Ruby is a general-purpose language; it can't properly be called a web language at all. Even so, web applications and web tools in general are among the most common uses of Ruby.
Not only can you write your own SMTP server, FTP daemon, or Web server in Ruby, but you can also use Ruby for more usual tasks such as CGI programming or as a replacement for PHP.
Please spend few minutes with CGI Programming Tutorial for more detail on CGI Programming.
For example, if you have the Web site http://www.example.com/ hosted with a Linux Web hosting provider and you upload test.cgi to the main directory and give it execute permissions, then visiting http://www.example.com/test.cgi should return an HTML page saying This is a test.
Here when test.cgi is requested from a Web browser, the Web server looks for test.cgi on the Web site, and then executes it using the Ruby interpreter. The Ruby script returns a basic HTTP header and then returns a basic HTML document.
Let's create a basic CGI script that uses cgi:
You can access the parameters FirstName and LastName using CGI#[] directly as follows:
In this example, assume the form has three fields called "name" and we entered three names "Zara", "Huma" and "Nuha":
An associated, but basic, form that could send the correct data would have HTML code like so:
To make tag nesting easier, these methods take their content as code blocks. The code blocks should return a String, which will be used as the content for the tag. For example:
This will produce the following result:
For example, any / in the query portion of the URL will be translated to the string %2F and must be translated back to a / for you to use it. Space and ampersand are also special characters. To handle this, CGI provides the routines CGI.escape and CGI.unescape.
Not only can you write your own SMTP server, FTP daemon, or Web server in Ruby, but you can also use Ruby for more usual tasks such as CGI programming or as a replacement for PHP.
Please spend few minutes with CGI Programming Tutorial for more detail on CGI Programming.
Writing CGI Scripts:
The most basic Ruby CGI script looks like this:#!/usr/bin/ruby puts "HTTP/1.0 200 OK" puts "Content-type: text/html\n\n" puts "<html><body>This is a test</body></html>"Output
This is a testIf you call this script test.cgi and uploaded it to a Unix-based Web hosting provider with the right permissions, you could use it as a CGI script.
For example, if you have the Web site http://www.example.com/ hosted with a Linux Web hosting provider and you upload test.cgi to the main directory and give it execute permissions, then visiting http://www.example.com/test.cgi should return an HTML page saying This is a test.
Here when test.cgi is requested from a Web browser, the Web server looks for test.cgi on the Web site, and then executes it using the Ruby interpreter. The Ruby script returns a basic HTTP header and then returns a basic HTML document.
Using cgi.rb:
Ruby comes with a special library called cgi that enables more sophisticated interactions than those with the preceding CGI script.Let's create a basic CGI script that uses cgi:
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' cgi = CGI.new puts cgi.header puts "<html><body>This is a test</body></html>"Output
This is a testHere, you created a CGI object and used it to print the header line for you.
Form Processing:
Using class CGI gives you access to HTML query parameters in two ways. Suppose we are given a URL of /cgi-bin/test.cgi?FirstName=Zara&LastName=Ali.You can access the parameters FirstName and LastName using CGI#[] directly as follows:
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' cgi = CGI.new cgi['FirstName'] # => ["Zara"] cgi['LastName'] # => ["Ali"]There is another way to access these form variables. This code will give you a hash of all the key and values:
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' cgi = CGI.new h = cgi.params # => {"FirstName"=>["Zara"],"LastName"=>["Ali"]} h['FirstName'] # => ["Zara"] h['LastName'] # => ["Ali"]Following is the code to retrieve all the keys:
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' cgi = CGI.new cgi.keys # => ["FirstName", "LastName"]If a form contains multiple fields with the same name, the corresponding values will be returned to the script as an array. The [] accessor returns just the first of these.index the result of the params method to get them all.
In this example, assume the form has three fields called "name" and we entered three names "Zara", "Huma" and "Nuha":
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' cgi = CGI.new cgi['name'] # => "Zara" cgi.params['name'] # => ["Zara", "Huma", "Nuha"] cgi.keys # => ["name"] cgi.params # => {"name"=>["Zara", "Huma", "Nuha"]}Note: Ruby will take care of GET and POST methods automatically. There is no separate treatment for these two different methods.
An associated, but basic, form that could send the correct data would have HTML code like so:
<html> <body> <form method="POST" action="http://www.example.com/test.cgi"> First Name :<input type="text" name="FirstName" value="" /> <br /> Last Name :<input type="text" name="LastName" value="" /> <input type="submit" value="Submit Data" /> </form> </body> </html>
Creating Forms and HTML:
CGI contains a huge number of methods used to create HTML. You will find one method per tag. In order to enable these methods, you must create a CGI object by calling CGI.new.To make tag nesting easier, these methods take their content as code blocks. The code blocks should return a String, which will be used as the content for the tag. For example:
#!/usr/bin/ruby require "cgi" cgi = CGI.new("html4") cgi.out{ cgi.html{ cgi.head{ "\n"+cgi.title{"This Is a Test"} } + cgi.body{ "\n"+ cgi.form{"\n"+ cgi.hr + cgi.h1 { "A Form: " } + "\n"+ cgi.textarea("get_text") +"\n"+ cgi.br + cgi.submit } } } }NOTE: The form method of the CGI class can accept a method parameter, which will set the HTTP method ( GET, POST, and so on...) to be used on form submittal. The default, used in this example, is POST.
This will produce the following result:
Content-Type: text/html Content-Length: 302 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Final//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>This Is a Test</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <FORM METHOD="post" ENCTYPE="application/x-www-form-urlencoded"> <HR> <H1>A Form: </H1> <TEXTAREA COLS="70" NAME="get_text" ROWS="10"></TEXTAREA> <BR> <INPUT TYPE="submit"> </FORM> </BODY> </HTML>
Quoting Strings:
When dealing with URLs and HTML code, you must be careful to quote certain characters. For instance, a slash character ( / ) has special meaning in a URL, so it must be escaped if it's not part of the pathname.For example, any / in the query portion of the URL will be translated to the string %2F and must be translated back to a / for you to use it. Space and ampersand are also special characters. To handle this, CGI provides the routines CGI.escape and CGI.unescape.
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' puts CGI.escape(Zara Ali/A Sweet & Sour Girl")This will produce the following result:
Zara+Ali%2FA Sweet+%26+Sour+Girl")
#!/usr/bin/ruby require 'cgi' puts CGI.escapeHTML('<h1>Zara Ali/A Sweet & Sour Girl</h1>')This will produce the following result:
<h1>Zara Ali/A Sweet & Sour Girl</h1>'
Useful Methods in CGI Class:
Here is complete listing of all the methods related to CGI class:- The Ruby CGI - Methods related to Standard CGI library.
Cookies and Sessions:
I have explained these two concepts in different links. Please follow these links:- The Ruby CGI Cookies - How to handle CGI Cookies.
- The Ruby CGI Sessions - How to manage CGI sessions.
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