2010/2/20 Torsten Förtsch
[ ... ]
> - is there a portable way to get all open file descriptors of the current
> process? Under Linux one can readdir(/proc/self/fd). On Darwin I once
> simply
> closed all fds from 0 to 1000. Some systems have getdtablesize(2),
> sometimes
> it is getrlimit. Someti
re: close all open file descriptors portably
well, if one is on a POSIX system, _SC_OPEN_MAX gives the max integer.
Then just close them all.
Here's my usual recipe for this:
# close all open file descriptors
my $max_fd = POSIX::sysconf(&POSIX::_SC_OPEN_MAX);
$max_fd = ((! defined $ma
On Saturday 20 February 2010 21:24:31 Cosimo Streppone wrote:
> That's really valuable, thanks for sharing.
> However, a question:
>
> is this something that should be included in Apache2::SubProcess
> to make it better? Or is this something that could be published
> another, separate, CPAN distri
In data 20 febbraio 2010 alle ore 21:16:22, Torsten Förtsch
ha scritto:
On Saturday 20 February 2010 19:25:39 Tosh Cooey wrote:
I do enjoy the fact that nobody really seems to have a simple definitive
vanilla fork/spawn process down pat, it seems everyone does what I do,
trying this and that
On Saturday 20 February 2010 19:25:39 Tosh Cooey wrote:
> I do enjoy the fact that nobody really seems to have a simple definitive
> vanilla fork/spawn process down pat, it seems everyone does what I do,
> trying this and that stumbling about until they come up with some
> monstrosity like Torse
It does, but Proc::Daemon closes a billion file handles and sets new
process IDs and forks and forks and maybe forks a couple more times for
good measure... Fingers crossed!
I do enjoy the fact that nobody really seems to have a simple definitive
vanilla fork/spawn process down pat, it seems e
Sorry,
got it working with your advice:
opendir(DIR, "G:/FTP/Ski") or die print "Error $!"; worked in the end...
Damn these slashes :-D
Thanks for the help
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Sent from the mod_perl - Genera
No,
that doesn't work either. I used opendir (DIR, "G:\FTP\Ski") ...
I've tried the slashes in all directions, and with and without preceding and
slashes in the end.
e.g. \Ski, \Ski\, /ski, /ski/
How do I get perl to understand the context? is there some function that
points to the root? (even
Apache knows the context, PERL does not.
Fully qualify that directory name and it should work.
On 2/20/2010 1:01 PM, ceauke wrote:
Hi there
Here is my code. I get the IMG displayed but also the perl error: No such
file or directory.
"
#!E:\ea12\apps\tech_st\10.1.2\perl\5.6.1\bin\MSWin32-x
Hi there
Here is my code. I get the IMG displayed but also the perl error: No such
file or directory.
"
#!E:\ea12\apps\tech_st\10.1.2\perl\5.6.1\bin\MSWin32-x86\perl.exe
print "Content-type: text/html \n\n";
print "Test:";
print " /Ski/temp.jpg ";
opendir(DIR, "/Ski") or die print "Error $!";
On Feb 20, 2010, at 7:01 AM, Tosh Cooey wrote:
Anyway, the solution, at least so far until I run into other
problems, seems to be to just make a system() call and the called
program uses Proc::Daemon and things *seem* to work fine in
testing, we'll see when it hits production...
Tosh
Do
Maybe it does or doesn't work under MP::R, the answer to that is perhaps
individual.
Anyway, the solution, at least so far until I run into other problems,
seems to be to just make a system() call and the called program uses
Proc::Daemon and things *seem* to work fine in testing, we'll see whe
You aren't going to like this, and maybe what you're doing is for a
really complex situation, but it really shouldn't be so complex to just
spawn off a long running process that you don't care to ever hear back
from, honestly.
Tosh
Torsten Förtsch wrote:
Tosh,
On Tuesday 09 February 2010 1
Tosh,
On Tuesday 09 February 2010 14:21:57 Tosh Cooey wrote:
> Hi after much trial and all error I am seeing that the browser
> connection closing is also stopping my subprocess.
>
I don't know what you are trying to achieve and I don't use
Apache2::Subprocess much. What I do to fork off proce
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