Just wondering if anyone has had any experience with Google SPDY on Apache? http://code.google.com/p/mod-spdy/
I run a couple of web servers and am interested to know if there have been any issues with the mod_spdy Apache module and if anyone has seen a visible speed increase in SPDY supported browsers?
I'm one of the developers on mod_spdy. At this stage the module is reasonably stable and fully SPDY/2 compliant (an earlier poster incorrectly claimed that it does not support multiplexing. That is incorrect). That said, it is not as stable as the core Apache modules like mod_ssl. I consider it a "beta" module suitable for use in environments where you can tolerate some issues. There are currently web sites using mod_spdy successfully today.
We are actively working on making the module fully production ready and we plan to release DEB/RPM packages (in addition to supporting build from source) within a few months time.
We will announce the availability of packages and other updates on our discussion forum: https://groups.google.com/group/mod-spdy-discuss Please join the group if you'd like to stay up to date with mod_spdy news. Thanks!
PS: Steve mentions "For example, its implementation of the SPDY protocol is just an svn external reference that pulls in a chunk of the Chromium C++ source tree." and I want to clarify that this is absolutely the right thing for mod_spdy or any other SPDY-compliant C++ component to do. SPDY is still changing rapidly so by leveraging the core SPDY encode/decode logic from Chromium we can stay in sync and up to date as the SPDY protocol changes. IMO it would be a mistake to do it any other way.
RE: SSL you pay a small penalty for SSL, yes, but for all but the simplest web pages the performance benefits of SPDY will make up for the SSL overhead and give your users a secure connection as well.
I've played around with mod_spdy on my personal site, purely out of curiosity. The Apache mod_spdy should be considered pre-alpha; it's basically a spike implementation and is nowhere near production quality. For example, its implementation of the SPDY protocol is just an svn external reference that pulls in a chunk of the Chromium C++ source tree. Currently it fails to implement some of important features of SPDY, such as multiplexing. Consequently I've seen negative performance gains using it (largely stemming from the need to force SSL and use FCGI).
It's not clear to me that Apache is the right place to put SPDY anyway; Apache is more of an application container nowadays; the caching layer (Nginx or Varnish) seems more appropriate.
All that said...
The mod_spdy wiki contains some instructions to build against Debian, but I don't recommend their method as it modifies the installed system. Instead I'd recommend building a fresh Apache/SSL install under /opt and run it from there; this gives you an easy rollback option. The rough steps to do this are: