1:mod:`cgi` --- Common Gateway Interface support 2=============================================== 3 4.. module:: cgi 5 :synopsis: Helpers for running Python scripts via the Common Gateway Interface. 6 7**Source code:** :source:`Lib/cgi.py` 8 9.. index:: 10 pair: WWW; server 11 pair: CGI; protocol 12 pair: HTTP; protocol 13 pair: MIME; headers 14 single: URL 15 single: Common Gateway Interface 16 17-------------- 18 19Support module for Common Gateway Interface (CGI) scripts. 20 21This module defines a number of utilities for use by CGI scripts written in 22Python. 23 24 25Introduction 26------------ 27 28.. _cgi-intro: 29 30A CGI script is invoked by an HTTP server, usually to process user input 31submitted through an HTML ``<FORM>`` or ``<ISINDEX>`` element. 32 33Most often, CGI scripts live in the server's special :file:`cgi-bin` directory. 34The HTTP server places all sorts of information about the request (such as the 35client's hostname, the requested URL, the query string, and lots of other 36goodies) in the script's shell environment, executes the script, and sends the 37script's output back to the client. 38 39The script's input is connected to the client too, and sometimes the form data 40is read this way; at other times the form data is passed via the "query string" 41part of the URL. This module is intended to take care of the different cases 42and provide a simpler interface to the Python script. It also provides a number 43of utilities that help in debugging scripts, and the latest addition is support 44for file uploads from a form (if your browser supports it). 45 46The output of a CGI script should consist of two sections, separated by a blank 47line. The first section contains a number of headers, telling the client what 48kind of data is following. Python code to generate a minimal header section 49looks like this:: 50 51 print("Content-Type: text/html") # HTML is following 52 print() # blank line, end of headers 53 54The second section is usually HTML, which allows the client software to display 55nicely formatted text with header, in-line images, etc. Here's Python code that 56prints a simple piece of HTML:: 57 58 print("<TITLE>CGI script output</TITLE>") 59 print("<H1>This is my first CGI script</H1>") 60 print("Hello, world!") 61 62 63.. _using-the-cgi-module: 64 65Using the cgi module 66-------------------- 67 68Begin by writing ``import cgi``. 69 70When you write a new script, consider adding these lines:: 71 72 import cgitb 73 cgitb.enable() 74 75This activates a special exception handler that will display detailed reports in 76the Web browser if any errors occur. If you'd rather not show the guts of your 77program to users of your script, you can have the reports saved to files 78instead, with code like this:: 79 80 import cgitb 81 cgitb.enable(display=0, logdir="/path/to/logdir") 82 83It's very helpful to use this feature during script development. The reports 84produced by :mod:`cgitb` provide information that can save you a lot of time in 85tracking down bugs. You can always remove the ``cgitb`` line later when you 86have tested your script and are confident that it works correctly. 87 88To get at submitted form data, use the :class:`FieldStorage` class. If the form 89contains non-ASCII characters, use the *encoding* keyword parameter set to the 90value of the encoding defined for the document. It is usually contained in the 91META tag in the HEAD section of the HTML document or by the 92:mailheader:`Content-Type` header). This reads the form contents from the 93standard input or the environment (depending on the value of various 94environment variables set according to the CGI standard). Since it may consume 95standard input, it should be instantiated only once. 96 97The :class:`FieldStorage` instance can be indexed like a Python dictionary. 98It allows membership testing with the :keyword:`in` operator, and also supports 99the standard dictionary method :meth:`~dict.keys` and the built-in function 100:func:`len`. Form fields containing empty strings are ignored and do not appear 101in the dictionary; to keep such values, provide a true value for the optional 102*keep_blank_values* keyword parameter when creating the :class:`FieldStorage` 103instance. 104 105For instance, the following code (which assumes that the 106:mailheader:`Content-Type` header and blank line have already been printed) 107checks that the fields ``name`` and ``addr`` are both set to a non-empty 108string:: 109 110 form = cgi.FieldStorage() 111 if "name" not in form or "addr" not in form: 112 print("<H1>Error</H1>") 113 print("Please fill in the name and addr fields.") 114 return 115 print("<p>name:", form["name"].value) 116 print("<p>addr:", form["addr"].value) 117 ...further form processing here... 118 119Here the fields, accessed through ``form[key]``, are themselves instances of 120:class:`FieldStorage` (or :class:`MiniFieldStorage`, depending on the form 121encoding). The :attr:`~FieldStorage.value` attribute of the instance yields 122the string value of the field. The :meth:`~FieldStorage.getvalue` method 123returns this string value directly; it also accepts an optional second argument 124as a default to return if the requested key is not present. 125 126If the submitted form data contains more than one field with the same name, the 127object retrieved by ``form[key]`` is not a :class:`FieldStorage` or 128:class:`MiniFieldStorage` instance but a list of such instances. Similarly, in 129this situation, ``form.getvalue(key)`` would return a list of strings. If you 130expect this possibility (when your HTML form contains multiple fields with the 131same name), use the :meth:`~FieldStorage.getlist` method, which always returns 132a list of values (so that you do not need to special-case the single item 133case). For example, this code concatenates any number of username fields, 134separated by commas:: 135 136 value = form.getlist("username") 137 usernames = ",".join(value) 138 139If a field represents an uploaded file, accessing the value via the 140:attr:`~FieldStorage.value` attribute or the :meth:`~FieldStorage.getvalue` 141method reads the entire file in memory as bytes. This may not be what you 142want. You can test for an uploaded file by testing either the 143:attr:`~FieldStorage.filename` attribute or the :attr:`~FieldStorage.file` 144attribute. You can then read the data from the :attr:`!file` 145attribute before it is automatically closed as part of the garbage collection of 146the :class:`FieldStorage` instance 147(the :func:`~io.RawIOBase.read` and :func:`~io.IOBase.readline` methods will 148return bytes):: 149 150 fileitem = form["userfile"] 151 if fileitem.file: 152 # It's an uploaded file; count lines 153 linecount = 0 154 while True: 155 line = fileitem.file.readline() 156 if not line: break 157 linecount = linecount + 1 158 159:class:`FieldStorage` objects also support being used in a :keyword:`with` 160statement, which will automatically close them when done. 161 162If an error is encountered when obtaining the contents of an uploaded file 163(for example, when the user interrupts the form submission by clicking on 164a Back or Cancel button) the :attr:`~FieldStorage.done` attribute of the 165object for the field will be set to the value -1. 166 167The file upload draft standard entertains the possibility of uploading multiple 168files from one field (using a recursive :mimetype:`multipart/\*` encoding). 169When this occurs, the item will be a dictionary-like :class:`FieldStorage` item. 170This can be determined by testing its :attr:`!type` attribute, which should be 171:mimetype:`multipart/form-data` (or perhaps another MIME type matching 172:mimetype:`multipart/\*`). In this case, it can be iterated over recursively 173just like the top-level form object. 174 175When a form is submitted in the "old" format (as the query string or as a single 176data part of type :mimetype:`application/x-www-form-urlencoded`), the items will 177actually be instances of the class :class:`MiniFieldStorage`. In this case, the 178:attr:`!list`, :attr:`!file`, and :attr:`filename` attributes are always ``None``. 179 180A form submitted via POST that also has a query string will contain both 181:class:`FieldStorage` and :class:`MiniFieldStorage` items. 182 183.. versionchanged:: 3.4 184 The :attr:`~FieldStorage.file` attribute is automatically closed upon the 185 garbage collection of the creating :class:`FieldStorage` instance. 186 187.. versionchanged:: 3.5 188 Added support for the context management protocol to the 189 :class:`FieldStorage` class. 190 191 192Higher Level Interface 193---------------------- 194 195The previous section explains how to read CGI form data using the 196:class:`FieldStorage` class. This section describes a higher level interface 197which was added to this class to allow one to do it in a more readable and 198intuitive way. The interface doesn't make the techniques described in previous 199sections obsolete --- they are still useful to process file uploads efficiently, 200for example. 201 202.. XXX: Is this true ? 203 204The interface consists of two simple methods. Using the methods you can process 205form data in a generic way, without the need to worry whether only one or more 206values were posted under one name. 207 208In the previous section, you learned to write following code anytime you 209expected a user to post more than one value under one name:: 210 211 item = form.getvalue("item") 212 if isinstance(item, list): 213 # The user is requesting more than one item. 214 else: 215 # The user is requesting only one item. 216 217This situation is common for example when a form contains a group of multiple 218checkboxes with the same name:: 219 220 <input type="checkbox" name="item" value="1" /> 221 <input type="checkbox" name="item" value="2" /> 222 223In most situations, however, there's only one form control with a particular 224name in a form and then you expect and need only one value associated with this 225name. So you write a script containing for example this code:: 226 227 user = form.getvalue("user").upper() 228 229The problem with the code is that you should never expect that a client will 230provide valid input to your scripts. For example, if a curious user appends 231another ``user=foo`` pair to the query string, then the script would crash, 232because in this situation the ``getvalue("user")`` method call returns a list 233instead of a string. Calling the :meth:`~str.upper` method on a list is not valid 234(since lists do not have a method of this name) and results in an 235:exc:`AttributeError` exception. 236 237Therefore, the appropriate way to read form data values was to always use the 238code which checks whether the obtained value is a single value or a list of 239values. That's annoying and leads to less readable scripts. 240 241A more convenient approach is to use the methods :meth:`~FieldStorage.getfirst` 242and :meth:`~FieldStorage.getlist` provided by this higher level interface. 243 244 245.. method:: FieldStorage.getfirst(name, default=None) 246 247 This method always returns only one value associated with form field *name*. 248 The method returns only the first value in case that more values were posted 249 under such name. Please note that the order in which the values are received 250 may vary from browser to browser and should not be counted on. [#]_ If no such 251 form field or value exists then the method returns the value specified by the 252 optional parameter *default*. This parameter defaults to ``None`` if not 253 specified. 254 255 256.. method:: FieldStorage.getlist(name) 257 258 This method always returns a list of values associated with form field *name*. 259 The method returns an empty list if no such form field or value exists for 260 *name*. It returns a list consisting of one item if only one such value exists. 261 262Using these methods you can write nice compact code:: 263 264 import cgi 265 form = cgi.FieldStorage() 266 user = form.getfirst("user", "").upper() # This way it's safe. 267 for item in form.getlist("item"): 268 do_something(item) 269 270 271.. _functions-in-cgi-module: 272 273Functions 274--------- 275 276These are useful if you want more control, or if you want to employ some of the 277algorithms implemented in this module in other circumstances. 278 279 280.. function:: parse(fp=None, environ=os.environ, keep_blank_values=False, strict_parsing=False) 281 282 Parse a query in the environment or from a file (the file defaults to 283 ``sys.stdin``). The *keep_blank_values* and *strict_parsing* parameters are 284 passed to :func:`urllib.parse.parse_qs` unchanged. 285 286 287.. function:: parse_multipart(fp, pdict, encoding="utf-8", errors="replace") 288 289 Parse input of type :mimetype:`multipart/form-data` (for file uploads). 290 Arguments are *fp* for the input file, *pdict* for a dictionary containing 291 other parameters in the :mailheader:`Content-Type` header, and *encoding*, 292 the request encoding. 293 294 Returns a dictionary just like :func:`urllib.parse.parse_qs`: keys are the 295 field names, each value is a list of values for that field. For non-file 296 fields, the value is a list of strings. 297 298 This is easy to use but not much good if you are expecting megabytes to be 299 uploaded --- in that case, use the :class:`FieldStorage` class instead 300 which is much more flexible. 301 302 .. versionchanged:: 3.7 303 Added the *encoding* and *errors* parameters. For non-file fields, the 304 value is now a list of strings, not bytes. 305 306 307.. function:: parse_header(string) 308 309 Parse a MIME header (such as :mailheader:`Content-Type`) into a main value and a 310 dictionary of parameters. 311 312 313.. function:: test() 314 315 Robust test CGI script, usable as main program. Writes minimal HTTP headers and 316 formats all information provided to the script in HTML form. 317 318 319.. function:: print_environ() 320 321 Format the shell environment in HTML. 322 323 324.. function:: print_form(form) 325 326 Format a form in HTML. 327 328 329.. function:: print_directory() 330 331 Format the current directory in HTML. 332 333 334.. function:: print_environ_usage() 335 336 Print a list of useful (used by CGI) environment variables in HTML. 337 338 339.. _cgi-security: 340 341Caring about security 342--------------------- 343 344.. index:: pair: CGI; security 345 346There's one important rule: if you invoke an external program (via the 347:func:`os.system` or :func:`os.popen` functions. or others with similar 348functionality), make very sure you don't pass arbitrary strings received from 349the client to the shell. This is a well-known security hole whereby clever 350hackers anywhere on the Web can exploit a gullible CGI script to invoke 351arbitrary shell commands. Even parts of the URL or field names cannot be 352trusted, since the request doesn't have to come from your form! 353 354To be on the safe side, if you must pass a string gotten from a form to a shell 355command, you should make sure the string contains only alphanumeric characters, 356dashes, underscores, and periods. 357 358 359Installing your CGI script on a Unix system 360------------------------------------------- 361 362Read the documentation for your HTTP server and check with your local system 363administrator to find the directory where CGI scripts should be installed; 364usually this is in a directory :file:`cgi-bin` in the server tree. 365 366Make sure that your script is readable and executable by "others"; the Unix file 367mode should be ``0o755`` octal (use ``chmod 0755 filename``). Make sure that the 368first line of the script contains ``#!`` starting in column 1 followed by the 369pathname of the Python interpreter, for instance:: 370 371 #!/usr/local/bin/python 372 373Make sure the Python interpreter exists and is executable by "others". 374 375Make sure that any files your script needs to read or write are readable or 376writable, respectively, by "others" --- their mode should be ``0o644`` for 377readable and ``0o666`` for writable. This is because, for security reasons, the 378HTTP server executes your script as user "nobody", without any special 379privileges. It can only read (write, execute) files that everybody can read 380(write, execute). The current directory at execution time is also different (it 381is usually the server's cgi-bin directory) and the set of environment variables 382is also different from what you get when you log in. In particular, don't count 383on the shell's search path for executables (:envvar:`PATH`) or the Python module 384search path (:envvar:`PYTHONPATH`) to be set to anything interesting. 385 386If you need to load modules from a directory which is not on Python's default 387module search path, you can change the path in your script, before importing 388other modules. For example:: 389 390 import sys 391 sys.path.insert(0, "/usr/home/joe/lib/python") 392 sys.path.insert(0, "/usr/local/lib/python") 393 394(This way, the directory inserted last will be searched first!) 395 396Instructions for non-Unix systems will vary; check your HTTP server's 397documentation (it will usually have a section on CGI scripts). 398 399 400Testing your CGI script 401----------------------- 402 403Unfortunately, a CGI script will generally not run when you try it from the 404command line, and a script that works perfectly from the command line may fail 405mysteriously when run from the server. There's one reason why you should still 406test your script from the command line: if it contains a syntax error, the 407Python interpreter won't execute it at all, and the HTTP server will most likely 408send a cryptic error to the client. 409 410Assuming your script has no syntax errors, yet it does not work, you have no 411choice but to read the next section. 412 413 414Debugging CGI scripts 415--------------------- 416 417.. index:: pair: CGI; debugging 418 419First of all, check for trivial installation errors --- reading the section 420above on installing your CGI script carefully can save you a lot of time. If 421you wonder whether you have understood the installation procedure correctly, try 422installing a copy of this module file (:file:`cgi.py`) as a CGI script. When 423invoked as a script, the file will dump its environment and the contents of the 424form in HTML form. Give it the right mode etc, and send it a request. If it's 425installed in the standard :file:`cgi-bin` directory, it should be possible to 426send it a request by entering a URL into your browser of the form: 427 428.. code-block:: none 429 430 http://yourhostname/cgi-bin/cgi.py?name=Joe+Blow&addr=At+Home 431 432If this gives an error of type 404, the server cannot find the script -- perhaps 433you need to install it in a different directory. If it gives another error, 434there's an installation problem that you should fix before trying to go any 435further. If you get a nicely formatted listing of the environment and form 436content (in this example, the fields should be listed as "addr" with value "At 437Home" and "name" with value "Joe Blow"), the :file:`cgi.py` script has been 438installed correctly. If you follow the same procedure for your own script, you 439should now be able to debug it. 440 441The next step could be to call the :mod:`cgi` module's :func:`test` function 442from your script: replace its main code with the single statement :: 443 444 cgi.test() 445 446This should produce the same results as those gotten from installing the 447:file:`cgi.py` file itself. 448 449When an ordinary Python script raises an unhandled exception (for whatever 450reason: of a typo in a module name, a file that can't be opened, etc.), the 451Python interpreter prints a nice traceback and exits. While the Python 452interpreter will still do this when your CGI script raises an exception, most 453likely the traceback will end up in one of the HTTP server's log files, or be 454discarded altogether. 455 456Fortunately, once you have managed to get your script to execute *some* code, 457you can easily send tracebacks to the Web browser using the :mod:`cgitb` module. 458If you haven't done so already, just add the lines:: 459 460 import cgitb 461 cgitb.enable() 462 463to the top of your script. Then try running it again; when a problem occurs, 464you should see a detailed report that will likely make apparent the cause of the 465crash. 466 467If you suspect that there may be a problem in importing the :mod:`cgitb` module, 468you can use an even more robust approach (which only uses built-in modules):: 469 470 import sys 471 sys.stderr = sys.stdout 472 print("Content-Type: text/plain") 473 print() 474 ...your code here... 475 476This relies on the Python interpreter to print the traceback. The content type 477of the output is set to plain text, which disables all HTML processing. If your 478script works, the raw HTML will be displayed by your client. If it raises an 479exception, most likely after the first two lines have been printed, a traceback 480will be displayed. Because no HTML interpretation is going on, the traceback 481will be readable. 482 483 484Common problems and solutions 485----------------------------- 486 487* Most HTTP servers buffer the output from CGI scripts until the script is 488 completed. This means that it is not possible to display a progress report on 489 the client's display while the script is running. 490 491* Check the installation instructions above. 492 493* Check the HTTP server's log files. (``tail -f logfile`` in a separate window 494 may be useful!) 495 496* Always check a script for syntax errors first, by doing something like 497 ``python script.py``. 498 499* If your script does not have any syntax errors, try adding ``import cgitb; 500 cgitb.enable()`` to the top of the script. 501 502* When invoking external programs, make sure they can be found. Usually, this 503 means using absolute path names --- :envvar:`PATH` is usually not set to a very 504 useful value in a CGI script. 505 506* When reading or writing external files, make sure they can be read or written 507 by the userid under which your CGI script will be running: this is typically the 508 userid under which the web server is running, or some explicitly specified 509 userid for a web server's ``suexec`` feature. 510 511* Don't try to give a CGI script a set-uid mode. This doesn't work on most 512 systems, and is a security liability as well. 513 514.. rubric:: Footnotes 515 516.. [#] Note that some recent versions of the HTML specification do state what 517 order the field values should be supplied in, but knowing whether a request 518 was received from a conforming browser, or even from a browser at all, is 519 tedious and error-prone. 520