Hi,
I'm a competent enough Objective-C and Java programmer, but I'm still
having the occasional problem getting my head around the "Ruby way". The
class that gives me most headaches is CGI..
I've got a script running on Apache mod_fcgi that receives an HTML POST
containing an XML message from another server (a light weight web
service). I parse this message and send emails, update databases and
logs based on its content.
My problem is that it works 99% of the time, but sometimes the XML gets
split and reassembled incorrectly, e.g.
<?xml version"1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<request>..lots of stuff..</request>
occasionally arrives as:
<request<?xml version"1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>..lots of stuff..</request>
Obviously at that stage REXML is packing in as the XML string is
incorrectly formatted.
Now something tells me that the problem might well be in the way I use
the CGI class to get to the POST data:
# gets a cgi object from the FCGI dispatcher
FCGI.each_cgi { |cgi|
# prints the parameters to the standard error for debugging
$stderr.puts "cgi.params: #{cgi.params}"
# parse the parameters
doc = Document.new cgi.params.to_s
I'm wondering whether there is any "ruby magic" to the cgi.params call.
I never quite understand what's actually in there, is it a simple
string, a hash of strings or an array of hashes or a hash of hashes or
sometimes one and sometimes another.. I'm sure it's frightfully
convenient, but I can't get my head around it..
The documentation simply confuses me even further.. it just looks like
my string re-assembly problem might stem from there..
Any help would be much appreciated.
Best regards,
Frank
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