astahttpd web server 0.1-beta2 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News astahttpd web server 0.1-beta2 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 02-01-2008
astahttpd web server 0.1-beta2 (Default branch)

Image astahttpd is a Web server for Linux written in pure PHP, mainly targeted for PHP developers. It supports GET, POST, and HEAD request methods, alias directories, CGI script processing, and both IP and name based virtual hosts. License: GNU General Public License v3 Changes:
A manual and API documentation have been added. URL rewriting has been added. A deflate format for Content-Encoding has been added (PHP must be compiled using --with-zlib). Basic Authentication has been added. The license has changed from the GPLv2 to the GPLv3. There is a new comment style to suit the PHPDocumentor style guide. Logs are written to files (access_log and rewrite_log). Bug #1882558, Always return Error 500 when listing a directory, has been fixed.Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread
Login or Register to Ask a Question
FLUSH(3)								 1								  FLUSH(3)

flush - Flush system output buffer

SYNOPSIS
void flush (void ) DESCRIPTION
Flushes the system write buffers of PHP and whatever backend PHP is using (CGI, a web server, etc). This attempts to push current output all the way to the browser with a few caveats. flush(3) may not be able to override the buffering scheme of your web server and it has no effect on any client-side buffering in the browser. It also doesn't affect PHP's userspace output buffering mechanism. This means you will have to call both ob_flush(3) and flush(3) to flush the ob output buffers if you are using those. Several servers, especially on Win32, will still buffer the output from your script until it terminates before transmitting the results to the browser. Server modules for Apache like mod_gzip may do buffering of their own that will cause flush(3) to not result in data being sent immedi- ately to the client. Even the browser may buffer its input before displaying it. Netscape, for example, buffers text until it receives an end-of-line or the beginning of a tag, and it won't render tables until the </table> tag of the outermost table is seen. Some versions of Microsoft Internet Explorer will only start to display the page after they have received 256 bytes of output, so you may need to send extra whitespace before flushing to get those browsers to display the page. RETURN VALUES
No value is returned. SEE ALSO
ob_flush(3), ob_clean(3), ob_end_flush(3), ob_end_clean(3). PHP Documentation Group FLUSH(3)