"hv @ Fashion Content" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev i en meddelelse
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Anyone know how to patch to following to support APR 1.2 ?
>
> static apr_status_t
>
> send_headers(request_rec *r, struct sockbuff *s)
>
> {
>
> /* headers to send */
>
> apr_table_t *t;
>
> const apr_array
Well, I wrote a "timeout" CGI especially to go into a loop. It's still running after 720 seconds on my 2.0.46+ server under linux. Timeout is set to 300.I never saw looping CGI's terminated under version 1 either.
With four processors in our system we sometimes don't notice looping CGI scripts for
Anyone know how to patch to following to support APR 1.2 ?
static apr_status_t
send_headers(request_rec *r, struct sockbuff *s)
{
/* headers to send */
apr_table_t *t;
const apr_array_header_t *hdrs_arr, *env_arr;
apr_table_entry_t *hdrs, *env;
unsigned long int n = 0;
char *buf;
int i;
On 10/14/06, Qingshan Xie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> KeepAlive (persistent-connections) and SSL can work
> fine together.
> But many configurations (including the default)
> include something like
> BrowserMatch ".*MSIE.*" \
> nokeepalive ssl-unclean-shutdown \
> downgrade-1.
Serge, Thanks for your quick reply.
I think HTTPS uses the same protocol as HTTP but above
ssl. It's still stateless. I am not sure your
statement, "HTTPS connections are always active untill
client leaves your site". Can you explain more?
Many Thanks, Q.Xie
--- Serge Dubrouski <[EMAIL PROT
--- Joshua Slive <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 10/13/06, Qingshan Xie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi! All,
> >
> >We have a 2.0.59 HTTPS server on Solaris 8.
> After
> > I turned on "KeepAlive On" and monitored it by
> > mod_status, I did not see any connection in
> KeepAlive
> > state
Hello ,
Its working fine now .. Problem is with the User and group directrives
..
Thanks for your help.
Nagendra
-Original Message-
From: Alex Joseph [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, October 14, 2006 7:02 PM
To: users@httpd.apache.org
Subject: Re: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Problem with
It's better for you to list your httpd.conf.
show your httpd.conf like the output:
cat conf/httpd.conf | grep -v ^# | grep -v ^$
On 10/14/06, Devireddy, Nagendra Reddy (STSD) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Sander,
Thanks once again for your reply ..
User and Group are set to bin in the httpd.
Hello Sander,
Thanks once again for your reply ..
User and Group are set to bin in the httpd.conf file ..
With the same conf file I am able to start the apache server version
2.0.48 and same file is not working in 2.0.59.
Please let me know if I need to change any thing else ..
Thanks,
Nagendra