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If you encounter an error or warning you don't understand, check this chapter for solutions to common warnings and errors that the mod_perl community has encountered in the last few years.
Perl's warnings mode is immensely helpful in detecting possible problems. Make sure you always turn on warnings while you are developing code. See The Importance of Warnings.
Enabling use diagnostics;
generally helps you to determine the
source of the problem and how to solve it. See diagnostics pragma for more information.
When building mod_perl one may get the following failure:
make[1]: Entering directory `.../mod_perl-1.29/Symbol' Running Mkbootstrap for Apache::Symbol () ... Bareword "gensym" not allowed while "strict subs" in use at /usr/lib/perl5/5.8.3/Pod/Parser.pm line 1158. ... make: *** [subdirs] Error 2
That happens when you you've modify @INC
to push "."
before all
other directories, whereas it should be last. When "."
is first in
@INC
it picks mod_perl-1.29/Symbol/Symbol.pm when it's inside
the directory mod_perl-1.29/Symbol. This shouldn't happen if your
system paths are coming first. To check your @INC
, run:
% perl -V
and it'll appear at the end of the output. Usually "."
is pushed
first by setting a PERL5LIB
or a similar environment
variable. Unset it and repeat the build process to solve the problem.
No rule to make target ... CORE/config.h
If while running 'make'
you get a message:
make: *** No rule to make target `/usr/lib/perl5/5.8.3/i386-linux/CORE/config.h', needed by `Makefile'. Stop.
That means that your Perl installation is incomplete. Usually this is the case on package based distros, where perl is split across multiple packages. Usually you need to install the Perl-devel package to be able to build any other Perl modules that include XS extensions.
This section talks about errors reported when you attempt to start the server.
Although the httpd executable was successfully built, you can still have make failures. The output could include the following errors:
relocation error: undefined symbol: PL_dowarn
This class of errors is often due to multiple installations of Perl. Having libperl.so in /usr/lib/ is a great reason for lots of obscure problems, when you have one more perl installed elsewhere. That's why perl puts its libperl.so under its private tree (e.g., /usr/lib/perl5/5.8.3/i686/CORE/). But some distributions decide to put it along with the rest of system libraries, not expecting that users will have extra perl installations.
To resolve the problem you need to check what perl library the
application finds. This is easy to check with the help of ldd(1)
.
If your mod_perl is statically linked with httpd, you need to check the httpd executable whether it's linked against libperl.so:
% ldd /path/to/apache/bin/httpd
If the output includes libperl.so check that the path is to the
version of Perl you've built mod_perl with. If your httpd executable
is reported to link against the wrong libperl.so file, you've found
the cause of the problem. You should either ask your distributor to
not put the perl library into the global system libs directory, or use
some other solution to force the loading of the right library, which
is usually very platform specific. For example on Linux one can
preload a specific library path using the LD_PRELOAD
environment
variable. So if the wanted library is located at
/usr/lib/perl5/5.8.3/i686/CORE/libperl.so you can make httpd use it
with:
% LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/perl5/5.8.3/i686/CORE/libperl.so httpd
for more information on Linux loader referer to the ld.so(8)
ldconfig(8)
manpages.
If mod_perl is built as DSO, you will need to check the mod_perl
module (and not httpd
) with ldd
. Confusingly, mod_perl 1.0
module name is the same as of Perl: libperl.so. If for example the
mod_perl module is located in /path/to/apache/libexec/, the command
would be:
% ldd /path/to/apache/libexec/libperl.so
There could be another variation of the problem where a Perl used to build mod_perl is statically linked and again, during the build time a wrong static archive (e.g., /usr/lib/libperl.a) is picked by the linker. If Perl is statically linked, running:
% perl -V:useshrplib
will say:
useshrplib='false'
Again, the solution may vary from system to system, but moving /usr/lib/libperl.a away while building mod_perl is probably the simplest.
Possible reasons and solutions:
You have to build mod_perl with the same compiler as Perl was built with. Otherwise you may see segmentation faults and other weird things happen.
This could be the XSLoader vs. DynaLoader problem, where the list of dl_handles created by XSLoader is wiped out by DynaLoader. Try adding:
use DynaLoader ();
to your startup.pl before any other module is loaded.
This has been resolved in perl 5.8.0. For earlier versions of Perl you need to comment out:
#@dl_librefs = (); # things we have loaded #@dl_modules = (); # Modules we have loaded
in DynaLoader.pm.
However if none of this cases applies and you still experience segmentation faults, please report the problem using the following guidelines.
If when you run the server you get the following error:
libexec/libperl.so: open failed: No such file or directory
it probably means that Perl was compiled with a shared library. mod_perl does detect this and links the Apache executable to the Perl shared library (libperl.so).
First of all make sure you have Perl installed on the machine, and that you have libperl.so in <perlroot>/<version>/<architecture>/CORE. For example in /usr/local/lib/perl5/5.00503/sun4-solaris/CORE.
Then make sure that directory is included in the environment
variable LD_LIBRARY_PRELOAD
. Under normal circumstances, Apache
should have the path configured at compile time, but this way you can
override the library path.
install_driver(Oracle) failed: Can't load '/usr/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/i386-linux/auto/DBD/Oracle/Oracle.so' for module DBD::Oracle: libclntsh.so.8.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory at /usr/lib/perl5/5.00503/i386-linux/DynaLoader.pm line 169. at (eval 27) line 3 Perhaps a required shared library or dll isn't installed where expected at /usr/local/apache/perl/tmp.pl line 11
On BSD style filesystems LD_LIBRARY_PATH
is not searched for setuid
programs (a.k.a., Apache). This isn't a problem for CGI script since
they don't do a setuid (and are forked off), but Apache does, and
mod_perl is in Apache. Therefore the first solution is to explicitly
load the library from the system wide ldconfig configuration file:
# echo $ORACLE_HOME/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf # ldconfig
Another solution to this problem is to modify the resulting
Makefile ( after running perl Makefile.PL
) as follows:
1. search for the line LD_RUN_PATH=
2. replace it with LD_RUN_PATH=(my_oracle_home)/lib
(my_oracle_home) is, of course, the home path to your oracle installation. In particular, the file libclntsh.so.8.0 should exist in that directory. (If you use CPAN, the build directory for DBD::Oracle should be in ~/.cpan/build/DBD-Oracle-1.06/ if you're logged in as root.)
Then, just type make install
, and all should go well.
FYI, setting LD_RUN_PATH
has the effect of hard-coding the path to
(my_oracle_home)/lib in the resulting Oracle.so
file generated
by the DBD::Oracle
so that at run-time, it doesn't have to go
searching through LD_LIBRARY_PATH
or the default directories used
by ld
.
For more information see the ld manpage and an essay on
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
: http://www.visi.com/~barr/ldpath.html
Syntax error on line 393 of /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf: Invalid command 'PerlHandler', perhaps mis-spelled or defined by a module not included in the server configuration [FAILED]
This can happen when you have a mod_perl enabled Apache compiled with DSO (generally it's an installed RPM or other binary package) but the mod_perl module isn't loaded. In this case you have to tell Apache to load mod_perl by adding:
AddModule mod_perl.c
in your httpd.conf.
This can also happen when you try to run a non-mod_perl Apache server using the configuration from a mod_perl server.
This problem is experienced by users on certain Solaris versions. When
the server is built with modules that use the __floatdisf
symbol it
can't be started. e.g.:
Cannot load /usr/local/apache/libexec/libproxy.so into server: ld.so.1: ../bin/httpd: fatal: relocation error: file /usr/local/apache/libexec/libproxy.so: symbol __floatdisf: referenced symbol not found
The missing symbol is in libgcc.a. Use
% gcc -print-libgcc-file-name
to see where that file is. Once found you have to relink the module with that file. You can also look for it in the gcc tree, e.g. under gcc-3.2.1/gcc.
First, configure and install Apache. Next, relink mod_proxy.so or mod_negotiation.so, or whatever the module that reports the problem with libgcc.a.
% cd apache_1.3.27/src/modules % ld -G -o mod_proxy.so mod_proxy.lo /pathto/libgcc.a
(adjust the /pathto/ to point to the right file from the gcc output stage.)
You can now verify with nm
that mod_proxy.so includes that
symbol.
RegistryLoader: Translation of uri [/home/httpd/perl/test.pl] to filename failed [tried: /home/httpd/docs/home/httpd/perl/test.pl]
This error shows up when Apache::RegistryLoader
fails to translate
the URI into the corresponding filesystem path. Most failures happen
when one passes a file path instead of URI. (A reminder:
/home/httpd/perl/test.pl is a file path, while /perl/test.pl is
a URI). In most cases all you have to do is to pass something that
Apache::RegistryLoader
expects to get - the URI, but there are more
complex cases. Apache::RegistryLoader
's man page shows how to
handle these cases as well (look for the trans() sub).
If your server startup fails with:
Apache.pm failed to load!
try adding this to httpd.conf:
PerlModule Apache
There is no object built for this module. e.g. when you see:
Can't locate loadable object for module Apache::Util in @INC...
make sure to give mod_perl's Makefile.PL
PERL_UTIL_API=1
,
EVERYTHING=1
or DYNAMIC=1
parameters to enable and build all the
components of Apache::Util
.
Can't locate object method "get_handlers" via package "Apache"
You need to rebuild your mod_perl with stacked handlers, i.e.
PERL_STACKED_HANDLERS=1
or more simply EVERYTHING=1
.
Most often you will find that you really do have a syntax error.
However the other reason might be that a script running under
Apache::Registry
is using __DATA__
or __END__
tokens. Learn why.
Check that all your modules are compiled with the same Perl that is compiled into mod_perl. Perl 5.005 and 5.004 are not binary compatible by default.
Other known causes of this problem:
OS distributions that ship with a broken binary Perl installation.
The `perl' program and `libperl.a' library are somehow built with different binary compatibility flags.
The solution to these problems is to rebuild Perl and any extension modules from a fresh source tree. Tip for running Perl's Configure script: use the `-des' flags to accepts defaults and `-D' flag to override certain attributes:
% ./Configure -des -Dcc=gcc ... && make test && make install
Read Perl's INSTALL document for more details.
Solaris OS specific:
"Can't load DBI
" or similar error for the IO module or whatever
dynamic module mod_perl tries to pull in first. The solution is to
re-configure, re-build and re-install Perl and dynamic modules with
the following flags when Configure asks for "additional LD flags
":
-Xlinker --export-dynamic
or
-Xlinker -E
This problem is only known to be caused by installing gnu ld under Solaris.
On certain Mac OS X builds mod_perl doesn't seem to able to print()
anything to the client. That's because STDOUT
is not tied to the
Apache
module. Most likely some core module on Mac OS X
untie's/re-tie's STDOUT
after mod_perl had it tied. The workaround
is to add:
PerlHeaderParserHandler "sub { tie *STDOUT, 'Apache' unless tied *STDOUT; }"
Another solution is not to use un unqualified print()
, but
$r->print()
, for example replace:
print "Hello";
with:
$r->print("Hello");
If you don't have $r
, you can obtain it with:
my $r = Apache->request;
If you build mod_perl and mod_php in the same binary, you might get Segmentation fault followed by this error:
exit signal Segmentation fault (11)
The solution is to not rely on PHP's built-in MySQL support, and
instead build mod_php with your local MySQL support files by adding
--with-mysql=/path/to/mysql
during ./configure
.
Under mod_perl you may receive a warning or an error in the
error_log which specifies /dev/null as the source file, and line
0 as an line number where the printing of the message was triggered.
This is absolutely normal if the code is executed from within a
handler, because there is no actual file associated with the handler.
Therefore $0
is set to /dev/null and that's what you see.
See the sections "Non-Scheduled Emergency Log Rotation" and "All RAM Consumed"
If you have some of the processes segfault when using XML::Parser
you should use
--disable-rule=EXPAT
during the Apache configuration step.
Starting from mod_perl version 1.23 this option is disabled by default.
See My CGI/Perl Code Gets Returned as Plain Text Instead of Being Executed by the Webserver.
See Use of uninitialized value at (eval 80) line 12.
This message happens when the client breaks the connection while your
script is trying to write to the client. With Apache 1.3.x, you should
only see the rwrite messages if LogLevel
is set to debug
.
There was a bug that reported this debug message regardless of the
value of the LogLevel
directive. It was fixed in mod_perl 1.19_01.
Generally LogLevel
is either debug
or info
. debug
logs
everything, info
is the next level, which doesn't include debug
messages. You shouldn't use "debug" mode on your production server.
At the moment there is no way to prevent users from aborting
connections.
[modperl] caught SIGPIPE in process 1234 [modperl] process 1234 going to Apache::exit with status...
That's the $SIG{PIPE}
handler installed by mod_perl/Apache::SIG
,
which is called if a connection times out or if the client presses the
'Stop' button. It gives you an opportunity to do cleanups if the
script was aborted in the middle of its execution. See Handling the 'User pressed Stop button' case for more
info.
If your mod_perl version is earlier than 1.17 you might also get the message in the following section...
Client hit STOP or Netscape bit it! Process 2493 going to Apache::exit with status=-2
You may see this message in mod_perl versions less than 1.17. See also caught SIGPIPE in process.
The script below will print a warning like that above, moreover it will print the whole script as a part of the warning message:
#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; print "Content-type: text/html\n\n"; print "Hello $undefined";
The warning:
Global symbol "$undefined" requires explicit package name at /usr/apps/foo/cgi/tmp.pl line 4. eval 'package Apache::ROOT::perl::tmp_2epl; use Apache qw(exit);sub handler { #line 1 /usr/apps/foo/cgi/tmp.pl BEGIN {$^W = 1;}#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; print "Content-type: text/html\\n\\n"; print "Hello $undefined"; } ;' called at /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Registry.pm line 168 Apache::Registry::compile('package Apache::ROOT::perl::tmp_2epl;use Apache qw(exit);sub han...') called at /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Registry.pm line 121 Apache::Registry::handler('Apache=SCALAR(0x205026c0)') called at /usr/apps/foo/cgi/tmp.pl line 4 eval {...} called at /usr/apps/foo/cgi/tmp.pl line 4 [Sun Nov 15 15:15:30 1998] [error] Undefined subroutine &Apache::ROOT::perl::tmp_2epl::handler called at /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Registry.pm line 135. [Sun Nov 15 15:15:30 1998] [error] Goto undefined subroutine &Apache::Constants::SERVER_ERROR at /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Constants.pm line 23.
The error is simple to fix. When you use the use strict;
pragma
(and you should...), Perl will insist that all variables are defined
before being used, so the error will not arise.
The bad thing is that sometimes the whole script (possibly, thousands
of lines) is printed to the error_log file as code that the server
has tried to eval()
uate.
May be you have a $SIG{__DIE__}
handler installed
(Carp::confess()
?). If so that's what's expected.
You might wish to try something more terse such as "local $SIG{__WARN__} = \&Carp::cluck;" The confess method is very verbose and will tell you more than you might wish to know including full source.
Your code includes some undefined variable that you have used as if it was already defined and initialized. For example:
$param = $q->param('test'); print $param;
vs.
$param = $q->param('test') || ''; print $param;
In the second case, $param
will always be defined, either with
$q->param('test')
's return value or the default value (''
empty string in our example).
Also read about Finding the Line Which Triggered the Error or Warning.
See Names collisions with Modules and libs.
Callback called exit is just a generic message when some
unrecoverable error occurs inside Perl during perl_call_sv()
(which
mod_perl uses to invoke all handler subroutines. Such problems seem
to occur far less with 5.005_03 than 5.004.
Sometimes you discover that your server is not responding and its error_log has filled up the remaining space on the file system. When you get to see the contents of the error_log -- it includes millions of lines, like:
Callback called exit at -e line 33, <HTML> chunk 1.
Why the looping?
Perl can get very confused inside an infinite loop in your code.
It doesn't necessarily mean that your code did call exit()
. Perl's
malloc went haywire and called croak()
, but no memory is left to
properly report the error, so Perl is stuck in a loop writing that
same message to stderr.
Perl 5.005+ plus is recommended for its improved malloc.c and other features that improve mod_perl and are turned on by default.
See also Out of memory
If something goes really wrong with your code, Perl may die with an "Out of memory!" message and/or "Callback called exit". Common causes of this are never-ending loops, deep recursion, or calling an undefined subroutine.
If you are using perl 5.005 or later, and perl is compiled to use it's
own malloc rutines, you can trap out of memory errors by setting aside
an extra memory pool in the special variable $^M
. By default perl
uses the operating system malloc for many popular systems, so unless
you build perl with 'usemymalloc=y' you probably wont be able to use
$^M
. Run:
% perl -V:usemymalloc
if your mod_perl was compiled against perl which uses internal
malloc()
the answer will be 'y'.
Here is an explanation of $^M
from the perlvar
manpage:
By default, running out of memory is an untrap- pable, fatal error. However, if suitably built, Perl can use the contents of $^M as an emergency memory pool after die()ing. Suppose that your Perl were compiled with -DPERL_EMERGENCY_SBRK and used Perl's malloc. Then $^M = 'a' x (1 << 16); would allocate a 64K buffer for use in an emer- gency. See the INSTALL file in the Perl distribu- tion for information on how to enable this option. To discourage casual use of this advanced feature, there is no English long name for this variable.
If your perl installation supports $^M and you add 'use
Apache::Debug level => 4;
' to your Perl script, it will allocate
the $^M
emergency pool and the $SIG{__DIE__}
handler will call
Carp::confess
, giving you a stack trace which should reveal where
the problem is. See the Apache::Resource
module for ways to
control httpd processes.
Note that Perl 5.005 and later have PERL_EMERGENCY_SBRK
turned on
by default.
Another trick is to have a startup script initialize Carp::confess
,
like so:
use Carp (); eval { Carp::confess("init") };
this way, when the real problem happens, Carp::confess
doesn't eat
memory in the emergency pool ($^M
).
Some other mod_perl users have reported that this works well for them:
# Allocate 64K as an emergency memory pool for use in out of # memory situation $^M = 0x00 x 65536; # Little trick to initialize this routine here so that in the case # of OOM, compiling this routine doesn't eat memory from the # emergency memory pool $^M use CGI::Carp (); eval { CGI::Carp::confess('init') }; # Importing CGI::Carp sets $main::SIG{__DIE__} = \&CGI::Carp::die; # Override that to additionally give a stack backtrace $main::SIG{__DIE__} = \&CGI::Carp::confess;
Discussion of $^M
has come up on PerlMonks, and there is
speculation that $^M
is a forgotten feature that's not well
supported. See http://perlmonks.org/index.pl?node_id=287850 for more
information.
syntax error at /dev/null line 1, near "line arguments:" Execution of /dev/null aborted due to compilation errors. parse: Undefined error: 0
There is a chance that your /dev/null
device is broken. Try:
% echo > /dev/null
Alternatively you should try to remove this special file and recreate it:
# rm /dev/null # mknod /dev/null c 1 3 # chmod a+rw /dev/null
Can't call method "register_cleanup" on an undefined value at /usr/lib/perl5/5.00503/CGI.pm line 263.
caused by this code snippet in CGI.pm:
if ($MOD_PERL) { Apache->request->register_cleanup(\&CGI::_reset_globals); undef $NPH; }
One solution is to add to httpd.conf:
PerlPostReadRequestHandler 'sub { Apache->request(shift) }'
But even better, switch to Apache::Cookie
:
use Apache; use Apache::Cookie; sub handler { my $r = shift; my $cookies = Apache::Cookie->new($r)->parse; my %bar = $cookies->{foo}->value; }
If readdir() either fails with an exception, or in the list context it
returns the correct number of items but each item as an empty string,
you have a binary compatibility between mod_perl and Perl
problem. Most likely the two have been built against different
glibc versions, which have incompatible struct dirent
.
To solve this problem rebuild mod_perl and Perl against the same glibc version or get new binary packages built against the same glibc version.
PerlFreshRestart
affects the graceful restart process for non-DSO
mod_perl builds. If you have mod_perl enabled Apache built as DSO and
you restart it, the whole Perl interpreter is completely torn down
(perl_destruct())and restarted. The value of PerlFreshRestart
is
irrelevant at this point.
Unfortunately, not all perl modules are robust enough to survive
reload. For them this is an unusual situation. PerlFreshRestart
does not much more than:
while (my ($k,$v) = each %INC) { delete $INC{$k}; require $k; }
Besides that, it flushes the Apache::Registry
cache, and empties
any dynamic stacked handlers (e.g. PerlChildInitHandler
).
Some users, who had turned PerlFreshRestart
On, reported having
segfaults, others have seen no problems starting the server, no errors
written to the logs, but no server running after a restart. Most of
the problems have gone away when it was turned Off
.
It doesn't mean that you shouldn't use it, if it works for you. Just beware of the dragons...
That's a mandatory warning inside Perl which happens only if you modify
your script and Apache::Registry reloads it. Perl is warning you that
the subroutine(s) were redefined. It is mostly harmless. If you
don't like seeing these warnings, just kill -USR1
(graceful restart)
Apache when you modify your scripts.
You aren't supposed to see these warnings if you don't modify the code with perl 5.004_05 or 5.005+.and higher. If you still experience a problem with code within a CGI script, moving all the code into a module (or a library) and require()ing it should solve the problem.
Can't undef active subroutine at /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Registry.pm line 102. Called from package Apache::Registry, filename /usr/apps/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.005/aix/Apache/Registry.pm, line 102
This problem is caused when a client drops the connection while httpd is in the middle of a write. httpd times out, sending a SIGPIPE, and Perl (in that child) is stuck in the middle of its eval context. This is fixed by the Apache::SIG module which is called by default. This should not happen unless you have code that is messing with $SIG{PIPE}. It's also triggered only when you've changed your script on disk and mod_perl is trying to reload it.
From mod_perl.pod: With Apache versions 1.3.0 and higher, mod_perl
will call the perl_destruct() Perl API function during the child exit
phase. This will cause proper execution of END
blocks found during
server startup as well as invoking the DESTROY
method on global
objects which are still alive. It is possible that this operation may
take a long time to finish, causing problems during a restart. If
your code does not contain any END
blocks or DESTROY
methods
which need to be run during child server shutdown, this destruction
can be avoided by setting the PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL
environment
variable to -1
. Be aware that `your code' includes any modules you
use and they may well have DESTROY
and END
blocks...
If you see a process stuck in "G" (Gracefully finishing) after a doing a graceful restart (sending kill -SIGUSR1) it means that the process is hanging in perl_destruct() while trying to cleanup. This cleanup normally isn't a requirement, you can disable it by setting the PERL_DESTRUCT_LEVEL environment variable to -1. See the section "Speeding up the Apache Termination and Restart" for more information.
See the HUP Signal explanation at the section: Server Stopping and Restarting
Also, be aware that <Perl>
sections can also cause leaks
during graceful restarts. See the (sub)thread:
http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Mail/Message/modperl/304620 (META: we
don't have code samples, so if you have such please let us know).
RedHat 8 and 9 ship Perl with a locale setting that breaks perl. To solve the problem either change the locale to en_US.ISO8859-1 or simply remove the UTF8 part.
For more information refer to: http://twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Codev/UsingPerl58OnRedHat8 http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=87682
chroot
'edSince OpenBSD 3.2, the Apache httpd(8)
server has been
chroot(2)
ed by default.
A mod_perl enabled OpenBSD httpd will NOT work as is. A proper
chroot(2)
environment must be setup for the default chrooted
behavior to work. The -u
option to httpd disables the chroot
behavior, and returns the httpd to the expanded "unsecure" behavior.
See the OpenBSD httpd(8)
man page.
For more information see section 10.16 of the OpenBSD FAQ. http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq10.html#httpdchroot.
Apache::DBI
causes the server to exit when it starts up, with:
[Mon Oct 25 15:06:11 1999] file .\main\http_main.c, line 5890, assertion "start_mutex" failed
Solution: build mod_perl with PERL_STARTUP_DONE_CHECK
set
(e.g. insert
#define PERL_STARTUP_DONE_CHECK 1
at the top of mod_perl.h or add it to the defines in the MSVC++ and
similar applications' Options
dialog).
Apache loads all Apache modules twice, to make sure the server will
successfully restart when asked to. This flag disables all
PerlRequire
and PerlModule
statements on the first load, so they
can succeed on the second load. Without that flag, the second load
fails.
Apache::Status
Dumps Core Under HP-UX 10.20HP-UX 10.20 may dump core when accessing perl-status?sig. This
issue is known to happen when perl's ./Configure doesn't detect
that SIGRTMAX
is defined, but not implemented on that platform.
One solution is to upgrade to a recent version of Perl (5.8.0?) that properly detects the implementation of that signal.
Another solution is to modify Apache/Status.pm to skip that broken signal by replacing the line:
sort keys %SIG),
with:
sort grep { $_ ne 'RTMAX' } keys %SIG),
Here is the list of Perl Modules that are known to have problems under mod_perl 1.0 and possible workarounds, solutions.
IPC::Open*
use IPC::Run
instead. It provides the same functionality as the
IPC::Open*
family and more... and it works fine with mod_perl.
Maintainer is the person(s) you should contact with updates, corrections and patches.
Stas Bekman [http://stason.org/]
Stas Bekman [http://stason.org/]
Only the major authors are listed above. For contributors see the Changes file.
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