Most of the modules on the official FreeRADIUS website are marked as "Obsolete". Specifically, I'm interested in the rml_rest module, it appeared recently, but is already outdated. Does this mean that its support has been discontinued and problems may arise in new versions, or how is this to be understood?
There was a bug in the web server generation, which has now been fixed. rlm_rest is definitely not obsolete.
Related
https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/17063/how-to-setup-knitr-workflow-in-emacs recommends
version 19.04 as the setup for Knitr is much simplified. However I can't find version 19.04
http://ess.r-project.org/ has version 18.10.2 and links to a development version, 18.10.3snapshot, on github. It describes version 19.04 as "unreleased."
Thanks https://stackoverflow.com/users/6045390/j-f
Yes, https://github.com/emacs-ess/ESS/milestone/1 records ess 19.04
as 75% complete with "No due date".
I'm going to add my own answer to this, as I was deeply confused.
As far as I can tell, in a technical sense "ESS 19.04" does not exist - when people refer to ESS 19.04 they mean "the current development version of ESS", which lives here. The VERSION file there currently (September 2022) lists 18.10.3snapshot; the version number hasn't changed since 2018 even though there's been a lot of development since then.
The news file on the ESS page discusses 19.04 extensively, and lots of web resources refer to version 19.04 ... but good luck finding it!
I needs to install php5.2 version on my server. Right now php 5.4 is the oldest version installed. Since 2 days. I searched a lot over google but didn't find appropriate guidance yet. Tried a lot of tutorials no works at all. Any suggestion or guidance will be appreciated. thanks
I don't think there is any proper or easy way to revert to php-5.2.x from php-5.4.x; at least not using WHM interface or as an automatic process. Even if you have EasyApache3 you will not be able to downgrade from php-5.4.x to php-5.2.x
Your only option might be CloudLinux which comes with a php selector which allows you to select any php version from php-5.1.x to php-7.x.
You must know that Cloudlinux is not free and the license is around $10/month. They offer a 15 day trial so if you do all the necessary setting within that period you can just use it as much as you want. You won't be able to update it though and some of the functionality might not work as expected after the trial ends.
The PHP versions that you have mentioned are completely outdated and using them would be risky. Cpanel is never going to support it with their newer version. So your best deal would be to update your application/website to latest PHP and host with the latest PHP only
I just read an article and learned about the HHVM which is built on the lines of JVM for Java. I went ahead and tried searching on the web, but found only articles about installing it on Ubuntu build 12 version.
I have been using a WAMP stack and would like to know if I can use the HHVM for any of my application. Also,I would like to understand if the HHVM can be integrated with our existing applications. Earlier an article suggested HipHop was what FB wrote to enhance their performance based on their requirements,and it may not suit yours. Is the same case with HHVM?
At present, HHVM does not support Windows. The HHVM team probably will not be adding Windows support in 2013, though they might pursue it at some point in the future. The team gladly accepts code contributions from developers who want to improve HHVM's support for different platforms at https://github.com/facebook/hiphop-php . You can also open a github issue at https://github.com/facebook/hiphop-php/issues to ask about Windows support.
Just as an update, since this is still popular - there is an official compiling/installation guide here at their Wiki for windows.
Full installation run-through guide.
We are using JBoss 4.2 GA, and need use a newest version in some new project.
I heard that JBoss 5.0 encounter such bugs... is this correct?
If not, which exact version of 5.0 to use?? and what about 6.0??
Thanks.
JBoss AS 5.1 is perfectly fine. Every app server has bugs, they're big, complex applications in themselves, but 5.1 is solid.
JBoss AS 6 hasn't been released yet, it's still in beta.
Jboss Application Server 7 is released, and up to a beta version of 7.1.0. You can download a copy here, and find the Getting Started Guides here.
As with any major revision of an application server, there are significant changes that might impact upon your business and will need to be considered in the context of your use case. Being an open source project, the early praise and early bugs are in the public arena, so it is easy to research for yourself.
Working on a documentation project involving AS7 I have seen some of the great work that the team has undertaken, and I couldn't imagine going back to a previous version now I've enjoyed the fast boot-up times, the ease of application deployment, custom configuration and the powerful Management CLI.
These kinds of improvements and features, not just constrained to JBoss Application Server or JBoss Enterprize Application Platform, speak volumes about the speed, stability and usability that will be increasing exponentially in this field for all competitors over the coming years. I'd urge you to check out the current generation of application servers if your experience is largely with JBoss AS 4.2.
I'm currently testing Memcached in a Windows machine and we are planning to use it in production while Microsoft Velocity is still in CTP. It is running well so I believe that Memcached for Windows will do well when our site is already in production. I'm reading some blogs pertaining to this issue and some of them just mentioned that it must not yet be used in production.
If there are issues, please tell why? And please, if you have any links about this matter, just post it here. Thanks.
There is no official release of memcached on Windows. We're working on it right now, but unless you're pulling from a dev branch or you've downloaded a pre-release, you've definitely got an unsupported version with a large number of bugs and missing features from the last couple of years.
I've been using memcached in production for several years now (since early 2008). We're currently using a 12-instance cluster and it absolutely hums. I would recommend memcached any day of the week.