| Home : Web : Apache Ebooks |
| Click "Subscribe" if you want to be notified of new or updated links in this category. | Subscribe |
|
|
Apache Ebooks Listings
|
|
Total:
57 | Displaying: 1 - 10 | Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> |
|
|
|
Objective For this second half of The Soothingly Seemless Setup of a Web Server , we\'ll be learning how to set up virtual hosts, virtual hosts that use SSL, and create our own certificates! If you don\'t have the Apache server installed, take a look at the first part of the tutorial, the The Soothingly Seamless Setup of Apache, SSL, MySQL, and PHP . Also, for those who are wondering, this article is aimed at people using *NIX systems....
Updated: 05/28/2005
|
|
|
In this article, we will explore a sophisticated and flexible approach to user-interface building for Web applications. We will explore the combination of the XML processing language XSL with the newly released JavaServer Faces (JSF) standard API, using the Apache Cocoon framework as an enabler for both. Overview of JSF Much has been written about the new JSF standard for UI construction, and it is easy to assume that JSF is mostly an adjunct to...
Updated: 05/28/2005
|
|
|
Introduction Your production machine might have installed PHP on an Apache server in a Linux environment, but most of the people (like me) will develop and test their code on a Windows machine before they move their work on a production machine. Working on this assumption
Updated: 05/28/2005
|
|
|
When the Apache developers first began talking about Apache 2.0, one of the major goals was for one module to be able to modify the output of another. This goal was realized earlier this year with the sixth alpha version. The mechanism used to make modifications are called filters. Originally it was difficult to write filters, but during the past few releases, the developers have improved the interface so that filters are much easier to create. This article will cover some of the basic concepts of Apache filters.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
Every couple of years the job comes round of revising Apache: The Definitive Guide to produce a new edition; this past year it was time for number three. Ben, my coauthor, and I live quite a way apart and updating the book gives us the chance to work together for a few months. I should say that Ben is my son: he lives in London, where he is a director of the Apache Software Foundation and is responsible for the Secure Sockets Layer. He is also busy making a reputation for himself as an international security guru. I live quite a distance away on the Channel coast and we don't see each other that often.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
The Apache Software Foundation and The Apache Server Project have released version 1.3.24 of Apache. This new version fixes many bugs, including a bug in the Win32 version of Apache that can be exploited by a remote attacker to execute arbitrary commands, and a bug that could cause invalid client host names to be written to the log file.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
Over the past few years, I have become dependent on Apache Ant to manage the process of building my Java projects. I find this tool indispensable when I need to package large amounts of code and other resources into an easily deployed archive. No tool has come to my attention that comes close to Ant's cross-platform ability to search directories for files that match specific patterns, compile these files, and accumulate the results into an efficient archive. As my projects have become more intricate, however, the complexity of translating the logic of my builds into XML has become daunting. I still need the Ant classes, but I require more control over program flow and build customization than Ant offers.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
In his last article, Matthew showed us how to successfully install and configure WAMP (Windows, Apache, MySQL and PHP) to setup a development environment. In this next piece, learn how to make use of the Apache and PHP configuration files to further enhance your server needs. In the previous tutorial, your WAMP system on your home PC is best for use as a development server only. You may be able to host a personal home page or hobby page, but of course this would only be available when your computer is on and online. Bearing in mind our decision to only use it as a development server we will have a specialised configuration.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
Ant is an extensible, open-source build tool written in Java and sponsored by Apache's Jakarta project. Ant has developed into something more than a just a build tool, however. It has gone beyond its predecessor make (and make's kin) to become a framework for performing an even larger variety of operations in a single step, not just compiling code or cleaning up after a build.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
As an IIS administrator it sometimes gets downright annoying having to fend off all the insults from Apache admins I meet claming innate server superiority. Generally the discussion about Web administration starts first with all the various security holes plaguing IIS and the negative press the platform garnered over the last year. Then it invariably moves to a discussion about how Netcraft and other stats sites show Apache as the dominant server on the Web, or how a certain big site uses Apache, or how there are so many cool modules to add to Apache.
Updated: 05/18/2005
|
|
|
Apache Ebooks Listings
|
|
Total:
57 | Displaying: 1 - 10 | Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> |
|
|