1/10/2024 0 Comments Activeperl ssl![]() NOTE: When I installed ActivePerl 5.10 on the new server, I found I needed a perl508.dll placed in the Perl\bin folder to install some of the perl modules from the ASSP module installation. Win32 OpenSSL: ASSP v1 (stable release): ActivePerl (5.10 recomended): hMailServer: Moving from the older to the newer versions should not be extremely difficult. At the time of writing, the server was to be decommissioned and I saw no point in runing upgrades. Perhaps something involving backslashes.Program versions: ASSP 1.5.1.5 Perl 5.08 hMailServer 5.2-B356 OpenSSL 0.9.8Lįoreword: Yes, they are older versions. The quick fix was to disable path_info for Apache… In my config file: $UsePathInfo = 0 From then on, Oddmuse is confused and believes that the strange pagename is part of the script name… I ended up with URLs like the following: If I create a page called ], and follow the link, then I will end up on a page where the ‘ö’ is encoded as Latin-1, which is invalid UTF-8, and so the name will display as Alex Schr?der. I think it is an Apache bug, but I am not sure. I’ve found a problem when using non-ASCII pagenames. I use ActivePerl rather than the Perl in Cygwin. Create this file if it doesn’t exist and add the following line: $ENV to where your cygwin binary is. If your data directory is C:\wiki as in the example above, then the config file is C:\wiki\config. Now we need to tell Oddmuse where to find it. Inside the archive, you’ll find the files in the usr/local/wbin directory.Ĭreate a directory called C:/bin and put your copy of diff.exe and grep.exe in there. You could get it from the unxutils project. ![]() You need to get a copy of the diff.exe and grep.exe command. Test the wiki wrapper script by following this link:Ĭreate a new page and checking RecentChanges, too. Change the data directory to whatever you see fit, but note that that the parent directory must exist. Change the first line to fit your setup if your Perl is installed somewhere else. On my (German) system, this is C:\Programme\ApacheĬreate a Wrapper Script called wiki (or, depending on how you have Apache configured) in the cgi-bin directory. Get a copy of the current script: ĭownload the script and put it in the cgi-bin directory. ![]() Install the current version of the script Note the forward slashes! #!c:/Programme/Perl/bin/Perl.exe On my (German) system this is C:\Programme\Perl\bin. It starts with the following line: #!c:/Perl/bin/Perl.exeĬhange it to the correct location. On my (German) system, this is C:\Programme\Apache You’ll find it in the cgi-bin directory of your Apache installation. If you did not install it in C:\Perl, you have to edit the test script.
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