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For 2023 (and 2024 ...) - we are now fully retired from IT training.
We have made many, many friends over 25 years of teaching about Python, Tcl, Perl, PHP, Lua, Java, C and C++ - and MySQL, Linux and Solaris/SunOS too. Our training notes are now very much out of date, but due to upward compatability most of our examples remain operational and even relevant ad you are welcome to make us if them "as seen" and at your own risk.

Lisa and I (Graham) now live in what was our training centre in Melksham - happy to meet with former delegates here - but do check ahead before coming round. We are far from inactive - rather, enjoying the times that we are retired but still healthy enough in mind and body to be active!

I am also active in many other area and still look after a lot of web sites - you can find an index ((here))
Keep the client experience easy - single server contact point

Your company will have one or two web servers ... and you'll be visited by one or two million different clients. So it makes logical sense for all the complicated stuff to go on your one or two machines, and leave your clients with just a simple browser.

Have you even got on the phone ... to a utility, or travel company, or government office, or insurer or bank ... and found that you're referred on from one person to the next, to another and then to a fourth - who puts you on hold or tells you to call in again on another number? I have, and it makes sense - if you possibly can - when you're providing a service to provide a single point of contact. Not only to improve the experience of your customer, but also to make efficient use of you own resources.

Putting these thoughts together, it's logical to have a single web server program - such as Apache httpd - running on a server computer as the single point of contact for your organisation or web application. Then have that server, "silently" as far as the visitor is concerned - run scripts in Perl or PHP, which it turn refer on to databases using MySQL or some other technology - (Apache + Mysql + Perl / PHP = AMP). And then - with all this open source - what better operating system to oversee the whole than Linux, and you have your LAMP application.

There is a lot to deploying LAMP - but far better that than having to configure lots of machines and services or make life complex for your users. And you can learn just how the elements on the diagram that I've used to illustrate this article go together on our deploying LAMP training course

(written 2008-03-27, updated 2008-03-28)

 
Associated topics are indexed as below, or enter http://melksh.am/nnnn for individual articles
A601 - Web Application Deployment - Apache httpd - an overview
  [576] Why run two different web servers - (2006-01-25)
  [659] Web Application Components - (2006-03-28)
  [924] The LAMP Cookbook - Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP / Perl - (2006-11-13)
  [1265] Apache, Tomcat, Jakarta, httpd, web server - what are they? - (2007-07-13)
  [1897] Keeping on an even keel - (2008-11-21)
  [2016] Apache httpd and Apache Tomcat miscellany - (2009-01-30)
  [2038] Sticky Sessions with mod_jk (httpd to Tomcat) - (2009-02-12)
  [2054] Tuning httpd / the supermarket checkout comparison - (2009-02-26)
  [2063] Internal Dummy Connections on Apache httpd - (2009-03-02)
  [2077] Why put Apache httpd in front of Apache Tomcat - (2009-03-12)
  [2186] An FAQ on the Apache httpd and Apache Tomcat web servers, and on using them together - (2009-05-17)
  [4064] Apache httpd - a robust, open source web server - (2013-04-16)
  [4434] Public training courses - upcoming dates - (2015-02-21)


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Comparing hotels - as a guest and from the proprietors view
Selling curry to the chinese takeaway
First Great Western Weekend
Please support improvements in our train service
Keep the client experience easy - single server contact point
Setting up a new user - Linux or Unix
Easter Sunday at 404, The Spa
All Change, Portsmouth Harbour
Dynamic Memory Allocation in C - calloc, realloc
String interpretation in Ruby
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This is a page archived from The Horse's Mouth at http://www.wellho.net/horse/ - the diary and writings of Graham Ellis. Every attempt was made to provide current information at the time the page was written, but things do move forward in our business - new software releases, price changes, new techniques. Please check back via our main site for current courses, prices, versions, etc - any mention of a price in "The Horse's Mouth" cannot be taken as an offer to supply at that price.

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