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 DEBIAN
camping
CAMPING(1) User Commands CAMPING(1)
NAME
camping - small Ruby web framework for MVC type applications
SYNOPSIS
camping app1.rb app2.rb...
DESCRIPTION
Camping is a web framework which consistently stays at less than 4kb of code. The idea here is to store a complete fledgling web applica-
tion (written in Ruby) in a single file like many small CGIs, but to organize it as a Model-View-Controller application like Rails does.
You can then easily move it to Rails once you've got it going.
Specific options:
-h, --host HOSTNAME
Host for web server to bind to (default is all IPs)
-p, --port NUM
Port for web server (defaults to 3301)
-d, --database FILE
SQLite3 database path (defaults to ~/.camping.db)
-C, --console
Run in console mode with IRB
-s, --server NAME
Server to force (mongrel, webrick, console)
Common options:
-?, --help
Show this message
-v, --version
Show version
FILES
~/.camping.db
The default database file.
SEE ALSO
The Camping website on http://camping.rubyforge.org/.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Paul van Tilburg <paulvt@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
camping 2.0 May 2010 CAMPING(1)