Yeah. That seems like a bad oversight. But you could just define a new pool and register "*" to that pool (The registration takes a server name).

At any rate - let's make sure this is documented on SourceFroge as a bug or feature requests.

M

On Aug 2, 2007, at 10:41 AM, Tom Jackson wrote:

On Wednesday 01 August 2007 23:53, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Maybe this is the intent, although it would be easy to add the
server
name to the key.

ISTM that virtual servers weren't considered when this code was written ...

All code in current versions should be fully aware of virtual servers.

The previous code in 4.0.10 was in urlspace.c and queue.c and was fully virtual server aware. The current version simply ditches this for no good reason, and by that I mean that the map storage and search are fully virtual server aware, but the threadpool creation code is a simple hash table keyed
to the name of the threadpool.

It also appears that on startup, two threadpools are created 'default'
and 'error'. These are shared across virtual servers. Any redefinition of
these affects all virtual servers.

So question: we now have interps separate from threads, but what about memory, code, etc. Is this part of the interp or does it hang out with the thread? If the thread is just a clean slate, at least it is safe to reuse in another virtual server, otherwise this is a big bend over routine. But then we are left with the other option: threads pick up interps and run anywhere and everywhere on the virtual server and the interp eventually grows in size. Even if threads exit with given timeout, do interps? This negates the reason
for threadpools entirely.

This really needs to be discussed because the programming model could be
disasterously affected and complicated by these decisions.

tom jackson


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