Sorry Jim, I meant Jim when I wrote Kim ... and 
Phico: 
http://webreflection.blogspot.com/2008/04/phomet-changes-name-so-welcome-phico.html

Regards

> From: an_...@hotmail.com
> To: php-general@lists.php.net
> Date: Fri, 27 Mar 2009 15:55:28 +0100
> Subject: RE: [PHP] flushing AJAX scripts
> 
> 
> Sorry, Kim, but why on earth you are polling with a second request to know 
> when the first one has finished?
> I mean, when the first request inserts data in the database that's it, you'll 
> manage the end of the request.
> 
> $A --->  do stuff; do stuff; do stuff; report ready;
> $B ---> report ready?
> $B ---> report ready?
> $B ---> report ready?
> $B ---> report ready?
> report ready; ---> notification to A
> $B ---> report ready;
> 
> the report ready, if it is when $A request has been finished, will be in $A, 
> the polling via $B is absolutely useless, imo.
> 
> There is no timeout from Ajax, it simply keep waiting, but obviously if your 
> PHP has max_execution_time 30 seconds and the script execution takes more 
> than 30 seconds there's no polling that could save you.
> 
> The same if the user closes the browser, connection lost, bye bye response.
> 
> To have a notice, you need Comet, try out Phico but still, a page that 
> requires that much is not suitable for the web. Report creation should be a 
> cronjob in a separed thread if it is that stressful.
> 
> Regards
> 
> > Date: Fri, 27 Mar 2009 10:47:10 -0400
> > From: jbw2...@earthlink.net
> > To: an_...@hotmail.com
> > CC: php-general@lists.php.net
> > Subject: Re: RE: [PHP] flushing AJAX scripts
> > 
> > My page submits the AJAX request to complete a report that takes some 
> > time, and upon completion stores results in a database. A second AJAX 
> > request polls every 5 seconds and queries the database if the report is 
> > ready. This hopefully will get around any timeout problems I am having 
> > with a long running request, and seems to be working. It looks like I 
> > can accept the default behavior for now. I don't depend on getting a 
> > response from the original request, but is there a point where the AJAX 
> > response script will be stopped either by Apache or PHP before it can 
> > insert into the database?
> > 
> > Jim
> 
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