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Apache::SIG - Override apache signal handlers with Perl's






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Table of Contents

Synopsis

  PerlFixupHandler Apache::SIG


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Description

When a client drops a connection and apache is in the middle of a write, a timeout will occur and httpd sends a SIGPIPE. When apache's SIGPIPE handler is used, Perl may be left in the middle of it's eval context, causing bizarre errors during subsequent requests are handled by that child. When Apache::SIG is used, it installs a different SIGPIPE handler which rewinds the context to make sure Perl is back to normal state, preventing these bizarre errors.

If you would like to log when a request was cancelled by a SIGPIPE in your Apache access_log, you can declare Apache::SIG as a handler (any Perl*Handler will do, as long as it is run before PerlHandler, e.g. PerlFixupHandler), and you must also define a custom LogFormat in your httpd.conf, like so:

  PerlFixupHandler Apache::SIG
  LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %s %b %{SIGPIPE}e"

If the server has noticed that the request was cancelled via a SIGPIPE, then the log line will end with 1, otherwise it will just be a dash.



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Caveats

The signal handler in this package uses the subprocess_env table of the main request object to supply the SIGPIPE "environment variable" to the log handler. If you already use the key SIGPIPE in your subprocess_env table, then you can redefine the key like this:

  $Apache::SIG::PipeKey = 'my_SIGPIPE';

and log it like this:

  LogFormat "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %s %b %{my_SIGPIPE}e"


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Maintainers

Maintainer is the person(s) you should contact with updates, corrections and patches.



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Authors

Only the major authors are listed above. For contributors see the Changes file.



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See Also

perlvar(1)






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