Note: This method only works with remote search pages that support the get method for form processing, not the post method.
This document describes how to construct such a form for use with Google Scholar. It assumes that Google Scholar has already been used to configure EZproxy for use with Google Scholar.
At first glance, it might seem that the example below would allow you to place a search form on a public page and it would operate in the manner described in the overview.
<form method="get" action="http://ezproxy.yourlib.org:2048/login?url=http://scholar.google.com/scholar">
<input maxlength="256" size="40" name="q" value="">
<input type="submit" value="Search">
</form>
However, the EZproxy /login URL makes very specific assumptions about the information it will receive, and receiving arbitrary form variables such as "q" in this form is not one of these assumptions, causing that variable to be discarded and preventing this form from working as desired.
<form method="post"action="http://ezproxy.yourlib.org:2048/form?qurl=http%3a%2f%2fscholar.google.com%2fscholar"> <input maxlength="256" size="40" name="q" value=""> <input type="submit" value="Search"> </form>
The HTML form tag in this new version has three key differences.
The destination URL is no longer specified using url=http://scholar.google.com/scholar but instead is specified as qurl=http%3a%2f%2fscholar.google.com%2fscholar, using qurl= in place of url= and specifying the destination URL with URL escaped encoding. To apply URL escaped encoding to an arbitrary URL, EZproxy provides a /encodeurl URL that you can access with a URL similar to:
http://ezproxy.yourlib.org:2048/encodeurl
On the /encodeurl page, you provide the original URL, press enter, then you receive the escaped version to use following qurl=.
Once you place this version of the form on a public page, both your local and remote users should be able to use it to perform searches, with local users required to authenticate but then proxied through to perform the search.