Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5
Available Languages: en
Description: | Provides for execution of FastCGI applications |
---|---|
Status: | External |
Module Identifier: | fcgid_module |
Source File: | mod_fcgid.c |
Compatibility: | Apache 2.0 and higher |
Any program assigned to the handler fcgid-script
is processed
using the FastCGI protocol; mod_fcgid
starts a sufficient
number instances of the program to handle concurrent requests, and these
programs remain running to handle further incoming requests. This is
significantly faster than using the default
mod_cgi or
mod_cgid
modules to launch the program upon each request.
However, the programs invoked by mod_fcgid
continue to
consume resources, so the administrator must weigh the impact of invoking
a particular program once per request against the resources required to
leave a sufficient number of instances running continuously.
The pool of fcgid-invoked programs is shared between all httpd workers. Configuration directives below let the administrator tune the number of instances of the program that will run concurrently.
Specific executables are assigned this handler either by having a name containing an extension defined by the AddHandler directive, or with an override using the SetHandler directive (e.g., for all files in a specific directory such as cgi-bin).
Some changes have been made in the ASF release of mod_fcgid which can affect existing configurations. All documentation refers to new names for the directives. (The old names still work but are now deprecated.) Please read the Upgrade Notes for details.
For an introduction to using CGI scripts with Apache, see the generic tutorial on Dynamic Content with CGI.
mod_fcgid
requires mod_unixd
to be loaded before itself in the httpd config.
The following changes have been made in the ASF release of mod_fcgid and should be considered when upgrading from the original version by Ryan Pan (Pan Qingfeng).
Old Name | New Name |
---|---|
BusyScanInterval |
FcgidBusyScanInterval |
BusyTimeout |
FcgidBusyTimeout |
DefaultInitEnv |
FcgidInitialEnv |
DefaultMaxClassProcessCount |
FcgidMaxProcessesPerClass |
DefaultMinClassProcessCount |
FcgidMinProcessesPerClass |
ErrorScanInterval |
FcgidErrorScanInterval |
FastCgiAccessChecker |
FcgidAccessChecker |
FastCgiAccessCheckerAuthoritative |
FcgidAccessCheckerAuthoritative |
FastCgiAuthenticator |
FcgidAuthenticator |
FastCgiAuthenticatorAuthoritative |
FcgidAuthenticatorAuthoritative |
FastCgiAuthorizer |
FcgidAuthorizer |
FastCgiAuthorizerAuthoritative |
FcgidAuthorizerAuthoritative |
FCGIWrapper |
FcgidWrapper |
IdleScanInterval |
FcgidIdleScanInterval |
IdleTimeout |
FcgidIdleTimeout |
IPCCommTimeout |
FcgidIOTimeout |
IPCConnectTimeout |
FcgidConnectTimeout |
MaxProcessCount |
FcgidMaxProcesses |
MaxRequestInMem |
FcgidMaxRequestInMem |
MaxRequestLen |
FcgidMaxRequestLen |
MaxRequestsPerProcess |
FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess |
OutputBufferSize |
FcgidOutputBufferSize |
PassHeader |
FcgidPassHeader |
PHP_Fix_Pathinfo_Enable |
FcgidFixPathinfo |
ProcessLifeTime |
FcgidProcessLifeTime |
SharememPath |
FcgidProcessTableFile |
SocketPath |
FcgidIPCDir |
SpawnScore |
FcgidSpawnScore |
SpawnScoreUpLimit |
FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit |
TerminationScore |
FcgidTerminationScore |
TimeScore |
FcgidTimeScore |
ZombieScanInterval |
FcgidZombieScanInterval |
The core directive ErrorDocument
allows the user to specify custom error pages for specific HTTP error codes.
An important note must be made: if the error page is generated by the fastcgi script, mod_fcgid
will
pass the response down to the output filter chain bypassing the Apache's
ErrorDocuments. Conversely, if the error is generated by Apache itself (for example, a HTTP 404
due to a missing resource) then the ErrorDocument set will be used.
This behaviour is the most conservative one to interfere as little as
possible with the fastcgi's response generation logic. mod_proxy
shows the same
behaviour but it offers
ProxyErrorOverride
to force the use of ErrorDocuments, meanwhile mod_fcgid
does not.
A common workaround is to instruct the fcgi script to generate the ErrorDocuments
to have full control of the response content.
The examples assume that mod_fcgid and other necessary modules are loaded into the server already, either built-in or via the LoadModule directive.
Additionally, the example configurations provide full access to the applications using access control directives which work with Apache 2.0 and 2.2. These directives are not appropriate for all environments, and they do not work for development levels of Apache HTTP Server (Subversion trunk).
The first example is a very simple Perl FastCGI application, and its configuration directives. This is typical for FastCGI applications which require no special configuration.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use CGI::Fast;
while (my $q = CGI::Fast->new) {
print("Content-Type: text/plain\n\n");
foreach $var (sort(keys(%ENV))) {
$val = $ENV{$var};
$val =~ s|\n|\\n|g;
$val =~ s|"|\\"|g;
print "${var}=\"${val}\"\n";
}
}
<Directory /usr/local/apache/fcgi-bin/>
SetHandler fcgid-script
Options +ExecCGI
# Customize the next two directives for your requirements.
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Directory>
PHP applications are usually configured using the
FcgidWrapper
directive
and a corresponding wrapper script. The wrapper script can be
an appropriate place to define any environment variables required
by the application, such as PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
or anything else. (Environment variables can also be set with
FcgidInitialEnv
,
but they then apply to all applications.)
Here is an example that uses a wrapper script to invoke PHP:
<?php
phpinfo();
?>
# FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess should be <= PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
# The example PHP wrapper script overrides the default PHP setting.
FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess 10000
# Uncomment the following line if cgi.fix_pathinfo is set to 1 in
# php.ini:
# FcgidFixPathinfo 1
Alias /phpapp/ /usr/local/phpapp/
<Location /phpapp/>
AddHandler fcgid-script .php
Options +ExecCGI
FcgidWrapper /usr/local/bin/php-wrapper .php
# Customize the next two directives for your requirements.
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Location>
#!/bin/sh
# Set desired PHP_FCGI_* environment variables.
# Example:
# PHP FastCGI processes exit after 500 requests by default.
PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS=10000
export PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
# Replace with the path to your FastCGI-enabled PHP executable
exec /usr/local/bin/php-cgi
By default, PHP FastCGI processes exit after handling 500
requests, and they may exit after this module has already
connected to the application and sent the next request. When that
occurs, an error will be logged and 500 Internal Server
Error
will be returned to the client. This PHP behavior
can be disabled by setting PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
to
0, but that can be a problem if the PHP application leaks
resources. Alternatively, PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
can
be set to a much higher value than the default to reduce the
frequency of this problem.
FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess
can be set to a value less than or equal to
PHP_FCGI_MAX_REQUESTS
to resolve the problem.
PHP child process management (PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN
)
should always be disabled with mod_fcgid, which will only route
one request at a time to application processes it has spawned;
thus, any child processes created by PHP will not be used
effectively. (Additionally, the PHP child processes may not be
terminated properly.) By default, and with the environment
variable setting PHP_FCGI_CHILDREN=0
, PHP child
process management is disabled.
The popular APC opcode cache for PHP cannot share a cache between PHP FastCGI processes unless PHP manages the child processes. Thus, the effectiveness of the cache is limited with mod_fcgid; concurrent PHP requests will use different opcode caches.
mod_fcgid has several types of controls which affect the creation of additional application processes:
Type of control | Directive |
---|---|
global limit on number of processes | FcgidMaxProcesses |
limit on number of processes per application | FcgidMaxProcessesPerClass |
limit on rate of spawning new application processes | FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit and
other score-related directives |
mod_fcgid has several types of controls which affect the termination of existing application processes:
Type of control | Directive |
---|---|
termination after an idle period | FcgidIdleTimeout |
termination after it handles a certain number of requests | FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess |
termination after a certain lifetime | FcgidProcessLifetime |
Several of the directives control processing for a process class. A process class is the set of processes which were started with the same executable file and share certain other characteristics such as virtual host and identity. Two commands which are links to or otherwise refer to the same executable file share the same process class.
Certain settings or other concepts that depend on the virtual host,
such as FcgidInitialEnv
or process classes, distinguish between virtual hosts only if they
have distinct server names. (See the ServerName
documentation for more information.) In the case of
FcgidInitialEnv
, if two
virtual hosts have the same server name but different environments as
defined by
FcgidInitialEnv
, the
environment used for a particular request will be that defined for the
virtual host of the request that caused the FastCGI process to be
started.
Information about each process will be displayed in the
mod_status
server-status page.
Description: | full path to FastCGI access checker |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAccessChecker command |
Default: | none |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Access checking or, more formally, access control, is a procedure which verifies that the client is allowed to access a resource, using some mechanism other than authentication and authorization.
Key environment variables passed to the application for access checking are:
FCGI_APACHE_ROLE
ACCESS_CHECKER
; by checking the current role,
the same FastCGI application can handle multiple stages of request
processingThe application must output a Status
line to indicate
the result of the check.
Before 2.3.6, only one FastCGI application of any type (AAA or handler) can be used for a particular request URI. Otherwise, the wrong FastCGI application may be invoked for one or more phases of request processing.
Description: | Set to 'off' to allow access control to be passed along to lower modules upon failure |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAccessCheckerAuthoritative On|Off |
Default: | FcgidAccessCheckerAuthoritative On |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive controls whether or not other access checkers
are allowed to run when this module has an access checker configured
and it fails a request. If this directive is On
(default)
and a FastCGI access checker returns a failure status, a failure is
returned to the client without giving other access checkers a chance to
allow access. If this directive is Off
, other access
checkers will be called.
Description: | full path to FastCGI authenticator |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAuthenticator command |
Default: | none |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Authentication is the procedure which verifies that the user is who they claim they are. This directive specifies the full path to a FastCGI application which will handle authentication for a particular context, such as a directory.
Key environment variables passed to the application on authentication are:
REMOTE_USER
REMOTE_PASSWD
FCGI_APACHE_ROLE
AUTHENTICATOR
; by checking the current role,
the same FastCGI application can handle multiple stages of request
processingThe application must output a Status
line to indicate
the result of authentication.
Before 2.3.6, only one FastCGI application of any type (AAA or handler) can be used for a particular request URI. Otherwise, the wrong FastCGI application may be invoked for one or more phases of request processing.
Description: | Set to 'off' to allow authentication to be passed along to lower modules upon failure |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAuthenticatorAuthoritative On|Off |
Default: | FcgidAuthenticatorAuthoritative On |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive controls whether or not other authenticators
are allowed to run when this module has an authenticator configured
and it fails a request. If this directive is On
(default)
and a FastCGI authenticator returns a failure status, a failure is
returned to the client without giving other authenticators a chance to
validate the client identity. If this directive is Off
,
other authenticators will be called.
Description: | full path to FastCGI authorizer |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAuthorizer command |
Default: | none |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Authorization is the procedure which verifies that the user is allowed to access a particular resource. This directive specifies the full path to a FastCGI application which will handle authorization for a particular context, such as a directory.
Key environment variables passed to the application on authorization are:
REMOTE_USER
FCGI_APACHE_ROLE
AUTHORIZER
; by checking the current role, the
same FastCGI application can handle multiple stages of request
processingThe application must output a Status
line to indicate
the result of authorization.
Before 2.3.6, only one FastCGI application of any type (AAA or handler) can be used for a particular request URI. Otherwise, the wrong FastCGI application may be invoked for one or more phases of request processing.
Description: | Set to 'off' to allow authorization to be passed along to lower modules upon failure |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidAuthorizerAuthoritative On|Off |
Default: | FcgidAuthorizerAuthoritative On |
Context: | directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive controls whether or not other authorizers
are allowed to run when this module has an authorizer configured
and it fails a request. If this directive is On
(default)
and a FastCGI authorizer returns a failure status, a failure is
returned to the client without giving other authorizer a chance to
access the resource. If this directive is Off
, other
authorizers will be called.
Description: | scan interval for busy timeout process |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidBusyScanInterval seconds |
Default: | FcgidBusyScanInterval 120 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
The module performs the
FcgidBusyTimeout
check at this
interval.
Description: | a FastCGI application will be killed after handling a request for FcgidBusyTimeout |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidBusyTimeout seconds |
Default: | FcgidBusyTimeout 300 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the maximum time limit for request handling. If a FastCGI
request does not complete within FcgidBusyTimeout seconds, it will be
subject to termination. Because the check is performed at the
interval defined by FcgidBusyScanInterval
,
request handling may be allowed to proceed for a longer period of time.
The purpose of this directive is to terminate hung applications. The default timeout may need to be increased for applications that can take longer to process the request.
Description: | Set processing options for a FastCGI command |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidCmdOptions command option
[option] ... |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive allows processing options to be specified for a specific command spawned by mod_fcgid. Each option for the command corresponds to another directive that normally applies to all commands started within a particular context. If a particular option is not specified on this directive, the default will be used.
The following table provides a list of options and corresponding directives:
Option name and syntax | Corresponding directive |
---|---|
ConnectTimeout seconds |
FcgidConnectTimeout |
IdleTimeout seconds |
FcgidIdleTimeout |
InitialEnv name[=value] |
FcgidInitialEnv |
IOTimeout seconds |
FcgidIOTimeout |
MaxProcesses value |
FcgidMaxProcessesPerClass |
MaxProcessLifeTime seconds |
FcgidProcessLifeTime |
MaxRequestsPerProcess value |
FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess |
MinProcesses value |
FcgidMinProcessesPerClass |
Multiple environment variables are defined by repeating
the InitialEnv
option.
FcgidCmdOptions /usr/local/bin/wrapper \
InitialEnv MAX_REQUESTS=2000 \
MaxRequestsPerProcess 2000 \
IOTimeout 90
When /usr/local/bin/wrapper
is spawned, its initial
environment contains the MAX_REQUESTS=2000
environment variable setting; additionally, mod_fcgid will
terminate it after it has handled 2000 requests, and I/O
operations will time out after 90 seconds. Directives
corresponding to other options, such as
FcgidIdleTimeout
or
FcgidProcessLifeTime
,
will be ignored for this command; defaults will be used for options
not specified on FcgidCmdOptions
.
Description: | Connect timeout to FastCGI server |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidConnectTimeout seconds |
Default: | FcgidConnectTimeout 3 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the maximum period of time the module will wait while trying to connect to a FastCGI application on Windows. (This directive is not respected on Unix, where AF_UNIX defaults will apply.)
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | scan interval for exited process |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidErrorScanInterval seconds |
Default: | FcgidErrorScanInterval 3 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the interval at which the module will handle
pending process termination. Termination is pending for
any processes which have exceeded
FcgidIdleTimeout
or
FcgidProcessLifeTime
.
Unix: mod_fcgid will terminate such processes with SIGTERM; if the process is still active during the next scan, the process will be terminated with SIGKILL. Thus, this directive controls the amount of time for orderly process terminate before being forcibly killed.
Description: | Mirror the PHP cgi.fix_pathinfo
setting |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidFixPathinfo 1 |
Default: | FcgidFixPathinfo 0 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive enables special SCRIPT_NAME
processing which allows PHP to provide additional path information.
The setting of FcgidFixPathinfo
should mirror the cgi.fix_pathinfo
setting in
php.ini
.
Description: | scan interval for idle timeout process |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidIdleScanInterval seconds |
Default: | FcgidIdleScanInterval 120 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the interval at which the module will search for
processes which have exceeded
FcgidIdleTimeout
or
FcgidProcessLifeTime
.
Description: | An idle FastCGI application will be killed after FcgidIdleTimeout |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidIdleTimeout seconds |
Default: | FcgidIdleTimeout 300 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Application processes which have not handled a request for this
period of time will be terminated, if the number of processses for the
class exceeds
FcgidMinProcessesPerClass
.
A value of 0
disables the check.
This idle timeout check is performed at the frequency of the configured
FcgidIdleScanInterval
.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | an environment variable name and optional value to pass to FastCGI. |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidInitialEnv name [ value ] |
Default: | none |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Use FcgidInitialEnv
to define environment
variables to pass to the FastCGI application. This directive can
be used multiple times.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | Communication timeout to FastCGI server |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidIOTimeout seconds |
Default: | FcgidIOTimeout 40 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the maximum period of time the module will wait while trying to read from or write to a FastCGI application.
The FastCGI application must begin generating the response within this period of time. Increase this directive as necessary to handle applications which take a relatively long period of time to respond.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | directory for AF_UNIX sockets (Unix) or pipes (Windows) |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidIPCDir pathname |
Default: | FcgidIPCDir logs/fcgidsock |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This module uses AF_UNIX sockets or named pipes, depending on the platform, to communicate with FastCGI applications. This directive specifies the directory where those sockets or named pipes will be created.
Description: | maximum number of FastCGI application processes |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMaxProcesses value |
Default: | FcgidMaxProcesses 1000 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive sets the maximum number of FastCGI application processes which can be active at one time.
Description: | Max process count of one class of FastCGI application |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMaxProcessesPerClass value |
Default: | FcgidMaxProcessesPerClass 100 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive sets the maximum number of processes that can be started for each process class.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | maximum size of a request which will be held in memory |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMaxRequestInMem bytes |
Default: | FcgidMaxRequestInMem 65536 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This module reads the entire request body from the client
before sending it to the application. Normally the request body
will be stored in memory. Once the amount of request body read
from the client exceeds FcgidMaxRequestInMem
bytes, the remainder of the request body will be stored in a
temporary file.
Description: | maximum HTTP request length |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMaxRequestLen bytes |
Default: | FcgidMaxRequestLen 131072 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
If the size of the request body exceeds this amount, the
request will fail with 500 Server Error
.
Administrators should change this to an appropriate value for their site based on application requirements.
Before 2.3.6, this defaulted to 1GB. Most users of earlier versions should use this directive to set a more reasonable limit.
Description: | Max requests handled by each FastCGI application |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess value |
Default: | FcgidMaxRequestsPerProcess 0 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
FastCGI application processes will be terminated after handling
the specified number of requests. A value of 0
disables the check.
A value of -1
is currently accepted for ease of
migration for existing configurations. It is treated the same as
0
.
Certain applications, notably PHP as FastCGI, have their own facility for terminating after handling a certain number of requests. This directive can be used to avoid sending additional requests to the application after it has handled its limit.
If this is set such that frequent process creation will be
required, you will likely need to adjust
FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit
or other score-related directives to allow more frequent process
creation.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | Min process count of one class of FastCGI application |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidMinProcessesPerClass value |
Default: | FcgidMinProcessesPerClass 3 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive sets the minimum number of processes that will be retained in a process class after finishing requests.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | CGI output buffer size |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidOutputBufferSize bytes |
Default: | FcgidOutputBufferSize 65536 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This is the maximum amount of response data the module will read from the FastCGI application before flushing the data to the client.
Description: | Header name which will be passed to FastCGI as environment variable. |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidPassHeader name |
Default: | none |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This directive specifies the name of a request header which will be passed to the FastCGI application as an environment variable. The name of the environment variable is derived from the value specified on this directive, as discussed below:
The legacy behavior is to use the value specified on this directive as the environment variable name, converting hyphens to underscores. No case conversion is performed.
Beginning with release 2.3.6, an additional environment variable
is created. The value specified on this directive is converted to
upper case, prefixed with HTTP_
, and hyphens are
converted to underscores.
Most request headers are already available to the application
as environment variables, and generally are prefixed with
HTTP_
. (Notable exceptions are Content-type
and Content-length
, which do not have the
HTTP_
prefix.) Thus, this directive is only required
for request headers that are purposefully omitted, such as
Authorization
and Proxy-Authorization
.
Only pass these request headers if absolutely required.
Description: | maximum FastCGI application process lifetime |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidProcessLifeTime seconds |
Default: | FcgidProcessLifeTime 3600 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Idle application processes which have existed for greater
than this time will be terminated, if the number of processses for the
class exceeds
FcgidMinProcessesPerClass
.
A value of 0
disables the check.
This process lifetime check is performed at the frequency of the configured
FcgidIdleScanInterval
.
This setting will apply to all applications spawned for this
server or virtual host. Use
FcgidCmdOptions
to apply
this setting to a single application.
Description: | shared memory file path |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidProcessTableFile pathname |
Default: | FcgidProcessTableFile logs/fcgid_shm |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
This module uses shared memory on Unix to maintain state which is shared between httpd processes. This directive specifies the name of the shared memory file.
Description: | Each spawn adds this value to the process activity score. |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidSpawnScore value |
Default: | FcgidSpawnScore 1 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Lower values of this directive increase the allowed spawn rate.
Refer to the FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit
directive for more information.
Description: | Maximum value of the process activity score which allows a spawn to occur |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit value |
Default: | FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit 10 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
A process activity score is maintained for each FastCGI application; the score is used to control the rate of spawning in order to avoid placing too much load on the system, particularly for applications that are repeatedly exiting abnormally.
The value of FcgidSpawnScore
is added to the score for every spawned application process. The value of
FcgidTerminationScore
is added
to the score for every terminated application process. The value of
FcgidTimeScore
is subtracted
from the score every second.
When the current score is higher than the value of
FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit
, no additional application
processes will be spawned; subsequent requests must wait until an existing
process is free or until the score decreases below the limit.
If the limit is reached under normal load, it may not be sufficient to
simply increase the limit, as that would only delay the amount of time
before the limit is reached again. Decrease the value of
FcgidSpawnScore
and/or
FcgidTerminationScore
, or
increase the value of FcgidTimeScore
,
to allow a higher rate of spawning.
Description: | Each terminated process adds this value to the process activity score. |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidTerminationScore value |
Default: | FcgidTerminationScore 2 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Lower values of this directive increase the allowed spawn rate. Negative values can be useful in some circumstances, such as allowing process replacement without increasing the score.
Refer to the FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit
directive for more information.
Description: | Amount subtracted from process activity score each second |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidTimeScore value |
Default: | FcgidTimeScore 1 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Higher values of this directive increase the allowed spawn rate.
Refer to the FcgidSpawnScoreUpLimit
directive for more information.
Description: | Job Control orphan prevention for fcgi workers. |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidWin32PreventOrphans On|Off |
Default: | FcgidWin32PreventOrphans Off |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
Uses Job Control Objects on Windows, only, to enforce shutdown of all fcgi processes created by the httpd worker when the httpd worker has been terminated. Processes terminated in this way do not have the opportunity to clean up gracefully, complete pending disk writes, or similar closure transactions, therefore this behavior is experimental and disabled, by default.
Description: | The CGI wrapper setting |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidWrapper command [ suffix ] [ virtual ] |
Default: | none |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
The given command is used to spawn FCGI server processes. If this directive is not used, the file pointed to by the request URL will be used instead. Options for the command can be included using quotation marks surrounding the command and options.
The optional suffix
argument restricts the use of this FCGI
server to all URLs with the given exact path suffix. A suffix needs to start
with '.
'.
The virtual
flag signals that there will be no check
whether the request URL actually points to an existing file. The only
file which needs to exist is the wrapper itself.
The directive can be used multiple times. A wrapper defined without a suffix is used as a default in case no suffix matches.
Description: | scan interval for zombie process |
---|---|
Syntax: | FcgidZombieScanInterval seconds |
Default: | FcgidZombieScanInterval 3 |
Context: | server config |
Status: | External |
Module: | mod_fcgid |
The module checks for exited FastCGI applications at this interval. During this period of time, the application may exist in the process table as a zombie (on Unix).
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