CGI::Fast
See the current Perl documentation for CGI::Fast.
Here is our local, out-dated (pre-5.6) version:

CGI::Fast -
CGI Interface for Fast
CGI

use CGI::Fast qw(:standard);
$COUNTER = 0;
while (new CGI::Fast) {
print header;
print start_html("Fast CGI Rocks");
print
h1("Fast CGI Rocks"),
"Invocation num

CGI::Fast is a subclass of the
CGI object created by CGI.pm. It is specialized to work well with the Open Market FastCGI standard, which greatly speeds up
CGI scripts by turning them into persistently running server processes. Scripts that perform time-consuming initialization processes, such as loading large modules or opening persistent database connections, will see large performance improvements.
In order to use CGI::Fast you'll need a FastCGI-enabled Web server. Open Market's server is FastCGI-savvy. There are also freely redistributable FastCGI modules for
NCSA httpd 1.5 and Apache. FastCGI-enabling modules for Microsoft Internet Information Server and Netscape Communications Server have been announced.
In addition, you'll need a version of the Perl interpreter that has been linked with the FastCGI
I/O library. Precompiled binaries are available for several platforms, including
DEC Alpha,
HP-UX and SPARC/Solaris, or you can rebuild Perl from source with patches provided in the FastCGI developer's kit. The FastCGI Perl interpreter can be used in place of your normal Perl without ill consequences.
You can find FastCGI modules for Apache and
NCSA httpd, precompiled Perl interpreters, and the FastCGI developer's kit all at
URL:
http://www.fastcgi.com/
FastCGI scripts are persistent: one or more copies of the script are
started up when the server initializes, and stay around until the server
exits or they die a natural death. After performing whatever one-time
initialization it needs, the script enters a loop waiting for incoming
connections, processing the request, and waiting some more.
A typical FastCGI script will look like this:
#!/usr/local/bin/perl # must be a FastCGI version of perl!
use CGI::Fast;
&do_some_initialization();
while ($q = new CGI::Fast) {
&process_request($q);
}
Each time there's a new request, CGI::Fast returns a
CGI object to your loop. The rest of the time your script waits in the call to
new(). When the server requests that your script be terminated,
new() will return undef. You can of course exit earlier if you choose.
A new version of the script will be respawned to take its place (this may be necessary in order to avoid Perl memory leaks in long-running scripts).
CGI.pm's default
CGI object mode also works. Just modify the loop this
way:
while (new CGI::Fast) {
&process_request;
}
Calls to
header(),
start_form(), etc. will all operate on the current request.
See the FastCGI developer's kit documentation for full details. On the
Apache server, the following line must be added to srm.conf:
AddType application/x-httpd-fcgi .fcgi
FastCGI scripts must end in the extension .fcgi. For each script you
install, you must add something like the following to srm.conf:
AppClass /usr/etc/httpd/fcgi-bin/file_upload.fcgi -processes 2
This instructs Apache to launch two copies of file_upload.fcgi at startup
time.
Any script that works correctly as a FastCGI script will also work correctly when installed as a vanilla
CGI script. However it will not see any performance benefit.
I haven't tested this very much.
be used and modified freely, but
I do request that this copyright notice remain
attached to the file. You may modify this module as you wish, but if you
redistribute a modified version, please attach a note listing the
modifications you have made.
Address bug reports and comments to: lstein@genome.wi.mit.edu
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Carp, CGI
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