Web server

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David Spencer's Media Spin Canada provides information on:

  1. associations in media, a glossary, music, Media new media, photography, publishing, radio, television, video and Resources web resources.
  2. David M.R.D. Spencer's founding and work with ChristianMedia.ca between 1999 to 2008. Read the interview with David .
  3. To connect with Canadian Christians working and volunteering in arts, media and music, publishing and writing go here .



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From the ChristianMedia.ca Glossary

From David Spencer's Media Spin Glossary

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Please note that some of the organizations and people listed in David Spencer's Media Spin Glossary may not be Christian and may not have a Christian faith perspective. The Christians that are listed in David Spencer's Media Spin Glossary are brothers and sisters in our Lord Jesus from Australia, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States of America and other countries around the world.



The term Web server can mean one of two things:

  1. A computer that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests from clients, which are known as Web browsers, and serving them Web pages, which are usually HTML documents and linked objects (images, etc.).
  2. A computer program that provides the functionality described in the first sense of the term.

Although Web server programs differ in detail, they all share some basic common features.

  1. HTTP responses to HTTP requests: every Web server program operates by accepting HTTP requests from the network, and providing an HTTP response to the requester. The HTTP response typically consists of an HTML document, but can also be a raw text file, an image, or some other type of document; if something bad is found in client request or while trying to serve the request, a Web server has to send an error response which may include some custom HTML or text messages to better explain the problem to end users.
  2. Logging: usually Web servers have also the capability of logging some detailed information, about client requests and server responses, to log files; this allows the Webmaster to collect statistics by running log analyzers on log files.


For more information, please visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_server