Hello sduggal and welcome to the monastery and to the wonderful world of Perl!

As you are relatively new to Perl and webframeworks i feel to suggest you to not start with IIS: I have only a limited and not so recent experience with Perl+IIS but is a dreadful path.

If you can switch to Linux things will be much simpler to get run.

If you have some constraint about the OS you can try Apache for windows.

IIS7 is in my experience a very unfriendly program: CGI on IIS was always a pain and things seem getting even worst. Especially debug web applications running on IIS written in non MS favourite languages, resulted painful to me.

That said if you must follow this path (IIS7.5+FastCGI) you have all my encouragemnts and I hope you can share here your future results. Thanks for the (even if japanese) page you linked, that is anyway interesting.

good luck and I hope see more post about this topic here at PM.

L*

There are no rules, there are no thumbs..
Reinvent the wheel, then learn The Wheel; may be one day you reinvent one of THE WHEELS.

In reply to Re: Help: Mojolicious+FastCGI+IIS by Discipulus
in thread Help: Mojolicious+FastCGI+IIS by sduggal

Title:
Use:  <p> text here (a paragraph) </p>
and:  <code> code here </code>
to format your post, it's "PerlMonks-approved HTML":



  • Posts are HTML formatted. Put <p> </p> tags around your paragraphs. Put <code> </code> tags around your code and data!
  • Titles consisting of a single word are discouraged, and in most cases are disallowed outright.
  • Read Where should I post X? if you're not absolutely sure you're posting in the right place.
  • Please read these before you post! —
  • Posts may use any of the Perl Monks Approved HTML tags:
    a, abbr, b, big, blockquote, br, caption, center, col, colgroup, dd, del, details, div, dl, dt, em, font, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, hr, i, ins, li, ol, p, pre, readmore, small, span, spoiler, strike, strong, sub, summary, sup, table, tbody, td, tfoot, th, thead, tr, tt, u, ul, wbr
  • You may need to use entities for some characters, as follows. (Exception: Within code tags, you can put the characters literally.)
            For:     Use:
    & &amp;
    < &lt;
    > &gt;
    [ &#91;
    ] &#93;
  • Link using PerlMonks shortcuts! What shortcuts can I use for linking?
  • See Writeup Formatting Tips and other pages linked from there for more info.