Re: [OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php
Scott Alexander wrote: No mod_perl doesn't serve the documents. I'm just using a PerlTranshandler to change the uri. Okay, that should work then. So if I add php support to the mod_perl server. How much extra load/memory usage strain will it add to the mod_perl server. I don't know; that's a PHP question. If I add a www -management system to our existing intranet application I want that all the www pages are in the www -management system not php pages on the front_end (have to add php support of course) and html pages on the mod_perl server. Sorry, I don't understand what you're talking about here. Or would it be better to have a nfs on the front_end accessible from the mod_perl server. So users can update the documents using the intranet application. Then www requests are handled only by the front end with now added php support. I don't see any good reason not to put PHP on the backend and do all the page generation there. It keeps the front-end simple too. - Perrin
Re: [OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php
On Wed, 18 Dec 2002, Perrin Harkins wrote: > Scott Alexander wrote: > > At the moment I have a front_end server with no php support. > > > > Backend is mod_perl. I'm planning to extend our document management > > system to serve www pages. > > > > The html documents are on the mod_perl machine. What happens if users add > > php code to their html documents? > > Nothing, unless you add PHP support to that machine and make sure > mod_perl is not serving those documents. You can't have them both > handle the same documents. > No mod_perl doesn't serve the documents. I'm just using a PerlTranshandler to change the uri. > > If I add php support on the front_end will it work normally? > > No, not if the front-end is proxying. It has to be actually serving > those documents locally in order to run them through PHP. > > - Perrin > So if I add php support to the mod_perl server. How much extra load/memory usage strain will it add to the mod_perl server. The setup is front_end 2*550 PIII scsi drives 2 GB mod_perl server 2*1200 scsi 36 GB 2GB database server 2*1200 scsi 36 GB 2GB About 3 - 5 scripts per day plus 5000 rewrites using the PerlTranshandler for the web pages. Database machine is handling abou 2 million queries per day. If I add a www -management system to our existing intranet application I want that all the www pages are in the www -management system not php pages on the front_end (have to add php support of course) and html pages on the mod_perl server. Or would it be better to have a nfs on the front_end accessible from the mod_perl server. So users can update the documents using the intranet application. Then www requests are handled only by the front end with now added php support. Best Regards Scott
Re: [OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php
Scott Alexander wrote: At the moment I have a front_end server with no php support. Backend is mod_perl. I'm planning to extend our document management system to serve www pages. The html documents are on the mod_perl machine. What happens if users add php code to their html documents? Nothing, unless you add PHP support to that machine and make sure mod_perl is not serving those documents. You can't have them both handle the same documents. If I add php support on the front_end will it work normally? No, not if the front-end is proxying. It has to be actually serving those documents locally in order to run them through PHP. - Perrin
Re: [OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php - RESEND
Still half asleep. Stupid typos have been un-typofied: On Wed, 18 Dec 2002, Raf wrote: > On Wed, 18 Dec 2002, Scott Alexander wrote: > > > The html documents are on the mod_perl machine. What happens if users add > > php code to their html documents? > > > > If I add php support on the front_end will it work normally? > * Have you thought of setting a separate document root for php (if they are .html templates from one document root)? * Have you considered placing it on the proxied machine and getting your mod_perl handler to decline if it finds PHP tags (if they are all .html from one document root)? * If you : * proxy *.html on the proxy server or whatever distinguishes your mod_perl content. * catch all on your proxy server that might do the trick. > > topic. I don't know what mailing list to ask this on. I'm doing distance > > work and living 150 km above the Arctic Circle Cool. Very Cool. Or even extremely cold. ;) I'm curious. What are you working on? Rafiq
Re: [OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php
On Wed, 18 Dec 2002, Scott Alexander wrote: > The html documents are on the mod_perl machine. What happens if users add > php code to their html documents? > > If I add php support on the front_end will it work normally? * Have you thought of setting a separate document route for php (if they are .html templates from one document route)? * Have you considered placing it on the proxied machine and getting your mod_perl handler to decline if it finds PHP tags (if they are all .html from one document root)? * If you : * proxy *.html on the proxy server or whatever distingues your mod_perl content. * catch all on your proxy server that might do the trick. > topic. I don't know what mailing list to ask this on. I'm doing distance > work and living 150 km above the Arctic Circle Cool. Very Cool. Or even extremely cold. ;) I'm curious. What are you working on? Rafiq
[OT] mod_proxy, mod_perl, php
At the moment I have a front_end server with no php support. Backend is mod_perl. I'm planning to extend our document management system to serve www pages. The html documents are on the mod_perl machine. What happens if users add php code to their html documents? If I add php support on the front_end will it work normally? Regards and thanks in advance for any help. And sorry if this is way off topic. I don't know what mailing list to ask this on. I'm doing distance work and living 150 km above the Arctic Circle Scott