Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings...

2013-09-09 Thread Tony Anecito
, 2013 3:54 PM Subject: Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings... On 09.09.2013 20:50, Tony Anecito wrote: > Many Thanks. I thought I was using the APR which is the native version > of Apache so was thinking that produced the logs I was looking at. I > will verify the valve is turned o

Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings...

2013-09-09 Thread Rainer Jung
Tomcat users list. Regards, Rainer > *From:* Rainer Jung > *To:* users@httpd.apache.org > *Sent:* Monday, September 9, 2013 9:40 AM > *Subject:* Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings... > > On 09.09.2013 17:35, Tony Anecito wrote: >> Hi All, >> >>

Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings...

2013-09-09 Thread Tony Anecito
: Rainer Jung To: users@httpd.apache.org Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 9:40 AM Subject: Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings... On 09.09.2013 17:35, Tony Anecito wrote: > Hi All, > > I am using the Apache Realtime Plugin (APR) that comes with ApacheTomcat > 7.0.33. I am using J

[users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings...

2013-09-09 Thread Tony Anecito
Hi All, I am using the Apache Realtime Plugin (APR) that comes with ApacheTomcat 7.0.33. I am using Java 7.0.5 64-bit on Windows 7 64-bit. I have noticed in the logs that the %D looks like it gives me milliseconds when compared to the %T seconds. For example: %D    %T 72 0.072 103    0.1

Re: [users@httpd] Apache %D and %T meanings...

2013-09-09 Thread Rainer Jung
On 09.09.2013 17:35, Tony Anecito wrote: > Hi All, > > I am using the Apache Realtime Plugin (APR) that comes with ApacheTomcat > 7.0.33. I am using Java 7.0.5 64-bit on Windows 7 64-bit. > > I have noticed in the logs that the %D looks like it gives me > milliseconds when compared to the %T seco