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Tom Metro wrote: > Mark Woodward wrote: >> At my day job, I had to find an embedded web server. Maybe I didn't >> look all that hard, but I couldn't find any that I thought were >> really good. >> It should be small! very small! Not another apache sort of thing. > > There must be a dozen Apache alternatives, many focused on resource > constrained environments. And just about every Linux-based gizmo has > an embedded web server, so there must be at least a few options > suitable for embedded use. > > You may be right that the existing choices have deficiencies, but if > you want to recruit other participants to the project you might want > to start out by listing those alternatives and saying how they fall > short of your criteria. I'm pretty sure if other people were in a similar circumstance, they would have their own list equally long as mine. If they didn't, I suspect they would not be interested in the first place. > > >> ...we could use C, but it should use some object based system. > > With the increasing CPU power of embedded systems, it is becoming more > common to use higher level languages for stuff like this, such as > Perl, Python, and Ruby. For example, the Western Digital NAS discussed > at a BLU talk and on the list recently uses Perl, and has a hardware JVM. That's the problem..... All the "higher level" environments don't fit the "small" requirements. Everyone is focusing on higher level languages leaving small footprint development needing. Making a bare bones minimalist web server library that could compile on many small environments with low RAM requirements would be useful. Al least I have needed such a library in the past. > > -Tom >
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