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1 point by tlrobinson 6169 days ago | link | parent

Apache probably offers better performance for static files anyway.

What's the best way to use Apache with another server like asv (on the same host, with the same port). Is a reverse proxy using mod_proxy appropriate? Something else?



1 point by nex3 6169 days ago | link

Using a reverse proxy seems like the best solution with the code we've got.

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2 points by byronsalty 6169 days ago | link

Makes sense. Obviously this is better for something being released to the public but during testing I didn't know if (even inefficiently) asv could be used as a one stop shop (a la webrick).

thanks

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1 point by nex3 6169 days ago | link

That shouldn't be too hard to hack in, I think... just find some way to capture all /images/* URLs or something and open up a file and send the contents. You might have to be a little careful with MIME types and so forth, but it seems pretty straightforward.

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5 points by bogomipz 6169 days ago | link

Just take any URL that is not defop'ed to mean a file name.

Currently, if no op is defined, the server responds with "Unknown operator.". Replace that with the code for opening a file, and if this fails, respond with a proper 404 Not Found message.

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3 points by pg 6169 days ago | link

That should work for text/html files.

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2 points by bogomipz 6168 days ago | link

By throwing in a hash table which maps from file name extensions to MIME types, it could work for other files as well.

A byte array data type for buffering would do good for performance.

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