On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 05:39:40 +0100 (BST)
shiji varghese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I want to build a perl program which will run like a daemon , where in it
> will pull up an svg webpage and then watch for events triggered in the svg
> webpage.
>  The perl program will should act like a back end server to the front end
>  svg webpage on the same machine.The interaction between them should be
>  similar to an interprocess communication. I know CGI is a concept very
>  similar to what i want to do.Any ideas as to how my perl server daemon can
>  receive function calls from the events recognised in the svg webpage.(For
>  Eg. The svg webpage will have button , which when clicked should sent the
>  signal to the backend perl daemon for it to process and sent a response
>  back to the svg webpage )
>  
>  Any ideas ..

How about:

* http://wiki.svg.org/XMLHttpRequest
* http://wiki.svg.org/GetURL
* http://wiki.svg.org/PostURL

G. Wade


>  
>  "G. Wade Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:                              
>  On Sat, 10 Jun 2006 11:27:27 -0000"varghen_shiji"
>  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  
>  > Hi 
>  > I want to develop a Perl server program ,which will put up an svg 
>  > webpage, and keep running in the background.Each time an event is 
>  > recognised on the webpage , it should be handled by the Perl server 
>  > program.
>  > The front end will be a svg webpage and the backend will be a perl 
>  > program (which will be running always watching for event handle calls 
>  > from the svg webpage)
>  > How do i make the perl to run continuosly watching for calls to the 
>  > events recognised in the front end svg webpage.
>  > 
>  > Hope you have understood my query.The perl will be a server and the 
>  > svg webpage my client. Please do guide me on this.
>  > Shiji
>  
>  This is not an SVG question and you could get a more in-depth answer from a
>  Perl mailing list.
>  
>  <off-topic>
>  However, to get you started, there are several alternatives you could
>  explore. The simplest would be the HTTP::Daemon module which sets up a very
>  small webserver with only a small amount of code. If you are planning on
>  having any real traffic at all (more than one user, etc.) you might
>  consider using mod_perl or CGI scripts on top of Apache.
>  
>  You can get more information through The Perl Monastery at
>  www.perlmonks.org.
>  </off-topic>
>  
>  G. Wade
>  -- 
>  To vacillate or not to vacillate, that is the question ... or is it?
>  
>      
>                        
> 
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> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 


-- 
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