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Posted to cvs@httpd.apache.org by rj...@apache.org on 2015/01/02 12:36:45 UTC

svn commit: r1649001 - /httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml

Author: rjung
Date: Fri Jan  2 11:36:45 2015
New Revision: 1649001

URL: http://svn.apache.org/r1649001
Log:
PR 48460: Improve/correct mod_proxy_ajp docs.

Modified:
    httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml

Modified: httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml
URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml?rev=1649001&r1=1649000&r2=1649001&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml (original)
+++ httpd/httpd/trunk/docs/manual/mod/mod_proxy_ajp.xml Fri Jan  2 11:36:45 2015
@@ -148,11 +148,7 @@ ProxyPassReverse /apps/foo http://www.ex
 <section id="basppacketstruct"><title>Basic Packet Structure</title>
     <p>There is a bit of an XDR heritage to this protocol, but it differs
     in lots of ways (no 4 byte alignment, for example).</p>
-    <p>Byte order: I am not clear about the endian-ness of the individual
-    bytes.  I'm guessing the bytes are little-endian, because that's what
-    XDR specifies, and I'm guessing that sys/socket library is magically
-    making that so (on the C side).  If anyone with a better knowledge of
-    socket calls can step in, that would be great.</p>
+    <p>AJP13 uses network byte order for all data types.</p>
     <p>There are four data types in the protocol: bytes, booleans,
     integers and strings.</p>
     <dl>
@@ -573,9 +569,9 @@ AJP13_GET_BODY_CHUNK :=
   </section>
   <section><title>End Response</title>
     <p>Signals the end of this request-handling cycle.  If the
-    <code>reuse</code> flag is true <code>(==1)</code>, this TCP connection can
-    now be used to handle new incoming requests.  If <code>reuse</code> is false
-    (anything other than 1 in the actual C code), the connection should
+    <code>reuse</code> flag is true <code>(anything other than 0 in the actual
+    C code)</code>, this TCP connection can now be used to handle new incoming
+    requests.  If <code>reuse</code> is false (==0), the connection should
     be closed.</p>
   </section>
   <section><title>Get Body Chunk</title>