this package aims to provide the full power of perl together with the
apache web server version 2. you can use perl to manage apache, respond to
requests for web pages and much more.
there already exists a mod_perl in ports (www/mod_perl) for use with the
apache in the base openbsd system. this one is usable only with
www/apache-httpd. the mod_perl developers were kind enough to set things up
so they wont conflict with each other, so you can have both running
concurrently.
originally from srebrenko sehic, with some naming tweaks from me. lots of
help from robert@ (as always).
im importing this now so it can be worked on in tree, but not hooking it up
to the bulk builds. there are a few warts that need to be fixed but i hate
sending tarballs around when we have a tree to develop in. its also nice to
have commit messages against changes so you can see why decisions were made
a certain way. after everyone is happy it can be hooked up.
define prefix the way apache likes it.
this is because apache2 has a different understanding of what the prefix
means, and our understanding and application of it on this port leads to
extremely confused paths in a lot of its generated files.
our understanding of prefix is to mean the path at which the binaries,
libs, manpages, and so on are stored, ie, /usr/local. apache2 understands
prefix to mean "install architecture-independent files", or in real terms
the ServerRoot. obviously using /usr/local as the server root when we want
to use /var/apache2 for that purpose is uncomfortable for it, and it leads
to things like broken paths in the default config files and builds of
modules.
ok robert@
Hiawatha is a secure webserver for Unix. It has been written with 'being
secure' as its main goal. Hiawatha has many security features that no
other webserver has.
Hiawatha does not have all the fancy features, but it is very secure and
fast and is really easy to configure. Rootjail, run CGIs under any
uid/gid you want, prevention of SQL injection and cross-site scripting,
banning of clients who try such exploits and many other features make
Hiawatha an interesting webserver for those who need more security than
what the other available webservers are offering.
ok steven@
programs. Fix RUN_DEPENDS so package updates work correctly.
Update problem reported by some guy at 23C3 in Berlin. RUN_DEPENDS problem
noticed by sturm@.
ok sturm@, ajacoutot@
- put config files in /etc/apache2 instead of /var since this is not
chrooted
- make a couple of comments that refer to 'httpd' refer to 'httpd2'
instead
- don't install the build makefiles
ideas from bernd@ and steven@, ok steven@
Web-browser, advanced e-mail and newsgroup client, IRC chat client,
and HTML editing made simple -- all your Internet needs in one
application.
Based mostly on a port from James Wright <jamesw at bsdhosting.co.za> with
input from several - thanks! Tested on i386/amd64/sparc64/macppc.
This module implements a configurable web traversal engine, for a robot
or other web agent. Given an initial web page (URL), the Robot will get
the contents of that page, and extract all links on the page, adding
them to a list of URLs to visit.
Features of the Robot module include:
* Follows the Robot Exclusion Protocol.
* Supports the META element proposed extensions to the Protocol.
* Implements many of the Guidelines for Robot Writers.
* Configurable.
* Builds on standard Perl 5 modules for WWW, HTTP, HTML, etc.
back and forth in email messages doesn't make any sense when we have a
cvs tree to work in.
So, not hooked into the package builds yet.
Original work and port name from dlg.
ok robert@, dlg@
while here, remove explicit dependency of -examples and -admin packages
on java, since they depend on the main package which already has this dep.
also tighten pkgspec in dependencies to v4/5.
Mongrel is a fast HTTP library and server for Ruby that is intended for
hosting Ruby web applications of any kind using plain HTTP rather than
FastCGI or SCGI. It is framework agnostic and already supports Ruby On Rails,
Og+Nitro, and Camping frameworks.
From Jason LaRiviere <jason at indelicate dot net>, some cleanup by me.