NAME¶
ns_adp_ctl - ADP control command
SYNOPSIS¶
ns_adp_ctl bufsize ?size?
ns_adp_ctl chan channel
ns_adp_ctl autoabort ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl detailerror ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl displayerror ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl expire ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl gzip ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl nocache ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl safe ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl singlescript ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl stricterror ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl trace ?bool?
ns_adp_ctl trimspace ?bool?
DESCRIPTION¶
This command enables control of the current ADP execution environment. Aside
from the
bufsize and
chan subcommands, they all return a boolean
value for a given ADP option. If the
bool argument is given, the option
is set to the given value and the previous value is returned.
- ns_adp_ctl bufsize ?size?
- This command returns the currently ADP output buffer size,
setting it to a new value if the optionial size argument is
specified.
- ns_adp_ctl chan channel
- This command is used to specify an open file channel to
receive output when the buffer is flushed. If channel is the null
string, the output channel is cleared. This capability can be useful for
specialized uses of ADP outside the context of an HTTP connection, e.g.,
for debugging or testing.
- ns_adp_ctl autoabort ?bool?
- Query or set the autoabort option. When enabled,
failure to flush a buffer (normally the result of a closed HTTP
connection) generates an ADP exception, unwinding the ADP call stack.
- ns_adp_ctl detailerror ?bool?
- Query or set the detailerror option. When enabled,
errors in ADP pages are formatted with information about the context of
the HTTP request. This can be very helpful in debugging ADP errors but
potentially a security risk if the HTTP context (e.g., cookie headers)
contains personal or sensitive data. Errors are logged to the server log
and, if displayerror is enabled, appened to the output buffer.
- ns_adp_ctl displayerror ?bool?
- Query or set the displayerror option. When enabled,
errors in ADP pages are formatted and appended to the output stream,
normally visiable to a user's browser. This option should generally be
enabled in development and disabled in production.
- ns_adp_ctl expire ?bool?
- Query or set the expire option. When enabled, the
ADP request processing code adds an "Expires: now" header in the
response buffer to disable any caching. In practice, more thoughtful cache
control mechanisms should be used based on the HTTP/1.1 spec.
- ns_adp_ctl gzip ?bool?
- Query or set the gzip option. When enabled, the
output buffer is compressed before being returned in the response. As
ADP's are generally used to generate text data such as HTML or XML,
compression is normally quite successful at reducing the response size.
- ns_adp_ctl nocache ?bool?
- Query or set the nocache option. When enabled, all
requests to cache executed ADP blocks via the ns_adp_include -cache
directive are ignored, resulting in normal execution of all code.
- ns_adp_ctl safe ?bool?
- Query or set the safe option. When enabled, all code
is executed in "safe" mode, disabling and ignoring any code
within <% registered tags.
- ns_adp_ctl singlescript ?bool?
- Query or set the singlescript option. When enabled,
ADP pages are converted from independent text-script blocks into a single
script, which text blocks replaced with a call to ns_adp_append
with the given text. Functionally the output is the same however an error
anywhere on the page will result in the entire ADP page returning instead
of skipping to the next block which is the normal behavior. In practice,
singlescript is useful in development while in production leaving
it disabled provides a more defensive execution environment where minor
errors in one ADP do not inhibit execution of the overall page.
- ns_adp_ctl stricterror ?bool?
- Query or set the stricterror option. When enabled,
the result is similar to that of singlescript in that an error in a
particular block will return the entire page instead of continuing to the
next text or script block.
- ns_adp_ctl trace ?bool?
- Query or set the trace option which currently does
nothing.
- ns_adp_ctl trimspace ?bool?
- Query or set the trimspace option. When enabled, any
white space at the start of the output buffer is eliminated. White space
can show up in the output as a result of ADP pages which do nothing but
include other ADP's in a way to reuse code with the unfortunate side
effect of the training newline at the end of a "<% ns_adp_include
myfile.adp %>" ending up in the output stream.
SEE ALSO¶
ns_adp(n), ns_adp_flush(n), ns_adp_close(n), ns_adp_mimetype(n)
KEYWORDS¶
ADP, dynamic pages, buffer