Fnord is a lightweight webserver written by Felix von Leitner. It aims to be a small, but extremely fast and secure webserver.
It supports CGI and IPv6.
Read article at Wikipedia
Fnord
Software
Compatible Operating Systems:
Similar topics in Freebase
-
Hiawatha webserver
Hiawatha is a secure and advanced webserver available for multiple platforms. It has been developed by Hugo Leisink since 2002. Hiawatha started in January 2002 as a very small webserver, suitable for servers with old hardware. It was written originally for internet servers in student houses in... -
Sun Java System Web Server
Oracle iPlanet Web Server is a web server designed for medium and large business applications. Oracle iPlanet Web Server builds on the earlier Sun ONE Web Server, iPlanet Web Server, and Netscape Enterprise Server products. Oracle iPlanet Web Server is available on Solaris, Windows, HP-UX, AIX, GNU... -
HAppS
Happstack (Haskell Application Stack) is a free application server for websites written in the functional programming language Haskell. It integrates handling Web, persistence, XML/XSLT, and templating functionality. It makes use of a number of Haskell libraries and systems such as Parsec, Cabal,... -
Thttpd
thttpd (tiny/turbo/throttling HTTP server) is an open source software web server from ACME Laboratories, designed for simplicity, a small execution footprint and speed. thttpd is single-threaded and portable: it compiles cleanly on most Unix-like operating systems, including FreeBSD, SunOS 4,... -
WikiServer
WikiServer is a free (public domain) WikiEngine that is completely self-contained - it includes its own HTTP server, and so does not require CGI support, Perl, or even a separate Web server such as Apache or IIS. As such, it is one of the easiest ways to install and run a wiki; even people without... -
Mongrel
Mongrel is an open-source software HTTP library and web server written in Ruby by Zed Shaw. It is used to run Ruby web applications and presents a standard HTTP interface. This makes layering other servers in front of it possible using a web proxy, a load balancer, or a combination of both, instead...
You can help improve this topic by adding more facts here