From: Gerd Stolpmann <info@gerd-stolpmann.de>
To: Joel Reymont <joelr1@gmail.com>
Cc: Caml List <caml-list@inria.fr>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Sample web server with nethttpd
Date: Fri, 30 Mar 2007 16:59:02 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1175266743.1530.238.camel@localhost.localdomain> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CA1B2BE6-55E1-47D5-8056-00D029348039@gmail.com>
Am Freitag, den 30.03.2007, 15:38 +0100 schrieb Joel Reymont:
> I'm trying to bring up a web app as soon as possible and failing to
> link Ruby with OCaml code my choice is to decouple and put an app
> server behind Rails. Apache is heavy-weight so mod_caml is out of the
> question. The choice is nethttpd and Ocsigen.
>
> My OCaml app server needs to take a POST request, grab the posted
> source code, translate it and spit it out. I can't figure out how to
> bring up a web server with nethttpd, though.
>
> It would be extremely helpful to have an expanded nethttpd tutorial
> [1] that included a sample web server. I read through but writing
> efficient code to accept connections in OCaml seems daunting and the
> choice between engine and reactor unclear.
>
> There's a sample web server in the Netplex intro, though[2], is that
> sufficient? Maybe the nethttpd intro should just point to the Netplex
> one.
Yes, the Netplex one is fully sufficient, and this is the way to go
except you have very specific needs.
The Nethttpd modules more or less provide a construction kit for web
servers. Using them require a basic understanding how servers are
constructed in general. Sorry that I cannot give a recipe.
> Quoting the manual:
> >>> Second, select an encapsulation.
>
> How is this done, precisely?
Use either the reactor module or the engine module.
> >>> As mentioned, the reactor is much simpler to use, but you must
> take a multi-threaded approach to serve multiple connections
> simultaneously.
>
> What's the standard (optimal) pattern here? Are there any code samples?
You seem to be blind. There are examples.
> >> The engine is more efficient, but may use more memory (unless it
> is only used for static pages).
>
> How much more memory? Is there a rule of thumb?
The engine needs memory buffers to store the incoming request. Depends
on the size of the requests. If you are not uploading files, you can
ignore that.
> How should I decide whether to pick an engine or a reactor?
Depends on what you can master. The engine is more difficult, you need
knowledge about event-based programming. If you don't have that
knowledge, keep away from it.
> >>> Third, write the code to create the socket and to accept
> connections.
>
> Should I use the netplex intro sample code?
Don't know how to answer this. I cannot decide for you.
> >>> For the reactor, you should do this in a multi-threaded way (but
> multi-processing is also possible). For the engine, you should do
> this in an event-based way.
>
> It appears that web servers like Lighttpd use the event-based way,
> should I pick that?
You find both approaches. Apache is multi-{processed,threaded}.
This mainly depends what you are also doing in your application.
Gerd
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Gerd Stolpmann * Viktoriastr. 45 * 64293 Darmstadt * Germany
gerd@gerd-stolpmann.de http://www.gerd-stolpmann.de
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-03-30 14:59 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-03-30 14:38 Joel Reymont
2007-03-30 14:59 ` Gerd Stolpmann [this message]
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