From parkert@u.washington.edu Tue May 29 12:44:05 2001 Received: from jason02.u.washington.edu (root@jason02.u.washington.edu [140.142.8.52]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.11.2+UW01.01/8.11.2+UW01.04) with ESMTP id f4TJi3018002 for ; Tue, 29 May 2001 12:44:04 -0700 Received: from dante30.u.washington.edu (parkert@dante30.u.washington.edu [140.142.15.212]) by jason02.u.washington.edu (8.11.2+UW01.01/8.11.2+UW01.04) with ESMTP id f4TJi1054344 for ; Tue, 29 May 2001 12:44:02 -0700 Received: from localhost (parkert@localhost) by dante30.u.washington.edu (8.11.2+UW01.01/8.11.2+UW01.04) with ESMTP id f4TJi1H10872 for ; Tue, 29 May 2001 12:44:01 -0700 Date: Tue, 29 May 2001 12:44:00 -0700 (PDT) From: Parker Thompson To: Subject: apsx Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII I'm entering the world of Apache DSO modules and thus far it's been a bugger. This is a rather silly question, but I have scoured the earth and can't seem to find apsx, a program used to build DSO's for apache. The documentation would seem to indicate that it comes standard with apache, but I've installed the apache-1.3.12-25 and apache-devel-devel-1.3.12-25 rpms (redhat 7.0 system) to no avail. Anyone know where I could get this from and/or how to build DSO's using gcc? I have looked high and low and am just confused and frightened at this point. Thanks, Parker. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- "In film you will find four basic story lines. Man versus man, man versus nature, nature versus nature, and dog versus vampire." - Steven Spielberg .