Using redhat rpm/rpmbuild to create a new your package is not too hard. But once you works with more advanced steps. You will be finally work with rpmrc and rpmmacro files.
Following improvements have been made to FastCGI module in Win7 (and Win2K8 R2).
1. Monitor changes to a file
We have added ability to monitor changes to a file for each FastCGI process pool. Module will recycle FastCGI processes for the process pool if a change to the file is detected. Users can specify file path to monitor using system.webServer/fastCgi/application@monitorChangesTo property. Value can be absolute path to the file or path relative to the folder containing FastCGI executable. In case of php, if fullPath property is set to “c:\php\php-cgi.exe”, monitorChangesTo property can be set to “php.ini” or “c:\php\php.ini”. If file to monitor is not found, status code 500 is returned on each request. Default value of this property is blank which means no file monitoring.
2. Real-time tuning
In win2k8, maxInstances property could be configured to a constant value greater than 0. This value dictated maximum number of FastCGI processes which can be launched for each application pool which is also equal to maximum number of requests which can be processed simultaneously as one process handle only one request at a time. Default value of this property was 4. Administrators were required to do some testing with different values to find the optimal number of maxInstances for their server. In win7, if you set maxInstances to 0, FastCGI module automatically adjusts this number up or down every few seconds based on the system load and number of requests waiting in the queue.
3. Tracing
In win7, STDERR stream can be used to send trace messages to FastCGI module which are logged to IIS FREB trace (if enabled). Trace messages are identified by start markers “IIS_TRACE_INFO:”, “IIS_TRACE_WARNING:”, “IIS_TRACE_ERROR:”. Depending on which start marker is used, information/warning/error trace event is generated. End of a trace statement should be marked by “:IIS_TRACE_END”. You can send as many trace statements as you like for each request. Most application frameworks running as FastCGI provide a way to send text on STDERR stream. In case of php, function error_log() can be used. So error_log(“IIS_TRACE_WARNING: Warning event.:IIS_TRACE_END”); statement in PHP code will make “Warning event” appear in IIS trace logs. Getting your application traces with traces generated by web server can be a very powerful tool for debugging problems. Note that starting from PHP 5.2.7 you can pass a parameter to the error_log() function to specify that the logged message should be always sent to STDERR regardless of error_log setting in php.ini. To do that use message_type parameter set to 4, e.g. error_log(“IIS_TRACE_WARNING: Warning event.:IIS_TRACE_END”, 4);
4. STDERR stream handling
FastCGI module can now be configured to handle text sent on STDERR stream differently. In IIS7 we used to return status code 500 and send data received on STDERR stream as the response. Now the behavior can be modified by setting system.webServer/fastCgi/application@stderrMode property. Value of this property can be set to one of following values.
ReturnStderrIn500 - We will set status code 500 and send whatever we receive on STDERR as response. This is the default value and gives same behavior as IIS7.
ReturnGeneric500 - Module will set status code 500 but will return a generic 500. This configuration is useful if you want to enable detailed error logging for server but don’t want to return these errors to users.
IgnoreAndReturn200 - Text on STDERR stream is completely ignored and we will send what we receive on STDOUT as response with status code 200. This property is useful if use debug statements for tracking purposes.b
TerminateProcess – FastCGI process will get terminated and generic 500 error message will be returned.
Trace statements are removed from STDERR stream before they are subjected to stderrMode logic. Post Win7 Beta, we are looking into making FastCGI work with CpuLimit feature and also dropping invalid response headers instead of failing requests with 500.
Welcome Screen
The Flash Catalyst welcome screen allows you to start
a project directly from a native Creative Suite or FXG file.
No need to change your workflow since all layers are imported with full fidelity.
Creating Dynamic Artwork
Turn a piece of static artwork into
a dynamic component such as a button, scroll bar, text input field and
more by selecting a menu command from the HUD (Heads-Up Display).
All layers are displayed in the layers panel on the right while motion
and transitions are displayed below.
Altering Behavior and Appearance
Once a piece of artwork is
converted into a component such as a button you can easily change the
behavior by selecting the displayed layers and changing the properties
of the four button states (Up, Over, Down, Disabled).
Code View
As you create your project in design view, Flash Catalyst
is representing the design as well-formed MXML code behind the scenes.
Share your project with "Gumbo", the next generation of Adobe Flex® Builder™,
to add logic and back-end connectivity. Move the project between Flash Catalyst
and Gumbo while preserving design and code integrity.