Hi there,
determining a good cache size and useful time-out-values is a
non-trivial task.
ns_cache_stats returns already some useful satistics, but i would say,
at least two
important figures are missing, which are subsumed by the # of flushes.
Actually,
there are at least 3 kind of flushes:
Bernd Eidenschink schrieb:
Gustaf,
I started with these:
* tcl/form.tcl:
* tcl/http.tcl:
* tcl/charsets.tcl:
* tcl/fastpath.tcl:
* tcl/sendmail.tcl:
the other files you provided partially differ from HEAD. I'll work over them
the next days.
here th
Bernd Eidenschink schrieb:
Gustaf,
I started with these:
* tcl/form.tcl:
* tcl/http.tcl:
* tcl/charsets.tcl:
* tcl/fastpath.tcl:
* tcl/sendmail.tcl:
the other files you provided partially differ from HEAD. I'll work over them
the next days.
really? i did
Gustaf,
I started with these:
* tcl/form.tcl:
* tcl/http.tcl:
* tcl/charsets.tcl:
* tcl/fastpath.tcl:
* tcl/sendmail.tcl:
the other files you provided partially differ from HEAD. I'll work over them
the next days.
-Bernd.
> Here comes something to consider for the distro:
>
> the .tcl files contain still many legacy comparions and some non-braced
> expressions.
> attached are the updated files that standardize the comparisons and can
> be compiled
> into more effficient byte-code.
that's really true. i'll go and in
Here comes something to consider for the distro:
the .tcl files contain still many legacy comparions and some non-braced
expressions.
attached are the updated files that standardize the comparisons and can
be compiled
into more effficient byte-code.
best regards
-gustaf
ns-modules-tcl.tar
Hi !
I wonder why is this so:
bash-2.03$ find modules/tcl/
modules/tcl/
modules/tcl/nsperm
modules/tcl/nsperm/init.tcl
modules/tcl/nsperm/compat.tcl
modules/tcl/charsets.tcl
modules/tcl/compat.tcl
modules/tcl/debug.tcl
modules/tcl/fastpath.tcl
modules/tcl/file.tcl
modules/tcl/form.tcl
modules/tc
Am 07.02.2006 um 05:34 schrieb Stephen Deasey:
Can this be changed to:
ns_section ns/server/$servername/tcl
ns_parambetternamehere true
It's clearly part of the Tcl configuration. As for the name, 'trace'
just seems too generic, which is why it clashes with existing usage
(ns_