I am looking for a way to activate a script or function or something of that sort, to update my access database every hour.
I though maybe timed app could activate itself and run the changes on the database. I thought maybe someone else would have a better idea to help as I am thinking the ASP app would take a while to update a lot of the information. Maybe it would easier to develop then.
I have an ASP provider and an Access Database. I need to build a small webpage where the user can enter his "user id" and a "hardware code", and if the "user id" is correct (will be checked against the db which means the user id must exist) a function will generate a product activation code from his/ her "hardware code" and show it on the next page.
I think the database thing is not a problem, but I have not been able to create a simple function that is hacksafe and cannot be "downloaded". Could anybody give me a hint where I can find an example of such a function so that I can understand how I have to encapsulate the important parts so that nobody can see it?
I'm looking for some best practices when it comes time to allowing a user to create an account for our web app. For example, a potential customer of ours would fill out an application and then an email would be sent w/further instructions on how to activate and login to their account. What's the best way to accomplish this? Should our system create a unique password for them (initially) and then require them to create their own? I need a solution that is secure with almost no chance of someone attempting to impersonate.
i have just installed jmailbox on my server. i am able to log into my work pop3 account through it. However, when i try to login using my gmail username & password (as gmail also allows pop3 and i am able to log into gmail through mail2web), jmailbox throws a "connection timed out error"
is there a setting somewhere in jmailbox to use ssl and/or change the pop port (gmail uses 995, normally it's 110)?
All I want to do is find a way to cause a vb.net / asp.net program to exceed the httpRuntime executionTimeout="xxx" value to thrown the exception, so I can do some testing. I've tried setting this several ways. I have also tried a do / loop to cause a time out...no go, in total execution time would surely cause a request to time out.
I've tried thread sleep with a value that exceeds httpRuntime executionTimeout...no go.
I've tried a second range loop that when executed should cause the program to exceed httpRuntime executionTimeout...no go.
Anybody have any idea's? Can I actually throw a exception to trigger the time out request?
I've tried it that way, and I receive an error, so I figured it wouldn't allow you since it's "redirecting"...
but my main question is if I can... no, I know that I can.. but does anyone up here no "how" to set a time for a response.redirect using ASP? I can't seem to find it on-line;
I sometimes get this error after about 60 seconds of "waiting for mazes.com" (but when the page works, it usually loads in less than 12 seconds).
[color=blue] > Active Server Pages error 'ASP 0113' > Script timed out > /asp-maze/amazingtest.asp > The maximum amount of time for a script to execute was exceeded. You can > change this limit by specifying a new value for the property Server.ScriptTimeout > or by changing the value in the IIS administration tools.[/color]
but if I click refresh, I usually get the page.
There is a very remote chance that there might be a loop causing this problem, but I don't think so. I've added timer-checks to the loops that might cause a problem, and have added other escape methods to other places that I think have caused the problem.
My questions:
1) Can the system be set to tell what line of the program was executing when it timed out? (This would certainly help figure out if there's a particular place that is causing an occasional problem). I'd have to tell my hosting person how to do it, so be specific if you can.
2) Could this be caused by too many people accessing ASP pages at the same time? How would he increase the number of users allowed to be loading pages simultaneously?
3) What steps would he use to reduce the time for this parameter, or should I reduce it. 60 seconds seems awfully long, but I do have another page that I
I don't know if this is a truly esoteric question, or not, but I'm wondering how (or even if) you handle a timeout on a transaction within a stored procedure executed in a Stored Procedure?
A theoretical example of the stored procedure (sadly, I'm not allowed to post the actual code):
Create proc sp_testproc @myval int, @outval int OUTPUT as
begin tran
select top 1 @outval= myname from mytable where recid = @myval
update mytable set myname='xxxx' where recid = @myval ...
I have an ASP form that uploads files to our server.When I upload small files, it works great.But larger files like (2.5mb), I get:
Active Server Pages error 'ASP 0113' Script timed out
I have looked up the error, and added more time to the script (up to 10 minutes). Didn't help. We are using Microsoft Server 2000, IIS 5.0, and Microsoft ASP Upload.
My guess is that there is a file size limitation somewhere, but don't where.