Received: by taz.hyperreal.com (8.6.12/8.6.5) id HAA15517; Thu, 14 Sep 1995 07:03:19 -0700 Received: from life.ai.mit.edu by taz.hyperreal.com (8.6.12/8.6.5) with SMTP id HAA15512; Thu, 14 Sep 1995 07:03:17 -0700 Received: from volterra.ai.mit.edu by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) for new-httpd@hyperreal.com id AA02520; Thu, 14 Sep 95 10:03:15 EDT From: rst@ai.mit.edu (Robert S. Thau) Received: by volterra.ai.mit.edu (8.6.12/AI-4.10) id KAA04145; Thu, 14 Sep 1995 10:03:12 -0400 Date: Thu, 14 Sep 1995 10:03:12 -0400 Message-Id: <199509141403.KAA04145@volterra.ai.mit.edu> To: new-httpd@hyperreal.com Subject: Re: Comments on current patches. Sender: owner-new-httpd@apache.org Precedence: bulk Reply-To: new-httpd@apache.org My patch doesn't do that, all it does is add a (void **) to the pcalloc(). The DYNAMIC_MODULE_LIMIT bit is in the original, too. Your patch is adding the DYNAMIC_MODULE_LIMIT stuff in places where it wasn't there before, and probably isn't needed. That's what I was asking about. As to egrep, here's the description of the -s option under SunOS: -s Work silently, that is, display nothing except error messages. This is useful for checking the error status. Note that *all* output is suppressed. If there are syntax errors, then the Config script is at pains to print them out, *after* labeling them as what they are. The effect of deleting the -s option is to make the output in this case unnecessarily messy and confusing --- a Bad Thing generally, but especially where error messages are concerned. rst