>While rebuilding perl and apache/modperl could possibly fix it, check your
>error log for segmentation faults.
No segfaults at all. The last core file I've got on one of the affected
boxes is from early January.
Thanks,
Jeremy
>Definitely go for 5.6.1 at least, 5.6.0 is buggy. Compile your own,
>don't use RPMs unless you have evidence they'll be OK. I use 5.7.2
>now in development and I'd be quite happy with to go live with it,
>although I don't do anything fancy in my Perl code if I can avoid it.
I'll give this a sh
While rebuilding perl and apache/modperl could possibly fix it, check your
error log for segmentation faults.
Regards,
Tim Tompkins
--
Programmer
http://www.arttoday.com/
http://www.rebelartist.com/
--
Hi again,
On Thu, 28 Feb 2002, Jeremy Rusnak wrote:
> This has been happening on both 2.4 and 2.2 machines. I've recompiled
> everything but Perl itself (5.6.0) with the stock Redhat 6.2 and 7.2
Definitely go for 5.6.1 at least, 5.6.0 is buggy. Compile your own,
don't use RPMs unless you have
>Is this for example only on the machines running Linux 2.4, did you
>recompile everything including Perl, what compiler and compilation
>options did you use, are you using DSO, have you read the file
>mod_perl/SUPPORT, have you tried mod_perl-1.26_01 and/or
>apache_1.3.23...?
This has been happe
Hi there,
On Thu, 28 Feb 2002, Jeremy Rusnak wrote:
[snip,snip]
> We're using mod_perl 1.26 and Apache 1.3.22 on kernel 2.2 and 2.4 on
> a few machines. We upgraded to Apache 1.3.22 several weeks ago
> At random times Apache stops serving requests.
> The last entry reported in
Hi all,
We're using mod_perl 1.26 and Apache 1.3.22 on kernel 2.2 and 2.4 on
a few machines. We upgraded to Apache 1.3.22 several weeks ago and
have been experiencing some strange problems.
At random times Apache stops serving requests. Trying to bring up
a request brings up a "