Jeff Beard wrote:
On Fri, 14 Dec 2001, Perrin Harkins wrote:
I _really_ hate so-called dedicated boxes. They're closed, nasty,
inflexible and often don't work in _your_ situation. Doing smart
session-based redirection can be hard with these boxes.
You can make it work with
Ged Haywood wrote:
Hi there,
On Tue, 11 Dec 2001, Jonathan M. Hollin wrote:
When using Mail::Sender only the first email is sent on my mod_perl server.
When I investigated, I realised that the socket to the SMTP server was
staying open after the completion of that first email
Tom Mornini wrote:
This whole thread can be answered very easily:
ANSWER: As much as you can.
That's it! That's the entire answer. Nothing else should figure in
unless you
personally wish to make exceptions for any reason you see fit.
Did the people who ask this question grow up and
Perrin Harkins wrote:
Now take the amount you want to make and divide it by the number
of hours you came up with above ($40,000 / 1,000). You get $40.
That's your target hourly rate. And despite what they high-flying
.com weanies were saying a year ago, that's going to be a nice
Congratulations to Stas, mod_perl, and the guide.
Excellent!
Ed
Stas Bekman wrote:
If you remember back in the end of April, I've posted to the list an
unusual job seek request [1], where I was saying that I want some
company to sponsor me to work full time on mod_perl 2.0 development.
Aaron E. Ross wrote:
On Fri, Sep 21, 2001 at 02:01:31AM +0800, Gunther Birznieks wrote:
You can reach your goals.
I'm living proof.
beefcake.
BEEFCAKE!!
-- Eric Cartman
LOL! sounds like a great project stas! thanks ticketmaster!
Yeah. Kudos to Ticketmaster for
Thanks Vivek,
Andrei, use the front end to directly handle any binaries, static files,
etc.
I doubt they are generating of these on the fly.
Vivek Khera wrote:
AAV == Andrei A Voropaev [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
AAV In our system we have to pass large PDF files thru mod_perl to
AAV
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Francesco, I believe that Ian was joking, hence the yikes before the name,
so the above post is the documentation!
Ed
.. so the best environment for the MVC++ design pattern is parrot/mod_parrot :)
http://www.oreilly.com/news/parrotstory_0401.html
Thanks
Michael Alan Dorman wrote:
Matt Sergeant [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It depends a *lot* on the type of content on your site. The above
www.dorado.com is brochureware, so it's not likely to need to be
re-styled for lighter browsers, or WebTV, or WAP, or... etc. So your
content (I'm
Matthew Kennedy wrote:
I'm on several postgresql mailing lists and couldn't find a recent post
from you complaining about 6.5.3 performance problems (not even by an
archive search). Your benchmark is worthless until you try postgresql
7.1. There have been two major releases of postgresql
agh!
check the headers!
Steven Zhu wrote:
How could I unsubscribe from [EMAIL PROTECTED] you so
much.Steven.
-Original Message-
If you are going to upgrade gcc for RH 7.0, I reccomend the
new source RPM for gcc to be found in the updates directory
on any redhat mirror site. In fact, if you are sticking with RH
you should see about updating a number of things.
23,
Ed
"G.W. Haywood" wrote:
Hi there,
On Tue, 27 Feb
Please use the MySQL modules list. Responses are timely.
;-)
ed
Subscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vivek Khera wrote:
"SV" == Steven Vetzal [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
SV Greetings,
to say "ping doesn't work in all cases" without qualifiying why and/or
which drivers that applies
Aristotle from the Ars Rhetorica on money:
Money will not make you wise, but it will bring a wise man to your door.
Robin Berjon wrote:
At 12:39 06/12/2000 -0800, brian moseley wrote:
ActiveState has built an Perl/Python IDE out of Mozilla:
Ron,
This is a greivous FAQ. Please read the guide at
http://perl.apache.org/guide
You'll find much more than this question answered.
Ed
Ron Rademaker wrote:
Hello,
I'm just starting with mod_perl and I'm using Apache::Registry(). The
second line after #!/usr/bin/perl -w is use
Explictly echoing Gunther, don't go there!
Use cookies, think crumbs of info, as flyweights. Significant chunks of data need
to be passed and stored
in other ways.
Ed
Gunther Birznieks wrote:
Caveat: even if you modify apache to do larger cookies, it's possible that
there will be a set of
Hi David,
Check out the guide at
http://perl.apache.org/guide/performance.html#Forking_and_Executing_Subprocess
The Eagle book also covers the C API subprocess details on page 622-631.
Let us know if the guide is unclear to you, so we can improve it.
Ed
"David E. Wheeler" wrote:
Hi All,
to know more specifics to answer
that with any modicum of confidence.
Cheers,
Ed
"David E. Wheeler" wrote:
ed phillips wrote:
Hi David,
Check out the guide at
http://perl.apache.org/guide/performance.html#Forking_and_Executing_Subprocess
The Eagle book also covers
Greg Stark wrote:
A better plan for such systems is to have a queue in your database for
parameters for e-mails to send. Insert a record in the database and let your
web server continue processing.
Have a separate process possibly on a separate machine or possibly on multiple
machines do
It is interesting and and somewhat ironic that the Engineering
dep at eToys is part of the open source community and culture
while their management's behavior was so disastrously misguided
and so misunderstanding of net culture and precedent.
They shot themselves in the foot pretty badly.
Would
"Hughes, Ralph" wrote:
COOL!
I couldn't wait...
I built and installed mod_perl 1.24 and it fixed the problem! Now if I can
just get the CGI module
to recognize my domainname .. :-)
-Original Message-
From: Hughes, Ralph
Sent: Friday, June 02, 2000 2:02 PM
To: Geoffrey
Level 3 is broken.
They know and are working on it. hmmm
Ed
Replying to myself. It is back up, obviously. sorry for the noise
Ed Phillips wrote:
Level 3 is broken.
They know and are working on it. hmmm
Ed
Yes, very cool Stas!
Perrin Harkins wrote:
On Sat, 3 Jun 2000, Stas Bekman wrote:
correction for the 3rd version (had the wrong startup), but it's almost
the same.
Version Size SharedDiff Test type
For those of you tired of this thread please excuse me, but
here is MySQL's current position statement on and discussion
about transactions:
Disclaimer: I just helped Monty write this partly in response to
some of the fruitful, to me, discussion on this list. I know
this is not crucial to
The troll vanisheth!
ha!
Reminds me of the Zen story of an old fisherman in a boat on a lake in a heavy can't
see your hands fog. He bumps into another boat, and shouts at the other guy, "Look
where you're going would you! You almost knocked me over." He pulls up beside the
boat and is
Ged,
You are very entertaining. The code in question is also known as a combined
copy and substitution.
Beware if you haven't got /src on the end of your source directory!
If you don't have a match with the string or regexp , you'll just get a straight copy.
Ed
X-Authentication-Warning:
Hi Dave,
I only do *nix, but I think that you should not need mysql.pm if you are using
DBI/DBD. Jochen is quite helpful on the MySQL modules list. subscription info availble
at www.mysql.com.
Good Luck,
Ed
Really Dheeraj,
This is not a mod_perl specific question, and I don't know the all important context
into which this boilerplate code you are seeking to elicit from the list is to be
dropped.
here is a boilerplate "find me keys that are not in both hashes":
foreach (keys %hash_one) {
Cliff,
I wanted him to work for the rest of it, or at least go to another list.
It looks like he wanted two arrays, @in_hash_one_alone and @in_hash_two_alone,
so having him push to one array may confuse him. he's better off doing a little
studying, methinks.
ed
This is also not a mod_perl question.
depending on where your DBD::Oracle is installed you can get away with certain
liberties in the Oracle library department.
Nonetheless, you should continue your inquiry on a DBI related list.
Thank you,
Ed
this is like closing the gate after the horse has bolted without things
like decent locking and transactions. Although perhaps I'm mistaken and
You can rest assured that they know what they are doing. :-)
It is also worth upgrading to newer versions. The newest versions not deemed stable
just
I don't have any real answers - just a suggestion. What is wrong with the
classic RDBMS architecture of RAID 1 on multiple drives with MySQL - surely
it will be able to do that transparently?
Yes, RAID is very helpful with MySQL. I spoke with Monty, the developer of MySQL at
the open source
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