There are alot of issues you have to deal with in your scenario, but here is one tip which you may find useful in dealing with long-cgi-processes.
#!/usr/bin/perl use warnings; use strict; #Benjamin Goldberg #The Apache process does NOT wait for the CGI process to exit, it wait +s #for the pipes to be closed. (Note that if the CGI is a NPH script, t +hen #it does waitpid() for the script to exit). #Thus, you do not really need a child process -- you can have your CGI + #process transmute itself into whatever you would have the child proce +ss #do, by doing something like: $| = 1; # need either this or to explicitly flush stdout, etc. + print "Content-type: text/plain\n\n"; print "Going to start the fork now\n"; open( STDIN, "</dev/null"); open( STDOUT, ">>/dev/null"); open( STDERR, ">>/path/to/logfile"); fork and exit; exec "program that would be the child process"; #Apache waits for all children to close the pipes to apache. It #does not wait for them to actually exit -- think ... how in the world + #could it *possibly* know that those processes were really spawned fro +m #the CGI process? Answer: It can't. It can only know that *somethin +g* #still has an open filedescriptor which points to one of the pipes tha +t #apache created to capture the CGI's stdout and stderr. As long as on +e #of these pipes is open, then apache waits.

I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth. flash japh

In reply to Re: Perl CGI timeout by zentara
in thread Perl CGI timeout by jewang

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