I'm curious, what is the use case is that requires a heartbeat from
the client to the server?

On Sep 14, 8:51 am, Ittai <[email protected]> wrote:
> I actually did what you suggested but oddly enough it did not work.
> I still had to add a dummy data to fool the IE into thinking it's a
> different URL.
> Anyone has any ideas? Because I would sure love to get rid of this
> ugly hack
>
> TIA
> Ittai
>
> On Sep 2, 12:17 am, Thomas Broyer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > On 1 sep, 18:06, Adligo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > Hi All,
>
> > >    This is my quick hack that fixes that issue;
> > >http://yourserver/yourPath?yourCgiParams=yourValues&request=1
> > >http://yourserver/yourPath?yourCgiParams=yourValues&request=2
> > >http://yourserver/yourPath?yourCgiParams=yourValues&request=3
> > > exc
>
> > > Also note this can be applied to html and property files (or any
> > > files)http://yourserver/funky.html&request=1http://yourserver/drummer.prope...
>
> > > I have been using a static int counter to accomplish this trick.
> > > I think GWT should add some caching options to its http api, because
> > > this is quite hoaky.
>
> > Something like the following? ;-)
>
> > RequestBuilder builder = new RequestBuilder(RequestBuilder.GET,
> > "yourPath?yourCgiParams=yourValues");
> > builder.setHeader("Cache-Control", "no-cache");
> > ...
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