On Monday 03 February 2003 14:47, Eric Fink wrote: > My experience is that it happens in IE only. It does not seem to have > the same result as logging out manually because you can hit the back > button and continue working in sqwebmail.
Hmm... you're right. When I use IE from another machine on my network it happens to me too. I wonder if it's a bug with the way IE handles frames and frame refreshes? I _CAN_NOT_ click the back button and continue my session. My back button points to the last page I visited _BEFORE_ my login page. That's what makes me think it's a frames issue. Jesse > > On Mon, 2003-02-03 at 14:35, Kurt Bigler wrote: > > on 2/3/03 10:44 AM, Jesse Guardiani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Monday 03 February 2003 12:26, home wrote: > > >> Dear all, Sorry if this has already been posted, I can't find the > > >> archives. If a user logs in to sqwebmail and the hits f5 (refresh > > >> page) it dumps them back to the login page. Is there any way to stop > > >> this happening? I have 'grep'ed the source files for any mention of > > >> this but to no avail. > > > > > > I can hit refresh all I want and never have a problem. > > > > > > Are you behind a firewall that does NAT? > > > > The same thing happens to me, so I have just learned not to use refresh, > > as someone else suggested. However this is unfriendly, since clicking on > > the link you are already on (Folder) is not the expected way to cause a > > refresh. > > > > I am behind a LinkSys router, which has minimal firewall capabilities, > > but does not interfere with http as far as I am aware. > > > > >> Regards > > >> > > >> Jonathan -- Jesse Guardiani, Systems Administrator WingNET Internet Services, P.O. Box 2605 // Cleveland, TN 37320-2605 423-559-LINK (v) 423-559-5145 (f) http://www.wingnet.net We are actively looking for companies that do a lot of long distance faxing and want to cut their long distance bill by up to 50%. Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] for more info.
