* Evert Rol <evert....@gmail.com> [101030 13:23]: > > FYI: I am working in a linux environment with python 2.6.5 > > am an experienced web developer with 8 years in python, but > > :) I have never tried this trick before: > > > > I note that with the right .htaccess file, I can run a php file, > > from a non-cgi location. > > Example: On my machine, my wwwroot is at /home/http/, I have > > /home/http/php/test/index.php and I have run index.php as > > http://localhost/php/test/ (again with the correct .hataccess). > > > > Is it possible to run a python script this way? > > I wouldn't think so, because index.php is not run as a cgi-script. > Whether Python will be interpreted correctly depends entirely on the > configuration of your webserver, in particular whether you're using/loading > the correct modules. > But if configured correctly, yes, you can 'run' Python scripts. Mod_wsgi > arranges this for you, and this is generally how things like Django run. That's the keyword - 'mod_wsgi' > But the easiest way to find out is to try it out, right? I did, didn't work.
> I also guess this question might be better answered on the forum > corresponding to your webserver (Apache?), since it appears to > deal more with the server setup than actually with Python. Understood. Thanks -- Tim tim at johnsons-web.com or akwebsoft.com http://www.akwebsoft.com _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor