Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

I've written some ruby CGI scripts (using the Ruby CGI class) that I serve from my production server using lighttpd. I want to test them on my development server using thin. Basically, I want to drop all my CGI scripts in a directory and start thin in that directory. Then, any requests to http://localhost:3000/<script> should just execute <script> in the current directory and return the results. If thin has a built-in way of doing this, I can't find it. I would imagine the Rack config file for this is easy if you know what you're doing, but I don't.

Update:

This rackup file seems to work. I'm not sure if it's the best solution, but it should be fine for a development environment.

run(lambda do |env|
  require 'rubygems'
  require 'systemu'
  script = env['REQUEST_PATH'][1..-1] + '.rb'
  response = '' 
  err = ''
  systemu(['ruby', script], 'stdout' => response, 'stderr' => err, 'env' => { 
    'foo' => 'bar' })
  if err.length > 0 
    [ 500, {'Content-Type' => 'text/plain'}, err ]
  else
    idx = 0
    status = -1
    headers = {}
    while true
      line_end = response.index("\n", idx)
      line = response[idx..line_end].strip
      idx = line_end+1

      if status < 0
        if line =~ /(\d\d\d)/
          status = $1.to_i
        else
          raise "Invalid status line: #{line}"
        end
      elsif line.empty?
        break
      else
        name, value = line.split /: ?/
        headers[name] = value
      end
    end
    content = response[idx..-1]
    [status, headers, content]
  end
end)
share|improve this question

1 Answer

I'm a little unclear as to why Rack is necessary at all. If you wrote the script using Ruby's built-in CGI module, you should be able to just tell thin to treat the directory as a cgi-bin,just like the Apache ScriptAlias directive, and Ruby CGI will take care of the rest. If thin can't do this, perhaps lighttpd would be a better solution.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.