07-24-2007
It depends on a number of things. For example what webserver, what method is used to handle incoming connections etc, but what it really boils down to is two things.
1. How much traffic will the server see?
2. What type of content will it serve.
For most purposes the specs that you posted would be more than enough to serve as a LAMP server.
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
genhash
genhash(1) General Commands Manual genhash(1)
NAME
genhash - md5 hash generation tool for remote web pages
SYNOPSIS
genhash [options] [-s server-address] [-p port] [-u url]
DESCRIPTION
genhash is a tool used for generating md5sum hashes of remote web pages. genhash can use HTTP or HTTPS to connect to the web page. The
output by this utility includes the HTTP header, page data, and the md5sum of the data. This md5sum can then be used within the
keepalived(8) program, for monitoring HTTP and HTTPS services.
OPTIONS
--use-ssl, -S
Use SSL to connect to the server.
--server <host>, -s
Specify the ip address to connect to.
--port <port>, -p
Specify the port to connect to.
--url <url>, -u
Specify the path to the file you want to generate the hash of.
--use-virtualhost <host>, -V
Specify the virtual host to send along with the HTTP headers.
--hash <alg>, -H
Specify the hash algorithm to make a digest of the target page. Consult the help screen for list of available ones with a mark of
the default one.
--verbose, -v
Be verbose with the output.
--help, -h
Display the program help screen and exit.
--release, -r
Display the release number (version) and exit.
SEE ALSO
keepalived(8), keepalived.conf(5)
AUTHOR
genhash was written by Alexandre Cassen <acassen@linux-vs.org>.
This man page was contributed by Andres Salomon <dilinger@voxel.net> for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
Feb 2004 genhash(1)