That sounds weird...
Anyway, did you try adding
use DBI;
in your startup.perl script (after Apache::DBI, that is)?
Also, I think I remember reading someone say that any time they upgrade
their system, perl, or whatever, they re-compile all their modules. I
haven't gone through that yet
On Mon, 4 Oct 1999, Leslie Mikesell wrote:
According to BeerBong:
Huh, another test
test.epl
According to BeerBong:
test.epl
--
use DBI;
$dbh = DBI-connect("DBI:Oracle:SIMain","test","test");
PHP3 and mod_perl script with
I'm not sure if I'm being a bit fussy here, or indeed banging my head
against a wall but can users of these mailing lists make the Subject part of
the msg more descriptive.
This will help readers to scroll through quicker and to read what is
relevant to them at the time.
For example, "make
Performance was a 7 req per sec... :( While clean perl - 24.
For other benchmarks, check out:
http://www.chamas.com/hello_world.html
Make sure that your MaxRequests is set high, so you aren't
counting the runtime script compile time, which you would likely
do away with by
On 7 Oct 1999, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
"Stas" == Stas Bekman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Stas yes, there are... you get a code like:
Stas sub handler{
Stas print "hi\n";
Stas =pod
Stas =head1 Hi
Stas =cut
Stas }
Stas which is syntaxically incorrect, pod directives
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 09:39:30AM +0200, Eric Cholet wrote:
On Friday, October 08, 1999 3:35 AM, Dmitry Beransky [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
I've been playing around with internal redirects of POST requests. They
seem to work fine as long as I don't call Apache::content() or any other
2. It appears that I will be using ASP quite heavily and while I don't
need event handler now, I may have to start using them in the future.
If that happens, I will have to maintain two sets of session management
code.
This is so simple, and, therefore, brilliant!
"Young, Geoffrey S." wrote:
That sounds weird...
Anyway, did you try adding
use DBI;
Yes I did try that...
in your startup.perl script (after Apache::DBI, that is)?
Also, I think I remember reading someone say that any time they upgrade
their system, perl, or whatever, they
"Anthony Gardner" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm not sure if I'm being a bit fussy here, or indeed banging my head
against a wall but can users of these mailing lists make the Subject part of
the msg more descriptive.
This will help readers to scroll through quicker and to read what is
On 8 Oct 1999, Frank D. Cringle wrote:
"Anthony Gardner" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm not sure if I'm being a bit fussy here, or indeed banging my head
against a wall but can users of these mailing lists make the Subject part of
the msg more descriptive.
Also, as most of us are on
On Friday, October 08, 1999 3:35 PM, Andrei A. Voropaev
[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 09:39:30AM +0200, Eric Cholet wrote:
On Friday, October 08, 1999 3:35 AM, Dmitry Beransky
[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
I've been playing around with internal redirects of
I tried to install HTML::Embperl with Apache/mod_perl on
a Sparc/Solaris server, but 'make test' failed with an error on the
module Apache/Session/Win32.pm.
Did someone already encounter/solve this kind of problem ?
Regards.
__
Jean-Philippe FAUVELLE [EMAIL
Ants,
Thanks for comments. It seems you said the point. Right now, I can
load 16MB data into a 32MB seg. But if I want to load data more than
32MB, the error came up. I think it is the semophore problem, because
from the debug log, I saw that the shmseg is allocated successful.
Then I tried
Does anyone know where I can get a list of ISP's that support mod_perl?
it was answered by Tobias. I'm sure there are many more who aren't listed
Any recomendations? What kind of concerns/questions should I have when
asking about ISP's support for mod_perl?
Greetings,
Testing a simple script under modperl using Registry and -X and Apache::DB,
as explained by Stas Bekman
It runs OK about seven times then it fails. Here is the error_log output:
resize: can't open terminal /dev/tty
[Fri Oct 8 07:47:39 1999] [error] Unable to get Terminal Size.
Hey all,
I just upgraded to Apache::ASP 0.16 last night and I've run into an
interesting problem. This only started happening after the upgrade so I'm
assuming that it's something that was changed in Apache::ASP.
For some reason, when I have the Files directive enabled (so that
Apache::ASP will
Sorry about the double post, you guys can ignore this one... I sent this
yesterday afternoon and when it didn't go through I subscribed to the list
and sent another...
Not sure why this one took almost 24 hours to go through
Jeremy Domingue
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Original Message -
On Fri, 8 Oct 1999, Matt Sergeant wrote:
On Fri, 08 Oct 1999, Stas Bekman wrote:
On 7 Oct 1999, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
"Stas" == Stas Bekman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Stas yes, there are... you get a code like:
Stas sub handler{
Stas print "hi\n";
Stas =pod
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 04:25:39PM +0200, Terje Malmedal wrote:
Inside a Perl section I want to configure mod_rewrite dynamically,
this works:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
If I do this:
$RewriteRule = "/cgi-bin/printenv /cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]";
src/helpers/GuessOS doesnt know about version 2.1.3:
4.2MP)
if [ "x$VERSION" = "x2.1.1" ]; then
echo "${MACHINE}-whatever-unixware211"; exit 0
elif [ "x$VERSION" = "x2.1.2" ]; then
echo
I've never used perl sections, but unless $RewriteRule is some magic variable,
the second assignment simply overwrites the first one.
I thought it had to be something along the lines of:
push(@RewriteRule , "/cgi-bin/printenv" , "/cgi-bin/slave.pl [PT]");
or
On Fri, Oct 08, 1999 at 11:54:58AM -0700, Cliff Rayman wrote:
I've never used perl sections, but unless $RewriteRule is some magic variable,
the second assignment simply overwrites the first one.
Sorry for my previous post, I see the problem now after re-reading things.
At first glance I
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