My wife says 4 minutes is not long enough for a session to be up. Where does one increase this?
William -----Original Message----- From: Woodrick, Ed [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, October 29, 2001 2:43 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: OWA 2000 logoff ? As long as the IE session is still running, you'll have cached credentials. I believe that the 4 minutes is the time that the server will hold the session up. If the server drops it, the client will reauthenticate under the covers. Yes, if you backup, or even if you type in the URL, the session will reestablish itself, even outside of the four minute period. -----Original Message----- From: Tony Hlabse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Posted At: Monday, October 29, 2001 11:05 AM Posted To: Microsoft Exchange Conversation: OWA 2000 logoff ? Subject: OWA 2000 logoff ? In OWA2000 there are three ways you get logged off. One is to close the browser which closes the session and clears any cached authenticated pages so no one else can use your session. Two is to wait for 4 minutes (Default timeout setting for OWA2000). Or spend a bunch off money for Messageware's solution which gives you a logoff button. Question is that a customer would like to have it so if he is browsing the web and then backspaces to the OWA2000 session (within the 4 minute timeout setting) he is forced to login again. I said I do not think there is a way around the logoff procedures other than the above ones. I was curious if SSL was installed if it changes/overrides the timeout settings. I do not really want to setup up SSL at this time as we may change the name of the server prior to cut over. Anybody have any experience with SSL and OWA2000 and logoff issues different than normal sessions? _________________________________________________________________ List posting FAQ: http://www.swinc.com/resource/exch_faq.htm Archives: http://www.swynk.com/sitesearch/search.asp To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Exchange List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

