I've hit a serious roadblock, and would appreciate any advice: I've written a Revolution app that configures a DSL modem. This DSL modem contains a web-server with configuration data that gets passed from it. I have successfully used Revolution to get and pass data back and forth to the modem to make/drop connections, request info about the unit, etc. I've been able to test the success of the software I've written by going into IE and typing the IP address of the DSL router and going to various URLs on the pages hosted in the hardware.
I was 99% complete until the client surprised me with a new feature - - - admin login access. Without it, I cannot access any data from the router. The good news is, if I go into IE and go to the "getmodeminfo" URL, I get prompted (via an IE popup) to enter the admin userid and password and join a realm. After I enter it in IE, I am able to continue browsing the configuration pages within the DSL modem. IE is just for testing, we are using Revolution for the actual software. The bad news is, if I go to the exact same URL in Revolution (using the put URL URLvar into x call), I do not get a userid/password popup. Without this popup, or a means of mimicing what IE is doing when it displays the popup and passes it back to the server, I'm sunk. My problem is that I don't really know what causes a web-browser to display a login prompt, and even if I did, I wouldn't know the http protocols for passing the data back. I did notice that Revolution offers a great means of creating custom HTTP headers, if that's of any help. Any http gurus on the list who could be of help? I'm authoring this for Mac OS 8/9 and X. - Rob _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
