So that was bad way to simulate apachectl stop just because of the above.
I think with 2.2 it even is not true, because apache2 has own way to
configure shutdown timeouts, the GracefulShutdownTimeout directive.
On 09.05.11 16:26, Bostjan Skufca wrote:
Yes, timeout is configurable, but that
if a server is killed (SIGKILL) during a large static file transfer, then
the client is not notified by his browser that file has not been completely
downloaded. On Win it just says it is not a valid Win32 application or
corrupted or sth.
Now I know this is not a general problem and a
On 9 May 2011 15:44, Matus UHLAR - fantomas uh...@fantomas.sk wrote:
So that was bad way to simulate apachectl stop just because of the above.
I think with 2.2 it even is not true, because apache2 has own way to
configure shutdown timeouts, the GracefulShutdownTimeout directive.
Yes, timeout
Hi all,
if a server is killed (SIGKILL) during a large static file transfer, then
the client is not notified by his browser that file has not been completely
downloaded. On Win it just says it is not a valid Win32 application or
corrupted or sth.
Now I know this is not a general problem and a
On April 20, 2011 11:11 , Bostjan Skufca bost...@a2o.si wrote:
if a server is killed (SIGKILL) during a large static file transfer,
then the client is not notified by his browser that file has not been
completely downloaded. On Win it just says it is not a valid Win32
application or
if a server is killed (SIGKILL) during a large static file transfer, then
the client is not notified by his browser that file has not been completely
downloaded. On Win it just says it is not a valid Win32 application or
corrupted or sth.
Now I know this is not a general problem and a