Are you sure about this?

> But I gave up because during a file upload, the whole application were
> unreachable :-/

I think what happened is that you did not unlock the session during
the upload and therefore you were unable to connect from the same
browser (using the same session cookie) as the upload. This is to
avoid session corruption. I do not think the application was
unreachable and it should have been reachable from a different browser/
machine.

It is also possible that sqlite was locking. Were you using sqlite?

I do not know about rocket ssl support. Perhaps other users have
advice.

Massimo

On Jan 3, 10:28 am, PhE <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for your fast reply.
>
> I got troubles with small files (50 Ko) on Internet and it may running
> fine with large file (over 700 Mo) on LAN.
> The target size is around 5 Mo.
>
> This is not always reproducible.
> I would like to investigate in this but I don't know where to look at.
> Should I enable some log ? Should I drop web2py ssl support ?
>
> My first attempts were with Cherokee, SSL and uWSGI.
> But I gave up because during a file upload, the whole application were
> unreachable :-/
> When the transfer ended, the application recovered.
>
> On 3 jan, 16:26, mdipierro <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > How big is the file? It is possible that the python ssl module cannot
> > handle too large files because of a limited buffer (I have see this
> > with python open-ssl before).
>
> > This should not be a problem if you use apache for ssl.
>
> > On Jan 3, 8:04 am, PhE <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I got strange upload issues on my app. A simple form with an upload
> > > field fails sometimes to upload the file. It works fine on my LAN but
> > > fails on the Internet.
> > > I focused it down to this reproducible scenario :
>
> > > I install a clean web2py with an ssl certificate :
>
> > > cd /var
> > > wgethttp://www.web2py.com/examples/static/web2py_src.zip
> > > unzip web2py_src.zip
> > > cd /var/web2py/
> > > dd if=/dev/random of=rand.dat bs=1024 count=1
> > > openssl genrsa -out cakey.key -rand rand.dat 2048
> > > openssl req -new -key cakey.key -out cakey.csr -subj
> > > '/C=FR/L=Paris/CN=test25656263.test.fr'
> > > openssl x509 -req -days 1780 -set_serial 1 -in cakey.csr -signkey
> > > cakey.key -out cakey.pem
> > > rm -f rand.dat
>
> > > I start web2py in SSL mode :
> > > python web2py.py -i 0.0.0.0 -p 443 -c cakey.pem -k cakey.key
>
> > > With the admin interface, I create my test app :
> > > New simple application
> > > Application name: testupload1
>
> > > Modify db.py and add :
> > > db.define_table('mytable',
> > >    Field('myfield', 'upload'),
> > >  )
>
> > > Go to database administration : [ insert new mytable ]
> > > select a small file (50 kb) then submit
>
> > > Then I got :
> > > -> "Internal error" Ticket issued ...
> > > testupload1/81.56.220.102.2011-01-03.11-26-20.6a65f307-5eb2-4fde-915d-
> > > d63516bc574a
> > > -> Bad Request
>
> > > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > >  File "/var/web2py/gluon/main.py", line 403, in wsgibase
> > >    parse_get_post_vars(request, environ)
> > >  File "/var/web2py/gluon/main.py", line 254, in parse_get_post_vars
> > >    request.body = copystream_progress(request) ### stores request body
> > >  File "/var/web2py/gluon/main.py", line 127, in copystream_progress
> > >    copystream(source, dest, size, chunk_size)
> > >  File "/var/web2py/gluon/fileutils.py", line 329, in copystream
> > >    data = src.read(size)
> > >  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/socket.py", line 377, in read
> > >    data = self._sock.recv(left)
> > >  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/ssl.py", line 215, in recv
> > >    return self.read(buflen)
> > >  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/ssl.py", line 136, in read
> > >    return self._sslobj.read(len)
> > > SSLError: The read operation timed out
>
> > > Server conf : Ubuntu 10.10 64 bits with latest web2py
> > > Client conf : Firefox 3.6.13 on Ubuntu 10.10 32 bits
>
> > > Help would be appreciated.
>
>

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