From: Eric M. <cyb...@gm...> - 2004-08-13 20:13:06
|
Thanks chandru, Two questions come up then. 1) is there anyway to have the a variable for the ROOT dir such that the application directory is automatically at the top of the higharchy? 2) How to tell embedded yaws where the alternate config file is? On Fri, 13 Aug 2004 20:53:23 +0100, Chandrashekhar Mullaparthi <cha...@t-...> wrote: > Eric, > > We used to put it under the yaws/priv directory. Now we have a config > directory under the root directory and have a www directory under it. > > $ROOTDIR/config/www > $ROOTDIR/config/www/htdocs > $ROOTDIR/config/yaws.conf > > In CVS, all our .yaws files go under the Appname/priv directory. During > installation, we move the files to the appropriate directories. > > The contents of our yaws.conf is like this (where > /Users/chandru/Testing/esaspub is the $ROOTDIR) > > logdir = /Users/chandru/Testing/esaspub/yaws_logs > ebin_dir = /Users/chandru/Testing/esaspub/yaws_ebin > # trace = http > # include_dir = . > # keep_alive_timeout = 15000 > > #end then a set of servers > > <server abcd> > port = 8000 > listen = 127.0.0.1 > docroot = /Users/chandru/Testing/esaspub/config/www/ > partial_post_size = 20000 > errormod_crash = esaspub_req > </server> > > cheers > Chandru > > > > On 13 Aug 2004, at 20:22, Eric Merritt wrote: > > > I have a few questions that I hope you guys would be willing to > > answer. I am attempting to build an application that uses yaws > > (http/html) as its interface. However, I have run into a few > > issues that I can find a documented solution for. > > When using the standard systools packaging mechenism, where do > > you put the *.yaws files and how to you indicate that location > > to yaws. Is it more common in this situation to simply use the > > appmod functionality? > > > > -- > > Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad-hoc, > > informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Lisp > > > > > > -- Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad-hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Lisp |