it's really for a 3rd party who we registered a domain name for, but aren't providing hosting. I think I got the solution for it anyway, ta though.
Duncan Cumming IT Manager http://www.alienationdesign.co.uk mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: 0141 575 9700 Fax: 0141 575 9600 Creative solutions in a technical world ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Get your domain names online from: http://www.alienationdomains.co.uk Reseller options available! ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Steve D" <steve@satach To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> i.com> cc: Subject: RE: [ cf-dev ] OT Javascript frames problem 08/21/02 02:51 PM Please respond to dev You COULD get around this by having ALL your .html, .cfm, etc pages on your own server (the one you currently have your index page with the hidden frame redirect on), seeing as .html pages take up basically no room. Then, just have all your heavy content (pictures, flash files, etc) being called from the current geocities page. This is most likely against their "conditions of use" though, and you would have to alter all the links in your .html files to point to a geocities link, but you would get no Geocities javascripts, and you wouldn't even need the hidden frame-redirect index page. Not sure if this is exactly what you want though ! You can't stop Geocities placing their javascript on every .html page that is served .... whether you can defeat that javascript, I dunno ! > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: 21 August 2002 13:40 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [ cf-dev ] OT Javascript frames problem > > > Got a website at http://www.geocities.com/somename/ > Have a domain name somename.com. > > Want to continue hosting the site at Geocities, so have setup > a website with hidden frame redirection for this domain. > i.e. at somename.com have an index page with a frameset. The > top frame has zero height, the lower frame has 100% height, > and it's source is the Geocities URL. No problem, done this > before without any hassle. However, Geocities puts in it's > lovely popup advert code in the foot of every page, which > includes some javascript. In IE (and probably Netscape 6, > Mozilla, Opera), this generates a Javascript error > "Permission Denied", obviously to prevent cross-site > scripting security flaw. > > How best to get around this? Could just do normal web > forwarding, i.e. it redirects to the Geocities URL, which > wouldn't look so nice, but right now is the best option I can > see. Disabling the popup advert probably isn't an option (if > it can be done programmatically then I think you run the risk > of Geocities slapping your wrists). A lot of the big domain > resellers provide hidden frame redirection, and they must > have a workaround for this exact thing, what could it be? > Could I set document.domain in the top frame to the same as > the geocities one? > > > ta for any pointers > > > Duncan Cumming > IT Manager > http://www.alienationdesign.co.uk mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: 0141 575 9700 Fax: 0141 575 9600 Creative solutions in a technical world ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Get your domain names online from: http://www.alienationdomains.co.uk Reseller options available! ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For human help, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For human help, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For human help, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
