Note: if you hit the stop button and php doesn't stop, that probably means
it's either in the middle of a query and can't stop, or more likely it means
that "ignore.user.abort" has been set to true.

Turn off ignore user abort in your php.ini, and that should solve your
problem.


As for accessing any database on any system configuration, yes PHP can do
it. You can have a DB running on a Super Nintendo accessed by PHP on a
FreeBSD box, and it should work fine. ;)

In other words it doesn't matter what platform it's running on...in a
perfect world.


--
Plutarck
Should be working on something...
...but forgot what it was.


"Christian Dechery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I have a huge (at least I think, for a script anyway) PHP script... it is
> over 1.000 lines of code.
> And it updates (do an entire DELETE-ALL / LOAD-ALL) an SQL Server database
> (over 35MB). It runs for over an hour (sometimes 2hs)... and I divided it
> into steps... so each step is a function in the script that when is over
> calls a javascript function that reloads the script to the next step.
>
> I was wondering if this is enough to get a good 'memory-cleaning'. Or it
> would be better to have lots of files (in total, there are 27 separate
> steps). I began noticing some processing slowness after the first 35
> mins... it get's 'tired'. The script starts running and with
> ob_implicit_flush() on, the output is flushed almost at real time... but
> after 10 or 12 steps it starts to get slow and do NO FLUSHING at all...
> only showing the entire output at once after the whole step has ended.
> Should I split it into files? Is because it's running on (eek!) IIS? Maybe
> the size of the file is getting in the way?
>
> Can someone help me out?
>
> Ah... one other thing. Has anybody experienced very weird behaviours of
PHP
> with IIS? Sometimes I press 'stop' at the browser but PHP is still
running.
> I can see it eating up memory in the TaskManager. And it won't stop until
I
> kill it. And the most weird part is, as soon as I call a script (any
> script) PHP returns to the TaskManager with the same amount of memory it
> had when it was running tha massive script mentioned above. Does IIS
really
> suck, or is there something very wrong with my config?
> ____________________________
> . Christian Dechery (lemming)
> . http://www.tanamesa.com.br
> . Gaita-L Owner / Web Developer
>
>
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