Fura is a self-contained grid middleware that allows the grid enablement and distribution of applications on heterogeneous computational resources. Fura features a web-based GUI, wizard-guided installation and configuration, and Web Services compliance.
Good evening:
I need your help please, I am new in Unix/Linux apps like middleware
Thare are thousands of documentation about middleware stuff but i would like to have a broader understanding about middleware apps, so i ask you the following questions:
1. In an Enterprise what i am working... (2 Replies)
I want to know if a server has J2EE application server installed, a webserver or any other middleware, is there a command to output a list or something like that.
Thak you (1 Reply)
Hi Experts, :confused:
I need help in one of my bit complicated script (for me complicated for experts like you might be simple).
I have 100+ Middleware servers and 200+ DB servers and 200+ application servers in my environment. What I’m looking is I have a script ready sitting on one JUMP... (12 Replies)
Plack::Middleware::Static(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Plack::Middleware::Static(3pm)NAME
Plack::Middleware::Static - serve static files with Plack
SYNOPSIS
use Plack::Builder;
builder {
enable "Plack::Middleware::Static",
path => qr{^/(images|js|css)/}, root => './htdocs/';
$app;
};
DESCRIPTION
Enable this middleware to allow your Plack-based application to serve static files.
If the given request matches with the pattern defined in "path", this middleware will try to locate the file in "root". If the file exists
it will be served but otherwise 404 response will be returned. See "pass_through" option below to change this behavior.
If the requested document is not within the "root" (i.e. directory traversal) or the file is there but not readable, a 403 Forbidden
response will be returned.
The content type returned will be determined from the file extension based on Plack::MIME.
CONFIGURATIONS
path, root
enable "Plack::Middleware::Static",
path => qr{^/static/}, root => 'htdocs/';
"path" specifies the URL pattern (regular expression) or a callback to match with requests to serve static files for. "root" specifies
the root directory to serve those static files from. The default value of "root" is the current directory.
This examples configuration serves "/static/foo.jpg" from "htdocs/static/foo.jpg". Note that the matched "/static/" portion is still
appears in the local mapped path. If you don't like it, use a callback instead to munge $_:
enable "Plack::Middleware::Static",
path => sub { s!^/static/!! }, root => 'static-files/';
This configuration would serve "/static/foo.png" from "static-files/foo.png" (not "static-files/static/foo.png"). The callback
specified in "path" option matches against $_ and then updates the value since it does s///, and returns the number of matches, so it
will pass through when "/static/" doesn't match.
If you want to map multiple static directories from different root, simply add "this", middleware multiple times with different
configuration options.
pass_through
By turning on this option, this middleware will pass the request back to the application for further processing, if the incoming
request path matches with the "path" but the requested file is not found on the file system.
AUTHOR
Tokuhiro Matsuno, Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
SEE ALSO
Plack::Middleware Plack::Builder
perl v5.14.2 2011-06-22 Plack::Middleware::Static(3pm)