"Stas" == Stas Bekman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Stas Ouch :( Someone to explain this phenomena? and it's just
Stas fine under the handler puzzled, what can I say...
Continuous array growth and copying?
--
Stephen
"So if she weighs the same as a duck, she's made of wood."... "And
"Drew" == Drew Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Drew I would like to return a single data structure, but order IS
Drew important (hence the current setup). I was thinking of using
Drew an array, where each element is a hash reference. So I would
Drew return something like this:
"Stas" == Stas Bekman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Stas Is this a question or a suggestion? but in both cases
Stas (mod_perl and perl benchmark) the process doesn't exit, so
Stas the allocated datastructure is reused... anyway it should be
Stas the same. But it's not.
It was a
"Perrin" == Perrin Harkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Perrin I think every RDBMS I've seen, includig MySQL, guarantees
Perrin atomicity at this level.
Look, Mummy, the funny man said MySQL and RDBMS in the same sentence :)
--
Stephen
"There are those who call me... Tim"
"Wim" == Wim Kerkhoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Wim We're using SqlNet to connect multiple Linux web servers to
Wim Oracle running on a Solaris box.
Adjust 'processes' and 'sessions' upwards in your initSID.ora file
on your database server.
Use:
svrmgrl
connect inernal
show paramete
"Stas" == Stas Bekman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Stas This is not a fatal error. It was fixed in the current CVS
Stas version. Get it from http://perl.apache.org/from-cvs/modperl
Thanks, Stas. Bleeding edge here I come :)
--
Stephen
"So if she weighs the same as a duck, she's made of
"Doug" == Doug MacEachern [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Doug won't performance suffer in that case? i "benchmarked" Perl
Doug malloc vs. system malloc under solaris once, there were far
Doug more syscalls to brk() with system malloc.
Ilya has claimed for about 18 mths now that
"Trevor" == Trevor Phillips [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Trevor This works fine, except "the.other.machine" gets the Host
Trevor header as "the.other.machine" and NOT whatever is passed
Trevor to the proxy by the client. As a result, virtual servers
Trevor with the same IP but
"Trevor" == Trevor Phillips [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Trevor Another alternative is to get the MD5 base64 key to the
Trevor URI. My query is, what is the chance of two URI's giving
Trevor the same MD5? Is there any risk in it, or is MD5 guranteed
Trevor to give unique ID's? (I