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debian and aphid?



from the mod_perl e-list, i saw this announcement about aphid --
it's a way to get mod_ssl and mod_perl into an apache server.
anybody used it on debian? yays? nays? comments?

----- Forwarded message from "Thomas, Peter L" <Peter.Thomas@eScout.com> -----

From: "Thomas, Peter L" <Peter.Thomas@eScout.com>
Date: Thu, 16 Aug 2001 14:31:55 -0500
To: mod_perl <modperl@apache.org>
Subject: [ANOUNCE] aphid 0.13a (minor release)


http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=10914&release_id=48507


aphid downloads, compiles, and installs a secure Apache and Perl
development "sandbox" anywhere on a unix system where the user
has permission to write and enough space to store a complete
system (around 300MB).  The best use for aphid is as a quick
facility for getting an SSL-ready Apache server and complete
Perl environment under a specific directory, staying out of the
way of the host machine's existing system files and environment.
Note that mod_perl and mod_ssl are both compiled statically into
the resulting httpd binary.  To date Aphid has been tested on
Rehat Linux 6 and 6.2, FreeBSD 4.0, and Solaris 2.6 and 7.

CHANGES:

0.13a 08/14/2001
 Removed dependencies on the RSARef library.  Fixed blank lines
 with spaces slipping by the host queue regex.  Corrected
 numbering error in log message when a remote file has to be
 requeued for HTTP download.  Changed install to write its log
 in the same directory from which it's invoked (instead of under
 /lib/install).  Numerous third-party releases brought up to
 date with the currently released stable version.  Edited the
 documentation.

Thanks.  -Pete Thomas

----- End forwarded message -----

-- 
DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #79 from Joost Kooij <joost@topaz.mdcc.cx>
:
When using a display manager (xdm, kdm, gdm) are your SHELL
DEFAULTS IGNORED IN X?  Put
	. ~/.bashrc
into your ~/.bash_profile so that new logins get noy only the
login environment but also the shell environment; and add
	. ~/.bash_profile
into your ~/.xsession, which makes sure that the X session gets
a login environment.

Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ...



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