Bit 5 has always been my favorite bit. He just hangs out there between 6 and 4. Nobody bothers him. Plus you can't get past 15 without him. He's a really good guy. For what you called a horrible product you sure seem to want to figure it out. Keep reading.
On Mon, May 17, 2021 at 2:21 PM back button <back.but...@mail.com> wrote: > > Hi, > > In my application https://www.backbutton.org/ > > I placed the front end proxy server on the all new 64 Bit Rasperry Pi 4. > It is a wopping 64 bit processor with 8GM Ram running the on linux > lsb_release Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. > > I used the ubuntu 64 bit OS rather than Raspberry Pi OS because Raspberry > Pi OS was pulling down a different version > of Ubuntu server Apache HTTPD , did not not include all the Ubuntu > utilities. > > I understand that when I startup the HTTPD using systemctl start apache2, > it rises directly into RAM > occupying the massive 8 GM of volatile memory. Then it starts listening > for urls in the I/O buffer. > I understand the HTTPD socket server with its text parser mod(s) performs > quite fast when running in RAM. > > I have tried out two different bits used talk to HTTPD with the back end > business logic application server(s) . > > The first bit I used is the mod_jk. > > This is the bit which talks to each other > > LoadModule jk_module path/to/mod_jk.so > AddModule mod_jk.c > JkWorkersFile /path/to/httpd/conf/workers.properties > > > The second bit I used is called mod_proxy. > this is the bit which talks to each other > > <VirtualHost backbutton.org:443><Proxy balancer://mycluster> > BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:8080 > BalancerMember http://127.0.0.1:8081</Proxy> > > ProxyPreserveHost On > > ProxyPass / balancer://mycluster/ > ProxyPassReverse / balancer://mycluster/</VirtualHost> > > > Both bits I used to talk to each other work fine. The first bit and the > second bit. > *Questions * > I am a bit confused which bit should I use, the first bit or the second > bit ? > Are any other bit(s) I can also try out for a bit of practice ? > > favourite phrase: > How you like them Apples ? > > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To > unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@httpd.apache.org For additional > commands, e-mail: users-h...@httpd.apache.org