or use cursor-right/left)
>
> -Rasmus
>
> On Tue, 30 Jul 2002, Shane Wright wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I have a database thats taking a bit of a hammering - enough so that the
> > number of connections spirals up and out of control.
> >
> > max_connect
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi
I have a database thats taking a bit of a hammering - enough so that the
number of connections spirals up and out of control.
max_connections was originally at the default of 100 - but rising above 50 or
so meant actual throughput dropped so t
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
you can do this...
$myvar = ecplode(' ', $postcode);
$firsthalf = $myvar[0];
But not everyone puts the space in there
S
On Thursday 04 April 2002 5:29 pm, Dave Carrera wrote:
> Hi All
>
>
>
> I have a variable returned by my application.
>
>
Hi Markus
I assume you're using Apache with PHP installed as a DSO? If not ignore my
ramblings...
AFAIK, the persistent connections are per-process - i.e. each Apache process
gets its own [set of] persistent processes.
But when you connect to apache, you rarely get the same process as you go
Hi
> The mail() entry in the manual does say that it returns a boolean for send
> success/failure, however none of the examples make any use of such
> feedback. Is there a way to work out if something has gone wrong with a
> particular mail out, what the actual failure was, eg SMTP server down,
Hi
I find that the best way to do it is with a script having a long/unlimited
timeout, but limiting it to only a few hundred mails per execution in the SQL
'... LIMIT 500'.
IMO better this way than a short-timeout script - sending one email can
sometimes take ages (long DNS lookup, slow conne
Hi
If he's going to do it, it should at least be done safely...
- have a status field in your database table (unsent/sent/error)
- update the status field after _every_ email you send.
- do NOT do this in a transaction (otherwise if something dies everything is
forgotten)
- if the update st