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Apache Software

Apache 2.0.49 Released 21

chipster writes "Apache 2.0.49 has been released today. This version addresses some bugs, as well as a few security issues. You can read about the new features here, and get Apache 2.0.49 here. Also available is the 2.0 ChangeLog."
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Apache 2.0.49 Released

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  • Now if only... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by afabbro ( 33948 ) on Friday March 19, 2004 @07:28PM (#8616405) Homepage
    ....they'd release mod_perl 2.0 ;)
    • Re:Now if only... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Patches and other contributions in order to get stable releases out the door are welcome and embraced. "Insightful" comments are wimpy.
      • Re:Now if only... (Score:2, Insightful)

        by LordK3nn3th ( 715352 )
        Not everyone can code. I don't know a dash of, say, perl, python, etc, I know only a tiny pinch of Java and a handful of C++. People who may want perl support in apache aren't always those who can program.
      • Re:Now if only... (Score:3, Interesting)

        by aled ( 228417 )
        Yet Apache 2.x has been released a while ago (years?) and yet some modules like mod_perl still have not a stable release. Something doesn't feel right.
  • Apache alternatives. (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    For anyone who isn't that fond of Apache (that would be me!), you should be aware that you have other options.

    For example, very excellent thttpd [acme.com].

    If you've ever been frustrated with Apache's complexity, bloated size and poor performance - try thttpd!
    • by yusufg ( 3239 ) on Friday March 19, 2004 @11:51PM (#8618258)
      One thing I really miss in thttpd is keep-alive support. I am currently kicking the tires of cherokee [alobbs.com]. It supports epoll/kqueue and also does keep-alive/pipelining. Very useful if you have to serve lots of images, it even has a nice mechanism to serve cache-friendly headers I see some issues with its gzip support but the author is quite responsive
    • by gtrubetskoy ( 734033 ) * on Saturday March 20, 2004 @12:16AM (#8618407)
      For example, very excellent thttpd

      Thttpd is good for some things, but don't think it's a full alternative to Apache. We use thttpd to serve http on ftp2.freebsd.org [freebsd.org], and for something like this it is great, because speed is all we care about. On the other hand if verstatility is an issue, stick with Apache. It is not bloated and will perform really well if properly configured.

      My personal take on tools that claim to be small, fast, secure and "better than what the rest of the world uses" is that you try them, then sooner or later end up switching back to the "old school" - I've done it with both qmail/sendmail and djbdns/bind...

  • mod_deflate (Score:4, Informative)

    by wattersa ( 629338 ) <andrew@andrewwatters.com> on Saturday March 20, 2004 @01:27AM (#8618794) Homepage
    The mod_deflate features works really well. It's reduced the bandwidth of my mostly text site to about 25% of its former size.
  • O.k so the foundation has issued an update for 2.x but what about 1.3.x?? is there nothing to patch?
    • O.k so the foundation has issued an update for 2.x but what about 1.3.x?? is there nothing to patch?

      Apache 1.x is being phased out in favor of 2.x. Support for 1.x has been there for a little while because of the number of copies in use. As 2.x is seen as more and more stable, they will stop patching 1.x. Although, FAIK, they may very well keep a versioning system like MySQL -- so users who want to be on the bleeding edge can live there, and users who want very stable code (read old), can have it thei

  • I don't get it. Where are the rotors? The tailguns? What kind of helicopter is this????????????

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