Server runner for testing Groonga full-text search engine.
Httperf is a tool for measuring web server performance. It provides a flexible
facility for generating various HTTP workloads and for measuring server
performance.
The focus of httperf is not on implementing one particular benchmark but on
providing a robust, high-performance tool that facilitates the construction of
both micro- and macro-level benchmarks. The three distinguishing characteristics
of httperf are its robustness, which includes the ability to generate and
sustain server overload, support for the HTTP/1.1 and SSL protocols, and its
extensibility to new workload generators and performance measurements.
LWP::UserAgent is the default module for issuing HTTP requests from
Perl. It has a keep_alive setting which by default allows unlimited
requests to the same server. Some servers will disconnect you after
a limited number of requests (in Apache 2 this is achieved with the
MaxKeepAliveRequests directive). This module allows you to limit
the maximum number of keep alive requests to a server.
The Web Service Addressing protocol is used to select certain service
and port on a SOAP server, just like the "Host" header in "HTTP".
The basic SOAP design uses the URI and the "soapAction" header of HTTP
(in case it uses HTTP, by far the most often used transport mechanism)
However, when the server is hidden behind firewalls and proxies, these
fields are rewritten or replaced. This means that the definitions by
the WSDL for the client can differ from the configuration of the
Nagios::Plugin::Beanstalk - Nagios plugin to observe Beanstalkd queue server.
AmphetaDesk is a free, cross platform, open-sourced, syndicated news
aggregator - it obediently sits on your desktop, downloads the latest
news that interests you, and displays them in a quick and easy to use
(and customizable!) webpage. With thousands of channels available,
AmphetaDesk can shave hours off your day - and you'll look smart to
all your friends! Egotism never had it better!
gdnsd is an Authoritative-only DNS server.
The initial g stands for Geographic, as gdnsd offers a plugin system for
geographic (or other sorts of) balancing, redirection, and
service-state-conscious failover. If you don't care about that feature,
it's still quite good at being a very fast, lean, and resilient
authoritative-only server for static DNS data.
gdnsd is written in C using libev and pthreads with a focus on high
performance, low latency service. It does not offer any form of caching or
recursive service, and does not support DNSSEC.
gdnsd is an Authoritative-only DNS server.
The initial g stands for Geographic, as gdnsd offers a plugin system for
geographic (or other sorts of) balancing, redirection, and
service-state-conscious failover. If you don't care about that feature,
it's still quite good at being a very fast, lean, and resilient
authoritative-only server for static DNS data.
gdnsd is written in C using libev and pthreads with a focus on high
performance, low latency service. It does not offer any form of caching or
recursive service, and does not support DNSSEC.
Test::WWW::Mechanize is a subclass of WWW::Mechanize that incorporates
features for web application testing. The Test::WWW::Mechanize::Catalyst
module meshes the two to allow easy testing of Catalyst applications
without needing to starting up a web server.
Testing web applications has always been a bit tricky, normally
requiring starting a web server for your application and making real
HTTP requests to it. This module allows you to test Catalyst web
applications but does not require a server or issue HTTP requests.
Instead, it passes the HTTP request object directly to Catalyst. Thus
you do not need to use a real hostname: "http://localhost/" will do.
However, this is optional. The following two lines of code do exactly
the same thing:
decoded_content utility method to WWW::Mechanize.