Luis M. González schreef: > For those interested in the simplest, easiest and most pythonic web > framework out there, there's a new page in Wikipedia: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karrigell
There's something I don't quite get regarding the Karrigell- and CherryPy-style frameworks. With PHP or mod_python I can put any number of different applications in different directories on a web server, which is very convenient: all kinds of things I want to use can live perfectly together (static content, webmail, phpmysql etc etc), all under Apache which either servers the static content directly or uses PHP or Python or Perl or whatever for dynamic content. If I understand everything correctly, Karrigell is meant to be run as its own server which runs one application. I guess I can run different Karrigell servers on different ports, and possibly use mod_rewrite to forward e.g. http://foo.example.com/app1 and http://foo.example.com/app2 to different instances. That's absolutely not elegant though, I think. Ideally, installing an application should consist of just putting it in its directory and making that directory available to the webserver. How do other people do this? Only one application on each (virtual) server? Or is there something I am missing? -- If I have been able to see further, it was only because I stood on the shoulders of giants. -- Isaac Newton Roel Schroeven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list