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Special Forums Hardware Use of SSD for serving webpages Post 302425694 by figaro on Saturday 29th of May 2010 05:21:25 AM
Old 05-29-2010
Thank you for your response. I have in the meantime found some sources that indeed make it evident that SSDs are not ready for hosting environments yet, ie there is no real business benefit, apart from the lower heat dissipation.
The environment that we were considering SSDs for is largely read-only, so web pages that are dynamically generated (PHP/SQL).
 

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Catalyst::Manual::Deployment(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation			 Catalyst::Manual::Deployment(3pm)

NAME
Catalyst::Manual::Deployment - Deploying Catalyst DEPLOYMENT OPTIONS
Catalyst applications are most often deployed as a FastCGI or mod_perl application (with FastCGI being the recommended option). However, as Catalyst is based on the PSGI specification, any web handler implementing that specification can be used to run Catalyst applications. This documentation most thoroughly covers the normal and traditional deployment options, but will mention alternate methods of deployment, and we welcome additional documentation from people deploying Catalyst in non-standard environments. Deployment in a shared hosting environment Almost all shared hosting environments involve deploying Catalyst as a FastCGI application on Apache. You will usually want to have a set of libraries specific to your application installed on your shared host. Full details of deploying Catalyst in a shared hosting environment are at Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::SharedHosting. FastCGI FastCGI is the most common Catalyst deployment option. It is documented generally in Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::FastCGI, and there are specific instructions for using FastCGI with common web servers below: Apache Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::Apache::FastCGI nginx Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::nginx::FastCGI lighttpd Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::lighttpd::FastCGI Microsoft IIS Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::IIS::FastCGI mod_perl Traditionally a common deployment option for dedicated applications, mod_perl has some advantages and disadvantages over FastCGI. Use of mod_perl is documented in Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::Apache::mod_perl. Development Server It is possible to deploy the Catalyst development server behind a reverse proxy. This may work well for small-scale applications which are in an early development phase, but which you want to be able to show to people. See Catalyst::Manual::Deployment::DevelopmentServer. PSGI Catalyst can be deployed with any PSGI-compliant handler. See Catalyst::PSGI for more information; a list of possible deployment servers are shown below: Starman Starman is a high-performance Perl server implementation, which is designed to be used directly (rather than behind a reverse proxy). It includes HTTP/1.1 support, chunked requests and responses, keep-alive, and pipeline requests. Starlet Starlet is a standalone HTTP/1.0 server with keepaXXalive support which is suitable for running HTTP application servers behind a reverse proxy. Twiggy Twiggy is a high-performance asynchronous web server. It can be used in conjunction with Catalyst, but there are a number of caveats which mean that it is not suitable for most deployments. Chef <LChef|http://www.opscode.com/chef/> is an open-source systems integration framework built specifically for automating cloud computing deployments. A Cookbooks demonstrating how to deploy a Catalyst application using Chef is available at <http://community.opscode.com/cookbooks/catalyst> and http://github.com/melezhik/cookbooks/wiki/Catalyst-cookbook-intro <http://github.com/melezhik/cookbooks/wiki/Catalyst-cookbook-intro>. AUTHORS
Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm COPYRIGHT
This library is free software. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.14.2 2012-01-20 Catalyst::Manual::Deployment(3pm)
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