNINGS APPEAR AS HTML COMMENTS
147 It is now also possible to make non-fatal errors appear as HTML
148 comments embedded in the output of your program. To enable this
149 feature, export the new "warningsToBrowser" subroutine. Since sending
150 warnings to the browser before the HTTP headers have been sent would
151 cause an error, any warnings are stored in an internal buffer until
152 you call the warningsToBrowser() subroutine with a true argument:
154 use CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser);
155 use CGI qw(:standard);
156 print header();
157 warningsToBrowser(1);
159 You may also give a false argument to warningsToBrowser() to prevent
160 warnings from being sent to the browser while you are printing some
161 content where HTML comments are not allowed:
163 warningsToBrowser(0); # disable warnings
164 print "<SCRIPT type=javascript><!--\n";
165 print_some_javascript_code();
166 print "//--></SCRIPT>\n";
167 warningsToBrowser(1); # re-enable warnings
169 Note: In this respect warningsToBrowser() differs fundamentally from
170 fatalsToBrowser(), which you should never call yourself!
172 =head1 CHANGE LOG
174 1.05 carpout() added and minor corrections by Marc Hedlund
175 <hedlund@best.com> on 11/26/95.
177 1.06 fatalsToBrowser() no longer aborts for fatal errors within
178 eval() statements.
180 1.08 set_message() added and carpout() expanded to allow for FileHandle
181 objects.
183 1.09 set_message() now allows users to pass a code REFERENCE for
184 really custom error messages. croak and carp are now
185 exported by default. Thanks to Gunther Birznieks for the
186 patches.
188 1.10 Patch from Chris Dean (ctdean@cogit.com) to allow
189 module to run correctly under mod_perl.
191 1.11 Changed order of &gt; and &lt; escapes.
193 1.12 Changed die() on line 217 to CORE::die to avoid B<-w> warning.
195 1.13 Added cluck() to make the module orthogonal with Carp.
196 More mod_perl related fixes.
198 1.20 Patch from Ilmari Karonen (perl@itz.pp.sci.fi): Added
199 warningsToBrowser(). Replaced <CODE> tags with <PRE> in
200 fatalsToBrowser() output.
202 =head1 AUTHORS
204 Copyright 1995-1998, Lincoln D. Stein. All rights reserved.
206 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
207 it under the same terms as Perl itself.
209 Address bug reports and comments to: lstein@cshl.org
211 =head1 SEE ALSO
213 Carp, CGI::Base, CGI::BasePlus, CGI::Request, CGI::MiniSvr, CGI::Form,
214 CGI::Response
216 =cut
218 require 5.000;
219 use Exporter;
220 use Carp;
222 @ISA = qw(Exporter);
223 @EXPORT = qw(confess croak carp);
224 @EXPORT_OK = qw(carpout fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser wrap set_message cluck);
226 $main::SIG{__WARN__}=\&CGI::Carp::warn;
227 $main::SIG{__DIE__}=\&CGI::Carp::die;
228 $CGI::Carp::VERSION = '1.20';
229 $CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG = undef;
231 # fancy import routine detects and handles 'errorWrap' specially.
232 sub import {
233 my $pkg = shift;
234 my(%routines);
235 grep($routines{$_}++,@_,@EXPORT);
236 $WRAP++ if $routines{'fatalsToBrowser'} || $routines{'wrap'};
237 $WARN++ if $routines{'warningsToBrowser'};
238 my($oldlevel) = $Exporter::ExportLevel;
239 $Exporter::ExportLevel = 1;
240 Exporter::import($pkg,keys %routines);
241 $Exporter::ExportLevel = $oldlevel;
244 # These are the originals
245 sub realwarn { CORE::warn(@_); }
246 sub realdie { CORE::die(@_); }
248 sub id {
249 my $level = shift;
250 my($pack,$file,$line,$sub) = caller($level);
251 my($id) = $file=~m|([^/]+)$|;
252 return ($file,$line,$id);
255 sub stamp {
256 my $time = scalar(localtime);
257 my $frame = 0;
258 my ($id,$pack,$file);
259 do {
260 $id = $file;
261 ($pack,$file) = caller($frame++);
262 } until !$file;
263 ($id) = $id=~m|([^/]+)$|;
264 return "[$time] $id: ";
267 sub warn {
268 my $message = shift;
269 my($file,$line,$id) = id(1);
270 $message .= " at $file line $line.\n" unless $message=~/\n$/;
271 _warn($message) if $WARN;
272 my $stamp = stamp;
273 $message=~s/^/$stamp/gm;
274 realwarn $message;
277 sub _warn {
278 my $msg = shift;
279 if ($EMIT_WARNINGS) {
280 # We need to mangle the message a bit to make it a valid HTML
281 # comment. This is done by substituting similar-looking ISO
282 # 8859-1 characters for <, > and -. This is a hack.
283 $msg =~ tr/<>-/\253\273\255/;
284 chomp $msg;
285 print STDOUT "<!-- warning: $msg -->\n";
286 } else {
287 push @WARNINGS, $msg;
291 sub ineval { _longmess() =~ /eval [\{\']/m }
293 # The mod_perl package Apache::Registry loads CGI programs by calling
294 # eval. These evals don't count when looking at the stack backtrace.
295 sub _longmess {
296 my $message = Carp::longmess();
297 my $mod_perl = exists $ENV{MOD_PERL};
298 $message =~ s,eval[^\n]+Apache/Registry\.pm.*,,s if $mod_perl;
299 return $message;
302 sub die {
303 realdie @_ if ineval;
304 my ($message) = @_;
305 my $time = scalar(localtime);
306 my($file,$line,$id) = id(1);
307 $message .= " at $file line $line." unless $message=~/\n$/;
308 &fatalsToBrowser($message) if $WRAP;
309 my $stamp = stamp;
310 $message=~s/^/$stamp/gm;
311 realdie $message;
314 sub set_message {
315 $CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG = shift;
316 return $CGI::Carp::CUSTOM_MSG;
319 # Avoid generating "subroutine redefined" warnings with the following
320 # hack:
322 local $^W=0;
323 eval <<EOF;
324 sub confess { CGI::Carp::die Carp::longmess \@_; }
325 sub croak { CGI::Carp::die Carp::shortmess \@_; }
326 sub carp { CGI::Carp::warn Carp::shortmess \@_; }
327 sub cluck { CGI::Carp::warn Carp::longmess \@_; }
332 # We have to be ready to accept a filehandle as a reference
333 # or a string.
334 sub carpout {
335 my($in) = @_;
336 my($no) = fileno(to_filehandle($in));
337 realdie("Invalid filehandle $in\n") unless defined $no;
339 open(SAVEERR, ">&STDERR");
340 open(STDERR, ">&$no") or
341 ( print SAVEERR "Unable to redirect STDERR: $!\n" and exit(1) );
344 sub warningsToBrowser {
345 $EMIT_WARNINGS = @_ ? shift : 1;
346 _warn(shift @WARNINGS) while $EMIT_WARNINGS and @WARNINGS;
349 # headers
350 sub fatalsToBrowser {
351 my($msg) = @_;
352 $msg=~s/&/&amp;/g;
353 $msg=~s/>/&gt;/g;
354 $msg=~s/</&lt;/g;
355 $msg=~s/\"/&quot;/g;
356 my($wm) = $ENV{SERVER_ADMIN} ?
357 qq[the webmaster (<a href="mailto:$ENV{SERVER_ADMIN}">$ENV{SERVER_ADMIN}</a>)] :
358 "this site's webmaster";
359 my ($outer_message) = <<END;
360 For help, please send mail to $wm, giving this error message
361 and the time and date of the error.
364 my $mod_perl = exists $ENV{MOD_PERL};
365 print STDOUT "Content-type: text/html\n\n"
366 unless $mod_perl;
368 warningsToBrowser(1); # emit warnings before dying
370 if ($CUSTOM_MSG) {
371 if (ref($CUSTOM_MSG) eq 'CODE') {
372 &$CUSTOM_MSG($msg); # nicer to perl 5.003 users
373 return;
374 } else {
375 $outer_message = $CUSTOM_MSG;
379 my $mess = <<END;
380 <H1>Software error:</H1>
381 <PRE>$msg</PRE>
383 $outer_message
387 if ($mod_perl && (my $r = Apache->request)) {
388 # If bytes have already been sent, then
389 # we print the message out directly.
390 # Otherwise we make a custom error
391 # handler to produce the doc for us.
392 if ($r->bytes_sent) {
393 $r->print($mess);
394 $r->exit;
395 } else {
396 $r->status(500);
397 $r->custom_response(500,$mess);
399 } else {
400 print STDOUT $mess;
404 # Cut and paste from CGI.pm so that we don't have the overhead of
405 # always loading the entire CGI module.
406 sub to_filehandle {
407 my $thingy = shift;
408 return undef unless $thingy;
409 return $thingy if UNIVERSAL::isa($thingy,'GLOB');
410 return $thingy if UNIVERSAL::isa($thingy,'FileHandle');
411 if (!ref($thingy)) {
412 my $caller = 1;
413 while (my $package = caller($caller++)) {
414 my($tmp) = $thingy=~/[\':]/ ? $thingy : "$package\:\:$thingy";
415 return $tmp if defined(fileno($tmp));
418 return undef;