Just create it online in such a way that you can spider your whole site and
burn it to CD. Granted you will lose the searchability of the DB, but the
contents would all be there, and could easily be indexed so that you could
still find what you are looking for.
Create one page that has a link to
Aditionally you could create a ram disk with you php stuff, mount that in
/tmp/whatever read-write- and use that for your thttpd document root. May require root
access to mount the ramdisk, though.
On Friday, January 19, 2001, at 03:12 PM, Michael A. Peters wrote:
> I would use thttpd with php
I would use thttpd with php support compiled in, rather than a browser.
That way you could use whatever the browser on the users system was- more comfortable
for the user.
difficulty is what port to run the server at (well, one of the difficulties...) but
you could search for an unused unprivil
I wonder if it's possible to adapt the CGI version of PHP as a Netscape
plugin, or to associate the extension of php files to some kind of php
wrapper. This would require distributing a browser with the CD for this
specific CD, but it could work.
For a Unix-only kludge, I found this page,
htt
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