You might want to take a look at Strudel. It is a project people from my
last job were working on: http://www.research.att.com/~mff/strudel/.

Regards,
Christian

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Philip Mak [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 8:09 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Dynamic content that is static
>
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> I have been going over the modperl tuning guide and the
> suggestions that
> people on this list sent me earlier. I've reduced MaxClients
> to 33 (each
> httpd process takes up 3-4% of my memory, so that's how much I can fit
> without swapping) so if the web server overloads again, at
> least it won't
> take the machine down with it.
>
> Running a non-modperl apache that proxies to a modperl apache
> doesn't seem
> like it would help much because the vast majority of pages
> served require
> modperl.
>
> I realized something, though: Although the pages on my site are
> dynamically generated, they are really static. Their content doesn't
> change unless I change the files on the website. (For example,
> http://www.animewallpapers.com/wallpapers/ccs.htm depends on
> header.asp,
> footer.asp, series.dat and index.inc. If none of those files
> change, the
> content of ccs.htm remains the same.)
>
> So, it would probably be more efficient if I had a /src
> directory and a
> /html directory. The /src directory could contain my modperl
> files and a
> Makefile that knows the dependencies; when I type "make", it
> will evaluate
> the modperl files and parse them into plain HTML files in the /html
> directory.
>
> Does anyone have any suggestions on how to implement this? Is there an
> existing tool for doing this? How can I evaluate
> modperl/Apache::ASP files
> from the command line?
>
> Thanks,
>
> -Philip Mak ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
>
>
>
>

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