Hello, all. I'm moving to a new server on my cheap hosted account,
and have been presented with two Ruby options: FastCGI or
modruby/eruby. I gather neither is the ideal option, but if you had
to choose one right now--quick, which would it be?
Thanks,
Andrew
Andrew,
Of your choices, I would have to go with FastCGI. If 'getting it
running' isn't your problem, it works pretty well.
Plus mod_ruby has other issues:
http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/rails/pages/mod_ruby
Good luck,
-Ross.
On 7/17/07, Andrew Darby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, all. I'm
Ugh. Both suck.
But.. FastCGI. I've never heard of anyone getting mod_ruby working
properly with Rails... I think it starts the entire stack for each
incoming request... which doesn't scale even if you're doing casual
development work.
-n
On Jul 17, 2007, at 11:32 AM, Andrew Darby wrote:
Howdy Andrew,
The fine folks over at LibraryFind have blogged a fair bit -- benchmarks
included -- about Rails deployment options:
http://blog.libraryfind.org/
Best of luck,
-Mike
On 7/17/07, Andrew Darby [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, all. I'm moving to a new server on my cheap hosted
Thanks Ross, Nathan and Mike. I've read bad things about both
mod_ruby and FastCGI, but it's good to know which one you consider
less sucky . . . .
Andrew
Does anyone have any decent open source code to parse a citation? I'm
talking about a completely narrative citation like someone might
cut-and-paste from a bibliography or web page. I realize there are a
number of differnet formats this could be in (not to mention the human
error problems that
Please forgive the cross-posting.
For my final project in the class Digital Libraries, I am bringing
together a bibliography (appliography?) of open source software
applications and free web services that would be useful in the
construction of digital libraries. (How self-referential can you
Howdy Sharon,
Not sure if this is perfect, but you might check out DOAP (Description of a
Project). Quoth Wikipedia:
*DOAP* (Description Of A Project) is an attempt to make an RDF
schemahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RDF_Schemaand
XML http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extensible_Markup_Language
I think you'll find that OSD has died the death. Have you managed
to find a copy of the DTD?
You're probably better off with a more general metadata framework such as
METS or RDF. There were some efforts at using RDF to describe RPM
packages for GNU/Linux software but these are no longer
Sharon, Michael, others --
Within the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, the Tools Community is
working on a Tools Application Profile. The AP is still in draft form,
and draws heavily upon the DOAP namespace referenced by Michael.
http://dublincore.org/groups/tools/map.shtml
At present, the
10 matches
Mail list logo