We had similar issues with users, who were using IE with auto-detect
compatibility mode, which caused that GET requests used different User-Agent
strings, which caused aborted sessions.
If I remember right, we had to add something in the HEAD section of our
template to avoid the issue.
On Feb 15, 2012, at 5:08 PM, James Devine wrote:
Any idea how I might verify what the problem is? I'm not seeing anything
popping up in the error logs and I'm not able to reproduce this myself, I'm
going off reports from customers
I believe that you should check the invalid session
On Feb 14, 2012, at 6:21 PM, James Devine wrote:
My fear is that the garbage collection from one or more webmail machines is
somehow stomping over active sessions
I don't think that is the actual issue if your cluster members have time in
sync, since session functions use this SQLs
On Dec 23, 2011, at 5:06 PM, Claudio Kuenzler wrote:
Do you see anything in the error logs? Activate the logging of php errors in
the .htaccess file if you havent already.
Did you upgrade (replaced files) or is it a new install?
Try debugging with Firebug or something similar to see whether
Hello,
I noticed the same problems with showing the attachments as Tobias Pyndt
Steinmann few days ago did.
What i noticed is:
- the problematic attachments in my case have long name (more than 64
characters)
- it does not matter the order of the attachments in the mail (first,
last,