.TH cgi_parse 3 "12 July 2007" "ClearSilver" "cgi/cgi.h" .de Ss .sp .ft CW .nf .. .de Se .fi .ft P .sp .. .SH NAME cgi_parse - Parse incoming CGI data .SH SYNOPSIS .Ss #include .Se .Ss NEOERR *cgi_parse (CGI *cgi); .Se .SH ARGUMENTS cgi - a pointer to a CGI pointer .SH DESCRIPTION We split cgi_init into two sections, one that parses just the basics, and the second is cgi_parse. cgi_parse is responsible for parsing the entity body of the HTTP request. This payload is typically only sent (expected) on POST/PUT requests, but generally this is called on all incoming requests. This function walks the list of registered parse callbacks (see cgi_register_parse_cb), and if none of those matches or handles the request, it handlers: POST w/ application/x-www-form-urlencoded POST w/ application/form-data PUT w/ any content type In general, if there is no Content-Length, then cgi_parse ignores the payload and doesn't raise an error. .SH "RETURN VALUE" Either data populated into files and cgi->hdf, or whatever .br other side effects of your own registered callbacks. .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR cgi_debug_init "(3), "cgi_parse "(3), "cgi_destroy "(3), "cgi_js_escape "(3), "cgi_html_escape_strfunc "(3), "cgi_register_strfuncs "(3), "cgi_output "(3), "parse_rfc2388 "(3), "cgi_url_validate "(3), "open_upload "(3), "cgi_cs_init "(3), "cgi_url_escape_more "(3), "cgi_html_strip_strfunc "(3), "cgi_neo_error "(3), "cgi_redirect "(3), "cgi_filehandle "(3), "cgi_register_parse_cb "(3), "cgi_url_escape "(3), "cgi_init "(3), "cgi_redirect_uri "(3), "cgi_cookie_clear "(3), "cgi_url_unescape "(3), "cgi_vredirect "(3), "cgi_display "(3), "cgi_html_ws_strip "(3), "cgi_error "(3), "cgi_cookie_set "(3), "cgi_text_html_strfunc "(3), "cgi_cookie_authority