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On Aug 24, 2007, at 01:08:50, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
BuildSmart wrote:
On Aug 23, 2007, at 22:31:37, Rasmus Lerdorf wrote:
BuildSmart wrote:
True but by enabling it (or I thought) I could generate a single
set of
modules that could be used
Yes but you can't build for apache2 without building threaded and I
Of course you can. That depends on MPM apache is using.
--
Stanislav Malyshev, Zend Software Architect
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.zend.com/
(408)253-8829 MSN: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development
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On Aug 24, 2007, at 02:35:40, Stanislav Malyshev wrote:
Yes but you can't build for apache2 without building threaded and I
Of course you can. That depends on MPM apache is using.
Unfortunately Apple builds the supplied apache 2.0.53 as worker
developing unicode and internationalization extensions to php.
Stas said I should join
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The windows build is ready for download at:
http://downloads.php.net/edink/php-5.2.4RC3-Win32.zip
http://downloads.php.net/edink/php-5.2.4RC3-win32-installer.msi
http://downloads.php.net/edink/pecl-5.2.4RC3-Win32.zip
Hi internals,
here is a patch that implements Late static bindinds in a way that
minimizes the performance hits that were feared.
There is no significant slowdown or memory usage increase when running
Zend/bench.php, which I assume is a
good enough bench for that kind of matter, as it involves
Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that listens on
port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to support
PHP but am looking for guidance on how to do that. Can someone point me
to instructions?
My first attempt was to just call the php.exe command line
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that listens on
port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to support
PHP but am looking for guidance on how to do that. Can someone point me
to instructions?
On 8/24/07, Robert Cummings [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that listens on
port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it to support
PHP but am looking for guidance on
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip!]
If the command line doesn't have a way to cause $_GET to be populated,
then what other way of invoking PHP could I use?
-- Steve
Steve,
You'd need to transpose the $_GET variables from the request to
$argv variables via the
Daniel Brown wrote:
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip!]
If the command line doesn't have a way to cause $_GET to be populated,
then what other way of invoking PHP could I use?
-- Steve
Steve,
You'd need to transpose the $_GET variables from the request to
On 8/24/07, Steve Francisco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip!]
Thanks Daniel, I can certainly do that in Java without much trouble,
however I was hoping to avoid needing to do things in each php file to
convert argv into $_GET. I want to be able to serve standard PHP
without modifying each one.
Hi Etienne,
We already have patch for late static binding that is very similar to yours.
If you have time, please compare them.
From quick look I see that our patch more accurate (it supports constants
and runtime function calls)
Does our patch miss something that your patch does?
Thanks.
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On Aug 24, 2007, at 11:22:14, Robert Cummings wrote:
On Fri, 2007-08-24 at 11:08 -0400, Steve Francisco wrote:
Hi, as an experiment I have a simple Java based server that
listens on
port 80 and can serve files just fine. I'd like to extend it
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