]> granicus.if.org Git - apache/commitdiff
update transforms
authorIgor Galić <igalic@apache.org>
Fri, 20 Apr 2012 12:29:45 +0000 (12:29 +0000)
committerIgor Galić <igalic@apache.org>
Fri, 20 Apr 2012 12:29:45 +0000 (12:29 +0000)
git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk@1328351 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68

38 files changed:
docs/manual/handler.html.en
docs/manual/handler.html.fr
docs/manual/handler.html.tr.utf8
docs/manual/handler.xml.es
docs/manual/handler.xml.fr
docs/manual/handler.xml.ja
docs/manual/handler.xml.ko
docs/manual/handler.xml.meta
docs/manual/handler.xml.tr
docs/manual/handler.xml.zh-cn
docs/manual/index.html.da
docs/manual/index.html.fr
docs/manual/index.html.tr.utf8
docs/manual/index.xml.da
docs/manual/index.xml.de
docs/manual/index.xml.es
docs/manual/index.xml.fr
docs/manual/index.xml.ja
docs/manual/index.xml.ko
docs/manual/index.xml.meta
docs/manual/index.xml.pt-br
docs/manual/index.xml.tr
docs/manual/index.xml.zh-cn
docs/manual/misc/perf-scaling.html.en
docs/manual/programs/log_server_status.html.en
docs/manual/programs/split-logfile.html
docs/manual/programs/split-logfile.html.en
docs/manual/sitemap.html.en
docs/manual/sitemap.html.fr
docs/manual/sitemap.html.tr.utf8
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.de
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.es
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.fr
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.ja
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.ko
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.meta
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.tr
docs/manual/sitemap.xml.zh-cn

index 30151821046baf2d7b4cf133c5fc1bffdbdb73e7..dfad2ed2332101a0d69843642352e909ff268768 100644 (file)
 
       <div class="example"><p><code>
         &lt;Directory /web/htdocs/asis&gt;<br />
-        SetHandler send-as-is<br />
+       <span class="indent">SetHandler send-as-is<br /></span>
         &lt;/Directory&gt;
       </code></p></div>
 
index 2fdde7c005e2fce734f9766f161a1b0c7c8f9681..a0c6343610021ba27733c21f1845fbb0b08cc3c4 100644 (file)
@@ -26,6 +26,8 @@
 <a href="./tr/handler.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/handler.html" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Cette traduction peut être périmée. Vérifiez la version
+            anglaise pour les changements récents.</div>
 
     <p>Ce document décrit l'utilisation des gestionnaires d'Apache (handlers).</p>
   </div>
index d50f8b7055a276c7fbcd94c2c202e4e1670e8f3f..6fb54816ca0afacb373f368f773f216c19d6ec23 100644 (file)
@@ -26,6 +26,7 @@
 <a href="./tr/handler.html" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/handler.html" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Bu çeviri güncel olmayabilir. Son değişiklikler için İngilizce sürüm geçerlidir.</div>
 
     <p>Bu belgede Apache Eylemcilerinin kullanımı açıklanmıştır.</p>
   </div>
index 0c0fff3da07c5ee794cb0324b8397ebb274d5fdf..e6b843f5b53d357c4ab5b8e017a53bd8feea5007 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE manualpage SYSTEM "./style/manualpage.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.es.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 151408:1174747 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 151408:1328350 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 6eff1735643cf1173638ea69d0c8815c7bbe2eae..11e473a9f04b65b8b9d312f05c52ca9df8cf6437 100644 (file)
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.fr.xsl"?>
 <!-- French translation : Lucien GENTIS -->
 <!-- Reviewed by : Vincent Deffontaines -->
-<!-- English Revision: 1174747 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1174747:1328350 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index e492d2da175e8b97d088eeaffdeab107c36b614d..80c0d9958e76b413c2dd8eab12cebd1a21fd4193 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE manualpage SYSTEM "./style/manualpage.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ja.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 420990:1174747 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 420990:1328350 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index fa09ad552a0a42e4fa30df8deb60a3659d97830e..d67768d6086460a2ea4f2168ea90cf912289b669 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="EUC-KR" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE manualpage SYSTEM "./style/manualpage.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ko.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 151408:1174747 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 151408:1328350 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index ed47de569eea86fcbd5d08dbd5d077241a1c6d1f..275bdba5ddfab189ddc3e381a7a118a66615d249 100644 (file)
@@ -9,10 +9,10 @@
   <variants>
     <variant>en</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">es</variant>
-    <variant>fr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">fr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ja</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ko</variant>
-    <variant>tr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">tr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">zh-cn</variant>
   </variants>
 </metafile>
index a77ae3fe326da935230ee0ae76d2b0fd0d0d88d0..11ca1ca53e4d8afc3ed33cac24f72f17719e5db9 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE manualpage SYSTEM "./style/manualpage.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.tr.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1174747 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1174747:1328350 (outdated) -->
 <!-- =====================================================
  Translated by: Nilgün Belma Bugüner <nilgun belgeler.org>
    Reviewed by: Orhan Berent <berent belgeler.org>
index d8ed7379d49fa5fe4caa983da4da0e6cb1306de4..98b257a07431f67fd69f54b373ddb7e17fee7b84 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE manualpage SYSTEM "./style/manualpage.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.zh-cn.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 420990:1174747 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 420990:1328350 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 60073bd2e8da27f311eb2d287ec951c07b085ebc..0d6128c124692923f5dfd86bab8edb0caf9b3b6b 100644 (file)
@@ -33,6 +33,7 @@ Dokumentation</h1>
 <a href="./tr/" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Denne oversættelse kan være forældet. Se den Engelske version for de seneste opdateringer.</div>
 <form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/search"><p><input name="as_q" value="" type="text" /> <input value="Google Søgning" type="submit" /><input value="10" name="num" type="hidden" /><input value="da" name="hl" type="hidden" /><input value="ISO-8859-1" name="ie" type="hidden" /><input value="Google Search" name="btnG" type="hidden" /><input name="as_epq" value="Version 2.5" type="hidden" /><input name="as_oq" value="" type="hidden" /><input name="as_eq" value="&quot;List-Post&quot;" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="lr" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_ft" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="as_filetype" type="hidden" /><input value="all" name="as_qdr" type="hidden" /><input value="any" name="as_occt" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_dt" type="hidden" /><input value="httpd.apache.org" name="as_sitesearch" type="hidden" /><input value="off" name="safe" type="hidden" /></p></form>
 <table id="indextable"><tr><td class="col1"><div class="category"><h2><a name="release" id="release">Udgivelses Noter</a></h2>
 <ul><li><a href="new_features_2_4.html">Nye funktioner i Apache 2.3/2.4</a></li>
index 4c894ef4c213e93d81dc47b9c1db897423c53b07..ad73f5221cb47743988addc422dee83b877bd52b 100644 (file)
@@ -33,6 +33,8 @@
 <a href="./tr/" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Cette traduction peut être périmée. Vérifiez la version
+            anglaise pour les changements récents.</div>
 <form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/search"><p><input name="as_q" value="" type="text" /> <input value="Recherche Google" type="submit" /><input value="10" name="num" type="hidden" /><input value="fr" name="hl" type="hidden" /><input value="ISO-8859-1" name="ie" type="hidden" /><input value="Google Search" name="btnG" type="hidden" /><input name="as_epq" value="Version 2.5" type="hidden" /><input name="as_oq" value="" type="hidden" /><input name="as_eq" value="&quot;List-Post&quot;" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="lr" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_ft" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="as_filetype" type="hidden" /><input value="all" name="as_qdr" type="hidden" /><input value="any" name="as_occt" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_dt" type="hidden" /><input value="httpd.apache.org" name="as_sitesearch" type="hidden" /><input value="off" name="safe" type="hidden" /></p></form>
 <table id="indextable"><tr><td class="col1"><div class="category"><h2><a name="release" id="release">Notes de version</a></h2>
 <ul><li><a href="new_features_2_4.html">Nouvelles fonctionnalités dApache 2.3/2.4</a></li>
index 6f23318cb46377acdae5ca8d1ee5c21fdfbf4631..2471af98dad8064b28edb27bfb0dd2976df98dbd 100644 (file)
@@ -33,6 +33,7 @@ Belgeleri</h1>
 <a href="./tr/" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Bu çeviri güncel olmayabilir. Son değişiklikler için İngilizce sürüm geçerlidir.</div>
 <form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/search"><p><input name="as_q" value="" type="text" /> <input value="Google’de Ara" type="submit" /><input value="10" name="num" type="hidden" /><input value="tr" name="hl" type="hidden" /><input value="UTF-8" name="ie" type="hidden" /><input value="Google Search" name="btnG" type="hidden" /><input name="as_epq" value="Sürüm 2.5" type="hidden" /><input name="as_oq" value="" type="hidden" /><input name="as_eq" value="&quot;List-Post&quot;" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="lr" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_ft" type="hidden" /><input value="" name="as_filetype" type="hidden" /><input value="all" name="as_qdr" type="hidden" /><input value="any" name="as_occt" type="hidden" /><input value="i" name="as_dt" type="hidden" /><input value="httpd.apache.org" name="as_sitesearch" type="hidden" /><input value="off" name="safe" type="hidden" /></p></form>
 <table id="indextable"><tr><td class="col1"><div class="category"><h2><a name="release" id="release">Sürümlerin Dağıtım Bilgileri</a></h2>
 <ul><li><a href="new_features_2_4.html">2.3/2.4’deki yeni özellikler</a></li>
index 7b5123e889e579ea822e1349ac549cf44adf4d5a..b85a61f9a1576df8b4a7a6403533391a58a6b9f0 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.en.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1221670 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1221670:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 1caec1fc061228fab03e0d63c892ff4c94f76cbe..955c237738ccfb9f3f957b703b69c8eadc4718a2 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.de.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1050960:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1050960:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index b33eb6f86a51d8da14289ac7899abb20eb8d58a5..a0b8a5c6e00e162e89e4f2b1644988b74801ab47 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.es.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 105989:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 105989:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 6d9e05a79095ff2cec625ceb1ed8790af8452bac..00d80a6e9688167e89a461657bf811144b8bd6a8 100644 (file)
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.fr.xsl"?>
 <!-- French translation : Lucien GENTIS -->
 <!-- Reviewed by : Vincent Deffontaines -->
-<!-- English Revision : 1221670 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1221670:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index c81fa743c8a133abe3d81a0834cc7c7cd007a36c..ef972c01e61d13b8c99b5a9f894026692a9d7d7f 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ja.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 636028:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 636028:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 6512da7fc3a8088f224f4095501a4450fc48a511..78887b7bd268323bbb11ceb9f50e978e2061aeeb 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="EUC-KR" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ko.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 105989:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 105989:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 1ba9baa6823b74d953c4d442d0593c7e6ce4d075..b95c36601f7843865877d6bd37ff8274ff33699b 100644 (file)
@@ -7,15 +7,15 @@
   <relpath>.</relpath>
 
   <variants>
-    <variant>da</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">da</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">de</variant>
     <variant>en</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">es</variant>
-    <variant>fr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">fr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ja</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ko</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">pt-br</variant>
-    <variant>tr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">tr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">zh-cn</variant>
   </variants>
 </metafile>
index 83a4fe9cd9084c74235b4fb49a823be500b3d083..037f6833b2808e1ef18bf3c642d06d175da8a8b4 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.pt-br.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 420993:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 420993:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index bd45e8dcff5733b6286e0b5ef340a9cf97422b71..32101423ec4726da731c166b734b943d9bd769e8 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.tr.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1221670 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1221670:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index a040d5d629f7473d248b89133c756f3695a7105b..ef0137eadcabee52ca677c4be80b63af15060cf7 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
 <!DOCTYPE indexpage SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.zh-cn.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1050960:1221670 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1050960:1328348 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 8c327850cd48cc43784e53bb7d087748b08a57c3..b84a47ec8a7b5bd056057a9884d64fb54d3ab63f 100644 (file)
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>\r
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">\r
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-      -->\r
-<title>Performance Scaling\r
-     - Apache HTTP Server</title>\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />\r
-<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>\r
-<body id="manual-page"><div id="page-header">\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>\r
-<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>\r
-<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>\r
-<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div id="path">\r
-<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>Performance Scaling\r
-    </h1>\r
-<div class="toplang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/misc/perf-scaling.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div>\r
-\r
-        \r
-        <p>The Performance Tuning page in the Apache 1.3 documentation says: \r
-        </p>\r
-        <ul>\r
-            <li>&#8220;Apache is a general webserver, which is designed to be\r
-                correct first, and fast\r
-                second. Even so, its performance is quite satisfactory. Most\r
-                sites have less than 10Mbits of outgoing bandwidth, which\r
-                Apache can fill using only a low end Pentium-based\r
-                webserver.&#8221; \r
-            </li>\r
-        </ul>\r
-        <p>However, this sentence was written a few years ago, and in the\r
-            meantime several things have happened. On one hand, web server\r
-            hardware has become much faster. On the other hand, many sites now\r
-            are allowed much more than ten megabits per second of outgoing\r
-            bandwidth. In addition, web applications have become more complex.\r
-            The classic brochureware site is alive and well, but the web has\r
-            grown up substantially as a computing application platform and\r
-            webmasters may find themselves running dynamic content in Perl, PHP\r
-            or Java, all of which take a toll on performance. \r
-        </p>\r
-        <p>Therefore, in spite of strides forward in machine speed and\r
-            bandwidth allowances, web server performance and web application\r
-            performance remain areas of concern. In this documentation several\r
-            aspects of web server performance will be discussed. \r
-        </p>\r
-        \r
-    </div>\r
-<div id="quickview"><ul id="toc"><li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#What Will and Will Not Be Discussed">What Will and Will Not Be Discussed\r
-        </a></li>\r
-<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Monitoring Your Server">Monitoring Your Server\r
-        </a></li>\r
-<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Configuring for Performance">Configuring for Performance\r
-        </a></li>\r
-<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Caching Content">Caching Content\r
-        </a></li>\r
-<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Further Considerations">Further Considerations\r
-        </a></li>\r
-</ul></div>\r
-<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="What Will and Will Not Be Discussed" id="What Will and Will Not Be Discussed">What Will and Will Not Be Discussed\r
-        </a></h2>\r
-        \r
-        <p>The session will focus on easily accessible configuration and tuning\r
-            options for Apache httpd 2.2 and 2.3 as well as monitoring tools.\r
-            Monitoring tools will allow you to observe your web server to\r
-            gather information about its performance, or lack thereof.\r
-            We'll assume that you don't have an unlimited budget for\r
-            server hardware, so the existing infrastructure will have to do the\r
-            job. You have no desire to compile your own Apache, or to recompile\r
-            the operating system kernel. We do assume, though, that you have\r
-            some familiarity with the Apache httpd configuration file. \r
-        </p>\r
-        \r
-    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="Monitoring Your Server" id="Monitoring Your Server">Monitoring Your Server\r
-        </a></h2>\r
-        \r
-        <p>The first task when sizing or performance-tuning your server is to\r
-            find out how your system is currently performing. By monitoring\r
-            your server under real-world load, or artificially generated load,\r
-            you can extrapolate its behavior under stress, such as when your\r
-            site is mentioned on Slashdot. \r
-        </p>\r
-        \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Monitoring Tools" id="Monitoring Tools">Monitoring Tools\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="top" id="top">top\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The top tool ships with Linux and FreeBSD. Solaris offers\r
-                    `prstat'. It collects a number of statistics for the\r
-                    system and for each running process, then displays them\r
-                    interactively on your terminal. The data displayed is\r
-                    refreshed every second and varies by platform, but\r
-                    typically includes system load average, number of processes\r
-                    and their current states, the percent CPU(s) time spent\r
-                    executing user and system code, and the state of the\r
-                    virtual memory system. The data displayed for each process\r
-                    is typically configurable and includes its process name and\r
-                    ID, priority and nice values, memory footprint, and\r
-                    percentage CPU usage. The following example shows multiple\r
-                    httpd processes (with MPM worker and event) running on an\r
-                    Linux (Xen) system: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    top - 23:10:58 up 71 days,  6:14,  4 users,  load average:\r
-                    0.25, 0.53, 0.47<br />\r
-                    Tasks: 163 total,   1 running, 162 sleeping,   0 stopped,  \r
-                    0 zombie<br />\r
-                    Cpu(s): 11.6%us,  0.7%sy,  0.0%ni, 87.3%id,  0.4%wa, \r
-                    0.0%hi,  0.0%si,  0.0%st<br />\r
-                    Mem:   2621656k total,  2178684k used,   442972k free,  \r
-                    100500k buffers<br />\r
-                    Swap:  4194296k total,   860584k used,  3333712k free, \r
-                    1157552k cached<br />\r
-                    <br />\r
-                    PID USER      PR  NI  VIRT  RES  SHR S %CPU %MEM    TIME+ \r
-                    COMMAND<br />\r
-                    16687 example_  20   0 1200m 547m 179m S   45 21.4  \r
-                    1:09.59 httpd-worker<br />\r
-                    15195 www       20   0  441m  33m 2468 S    0  1.3  \r
-                    0:41.41 httpd-worker<br />\r
-                    1 root      20   0 10312  328  308 S    0  0.0   0:33.17\r
-                    init<br />\r
-                    2 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00\r
-                    kthreadd<br />\r
-                    3 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.14\r
-                    migration/0<br />\r
-                    4 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:04.58\r
-                    ksoftirqd/0<br />\r
-                    5 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   4:45.89\r
-                    watchdog/0<br />\r
-                    6 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:42.52\r
-                    events/0<br />\r
-                    7 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00\r
-                    khelper<br />\r
-                    19 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00\r
-                    xenwatch<br />\r
-                    20 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00\r
-                    xenbus<br />\r
-                    28 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.14\r
-                    migration/1<br />\r
-                    29 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.20\r
-                    ksoftirqd/1<br />\r
-                    30 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:05.96\r
-                    watchdog/1<br />\r
-                    31 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:18.35\r
-                    events/1<br />\r
-                    32 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.08\r
-                    migration/2<br />\r
-                    33 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.18\r
-                    ksoftirqd/2<br />\r
-                    34 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.00\r
-                    watchdog/2<br />\r
-                    35 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:08.39\r
-                    events/2<br />\r
-                    36 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.10\r
-                    migration/3<br />\r
-                    37 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.16\r
-                    ksoftirqd/3<br />\r
-                    38 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.08\r
-                    watchdog/3<br />\r
-                    39 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:22.81\r
-                    events/3<br />\r
-                    68 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.28\r
-                    kblockd/0<br />\r
-                    69 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.04\r
-                    kblockd/1<br />\r
-                    70 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.04\r
-                    kblockd/2\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Top is a wonderful tool even though it&#8217;s slightly resource\r
-                    intensive (when running, its own process is usually in the\r
-                    top ten CPU gluttons). It is indispensable in determining\r
-                    the size of a running process, which comes in handy when\r
-                    determining how many server processes you can run on your\r
-                    machine. How to do this is described in '<a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingUp#S">\r
-                        sizing MaxClients\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    '. Top is, however, an interactive tool and running it\r
-                    continuously has few if any advantages. \r
-                </p>\r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="free" id="free">free\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This command is only available on Linux. It shows how much\r
-                    memory and swap space is in use. Linux allocates unused\r
-                    memory as file system cache. The free command shows usage\r
-                    both with and without this cache. The free command can be\r
-                    used to find out how much memory the operating system is\r
-                    using, as described in the paragraph '<a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingUp#S">\r
-                        Sizing MaxClients\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    '. The output of free looks like this: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    sctemme@brutus:~$ free<br />\r
-                    total       used     free   shared    buffers    cached<br />\r
-                    Mem:        4026028    3901892   124136         0    253144\r
-                       841044<br />\r
-                    -/+ buffers/cache:     2807704  1218324<br />\r
-                    Swap:       3903784      12540  3891244\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="vmstat" id="vmstat">vmstat\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This command is available on many unix platforms. It\r
-                    displays a large number of operating system metrics. Run\r
-                    without argument, it displays a status line for that\r
-                    moment. When a numeric argument is added, the status is\r
-                    redisplayed at designated intervals. For example, <code>\r
-                        vmstat 5\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    causes the information to reappear every five seconds.\r
-                    Vmstat displays the amount of virtual memory in use, how\r
-                    much memory is swapped in and out each second, the number\r
-                    of processes currently running and sleeping, the number of\r
-                    interrupts and context switches per second and the usage\r
-                    percentages of the CPU. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    The following is <code>vmstat\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    output of an idle server: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    [sctemme@GayDeceiver sctemme]$ vmstat 5 3<br />\r
-                    procs                      memory     swap         io   \r
-                    system        cpu<br />\r
-                    r b w     swpd   free   buff cache si so       bi    bo in \r
-                       cs us  sy i<br />\r
-                    0 0 0        0 186252   6688 37516    0    0   12     5 47 \r
-                      311  0   1 9<br />\r
-                    0 0 0        0 186244   6696 37516    0    0    0    16 41 \r
-                      314  0   0 10<br />\r
-                    0 0 0        0 186236   6704 37516    0    0    0     9 44 \r
-                      314  0   0 100\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>And this is output of a server that is under a load of one\r
-                    hundred simultaneous connections fetching static content: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    sctemme@GayDeceiver sctemme]$ vmstat 5 3<br />\r
-                    procs                      memory     swap    io     \r
-                    system       cpu<br />\r
-                    r b w     swpd   free   buff cache si so     bi bo   in    \r
-                    cs us sy  id<br />\r
-                    1 0 1        0 162580   6848 40056    0    0 11  5 150    \r
-                    324  1  1  98<br />\r
-                    6 0 1        0 163280   6856 40248    0    0  0 66 6384\r
-                    1117   42 25  32<br />\r
-                    11 0 0        0 162780   6864 40436    0    0  0 61 6309\r
-                    1165   33 28  40\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The first line gives averages since the last reboot. The\r
-                    subsequent lines give information for five second\r
-                    intervals. The second argument tells vmstat to generate\r
-                    three reports and then exit. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="SE Toolkit" id="SE Toolkit">SE Toolkit\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The SE Toolkit is a system monitoring toolkit for Solaris.\r
-                    Its programming language is based on the C preprocessor and\r
-                    comes with a number of sample scripts. It can use both the\r
-                    command line and the GUI to display information. It can\r
-                    also be programmed to apply rules to the system data. The\r
-                    example script shown in Figure 2, Zoom.se, shows green,\r
-                    orange or red indicators when utilization of various parts\r
-                    of the system rises above certain thresholds. Another\r
-                    included script, Virtual Adrian, applies performance tuning\r
-                    metrics according to. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>The SE Toolkit has drifted around for a while and has had\r
-                    several owners since its inception. It seems that it has\r
-                    now found a final home at Sunfreeware.com, where it can be\r
-                    downloaded at no charge. There is a single package for\r
-                    Solaris 8, 9 and 10 on SPARC and x86, and includes source\r
-                    code. SE Toolkit author Richard Pettit has started a new\r
-                    company, Captive Metrics4 that plans to bring to market a\r
-                    multiplatform monitoring tool built on the same principles\r
-                    as SE Toolkit, written in Java. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="DTrace" id="DTrace">DTrace\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Given that DTrace is available for Solaris, FreeBSD and OS\r
-                    X, it might be worth exploring it. There's also\r
-                    mod_dtrace available for httpd. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="mod_status" id="mod_status">mod_status\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The mod_status module gives an overview of the server\r
-                    performance at a given moment. It generates an HTML page\r
-                    with, among others, the number of Apache processes running\r
-                    and how many bytes each has served, and the CPU load caused\r
-                    by httpd and the rest of the system. The Apache Software\r
-                    Foundation uses mod_status on its own <a href="http://apache.org/server-status">\r
-                        web site\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    .If you put the <code>ExtendedStatus On\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive in your <code>httpd.conf\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,the <code>mod_status\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    page will give you more information at the cost of a little\r
-                    extra work per request. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Web Server Log Files" id="Web Server Log Files">Web Server Log Files\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>Monitoring and analyzing the log files httpd writes is one of\r
-                the most effective ways to keep track of your server health and\r
-                performance. Monitoring the error log allows you to detect\r
-                error conditions, discover attacks and find performance issues.\r
-                Analyzing the access logs tells you how busy your server is,\r
-                which resources are the most popular and where your users come\r
-                from. Historical log file data can give you invaluable insight\r
-                into trends in access to your server, which allows you to\r
-                predict when your performance needs will overtake your server\r
-                capacity. \r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Error Log" id="Error Log">Error Log\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The error log will contain messages if the server has\r
-                    reached the maximum number of active processes or the\r
-                    maximum number of concurrently open files. The error log\r
-                    also reflects when processes are being spawned at a\r
-                    higher-than-usual rate in response to a sudden increase in\r
-                    load. When the server starts, the stderr file descriptor is\r
-                    redirected to the error logfile, so any error encountered\r
-                    by httpd after it opens its logfiles will appear in this\r
-                    log. This makes it good practice to review the error log\r
-                    frequently. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Before Apache httpd opens its logfiles, any errors will be\r
-                    written to the stderr stream. If you start httpd manually,\r
-                    this error information will appear on your terminal and you\r
-                    can use it directly to troubleshoot your server. If your\r
-                    httpd is started by a startup script, the destination of\r
-                    early error messages depends on their design. The <code>\r
-                        /var/log/messages\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    file is usually a good bet. On Windows, early error\r
-                    messages are written to the Applications Event Log, which\r
-                    can be viewed through the Event Viewer in Administrative\r
-                    Tools. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    The Error Log is configured through the <code>ErrorLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and <code>LogLevel\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    configuration directives. The error log of httpd&#8217;s main\r
-                    server configuration receives the log messages that pertain\r
-                    to the entire server: startup, shutdown, crashes, excessive\r
-                    process spawns, etc. The <code>ErrorLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive can also be used in virtual host containers. The\r
-                    error log of a virtual host receives only log messages\r
-                    specific to that virtual host, such as authentication\r
-                    failures and 'File not Found' errors. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>On a server that is visible to the Internet, expect to see a\r
-                    lot of exploit attempt and worm attacks in the error log. A\r
-                    lot of these will be targeted at other server platforms\r
-                    instead of Apache, but the current state of affairs is that\r
-                    attack scripts just throw everything they have at any open\r
-                    port, regardless of which server is actually running or\r
-                    what applications might be installed. You could block these\r
-                    attempts using a firewall or <a href="http://www.modsecurity.org/">\r
-                        mod_security\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    ,but this falls outside the scope of this discussion. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    The <code>LogLevel\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive determines the level of detail included in the\r
-                    logs. There are eight log levels as described here: \r
-                </p>\r
-                <table>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p>\r
-                                 <strong>Level\r
-                                </strong>\r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p>\r
-                                 <strong>Description\r
-                                </strong>\r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> emerg \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Emergencies - system is unusable. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> alert \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Action must be taken immediately. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> crit \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Critical Conditions. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> error \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Error conditions. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> warn \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Warning conditions. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> notice \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Normal but significant condition. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> info \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Informational. \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> debug \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Debug-level messages \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                </table>\r
-                <p>The default log level is warn. A production server should\r
-                    not be run on debug, but increasing the level of detail in\r
-                    the error log can be useful during troubleshooting.\r
-                    Starting with 2.3.8 <code>LogLevel\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    can be specified on a per module basis: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    LogLevel debug mod_ssl:warn\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    This puts all of the server in debug mode, except for <code>\r
-                        mod_ssl\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,which tends to be very noisy. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Access Log" id="Access Log">Access Log\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Apache httpd keeps track of every request it services in its\r
-                    access log file. In addition to the time and nature of a\r
-                    request, httpd can log the client IP address, date and time\r
-                    of the request, the result and a host of other information.\r
-                    The various logging format features are documented in the <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/core.html#loglevel">\r
-                        manual\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    .This file exists by default for the main server and can be\r
-                    configured per virtual host by using the <code>TransferLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    or <code>CustomLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    configuration directive. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>The access logs can be analyzed with any of several free and\r
-                    commercially available programs. Popular free analysis\r
-                    packages include Analog and Webalizer. Log analysis should\r
-                    be done offline so the web server machine is not burdened\r
-                    by processing the log files. Most log analysis packages\r
-                    understand the Common Log Format. The fields in the log\r
-                    lines are explained in in the following: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    195.54.228.42 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:05:11 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/feed/ HTTP/1.1" 200 9747<br />\r
-                    64.34.165.214 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:10:11 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/feed/atom HTTP/1.1" 200 9068<br />\r
-                    60.28.164.72 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:11:41 -0400] "GET /\r
-                    HTTP/1.0" 200 618<br />\r
-                    85.140.155.56 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:14:12 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/2006/09/27/44/ HTTP/1.1" 200 14172<br />\r
-                    85.140.155.56 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:14:15 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/2006/09/21/gore-tax-pollution/ HTTP/1.1" 200 15147<br />\r
-                    74.6.72.187 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:18:11 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/2006/09/27/44/ HTTP/1.0" 200 14172<br />\r
-                    74.6.72.229 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:24:22 -0400] "GET\r
-                    /sander/2006/11/21/os-java/ HTTP/1.0" 200 13457\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <table>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p>\r
-                                 <strong>Field\r
-                                </strong>\r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p>\r
-                                 <strong>Content\r
-                                </strong>\r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p>\r
-                                 <strong>Explanation\r
-                                </strong>\r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Client IP \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> 195.54.228.42 \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> IP address where the request originated \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> RFC 1413 ident \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> -  \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Remote user identity as reported by their\r
-                                identd \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> username \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> -   \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Remote username as authenticated by Apache \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> timestamp \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> [24/Mar/2007:23:05:11 -0400] \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Date and time of request \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Request \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> "GET /sander/feed/ HTTP/1.1"  \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Request line \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Status Code \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> 200  \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Response code \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                    <tr>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Content Bytes \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> 9747 \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                        <td>\r
-                            <p> Bytes transferred w/o headers \r
-                            </p>\r
-                        </td>\r
-                    </tr>\r
-                </table>\r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Rotating Log Files" id="Rotating Log Files">Rotating Log Files\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>There are several reasons to rotate logfiles. Even though\r
-                    almost no operating systems out there have a hard file size\r
-                    limit of two Gigabytes anymore, log files simply become too\r
-                    large to handle over time. Additionally, any periodic log\r
-                    file analysis should not be performed on files to which the\r
-                    server is actively writing. Periodic logfile rotation helps\r
-                    keep the analysis job manageable, and allows you to keep a\r
-                    closer eye on usage trends. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>On unix systems, you can simply rotate logfiles by giving\r
-                    the old file a new name using mv. The server will keep\r
-                    writing to the open file even though it has a new name.\r
-                    When you send a graceful restart signal to the server, it\r
-                    will open a new logfile with the configured name. For\r
-                    example, you could run a script from cron like this: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    APACHE=/usr/local/apache2<br />\r
-                    HTTPD=$APACHE/bin/httpd<br />\r
-                    mv $APACHE/logs/access_log\r
-                    $APACHE/logarchive/access_log-&#8216;date +%F&#8216;<br />\r
-                    $HTTPD -k graceful\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This approach also works on Windows, just not as smoothly.\r
-                    While the httpd process on your Windows server will keep\r
-                    writing to the log file after it has been renamed, the\r
-                    Windows Service that runs Apache can not do a graceful\r
-                    restart. Restarting a Service on Windows means stopping it\r
-                    and then starting it again. The advantage of a graceful\r
-                    restart is that the httpd child processes get to complete\r
-                    responding to their current requests before they exit.\r
-                    Meanwhile, the httpd server becomes immediately available\r
-                    again to serve new requests. The stop-start that the\r
-                    Windows Service has to perform will interrupt any requests\r
-                    currently in progress, and the server is unavailable until\r
-                    it is started again. Plan for this when you decide the\r
-                    timing of your restarts. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    A second approach is to use piped logs. From the <code>\r
-                        CustomLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,<code>TransferLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    or <code>ErrorLog\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directives you can send the log data into any program using\r
-                    a pipe character (<code>|\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ). For instance: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>CustomLog "|/usr/local/apache2/bin/rotatelogs\r
-                    /var/log/access_log 86400" common\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The program on the other end of the pipe will receive the\r
-                    Apache log data on its stdin stream, and can do with this\r
-                    data whatever it wants. The rotatelogs program that comes\r
-                    with Apache seamlessly turns over the log file based on\r
-                    time elapsed or the amount of data written, and leaves the\r
-                    old log files with a timestamp suffix to its name. This\r
-                    method for rotating logfiles works well on unix platforms,\r
-                    but is currently broken on Windows. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Logging and Performance" id="Logging and Performance">Logging and Performance\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Writing entries to the Apache log files obviously takes some\r
-                    effort, but the information gathered from the logs is so\r
-                    valuable that under normal circumstances logging should not\r
-                    be turned off. For optimal performance, you should put your\r
-                    disk-based site content on a different physical disk than\r
-                    the server log files: the access patterns are very\r
-                    different. Retrieving content from disk is a read operation\r
-                    in a fairly random pattern, and log files are written to\r
-                    disk sequentially. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    Do not run a production server with your error <code>\r
-                        LogLevel\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    set to debug. This log level causes a vast amount of\r
-                    information to be written to the error log, including, in\r
-                    the case of SSL access, complete dumps of BIO read and\r
-                    write operations. The performance implications are\r
-                    significant: use the default warn level instead. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>If your server has more than one virtual host, you may give\r
-                    each virtual host a separate access logfile. This makes it\r
-                    easier to analyze the logfile later. However, if your\r
-                    server has many virtual hosts, all the open logfiles put a\r
-                    resource burden on your system, and it may be preferable to\r
-                    log to a single file. Use the <code>%v\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    format character at the start of your <a href="/httpd/LogFormat" class="nonexistent">\r
-                        LogFormat\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    and starting 2.3.8 of your <code>ErrorLogFormat\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    to make httpd print the hostname of the virtual host that\r
-                    received the request or the error at the beginning of each\r
-                    log line. A simple Perl script can split out the log file\r
-                    after it rotates: one is included with the Apache source\r
-                    under <code>support/split-logfile\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    .\r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    You can use the <code>BufferedLogs\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive to have Apache collect several log lines in\r
-                    memory before writing them to disk. This might yield better\r
-                    performance, but could affect the order in which the\r
-                    server's log is written. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Generating A Test Load" id="Generating A Test Load">Generating A Test Load\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>It is useful to generate a test load to monitor system\r
-                performance under realistic operating circumstances. Besides\r
-                commercial packages such as <a href="/httpd/LoadRunner" class="nonexistent">\r
-                    LoadRunner\r
-                </a>\r
-                ,there are a number of freely available tools to generate a\r
-                test load against your web server. \r
-            </p>\r
-            <ul>\r
-                <li>Apache ships with a test program called ab, short for\r
-                    Apache Bench. It can generate a web server load by\r
-                    repeatedly asking for the same file in rapid succession.\r
-                    You can specify a number of concurrent connections and have\r
-                    the program run for either a given amount of time or a\r
-                    specified number of requests. \r
-                </li>\r
-                <li>Another freely available load generator is http load11 .\r
-                    This program works with a URL file and can be compiled with\r
-                    SSL support. \r
-                </li>\r
-                <li>The Apache Software Foundation offers a tool named flood12\r
-                    . Flood is a fairly sophisticated program that is\r
-                    configured through an XML file. \r
-                </li>\r
-                <li>Finally, JMeter13 , a Jakarta subproject, is an all-Java\r
-                    load-testing tool. While early versions of this application\r
-                    were slow and difficult to use, the current version 2.1.1\r
-                    seems to be versatile and useful. \r
-                </li>\r
-                <li>\r
-                    <p>ASF external projects, that have proven to be quite\r
-                        good: grinder, httperf, tsung, <a href="/httpd/FunkLoad" class="nonexistent">\r
-                            FunkLoad\r
-                        </a>\r
-                    </p>\r
-                </li>\r
-            </ul>\r
-            <p>When you load-test your web server, please keep in mind that if\r
-                that server is in production, the test load may negatively\r
-                affect the server&#8217;s response. Also, any data traffic you\r
-                generate may be charged against your monthly traffic allowance.\r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-        \r
-    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="Configuring for Performance" id="Configuring for Performance">Configuring for Performance\r
-        </a></h2>\r
-        \r
-        \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Apache Configuration" id="Apache Configuration">Apache Configuration\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>The Apache 2.2 httpd is by default a pre-forking web server.\r
-                When the server starts, the parent process spawns a number of\r
-                child processes that do the actual work of servicing requests.\r
-                But Apache httpd 2.0 introduced the concept of the\r
-                Multi-Processing Module (MPM). Developers can write MPMs to\r
-                suit the process- or threadingarchitecture of their specific\r
-                operating system. Apache 2 comes with special MPMs for Windows,\r
-                OS/2, Netware and BeOS. On unix-like platforms, the two most\r
-                popular MPMs are Prefork and Worker. The Prefork MPM offers the\r
-                same pre-forking process model that Apache 1.3 uses. The Worker\r
-                MPM runs a smaller number of child processes, and spawns\r
-                multiple request handling threads within each child process. In\r
-                2.3+ MPMs are no longer hard-wired. They too can be exchanged\r
-                via <a href="/httpd/LoadModule" class="nonexistent">LoadModule\r
-                </a>\r
-                .The default MPM in 2.3 is the event MPM. \r
-            </p>\r
-            <p>The maximum number of workers, be they pre-forked child\r
-                processes or threads within a process, is an indication of how\r
-                many requests your server can manage concurrently. It is merely\r
-                a rough estimate because the kernel can queue connection\r
-                attempts for your web server. When your site becomes busy and\r
-                the maximum number of workers is running, the machine\r
-                doesn't hit a hard limit beyond which clients will be\r
-                denied access. However, once requests start backing up, system\r
-                performance is likely to degrade. \r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="MaxClients" id="MaxClients">MaxClients\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    The <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive in your Apache httpd configuration file specifies\r
-                    the maximum number of workers your server can create. It\r
-                    has two related directives, <code>MinSpareServers\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and <code>MaxSpareServers\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,which specify the number of workers Apache keeps waiting\r
-                    in the wings ready to serve requests. The absolute maximum\r
-                    number of processes is configurable through the <code>\r
-                        ServerLimit\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Spinning Threads" id="Spinning Threads">Spinning Threads\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>For the prefork MPM of the above directives are all there is\r
-                    to determining the process limit. However, if you are\r
-                    running a threaded MPM the situation is a little more\r
-                    complicated. Threaded MPMs support the <code>\r
-                        ThreadsPerChild\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive1 . Apache requires that <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    is evenly divisible by <code>ThreadsPerChild\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    .If you set either directive to a number that doesn&#8217;t\r
-                    meet this requirement, Apache will send a message of\r
-                    complaint to the error log and adjust the <code>\r
-                        ThreadsPerChild\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    value downwards until it is an even factor of <code>\r
-                        MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    .\r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Sizing MaxClients" id="Sizing MaxClients">Sizing MaxClients\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Optimally, the maximum number of processes should be set so\r
-                    that all the memory on your system is used, but no more. If\r
-                    your system gets so overloaded that it needs to heavily\r
-                    swap core memory out to disk, performance will degrade\r
-                    quickly. The formula for determining <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    is fairly simple: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    total RAM &#8722; RAM for OS &#8722; RAM for external programs<br />\r
-                    MaxClients =\r
-                    -------------------------------------------------------<br />\r
-                    RAM per httpd process\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The various amounts of memory allocated for the OS, external\r
-                    programs and the httpd processes is best determined by\r
-                    observation: use the top and free commands described above\r
-                    to determine the memory footprint of the OS without the web\r
-                    server running. You can also determine the footprint of a\r
-                    typical web server process from top: most top\r
-                    implementations have a Resident Size (RSS) column and a\r
-                    Shared Memory column. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>The difference between these two is the amount of memory\r
-                    per-process. The shared segment really exists only once and\r
-                    is used for the code and libraries loaded and the dynamic\r
-                    inter-process tally, or 'scoreboard,' that Apache\r
-                    keeps. How much memory each process takes for itself\r
-                    depends heavily on the number and kind of modules you use.\r
-                    The best approach to use in determining this need is to\r
-                    generate a typical test load against your web site and see\r
-                    how large the httpd processes become. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>The RAM for external programs parameter is intended mostly\r
-                    for CGI programs and scripts that run outside the web\r
-                    server process. However, if you have a Java virtual machine\r
-                    running Tomcat on the same box it will need a significant\r
-                    amount of memory as well. The above assessment should give\r
-                    you an idea how far you can push <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,but it is not an exact science. When in doubt, be\r
-                    conservative and use a low <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    value. The Linux kernel will put extra memory to good use\r
-                    for caching disk access. On Solaris you need enough\r
-                    available real RAM memory to create any process. If no real\r
-                    memory is available, httpd will start writing &#8216;No space\r
-                    left on device&#8217; messages to the error log and be unable\r
-                    to fork additional child processes, so a higher <code>\r
-                        MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    value may actually be a disadvantage. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Selecting your MPM" id="Selecting your MPM">Selecting your MPM\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The prime reason for selecting a threaded MPM is that\r
-                    threads consume fewer system resources than processes, and\r
-                    it takes less effort for the system to switch between\r
-                    threads. This is more true for some operating systems than\r
-                    for others. On systems like Solaris and AIX, manipulating\r
-                    processes is relatively expensive in terms of system\r
-                    resources. On these systems, running a threaded MPM makes\r
-                    sense. On Linux, the threading implementation actually uses\r
-                    one process for each thread. Linux processes are relatively\r
-                    lightweight, but it means that a threaded MPM offers less\r
-                    of a performance advantage than in other environments. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Running a threaded MPM can cause stability problems in some\r
-                    situations For instance, should a child process of a\r
-                    preforked MPM crash, at most one client connection is\r
-                    affected. However, if a threaded child crashes, all the\r
-                    threads in that process disappear, which means all the\r
-                    clients currently being served by that process will see\r
-                    their connection aborted. Additionally, there may be\r
-                    so-called "thread-safety" issues, especially with\r
-                    third-party libraries. In threaded applications, threads\r
-                    may access the same variables indiscriminately, not knowing\r
-                    whether a variable may have been changed by another thread.\r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>This has been a sore point within the PHP community. The PHP\r
-                    processor heavily relies on third-party libraries and\r
-                    cannot guarantee that all of these are thread-safe. The\r
-                    good news is that if you are running Apache on Linux, you\r
-                    can run PHP in the preforked MPM without fear of losing too\r
-                    much performance relative to the threaded option. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Spinning Locks" id="Spinning Locks">Spinning Locks\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Apache httpd maintains an inter-process lock around its\r
-                    network listener. For all practical purposes, this means\r
-                    that only one httpd child process can receive a request at\r
-                    any given time. The other processes are either servicing\r
-                    requests already received or are 'camping out' on\r
-                    the lock, waiting for the network listener to become\r
-                    available. This process is best visualized as a revolving\r
-                    door, with only one process allowed in the door at any\r
-                    time. On a heavily loaded web server with requests arriving\r
-                    constantly, the door spins quickly and requests are\r
-                    accepted at a steady rate. On a lightly loaded web server,\r
-                    the process that currently "holds" the lock may\r
-                    have to stay in the door for a while, during which all the\r
-                    other processes sit idle, waiting to acquire the lock. At\r
-                    this time, the parent process may decide to terminate some\r
-                    children based on its <code>MaxSpareServers\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="The Thundering Herd" id="The Thundering Herd">The Thundering Herd\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The function of the 'accept mutex' (as this\r
-                    inter-process lock is called) is to keep request reception\r
-                    moving along in an orderly fashion. If the lock is absent,\r
-                    the server may exhibit the Thundering Herd syndrome. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Consider an American Football team poised on the line of\r
-                    scrimmage. If the football players were Apache processes\r
-                    all team members would go for the ball simultaneously at\r
-                    the snap. One process would get it, and all the others\r
-                    would have to lumber back to the line for the next snap. In\r
-                    this metaphor, the accept mutex acts as the quarterback,\r
-                    delivering the connection "ball" to the\r
-                    appropriate player process. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Moving this much information around is obviously a lot of\r
-                    work, and, like a smart person, a smart web server tries to\r
-                    avoid it whenever possible. Hence the revolving door\r
-                    construction. In recent years, many operating systems,\r
-                    including Linux and Solaris, have put code in place to\r
-                    prevent the Thundering Herd syndrome. Apache recognizes\r
-                    this and if you run with just one network listener, meaning\r
-                    one virtual host or just the main server, Apache will\r
-                    refrain from using an accept mutex. If you run with\r
-                    multiple listeners (for instance because you have a virtual\r
-                    host serving SSL requests), it will activate the accept\r
-                    mutex to avoid internal conflicts. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    You can manipulate the accept mutex with the <code>\r
-                        AcceptMutex\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive. Besides turning the accept mutex off, you can\r
-                    select the locking mechanism. Common locking mechanisms\r
-                    include fcntl, System V Semaphores and pthread locking. Not\r
-                    all are available on every platform, and their availability\r
-                    also depends on compile-time settings. The various locking\r
-                    mechanisms may place specific demands on system resources:\r
-                    manipulate them with care. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>There is no compelling reason to disable the accept mutex.\r
-                    Apache automatically recognizes the single listener\r
-                    situation described above and knows if it is safe to run\r
-                    without mutex on your platform. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Tuning the Operating System" id="Tuning the Operating System">Tuning the Operating System\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>People often look for the 'magic tune-up' that will\r
-                make their system perform four times as fast by tweaking just\r
-                one little setting. The truth is, present-day UNIX derivatives\r
-                are pretty well adjusted straight out of the box and there is\r
-                not a lot that needs to be done to make them perform optimally.\r
-                However, there are a few things that an administrator can do to\r
-                improve performance. \r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="RAM and Swap Space" id="RAM and Swap Space">RAM and Swap Space\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>The usual mantra regarding RAM is "more is\r
-                    better". As discussed above, unused RAM is put to good\r
-                    use as file system cache. The Apache processes get bigger\r
-                    if you load more modules, especially if you use modules\r
-                    that generate dynamic page content within the processes,\r
-                    like PHP and mod_perl. A large configuration file-with many\r
-                    virtual hosts-also tends to inflate the process footprint.\r
-                    Having ample RAM allows you to run Apache with more child\r
-                    processes, which allows the server to process more\r
-                    concurrent requests. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>While the various platforms treat their virtual memory in\r
-                    different ways, it is never a good idea to run with less\r
-                    disk-based swap space than RAM. The virtual memory system\r
-                    is designed to provide a fallback for RAM, but when you\r
-                    don't have disk space available and run out of\r
-                    swappable memory, your machine grinds to a halt. This can\r
-                    crash your box, requiring a physical reboot for which your\r
-                    hosting facility may charge you. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Also, such an outage naturally occurs when you least want\r
-                    it: when the world has found your website and is beating a\r
-                    path to your door. If you have enough disk-based swap space\r
-                    available and the machine gets overloaded, it may get very,\r
-                    very slow as the system needs to swap memory pages to disk\r
-                    and back, but when the load decreases the system should\r
-                    recover. Remember, you still have <code>MaxClients\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    to keep things in hand. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Most unix-like operating systems use designated disk\r
-                    partitions for swap space. When a system starts up it finds\r
-                    all swap partitions on the disk(s), by partition type or\r
-                    because they are listed in the file <code>/etc/fstab\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ,and automatically enables them. When adding a disk or\r
-                    installing the operating system, be sure to allocate enough\r
-                    swap space to accommodate eventual RAM upgrades.\r
-                    Reassigning disk space on a running system is a cumbersome\r
-                    process. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Plan for available hard drive swap space of at least twice\r
-                    your amount of RAM, perhaps up to four times in situations\r
-                    with frequent peaking loads. Remember to adjust this\r
-                    configuration whenever you upgrade RAM on your system. In a\r
-                    pinch, you can use a regular file as swap space. For\r
-                    instructions on how to do this, see the manual pages for\r
-                    the <code>mkswap\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and <code>swapon\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    or <code>swap\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    programs. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="ulimit: Files and Processes" id="ulimit: Files and Processes">ulimit: Files and Processes\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Given a machine with plenty of RAM and processor capacity,\r
-                    you can run hundreds of Apache processes if necessary. . .\r
-                    and if your kernel allows it. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Consider a situation in which several hundred web servers\r
-                    are running; if some of these need to spawn CGI processes,\r
-                    the maximum number of processes would occur quickly. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>However, you can change this limit with the command \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    ulimit [-H|-S] -u [newvalue]\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This must be changed before starting the server, since the\r
-                    new value will only be available to the current shell and\r
-                    programs started from it. In newer Linux kernels the\r
-                    default has been raised to 2048. On FreeBSD, the number\r
-                    seems to be the rather unusual 513. In the default user\r
-                    shell on this system, <code>csh\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    the equivalent is <code>limit\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and works analogous the the Bourne-like <code>ulimit\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    :\r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    limit [-h] maxproc [newvalue]\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Similarly, the kernel may limit the number of open files per\r
-                    process. This is generally not a problem for pre-forked\r
-                    servers, which just handle one request at a time per\r
-                    process. Threaded servers, however, serve many requests per\r
-                    process and much more easily run out of available file\r
-                    descriptors. You can increase the maximum number of open\r
-                    files per process by running the \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>ulimit -n [newvalue]\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>command. Once again, this must be done prior to starting\r
-                    Apache. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Setting User Limits on System Startup" id="Setting User Limits on System Startup">Setting User Limits on System Startup\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Under Linux, you can set the ulimit parameters on bootup by\r
-                    editing the <code>/etc/security/limits.conf\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    file. This file allows you to set soft and hard limits on a\r
-                    per-user or per-group basis; the file contains commentary\r
-                    explaining the options. To enable this, make sure that the\r
-                    file <code>/etc/pam.d/login\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    contains the line \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>session required /lib/security/pam_limits.so\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>All items can have a 'soft' and a 'hard'\r
-                    limit: the first is the default setting and the second the\r
-                    maximum value for that item. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    In FreeBSD's <code>/etc/login.conf\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    these resources can be limited or extended system wide,\r
-                    analogously to <code>limits.conf\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    .'Soft' limits can be specified with <code>-cur\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and 'hard' limits with <code>-max\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    .\r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Solaris has a similar mechanism for manipulating limit\r
-                    values at boot time: In <code>/etc/system\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    you can set kernel tunables valid for the entire system at\r
-                    boot time. These are the same tunables that can be set with\r
-                    the <code>mdb\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    kernel debugger during run time. The soft and hard limit\r
-                    corresponding to ulimit -u can be set via: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    set rlim_fd_max=65536<br />\r
-                    set rlim_fd_cur=2048\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Solaris calculates the maximum number of allowed processes\r
-                    per user (<code>maxuprc\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    )based on the total amount available memory on the system (<code>\r
-                        maxusers\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    ). You can review the numbers with \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>sysdef -i | grep maximum\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>but it is not recommended to change them. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Turn Off Unused Services and Modules" id="Turn Off Unused Services and Modules">Turn Off Unused Services and Modules\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>Many UNIX and Linux distributions come with a slew of\r
-                    services turned on by default. You probably need few of\r
-                    them. For example, your web server does not need to be\r
-                    running sendmail, nor is it likely to be an NFS server,\r
-                    etc. Turn them off. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>On Red Hat Linux, the chkconfig tool will help you do this\r
-                    from the command line. On Solaris systems <code>svcs\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and <code>svcadm\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    will show which services are enabled and disable them\r
-                    respectively. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>In a similar fashion, cast a critical eye on the Apache\r
-                    modules you load. Most binary distributions of Apache\r
-                    httpd, and pre-installed versions that come with Linux\r
-                    distributions, have their modules enabled through the <code>\r
-                        LoadModule\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Unused modules may be culled: if you don't rely on\r
-                    their functionality and configuration directives, you can\r
-                    turn them off by commenting out the corresponding <code>\r
-                        LoadModule\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    lines. Read the documentation on each module&#8217;s\r
-                    functionality before deciding whether to keep it enabled.\r
-                    While the performance overhead of an unused module is\r
-                    small, it's also unnecessary. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="Caching Content" id="Caching Content">Caching Content\r
-        </a></h2>\r
-        \r
-        <p>Requests for dynamically generated content usually take\r
-            significantly more resources than requests for static content.\r
-            Static content consists of simple filespages, images, etc.-on disk\r
-            that are very efficiently served. Many operating systems also\r
-            automatically cache the contents of frequently accessed files in\r
-            memory. \r
-        </p>\r
-        <p>Processing dynamic requests, on the contrary, can be much more\r
-            involved. Running CGI scripts, handing off requests to an external\r
-            application server and accessing database content can introduce\r
-            significant latency and processing load to a busy web server. Under\r
-            many circumstances, performance can be improved by turning popular\r
-            dynamic requests into static requests. In this section, two\r
-            approaches to this will be discussed. \r
-        </p>\r
-        \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Making Popular Pages Static" id="Making Popular Pages Static">Making Popular Pages Static\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>By pre-rendering the response pages for the most popular queries\r
-                in your application, you can gain a significant performance\r
-                improvement without giving up the flexibility of dynamically\r
-                generated content. For instance, if your application is a\r
-                flower delivery service, you would probably want to pre-render\r
-                your catalog pages for red roses during the weeks leading up to\r
-                Valentine's Day. When the user searches for red roses,\r
-                they are served the pre-rendered page. Queries for, say, yellow\r
-                roses will be generated directly from the database. The\r
-                mod_rewrite module included with Apache is a great tool to\r
-                implement these substitutions. \r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Example: A Statically Rendered Blog" id="Example: A Statically Rendered Blog">Example: A Statically Rendered Blog\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    <strong>'we should provide a more useful example here.\r
-                        One showing how to make Wordpress or Drupal suck less.\r
-                    </strong>\r
-                    ' \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>Blosxom is a lightweight web log package that runs as a CGI.\r
-                    It is written in Perl and uses plain text files for entry\r
-                    input. Besides running as CGI, Blosxom can be run from the\r
-                    command line to pre-render blog pages. Pre-rendering pages\r
-                    to static HTML can yield a significant performance boost in\r
-                    the event that large numbers of people actually start\r
-                    reading your blog. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>To run blosxom for static page generation, edit the CGI\r
-                    script according to the documentation. Set the $static dir\r
-                    variable to the <code>DocumentRoot\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    of the web server, and run the script from the command line\r
-                    as follows: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>$ perl blosxom.cgi -password='whateveryourpassword'\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This can be run periodically from Cron, after you upload\r
-                    content, etc. To make Apache substitute the statically\r
-                    rendered pages for the dynamic content, we&#8217;ll use\r
-                    mod_rewrite. This module is included with the Apache source\r
-                    code, but is not compiled by default. It can be built with\r
-                    the server by passing the option <code>\r
-                        --enable-rewrite[=shared]\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    to the configure command. Many binary distributions of\r
-                    Apache come with mod_rewrite included. The following is an\r
-                    example of an Apache virtual host that takes advantage of\r
-                    pre-rendered blog pages: \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>Listen *:8001<br />\r
-                    &lt;VirtualHost *:8001&gt;<br />\r
-                    <span class="indent">\r
-                        ServerName blog.sandla.org:8001<br />\r
-                        ServerAdmin sander@temme.net<br />\r
-                        DocumentRoot "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/htdocs"<br />\r
-                        &lt;Directory\r
-                        "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/htdocs"&gt;<br />\r
-                        <span class="indent">\r
-                            Options +Indexes<br />\r
-                            Order allow,deny<br />\r
-                            Allow from all<br />\r
-                            RewriteEngine on<br />\r
-                            RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f<br />\r
-                            RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d<br />\r
-                            RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /cgi-bin/blosxom.cgi/$1 [L,QSA]<br />\r
-                        </span>\r
-                        &lt;/Directory&gt;<br />\r
-                        RewriteLog\r
-                        /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/rewrite_log<br />\r
-                        RewriteLogLevel 9<br />\r
-                        ErrorLog /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/error_log<br />\r
-                        LogLevel debug<br />\r
-                        CustomLog /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/access_log\r
-                        common<br />\r
-                        ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/sctemme/inst/blog/bin/<br />\r
-                        &lt;Directory "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/bin"&gt;<br />\r
-                        <span class="indent">\r
-                            Options +ExecCGI<br />\r
-                            Order allow,deny<br />\r
-                            Allow from all<br />\r
-                        </span>\r
-                        &lt;/Directory&gt;<br />\r
-                    </span>\r
-                    &lt;/VirtualHost&gt;\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    The <code>RewriteCond\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    and <code>RewriteRule\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directives say that, if the requested resource does not\r
-                    exist as a file or a directory, its path is passed to the\r
-                    Blosxom CGI for rendering. Blosxom uses Path Info to\r
-                    specify blog entries and index pages, so this means that if\r
-                    a particular path under Blosxom exists as a static file in\r
-                    the file system, the file is served instead. Any request\r
-                    that isn't pre- rendered is served by the CGI. This\r
-                    means that individual entries, which show the comments, are\r
-                    always served by the CGI which in turn means that your\r
-                    comment spam is always visible. This configuration also\r
-                    hides the Blosxom CGI from the user-visible URL in their\r
-                    Location bar. mod_rewrite is a fantastically powerful and\r
-                    versatile module: investigate it to arrive at a\r
-                    configuration that is best for your situation. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-        <h3><a name="Caching Content With mod_cache" id="Caching Content With mod_cache">Caching Content With mod_cache\r
-            </a></h3>\r
-            \r
-            <p>The mod_cache module provides intelligent caching of HTTP\r
-                responses: it is aware of the expiration timing and content\r
-                requirements that are part of the HTTP specification. The\r
-                mod_cache module caches URL response content. If content sent\r
-                to the client is considered cacheable, it is saved to disk.\r
-                Subsequent requests for that URL will be served directly from\r
-                the cache. The provider module for mod_cache, mod_disk_cache,\r
-                determines how the cached content is stored on disk. Most\r
-                server systems will have more disk available than memory, and\r
-                it's good to note that some operating system kernels cache\r
-                frequently accessed disk content transparently in memory, so\r
-                replicating this in the server is not very useful. \r
-            </p>\r
-            <p>To enable efficient content caching and avoid presenting the\r
-                user with stale or invalid content, the application that\r
-                generates the actual content has to send the correct response\r
-                headers. Without headers like <code>Etag:\r
-                </code>\r
-                ,<code>Last-Modified:\r
-                </code>\r
-                or <code>Expires:\r
-                </code>\r
-                ,mod_cache can not make the right decision on whether to cache\r
-                the content, serve it from cache or leave it alone. When\r
-                testing content caching, you may find that you need to modify\r
-                your application or, if this is impossible, selectively disable\r
-                caching for URLs that cause problems. The mod_cache modules are\r
-                not compiled by default, but can be enabled by passing the\r
-                option <code>--enable-cache[=shared]\r
-                </code>\r
-                to the configure script. If you use a binary distribution of\r
-                Apache httpd, or it came with your port or package collection,\r
-                it may have mod_cache already included. \r
-            </p>\r
-            \r
-            \r
-            <h4><a name="Example: wiki.apache.org" id="Example: wiki.apache.org">Example: wiki.apache.org\r
-                </a></h4>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    <strong>'Is this still the case? Maybe we should give\r
-                        a better example here too.\r
-                    </strong>\r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    The Apache Software Foundation Wiki is served by <a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">\r
-                        MoinMoin\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    .<a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">MoinMoin\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    is written in Python and runs as a CGI. To date, any\r
-                    attempts to run it under mod_python has been unsuccessful.\r
-                    The CGI proved to place an untenably high load on the\r
-                    server machine, especially when the Wiki was being indexed\r
-                    by search engines like Google. To lighten the load on the\r
-                    server machine, the Apache Infrastructure team turned to\r
-                    mod_cache. It turned out <a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">MoinMoin\r
-                    </a>\r
-                    needed a small patch to ensure proper behavior behind the\r
-                    caching server: certain requests can never be cached and\r
-                    the corresponding Python modules were patched to send the\r
-                    proper HTTP response headers. After this modification, the\r
-                    cache in front of the Wiki was enabled with the following\r
-                    configuration snippet in <code>httpd.conf\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    :\r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    CacheRoot /raid1/cacheroot<br />\r
-                    CacheEnable disk /<br />\r
-                    # A page modified 100 minutes ago will expire in 10 minutes<br />\r
-                    CacheLastModifiedFactor .1<br />\r
-                    # Always check again after 6 hours<br />\r
-                    CacheMaxExpire 21600\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>This configuration will try to cache any and all content\r
-                    within its virtual host. It will never cache content for\r
-                    more than six hours (the <code>CacheMaxExpire\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    directive). If no <code>Expires:\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    header is present in the response, mod_cache will compute\r
-                    an expiration period from the <code>Last-Modified:\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    header. The computation using <code>CacheLastModifiedFactor\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    is based on the assumption that if a page was recently\r
-                    modified, it is likely to change again in the near future\r
-                    and will have to be re-cached. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <p>\r
-                    Do note that it can pay off to <em>disable\r
-                    </em>\r
-                    the <code>ETag:\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    header: For files smaller than 1k the server has to\r
-                    calculate the checksum (usually MD5) and then send out a <code>\r
-                        304 Not Modified\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    response, which will take waste some CPU and still saturate\r
-                    the same amount of network resources for the transfer (one\r
-                    TCP packet). For resources larger than 1k it might prove\r
-                    CPU expensive to calculate the header for each request.\r
-                    Unfortunately there does currently not exist a way to cache\r
-                    these headers. \r
-                </p>\r
-                <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-                    &lt;FilesMatch \.(jpe?g|png|gif|js|css|x?html|xml)&gt;<br />\r
-                    <span class="indent">\r
-                        FilesETag None<br />\r
-                    </span>\r
-                    &lt;/FilesMatch&gt;\r
-                </code></p></div>\r
-                \r
-                <p>\r
-                    This will disable the generation of the <code>ETag:\r
-                    </code>\r
-                    header for most static resources. The server does not\r
-                    calculate these headers for dynamic resources. \r
-                </p>\r
-                \r
-                \r
-            \r
-        \r
-    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="Further Considerations" id="Further Considerations">Further Considerations\r
-        </a></h2>\r
-        \r
-        <p>Armed with the knowledge of how to tune a sytem to deliver the\r
-            desired the performance, we will soon discover that <em>one\r
-            </em>\r
-            system might prove a bottleneck. How to make a system fit for\r
-            growth, or how to put a number of systems into tune will be\r
-            discussed in <a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingOut">\r
-                PerformanceScalingOut\r
-            </a>\r
-            .\r
-        </p>\r
-    </div></div>\r
-<div class="bottomlang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/misc/perf-scaling.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div><div id="footer">\r
-<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>\r
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+      -->
+<title>Performance Scaling
+     - Apache HTTP Server</title>
+<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />
+<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>
+<body id="manual-page"><div id="page-header">
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>
+<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>
+<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>
+<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>
+<div id="path">
+<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>Performance Scaling
+    </h1>
+<div class="toplang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/misc/perf-scaling.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div>
+
+        
+        <p>The Performance Tuning page in the Apache 1.3 documentation says: 
+        </p>
+        <ul>
+            <li>&#8220;Apache is a general webserver, which is designed to be
+                correct first, and fast
+                second. Even so, its performance is quite satisfactory. Most
+                sites have less than 10Mbits of outgoing bandwidth, which
+                Apache can fill using only a low end Pentium-based
+                webserver.&#8221; 
+            </li>
+        </ul>
+        <p>However, this sentence was written a few years ago, and in the
+            meantime several things have happened. On one hand, web server
+            hardware has become much faster. On the other hand, many sites now
+            are allowed much more than ten megabits per second of outgoing
+            bandwidth. In addition, web applications have become more complex.
+            The classic brochureware site is alive and well, but the web has
+            grown up substantially as a computing application platform and
+            webmasters may find themselves running dynamic content in Perl, PHP
+            or Java, all of which take a toll on performance. 
+        </p>
+        <p>Therefore, in spite of strides forward in machine speed and
+            bandwidth allowances, web server performance and web application
+            performance remain areas of concern. In this documentation several
+            aspects of web server performance will be discussed. 
+        </p>
+        
+    </div>
+<div id="quickview"><ul id="toc"><li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#What Will and Will Not Be Discussed">What Will and Will Not Be Discussed
+        </a></li>
+<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Monitoring Your Server">Monitoring Your Server
+        </a></li>
+<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Configuring for Performance">Configuring for Performance
+        </a></li>
+<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Caching Content">Caching Content
+        </a></li>
+<li><img alt="" src="../images/down.gif" /> <a href="#Further Considerations">Further Considerations
+        </a></li>
+</ul></div>
+<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="What Will and Will Not Be Discussed" id="What Will and Will Not Be Discussed">What Will and Will Not Be Discussed
+        </a></h2>
+        
+        <p>The session will focus on easily accessible configuration and tuning
+            options for Apache httpd 2.2 and 2.3 as well as monitoring tools.
+            Monitoring tools will allow you to observe your web server to
+            gather information about its performance, or lack thereof.
+            We'll assume that you don't have an unlimited budget for
+            server hardware, so the existing infrastructure will have to do the
+            job. You have no desire to compile your own Apache, or to recompile
+            the operating system kernel. We do assume, though, that you have
+            some familiarity with the Apache httpd configuration file. 
+        </p>
+        
+    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="Monitoring Your Server" id="Monitoring Your Server">Monitoring Your Server
+        </a></h2>
+        
+        <p>The first task when sizing or performance-tuning your server is to
+            find out how your system is currently performing. By monitoring
+            your server under real-world load, or artificially generated load,
+            you can extrapolate its behavior under stress, such as when your
+            site is mentioned on Slashdot. 
+        </p>
+        
+        
+        <h3><a name="Monitoring Tools" id="Monitoring Tools">Monitoring Tools
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="top" id="top">top
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The top tool ships with Linux and FreeBSD. Solaris offers
+                    `prstat'. It collects a number of statistics for the
+                    system and for each running process, then displays them
+                    interactively on your terminal. The data displayed is
+                    refreshed every second and varies by platform, but
+                    typically includes system load average, number of processes
+                    and their current states, the percent CPU(s) time spent
+                    executing user and system code, and the state of the
+                    virtual memory system. The data displayed for each process
+                    is typically configurable and includes its process name and
+                    ID, priority and nice values, memory footprint, and
+                    percentage CPU usage. The following example shows multiple
+                    httpd processes (with MPM worker and event) running on an
+                    Linux (Xen) system: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    top - 23:10:58 up 71 days,  6:14,  4 users,  load average:
+                    0.25, 0.53, 0.47<br />
+                    Tasks: 163 total,   1 running, 162 sleeping,   0 stopped,  
+                    0 zombie<br />
+                    Cpu(s): 11.6%us,  0.7%sy,  0.0%ni, 87.3%id,  0.4%wa, 
+                    0.0%hi,  0.0%si,  0.0%st<br />
+                    Mem:   2621656k total,  2178684k used,   442972k free,  
+                    100500k buffers<br />
+                    Swap:  4194296k total,   860584k used,  3333712k free, 
+                    1157552k cached<br />
+                    <br />
+                    PID USER      PR  NI  VIRT  RES  SHR S %CPU %MEM    TIME+ 
+                    COMMAND<br />
+                    16687 example_  20   0 1200m 547m 179m S   45 21.4  
+                    1:09.59 httpd-worker<br />
+                    15195 www       20   0  441m  33m 2468 S    0  1.3  
+                    0:41.41 httpd-worker<br />
+                    1 root      20   0 10312  328  308 S    0  0.0   0:33.17
+                    init<br />
+                    2 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00
+                    kthreadd<br />
+                    3 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.14
+                    migration/0<br />
+                    4 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:04.58
+                    ksoftirqd/0<br />
+                    5 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   4:45.89
+                    watchdog/0<br />
+                    6 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:42.52
+                    events/0<br />
+                    7 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00
+                    khelper<br />
+                    19 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00
+                    xenwatch<br />
+                    20 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.00
+                    xenbus<br />
+                    28 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.14
+                    migration/1<br />
+                    29 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.20
+                    ksoftirqd/1<br />
+                    30 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:05.96
+                    watchdog/1<br />
+                    31 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:18.35
+                    events/1<br />
+                    32 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.08
+                    migration/2<br />
+                    33 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.18
+                    ksoftirqd/2<br />
+                    34 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.00
+                    watchdog/2<br />
+                    35 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:08.39
+                    events/2<br />
+                    36 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.10
+                    migration/3<br />
+                    37 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.16
+                    ksoftirqd/3<br />
+                    38 root      RT  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.08
+                    watchdog/3<br />
+                    39 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   1:22.81
+                    events/3<br />
+                    68 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:06.28
+                    kblockd/0<br />
+                    69 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.04
+                    kblockd/1<br />
+                    70 root      15  -5     0    0    0 S    0  0.0   0:00.04
+                    kblockd/2
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>Top is a wonderful tool even though it&#8217;s slightly resource
+                    intensive (when running, its own process is usually in the
+                    top ten CPU gluttons). It is indispensable in determining
+                    the size of a running process, which comes in handy when
+                    determining how many server processes you can run on your
+                    machine. How to do this is described in '<a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingUp#S">
+                        sizing MaxClients
+                    </a>
+                    '. Top is, however, an interactive tool and running it
+                    continuously has few if any advantages. 
+                </p>
+            
+            <h4><a name="free" id="free">free
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>This command is only available on Linux. It shows how much
+                    memory and swap space is in use. Linux allocates unused
+                    memory as file system cache. The free command shows usage
+                    both with and without this cache. The free command can be
+                    used to find out how much memory the operating system is
+                    using, as described in the paragraph '<a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingUp#S">
+                        Sizing MaxClients
+                    </a>
+                    '. The output of free looks like this: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    sctemme@brutus:~$ free<br />
+                    total       used     free   shared    buffers    cached<br />
+                    Mem:        4026028    3901892   124136         0    253144
+                       841044<br />
+                    -/+ buffers/cache:     2807704  1218324<br />
+                    Swap:       3903784      12540  3891244
+                </code></p></div>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="vmstat" id="vmstat">vmstat
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>This command is available on many unix platforms. It
+                    displays a large number of operating system metrics. Run
+                    without argument, it displays a status line for that
+                    moment. When a numeric argument is added, the status is
+                    redisplayed at designated intervals. For example, <code>
+                        vmstat 5
+                    </code>
+                    causes the information to reappear every five seconds.
+                    Vmstat displays the amount of virtual memory in use, how
+                    much memory is swapped in and out each second, the number
+                    of processes currently running and sleeping, the number of
+                    interrupts and context switches per second and the usage
+                    percentages of the CPU. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    The following is <code>vmstat
+                    </code>
+                    output of an idle server: 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    [sctemme@GayDeceiver sctemme]$ vmstat 5 3<br />
+                    procs                      memory     swap         io   
+                    system        cpu<br />
+                    r b w     swpd   free   buff cache si so       bi    bo in 
+                       cs us  sy i<br />
+                    0 0 0        0 186252   6688 37516    0    0   12     5 47 
+                      311  0   1 9<br />
+                    0 0 0        0 186244   6696 37516    0    0    0    16 41 
+                      314  0   0 10<br />
+                    0 0 0        0 186236   6704 37516    0    0    0     9 44 
+                      314  0   0 100
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>And this is output of a server that is under a load of one
+                    hundred simultaneous connections fetching static content: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    sctemme@GayDeceiver sctemme]$ vmstat 5 3<br />
+                    procs                      memory     swap    io     
+                    system       cpu<br />
+                    r b w     swpd   free   buff cache si so     bi bo   in    
+                    cs us sy  id<br />
+                    1 0 1        0 162580   6848 40056    0    0 11  5 150    
+                    324  1  1  98<br />
+                    6 0 1        0 163280   6856 40248    0    0  0 66 6384
+                    1117   42 25  32<br />
+                    11 0 0        0 162780   6864 40436    0    0  0 61 6309
+                    1165   33 28  40
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>The first line gives averages since the last reboot. The
+                    subsequent lines give information for five second
+                    intervals. The second argument tells vmstat to generate
+                    three reports and then exit. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="SE Toolkit" id="SE Toolkit">SE Toolkit
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The SE Toolkit is a system monitoring toolkit for Solaris.
+                    Its programming language is based on the C preprocessor and
+                    comes with a number of sample scripts. It can use both the
+                    command line and the GUI to display information. It can
+                    also be programmed to apply rules to the system data. The
+                    example script shown in Figure 2, Zoom.se, shows green,
+                    orange or red indicators when utilization of various parts
+                    of the system rises above certain thresholds. Another
+                    included script, Virtual Adrian, applies performance tuning
+                    metrics according to. 
+                </p>
+                <p>The SE Toolkit has drifted around for a while and has had
+                    several owners since its inception. It seems that it has
+                    now found a final home at Sunfreeware.com, where it can be
+                    downloaded at no charge. There is a single package for
+                    Solaris 8, 9 and 10 on SPARC and x86, and includes source
+                    code. SE Toolkit author Richard Pettit has started a new
+                    company, Captive Metrics4 that plans to bring to market a
+                    multiplatform monitoring tool built on the same principles
+                    as SE Toolkit, written in Java. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="DTrace" id="DTrace">DTrace
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Given that DTrace is available for Solaris, FreeBSD and OS
+                    X, it might be worth exploring it. There's also
+                    mod_dtrace available for httpd. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="mod_status" id="mod_status">mod_status
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The mod_status module gives an overview of the server
+                    performance at a given moment. It generates an HTML page
+                    with, among others, the number of Apache processes running
+                    and how many bytes each has served, and the CPU load caused
+                    by httpd and the rest of the system. The Apache Software
+                    Foundation uses mod_status on its own <a href="http://apache.org/server-status">
+                        web site
+                    </a>
+                    .If you put the <code>ExtendedStatus On
+                    </code>
+                    directive in your <code>httpd.conf
+                    </code>
+                    ,the <code>mod_status
+                    </code>
+                    page will give you more information at the cost of a little
+                    extra work per request. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+        <h3><a name="Web Server Log Files" id="Web Server Log Files">Web Server Log Files
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>Monitoring and analyzing the log files httpd writes is one of
+                the most effective ways to keep track of your server health and
+                performance. Monitoring the error log allows you to detect
+                error conditions, discover attacks and find performance issues.
+                Analyzing the access logs tells you how busy your server is,
+                which resources are the most popular and where your users come
+                from. Historical log file data can give you invaluable insight
+                into trends in access to your server, which allows you to
+                predict when your performance needs will overtake your server
+                capacity. 
+            </p>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="Error Log" id="Error Log">Error Log
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The error log will contain messages if the server has
+                    reached the maximum number of active processes or the
+                    maximum number of concurrently open files. The error log
+                    also reflects when processes are being spawned at a
+                    higher-than-usual rate in response to a sudden increase in
+                    load. When the server starts, the stderr file descriptor is
+                    redirected to the error logfile, so any error encountered
+                    by httpd after it opens its logfiles will appear in this
+                    log. This makes it good practice to review the error log
+                    frequently. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Before Apache httpd opens its logfiles, any errors will be
+                    written to the stderr stream. If you start httpd manually,
+                    this error information will appear on your terminal and you
+                    can use it directly to troubleshoot your server. If your
+                    httpd is started by a startup script, the destination of
+                    early error messages depends on their design. The <code>
+                        /var/log/messages
+                    </code>
+                    file is usually a good bet. On Windows, early error
+                    messages are written to the Applications Event Log, which
+                    can be viewed through the Event Viewer in Administrative
+                    Tools. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    The Error Log is configured through the <code>ErrorLog
+                    </code>
+                    and <code>LogLevel
+                    </code>
+                    configuration directives. The error log of httpd&#8217;s main
+                    server configuration receives the log messages that pertain
+                    to the entire server: startup, shutdown, crashes, excessive
+                    process spawns, etc. The <code>ErrorLog
+                    </code>
+                    directive can also be used in virtual host containers. The
+                    error log of a virtual host receives only log messages
+                    specific to that virtual host, such as authentication
+                    failures and 'File not Found' errors. 
+                </p>
+                <p>On a server that is visible to the Internet, expect to see a
+                    lot of exploit attempt and worm attacks in the error log. A
+                    lot of these will be targeted at other server platforms
+                    instead of Apache, but the current state of affairs is that
+                    attack scripts just throw everything they have at any open
+                    port, regardless of which server is actually running or
+                    what applications might be installed. You could block these
+                    attempts using a firewall or <a href="http://www.modsecurity.org/">
+                        mod_security
+                    </a>
+                    ,but this falls outside the scope of this discussion. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    The <code>LogLevel
+                    </code>
+                    directive determines the level of detail included in the
+                    logs. There are eight log levels as described here: 
+                </p>
+                <table>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p>
+                                 <strong>Level
+                                </strong>
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p>
+                                 <strong>Description
+                                </strong>
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> emerg 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Emergencies - system is unusable. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> alert 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Action must be taken immediately. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> crit 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Critical Conditions. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> error 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Error conditions. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> warn 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Warning conditions. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> notice 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Normal but significant condition. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> info 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Informational. 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> debug 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Debug-level messages 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                </table>
+                <p>The default log level is warn. A production server should
+                    not be run on debug, but increasing the level of detail in
+                    the error log can be useful during troubleshooting.
+                    Starting with 2.3.8 <code>LogLevel
+                    </code>
+                    can be specified on a per module basis: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    LogLevel debug mod_ssl:warn
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>
+                    This puts all of the server in debug mode, except for <code>
+                        mod_ssl
+                    </code>
+                    ,which tends to be very noisy. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Access Log" id="Access Log">Access Log
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Apache httpd keeps track of every request it services in its
+                    access log file. In addition to the time and nature of a
+                    request, httpd can log the client IP address, date and time
+                    of the request, the result and a host of other information.
+                    The various logging format features are documented in the <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/core.html#loglevel">
+                        manual
+                    </a>
+                    .This file exists by default for the main server and can be
+                    configured per virtual host by using the <code>TransferLog
+                    </code>
+                    or <code>CustomLog
+                    </code>
+                    configuration directive. 
+                </p>
+                <p>The access logs can be analyzed with any of several free and
+                    commercially available programs. Popular free analysis
+                    packages include Analog and Webalizer. Log analysis should
+                    be done offline so the web server machine is not burdened
+                    by processing the log files. Most log analysis packages
+                    understand the Common Log Format. The fields in the log
+                    lines are explained in in the following: 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    195.54.228.42 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:05:11 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/feed/ HTTP/1.1" 200 9747<br />
+                    64.34.165.214 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:10:11 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/feed/atom HTTP/1.1" 200 9068<br />
+                    60.28.164.72 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:11:41 -0400] "GET /
+                    HTTP/1.0" 200 618<br />
+                    85.140.155.56 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:14:12 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/2006/09/27/44/ HTTP/1.1" 200 14172<br />
+                    85.140.155.56 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:14:15 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/2006/09/21/gore-tax-pollution/ HTTP/1.1" 200 15147<br />
+                    74.6.72.187 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:18:11 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/2006/09/27/44/ HTTP/1.0" 200 14172<br />
+                    74.6.72.229 - - [24/Mar/2007:23:24:22 -0400] "GET
+                    /sander/2006/11/21/os-java/ HTTP/1.0" 200 13457
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <table>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p>
+                                 <strong>Field
+                                </strong>
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p>
+                                 <strong>Content
+                                </strong>
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p>
+                                 <strong>Explanation
+                                </strong>
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Client IP 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> 195.54.228.42 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> IP address where the request originated 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> RFC 1413 ident 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> -  
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Remote user identity as reported by their
+                                identd 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> username 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> -   
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Remote username as authenticated by Apache 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> timestamp 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> [24/Mar/2007:23:05:11 -0400] 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Date and time of request 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Request 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> "GET /sander/feed/ HTTP/1.1"  
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Request line 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Status Code 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> 200  
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Response code 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                    <tr>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Content Bytes 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> 9747 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                        <td>
+                            <p> Bytes transferred w/o headers 
+                            </p>
+                        </td>
+                    </tr>
+                </table>
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Rotating Log Files" id="Rotating Log Files">Rotating Log Files
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>There are several reasons to rotate logfiles. Even though
+                    almost no operating systems out there have a hard file size
+                    limit of two Gigabytes anymore, log files simply become too
+                    large to handle over time. Additionally, any periodic log
+                    file analysis should not be performed on files to which the
+                    server is actively writing. Periodic logfile rotation helps
+                    keep the analysis job manageable, and allows you to keep a
+                    closer eye on usage trends. 
+                </p>
+                <p>On unix systems, you can simply rotate logfiles by giving
+                    the old file a new name using mv. The server will keep
+                    writing to the open file even though it has a new name.
+                    When you send a graceful restart signal to the server, it
+                    will open a new logfile with the configured name. For
+                    example, you could run a script from cron like this: 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    APACHE=/usr/local/apache2<br />
+                    HTTPD=$APACHE/bin/httpd<br />
+                    mv $APACHE/logs/access_log
+                    $APACHE/logarchive/access_log-&#8216;date +%F&#8216;<br />
+                    $HTTPD -k graceful
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>This approach also works on Windows, just not as smoothly.
+                    While the httpd process on your Windows server will keep
+                    writing to the log file after it has been renamed, the
+                    Windows Service that runs Apache can not do a graceful
+                    restart. Restarting a Service on Windows means stopping it
+                    and then starting it again. The advantage of a graceful
+                    restart is that the httpd child processes get to complete
+                    responding to their current requests before they exit.
+                    Meanwhile, the httpd server becomes immediately available
+                    again to serve new requests. The stop-start that the
+                    Windows Service has to perform will interrupt any requests
+                    currently in progress, and the server is unavailable until
+                    it is started again. Plan for this when you decide the
+                    timing of your restarts. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    A second approach is to use piped logs. From the <code>
+                        CustomLog
+                    </code>
+                    ,<code>TransferLog
+                    </code>
+                    or <code>ErrorLog
+                    </code>
+                    directives you can send the log data into any program using
+                    a pipe character (<code>|
+                    </code>
+                    ). For instance: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>CustomLog "|/usr/local/apache2/bin/rotatelogs
+                    /var/log/access_log 86400" common
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>The program on the other end of the pipe will receive the
+                    Apache log data on its stdin stream, and can do with this
+                    data whatever it wants. The rotatelogs program that comes
+                    with Apache seamlessly turns over the log file based on
+                    time elapsed or the amount of data written, and leaves the
+                    old log files with a timestamp suffix to its name. This
+                    method for rotating logfiles works well on unix platforms,
+                    but is currently broken on Windows. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Logging and Performance" id="Logging and Performance">Logging and Performance
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Writing entries to the Apache log files obviously takes some
+                    effort, but the information gathered from the logs is so
+                    valuable that under normal circumstances logging should not
+                    be turned off. For optimal performance, you should put your
+                    disk-based site content on a different physical disk than
+                    the server log files: the access patterns are very
+                    different. Retrieving content from disk is a read operation
+                    in a fairly random pattern, and log files are written to
+                    disk sequentially. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    Do not run a production server with your error <code>
+                        LogLevel
+                    </code>
+                    set to debug. This log level causes a vast amount of
+                    information to be written to the error log, including, in
+                    the case of SSL access, complete dumps of BIO read and
+                    write operations. The performance implications are
+                    significant: use the default warn level instead. 
+                </p>
+                <p>If your server has more than one virtual host, you may give
+                    each virtual host a separate access logfile. This makes it
+                    easier to analyze the logfile later. However, if your
+                    server has many virtual hosts, all the open logfiles put a
+                    resource burden on your system, and it may be preferable to
+                    log to a single file. Use the <code>%v
+                    </code>
+                    format character at the start of your <a href="/httpd/LogFormat" class="nonexistent">
+                        LogFormat
+                    </a>
+                    and starting 2.3.8 of your <code>ErrorLogFormat
+                    </code>
+                    to make httpd print the hostname of the virtual host that
+                    received the request or the error at the beginning of each
+                    log line. A simple Perl script can split out the log file
+                    after it rotates: one is included with the Apache source
+                    under <code>support/split-logfile
+                    </code>
+                    .
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    You can use the <code>BufferedLogs
+                    </code>
+                    directive to have Apache collect several log lines in
+                    memory before writing them to disk. This might yield better
+                    performance, but could affect the order in which the
+                    server's log is written. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+        <h3><a name="Generating A Test Load" id="Generating A Test Load">Generating A Test Load
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>It is useful to generate a test load to monitor system
+                performance under realistic operating circumstances. Besides
+                commercial packages such as <a href="/httpd/LoadRunner" class="nonexistent">
+                    LoadRunner
+                </a>
+                ,there are a number of freely available tools to generate a
+                test load against your web server. 
+            </p>
+            <ul>
+                <li>Apache ships with a test program called ab, short for
+                    Apache Bench. It can generate a web server load by
+                    repeatedly asking for the same file in rapid succession.
+                    You can specify a number of concurrent connections and have
+                    the program run for either a given amount of time or a
+                    specified number of requests. 
+                </li>
+                <li>Another freely available load generator is http load11 .
+                    This program works with a URL file and can be compiled with
+                    SSL support. 
+                </li>
+                <li>The Apache Software Foundation offers a tool named flood12
+                    . Flood is a fairly sophisticated program that is
+                    configured through an XML file. 
+                </li>
+                <li>Finally, JMeter13 , a Jakarta subproject, is an all-Java
+                    load-testing tool. While early versions of this application
+                    were slow and difficult to use, the current version 2.1.1
+                    seems to be versatile and useful. 
+                </li>
+                <li>
+                    <p>ASF external projects, that have proven to be quite
+                        good: grinder, httperf, tsung, <a href="/httpd/FunkLoad" class="nonexistent">
+                            FunkLoad
+                        </a>
+                    </p>
+                </li>
+            </ul>
+            <p>When you load-test your web server, please keep in mind that if
+                that server is in production, the test load may negatively
+                affect the server&#8217;s response. Also, any data traffic you
+                generate may be charged against your monthly traffic allowance.
+            </p>
+            
+            
+        
+    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="Configuring for Performance" id="Configuring for Performance">Configuring for Performance
+        </a></h2>
+        
+        
+        
+        <h3><a name="Apache Configuration" id="Apache Configuration">Apache Configuration
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>The Apache 2.2 httpd is by default a pre-forking web server.
+                When the server starts, the parent process spawns a number of
+                child processes that do the actual work of servicing requests.
+                But Apache httpd 2.0 introduced the concept of the
+                Multi-Processing Module (MPM). Developers can write MPMs to
+                suit the process- or threadingarchitecture of their specific
+                operating system. Apache 2 comes with special MPMs for Windows,
+                OS/2, Netware and BeOS. On unix-like platforms, the two most
+                popular MPMs are Prefork and Worker. The Prefork MPM offers the
+                same pre-forking process model that Apache 1.3 uses. The Worker
+                MPM runs a smaller number of child processes, and spawns
+                multiple request handling threads within each child process. In
+                2.3+ MPMs are no longer hard-wired. They too can be exchanged
+                via <a href="/httpd/LoadModule" class="nonexistent">LoadModule
+                </a>
+                .The default MPM in 2.3 is the event MPM. 
+            </p>
+            <p>The maximum number of workers, be they pre-forked child
+                processes or threads within a process, is an indication of how
+                many requests your server can manage concurrently. It is merely
+                a rough estimate because the kernel can queue connection
+                attempts for your web server. When your site becomes busy and
+                the maximum number of workers is running, the machine
+                doesn't hit a hard limit beyond which clients will be
+                denied access. However, once requests start backing up, system
+                performance is likely to degrade. 
+            </p>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="MaxClients" id="MaxClients">MaxClients
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>
+                    The <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    directive in your Apache httpd configuration file specifies
+                    the maximum number of workers your server can create. It
+                    has two related directives, <code>MinSpareServers
+                    </code>
+                    and <code>MaxSpareServers
+                    </code>
+                    ,which specify the number of workers Apache keeps waiting
+                    in the wings ready to serve requests. The absolute maximum
+                    number of processes is configurable through the <code>
+                        ServerLimit
+                    </code>
+                    directive. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Spinning Threads" id="Spinning Threads">Spinning Threads
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>For the prefork MPM of the above directives are all there is
+                    to determining the process limit. However, if you are
+                    running a threaded MPM the situation is a little more
+                    complicated. Threaded MPMs support the <code>
+                        ThreadsPerChild
+                    </code>
+                    directive1 . Apache requires that <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    is evenly divisible by <code>ThreadsPerChild
+                    </code>
+                    .If you set either directive to a number that doesn&#8217;t
+                    meet this requirement, Apache will send a message of
+                    complaint to the error log and adjust the <code>
+                        ThreadsPerChild
+                    </code>
+                    value downwards until it is an even factor of <code>
+                        MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    .
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Sizing MaxClients" id="Sizing MaxClients">Sizing MaxClients
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Optimally, the maximum number of processes should be set so
+                    that all the memory on your system is used, but no more. If
+                    your system gets so overloaded that it needs to heavily
+                    swap core memory out to disk, performance will degrade
+                    quickly. The formula for determining <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    is fairly simple: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    total RAM &#8722; RAM for OS &#8722; RAM for external programs<br />
+                    MaxClients =
+                    -------------------------------------------------------<br />
+                    RAM per httpd process
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>The various amounts of memory allocated for the OS, external
+                    programs and the httpd processes is best determined by
+                    observation: use the top and free commands described above
+                    to determine the memory footprint of the OS without the web
+                    server running. You can also determine the footprint of a
+                    typical web server process from top: most top
+                    implementations have a Resident Size (RSS) column and a
+                    Shared Memory column. 
+                </p>
+                <p>The difference between these two is the amount of memory
+                    per-process. The shared segment really exists only once and
+                    is used for the code and libraries loaded and the dynamic
+                    inter-process tally, or 'scoreboard,' that Apache
+                    keeps. How much memory each process takes for itself
+                    depends heavily on the number and kind of modules you use.
+                    The best approach to use in determining this need is to
+                    generate a typical test load against your web site and see
+                    how large the httpd processes become. 
+                </p>
+                <p>The RAM for external programs parameter is intended mostly
+                    for CGI programs and scripts that run outside the web
+                    server process. However, if you have a Java virtual machine
+                    running Tomcat on the same box it will need a significant
+                    amount of memory as well. The above assessment should give
+                    you an idea how far you can push <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    ,but it is not an exact science. When in doubt, be
+                    conservative and use a low <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    value. The Linux kernel will put extra memory to good use
+                    for caching disk access. On Solaris you need enough
+                    available real RAM memory to create any process. If no real
+                    memory is available, httpd will start writing &#8216;No space
+                    left on device&#8217; messages to the error log and be unable
+                    to fork additional child processes, so a higher <code>
+                        MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    value may actually be a disadvantage. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Selecting your MPM" id="Selecting your MPM">Selecting your MPM
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The prime reason for selecting a threaded MPM is that
+                    threads consume fewer system resources than processes, and
+                    it takes less effort for the system to switch between
+                    threads. This is more true for some operating systems than
+                    for others. On systems like Solaris and AIX, manipulating
+                    processes is relatively expensive in terms of system
+                    resources. On these systems, running a threaded MPM makes
+                    sense. On Linux, the threading implementation actually uses
+                    one process for each thread. Linux processes are relatively
+                    lightweight, but it means that a threaded MPM offers less
+                    of a performance advantage than in other environments. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Running a threaded MPM can cause stability problems in some
+                    situations For instance, should a child process of a
+                    preforked MPM crash, at most one client connection is
+                    affected. However, if a threaded child crashes, all the
+                    threads in that process disappear, which means all the
+                    clients currently being served by that process will see
+                    their connection aborted. Additionally, there may be
+                    so-called "thread-safety" issues, especially with
+                    third-party libraries. In threaded applications, threads
+                    may access the same variables indiscriminately, not knowing
+                    whether a variable may have been changed by another thread.
+                </p>
+                <p>This has been a sore point within the PHP community. The PHP
+                    processor heavily relies on third-party libraries and
+                    cannot guarantee that all of these are thread-safe. The
+                    good news is that if you are running Apache on Linux, you
+                    can run PHP in the preforked MPM without fear of losing too
+                    much performance relative to the threaded option. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Spinning Locks" id="Spinning Locks">Spinning Locks
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Apache httpd maintains an inter-process lock around its
+                    network listener. For all practical purposes, this means
+                    that only one httpd child process can receive a request at
+                    any given time. The other processes are either servicing
+                    requests already received or are 'camping out' on
+                    the lock, waiting for the network listener to become
+                    available. This process is best visualized as a revolving
+                    door, with only one process allowed in the door at any
+                    time. On a heavily loaded web server with requests arriving
+                    constantly, the door spins quickly and requests are
+                    accepted at a steady rate. On a lightly loaded web server,
+                    the process that currently "holds" the lock may
+                    have to stay in the door for a while, during which all the
+                    other processes sit idle, waiting to acquire the lock. At
+                    this time, the parent process may decide to terminate some
+                    children based on its <code>MaxSpareServers
+                    </code>
+                    directive. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="The Thundering Herd" id="The Thundering Herd">The Thundering Herd
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The function of the 'accept mutex' (as this
+                    inter-process lock is called) is to keep request reception
+                    moving along in an orderly fashion. If the lock is absent,
+                    the server may exhibit the Thundering Herd syndrome. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Consider an American Football team poised on the line of
+                    scrimmage. If the football players were Apache processes
+                    all team members would go for the ball simultaneously at
+                    the snap. One process would get it, and all the others
+                    would have to lumber back to the line for the next snap. In
+                    this metaphor, the accept mutex acts as the quarterback,
+                    delivering the connection "ball" to the
+                    appropriate player process. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Moving this much information around is obviously a lot of
+                    work, and, like a smart person, a smart web server tries to
+                    avoid it whenever possible. Hence the revolving door
+                    construction. In recent years, many operating systems,
+                    including Linux and Solaris, have put code in place to
+                    prevent the Thundering Herd syndrome. Apache recognizes
+                    this and if you run with just one network listener, meaning
+                    one virtual host or just the main server, Apache will
+                    refrain from using an accept mutex. If you run with
+                    multiple listeners (for instance because you have a virtual
+                    host serving SSL requests), it will activate the accept
+                    mutex to avoid internal conflicts. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    You can manipulate the accept mutex with the <code>
+                        AcceptMutex
+                    </code>
+                    directive. Besides turning the accept mutex off, you can
+                    select the locking mechanism. Common locking mechanisms
+                    include fcntl, System V Semaphores and pthread locking. Not
+                    all are available on every platform, and their availability
+                    also depends on compile-time settings. The various locking
+                    mechanisms may place specific demands on system resources:
+                    manipulate them with care. 
+                </p>
+                <p>There is no compelling reason to disable the accept mutex.
+                    Apache automatically recognizes the single listener
+                    situation described above and knows if it is safe to run
+                    without mutex on your platform. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+        <h3><a name="Tuning the Operating System" id="Tuning the Operating System">Tuning the Operating System
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>People often look for the 'magic tune-up' that will
+                make their system perform four times as fast by tweaking just
+                one little setting. The truth is, present-day UNIX derivatives
+                are pretty well adjusted straight out of the box and there is
+                not a lot that needs to be done to make them perform optimally.
+                However, there are a few things that an administrator can do to
+                improve performance. 
+            </p>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="RAM and Swap Space" id="RAM and Swap Space">RAM and Swap Space
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>The usual mantra regarding RAM is "more is
+                    better". As discussed above, unused RAM is put to good
+                    use as file system cache. The Apache processes get bigger
+                    if you load more modules, especially if you use modules
+                    that generate dynamic page content within the processes,
+                    like PHP and mod_perl. A large configuration file-with many
+                    virtual hosts-also tends to inflate the process footprint.
+                    Having ample RAM allows you to run Apache with more child
+                    processes, which allows the server to process more
+                    concurrent requests. 
+                </p>
+                <p>While the various platforms treat their virtual memory in
+                    different ways, it is never a good idea to run with less
+                    disk-based swap space than RAM. The virtual memory system
+                    is designed to provide a fallback for RAM, but when you
+                    don't have disk space available and run out of
+                    swappable memory, your machine grinds to a halt. This can
+                    crash your box, requiring a physical reboot for which your
+                    hosting facility may charge you. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Also, such an outage naturally occurs when you least want
+                    it: when the world has found your website and is beating a
+                    path to your door. If you have enough disk-based swap space
+                    available and the machine gets overloaded, it may get very,
+                    very slow as the system needs to swap memory pages to disk
+                    and back, but when the load decreases the system should
+                    recover. Remember, you still have <code>MaxClients
+                    </code>
+                    to keep things in hand. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Most unix-like operating systems use designated disk
+                    partitions for swap space. When a system starts up it finds
+                    all swap partitions on the disk(s), by partition type or
+                    because they are listed in the file <code>/etc/fstab
+                    </code>
+                    ,and automatically enables them. When adding a disk or
+                    installing the operating system, be sure to allocate enough
+                    swap space to accommodate eventual RAM upgrades.
+                    Reassigning disk space on a running system is a cumbersome
+                    process. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Plan for available hard drive swap space of at least twice
+                    your amount of RAM, perhaps up to four times in situations
+                    with frequent peaking loads. Remember to adjust this
+                    configuration whenever you upgrade RAM on your system. In a
+                    pinch, you can use a regular file as swap space. For
+                    instructions on how to do this, see the manual pages for
+                    the <code>mkswap
+                    </code>
+                    and <code>swapon
+                    </code>
+                    or <code>swap
+                    </code>
+                    programs. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="ulimit: Files and Processes" id="ulimit: Files and Processes">ulimit: Files and Processes
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Given a machine with plenty of RAM and processor capacity,
+                    you can run hundreds of Apache processes if necessary. . .
+                    and if your kernel allows it. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Consider a situation in which several hundred web servers
+                    are running; if some of these need to spawn CGI processes,
+                    the maximum number of processes would occur quickly. 
+                </p>
+                <p>However, you can change this limit with the command 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    ulimit [-H|-S] -u [newvalue]
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>This must be changed before starting the server, since the
+                    new value will only be available to the current shell and
+                    programs started from it. In newer Linux kernels the
+                    default has been raised to 2048. On FreeBSD, the number
+                    seems to be the rather unusual 513. In the default user
+                    shell on this system, <code>csh
+                    </code>
+                    the equivalent is <code>limit
+                    </code>
+                    and works analogous the the Bourne-like <code>ulimit
+                    </code>
+                    :
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    limit [-h] maxproc [newvalue]
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>Similarly, the kernel may limit the number of open files per
+                    process. This is generally not a problem for pre-forked
+                    servers, which just handle one request at a time per
+                    process. Threaded servers, however, serve many requests per
+                    process and much more easily run out of available file
+                    descriptors. You can increase the maximum number of open
+                    files per process by running the 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>ulimit -n [newvalue]
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>command. Once again, this must be done prior to starting
+                    Apache. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Setting User Limits on System Startup" id="Setting User Limits on System Startup">Setting User Limits on System Startup
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Under Linux, you can set the ulimit parameters on bootup by
+                    editing the <code>/etc/security/limits.conf
+                    </code>
+                    file. This file allows you to set soft and hard limits on a
+                    per-user or per-group basis; the file contains commentary
+                    explaining the options. To enable this, make sure that the
+                    file <code>/etc/pam.d/login
+                    </code>
+                    contains the line 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>session required /lib/security/pam_limits.so
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>All items can have a 'soft' and a 'hard'
+                    limit: the first is the default setting and the second the
+                    maximum value for that item. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    In FreeBSD's <code>/etc/login.conf
+                    </code>
+                    these resources can be limited or extended system wide,
+                    analogously to <code>limits.conf
+                    </code>
+                    .'Soft' limits can be specified with <code>-cur
+                    </code>
+                    and 'hard' limits with <code>-max
+                    </code>
+                    .
+                </p>
+                <p>Solaris has a similar mechanism for manipulating limit
+                    values at boot time: In <code>/etc/system
+                    </code>
+                    you can set kernel tunables valid for the entire system at
+                    boot time. These are the same tunables that can be set with
+                    the <code>mdb
+                    </code>
+                    kernel debugger during run time. The soft and hard limit
+                    corresponding to ulimit -u can be set via: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    set rlim_fd_max=65536<br />
+                    set rlim_fd_cur=2048
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>Solaris calculates the maximum number of allowed processes
+                    per user (<code>maxuprc
+                    </code>
+                    )based on the total amount available memory on the system (<code>
+                        maxusers
+                    </code>
+                    ). You can review the numbers with 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>sysdef -i | grep maximum
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>but it is not recommended to change them. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+            <h4><a name="Turn Off Unused Services and Modules" id="Turn Off Unused Services and Modules">Turn Off Unused Services and Modules
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>Many UNIX and Linux distributions come with a slew of
+                    services turned on by default. You probably need few of
+                    them. For example, your web server does not need to be
+                    running sendmail, nor is it likely to be an NFS server,
+                    etc. Turn them off. 
+                </p>
+                <p>On Red Hat Linux, the chkconfig tool will help you do this
+                    from the command line. On Solaris systems <code>svcs
+                    </code>
+                    and <code>svcadm
+                    </code>
+                    will show which services are enabled and disable them
+                    respectively. 
+                </p>
+                <p>In a similar fashion, cast a critical eye on the Apache
+                    modules you load. Most binary distributions of Apache
+                    httpd, and pre-installed versions that come with Linux
+                    distributions, have their modules enabled through the <code>
+                        LoadModule
+                    </code>
+                    directive. 
+                </p>
+                <p>Unused modules may be culled: if you don't rely on
+                    their functionality and configuration directives, you can
+                    turn them off by commenting out the corresponding <code>
+                        LoadModule
+                    </code>
+                    lines. Read the documentation on each module&#8217;s
+                    functionality before deciding whether to keep it enabled.
+                    While the performance overhead of an unused module is
+                    small, it's also unnecessary. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="Caching Content" id="Caching Content">Caching Content
+        </a></h2>
+        
+        <p>Requests for dynamically generated content usually take
+            significantly more resources than requests for static content.
+            Static content consists of simple filespages, images, etc.-on disk
+            that are very efficiently served. Many operating systems also
+            automatically cache the contents of frequently accessed files in
+            memory. 
+        </p>
+        <p>Processing dynamic requests, on the contrary, can be much more
+            involved. Running CGI scripts, handing off requests to an external
+            application server and accessing database content can introduce
+            significant latency and processing load to a busy web server. Under
+            many circumstances, performance can be improved by turning popular
+            dynamic requests into static requests. In this section, two
+            approaches to this will be discussed. 
+        </p>
+        
+        
+        <h3><a name="Making Popular Pages Static" id="Making Popular Pages Static">Making Popular Pages Static
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>By pre-rendering the response pages for the most popular queries
+                in your application, you can gain a significant performance
+                improvement without giving up the flexibility of dynamically
+                generated content. For instance, if your application is a
+                flower delivery service, you would probably want to pre-render
+                your catalog pages for red roses during the weeks leading up to
+                Valentine's Day. When the user searches for red roses,
+                they are served the pre-rendered page. Queries for, say, yellow
+                roses will be generated directly from the database. The
+                mod_rewrite module included with Apache is a great tool to
+                implement these substitutions. 
+            </p>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="Example: A Statically Rendered Blog" id="Example: A Statically Rendered Blog">Example: A Statically Rendered Blog
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>
+                    <strong>'we should provide a more useful example here.
+                        One showing how to make Wordpress or Drupal suck less.
+                    </strong>
+                    ' 
+                </p>
+                <p>Blosxom is a lightweight web log package that runs as a CGI.
+                    It is written in Perl and uses plain text files for entry
+                    input. Besides running as CGI, Blosxom can be run from the
+                    command line to pre-render blog pages. Pre-rendering pages
+                    to static HTML can yield a significant performance boost in
+                    the event that large numbers of people actually start
+                    reading your blog. 
+                </p>
+                <p>To run blosxom for static page generation, edit the CGI
+                    script according to the documentation. Set the $static dir
+                    variable to the <code>DocumentRoot
+                    </code>
+                    of the web server, and run the script from the command line
+                    as follows: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>$ perl blosxom.cgi -password='whateveryourpassword'
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>This can be run periodically from Cron, after you upload
+                    content, etc. To make Apache substitute the statically
+                    rendered pages for the dynamic content, we&#8217;ll use
+                    mod_rewrite. This module is included with the Apache source
+                    code, but is not compiled by default. It can be built with
+                    the server by passing the option <code>
+                        --enable-rewrite[=shared]
+                    </code>
+                    to the configure command. Many binary distributions of
+                    Apache come with mod_rewrite included. The following is an
+                    example of an Apache virtual host that takes advantage of
+                    pre-rendered blog pages: 
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>Listen *:8001<br />
+                    &lt;VirtualHost *:8001&gt;<br />
+                    <span class="indent">
+                        ServerName blog.sandla.org:8001<br />
+                        ServerAdmin sander@temme.net<br />
+                        DocumentRoot "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/htdocs"<br />
+                        &lt;Directory
+                        "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/htdocs"&gt;<br />
+                        <span class="indent">
+                            Options +Indexes<br />
+                            Order allow,deny<br />
+                            Allow from all<br />
+                            RewriteEngine on<br />
+                            RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f<br />
+                            RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d<br />
+                            RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /cgi-bin/blosxom.cgi/$1 [L,QSA]<br />
+                        </span>
+                        &lt;/Directory&gt;<br />
+                        RewriteLog
+                        /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/rewrite_log<br />
+                        RewriteLogLevel 9<br />
+                        ErrorLog /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/error_log<br />
+                        LogLevel debug<br />
+                        CustomLog /home/sctemme/inst/blog/httpd/logs/access_log
+                        common<br />
+                        ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /home/sctemme/inst/blog/bin/<br />
+                        &lt;Directory "/home/sctemme/inst/blog/bin"&gt;<br />
+                        <span class="indent">
+                            Options +ExecCGI<br />
+                            Order allow,deny<br />
+                            Allow from all<br />
+                        </span>
+                        &lt;/Directory&gt;<br />
+                    </span>
+                    &lt;/VirtualHost&gt;
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>
+                    The <code>RewriteCond
+                    </code>
+                    and <code>RewriteRule
+                    </code>
+                    directives say that, if the requested resource does not
+                    exist as a file or a directory, its path is passed to the
+                    Blosxom CGI for rendering. Blosxom uses Path Info to
+                    specify blog entries and index pages, so this means that if
+                    a particular path under Blosxom exists as a static file in
+                    the file system, the file is served instead. Any request
+                    that isn't pre- rendered is served by the CGI. This
+                    means that individual entries, which show the comments, are
+                    always served by the CGI which in turn means that your
+                    comment spam is always visible. This configuration also
+                    hides the Blosxom CGI from the user-visible URL in their
+                    Location bar. mod_rewrite is a fantastically powerful and
+                    versatile module: investigate it to arrive at a
+                    configuration that is best for your situation. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+        <h3><a name="Caching Content With mod_cache" id="Caching Content With mod_cache">Caching Content With mod_cache
+            </a></h3>
+            
+            <p>The mod_cache module provides intelligent caching of HTTP
+                responses: it is aware of the expiration timing and content
+                requirements that are part of the HTTP specification. The
+                mod_cache module caches URL response content. If content sent
+                to the client is considered cacheable, it is saved to disk.
+                Subsequent requests for that URL will be served directly from
+                the cache. The provider module for mod_cache, mod_disk_cache,
+                determines how the cached content is stored on disk. Most
+                server systems will have more disk available than memory, and
+                it's good to note that some operating system kernels cache
+                frequently accessed disk content transparently in memory, so
+                replicating this in the server is not very useful. 
+            </p>
+            <p>To enable efficient content caching and avoid presenting the
+                user with stale or invalid content, the application that
+                generates the actual content has to send the correct response
+                headers. Without headers like <code>Etag:
+                </code>
+                ,<code>Last-Modified:
+                </code>
+                or <code>Expires:
+                </code>
+                ,mod_cache can not make the right decision on whether to cache
+                the content, serve it from cache or leave it alone. When
+                testing content caching, you may find that you need to modify
+                your application or, if this is impossible, selectively disable
+                caching for URLs that cause problems. The mod_cache modules are
+                not compiled by default, but can be enabled by passing the
+                option <code>--enable-cache[=shared]
+                </code>
+                to the configure script. If you use a binary distribution of
+                Apache httpd, or it came with your port or package collection,
+                it may have mod_cache already included. 
+            </p>
+            
+            
+            <h4><a name="Example: wiki.apache.org" id="Example: wiki.apache.org">Example: wiki.apache.org
+                </a></h4>
+                
+                <p>
+                    <strong>'Is this still the case? Maybe we should give
+                        a better example here too.
+                    </strong>
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    The Apache Software Foundation Wiki is served by <a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">
+                        MoinMoin
+                    </a>
+                    .<a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">MoinMoin
+                    </a>
+                    is written in Python and runs as a CGI. To date, any
+                    attempts to run it under mod_python has been unsuccessful.
+                    The CGI proved to place an untenably high load on the
+                    server machine, especially when the Wiki was being indexed
+                    by search engines like Google. To lighten the load on the
+                    server machine, the Apache Infrastructure team turned to
+                    mod_cache. It turned out <a href="/httpd/MoinMoin">MoinMoin
+                    </a>
+                    needed a small patch to ensure proper behavior behind the
+                    caching server: certain requests can never be cached and
+                    the corresponding Python modules were patched to send the
+                    proper HTTP response headers. After this modification, the
+                    cache in front of the Wiki was enabled with the following
+                    configuration snippet in <code>httpd.conf
+                    </code>
+                    :
+                </p>
+                
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    CacheRoot /raid1/cacheroot<br />
+                    CacheEnable disk /<br />
+                    # A page modified 100 minutes ago will expire in 10 minutes<br />
+                    CacheLastModifiedFactor .1<br />
+                    # Always check again after 6 hours<br />
+                    CacheMaxExpire 21600
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>This configuration will try to cache any and all content
+                    within its virtual host. It will never cache content for
+                    more than six hours (the <code>CacheMaxExpire
+                    </code>
+                    directive). If no <code>Expires:
+                    </code>
+                    header is present in the response, mod_cache will compute
+                    an expiration period from the <code>Last-Modified:
+                    </code>
+                    header. The computation using <code>CacheLastModifiedFactor
+                    </code>
+                    is based on the assumption that if a page was recently
+                    modified, it is likely to change again in the near future
+                    and will have to be re-cached. 
+                </p>
+                <p>
+                    Do note that it can pay off to <em>disable
+                    </em>
+                    the <code>ETag:
+                    </code>
+                    header: For files smaller than 1k the server has to
+                    calculate the checksum (usually MD5) and then send out a <code>
+                        304 Not Modified
+                    </code>
+                    response, which will take waste some CPU and still saturate
+                    the same amount of network resources for the transfer (one
+                    TCP packet). For resources larger than 1k it might prove
+                    CPU expensive to calculate the header for each request.
+                    Unfortunately there does currently not exist a way to cache
+                    these headers. 
+                </p>
+                <div class="example"><p><code>
+                    &lt;FilesMatch \.(jpe?g|png|gif|js|css|x?html|xml)&gt;<br />
+                    <span class="indent">
+                        FilesETag None<br />
+                    </span>
+                    &lt;/FilesMatch&gt;
+                </code></p></div>
+                
+                <p>
+                    This will disable the generation of the <code>ETag:
+                    </code>
+                    header for most static resources. The server does not
+                    calculate these headers for dynamic resources. 
+                </p>
+                
+                
+            
+        
+    </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="Further Considerations" id="Further Considerations">Further Considerations
+        </a></h2>
+        
+        <p>Armed with the knowledge of how to tune a sytem to deliver the
+            desired the performance, we will soon discover that <em>one
+            </em>
+            system might prove a bottleneck. How to make a system fit for
+            growth, or how to put a number of systems into tune will be
+            discussed in <a href="/httpd/PerformanceScalingOut">
+                PerformanceScalingOut
+            </a>
+            .
+        </p>
+    </div></div>
+<div class="bottomlang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/misc/perf-scaling.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div><div id="footer">
+<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>
 </body></html>
\ No newline at end of file
index 0ce9be507ba9366d66f1dcee08b79c0b2d6162bc..ed985ad906925cbc5a3f9fe5ffaf918185812c8e 100644 (file)
@@ -1,63 +1,63 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>\r
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">\r
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-      -->\r
-<title>log_server_status - Log periodic status summaries - Apache HTTP Server</title>\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />\r
-<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>\r
-<body id="manual-page" class="no-sidebar"><div id="page-header">\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>\r
-<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>\r
-<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>\r
-<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div id="path">\r
-<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a> &gt; <a href="./">Programs</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>log_server_status - Log periodic status summaries</h1>\r
-<div class="toplang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div>\r
-\r
-    <p>This perl script is designed to be run at a frequent interval by\r
-    something like cron. It connects to the server and downloads the status\r
-    information. It reformats the information to a single line and logs it to\r
-    a file. Adjust the variables at the top of the script to specify the\r
-    location of the resulting logfile. <code class="module"><a href="../mod/mod_status.html">mod_status</a></code> will\r
-    need to be loaded and configured in order for this script to do its\r
-    job.</p>\r
-</div>\r
-<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="configure" id="configure">Usage</a></h2>\r
-\r
-<p>The script contains the following section.</p>\r
-\r
-<div class="example"><pre>\r
-my $wherelog = "/usr/local/apache2/logs/";  # Logs will be like "/usr/local/apache2/logs/19960312"\r
-my $server   = "localhost";        # Name of server, could be "www.foo.com"\r
-my $port     = "80";               # Port on server\r
-my $request = "/server-status/?auto";    # Request to send\r
-</pre></div>\r
-\r
-<p>You'll need to ensure that these variables have the correct values,\r
-and you'll need to have the <code>/server-status</code> handler\r
-configured at the location specified, and the specified log location\r
-needs to be writable by the user which will run the script.</p>\r
-\r
-<p>Run the script periodically via cron to produce a daily log file,\r
-which can then be used for statistical analysis.</p>\r
-\r
-</div></div>\r
-<div class="bottomlang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div><div id="footer">\r
-<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>\r
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+      -->
+<title>log_server_status - Log periodic status summaries - Apache HTTP Server</title>
+<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />
+<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>
+<body id="manual-page" class="no-sidebar"><div id="page-header">
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>
+<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>
+<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>
+<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>
+<div id="path">
+<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a> &gt; <a href="./">Programs</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>log_server_status - Log periodic status summaries</h1>
+<div class="toplang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div>
+
+    <p>This perl script is designed to be run at a frequent interval by
+    something like cron. It connects to the server and downloads the status
+    information. It reformats the information to a single line and logs it to
+    a file. Adjust the variables at the top of the script to specify the
+    location of the resulting logfile. <code class="module"><a href="../mod/mod_status.html">mod_status</a></code> will
+    need to be loaded and configured in order for this script to do its
+    job.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="configure" id="configure">Usage</a></h2>
+
+<p>The script contains the following section.</p>
+
+<div class="example"><pre>
+my $wherelog = "/usr/local/apache2/logs/";  # Logs will be like "/usr/local/apache2/logs/19960312"
+my $server   = "localhost";        # Name of server, could be "www.foo.com"
+my $port     = "80";               # Port on server
+my $request = "/server-status/?auto";    # Request to send
+</pre></div>
+
+<p>You'll need to ensure that these variables have the correct values,
+and you'll need to have the <code>/server-status</code> handler
+configured at the location specified, and the specified log location
+needs to be writable by the user which will run the script.</p>
+
+<p>Run the script periodically via cron to produce a daily log file,
+which can then be used for statistical analysis.</p>
+
+</div></div>
+<div class="bottomlang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div><div id="footer">
+<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>
 </body></html>
\ No newline at end of file
index 60045f0f36340073721738a030ca637412190757..80b48605c02825c3a2478c2dd214d7b9b026bfdf 100644 (file)
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-# GENERATED FROM XML -- DO NOT EDIT\r
-\r
-URI: split-logfile.html.en\r
-Content-Language: en\r
-Content-type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1\r
+# GENERATED FROM XML -- DO NOT EDIT
+
+URI: split-logfile.html.en
+Content-Language: en
+Content-type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1
index 56be24284e6b36dd7ab255ce4b62122f96580300..ab075f091518483910380a1f303c1ae7f30a41dc 100644 (file)
@@ -1,63 +1,63 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>\r
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">\r
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT\r
-        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX\r
-      -->\r
-<title>split-logfile - Split up multi-vhost logfiles - Apache HTTP Server</title>\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />\r
-<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />\r
-<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>\r
-<body id="manual-page" class="no-sidebar"><div id="page-header">\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>\r
-<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>\r
-<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>\r
-<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div id="path">\r
-<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a> &gt; <a href="./">Programs</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>split-logfile - Split up multi-vhost logfiles</h1>\r
-<div class="toplang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div>\r
-\r
-    <p>This perl script will take a combined Web server access log file and\r
-    break its contents into separate files. It assumes that the first field of\r
-    each line is the virtual host identity, put there using the "<code>%v</code>"\r
-    variable in <code class="directive"><a href="../mod/mod_log_config.html#logformat">LogFormat</a></code>.\r
-    </p>\r
-</div>\r
-<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>\r
-<div class="section">\r
-<h2><a name="split-logfile" id="split-logfile">Usage</a></h2>\r
-\r
-    <p>Create a log file with virtual host information in it:</p>\r
-\r
-    <div class="example"><p><code>\r
-        LogFormat "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %&gt;s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\""\r
-             combined_plus_vhost<br />\r
-        CustomLog logs/access_log combined_plus_vhost\r
-    </code></p></div>\r
-\r
-    <p>Log files will be created, in the directory where you run the\r
-    script, for each virtual host name that appears in the combined log file.\r
-    These logfiles will named after the hostname, with a\r
-    <code>.log</code> file extension.</p>\r
-\r
-    <p>The combined log file is read from stdin. Records read will be appended\r
-    to any existing log files.</p>\r
-\r
-    <div class="example"><p><code>split-logfile &lt; access_log</code></p></div>\r
-\r
-\r
-</div></div>\r
-<div class="bottomlang">\r
-<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |\r
-<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>\r
-</div><div id="footer">\r
-<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>\r
-<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>\r
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en"><head><!--
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+              This file is generated from xml source: DO NOT EDIT
+        XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
+      -->
+<title>split-logfile - Split up multi-vhost logfiles - Apache HTTP Server</title>
+<link href="../style/css/manual.css" rel="stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="Main stylesheet" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-loose-100pc.css" rel="alternate stylesheet" media="all" type="text/css" title="No Sidebar - Default font size" />
+<link href="../style/css/manual-print.css" rel="stylesheet" media="print" type="text/css" />
+<link href="../images/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" /></head>
+<body id="manual-page" class="no-sidebar"><div id="page-header">
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p>
+<p class="apache">Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5</p>
+<img alt="" src="../images/feather.gif" /></div>
+<div class="up"><a href="./"><img title="&lt;-" alt="&lt;-" src="../images/left.gif" /></a></div>
+<div id="path">
+<a href="http://www.apache.org/">Apache</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/">HTTP Server</a> &gt; <a href="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/">Documentation</a> &gt; <a href="../">Version 2.5</a> &gt; <a href="./">Programs</a></div><div id="page-content"><div id="preamble"><h1>split-logfile - Split up multi-vhost logfiles</h1>
+<div class="toplang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div>
+
+    <p>This perl script will take a combined Web server access log file and
+    break its contents into separate files. It assumes that the first field of
+    each line is the virtual host identity, put there using the "<code>%v</code>"
+    variable in <code class="directive"><a href="../mod/mod_log_config.html#logformat">LogFormat</a></code>.
+    </p>
+</div>
+<div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="../images/up.gif" /></a></div>
+<div class="section">
+<h2><a name="split-logfile" id="split-logfile">Usage</a></h2>
+
+    <p>Create a log file with virtual host information in it:</p>
+
+    <div class="example"><p><code>
+        LogFormat "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %&gt;s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\""
+             combined_plus_vhost<br />
+        CustomLog logs/access_log combined_plus_vhost
+    </code></p></div>
+
+    <p>Log files will be created, in the directory where you run the
+    script, for each virtual host name that appears in the combined log file.
+    These logfiles will named after the hostname, with a
+    <code>.log</code> file extension.</p>
+
+    <p>The combined log file is read from stdin. Records read will be appended
+    to any existing log files.</p>
+
+    <div class="example"><p><code>split-logfile &lt; access_log</code></p></div>
+
+
+</div></div>
+<div class="bottomlang">
+<p><span>Available Languages: </span><a href="../en/programs/other.html" title="English">&nbsp;en&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../ko/programs/other.html" hreflang="ko" rel="alternate" title="Korean">&nbsp;ko&nbsp;</a> |
+<a href="../tr/programs/other.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a></p>
+</div><div id="footer">
+<p class="apache">Copyright 2012 The Apache Software Foundation.<br />Licensed under the <a href="http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License, Version 2.0</a>.</p>
+<p class="menu"><a href="../mod/">Modules</a> | <a href="../mod/directives.html">Directives</a> | <a href="../faq/">FAQ</a> | <a href="../glossary.html">Glossary</a> | <a href="../sitemap.html">Sitemap</a></p></div>
 </body></html>
\ No newline at end of file
index 0324ee46cf0e0170426670b4da9a156bd0a9308f..15dcf4836107b29feeb5bce41bf8c74e9d458913 100644 (file)
@@ -291,12 +291,12 @@ Server on HPUX</a></li>
 <ul><li class="separate"><a href="developer/">Overview</a></li>
 <li><a href="developer/API.html">Apache API notes</a></li>
 <li><a href="developer/new_api_2_4.html">API updates in Apache HTTPD 2.4</a></li>
-<li><a href="developer/debugging.html">Debugging Memory Allocation in APR</a></li>
-<li><a href="developer/documenting.html">Documenting Apache 2.x</a></li>
+<li><a href="developer/modguide.html">Developing modules for Apache HTTPD 2.4</a></li>
+<li><a href="developer/documenting.html">Documenting Apache HTTPD</a></li>
 <li><a href="developer/hooks.html">Apache 2.x Hook Functions</a></li>
-<li><a href="developer/modules.html">Converting Modules from Apache 1.3 to Apache 2.x</a></li>
-<li><a href="developer/request.html">Request Processing in Apache 2.x</a></li>
-<li><a href="developer/filters.html">How Filters Work in Apache 2.x</a></li>
+<li><a href="developer/modules.html">Converting Modules from 1.3 to 2.x</a></li>
+<li><a href="developer/request.html">Request Processing in 2.x</a></li>
+<li><a href="developer/filters.html">How Filters Work in 2.x</a></li>
 </ul>
 </div><div class="top"><a href="#page-header"><img alt="top" src="./images/up.gif" /></a></div>
 <div class="section"><h2><a name="index" id="index">Glossary and Index</a></h2>
index 4291e06f56e036eaa8fde3b8afde01efbb2b8335..b386e32095b6ed1c9307554cf83b0824140720f9 100644 (file)
@@ -29,6 +29,8 @@
 <a href="./tr/sitemap.html" hreflang="tr" rel="alternate" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/sitemap.html" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Cette traduction peut être périmée. Vérifiez la version
+            anglaise pour les changements récents.</div>
 
 <p>Cette page contient la liste des éléments actuellement disponibles de
 la <a href="./">Documentation du serveur HTTP Apache Version
index f97578561ef7aba77c4118a23208d4bb81a25aeb..a29a7febb18aa430a772621bafa71e3f940854fb 100644 (file)
@@ -29,6 +29,7 @@
 <a href="./tr/sitemap.html" title="Türkçe">&nbsp;tr&nbsp;</a> |
 <a href="./zh-cn/sitemap.html" hreflang="zh-cn" rel="alternate" title="Simplified Chinese">&nbsp;zh-cn&nbsp;</a></p>
 </div>
+<div class="outofdate">Bu çeviri güncel olmayabilir. Son değişiklikler için İngilizce sürüm geçerlidir.</div>
 
 <p>Bu sayfada <a href="./">Apache HTTP Sunucusu Sürüm 2.5
 Belgeleri</a>nin tamamı listelenmiştir.</p>
index a94aa16bc65e8aaa37ce2a59c865e8580c4de6ee..e6628a823bc1838f6d4e47a4a0d011dde1f7552d 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <!DOCTYPE sitemap SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.de.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1044380:1075625 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1044380:1328342 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 2d886d60f4a24994cd07ff7e77f7c1408f58f5aa..8f59e60fef9f02fa204eaabfa640f5ec2aa5209c 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.es.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 151408:1075625 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 151408:1328342 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 160fa11abcbac1fba09fb564552ef833e1310456..e09e03654f9a00a652b27137bb7a4eba0ff032f5 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <!DOCTYPE sitemap SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.fr.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision : 1075625 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1075625:1328342 (outdated) -->
 <!-- French translation : Lucien GENTIS -->
 <!-- Reviewed by : Vincent Deffontaines -->
 
index 40efbfdd5e9c62c7adcac94e03fcb11eed9daa21..78caa6221445303781cebb6a5de808367736f908 100644 (file)
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 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ja.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 587444:1075625 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 587444:1328342 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index d35fae3febf0954f867261d624a688db0fb5a529..c8a3277c6d2a0bf09f0d781a5dd159909fd1087c 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <!DOCTYPE sitemap SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.ko.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 151408:1075625 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 151408:1328342 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
index 9f27012430e724644096648d7a780fb8ca17446a..4ae81b685811deda3ca6306bd7ce7ae3b764db07 100644 (file)
     <variant outdated="yes">de</variant>
     <variant>en</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">es</variant>
-    <variant>fr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">fr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ja</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">ko</variant>
-    <variant>tr</variant>
+    <variant outdated="yes">tr</variant>
     <variant outdated="yes">zh-cn</variant>
   </variants>
 </metafile>
index 4403bda39101e95ff6af36e33220821b21ecab41..b155a92b1b9c757ee87be18a37b2692d4c8a7dfc 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <!DOCTYPE sitemap SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
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-<!-- English Revision: 1075625 -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1075625:1328342 (outdated) -->
 <!-- =====================================================
  Translated by: Nilgün Belma Bugüner <nilgun belgeler.org>
    Reviewed by: Orhan Berent <berent belgeler.org>
index 3bc906ead6555459916bc7c2e1ee8723790893e0..0b0966f0e8d6a19b8e2bf3ada6851b880edf614b 100644 (file)
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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 <!DOCTYPE sitemap SYSTEM "./style/sitemap.dtd">
 <?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="./style/manual.zh-cn.xsl"?>
-<!-- English Revision: 1044380:1075625 (outdated) -->
+<!-- English Revision: 1044380:1328342 (outdated) -->
 
 <!--
  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more