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I'm just beginning to understand how an apache server works, andthe other day I ran into a problem when programming a very simple webpage while displaying a hit count for the page:

/* The simplest HelloWorld module */
#include <httpd.h>
#include <http_protocol.h>
#include <http_config.h>

static int noOfViews = 0;

static int helloworld_handler(request_rec *r)
{

    if (!r->handler || strcmp(r->handler, "helloworld")) {
        return DECLINED;
    }

    if (r->method_number != M_GET) {
        return HTTP_METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED;
    }
    noOfViews++;

    ap_set_content_type(r, "text/html;charset=ascii");
    ap_rputs("<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC \"-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN\">\n",
             r);
    ap_rputs("<html><head><title>Apache HelloWorld "
             "Module</title></head>", r);
    ap_rputs("<body><h1>Hello World!</h1>", r);
    ap_rputs("<p>This is the Apache HelloWorld module!</p>", r);
    ap_rprintf(r, "<p>Views: %d</p>", noOfViews);
    ap_rputs("</body></html>", r);
    return OK;
}

static void helloworld_hooks(apr_pool_t *pool)
{
    ap_hook_handler(helloworld_handler, NULL, NULL, APR_HOOK_MIDDLE);
}

module AP_MODULE_DECLARE_DATA helloworld_module = {
    STANDARD20_MODULE_STUFF,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
    NULL,
            helloworld_hooks
};

What basically happened is when I would refresh the page, the hit counter would go up, but sometimes it would randomly drop in number. Someone told me that it was because of the way the Apache Prefork MPM worked. After reading this:

http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.0/mod/prefork.html

I understand the problem more, but I'm still not 100% sure whats going on. So the prefork MPM creates a bunch of child processes, some of them idle, and waits for clients to connect, so when I'm refreshing the page, I'm actually connecting to a bunch of different child processes the server is running. However, this module has a limited number of child processes it can keep up at the same time, so sometimes when it kills a process my counter goes down. I'm not entirely sure if this explanation is correct or why exactly the counter drops.

All advice is appreciated.

2 Answers 2

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Yes, either that or you got one of the other Apache processes to serve you the request when the counter went down.

You could try and configure Apache in such a way that it only spawns exactly 1 child process that lives forever, but by doing that you limit Apaches capabilities.

I recommend that you try and keep your module completely stateless. If you want that hit counter, save the state in a file or a database and retrieve it from there when you need it. You could even talk to another process that has the hit counter just in a static variable like your module at the moment.

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You are storing your hit count in the noOfViews variable, which means in the memory of a single process.

Whether under worker or prefork MPM, httpd typically spawns multiple child processes. Each will have its own memory storage for noOfViews, so you are only counting the number of hits for that process. When your request is randomly given to a different process, it has a different counter.

You will notice this more for prefork than worker because each prefork process only handles one request at a time, while worker is threaded and may handle multiple; so there are a lot more processes under prefork than worker. But the same thing will occur under either MPM when your requests are directed to different processes.

Also note that restarting httpd, or just killing individual processes, will lose the counter. New processes will start at a count of 0. So, this is not a good approach if your goal is to count hits globally.

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