So I'm guessing that's why it wasn't sending cookies when you I was in the
browser. I was logged into my site in the browser and sending and receiving
messages (checked in Firebug). When I turned on network monitor the
responses from the server were that I was no longer logged in and no
network calls were showing up in Firebug. When I turned off the network
monitor the calls went back through the browser and I was still logged in
(Firefox). Also, even if you pause or stop it it will still log calls in
some cases.



On Tue, Dec 3, 2013 at 8:31 AM, Cosma Colanicchia <cosma...@gmail.com>wrote:

> On the same subject: the network monitor act as a proxy to the actual
> services, that in turn will use the Eclipse proxy settings to forward the
> invocations to the real destination. If the Eclipse proxy isn’t correctly
> set, it will appears as if your application cannot reach the back-end, only
> when network monitor is enabled for that application...
>
>
> 2013/12/3 piotr.zarzycki <piotrzarzyck...@gmail.com>
>
> > Hi Cosma.
> >
> > One of my colleagues have noticed some strange behavior with this, when
> he
> > switched off network monitor everything back to normal. :) But we didn't
> > know what is in the background. Thanks for sharing this. :)
> >
> > Piotr
> >
> >
> >
> > -----
> > Flex/Air developer open to new job offers and challenges.
> > piotrzarzyck...@gmail.com
> > --
> > View this message in context:
> >
> http://apache-flex-development.2333347.n4.nabble.com/FB-Enabling-network-monitor-can-overwrite-include-libraries-compiler-settings-tp32908p32909.html
> > Sent from the Apache Flex Development mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
> >
>

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