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 DEBIAN
apr::sockaddr
libapache2-mod-perl2-2.0.7::docs::api::APR::SockAddr(3pmUser Contributed Perl Documentatilibapache2-mod-perl2-2.0.7::docs::api::APR::SockAddr(3pm)NAME
APR::SockAddr - Perl API for APR socket address structure
Synopsis
use APR::SockAddr ();
my $ip = $sock_addr->ip_get;
my $port = $sock_addr->port;
Description
"APR::SockAddr" provides an access to a socket address structure fields.
Normally you'd get a socket address object, by calling:
use Apache2::Connection ();
my $remote_sock_addr = $c->remote_addr;
my $local_sock_addr = $c->remote_local;
API
"APR::SockAddr" provides the following functions and/or methods:
"ip_get"
Get the IP address of the socket
$ip = $sock_addr->ip_get();
obj: $sock_addr ( "APR::SockAddr object" )
ret: $ip ( string )
since: 2.0.00
If you are familiar with how perl's "Socket" works:
use Socket 'sockaddr_in';
my ($serverport, $serverip) = sockaddr_in(getpeername($local_sock));
my ($remoteport, $remoteip) = sockaddr_in(getpeername($remote_sock));
in apr-speak that'd be written as:
use APR::SockAddr ();
use Apache2::Connection ();
my $serverport = $c->local_addr->port;
my $serverip = $c->local_addr->ip_get;
my $remoteport = $c->remote_addr->port;
my $remoteip = $c->remote_addr->ip_get;
"port"
Get the IP address of the socket
$port = $sock_addr->port();
obj: $sock_addr ( "APR::SockAddr object" )
ret: $port ( integer )
since: 2.0.00
Example: see "ip_get()"
Unsupported API
"APR::SockAddr" also provides auto-generated Perl interface for a few other methods which aren't tested at the moment and therefore their
API is a subject to change. These methods will be finalized later as a need arises. If you want to rely on any of the following methods
please contact the the mod_perl development mailing list so we can help each other take the steps necessary to shift the method to an
officially supported API.
"equal"
META: Autogenerated - needs to be reviewed/completed
See if the IP addresses in two APR socket addresses are equivalent. Appropriate logic is present for comparing IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses
with IPv4 addresses.
$ret = $addr1->equal($addr2);
obj: $addr1 ( "APR::SockAddr object" )
One of the APR socket addresses.
arg1: $addr2 ( "APR::SockAddr object" )
The other APR socket address.
ret: $ret ( integer )
since: subject to change
The return value will be non-zero if the addresses are equivalent.
See Also
mod_perl 2.0 documentation.
Copyright
mod_perl 2.0 and its core modules are copyrighted under The Apache Software License, Version 2.0.
Authors
The mod_perl development team and numerous contributors.
perl v5.14.2 2011-02-08 libapache2-mod-perl2-2.0.7::docs::api::APR::SockAddr(3pm)