On Wednesday, 2002-09-25 at 10:41:19 -0400, valerian wrote:
BTW, anyone know if Perl 6 will free unused memory? From what I
understand, right now it just allocates as needed, but never gives any
back to the OS when it's done... (ie, when some function ends)
Even if Parrot (the perl 6
Hi Kyle,
There are a few performance penalties when using Apache::Registry:
* Scripts are compiled at first request instead of server start unless you
use something like Apache::RegistryLoader. So, the first request per
child
will be a little bit slower and you don't get to share memory
Hi Ged,
Thanks for replying. I hope you had a good time in my old country :-)
You probably saw the reports on the news about roads being washed away
by the rain in Sevilla. I went on a motor-cycle. Camping.
Mmm... Doesn't sound like the perfect vacation. I'm glad you made it back
:-)
On Tue, Sep 24, 2002 at 08:03:56PM -0700, Kyle Oppenheim wrote:
There are a few performance penalties when using Apache::Registry:
* Scripts are compiled at first request instead of server start unless you
use something like Apache::RegistryLoader. So, the first request per child
will be a
There are a few performance penalties when using Apache::Registry:
* Scripts are compiled at first request instead of server start
unless you
use something like Apache::RegistryLoader. So, the first
request per child
will be a little bit slower and you don't get to share memory
Hi Ged,
Sorry it took a long time to reply. Been to Spain.
Thanks for replying. I hope you had a good time in my old country :-)
If you're writing new code then I would recommend writing handlers and
avoiding Apache::Registry altogether.
I had been thinking about whether to do this. Why
Hi Francisco,
On Tue, 24 Sep 2002, Francisco Corella wrote:
Thanks for replying. I hope you had a good time in my old country :-)
You probably saw the reports on the news about roads being washed away
by the rain in Sevilla. I went on a motor-cycle. Camping.
If you're writing new code
If you're writing new code then I would recommend writing handlers and
avoiding Apache::Registry altogether.
I had been thinking about whether to do this. Why do you
recommend avoiding
Apache::Registry? Is there a performance penalty for using it?
We sometimes use Apache::Registry
Hi Francisco,
Sorry it took a long time to reply. Been to Spain.
On Fri, 13 Sep 2002, Francisco Corella wrote:
I believe calling Apache::exit doesn't prevent the log phase from
being run for the request, does it?
That's the way I understand it.
You recommend using 'return' rather than
Hi there,
On Wed, 11 Sep 2002, Francisco Corella wrote:
The Modules book by Lincoln Stein and Doug MacEachern (pp.464-465)
says that Apache::exit() can be used to halt script execution
without terminating the process and without logging an error.
Ask yourself why you want to call an exit()
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