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==== Breaking the LAMP loop, alternative web serving methods ==== | ===== Breaking the LAMP loop, alternative web serving methods ===== Lately I decided to look elsewhere than the usual "linux apache mysql php". Reading on docs makes me draw something like apache or ngingx as a load balancer front-end, the same as the backend adding lighttpd for fast streaming ofdata. This leave me more confused than before: * apache or ngingx? old but solid or new with an ongoing development? I thought myself using a beast like apache to do load balancing was a bit like killing a fly with a nuke, so for I looked elsewhere for two solutions, reverse proxy or tcp-loadbalance? and then apt-cache search came to the rescue: [[/pound|Reverse proxy, load balancer and HTTPS front-end for Web servers]] * database: mysql?postgres?sqlite?ORACLE!?? |
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[[/pound|Reverse proxy, load balancer and HTTPS front-end for Web servers]] |
Breaking the LAMP loop, alternative web serving methods
Lately I decided to look elsewhere than the usual "linux apache mysql php". Reading on docs makes me draw something like apache or ngingx as a load balancer front-end, the same as the backend adding lighttpd for fast streaming ofdata. This leave me more confused than before:
- apache or ngingx? old but solid or new with an ongoing development?
I thought myself using a beast like apache to do load balancing was a bit like killing a fly with a nuke, so for I looked elsewhere for two solutions, reverse proxy or tcp-loadbalance? and then apt-cache search came to the rescue:
Reverse proxy, load balancer and HTTPS front-end for Web servers
- database: mysql?postgres?sqlite?ORACLE!??