This has been a really interesting thread. I would like to contribute my
own experiences as I am currently sitting on both sides of the fence.
In my spare time, what little there is, I operate a web hosting service for
NZ Christian churches, organisations and ministries. This endeavou
The foibles of IE and the Win OSes has proven to be beyond me :-(
Thanks to those that offered various solutions, each worked but not on all
combinations of IE version and Win version.
My solution, in the end, has been to generate the PDF to a temporary file,
in the document tree and issue a 'Lo
> Or I think even this may work:
>
>Content-Disposition: inline; filename=somefile.pdf
This works too.
Thanks.
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> I've found ?.pdf to work just as well to fool IE and your artificially
> created PATH_INFO filename will then stick if a user does a save as.
This is an absolute crock, but it works a treat.
I now have
Thanks.
Glen.
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To u
> You see, IE is smarter than the web site authors of the world. It
> insists that the document URL end in an approprate extension to do the
> right thing. A typical workaround is to just append "/foo.pdf" to
> your URL and let your Apache::Registry script ignore the PATH_INFO
> that is the resu
This isn't strictly a mod_perl issue but Im hoping someone knows what I am
doing wrong. The code is running under Apache::Registry
I have a series of invoices, stored as postscript files. I have a page
which allows the client to select a file. I then run it through 'gs' and
convert it to a PDF
Derrr...
Dumb error, never trust a cut and paste. I copied in one two many lines from
the original program.
I installed Apache::SSI last night as I needed a quick way of including some
costing info in a page (from my dbase) that already used std SSI.
The install worked fine, my extension seems to be fine but when my code
runs, I get an unexpected error.
[Thu Nov 16 21:45:33 2000] [error] [Thu Nov 16 2
I installed Apache::SSI last night as I needed a quick way of including some
costing info in a page (from my dbase) that already used std SSI.
The install worked fine, my extension seems to be fine but when my code
runs, I get an unexpected error.
[Thu Nov 16 21:45:33 2000] [error] [Thu Nov 16 2
After trying alot of thing, the following is what I ended up with. It
allows all of the ENV REDIRECT_* variables to be accessed by the cgi script
and all in all did exactly what I wanted.
Because I didn't get a lot of help from either of my earlier postings, I
assummed that either others had not
Once again, I don't seem to have been very successful in describing my
problem. I'll try again.
I am using mod_proxy, as a reverse proxy, i.e. so that I can push inbound
requests to a bunch of backend servers. This works great, as most of you
probably already know, until one of the back end ser
I would like to be able to add to or change the way errors are handled. I
am hoping that is possible to somehow create a routine in perl that I can
get called before or instead of the standard core routine.
I want to be able to construct a page that contains a more user friendly
response. The e
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