Chapter 13. TMTOWTDI: Convenience and Habit Versus Performance
TMTOWTDI (sometimes pronounced "tim
toady"), an acronym for
"There's More Than One Way To Do
It," is the main motto of Perl. In other words, you
can reach the same goal (usually a working product) by coding in many
different styles, using different modules and deploying the same
modules in different ways.
However, when you come to the point where performance is the goal,
you might have to learn what's efficient and
what's not. This may mean that you will have to use
an approach that you don't really like,
that's less convenient, or that requires changing
your coding habits.
This section is about performance trade-offs. For almost every
comparison, we will provide the theoretical difference and then run
benchmarks to support the theory. No matter how good the theory is,
it's the numbers we get in practice that matter.
We also would like to mention that the code snippets used in the
benchmarks are meant to demonstrate the points we are making and are
intended to be as short and easy to understand as possible, rather
than being real-world examples.
In the following benchmarks, unless stated differently, mod_perl is
tested directly, and the following Apache configuration has been
used:
MinSpareServers 10
MaxSpareServers 20
StartServers 10
MaxClients 20
MaxRequestsPerChild 10000
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