On Tue, 04 Nov 2008 13:24:41 +0100, Jochem Maas wrote:
> try testing for the request type (i.e. HEAD) and if found don't output
> anything at all.
This is a nice workaround and works perfectly, thanks!
> seems like apache (not the user) is shutting down the request as soon as
> it recieves the f
On Tue, 04 Nov 2008 11:59:20 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
>> I need the PHP script to keep running until the end)
>
> Until the end of what? Time?
Until the end of the script.
> If you want your HTTP request to finish and
> a script to continue regardless then use the method I suggested, an
> sta
On Tue, 04 Nov 2008 11:37:15 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
>> The question here is: why a PHP script called via 'wget --spider'
>> through Apache/2 gets killed as soon as the HTTP reply code is sent,
>> even if ignore_user_abort() is set?
>
> A script ending naturally is not the same as a user abor
On Tue, 04 Nov 2008 10:03:11 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
>> I am trying to get a script to run in background no matter what, but I
>> am obviously doing it wrong.
>
> 1. Have it executed via a shell command. 2. Redirect all output.
> 3. Append the ampersand.
This is not what I need, but thanks.
Hi there,
I am trying to get a script to run in background no matter what, but I am
obviously doing it wrong.
Here is the entire code:
The file /tmp/aborting get touched if I abort the connection in a
browser, or if I run "wget blabla/script.php" and kill wget... in fact it
works perfectly
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