Author(s): | Stas Bekman & Eric Cholet |
---|---|
Publisher: | O'Reilly (2003) |
ISBN: | 0596002270 |
Web Site: | http://modperlbook.org/ |
Reviewer: | Dave Cross |
At almost 900 pages, this is certainly the biggest book on
mod_perl
that has been published so far. In my opinion it’s
also one of the most useful.
Stas Bekman and Eric Cholet are two of the best-known and (probably
more importantly) most respected names in the mod_perl
community so you can be sure the the information you get in this book is
going to be top quality.
Part 1 of the book is about mod_perl
administration. It
starts with an overview of what mod_perl
is and how it
relates to CGI and the Apache web server before going into a chapter
which gives a quickstart guide to installing and using
mod_perl
on some of the most common platforms. Chapter
three then goes back over the installation process in far more detail.
Chapter four explains how to configure mod_perl
in various
ways and chapter five cover monitoring, upgrading and maintaining your
mod_perl
enabled web server. Chapter 6 is full of advice
about how to write Perl code that takes advantage of
mod_perl
’s features.
Part 2 is all about mod_perl
performance and contains
chapters about benchmarking and tuning your server. I found chapter
twelve to be particularly useful as it discusses a number of useful
strategies for splitting server load between a mod_perl
server for dynmaic content and a “plain” (non-mod_perl
)
server for static content. Other chapters in this section cover other
strategies for improving performance by tuning Apache’s configuration,
changing your Apache and mod_perl
build options and being
cleverer about the HTTP headers that you return.
Most dynamic web sites have a database involved somewhere so part 3
covers using databases with mod_perl
. Part 4 is all about
debugging and troubleshooting your mod_perl
server.
Finally, part 5 looks at what has changed with the release of the
forthcoming mod_perl 2.0
.
And this isn’t just theoretical stuff. The two authors have been
involved in developing mod_perl
for a long time but they
are also mod_perl
users. You can just tell from the way
they write that the problems they discuss are problems they have dealt
with. This is the voice (or, rather, voices) of experience.
A lot of the text in the book is based on the mod_perl
guide which has been available on the web for some time, but all of the
content has been revisited, updated and expanded. This book is not
really in competition with books like The mod_perl
Developers Cookbook or the older Writing Apache Modules with
Perl and C as those books largely concentrate on how to write code
for mod_perl
whereas the emphasis in this book is on
configuring and administering a mod_perl
server.
And if you are the administrator of a mod_perl
server
then you should really consider adding this book to your library.