to turn on cookies.
- Otherwise send them back to the page that sets the cookie (usually
a login page).
It's a simple scheme, and relies on Referer which everyone will now
tell me is bad, but it does work.
Matt.
--
Reporting bugs: http://perl.apache.org/bugs/
Mail list info: http
-Cookie + Location
is not compatible (generally - some browsers will accept the cookie).
Matt.
with the dependency
tests
- AxTraceIntermediate now creates the dir if it didn't exist
- Other assorted minor bug fixes
--
!-- Matt --
:-get a SMart net/:-
Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
. I don't do any fancy post-processing. Sorry Andy, but the above is
not true at all.
Vive la difference!
As you can see in evidence (Apache::AxKit::Language::*), I agree.
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!-- Matt --
:-get a SMart net/:-
Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
solutions based on
your criteria. AxKit matches mine but it doesn't mean it will match yours.
Matt.
::ASP all seem to have reasonably active user bases
as
well.
And lets not forget XML templating solutions too, like XSLT, which
probably out scores them all in job postings terms (although not all
that work is perl related).
Matt.
(you can of course use XSLT in AxKit :-)
I like to be removed from this list but the un-scribe does not work for me.
the problem is the mail address that I used way back when has been aliases.
-Original Message-
From: Jonathan M. Hollin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2003 2:37 AM
To: Slava Bizyayev; mod_perl
in the request line:
CONNECT mail.openrelay.com:25 HTTP/1.1
I *think* mod_perl will be able to intercept this, but I've never tried
it. You might need to do it very early on in the request, and make sure
it gets passed through to mod_proxy later on or things just won't work.
Matt.
; via package "Apache::Request" (perhaps you forgot to load "Apache::Request"?) at c:\apache\cgi-bin\ap2.pl line 6.
This prob has been with
mea weeka nd I just don't seem to be able to find a
resolution.
Matt
Randy,
Does'nt seem to make any difference.
Matt
-Original Message-
From: Randy Kobes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 02 July 2003 19:39
To: Matt Corbett
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: FW: Please help newbie with Module problem.
On Wed, 2 Jul 2003, Matt Corbett wrote:
Yes, mod
of you can recommend a good charity I will
make a small donation for your time. Again thanks
Matt
-Original Message-
From: Dennis Stout [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 02 July 2003 19:28
To: Matt Corbett
Subject: Re: Please help newbie with Module problem.
I don't have a PerlHandler set
PostgreSQL).
--
!-- Matt --
:-get a SMart net/:-
Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
heavily (it has been developed on PostgreSQL), and had feared this might
be an area of contention.
--
!-- Matt --
:-get a SMart net/:-
Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Wed, 18 Jun 2003, FARRINGTON, RYAN wrote:
omg... linux people using MS SQL servers? shame on you... =)
I hold in one hand the option of taking a pager home with me. In the other
hand is using MS SQL Server and giving support over to our 24/7 DBAs.
Which would you choose?
--
!-- Matt
a file each time.
With this cookie solution, I can create a fake login page which will set the appropriate cookies in _javascript_ and also allow for simulating logout by clearing the cookie.
Matt
;
}
if ($phase eq 'PerlHandler')
{
$reqCtr++;
}
Or, you could use a note and skip the global scalar.
I don't think mod_perl has direct access to the current count (at least not
in mp1).
Matt
and re-start the server to test different header scenarios.
Thanks!
Matt Kruse
submission. So you vastly limit the things you have to check
for.
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Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
this entirely the wrong way' would be helpful. This
is all development software I'm working on, so I'm free to change alot.
Thanks!
-m
## Matt J. Avitable ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
## General Partner / Programmer
## Escapement Arts And Media
## http://www.escapement.net/
## Phone: (804) 400-0605
On Wednesday, Feb 26, 2003, at 17:41 Europe/London, Chris Pizzo wrote:
Hi All,
I want to take an Invoice that exists as an html doc and convert it to
a PDF file to attach to an email. I have been looking at DocSet but
this seems better suited for large documents. Any help?
Check out HTMLDoc.
::LibXML's garbage collector.
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Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
*so* fast that it made zero difference to them to cache the stylesheets
in memory (shared or otherwise).
Try it. You may discover you don't need all this caching.
Matt.
On Thursday, Jan 30, 2003, at 22:51 Europe/London, Stas Bekman wrote:
Matt Sergeant wrote:
[...]
It would help to know your platform details. We tried to eliminate
all segfaults related to perl-5.8.0, but in the process we may have
introduced new ones.
perl 5.00503 on RH 6.2 and mod_perl 1.26
On Thursday, Jan 30, 2003, at 22:36 Europe/London, Stas Bekman wrote:
Matt, Apache::Test may not work when run under root, because Apache
won't let you start the server as 'User root' so it tries to use
'nobody' or something else as the username the server runs under,
which of course has
tries to deliver files from what
becomes a root-owned directory, and it won't do that. Secondly it seems to
segfault my apache, so it leaves zombies lying around. Not sure if that's
libapreq or something else though. It's the first problem that needs
fixing most.
--
!-- Matt --
:-get a SMart net
On Thursday, Jan 30, 2003, at 14:46 Europe/London, Joe Schaefer wrote:
Matt Sergeant [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 28 Jan 2003, Joe Schaefer wrote:
libapreq-1.1 is now available on CPAN,
and also through the Apache website at
http://www.apache.org/dist/httpd/libapreq/libapreq-1.1.tar.gz
On Fri, 10 Jan 2003, Jonathan M. Hollin wrote:
Matt Sergeant wrote:
I've done a lot on bayes for spam (I had an effective bayesian filter before
Paul Graham wrote his article on the subject), but there's not much in it
for a full talk. Maybe a lightning talk. Hmm...
That would be great
stories).
And no, I don't mean 45 mins. :-)
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Spam trap - do not mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
APACHE_SRC=../apache_1.3.27/src \
DO_HTTPD=1 USE_APACI=1 EVERYTHING=1 (I have also used the USE_DSO=1)
% make make test make install
% cd ../apache_1.3.27
% make installd
Thanks in advance.
Matt
I am worried about the ENV{MOD_PERL} var not being set. What would cause
that not to get set? Is it a perms issue? In the conf file the User is
nobody and the Group is nobody. I am doing the entire make as root.
Stas Bekman wrote:
Matt Lopresti wrote:
I am using RedHat 7.2, apache 1.3.27
If you are seeing the mod_perl token in the server response headers or
the server startup:
http://perl.apache.org/docs/1.0/guide/install.html#Checking_the_error_log
http://perl.apache.org/docs/1.0/guide/install.html#Testing_via_telnet
but not in the script:
about this on the perl.apache.org docs search engine, or with a
simple google search. I'm probably just missing something
simple/stupid. This is a Solaris 8/SPARC box. Any help is
appreciated. - Matt
Command being run by make which generates the error:
gcc -DSOLARIS2=280 -I/usr/local/pkgs/build
, unless I missed it in your post.
-Original Message-
From: Matt Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, September 04, 2002 10:15 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Compilation error doing 'make' in the apache 1.3.26 directory
I'm trying to build mod_perl statically
Here's the trouble I had to go through to fix this (I got it to work,
but I'm still searching for a better way - this is ugly as sin).
Re-ran my apache configure with a -L in my LIBS for
/usr/local/lib/perl5/5.6.1/sun4-solaris/CORE
This got rid of all of the errors but one - something about
Can you guys please snip the emails down to the relevant information?
Having to scroll past lots of rubbish at the end of the email gets
annoying (and I'm not even a digest subscriber). Thanks.
And of course, send whatever info we can to the RBL folks
SpamAssasin does that - when a user gets spam which isn't flagged,
he's supposed to send it to a 'sightings' address. Matt, is that
still right? I'm still sending the stuff...
Yeah - but I don't read the sightings list - too much
is work in progress, of course, even if already I use it.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
the values easily, that's all.
Matt.
) as a cache rather than worrying
about a built in one.
Sorry for getting off topic for this list though. Just trying to pass
around the SAX kool aid ;-)
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
On 12 Jul 2002, Randal L. Schwartz wrote:
Oh, and add Template Toolkit (www.tt2.org) to that list.
You mean like this:
Matt EmbPerl, TT, Mason, AxKit, ASP, etc... Perhaps live sites is a more
^^
;-)
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
chdir to the
dir of the script. We have discussed various workarounds on the dev
list, but none of them has been applied yet.
http://mathforum.org/discussions/epi-search/modperl-dev.html
(search for 'chdir thread')
Arthur told me he either had, or was going to fix this (on IRC).
--
!-- Matt
list).
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
debating this just yesterday in our
office.
Actually my recommendation for this year's talk on exceptions is to just
use eval{}; if ($) {}. It's a little more typing, but at the end of the
day closures created by subroutine prototypes are a really bad thing (tm).
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
On Wed, 10 Jul 2002, Perrin Harkins wrote:
Matt Sergeant wrote:
On Wed, 10 Jul 2002, Fran Fabrizio wrote:
Just to confirm, the end result of Matt's slide presentation was that
Error.pm was good, and you should use it, but you should not use the
try/catch syntax, or at the bare minimum only
On Wed, 10 Jul 2002, Michael Schout wrote:
Perrin Harkins wrote:
We've actually discussed this on the list. It has to do with closures.
Matt gave a presentation about exception handling which covers it and
shows a workaround. You can see it here:
http://axkit.org/docs
to be faster even than
Microsoft's (which was always the benchmark to beat).
I do still wonder why people get the impression you were given - it's
widely known that the C version of Xalan is appallingly slow - slower
even than it's Java counterpart.
Matt.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Saturday 22 June 2002 12:57 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi, My Mission(must accept it) is to retrieve xml-formatted mail, parse
thru char-sets in msg-body, if chars out of ascii range: generate err msg.
While I wade thru the apis could any
pretty much the same, and so gave a talk about this (and other
things) at last year's perl conference. Slides are at
http://axkit.org/docs/presentations/tpc2001/anydbd.axp/a.pdf
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thursday 13 June 2002 6:20 am, Rob Nagler wrote:
Matt Sergeant writes:
This assumes you need XML in the first place.
No, it does not. The rest of my post spoke about XML as a
data format and set of tools, not as a syntax. Please stop
On Thursday 13 June 2002 10:46 pm, Doug MacEachern wrote:
On Thu, 13 Jun 2002, Stathy G. Touloumis wrote:
Is there an idea of when the TIPool API will be available for mod_perl
2.0?
probably never now that threads::shared has been implemented in perl-5.8,
which can be used to provide the
On Thursday 13 June 2002 11:37 pm, John Siracusa wrote:
On 6/13/02 5:58 PM, Matt Sergeant wrote:
Also note perl.com is now running an article on threads::shared.
http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/06/11/threads.html
It's mainly aimed at module authors, but it could be of interest anyway
On Thursday 13 June 2002 11:50 pm, John Siracusa wrote:
On 6/13/02 6:40 PM, Matt Sergeant wrote:
Does anyone know the logic behind making the threads modules all
lowercase? I'd expect it to be Threads::Shared, not threads::shared.
Pragmas are lowercase. And use threads; is really
On Wednesday 12 June 2002 4:09 am, Rob Nagler wrote:
Matt Sergeant writes:
There's quite a few things that are a lot harder to do with XML in
plain perl (especially in SAX) than they are in XSLT.
This assumes you need XML in the first place.
No, it does not. The rest of my post spoke
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On Monday 10 June 2002 11:23 pm, Vuillemot, Ward W wrote:
: Really interesting, xml
: appears to be
: the final destination for most of us, even if now i
: prefer objects.
:
: Ciao, Valerio
That is my big question. Is
relatively few years of experience.
I know that's not specifically about AxKit. What AxKit does offer is a
mature stable system for bringing these tools together, plus it offers
nice ways to deliver the same content in different formats.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
AxKit 1.6 is out. I'll save you all the hoopla in the announce in case people
are subscribed to both this list and the AxKit list. Instead here's a link:
URL:http://axkit.org/cgi-bin/ezmlm-cgi?3:mss:4164:gckddipdnjdnhmddncgd
Enjoy ;-)
- --
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 10 June 2002 11:09 pm, Valerio_Valdez Paolini wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jun 2002, James G Smith wrote:
I'm working on a framework that will use the Mason component as the
controller, Perl modules as the model, and either Mason components or
uses of transforming an XML tree into another
XML tree.
Right tool for the job, as always.
Matt.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On Friday 31 May 2002 4:09 am, Stas Bekman wrote:
Actually the new site (which should be released realy soon now) has a
nice and easy intro to mod_perl (thanks to Bill Moseley and others who
helped):
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On Tuesday 28 May 2002 12:51 am, Andrew McNaughton wrote:
See:
Combinatorial Algorithms
Nijenhuis and Wilf
Academic Press
0-12-519260-6 (1975)
P 240
I've got a different problem. I want to auto-link phrases which appear in
a
On Thu, 23 May 2002, Geoffrey Young wrote:
Matt Sergeant wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
This is just a heads up on something I've not seen documented in either the
Eagle book or in the Cookbook (at least not that I can find).
If you create a subrequest via
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
This is just a heads up on something I've not seen documented in either the
Eagle book or in the Cookbook (at least not that I can find).
If you create a subrequest via $r-lookup_file(), the per_dir_config entry
doesn't seem to be created. If you
Exception: $e;
$um-dbh-rollback;
};
No. $um is caught in a closure, which could potentially leak.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
On Mon, 20 May 2002, F. Xavier Noria wrote:
On Mon, 20 May 2002 10:15:02 +0100 (BST)
Matt Sergeant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
: my $um = UserManager-new;
: # ...
: try {
: $um-write_user($user);
:$um-dbh-commit;
: } catch Exception::DB
On Mon, 20 May 2002, Mark Fowler wrote:
On Mon, 20 May 2002, Matt Sergeant wrote:
if ($ $@-isa('Exception::DB')) {
debug Exception: $;
$um-dbh-rollback;
}
(note: if you expect all exceptions to be references like this, you had
better have a $SIG{__DIE__} handler installed
a site that can't cope with just a few seconds
downtime. Most users won't even notice, save for some slight delay in getting
their request through. Users tend to be pretty used to trying again in this
world of reliable computing.
Matt.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On Monday 20 May 2002 2:47 am, Gregory Matthews wrote:
Hello again.
Is Apache::Leak the easiest/best module to use for both detecting AND
allowing us to find the source of a memory leak in mod_perl?
No - it's a nightmare.
To debug memory leaks
that was perfect for the button. I'm not sure why nobody took a
snapshot of it. http://take23.org/modperl.svg
Matt.
for some details).
Matt.
much by trying to make it
shared anyway (because it's mostly XS/C code, rather than perl code).
Matt.
to have parse_* subs
- Added HtmlDoc language module
- Fixed strange bug in cached LibXSLT stylesheets
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
), for example using something like a
href=.../a. And then ban that via robots.txt. And then automatically
update your routing tables for any IP addresses that try and visit that URL.
Just a thought, there's probably more to it.
Matt.
, and if you find bugs
or anything like that.
Cheers, Matt.
- --
:-get a SMart net/:-
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Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org
iEYEARECAAYFAjy71NMACgkQVBc71ct6OywLngCglzRm6f7/JqsXW8Km6+3retTh
qxoAoON1dfm9snjZTFjaVMWSaQiiswzQ
to [EMAIL PROTECTED], which Ask seems to have
setup to redirect to the right address.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
On Tuesday 09 April 2002 7:53 am, Matthew Watson wrote:
Heya.
I was wondering if there are any content management systems around for
modperl , i'm after a similar kind of thing
as postnuke for php. I'd much rather something 'out of the box' as I don't
have time to develop a system from
On Monday 08 April 2002 7:44 pm, David Nelson wrote:
Hello all,
Thanks to everyone for helping promote open source!
What a great feeling it is to be a part of this
movement. http://www.take23.org is down due to an
internal server error at the moment. If anyone knows
who maintains this
Geoff I would do a full review, and I'm doing an OS upgrade
this weekend, so perhaps I'll get a chance to go over the bits of the book
I've missed so far and post the review somewhere.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
/Directory
/VirtualHost
Bill Marrs wrote:
At 04:02 AM 3/14/2002, Matt Phelps wrote:
Forgive me if I'm posting to the wrong group. Ive got apache 1.3.22
running several virtual webs. I can get perl scripts to run under the
default web
Animated version of the new mod_perl logo:
http://take23.org/modperl.svg
If you want a button, download it and change the width/height attributes
to 100 x 22 (or smaller/larger as appropriate).
--
!-- Matt --
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, with several variations as mentioned above.
This is dead easy to do with the SVG version. Feel free to hack around
with it.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
out what the font is, I'd enjoy trying to do an SVG version
(I just bought an SVG book, so I'm enjoying playing).
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
. Any help would be great.
Thanks
Matt
for you using
their hardware at a colo site.
Before anyone even looks into this, be warned they quoted me £50,000 once
for LoadRunner. Needless to say I was flabbergasted (though their software
did look kinda cool).
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
'safe_parse' which is supposed to wrap the parsing in an 'eval'
and return an error code instead of dying
It's the built in expat bug Upgrade XML::Parser to 230, then upgrade
Apache to latest The problem should go away
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
is it? ;-)
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
to be sure.
If you talk w/ Matt, he'll be sure to hawk AxKit. But then that's Matt. And
AxKit really is cool stuff. :-)
Well I'd rather recommend whatever works for people. Bricolage certainly
seems full featured, and it looks easy enough to add XSLT support to it,
though I haven't had chance
taken steps to get reassurance from Sun they
won't enforce this against them, and Apache has the prior art anyhow. Just
another example of how terrible the USPO is.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
,
just a link at the moment), but perhaps due to the above?
However I'm always skeptical of such massive changes - perhaps more likely
is a change in SecuritySpace's methodology?
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
) mod_gzip/1.3.19.1a mod_perl/1.26 mod_ssl/2.8.5 \
OpenSSL/0.9.6b
Cheers
Matt
--
Phased plasma rifle in a forty-watt range?
Hey, just what you see, pal
, if someone can communicate with me in private, seriously dumbed down
details, I can try this. I'm a libapreq committer, and have sourceforge
farm access, so I'll do my best there - though last time I tried I
couldn't get onto their OSX box...
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
My copy just arrived! I'll try and get through most of it as fast as I can
and post a review.
Congrats Geoff, Paul and Randy. Looks great at first glance.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
,
but there is no mention of how it goes about loading that file.
Not that I know of, but you can hook in there custom parsing code. It's
way too complex to explain though, so I suggest you get the eagle book
which goes into details on it.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
skips out a boat load of
processing and goes direct into the queue.
Of course none of this is relevant if you're not using qmail ;-)
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
'} = sub { $error .= $_[0]; };
Yuck. People really need to stay away from $SIG{__DIE__} unless they
*really* know what they're doing.
Matt.
This e-mail has been scanned for all viruses by Star Internet. The service is powered
the authors or getting a bug fix.
Unfortunately ePerl isn't maintained, so you have to open the bonnet (hood
to USians) and fix things yourself.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
method (try
it - implement a PROPOGATE method in your exception class, and watch for
when it gets called).
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
there that spammers are using to send tons of mail.
It's like having an open relay.
A program to check for these on Google and then alert the webmaster at
each offending site could be a really good thing.
Right, and point them to NMS for a replacement too.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
with {
code for BarExceptions;
} otherwise {
};
And the fun potential for memory leaks with nested closures.
Matt has an idea for doing this with Filter module, instead of
nasty closures.
Actually unfortunately I even had code, but it was on my laptop that died.
I may resurrect
::Mason or HTML::Template -- that is, Perl. So you have a
complete, robust programming language to work with.
Any chance of supporting more template systems in the future, like TT and
XSLT?
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
appear to be from some kind of
compromised form mailer script. I'm open to any suggestions.
http://www.spamassassin.org/
Without a doubt, the best anti-spam solution around.
--
!-- Matt --
:-Get a smart net/:-
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