Standalone.  Running it through xinetd means that the daemon has to be 
started *each* time a connection is requested.

Running standalone, the running daemon will initiate additional forks or 
threads of itself, and can do it much quicker than if an instance has to 
be started by xinetd.

On 18 Nov 2002, Joe Giles wrote:

> List,
> 
> What would you all recommend? Running HTTPD as standalone, or running
> with xinetd? 
> 
> Would xinetd manage resources better than standalone or no?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> 
> 

-- 
Mike Burger
http://www.bubbanfriends.org

Visit the Dog Pound II BBS
telnet://dogpound2.citadel.org or http://dogpound2.citadel.org:2000



-- 
redhat-list mailing list
unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to