An issue commonly faced by administrators running load-balanced web
servers using Apache is that the "ETag" header returned for static
resources can differ across the farm of servers, since the file's
inode number is used when calculating the ETag. As the ETag is used
to determine whether or not a cached resource has changed (in a
browser or proxy cache), this can cause an unnecessary performance hit
as resources are fetched more often than is required.
To work around this problem, the FileETag
directive has been added to Apache 2.0 and 1.3 to allow the
administrator to determine which of a file's properties are used in
the ETag calculation. For example, FileETag MTime Size
would mean that two files with the same size and modification time
would have the same ETag regardless of the inode number.
Investigation of the high loads generated by 2.0 on the live server
at apache.org is progressing; current theories are targeting
interactions with the FreeBSD poll system call.
Bob Liu reports on
Apache 2.0: What's New and Who'll Benefit, giving a brief history of
Apache and covering some of the new features in 2.0, concentrating mainly
on the Windows port:
...with the release of 2.0, Windows users now have a Web server
that is specifically designed to support their platform, yet, is more
reliable and secure.
But ASF board member Ken Coar warns:
not to expect to see the final version [of 2.0] released before
March
In this section we highlight some of the articles on the web that are of
interest to Apache users.
"Writing Apache SOAP-RPC-Based Web Services Using Java[tm] Technology"
provides you with the steps to install the Apache SOAP implementation
and develop a simple SOAP-RPC-based Web service with a client to
connect to it. It also includes instructions on using Tomcat as the
servlet container for the Web service.
You may be interested to find out the results of benchmarking
"Linux/apache/PHP vs Windows 2000/IIS/ASP".
That is if you know how to read French. If not, you can always try your
hand at interpreting the output of online translation tools.
"Building A PHP-Based Mail Client (part 2)"
continues with the task of writing a POP3 mail reader which is able to
handle MIME attachments. First it shows how MIME attachments work
by using an example and then proceeds to write the code to
manipulate the attachments.
Read all about the United States Census Bureau's
testimonial
on open source software such as MySQL, Perl, Apache, Linux, and
PHP. May open source be with you!