Hey Stas,
PH>Some good graphs, including thttpd:
PH>http://www.zeuscat.com/andrew/work/aprbench/
SB>It shows that threaded mpm's throughput is worse than preforked, which
SB>sounds dubious unless things were broken (blocking mutexes). Hopefully
SB>someone can run a benchmark on more updated versi
Perrin Harkins wrote:
Stas Bekman wrote:
Where did you see the benchmarks showing that Apache 2.0 has a better
performance than 1.3?
All over!
Thanks Perrin.
[...]
Some good graphs, including thttpd:
http://www.zeuscat.com/andrew/work/aprbench/
It shows that threaded mpm's throughput i
Stas Bekman wrote:
Where did you see the benchmarks showing that Apache 2.0 has a better
performance than 1.3?
All over!
Joshua's numbers from this list:
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=apache-modperl&m=103238123915307&w=2
Some good graphs, including thttpd:
http://www.zeuscat.com/andrew/work/
Nick Tonkin wrote:
Hmm, I think it all depends on the application. It's true that hardware
costs have declined since The Days, but you still don't have unlimited
RAM.
True, there is an upper limit on per-machine scalability with a
multi-process server and thttpd would do better there if the net
On Tue, 21 Jan 2003, Perrin Harkins wrote:
> Eric Frazier wrote:
> > On that note, how about just using Apache2 for the proxy front end, and
> > mod_perl /apache 1.x for the back end? I have wanted to try to avoid the
> > thttpd stuff for images and from what I have heard about apache2 it can
> >
Hi,
You know I was all ready on my dev box to start messing around with apache2,
when we had a major evil thing happen on our fancy server. So my dev box had
to become our server. And because I have not had any personal experence with
apache 2, I converted everthing back to 1.x on the dev box.
Perrin Harkins wrote:
Eric Frazier wrote:
On that note, how about just using Apache2 for the proxy front end, and
mod_perl /apache 1.x for the back end? I have wanted to try to avoid the
thttpd stuff for images and from what I have heard about apache2 it can
handle static pages a lot faster than
Eric Frazier wrote:
On that note, how about just using Apache2 for the proxy front end, and
mod_perl /apache 1.x for the back end? I have wanted to try to avoid the
thttpd stuff for images and from what I have heard about apache2 it can
handle static pages a lot faster than the 1.x did.
You real
Hi,
On that note, how about just using Apache2 for the proxy front end, and
mod_perl /apache 1.x for the back end? I have wanted to try to avoid the
thttpd stuff for images and from what I have heard about apache2 it can
handle static pages a lot faster than the 1.x did.
Thanks,
Eric
At 04:0
Ged Haywood wrote:
modperl 2 with apache 2 thread is stable enought for start one big
project of ecommerce?
If it were my decision I'd say not yet, use mod_perl 1.27 with Apache 1.3.27.
It depends on your needs. The majority of the features is there and should
work just fine. The stability
Hi there,
On Mon, 20 Jan 2003, Udlei Nattis wrote:
> hi, sorry my english ;)
It's ok. :)
> modperl 2 with apache 2 thread is stable enought for start one big
> project of ecommerce?
If it were my decision I'd say not yet, use mod_perl 1.27 with Apache 1.3.27.
73,
Ged.
hi, sorry my english ;)
modperl 2 with apache 2 thread is stable enought for start one big
project of ecommerce?
[]s
nattis
On Tue, Jul 02, 2002 at 10:43:14PM -0500, David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
> Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
> processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
http://interchange.redhat.com/
- it's mature
- we wrote our own but i'd u
.
>
> -vlad
>
> > Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
> > processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
> > --
> > David Dyer-Bennet, [EMAIL PROTECTED] / New TMDA anti-spam in test
> > John Dyer-Bennet 1915-
Christopher Taranto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> We have been using ECHO for over 5 years and they have been an
> excellent company. They are strictly a credit card processing company
> - no order fulfillment. They also do online check processing and a
> whole bunch of other services.
>
> The
Gedanken <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 2 Jul 2002, David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
>
> Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
> processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
>
> There are a few 'clearing house' type s
.html
HTH,
Christopher Taranto
WWWarehouse, Inc.
At 10:43 PM 7/2/02 -0500, you wrote:
>Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
>processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
>--
>David Dyer-Bennet, [EMAIL PROTECTED] / New TMDA anti-spam in test
&g
er on their site for payment processing
(http://www.assist.ru/eng/about/cardpayments/)
I don't thunk these services are suitable for, but you read some help on
it and understand what exactly you need.
-vlad
> Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
> process
On 2 Jul 2002, David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
There are a few 'clearing house' type services to which one can subscribe
that do the actual cybercash-type trans
Any obvious choices for a relatively small-scale e-commerce payment
processing system for a server running apache / mod_perl?
--
David Dyer-Bennet, [EMAIL PROTECTED] / New TMDA anti-spam in test
John Dyer-Bennet 1915-2002 Memorial Site http://john.dyer-bennet.net
Book log: http
> You simply cannot come forward and say, "look, I've got this big-assed
> linux box, why is my site sucking?" We don't know, and it's neither our
granted. never my intention.
i described the box only to illustrate that i (should) have sufficient HW.
> The very, very best minds in production a
illustration below.)
Hi Rob.
Here's how you design an e-commerce site:
Figure out how many users you want to service.
Figure out how much juice it takes to service each user.
Multiply.
Add 50%.
Build.
You simply cannot come forward and say, "look, I've got this big-assed
linux b
I work for an e-commerce company iCelebrate.com, Inc.. and we use mod-perl
Mukesh Wani
http://www.icelebrate.com
I wonder if anyone could list me some e-commerce web sites using mod_perl -
like amazon, cdnow, etc.
Thanks!
../Ricardo
I wonder if anyone could list me some e-commerce web sites using mod_perl -
like amazon, cdnow, etc.
Thanks!
./Ricardo
###
Guitar fan Chris Black of London actually had a wedding
ceremony to officially marry his Fender Stratocaster
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