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Deploying Perl apps
Azure Web Apps doesn't have direct support for Perl, but it's possible to get it working with some manual steps:
- Create a Web App.
- Go to Kudu Console to easily drop files into your site.
- Go to http://strawberryperl.com/releases.html and download the "32bit ZIP edition".
- Create a
perl
folder underD:\home\site
. - Drag and drop the perl zip file into that folder, making sure to drop it in the special area that expands zip files. It's a big file, so it could take several minutes.
- Go into the
D:\home\site\perl\perl\lib
folder, and create a subfolder namedFCGI
. - On your machine, download http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/C/CO/COSMICNET/FCGI-IIS-0.05.tar.gz
- Using a tool like 7zip, extract the file
IIS.pm
out of it (it's underFCGI-IIS-0.05\lib\FCGI
). - Copy that file into the FCGI folder you create above in the Kudu Console.
- Go to the Azure Portal and go to you site's Configure page.
- Under Handler Mappings, add one for: Extension:
*.pl
, Script processor path:D:\home\site\perl\perl\bin\perl.exe
, Additional arguments:-MFCGI::IIS=do
.
Other FastCGI operation modes for reference:
-MFCGI::IIS=test
This is a simple test routine, that displays a counter that increments by 1 each time
the script is called as a FastCGI.
-MFCGI::IIS=carp
In this mode, CGI::Carp qw(fatalsToBrowser)
is invoked before running the do method.
-MFCGI::IIS=eval
With this mode eval is used instead of the do operator. Slower run time, but allows
you to trap errors.
-MFCGI::IIS=evalhead
With this mode eval is used instead of the do operator, also the Content-Type: text/html
header is returned first, allowing you to trap wrong header errors.
-MFCGI::IIS=do
Production Mode. This is the default mode, and will be called if no arguments are given, i.e.
perl -MFCGI::IIS
. The calling script is loaded into the FastCGI using the do operator.
- Using Kudu console, copy a Perl file into
D:\home\site\wwwroot
. e.g.hello.pl
. - Request
http://{yoursite}.azurewebsites.net/hello.pl
to run it.
Here is an example hello.pl file you can start with:
print "Content-type: text/plain\n\n";
print "Hello from Perl on Windows!\n";
If you're using CGI.pm to write to disk (or anything that uses File::Temp for that matter), be aware that Perl does not get the right temporary location in its $ENV{TMPDIR}
. You'll need to specify it yourself at the top of your script.
Example:
BEGIN { $ENV{TMPDIR} = "d:\\local\\temp"; }
use CGI;
my $q = new CGI;
print $q->header(-type => "text/plain");
print "Temporary folder set to $ENV{TMPDIR}\n";
Output:
Temporary folder set to d:\local\temp
See this issue for more details on File::Temp
: https://github.com/projectkudu/kudu/issues/1700
-
Copy
D:\home\site\perl\c\bin\libmysql_.dll
toD:\home\site\perl\perl\vendor\lib\auto\DBD\mysql
(See this StackOverflow thread for the "Why") -
Add
BEGIN { $ENV{SYSTEMROOT} = "D:\\Windows"; }
at the top of your.pl
script
(See this StackOverflow thread for the "Why") -
At this point, running your Perl script in the Kudu console should be successful.
Example:
BEGIN
{
$ENV{TMPDIR} = "d:\\local\\temp";
$ENV{SYSTEMROOT} = "D:\\Windows";
}
use DBI;
print "Content-type: text/plain\n\n";
$db="wordpress";
$host="a-mysql-db.cloudapp.net";
$user="db_user";
$password="db_pass";
# Connect to MySQL database
my $dbhandle = DBI->connect ("DBI:mysql:database=$db:host=$host",
$user,
$password)
or die "Can't connect to database: $DBI::errstr\n";
# Execute 'SHOW TABLES'
my $statement=$dbhandle->prepare("SHOW TABLES");
$statement->execute();
while (my @row=$statement->fetchrow_array)
{
print $row[0]."\n";
}
$statement->finish;
# Disconnect from database
$db->disconnect or warn "Disconnection error: $DBI::errstr\n";
exit;
D:\home\site\wwwroot> d:\home\site\perl\perl\bin\perl.exe TestMySQL.pl
Content-type: text/plain
wp_commentmeta
wp_comments
wp_links
wp_options
wp_postmeta
wp_posts
wp_term_relationships
wp_term_taxonomy
wp_terms
wp_usermeta
wp_users
- With the console test successful, accessing the script over FastCGI should now also render the expected results: