Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-03 Thread Alexander Burger
Hi Anthony, > Great! This is very clear. As a follow-on then, do you have multiple > installations of Pico Lisp on the same server in different directories > or multiple applications in the same /home/app directory? Actually I have no production installation with more than one version of pi

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-03 Thread Anthony Sherbondy
Alex; Great! This is very clear. As a follow-on then, do you have multiple installations of Pico Lisp on the same server in different directories or multiple applications in the same /home/app directory? While it may be a of preference, as you say, it is very helpful to understand how y

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-03 Thread Alexander Burger
Hi Anthony, > Lisp server. For clarification though, you have the Pico Lisp > application installed as a user under home, but Pico Lisp is installed > in usr/local correct? Also, where do you place each of these scripts? While it is perfectly possible to install PicoLisp in some global pl

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-03 Thread Anthony Sherbondy
Alex; First, thanks for the plain explanation of the scripting to support Pico Lisp server. For clarification though, you have the Pico Lisp application installed as a user under home, but Pico Lisp is installed in usr/local correct? Also, where do you place each of these scripts? Do y

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-03 Thread Alexander Burger
Hi Anthony, > Due to frustrations working with Pico Lisp on MacOSX10.5 I recently sorry to hear that ... we obviously did not succeed to find a unified 'make' process for Mac OS. > creating a Pico Lisp init.d script within Debian possibly with a I think the script can be very simple. Here

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Anthony Sherbondy
Hi Alex; Due to frustrations working with Pico Lisp on MacOSX10.5 I recently implemented a Debian Linux server. I was wondering how to go about creating a Pico Lisp init.d script within Debian possibly with a modification of the following server init.d script (how should I do this?): #

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Alexander Burger
Hi Andrei, basically, there is no problem to run PicoLisp as an application server as a normal user, as long as you don't use a port below 1024. So you must have your users connect to http://host:8080 or similar, which is not so nice. The standard way in PicoLisp is therefore to start 'httpGate'

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Andrei Ivushkin
Well, we obviously come to idea of having some root access anyway, because I can't see any other means to get picoserver running aside httpd. On Wed, 02 Jul 2008 16:21:26 +0300, Robert Wörle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Why would it be a silly idea ?? I actually run pico as http multiple tim

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Robert Wörle
Why would it be a silly idea ?? I actually run pico as http multiple times on my root server. I guess as you need to have a root access to the hosting server, then the "hoster" will not bug you as you can do what you want , right ? Andrei Ivushkin wrote: Is it possible to run pico appserver a

Re: At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Henrik Sarvell
Save yourself the trouble and go for a nice and cheap VPS solution like http://www.slicehost.com/ instead :) That is what I would/will do anyway... Henrik On Wed, Jul 2, 2008 at 3:09 PM, Andrei Ivushkin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Is it possible to run pico appserver at free shared hosting? H

At shared hosting

2008-07-02 Thread Andrei Ivushkin
Is it possible to run pico appserver at free shared hosting? How will it be started and working? How much CPU time will consume this process? I guess such a site will be quickly closed by the hoster :) Sorry if I have a silly idea to use pico as web server... -- UNSUBSCRIBE: mailto:[EMAIL PROTEC