hello members,
We run a video playing site. For each movie, we want to record its played time.
( for example, client A watched movie A for 30 minutes, client B
watched movie B for 2 hours).
So I think for each requested movie, it's maybe possible to get
apache's responce time by modperl.
But how
You can time how long it takes for someone to download the movie,
which isn't equal to the time it takes them to view it. Viewing
statistics can only be had from the player, so as long as your player
reports back when someone started viewing and when they hit the pause/
stop/play buttons,
On 11/22/07, Ben van Staveren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You can time how long it takes for someone to download the movie,
which isn't equal to the time it takes them to view it.
Yes I just need the download time.How can I get it? use which handler
and which function? thank you again.
Malcolm J Harwood-3 wrote:
On Wednesday 21 November 2007 6:21:57 am Neil Shephard wrote:
Alias /cgi-perl /usr/local/apache/chi-perl/
Location /cgi-perl
Should that be:
Alias /cgi-perl /usr/local/apache/cgi-perl/
rather than
Alias /cgi-perl /usr/local/apache/chi-perl/
Hello,
I'm currently using the tied APR::Request::Param::Table object to get
request parameters. However, this tied object does not implement STORE
so I cannot add or modify information in this object. For my project I
need to be able to modify request parameters. I've tried doing this:
my
I'm running mod_perl 2.0.2 under apache 2.0.54. After adding PerlSwitches
-wT to my apache config, I wanted to test that I had taint mode was indeed
working, so I wrote a test script that purposely misused a CGI parameter,
expecting the taint exception to be thrown. I was surprised to find it was