From what I know about fork, and mod_perl, I can't understand why that would be the recommened way to handle this (and I am in no way claiming to know everything about fork/mod_perl, so I may be way off here). My understanding is that forking under mod_perl would result in a duplication of the apache child process, complete with mod_perl and all its goodies. Sure that could then be chopped off of the apache parent and set to live on its own by closing file-handles and such, but then I have a big-fat-apache zombie process which eventually will just need to get reaped by the OS's init process.

How can that be better than hijacking an Apache process with the Cleanup phase for a little while? Am I grossly misunderstanding something here?

-stvn

In reply to Re^4: Perl cgi without mod_perl, your experience by stvn
in thread Perl cgi without mod_perl, your experience by kiat

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