Does anyone have any ideas on what could possibly be causing this?
Matt:
The first thing I would do is to validate the web portion of your
application. In other words do your forms, as well as the rest of the
web pages, validate? I've seen instances where people build projects
around IE when
> I would set up Wireshark to capture and compare the http sequences from
> each browser. After you capture each stream, use the "Follow TCP Stream"
> option to look at the raw HTTP. If it is the browsers, there should be
> some obvious differences in the sequence of requests from them.
This is a
From: Matt Neimeyer
> So far... I can reliably reproduce the problem in Firefox on Windows
> and Mac, Safari on Windows and Mac. But Chrome and IE appear to be
> unaffected.
>
>> Finally, have you reproduced the problem while watching the network
>> activity using something like tcpdump or Firebu
> How many PHP scripts correspond to these 4 steps? Is it one script (or
> more) for each step? For example:
> Or is it just one "dispatcher" script:
> Or something in-between?
It's a dispatcher script that can call multiple files. For example
(without pulling up code)... (each dispatch job would
> 1. Menu of what type of merge you want to do. (Initialize working table)
> 2. Process Data File (Initialize working table and then load in new data)
> 3. Build Email
> 4. Send out Email
How many PHP scripts correspond to these 4 steps? Is it one script (or
more) for each step? For example:
st
> In circumstances like this, I would "instrument" the code with
> echo/print statements all around where you think the problem is.
We did that with no luck. We only saw one call to the initialize
function which is why I switched to tracer emails because we "knew"
the initialize function was "the
On Mon, Aug 31, 2009 at 11:55:38AM -0400, Matt Neimeyer wrote:
> > If it were prefetching, or another request clobbering your current request
> > then you would see a second hit in your server logs.
>
> I will admit... I have made (at least) one assumption... Since...
>
> 1. This is a difference
> If it were prefetching, or another request clobbering your current request
> then you would see a second hit in your server logs.
I will admit... I have made (at least) one assumption... Since...
1. This is a difference between IE and Firefox/Safari...
2. I was seeing a tracer email for each hi
Matt Neimeyer wrote:
No answers - just more questions to maybe point you in a direction you
haven't been
Anything is appreciated...
Is it possible that the query/script is taking too long to build the
response page and FireFox/Safari is asking for an empty query result?
I don't
> No answers - just more questions to maybe point you in a direction you
> haven't been
Anything is appreciated...
> Is it possible that the query/script is taking too long to build the
> response page and FireFox/Safari is asking for an empty query result?
I don't think so... the tr
> -Original Message-
> From: Matt Neimeyer [mailto:m...@neimeyer.org]
> Sent: Monday, August 31, 2009 11:06 AM
> To: php-general
> Subject: [PHP] I'm not crazy I swear it... IE vs Safari and Firefox -
> The impossible!
>
> One of our products allows you to &
Probably a year or so ago I asked on this list before and basically
the response was that this should be impossible that it shouldn't
happen... So I'm asking again hoping someone new to the list can
suggest something that might lead to a fix or that someone else has
run across the problem in the in
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