Joshua Chamas wrote:
>
> I would recommend using Apache::ASP as it does everything you need.
> First it allows for creation of your dynamic tags:
>
> http://www.nodeworks.com/xml.html
>
> It will reload all of your templates dynamically at runtime, for
> ease of development but also has adva
Greg Cope wrote:
>
> Dear All
>
> I've writen a small IPC sysV based shared cache thingy ... (useing
> IPC::ShareLite), and I'd like some comments oin the design if anywants
> to crtique...
>
> Why / the problem:
>
> I work in a dept where the coderes (Me !) code, and the HTML design
> people
Francesco Pasqualini wrote:
>
> is it possible to use IPC sysV to share DBI connection between apache
> childs ?
IIRC this is not possible as DBI connections are special magic things -
this was discussed on the list a few months back - but I cannot remember
the name of the thread.
Greg Cope
rl list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, July 21, 2000 8:58 PM
Subject: YAM (Yet Another Module) - an IPC shared cache thing - anyone
interested ?
> Dear All
>
> I've writen a small IPC sysV based shared cache thingy ... (useing
> IPC::ShareLite), and I'd like some comments oin the design if anywants
> to crtique...
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
[No StatINC because...]
> I do not use it to store perl modules, only to store all my html templates.
>
> Does that make sense ?
Well, it isn't scalable past one machine, you know. As long as you are willing
to live with that, fine.
If that is a problem, I'm not sure i
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Sorry, sounds like you could have just used Apache::StatINC, no?
Apache::StatINC only reloads your perl modules if they change.
My module loads (HTML) templates into a shared IPC memory segment - or
rather anything that can be stored as a scalar (limits of IPC::Shar
Dear All
I've writen a small IPC sysV based shared cache thingy ... (useing
IPC::ShareLite), and I'd like some comments oin the design if anywants
to crtique...
Why / the problem:
I work in a dept where the coderes (Me !) code, and the HTML design
people do HTML. The only commonality we share