Hi everybody,
I have installed Apache 2 + Tomcat 5.5. on Ubuntu 7.04 and the default httpd.conf is empty (0 lines), however there is a file called apache2.conf that looks like a default httpd.conf.
I didn't use Apache in ages, since 1.3.x release, but I remember that the httpd.conf by default... (2 Replies)
Hi,
What options should I use with ./configure to include mod_dav into the build? I use --enable-dav and I didn't see mod_dav.so anywhere in the build directory. I need to load mod_dav.so as a module during httpd startup.
Thanks. (1 Reply)
I'd like to know if servername in apache httpd.conf is the machine name or domain name. If it is domain name like example.com, should it be registered before in use? (1 Reply)
Evening,
I'm posting for help here, because I'll be honest I've reached the end of my tether, hopefully someone can give me some assistance and help me maintain a level of sanity...
I maintain a number of webservers on RHEL 5 64Bit (Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.3 (Tikanga)), the... (2 Replies)
Hi, I was wondering if someone could help me out here. I am super-paranoid, so am trying to limit what PHP files can be executed on this server. I have a small list of files that I want to allow. The rest, deny. So I have base rule that denies all php files server-wide: order allow,deny ... (0 Replies)
Hi, I was wondering if someone could help me out here. I am super-paranoid, so am trying to limit what PHP files can be executed on this server. I have a small list of files that I want to allow. The rest, deny:
<Files ~ "\.(php|php3)$">
order allow,deny
deny from all
</Files>
I... (0 Replies)
Dear all experts,
I have a environment with 2 web, 2 apps and 2 db servers. Recently after I have patch the AIX O/S from 5300-11-02 to 5300-12-02, we found that the number of httpd processes increase largely. From originally 4 fix httpd processes become more than 600 processes. And it already... (1 Reply)
What is the command to see what httpd.conf file is apache using. Apache is started. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: galford
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
apr::perlio
PERLIO(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PERLIO(1)NAME
APR:PerlIO -- An APR Perl IO layer
SYNOPSIS
use APR::PerlIO ();
sub handler {
my $r = shift;
open my $fh, ">:APR", $filename, $r or die $!;
# work with $fh as normal $fh
close $fh;
return Apache::OK;
}
DESCRIPTION
"APR::PerlIO" implements a Perl IO layer using APR's file manipulation as its internals.
Why do you want to use this? Normally you shouldn't, probably it won't be faster than Perl's default layer. It's only useful when you need
to manipulate a filehandle opened at the APR side, while using Perl.
Normally you won't call open() with APR layer attribute, but some mod_perl functions will return a filehandle which is internally hooked to
APR. But you can use APR Perl IO directly if you want.
METHODS
Perl Interface:
open()
To use APR Perl IO to open a file the four arguments open() should be used. For example:
open my $fh, ">:APR", $filename, $r or die $!;
where:
the second argument is the mode to open the file, constructed from two sections separated by the ":" character: the first section is
the mode to open the file under (>, <, etc) and the second section must be a string APR.
the fourth argument can be a "Apache::RequestRec" or "Apache::ServerRec" object.
the rest of the arguments are the same as described by the open() manpage.
seek()
seek($fh, $offset, $whence);
If $offset is zero, "seek()" works normally.
However if $offset is non-zero and Perl has been compiled with with large files support ("-Duselargefiles"), whereas APR wasn't, this
function will croak. This is because largefile size "Off_t" simply cannot fit into a non-largefile size "apr_off_t".
To solve the problem, rebuild Perl with "-Uuselargefiles". Currently there is no way to force APR to build with large files support.
The C interface provides functions to convert between Perl IO and APR Perl IO filehandles.
SEE ALSO
The perliol(1), perlapio(1) and perl(1) manpages.
perl v5.8.0 2002-06-05 PERLIO(1)