First of all, check for trivial installation errors - reading the
section above on installing your CGI script carefully can save you a
lot of time. If you wonder whether you have understood the
installation procedure correctly, try installing a copy of this module
file (cgi.py
) as a CGI script. When invoked as a script, the file
will dump its environment and the contents of the form in HTML form.
Give it the right mode etc, and send it a request. If it's installed
in the standard cgi-bin
directory, it should be possible to send it a
request by entering a URL into your browser of the form:
http://yourhostname/cgi-bin/cgi.py?name=Joe+Blow&addr=At+Home
If this gives an error of type 404, the server cannot find the script
- perhaps you need to install it in a different directory. If it
gives another error (e.g. 500), there's an installation problem that
you should fix before trying to go any further. If you get a nicely
formatted listing of the environment and form content (in this
example, the fields should be listed as ``addr'' with value ``At Home''
and ``name'' with value ``Joe Blow''), the cgi.py
script has been
installed correctly. If you follow the same procedure for your own
script, you should now be able to debug it.
The next step could be to call the cgi
module's test() function from
your script: replace its main code with the single statement
cgi.test()
This should produce the same results as those gotten from installing
the cgi.py
file itself.
When an ordinary Python script raises an unhandled exception (e.g. because of a typo in a module name, a file that can't be opened, etc.), the Python interpreter prints a nice traceback and exits. While the Python interpreter will still do this when your CGI script raises an exception, most likely the traceback will end up in one of the HTTP server's log file, or be discarded altogether.
Fortunately, once you have managed to get your script to execute
*some* code, it is easy to catch exceptions and cause a traceback to
be printed. The test()
function below in this module is an example.
Here are the rules:
sys.stderr
to sys.stdout
traceback.print_exc()
For example:
import sys import traceback print "Content-type: text/html" print sys.stderr = sys.stdout try: ...your code here... except: print "\n\n<PRE>" traceback.print_exc()
Notes: The assignment to sys.stderr
is needed because the traceback
prints to sys.stderr
. The print "
statement is necessary to
disable the word wrapping in HTML.
n
n<PRE>"
If you suspect that there may be a problem in importing the traceback module, you can use an even more robust approach (which only uses built-in modules):
import sys sys.stderr = sys.stdout print "Content-type: text/plain" print ...your code here...
This relies on the Python interpreter to print the traceback. The content type of the output is set to plain text, which disables all HTML processing. If your script works, the raw HTML will be displayed by your client. If it raises an exception, most likely after the first two lines have been printed, a traceback will be displayed. Because no HTML interpretation is going on, the traceback will readable.