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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
Apache::ASP has a cgi/asp script in the distribution that
I use to generate apache-asp.org and chamas.com. Its
a bit rough but works for static HTML generation from
ASP scripts. Also you can consider using a combination
of mod_proxy and specific headers like Expires to cache
your content for
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Philip Mak wrote:
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 Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 09:51:55PM -0500, brian d foy wrote:
however, i have been talking to a few people about something like a
mod_makefile. :)
I've used this approach succesfully on a lower volume site where the it
was taking lots of time to build the final HTML but the data sources
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
Hi there,
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Philip Mak wrote:
I realized something, though: Although the pages on my site are
dynamically generated, they are really static.
You're not alone.
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to implement this? Is there an
existing tool for doing this? How can I
Not necessarily.
You can use mod_proxy to cache the dynamically generated pages on the
lightweight apache.
Check out http://perl.apache.org/guide/strategy.html#Apache_s_mod_proxy
for details on what headers you'll need to set for caching to work.
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Philip Mak wrote:
Hi
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Edward Moon wrote:
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.
Not necessarily.
You can use mod_proxy to cache the dynamically generated pages on the
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Philip Mak wrote:
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
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,
On 22 Dec 2000, Dave Seidel wrote:
I don't know if either Mason or Embperl offer static compilation, but Mason has
caching and I believe that Embperl is getting caching.AxKit is also very
cool, and caches.
Using Mason to generate a set of HTML pages would not be too terribly
ber 22, 2000 9:28 PM
Subject: Re: Dynamic content that is static
On 22 Dec 2000, Dave Seidel wrote:
I don't know if either Mason or Embperl offer static compilation, but
Mason has
caching and I believe that Embperl is getting caching. AxKit is also
very
cool, and caches.
Using Mason to generate
You should check out the documentation on mod_proxy to see what it's
capable of: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/mod/mod_proxy.html
You can specify expiration values and be assured that cached files older
than expiry will be deleted.
So, for example, if you know that your content gets updated
At 09:08 PM 12/22/00 -0500, Philip Mak wrote:
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.
This doesn't really help with your ASP files, but have you looked at
On Fri, 22 Dec 2000, Philip Mak wrote:
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.
Not necessarily.
You can use mod_proxy to cache the dynamically generated pages
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