Dear Mod_Perl mailing list, We installed Apache 1.3.12 on our Sun Solaris 2.6 with gcc 2.95.2 compiler. Then we installed mod_perl 1.24 as a DSO to the Apache server. When we were installing mo_perl with apxs, everything looks fine. However, httpd.conf file seems to be untouched. We added the following lines to the httpd.conf: LoadModule perl_module libexec/libperl.so AddModule mod_perl.c <IfModule mod_perl.c> Alias /perl/ /site/subsys/www/apache_1.3.12/cgi-bin/ <Location /perl/> SetHandler perl-script PerlHandler Apache::Registry Options ExecCGI allow from all PerlSendHeader On </Location> </IfModule> Then the apache service could not start correctly by either causing core dump or complaining about the "PerlHandler" directive. >From what I read in mod_perl FAQ website, using apxs to install mod_perl as a DSO is not that reliable. But is there anyway, we can manually configure mod_perl as a DSO correctly? As far as I can see, all the perl modules are there in the perl installation tree and libperl.so presents in the Apache libexec directory already. I also attach our mod_perl installation note for your reference. I hope installing mod_perl statically will not be our only solution to the problem. Thank you very much. Ziying Sherwin ----------------------------------------------------------------------- LOCAL INSTALLATION NOTES Package Name: mod_perl Version: 1.24 Release Date: 16 May 2000 Origin: http://perl.apache.org/dist/, http://perl.apache.org/guide/install.html Author: Doug MacEachern ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) et al. Language: C Software Description: Apache server plugin making it possible to write Apache modules entirely in Perl. Apache/Perl modules include: Apache::Registry - Run unaltered CGI scripts Apache::Status - Embedded interpreter runtime status Apache::Embperl - Embed Perl code in HTML documents Apache::SSI - Implement server-side includes in Perl Apache::DBI - Maintain persistent DBI connections Apache::Gateway - Implement an HTTP/1.1 gateway Apache::GzipChain - Compress output on the fly Apache::Filter - Filter document and script output Apache::Sandwich - Generate page headers and footers Apache::TransLDAP - Translate URIs via LDAP lookups Apache::ASP - Implement "Active Server Pages" Apache::AuthenDBI - Authenticate against a database via DBI Apache::PHLogin - Authenticate against a PH database Apache::DBILogger - Log requests to a database via DBI Apache::Session - Persistent session management Apache::Throttle - Content negotiation based on connection speed The Apache/Perl module list keeps track of modules inside and outside the distribution, along with idea placeholders. It is also possible to use Perl to configure your server (in *.conf files) with <Perl> sections. This eases often complicated and cumbersome configuration of virtual host and various resources. Installation Hardware: SunOS tintin 5.6 Generic_105181-04 sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-2 Compiler: gcc version 2.8.1 Installation OS: Solaris 2.6 Host-specific installation: User-specific installation: Software used by this package for operation: apache Software used by this package for installation: apache Software depending on this package for operation: apache Software depending on this package for installation: apache Environment variables: Notes: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1) If using perl installed in a public location which is not writeable (such as when using depot, when the perl directory is mounted to the local host via NFS), be sure to copy the perl installation directory (for example, /depot_server/sparc/SunOS5.6/package/perl_5.005_02) into the local file system in such a way that it can be written to: rm /depot/package/perl_5.005_02 (a symbolic link) tar cvfb - 20 /depot_server/sparc/SunOS5.6/package/perl_5.005_02 | \ ( cd /depot/package ; tar xvBfb - 20 ) Adjust the above instrcutions apporpirately to follow your local installation conventions. Without this precaution, the installation of perl modules into the perl tree will fail. This copy of the perl directory will henceforth be referred to as the "local perl directory." Once the various following installation steps are accomplished, the directory may be restored to its original location. When install perl, need to use -Ubincompat5005 flag to turn off the malloc pollution, use -Uuselargefiles to turn off understanding large files (since Apache is installed in such way that it will not understand large files). Also when running configure in perl, answer no when it asks whether you want to use malloc coming with this perl distribution. Always build dynamic load for perl, otherwise one of the following perl module can not be compiled correctly. 2) Add the following perl modules into the local perl installation (otherwise the mod_perl tests will fail): MIME-BASE64-2.11 URI-1.02 HTML-Parser_MD5-2.0.7 libnet-1.0606 libwww-perl-5.43 Each module is installed following the same procedure: 1) Unpack source, cd into source dir 2) perl Makefile.PL 3) make 4) make test 5) make install 6) make clean 3) Unpack the distribution file into the source tree: gunzip mod_perl-1.24.tar.gz | tar xvf - mv mod_perl-1.24 mod_perl_1.24 the directory is assumed to exist alongisde the apache_1.3.12 directory. 4) Clean up (as precaution): make distclean [transcript appended] 5) Configure to build mod_perl as a DSO (dynamically shared object): cd mod_perl_1.24 perl Makefile.PL \ USE_APXS=1 \ WITH_APXS=/site/subsys/www/apache_1.3.12/bin/apxs \ EVERYTHING=1 where: USE_APXS causes the Apache DSO creation tool, apxs (APache eXtension), to be employed WITH_APXS specifies the path to apxs EVERYTHING enable all features of mod_perl [transcript appended] 6) Build mod_perl: make [transcript appended] 7) Test mod_perl: make test [transcript appended] 8) Install mod_perl into existing Apache installation hierarchy: make install [transcript appended] 9) Clean up: make distclean [transcript appended]