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1 point by CatDancer 5828 days ago | link | parent

Another option is if your provider will forward web requests that come in on the standard HTTP port 80 for your domain to your Arc process listening on a port such as 8080.

For example, here's my Apache configuration:

  <VirtualHost *:80>
    ServerName desiremenu.net
    ProxyPass / http://localhost:9002/
  </VirtualHost>
Arc runs and listens on port 9002 (serve 9002). Web requests that come in to http://desiremenu.net/ are forwarded by Apache to port 9002.

This doesn't need any additional code or implementation in Arc, since srv.arc already implements a web server.



1 point by shader 5826 days ago | link

How well does that hold up under load? I.e. is it fast enough to run on a shared host?

Also, has anyone here tried any of the other lisp web frameworks, such as webolcks, ucw or plt? How do you think they compare to arc's?

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1 point by CatDancer 5826 days ago | link

is it fast enough to run on a shared host?

I would assume so. I've used Apache's ProxyPass frequently and haven't had a problem. There's no technical reason that I know of that it would be either faster or slower than fastcgi. In both cases Apache is passing on the request to a persistent process. I haven't measured it though.

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