Hi,
ich versuche gerade auf meinem Fileserver (unter Debian) Daten via WebDAV
freizugeben. Zur Authentifizierung nutze ich momentan überall PAM (später mal
LDAP...).
Also habe ich eine neue Site angelegt und mit a2ensite storage aktiviert.
Das Configfile schaut so aus:
VirtualHost 10.1.3.11
Hi
We are using prefork apache on Red Hat Enterprise Linux AS 4 with the
following settings:
MaxKeepAliveRequests 100
KeepAliveTimeout 15
IfModule prefork.c
StartServers 8
MinSpareServers8
MaxSpareServers 300
ServerLimit 575
MaxClients 575
MaxRequestsPerChild 4000
We are running Apache 1.3.34.
On our Debian 4.0 system, each night cron.daily runs logrotate.
Logrotate's postrotate script runs `/etc/init.d/apache reload` (no
errors on stderr). When it is successful, top shows all apache children
go defunct, then apache restarts. But more often than not, all
With that type of load that server would be ample. Maybe buy an
additional network card and configure fail over between the cards...
Something to consider is what is your expected growth over the lifetime
of this server. If you depreciate the servers cost to 0 in 3 years time
and expect to
On 28/08/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What I am unclear about is that if the server limit is 575 and I have
actually reached this limit will there be 8 additional children
started(MinSpareServers) that is not serving requests but will be if any
of the other children stops or
Hi All
We just had our old apache server die, looking to upgrade quickly.
Anyone have a good link to some hardware discussions for apache. Our
apache machine will run as a load balancer, using mod_jk to pass
requests to tomcat. I was thinking 2 G of ram and a cheap dual core
processor.
On 09.07.07 17:25, Ki Song wrote:
I want to redirect visitors from http://www.foo.com/folder/index.html to
http://folder.foo.com/index.html
What is the best way to accomplish this?
Wouldn't be better redirecting from http://www.foo.com/folder/ to
http://folder.foo.com/index.html ? If so, put
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
With that type of load that server would be ample. Maybe buy an
additional network card and configure fail over between the cards...
Something to consider is what is your expected growth over the lifetime
of this server. If you depreciate the servers cost to 0 in 3
I have the oddest situation. I have a test server on the LAN. I added a
host entry for www.myserver.com (actual name changed to protect the
innocent). I can ping www.myserver.com and my resolved address matches
the host entry. Life is grand, no?
I have apache configured with a virtual
The benefit in quick drives is relative. It would depend on your
application.
If you are serving huge files all of the time then yes, and probably
also if you are saving a lot of files most of the time.
Linux caches disk reads so having lots of ram would help with this, but
I do not know which OS
Some additional info -- when Apache is running normally (for example,
during the middle of the day), we can issue a manual '/etc/init.d/apache
reload' and it will work fine. The problems seem to arise some
percentage of the time when it tries to run from cron.daily's calling of
Hi..
I'm using Apache 2.2 with mod_proxy_balancer right
now to run a dynamic RESTful application. This app
caches requests in the Apache DocumentRoot, so a
request can be handled by Apache, once generated.
Right now I'm checking my requests via mod_proxy.
If the file does not exist in the
Hello,
I'm having a really weird behavior on my site, where depending from
where it is accessed not all requests (16 async RPCs) are attended.
From my PC a ping to mysite has a 160ms average RTT (yes, I'm
offshore), on a remote PC on CA the same ping has a 15ms RTT.
From my PC when I access the
On 8/28/07, Alfredo Mesen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[Tue Aug 28 10:52:21 2007] [error] [client xxx.xxx.xxx.234] client
denied by server configuration: /var/www/html/home
I'm running Apache/1.3.33 (Unix), not really sure what more data is
relevant, httpd.conf has default values for all the
On 8/28/07, Benjamin Krause [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi..
I'm using Apache 2.2 with mod_proxy_balancer right
now to run a dynamic RESTful application. This app
caches requests in the Apache DocumentRoot, so a
request can be handled by Apache, once generated.
Right now I'm checking my
On 8/28/07, Brian Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We are running Apache 1.3.34.
On our Debian 4.0 system, each night cron.daily runs logrotate.
Logrotate's postrotate script runs `/etc/init.d/apache reload` (no
errors on stderr). When it is successful, top shows all apache children
go
well I am sure/certain that no one probably cares about this and I doubt
that I will get a response, but I just wanted to say that I finally got it
right with the PHP-Apache Server integration!!!
- Original Message -
From: Dragon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Sent:
Joshua Slive wrote:
Since this isn't something that I see frequently reported, my first
guess would be a faulty third-party module. What are you using other
than the standard apache modules?
Joshua.
Thanks for responding, Joshua. My full module list is as follows:
AddModule mod_so.c
Joshua,
thank you for your reply ..
1. Have you tried the -U test rather than -F? This should pass the
request through apache's url-handling stuff. (You'll need to modify
the rest of the RewriteCond to use a url-path rather than a file
path).
no, i didn't even know about the -U flag :-)
* Benjamin Krause wrote:
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-U
RewriteCond %{IS_SUBREQ} 'false'
RewriteRule ^/(.*)$ balancer://my_balancer%{REQUEST_URI} [P,QSA,L]
and this produces the following log output:
initial (2) init rewrite engine with requested uri /non_existing_url
On 8/28/07, Brian Cohen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Joshua Slive wrote:
Since this isn't something that I see frequently reported, my first
guess would be a faulty third-party module. What are you using other
than the standard apache modules?
Joshua.
Thanks for responding, Joshua. My
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