in reply to Calling Windows executable from a CGI Perl
Couple of possibilities besides ones that have already been noted by BrowserUk and Corion:
You can cut through most of this by making definitive tests. E.g., create a CGI executable that tests a known working command (untested but should work):
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; # Enable all the warnings use CGI::Carp qw/fatalsToBrowser warningsToBrowser/; use CGI qw/:standard/; # Turn off buffering (possibly unnecessary depending on Perl version, # but can't hurt) $|++; # Get the date my $date = qx{date /t}; print header, start_html, p($date), end_html;
Run this from the command line; then, try it via your server and browser. Based on the output, you should be able to easily decide in which direction the problem lies.
-- Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. -- HG Wells
|
|---|