>The reason turning off swap works is because it forces the memory from
>the parent process that was swapped out to be swapped back in. It will
>not fix those processes that have been sired after the shared memory
>loss, as of Linux 2.2.15 and Solaris 2.6. (I have not checked since
>then for be
On Sat, 2002-03-16 at 08:01, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Recently I had a discussion with a Java programmer, who said that
> mod_perl is a try to save the obsolete language Perl. His argument was
> that only Java programmers are searched, especially here in Europe.
Interesting. I have a friend t
Yes, this is my theory also. I figured this out a while back, and started a
thread on this list, but since then haven't had enough time to investigate
it further.
The thread is here:
http://mathforum.org/epigone/modperl/wherdtharvoi
which includes some helpful hints from Doug on how to call
Oh, sorry, I forgot:
httpd -l gives:
Compiled-in modules:
http_core.c
mod_so.c
suexec: enabled; valid wrapper /usr/sbin/suexec
The rest is DSO.
Ernest
I believe I have the answer...
The problem is that the parent httpd swaps, and any new children it
creates load the portion of memory that was swaped from swap, which does
not make it copy-on-write. The really annoying thing - when memory gets
tight, the parent is the most likely httpd process t
Hi,
in a 2-server-on-one-machine-environment (proxy/mod_perl) I try to slim
especially the proxy httpd as much as possible by removing all unneeded
modules.
Please help me at 2 questions:
1. What is the minimum of modules to be loaded for the proxy and the
mod_perl apache? (Ok, I'm about to fin
> A thought - what about putting the suggestion of an underscore by
> putting bars underneath the d and p of "modperl"? Just a suggestion
> to Michael as presumably he is revisting the design for the buttons.
This is a funny discussion. Although not my favorite Logo has been
elected, I confirm th
DR>I really like the new logo, and in fact I voted for it. However, I just
DR>realized that the logo uses "modperl", whereas mod_perl's name is
DR>"mod_perl", with the underscore. Does anyone else see this as a problem?
BM>It's a graphic design so I don't see that it needs to follow the Apache
BM
If anyone out there's building modules with directives you'll know
that its a tricky business. I ran across two problems and related
solutions. (Thanks for nudging me along for #1 Geoff - but #2 I solved
all by my lonesome!)
FIRST HINT - Modules compirised of several files and make Apache