$ENV{REMOTE_USER} will give you the username, after it's been authenticated by the web server.

If you've built your own server out of something like HTTP::Daemon, you can get a request object and grab the Authorization header to parse it yourself:

my $r = $daemon->get_request(); my ($username, $password) = split(/:/, $r->header('Authorization'), 2) +;

Update:

Yeah, that did say 'REQUEST_USER' before. Sorry, I merged the right line with the description of 'REQUEST_METHOD' as I read it.


In reply to Re: Getting username and password from the URL. by chromatic
in thread Getting username and password from the URL. by Punto

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