* and then Ernest E Vogelsinger declared
> At 20:18 27.11.2002, Ernest E Vogelsinger spoke out and said:
> [snip]
> >Error 413 certainly denotes that the web server refuses to handle the
> >request. No idea how to configure this value but I'm sure it can
On Wed, 27 Nov 2002, Nick Wilson wrote:
> * and then Nick Wilson declared
> > Next step, try the script on another machine I guess Thnaks for the
> > help Ernest...
>
> Could it be an Apache 2.0 thing? -- just upgraded. THis is what I get:
That's actually a downgrade these days. I'd stron
At 20:18 27.11.2002, Ernest E Vogelsinger spoke out and said:
[snip]
>Error 413 certainly denotes that the web server refuses to handle the
>request. No idea how to configure this value but I'm sure it can be done
>with Apache. I see a better chance of gettin
At 20:11 27.11.2002, Ernest E Vogelsinger spoke out and said:
[snip]
>Ooops - you should normally only get this with GET requests where the max.
>query string size is exceeded - I'd check the Apache docs though... seems
>positively to be connected to the web
* and then Van Andel, Robert declared
> One problem may be your browser timing out before the end of the script. Another
>may be (although I'm not 100% sure) is that the file excedes the max memory set aside
>by PHP.
Thanks Robert, that's not it though
--
Nick Wilson // www.tiok
At 20:12 27.11.2002, Nick Wilson spoke out and said:
[snip]
>Request entity too large!
>
>The POST method does not allow the data transmitted, or the data volume
>exceeds the capacity limit.
>
>If you think this is a server error, please contact the webmaste
* and then Nick Wilson declared
> Next step, try the script on another machine I guess Thnaks for the
> help Ernest...
Could it be an Apache 2.0 thing? -- just upgraded. THis is what I get:
Request entity too large!
The POST method does not allow the data transmitted, or the data volume
* and then Ernest E Vogelsinger declared
> I can just guess here... you've got 1 billion in max_file_size, maybe this
> is way too big for the browser's (integer?) math? Does it upload without
> max_file_size? Did you try setting max_file_size to 1572864 (which is
> exactly 1.5 MB)?
Nope, tha
At 19:45 27.11.2002, Jason Wong spoke out and said:
[snip]
>Did you read the manual then? The bit after the 1st paragraph "Related
>Configurations Note" ??
[snip]
Jason, you may be a genius programmer, but you certai
At 19:02 27.11.2002, Nick Wilson spoke out and said:
[snip]
>Hi all,
>
>I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php 'upload
>form':
>
>
>
>So why won't it upload a 1.5MB file?
[snip]
I can just
On Thursday 28 November 2002 02:40, Nick Wilson wrote:
> * and then Jason Wong declared
>
> > On Thursday 28 November 2002 02:02, Nick Wilson wrote:
> > > Hi all,
> > >
> > > I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php
> > > 'upload form':
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > So why w
ember 27, 2002 10:03 AM
To: php-general
Subject: [PHP] max file size on uploading files
Hi all,
I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php 'upload
form':
So why won't it upload a 1.5MB file?
Many thanks
--
Nick Wilson // www.tioka.com
--
* and then Jason Wong declared
> On Thursday 28 November 2002 02:02, Nick Wilson wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php 'upload
> > form':
> >
> >
> >
> > So why won't it upload a 1.5MB file?
>
> manual -> Handling File Uploads
Why don't
On Thursday 28 November 2002 02:02, Nick Wilson wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php 'upload
> form':
>
>
>
> So why won't it upload a 1.5MB file?
manual -> Handling File Uploads
--
Jason Wong -> Gremlins Associates -> www.gremlins.biz
Open Sour
Hi all,
I must be missunderstanding something here, I have this in an php 'upload
form':
So why won't it upload a 1.5MB file?
Many thanks
--
Nick Wilson // www.tioka.com
--
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