how to create a download buffer? I'll explain a little bit. What I mean by a download buffer is a script that will count how many people are downloading a certain file, then after say 50 or so are downloading that file, it will make everyone else who wants to download it have to wait a certain amount of time(ex. 5 minutes).
I got the idea from Fileplanet.com and Fileshack.com. Seems like a pretty cool system and it appears to be written in asp.net on their sites.
I have an ASP script that show a big number of record (about 1100 rows) so I have set the Response.buffer value to off. With Firefox all works fine, the script shows the record one by one while it loads them. The problem is that using Internet Explorer I can see the records only once that all rows are loaded.
I'm experiencing bad performance migrating from IIS 5 to IIS 6 on a server with identical Hardware configuration on some ASP pages.I notice that setting
I have over 6000 record in a SQL Server database (in one table) and trying to fetch all these records at once but it always fails. I have tried every thing, increased Script time out function to 300 even to 3000 but still same. Used response.buffer=false too but no change.
When you use response.buffer=true , I realize that anything writeen with response.write will not be outputted until you do response.flush, correct?
With that said, what about this (I don't know if it's the same as response.write or not)
<% if page = 1 then %> (Load pictures 1-20) by using html (not response.write) <% end if %> <% if page = 2 then %> (Load pictures 21-40) by using html (not response.write) <% end if %>
I notice a lag in the page (it stays blank for a second or so before any of the page loads) and I wondered if changing buffer type to true and adding a response.flush between every 5 or so pictures would make that better.
I'm trying to retreive and display a list of showrooms in the United States. The user is presented with a map of the US and an image map has the co-ordinates. The user clicks on a state and "Viola!", all in that state are listed.
It works great, except for two states; California and Florida. On those, I get the following error: Quote: Response object error 'ASP 0251 : 80004005'
Response Buffer Limit Exceeded
/default.asp, line 0
Execution of the ASP page caused the Response Buffer to exceed its configured limit.
There isn't that much data being pulled from the database; only 77 records for Florida, only 122 for California. There aren't that many fields in any of the recordsets, either, and none of them are more than 500 characters in length (all varchar with some int dbtypes.) Code:
In the following code when i = 500 the buffer on the server is flushed to the client. However, because the content that is sent to the browser contains an html table Internet Explorer does not display the table until it receives the closing </table> tag.
The question is, am I correct in saying that the buffer on the server is CLEARED when i = 500? It will be empty for a split second until the loop resumes again. Am I correct? Code:
For... IF x MOD 20 = 0 AND Response.IsClientConnected=false THEN EXIT FOR END IF some code here Next so the FOR...NEXT statement would stop if a client leaves the page or hits the stop button.
But is it pointless when using it with <% Response.Buffer = True %> since it processes the entire page before displaying it to the user.
If response.buffer is set to true, and no response.flush has been executed, is it accurate to expect that my browser should not be rendering the content which I (well Ok, someone else) is sending in response.write statements?
I have an ASP page which is returning so much data that I'm receiving a message that the Response Buffer Limit has exceeded its configured values. Any idea where to find this configured value so I can set it higher?
Are there specific security precautions (input validations for example) that are documented somewhere to prevent hackers from compromising a credit card ASP application? In particular, can we prevent a buffer overflow by using the LEFT function to grab only the necessary characters from the credit card text field?
When I try to print a large table I get "Response Buffer Limit Exceeded". When the table is small, this is not a problem. I am sure that there is no infinite loop, and have tried setting the buffer to false, in addition to occassionally trying to flush the buffer. I can not modify the server settings. What can else can I try? I'd rather not split up my table into multiple pages.
Execution of the ASP page caused the Response Buffer to exceed its configured limit. What does this mean anybody, please. I just thought, OK I am doing this reasonable competently and now this.
I have the following error on a page. I can fix it by making a large-ish block of text (almostr 4k) a little smaller. But what is ASP actually complaining about?
Steve
Response object error 'ASP 0251 : 80004005'
Response Buffer Limit Exceeded
/lsm/TemplateKb2.asp, line 0
Execution of the ASP page caused the Response Buffer to exceed its configured limit.
I have a big asp file that has an error under certain conditions -- totally repeatable. However, it only fails when I set response.buffer = True at the top. WHen I set it False in order to debug it, it works every time! I even set it to True, but did a .Flush just before the error, and the error won't happen.
It only happens when response.buffer is True and no .response.flush is issued.
The error is a string variable turns-up empty and crashes a function requiring a date. I could test for this before the line where it crashes, but where did my data go? Why is the buffer affecting it?
I am trying to download files from one website to another for purposes of caching. In trying to do this, I created a VB dll component (using VB6), that used URLDownloadToFile, to allow me to download the file onto the receiving site. The sending site supports an ASP page that allows the file to be downloaded.The component works fine when run in debugging mode, placing the file as expected. But when not debugging (but registered), it reports that the file has been downloaded, but the file is not there.
I am looking for some VB Script tutorials possibly as a pdf file that one can download and take print out of as one single file. I can see a lot of VB Script tutorials on the net but not offered as a single PDF file all in html format and explained on different pages.
where I can download PWS Personal Web Server,or IIS from,ideally for as little cost as possible?I have XP Pro, but I've tried typing "inetmgr" in the Run field in Start Menu but it says it can't find inetmgr,and there is no IIS or PWS in my Program menus or submenus on my machine that I can see.
I had heard my XP Pro may have come with IIS but this doesn't seem to be the case with my pc. I have IIS on my server at work which has Windows 2000.Is it possible to copy an .exe install application of somekind which would be used to install IIS on another machine? What would the .exe file be called and where would it be located?
I have created a script which connects to a SQL DB, runs a query, writes the results out to a file (Using FSO) then presents the user with a link to download the CSV. As the file contains sensitive data, I dont want to leave the file on the server, and I dont want to rely on the user to delete the file after every export.
Looking for download asp script or java script for my zip files but without user know the location of the file/folder and can only log to this page from my authorized page.