Thanks Simon, I got around this behavior by adding "MaxRequestsPerChild 1" (default value of this is 0) to my httpd.conf to limit the number of requests a child server process will handle before it dies but I think it is important to keep it 0 in production environment.
Regards, Johnson On Fri, 3 Jul 2009 10:44:52 -0700 (PDT), Simon Forman wrote > On Jul 3, 5:18 am, Johnson Mpeirwe <mjohn...@cfi.co.ug> wrote: > > Hello All, > > > > How do I stop caching of Python Server Pages (or whatever causes changes > > in a page not to be noticed in a web browser)? I am new to developing > > web applications in Python and after looking at implementations of PSP > > like Spyce (which I believed introduces new unnecessary non-PSP syntax), > > I decided to write my own PSP applications from scratch. When I modify a > > file, I keep getting the old results until I intentionally introduce an > > error (e.g parse error) and correct it after to have the changes > > noticed. There's no proxy (I am working on a windows machine unplugged > > from the network). I have Googled and no documents seem to talk about > > this. Is there any particular mod_python directive I must set in my > > Apache configuration to fix this? > > > > Any help will be highly appreciated. > > > > Johnson > > I don't know much about caching with apache, but the answer mght be > on this page: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/caching.html > > Meanwhile, couldn't you just send apache a restart signal when you > modify your code? > > HTH, > ~Simon > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list