For that lengthy a response, it might be better from a user standpoint to send him e-mail when his "report" is ready and not make him wait.
If you absolutely have to keep the browser from timing out, you can trickle an HTML response back, sending HTML comment strings, for example, until the real thing is ready. Duane Morse, Eldorado Computing Inc., Phoenix, Arizona -----Original Message----- From: ShriKant Vashishtha [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2002 11:29 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Request time out problem........ Hi All, At present I am facing the request time out problem while the request is executing on the server side. I am running a task of importing thousands of transactions at once into database, and it takes around 10 minutes to complete it. But before showing the response page to the user, request gets timedout. I don't think that the strategy will be to increase the browser timeout. Is there any alternative solution available. Please help!!!!!!!! -ShriKant =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com =========================================================================== To unsubscribe: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "signoff JSP-INTEREST". For digest: mailto [EMAIL PROTECTED] with body: "set JSP-INTEREST DIGEST". Some relevant FAQs on JSP/Servlets can be found at: http://archives.java.sun.com/jsp-interest.html http://java.sun.com/products/jsp/faq.html http://www.esperanto.org.nz/jsp/jspfaq.jsp http://www.jguru.com/faq/index.jsp http://www.jspinsider.com
