In the end it will printout a web page including the necessary CGI headers.
B<rrdcgi> parses the contents of the template in 3 steps. In each step it looks
-only for a subset of tags. This allows nesting of tags.
+only for a subset of tags. This allows nesting of tags.
The argument parser uses the same semantics as you are used from your C-shell.
Inserts the CGI variable of the given name, quotes it and makes sure
it starts neither with a '/' nor contains '..'. This is to make
-sure that no problematic pathnames can be introduced through the
+sure that no problematic pathnames can be introduced through the
CGI interface.
=item RRD::GETENV I<variable>
Analog to SETENV but for local variables.
-=item RRD::GETVAR I<variable>
+=item RRD::GETVAR I<variable>
Analog to GETENV but for local variables.
=head1 EXAMPLE 2
-This script is slightly more elaborate, it allows you to run it from
+This script is slightly more elaborate, it allows you to run it from
a form which sets RRD_NAME. RRD_NAME is then used to select which RRD
you want to use as source for your graph.
<INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT></FORM>
<H2>Graph</H2>
<P>
- <RRD::GRAPH <RRD::CV::PATH RRD_NAME>.png --lazy
+ <RRD::GRAPH <RRD::CV::PATH RRD_NAME>.png --lazy
--title "Temperatures for "<RRD::CV::QUOTE RRD_NAME>
DEF:cel=<RRD::CV::PATH RRD_NAME>.rrd:exhaust:AVERAGE
LINE2:cel#00a000:"D. Celsius">