- From: Anselm.BairdSmith <Anselm.Baird_Smith@inria.fr>
- Date: Mon, 6 Mar 1995 12:57:13 +0100
- To: www-talk@www0.cern.ch
I am currently experiencing two ways html through the use of scripts: the general guideline is to try to make it *whithout* any changes in the current available servers and browsers. The idea - which seems quiet common now - is to have the server send scripts to the browser, encoded as a special MIME type (in my case, for example application/scheme). By using Mosaic 2.5 CCI capabilities, this MIME type gets forwarded to a scheme interpreter that evaluates the script. For those of you who understand lisp, here is an example of what I call a "script-document": ----- foo.scm ;; Have fun: ;; This is to be launched in the "demo" context were we now that the mosaic ;; pilot is bound to *pilot* :-( (define *urls* '("http://www.inria.fr" "http://www.inria.fr/koala" "http://www.inria.fr/koala/abaird.html" "http://www.inria.fr/koala/abaird/oscheme/oscheme.html")) (for-each (lambda (url) (format (current-error-port) "Going to %0\n" url) [*pilot* goto: url] (sleep 5)) *urls*) ----- When this scripts gets executed in the "helper" scheme interpreter, it sends back requests to the Mosaic browsers (using the GOTO CCI protocol request), and make it visit the given set of HTML pages automagically. This presents a number of advantages - as was mention by someone this morning on the list - one of it being that it requires no changes in currently available WWW components (well, as long as something like Mosaic 2.5 CCI is agreed upon). However, they are also disadvantages, the biggest one being security. I'm currently working on a "secure" version of scheme, which would allow to run "script-document" in a somehow "secure" environment: the accessible primitive set is reduced depending on a security level, and various parameters, such as file I/O and CPU consumption can be limited. I hope this helps the discussion, my point here is just to show that scripting may really improve WWW interactivity, and it is not that far now (given all the various efforts going in that direction). Thanks for your attention, Anselm. ----- Anselm BAIRD-SMITH (Anselm.BairdSmith@inria.fr), Koala Project, BULL/INRIA. WWW: "http://www.inria.fr/koala/abaird.html"
Received on Monday, 6 March 1995 06:54:39 UTC