Alan Horkan wrote:
> 
> On Thu, 27 Dec 2001, Bryce Nesbitt wrote:
> 
> > Randy Kramer wrote:
> > >
> > > Bryce Nesbitt wrote:
> > > > Bugzilla already gives you a cookie.  Second time around you're not
> > > > asked for the login.
> > >
> > > That's not been my experience.  Subsequent times I'm not asked to login
> > > *unless* I've restarted IE5 or rebooted my computer since the last
> > > time.  I thought a cookie would stay "in there"?  (Or is this a "session
> > > based cookie" (whatever that is exactly).)
> > >
> > > Randy Kramer
> >
> > Ok, ok, Bugzilla 2.11 also has a bug that causes it to lose it's cookies
> > for no apparent reason.  Some people it happens all the time.  Others
> > never.
> 
> I always blame the fact that im behind a proxy server ... (vague memories
> of cookies acting funny with proxies, damn my foggy memory)
> 
> > Bug the bugzilla folks :-).
> 
> the mozilla bugzilla is huge and scarey, (at least 10 times bigger than
> abiword) if you can give me a few relevant bug numbers i might be able to
> contribute something useful

It happens without proxies also.
It's been a bug for so long I no longer remember details.  Perhaps AbiSource
should start by upgrading bugzilla.

Mozilla's Bugzilla Bugzilla is not so scarry.  Mozilla Brower Bugzilla is scarry.

                        =Bryce

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