On Thu, Jul 31, 2014 at 8:47 AM, Anselm Lingnau
<anselm.lingnau+exam...@linupfront.de> wrote:
> Finally, Apache remains the most popular web server in the world by a very
> wide margin. When we count only active web sites (and exclude parked domains
> etc.) Apache hosts way more of those than all other web servers taken
> together. This has been the case for the last 20 years or so and is likely to
> stay that way for quite some time. Apache is also part of every single
> interesting Linux distribution. Hence, I would be very suspicious about
> reducing Apache coverage in the LPI exams in favour of the fashionable-web-
> server-of-the-week which may or may not even be around anymore two years from
> now.

Agreed.  I don't think that we need to rush into any major changes
here.  LPI's never been accused of changing its objectives too
quickly. :)

And we have 4-ish years to watch what happens.  Nginx is definitely a
contender, though:

    
http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2014/04/02/april-2014-web-server-survey.html

Although, I'm also aware of how easily these stats are affected by
inactive sites and newly popular hosting platforms.

Regards,
--matt
-- 
G. Matthew Rice <mr...@lpi.org>                         gpg id: EF9AAD20
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