, 2003 3:23 PM
To: Commons HttpClient Project
Subject: Re: Occassional long download times
Michael,
You might try turning on the wire and/or trace logging (which sounds
like it might generate a lot of data), but it would also tell you
exactly where the delay occurs.
Knowing where
, July 07, 2003 3:23 PM
To: Commons HttpClient Project
Subject: Re: Occassional long download times
Michael,
You might try turning on the wire and/or trace logging (which sounds
like it might generate a lot of data), but it would also tell you
exactly where the delay occurs.
Knowing where
Subject: Re: Occassional long download times
Michael,
You might try turning on the wire and/or trace logging (which sounds
like it might generate a lot of data), but it would also tell you
exactly where the delay occurs.
Knowing where the culprit occurs would provide additional detail that
might
Title: RE: Occassional long download times
Attached is an example of a log4j properties config file. Be sure to set the parameter:
-Dlog4j.configuration=C:/log4j.properties for example
-Original Message-
From: Michael Mattox [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2003
AM
To: Eric Johnson; Commons HttpClient Project
Subject: RE: Occassional long download times
I've tried to turn the wire logging on but can't get it to work. I pasted
the code to set the system properties but that doesn't work. Is it possible
to use the wire log with Log4J?
Thanks
Michael,
You might try turning on the wire and/or trace logging (which sounds
like it might generate a lot of data), but it would also tell you
exactly where the delay occurs.
Knowing where the culprit occurs would provide additional detail that
might clearly identify whether the problem lies
I'm experiencing something weird and I just want to see if anyone else has
experienced it, and if it may be something I'm doing. Basically my
application is monitoring 700+ websites every 5 minutes and timing the time
it takes to connect and download. The main goal is to verify the site is