Apache runs as a permanent background task: a daemon (UNIX) or service (Windows). Start-up is a slow and expensive operation, so for an operational server, it is usual for Apache to start at system boot and remain permanently up. Early versions of Apache had documented support for an inetd
mode (run from a generic superserver for every incoming request), but this mode was never appropriate for operational use.
The Apache HTTP Server comprises a relatively small core, together with a number of modules (Figure 2-1). Modules may be compiled statically into the server or, more commonly, held in a /modules/
or /libexec/
directory and loaded dynamically at runtime. In addition, the server relies on the Apache Portable Runtime (APR) libraries, which provide a cross-platform operating system layer and utilities, so that modules don’t have to rely on non-portable operating system calls. A special-purpose module, the Multi-Processing Module (MPM), serves to optimize Apache for the underlying operating system. The MPM should normally be the only module to access the operating system other than through the APR.
Figure 2-1. Apache architecture
Apache operation proceeds in two phases: start-up and operational. System start-up takes place as root
, and includes parsing the configuration file(s), loading modules, and initializing system resources such as log files, shared memory segments, and database connections. For normal operation, Apache relinquishes its system privileges and runs as an unprivileged user before accepting and processing connections from clients over the network. This basic security measure helps to prevent a simple bug in Apache (or a module or script) from becoming a devastating system vulnerability, like those exploited by malware such as “Code Red” and “Nimda” in MS IIS.
This two-stage operation has some implications for applications architecture. First, anything that requires system privileges must be run at system start-up. Second, it is good practice to run as much initialization as possible at start-up, so as to minimize the processing required to service each request. Conversely, because so many slow and expensive operations are concentrated in system start-up, it would be hugely inefficient to try to run Apache from a generic server such as inetd
or tcpserver
.
One non-intuitive quirk of the architecture is that the configuration code is, in fact, executed twice at start-up (although not at restart). The first time through checks that the configuration is valid (at least to the point that Apache can successfully start); the second pass is “live” and leads into the operational phase. Most modules can ignore this behavior (standard use of APR pools ensures that it doesn’t cause a resource leak), but it may have implications for some modules. For example, a module that dynamically loads new code at start-up may want to do so just once and, therefore, must use a technique such as setting and checking a static flag to ensure that critical initialization takes place just once.
The purpose of Apache’s start-up phase is to read the configuration, load modules and libraries, and initialize required resources. Each module may have its own resources, and has the opportunity to initialize those resources. At start-up, Apache runs as a single-process, single-thread program and has full system privileges.
Apache’s main configuration file is normally called httpd.conf
. However, this nomenclature is just a convention, and third-party Apache distributions such as those provided as .rpm
or .deb
packages may use a different naming scheme. In addition, httpd.conf
may be a single file, or it may be distributed over several files using the Include
directive to include different configuration files. Some distributions have highly intricate configurations. For example, Debian GNU/Linux ships an Apache configuration that relies heavily on familiarity with Debian, rather than with Apache. It is not the purpose of this book to discuss the merits of different layouts, so we’ll simply call this configuration file httpd.conf
.
The httpd.conf
configuration file is a plain text file and is parsed line-by-line at server start-up. The contents of httpd.conf
comprise directives, containers, and comments. Blank lines and leading whitespace are also allowed, but will be ignored.
Most of the contents of httpd.conf
are directives. A directive may have zero or more arguments, separated by whitespace. Each directive determines its own syntax, so different directives may permit different numbers of arguments, and different argument types (e.g., string, numeric, enumerated, Boolean on/off, or filename). Each directive is implemented by some module or the core, as described in Chapter 9.
For example:
LoadModule foo_module modules/mod_foo.so
This directive is implemented by mod_so
and tells it to load a module. The first argument is the module name (string, alphanumeric). The second argument is a filename, which may be absolute or relative to the server root.
DocumentRoot /usr/local/apache/htdocs
This directive is implemented by the core, and sets the directory that is the root of the main document tree visible from the Web.
SetEnv hello "Hello, World!"
This directive is implemented by mod_env
and sets an environment variable. Note that because the second argument contains a space, we must surround it with quotation marks.
Choices On
This directive is implemented by mod_choices
(Chapter 6) and activates that module’s options.
A container is a special form of directive, characterized by a syntax that superficially resembles markup, using angle brackets. Containers differ semantically from other directives in that they comprise a start and an end on separate lines, and they affect directives falling between the start and the end of the container. For example, the <VirtualHost>
container is implemented by the core and defines a virtual host:
The container provides a context for the directives within it. In this case, the directives apply to requests to www.example.com
, but not to requests to any other names this server responds to. Containers can be nested unless a module explicitly prevents it. Directives, including containers, may be context sensitive, so they are valid only in some specified type of context.
Any line whose first character is a hash is read as a comment.
# This line is a comment
A hash within a directive doesn’t in general make a comment, unless the module implementing the directive explicitly supports it.
If a module is not loaded, directives that it implements are not recognized, and Apache will stop with a syntax error when it encounters them. Therefore mod_so
must be statically linked to load other modules. This is pretty much essential whenever you’re developing new modules, as without LoadModule
you’d have to rebuild the entire server every time you change your module!
At the end of the start-up phase, control passes to the Multi-Processing Module (see Section 2.3). The MPM is responsible for managing Apache’s operation at a systems level. It typically does so by maintaining a pool of worker processes and/or threads, as appropriate to the operating system and other applicable constraints (such as optimization for a particular usage scenario). The original process remains as “master,” maintaining a pool of worker children. These workers are responsible for servicing incoming connections, while the parent process deals with creating new children, removing surplus ones as necessary, and communicating signals such as “shut down” or “restart.”
Because of the MPM architecture, it is not possible to describe the operational phase in definite terms. Whereas the standard MPMs use worker children in some manner, they are not constrained to work in only one way. Thus another MPM could, in principle, implement an entirely different server architecture at the system level.
There is no shutdown phase as such. Instead, anything that needs be done on shutdown is registered as a cleanup, as described in Chapter 3. When Apache stops, all registered cleanups are run.
At the end of the start-up phase, after the configuration has been read, overall control of Apache passes to a Multi-Processing Module. The MPM provides the interface between the running Apache server and the underlying operating system. Its primary role is to optimize Apache for each platform, while ensuring the server runs efficiently and securely.
As indicated by the name, the MPM is itself a module. But the MPM is uniquely a systems-level module (so developing an MPM falls outside the scope of a book on applications development). Also uniquely, every Apache instance must contain exactly one MPM, which is selected at build-time.
The old NCSA server, and Apache 1, grew up in a UNIX environment. It was a multiprocess server, where each client would be serviced by one server instance. If there were more concurrent clients than server processes, Apache would fork additional server processes to deal with them. Under normal operation, Apache would maintain a pool of available server processes to deal with incoming requests.
Whereas this scheme works well on UNIX-family[1] systems, it is an inefficient solution on platforms such as Windows, where forking a process is an expensive operation. So making Apache truly cross-platform required another solution. The approach adopted for Apache 2 is to turn the core processing into a pluggable module, the MPM, which can be optimized for different environments. The MPM architecture also allows different Apache models to coexist even within a single operating system, thus providing users with options for different usages.
In practice, only UNIX-family operating systems offer a useful[2] choice: Other supported platforms (Windows, Netware, OS/2, BeOS) have a single MPM optimized for each platform. UNIX has two production-quality MPMs (Prefork and Worker) available as standard, a third (Event) that is thought to be stable for non-SSL uses in Apache 2.2, and several experimental options unsuitable for production use. Third-party MPMs are also available.
mod_dbd
.mod_ruid
.[6] For running external programs, other options include fastcgi/mod_fcgid
[7] and suexec
(CGI). The author does not have personal knowledge of these third-party solutions and so cannot make recommendations about them.The one-sentence summary: MPMs are invisible to applications and should be ignored!
Applications developed for Apache should normally be MPM-agnostic. Given that MPM internals are not part of the API, this is basically straightforward, provided programmers observe basic rules of good practice (namely, write thread-safe, cross-process-safe, reentrant code), as briefly discussed in Chapter 4. This issue is closely related to the broader question of developing platform-independent code. Indeed, it is sometimes useful to regard the MPM, rather than the operating system, as the applications platform.
Sometimes an application is naturally better suited to some MPMs than others. For example, database-driven or load-balancing applications benefit substantially from connection pooling (discussed later in this book) and therefore from a threaded MPM. In contrast, forking a child process (the original CGI implementation or mod_ext_filter
) creates greater overhead in a threaded program and, therefore, works best with the Prefork MPM. Nevertheless, an application should work even when used with a suboptimal MPM, unless there are compelling reasons to limit it.
If you wish to run Apache on an operating system that is not yet supported, the main task is to add support for your target platform to the APR, which provides the operating system layer. A custom MPM may or may not be necessary, but is likely to deliver better performance than an existing one. From the point of view of Apache, this is a systems programming task, and hence it falls outside the scope of an applications development book.
To work with Apache as a development platform, we need an overview of the basic units of webserver operation and the core objects that represent them within Apache. The most important are the server, the TCP connection, and the HTTP request. A fourth basic Apache object, the process, is a unit of the operating system rather than the application architecture. Each of these basic units is represented by a core data structure defined in the header file httpd.h
and, like other core objects we encounter in applications development, is completely independent of the MPM in use.
Before describing these core data structures, we need to introduce some further concepts used throughout Apache and closely tied to the architecture:
apr_pool_t
) are the core of resource management in Apache. Whenever a resource is allocated dynamically, a cleanup is registered with a pool, ensuring that system resources are freed when they are no longer required. Pools tie resources to the lifetime of one of the core objects. We will describe pools in depth in Chapter 3.ap_conf_vector_t
), with each module having its own entry in the vector. They are used in two ways: to set and retrieve permanent configuration data, and to store temporary data associated with a transient object. They are often essential to avoid use of unsafe static or global data in a module, as discussed in Chapters 4 and 9.Having introduced pools and configuration records, we are now ready to look at the Apache core objects. In order of importance to most modules, they are
request_rec
server_rec
conn_rec
process_rec
The first two are by far the most commonly encountered in application development.
A request_rec
object is created whenever Apache accepts an HTTP request from a client, and is destroyed as soon as Apache finishes processing the request. The request_rec
object is passed to every handler implemented by any module in the course of processing a request (as discussed in Chapters 5 and 6). It holds all of the internal data relevant to processing an HTTP request. It also includes a number of fields used internally to maintain state and client information by Apache:
httpd.conf
or .htaccess
).mod_rewrite
, and PHP), and a similar “notes” table for request data that should not be seen by scripts.Here is the full definition, from httpd.h
:
The server_rec
defines a logical webserver. If virtual hosts are in use,[8] each virtual host has its own server_rec
, defining it independently of the other hosts. The server_rec
is created at server start-up, and it never dies unless the entire httpd
is shut down. The server_rec
does not have its own pool; instead, server resources need to be allocated from the process pool, which is shared by all servers. It does have a configuration vector as well as server resources including the server name and definition, resources and limits, and logging information.
The server_rec
is the second most important structure to programmers, after the request_rec
. It will feature prominently throughout our discussion of module programming.
Here is the full definition, from httpd.h
:
The conn_rec
object is Apache’s internal representation of a TCP connection. It is created when Apache accepts a connection from a client, and later it is destroyed when the connection is closed. The usual reason for a connection to be made is to serve one or more HTTP requests, so one or more request_rec
structures will be instantiated from each conn_rec
. Most applications will focus on the request and ignore the conn_rec
, but protocol modules and connection-level filters will need to use the conn_rec
, and modules may sometimes use it in tasks such as optimizing the use of resources over the lifetime of an HTTP Keepalive (persistent connection).
The conn_rec
has no configuration information, but has a configuration vector for transient data associated with a connection as well as a pool for connection resources. It also has connection input and output filter chains, plus data describing the TCP connection.
It is important to distinguish clearly between the request and the connection—the former is always a subcomponent of the latter. Apache cleanly represents each as a separate object, with one important exception, which we will deal with in discussing connection filters in Chapter 8.
Here is the full definition from httpd.h
:
Unlike the other core objects discussed earlier, the process_rec
is an operating system object rather than a web architecture object. The only time applications need concern themselves with it is when they are working with resources having the lifetime of the server, when the process pool serves all of the server_rec
objects (and is accessed from a server_rec
as s->process->pool
). The definition appears in httpd.h
, but is not reproduced here.
The header file httpd.h
that defines these core structures is but one of many API header files that the applications developer will need to use. These fall into several loosely bounded categories that can be identified by naming conventions:
ap_
header files generally define low-level API elements and are usually (though not always) accessed indirectly by inclusion in other headers.http_
header files define most of the key APIs likely to be of interest to application developers. They are also exposed in scripting languages through modules such as mod_perl
and mod_python
.util_
header files define API elements at a higher level than ap_
, but are rarely used directly by application modules. Two exceptions to that rule are util_script.h
and util_filter.h
, which define scripting and filtering APIs, respectively, and are commonly accessed by modules.mod_
header files define APIs implemented by modules that are optional. Using these APIs may create dependencies. Best practice is discussed in Chapter 10.apr_
header files define the APR APIs. The APR libraries are external but essential to the webserver, and the APR is required (directly or indirectly) by any nontrivial module. The APR is discussed in Chapter 3.mod_
header file) or adopt their own.As noted earlier, the primary APIs for application modules are the http_*
header files.
http_config.h
— Defines the configuration API, including the configuration data structures, the configuration vectors, any associated accessors, and, in particular, the main APIs presented in Chapter 9. It also defines the module data structure itself and associated accessors, and the handler (content generator) hook. It is required by most modules.http_connection.h
— Defines the (small) TCP connection API, including connection-level hooks. Most modules will access the connection through the conn_rec
object, so this API is seldom required by application modules.http_core.h
— Defines miscellaneous APIs exported by the Apache core, such as accessor functions for the request_rec
object. It includes APIs exported for particular modules, such as to support mod_perl
’s configuration sections. This header file is rarely required by application modules.http_log.h
— Defines the error logging API and piped logs. Modules will need it for the error reporting functions and associated macros.http_main.h
— Defines APIs for server start-up. It is unlikely to be of interest to modules.http_protocol.h
— Contains high-level functional APIs for performing a number of important operations, including all normal I/O to the client, and for dealing with aspects of the HTTP protocol such as generating the correct response headers. It also exports request processing hooks that fall outside the scope of http_request
. Many modules will require this header file—for example, content generators (unless you use only the lower-level APIs) and authentication modules.http_request.h
— Defines the main APIs discussed in Chapter 6. It exports most of the request processing hooks, and the subrequest and internal redirect APIs. It is required by some, but not all, modules.http_vhost.h
— Contains APIs for managing virtual hosts. It is rarely needed by modules except those concerned with virtual host configuration.httpd.h
— Contains Apache’s core API, which is required by (probably) all modules. It defines a lot of system constants, some of them derived from local build parameters, and various APIs such as HTTP status codes and methods. Most importantly, it defines the core objects mentioned earlier in this chapter.Other important API headers we will encounter include the following files:
util_filter.h
— The filter API, required by all filter modules (Chapter 8)ap_provider.h
— The provider API (Chapter 10)mod_dbd.h
— The DBD framework (Chapters 10 and 11)Other API headers likely to be of interest to application developers include the following files:
util_ldap.h
— The LDAP APIutil_script.h
— A scripting environment that originally supported CGI, but is also used by other modules that use CGI environment variables (e.g., mod_rewrite
, mod_perl
, mod_php
) or that generate responses using CGI rules (e.g., mod_asis
)Apache configuration is mostly determined at start-up, when the server reads httpd.conf
(and any included files). Configuration data, including resources derived from them by a module (e.g., by opening a file), are stored on each module’s configuration records.
Each module has two configuration records, either or both of which may be null (unused):
server_rec
, so there is one instance per virtual host. The scope of per-server directives is controlled by <VirtualHost>
containers in httpd.conf
, but other containers such as <Location>
, <Directory>
, and <Files>
will be ignored.request_rec
object in the course of processing a request. It is the opposite of per-server configuration: Its scope is defined by containers such as <Location>
, <Directory>
, and <Files>
.To implement a configuration directive, a module must supply a function that will recognize the directive and set a field in one of the configuration records at system start-up time. After start-up, the configuration is set and should not be changed. In particular, the configuration records should generally be treated as read-only while processing requests (or connections). Changing configuration data during request processing violates thread safety (requiring use of programming techniques such as locking) and runs a high risk of introducing other bugs due to the increased complexity. Apache provides a separate configuration record on each conn_rec
and request_rec
for transient data.
Chapter 9 describes working with configuration records and data.
Most, though by no means all, modules are concerned with some aspect of processing an HTTP request. But there is rarely, if ever, a reason for a module to concern itself with every aspect of HTTP—that is the business of the httpd
. The advantage of a modular approach is that a module can easily focus on a particular task but ignore aspects of HTTP that are not relevant to it.
The simplest possible formulation of a webserver is a program that listens for HTTP requests and returns a response when it receives one (Figure 2-2). In Apache, this job is fundamentally the business of a content generator, the core of the webserver.
Figure 2-2. Minimal webserver
Exactly one content generator must be run for every HTTP request. Any module may register content generators, normally by defining a function referenced by a handler that can be configured using the SetHandler
or AddHandler
directives in httpd.conf
. The default generator, which is used when no specific generator is defined by any module, simply returns a file, mapped directly from the request to the filesystem. Modules that implement content generators are sometimes known as “content generator” or “handler” modules.
In principle, a content generator can handle all the functions of a webserver. For example, a CGI program gets the request and produces the response, and it can take full control of what happens between them. Like other webservers, Apache splits the request into different phases. For example, it checks whether the user is authorized to do something before the content generator does that thing.
Several request phases precede the content generator (Figure 2-3). These serve to examine and perhaps manipulate the request headers, and to determine what to do with the request. For example:
mod_negotiation
will find the version of the resource that best matches the browser’s preference. For example, the Apache manual pages are served in the language requested by the browser.mod_alias
or mod_rewrite
may change the effective URL in the request.Figure 2-3. Request processing in Apache
There is also a request logging phase, which comes after the content generator has sent a reply to the browser.
Request processing may sometimes be diverted from the standard processing axis described here, for a variety of reasons:
quick_handler
hook that bypasses normal processing, used by mod_cache
(not discussed in this book).The mechanism by which a module can influence or take charge of some aspect of processing in Apache is through a sequence of hooks. The usual hooks for processing a request in Apache 2.0 are described next.
post_read_request
— This is the first hook available to modules in normal request processing. It is available to modules that need to hook very early into processing a request.
translate_name
— Apache maps the request URL to the filesystem. A module can insert a hook here to substitute its own logic—for example, mod_alias
.
map_to_storage
— Since the URL has been mapped to the filesystem, we are now in a position to apply per-directory configuration (<Directory>
and <Files>
sections and their variants, including any relevant .htaccess
files if enabled). This hook enables Apache to determine the configuration options that apply to this request. It applies normal configuration directives for all active modules, so few modules should ever need to apply hooks here. The only standard module to do so is mod_proxy
.
header_parser
— This hook inspects the request headers. It is rarely used, as modules can perform that task at any point in the request processing, and they usually do so within the context of another hook. mod_setenvif
is a standard module that uses a header_parser
to set internal environment variables according to the request headers.
access_checker
— Apache checks whether access to the requested resource is permitted according to the server configuration (httpd.conf
). A module can add to or replace Apache’s standard logic, which implements the Allow/Deny From directives in mod_access
(httpd 1.x and 2.0) or mod_authz_host
(httpd 2.2).
check_user_id
— If any authentication method is in use, Apache will apply the relevant authentication and set the username field r->user
. A module may implement an authentication method with this hook.
auth_checker
— This hook checks whether the requested operation is permitted to the authenticated user.
type_checker
— This hook applies rules related to the MIME type (where applicable) of the requested resource, and determines the content handler to use (if not already set). Standard modules implementing this hook include mod_negotiation
(selection of a resource based on HTTP content negotiation) and mod_mime
(setting the MIME type and handler information according to standard configuration directives and conventions such as filename “extensions”).
fixups
— This general-purpose hook enables modules to run any necessary processing after the preceding hooks but before the content generator. Like post_read_request
, it is something of a catch-all, and is one of the most commonly used hooks.
handler
— This is the content generator hook. It is responsible for sending an appropriate response to the client. If there are input data, the handler
is also responsible for reading them. Unlike the other hooks, where zero or many functions may be involved in processing a request, every request is processed by exactly one handler.
log_transaction
— This hook logs the transaction after the response has been returned to the client. A module may modify or replace Apache’s standard logging.
A module may hook its own handlers into any of these processing phases. The module provides a callback function and hooks it in, and Apache calls the function during the appropriate processing phase. Modules that concern themselves with the phases before content generation are sometimes known as metadata modules; they are described in detail in Chapter 6. Modules that deal with logging are known as logging modules. In addition to using the standard hooks, modules may define further processing hooks, as described in Chapter 10.
What we have described so far is essentially similar to the architecture of every general-purpose webserver. There are, of course, differences in the details, but the request processing (metadata → generator → logger) phases are common.
The major innovation in Apache 2, which transforms it from a “mere” webserver (like Apache 1.3 and others) into a powerful applications platform, is the filter chain. The filter chain can be represented as a data axis, orthogonal to the request-processing axis (Figure 2-4). The request data may be processed by input filters before reaching the content generator, and the response may be processed by output filters before being sent to the client. Filters enable a far cleaner and more efficient implementation of data processing than was possible in the past, as well as separating content generation from its transformation and aggregation.
Figure 2-4. Apache 2 introduces a new data axis enabling a new range of powerful applications
Many applications can be implemented as either a handler or a filter. Sometimes it may be clear that one of these solutions is appropriate and the other would be nonsensical, but between these extremes lies a gray area. How does one decide whether to write a handler or a filter?
When making this decision, there are several questions to consider:
For example, Apache 1.3 users can do an XSLT transformation by building it into handlers, such as CGI or PHP. Alternatively, they can use an XSLT module, but this is very slow and cumbersome (this author tried an XSLT module for Apache 1.3, but found it many hundreds of times slower than running XSLT in a CGI script operating on temporary files). Running XSLT in a handler works, but loses modularity and reusability. Any nontrivial application that needs it has to reinvent that wheel, using whatever libraries are available for the programming or scripting language used and often resorting to ugly hacks such as temporary files.
Apache 2, by contrast, allows us to run XSLT in a filter. Content handlers requiring XSLT can simply output the XML as is, and leave the transformation to Apache. The first XSLT module for Apache 2, written by Phillip Dunkel and released while Apache 2.0 was still in beta testing, was initially incomplete, but already worked far better than XSLT in Apache 1.3. It is now further improved, and is one of a choice of XSLT modules. This book’s author developed another XSLT module.
More generally, if a module has both data inputs and outputs, and if it may be used in more than one application, then it is a strong candidate for implementation as a filter.
DocumentRoot
. Although a filter could do that, there’s nothing to be gained.mod_ext_filter
.mod_include
implements server-side includes, a simple scripting language embedded in pages. It is implemented as a filter, so it can post-process content from any content generator, as discussed earlier with reference to XSLT.mod_ssl
implements secure transport as a connection-level filter, thereby enabling all normal processing in the server to work with unencrypted data. This represents a major advance over Apache 1.x, where secure transport was complex and required a lot of work to combine it with other applications.mod_form
and mod_upload
,[13] spare applications from reinventing that wheel.mod_deflate
. The filter architecture allows this module to be much simpler than mod_gzip
(an Apache 1.3 compression module) and to dispense with any use of temporary files.Before moving on to discuss how a module hooks itself into any of the stages of processing a request/data, we should pause to clear up a matter that often causes confusion—namely, the order of processing.
The request processing axis is straightforward, with phases happening strictly in order. But confusion arises in the data axis. For maximum efficiency, this axis is pipelined, so the content generator and filters do not run in a deterministic order. For example, you cannot in general set something in an input filter and expect it to apply in the generator or output filters.
The order of processing centers on the content generator, which is responsible for pulling data from the input filter stack and pushing data onto the output filters (where applicable, in both cases). When a generator or filter needs to set something affecting the request as a whole, it must do so before passing any data down the chain (generator and output filters) or before returning data to the caller (input filters).
Now that we have an overview of request processing in Apache, we can show how a module hooks into it to play a part.
The Apache module structure declares several (optional) data and function members:
The configuration directives are presented as an array; the remaining module entries are functions. The relevant function for the module to create request processing hooks is the final member:
Which hooks we need to create here depend on which part or parts of the request our module is interested in. For example, a module that implements a content generator (handler) will need a handler hook, looking something like this:
ap_hook_handler(my_handler, NULL, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE) ;
Now my_handler
will be called when a request reaches the content generation phase. Hooks for other request phases are similar.
The following prototype applies to a handler for any of these phases:
Details and implementation of this prototype are discussed in Chapters 5 and 6.
This basic introduction to the Apache platform and architecture sets the scene for the following chapters. We have now looked at the following aspects of Apache:
Nothing in this general overview is specific to C programming, so Chapter 2 should be equally relevant to scripting languages. Together with the next two chapters (on the APR and programming techniques, respectively), it provides the essential basis for understanding the core information and advanced topics covered in Chapters 5–11. In those chapters, the concepts introduced here are examined in more detail, and demonstrated in the context of developing real applications.
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