>
> Firebug does not display the images called by setTimeout, interestingly (?)
Firebug or Firefox?
Any chance you can provide a URL, so I can try that out myself?
Sebastian
On Wednesday, January 22, 2014 2:20:54 PM UTC+1, Szoghy, Bertrand wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
>
>
> I’ve worked around our embedded web server issue by staggering the image
> requests from the web page via JavaScript setTimeout calls with intervals
> separated by 100 ms. We get no more “aborted” files. The web server has a
> performance limitation, it is simply unable to handle a burst of HTTP
> requests all at the same time.
>
>
>
> Firebug does not display the images called by setTimeout, interestingly (?)
>
>
>
> At the bottom of the web page I call the function:
>
>
>
> setTimeout("PlaceImageBackground('header','./images/header.jpg')",1000);
>
>
>
> And the function is:
>
>
>
> function PlaceImageBackground(DivName,ImageUrl)
>
> {
>
> document.getElementById(DivName).style.backgroundImage =
> 'url(' + ImageUrl + ')';
>
> }
>
>
>
> I am using Windows 7 64 bit, Firefox 26.0 and Firebug 1.13.0a7.
>
>
>
> Cheers!
>
>
>
> Bertrand
>
>
>
> *De :* [email protected] <javascript:> [mailto:
> [email protected] <javascript:>] *De la part de* Sebastian Zartner
> *Envoyé :* lundi 20 janvier 2014 05:29
> *À :* [email protected] <javascript:>
> *Objet :* [firebug] Re: What does aborted mean in Firebug?
>
>
>
> I couldn't find a clear definition of what it means in Firefox, though the
> general answer to this is that the client stopped the request. As a document
> related to HttpWatch
> describes<http://blog.httpwatch.com/2008/01/28/what-does-aborted-mean-in-httpwatch/>for
> IE this can have several reasons (copied from there):
>
> 1. If you click on a link or bookmark while a page is downloading, or
> click on IE’s Stop button, you will see that IE cancels any requests which
> are still active and HttpWatch shows the (Aborted) result.
> 2. A CSS rollover image on a page will start a request when the mouse
> pointer is moved into its active area. If the mouse pointer quickly moves
> away again, IE may abort the request if it has not already completed.
> 3. Sometimes javascript is used to fire off requests for background
> tasks or to gather statistics on a page. Often this can lead to aborted
> results if the javascript does not wait for the response to be received
> from the server.
>
> As these points say they apply to Internet Explorer. Though I assume the
> same counts for Firefox.
> Our network guru Honza might have a better explanation for this.
>
> Sebastian
>
>
> On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:29:04 PM UTC+1,
> [email protected]:
>
> Hello,
>
> We are debugging an embedded web server, and some standard page elements
> for our web pages like the stylesheet or images are not showing up. Using
> Firebug, we can see they are "Aborted" in about 100 ms. That seems "too
> impatient" to be a timeout.
>
> So, is it aborted by the server? If so, it would be nice to know what
> error code "aborted" corresponds to? I have downloaded the Firebug code,
> can anyone point me to where I should add an "alert" ?
>
> Or is it aborted by the browser? Is there a setting in Firefox'
> about:config that would shed light on this?
>
> Thank in advance,
> Bert
>
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