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Date:      Sat, 7 Apr 2001 22:24:28 -0700
From:      Joe Heuring <heyjoe@cts.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: minimal web server install
Message-ID:  <20010407222428.E8519@Joe H>
In-Reply-To: <uvgog12tk.fsf@tim.bridge.com>; from tayers@bridge.com on Sat, Apr 07, 2001 at 09:35:19PM -0600
References:  <20010407185341.B8519@Joe <20010407185341.B8519@Joe H> <uvgog12tk.fsf@tim.bridge.com>

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On Sat, Apr 07, 2001 at 08:46:42PM -0700, joe heuring wrote:
 On Sat, Apr 07, 2001 at 09:35:19PM -0600, Tim Ayers wrote:
 > >>>>> "J" == Joe Heuring <heyjoe@cts.com> writes:
 > 
 > J> Hello, I would like to install a personal apache server on FreeBSD.
 > J> It would sit behind it's own firewall.
 > 
 > Do you mean you want a server that only you (or only people inside
 > your firewall) will access? What types of web stuff do you plan to
 > serve? Just HTML pages? some CGI scripts? Anything fancier than that?
 
 Oh I should of mentioned that.  CGI, perl, php3, mysql,  probably 2 nics. 
 It will sit behind a fire-wall but will be connected to the world.
 By personal I mean a learning hobby thing but scale-able.
 > 
 > J> Are there canned installations for this giving me just the minimal
 > J> packages, or a howto for compiling the kernel for such.  The howto
 > J> would have to explain every package or at least a "trustme just
 > J> load these for your server and you can add the rest later if you
 > J> want" I started to go through the packages on an ftp install but
 > J> even with the descriptions I was unsure with to many of them so I
 > J> chose the canned install but got to much.
 > 
 > Why are you concerned with "the minimal packages?" Disk space? Memory
 > usage? Complexity? 
 
 mostly security and performance.  I don't want anything gui, extra package or so is ok but I want a pretty lean compile.
 > 
 > It sounds like you might want to check out thttpd:
 > http://www.acme.com/software/thttpd/. This is a great, small, simple
 > server that excels at serving html and CGI without all the extra power
 > and flexibility (and complexity) of Apache. It can be installed from
 > the ports collection.
 
OK

 > J> Also what nongui web browser is there like lynx?
 > 
 > Lynx is pretty similar to lynx. ;-) If you are asking about _other_
 > non-gui browsers, I know of 'w3m' and 'links' but I've never used
 > either so I have no comment. 
 
 ah I hope that wasn't my mistake, a spelling error.  I just ftp installed 
 Free-BSD but aborted at the lynx prompt.  I can just barely crawl with linux
 but I'm hoping FreeBSD will be not be so different that the learning curve 
 is to steep.  When lynx didn't work I hit despair.
 > 
 > HTH and
 > Hope you have a very nice day, :-)
 > Tim Ayers (tayers@bridge.com)
 > 
 everything helps, in fact now I will re install.
 
 Oh maybe this isn't the right place to ask this, and as a newbie I probably shouldn't even be concerned with this, but I was reading a promo on Debian's "Linux Now"  Does FreeBSD have anything like this?  It seems like a good idea but maybe I'm just believing hype and not realizing other things.  

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