Inside a Perl section I want to configure mod_rewrite dynamically,
this works:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
If I do this:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/test /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
the
On Friday, October 08, 1999 4:26 PM, Terje Malmedal [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
Hi,
Inside a Perl section I want to configure mod_rewrite dynamically,
this works:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
If I do this:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 04:25:39PM +0200, Terje Malmedal wrote:
Inside a Perl section I want to configure mod_rewrite dynamically,
this works:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
If I do this:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
I've never used perl sections, but unless $RewriteRule is some magic variable,
the second assignment simply overwrites the first one.
I thought it had to be something along the lines of:
push(@RewriteRule , "/cgi-bin/printenv" , "/cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]");
or
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 11:54:58AM -0700, Cliff Rayman wrote:
I've never used perl sections, but unless $RewriteRule is some magic variable,
the second assignment simply overwrites the first one.
Sorry for my previous post, I see the problem now after re-reading things.
At first glance I