Wolf wrote:
IMHO, you should be testing this long before taking it to the customer and
having another failure to show off.
Personally, 2 failures is good reason NOT to purchase someone's services...
Wolf
Yes, I'm well aware of this - the point which you've continually failed
to realize is tha
robert wrote:
Hi
Every so often my site is "attacked" in which all URLS on my site are
retrieved in the span of minutes. What is this called?? I mean what do
I google for? I don't know where to begin.
I'm not sure if I am going to implement such at thing but I would like
to be able to resear
Sorry, the link:
http://www.javascriptkit.com/howto/htaccess13.shtml
Usamah
On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 1:15 AM, Usamah M. Ali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 8:51 PM, robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Cool! yes Fasterfox could be it. If anyone cares, it also gave me so
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 8:51 PM, robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Cool! yes Fasterfox could be it. If anyone cares, it also gave me some
> clues to what I was looking for: "offline browsing". Certainly better
> keywords than "page suck" :)
>
> thank you everyone!
>
>
Well, "site rippers" is a m
robert wrote:
Hi
Every so often my site is "attacked" in which all URLS on my site are
retrieved in the span of minutes. What is this called?? I mean what do I
google for? I don't know where to begin.
I'm not sure if I am going to implement such at thing but I would like
to be able to resear
I was going to ignore this, but I'm in a confrontational mood today,
so please accept my apologies for the noise.
On 21 May 2008, at 14:08, Michelle Konzack wrote:
Am 2008-05-12 15:40:54, schrieb Stut:
CSS, but I may not be understanding what you mean by blunt.
Javascript
can be written su
robert wrote:
Not that i can tell. Yahoo and google have a signature: googlebot and
slurp. both of them also check my site over a span of days. that's all
good. The others come from regular isps as far as their IP tells me
and the hits are within milliseconds.
Hi,
Are the URL's legit? Or are
Cool! yes Fasterfox could be it. If anyone cares, it also gave me some
clues to what I was looking for: "offline browsing". Certainly better
keywords than "page suck" :)
thank you everyone!
On May 21, 2008, at 10:02 AM, Thiago Pojda wrote:
Perhaps someone is accessing your website with
Can you check your logs and look at the user agent for what's making the
connections? Could it just be a search engine crawler indexing your pages?
You can control access, usually, via a robots.txt exclusion file.
If it's someone else mirroring your site for some reason, some programs that
d
Hi:
The following could be taken from MySQL just as well:
http://webbytedd.com/b/timed-php/
Cheers,
tedd
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At 3:08 PM +0200 5/21/08, Michelle Konzack wrote:
Am 2008-05-12 15:40:54, schrieb Stut:
> Well, some of his pages do but that's complicating the issue. As far
as I can tell the only bit of Javascript common to all Tedd's pages is
the Google Analytics code which is not required for you to use
Perhaps someone is accessing your website with some prefetching tool?
I'm not sure, but I think Fasterfox does that.
Atenciosamente,
www.softpartech.com.br
Thiago Henrique Pojda
Desenvolvimento Web
+55 41 3033-7676
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ExcelĂȘncia em Softwares Financeiros
-Mensagem original
Dmitri wrote:
Mattias Thorslund wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking at possibly implementing mnoGoSearch (for indexing and
search of uploaded documents on the server) into my application, but
noticed it has been moved into PECL since PHP 5.1. Does this mean
mnoGoSearch has been deprecated and there is a
Not that i can tell. Yahoo and google have a signature: googlebot and
slurp. both of them also check my site over a span of days. that's all
good. The others come from regular isps as far as their IP tells me
and the hits are within milliseconds.
On May 21, 2008, at 8:57 AM, Gavin M. Roy w
Hmmm, sounds like a search engine scan, Google or Yahoo Slurpy? Do a
reverse lookup on the requesting IP. I would think the goal would be to get
this increased? You can stop it (or control it a bit) by placing a
robots.txt file in the root directory, then telling the robot which paths
not to fol
One thing you might want to check for before blocking it is looking in
the logs and checking to see if it is one of the search engines that
is grabbing your URL's... Which I would think you actually want :)
On May 21, 2008, at 11:54 AM, robert wrote:
Hi
Every so often my site is "attacked"
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 11:54 AM, robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
> Every so often my site is "attacked" in which all URLS on my site are
> retrieved in the span of minutes. What is this called?? I mean what do I
> google for? I don't know where to begin.
>
> I'm not sure if I am going to i
Search engines indexing your site?
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 11:54 AM, robert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
> Every so often my site is "attacked" in which all URLS on my site are
> retrieved in the span of minutes. What is this called?? I mean what do I
> google for? I don't know where to begin.
Hi
Every so often my site is "attacked" in which all URLS on my site are
retrieved in the span of minutes. What is this called?? I mean what do
I google for? I don't know where to begin.
I'm not sure if I am going to implement such at thing but I would like
to be able to research it to kno
Am 2008-05-12 15:40:54, schrieb Stut:
> CSS, but I may not be understanding what you mean by blunt. Javascript
> can be written such that it eats CPU and/or memory but this is of no
> benefit to anyone so unless you're running on a prehistoric machine I
> can't see that being an issue. And it
Am 2008-05-20 15:28:31, schrieb Chris Haensel:
> Hi fellas (and ladies)
>
> Again, I know this is kind of an OT post, but I know that many, if not most,
> developers are kind of data-collectors.
>
> I am looking for a database with US airport runway information. I got all
> kinds of stuff, but th
Am 2008-05-12 15:36:30, schrieb tedd:
> Now, how is that a security threat? Or is the claim that any site
> that uses js is a security threat?
END OF REPLIED MESSAGE
One of my customers is the french "Ministry of Defense" and IF ENOUGH
websites
Todd
I want to thank you. You sent me thinking in the right direction to resolving
this issue. I now have successfully created a live Pika Card status GUI using
PHP, MYSQL, AJAX.
The key word in what you said was unique function. I was not thinking to write
a function. I was looking for the qu
Mattias Thorslund wrote:
Hi,
I'm looking at possibly implementing mnoGoSearch (for indexing and
search of uploaded documents on the server) into my application, but
noticed it has been moved into PECL since PHP 5.1. Does this mean
mnoGoSearch has been deprecated and there is a different/bett
Hi,
I'm looking at possibly implementing mnoGoSearch (for indexing and
search of uploaded documents on the server) into my application, but
noticed it has been moved into PECL since PHP 5.1. Does this mean
mnoGoSearch has been deprecated and there is a different/better solution
that I should
Nameless,
I see someone mentioned the setTimeout(function, milliseconds) function for
JavaScript. I would also like to point out that you can use
setInterval(function, milliseconds) in order to have an event repeat at a set
interval. For instance, let's say you had a page laid out like so:
---
Without more data and code, all I can tell is that this line should be be
read carefully:
Warning: mysql_connect() [function.mysql-connect]: Access denied for user
'vesna'@'localhost' (using password: YES) in
/usr/home/vesna/html/pryvit/church_maps/data_genxml.php on line 13
Not connected : Access
James Colannino wrote:
Chris wrote:
Are you sure there are newlines before you run strip_tags?
I would assume so, because everything from the textarea runs together in
one line when displayed in the browser until filtered through nl2br().
That would suggest to me that there are indeed \n's
Chris wrote:
Are you sure there are newlines before you run strip_tags?
I would assume so, because everything from the textarea runs together in
one line when displayed in the browser until filtered through nl2br().
That would suggest to me that there are indeed \n's that are being
converte
Wolf wrote:
Ray Hauge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just read an interesting article about enterprise software. One of
the most common arguments against PHP tends to be "It's not enterprise
ready." This article talks more about ruby, but it could be about any
"non-enterprise" language as
James Colannino wrote:
> Chris wrote:
>
>> RTM.
>>
>> Supply the tags you want to keep when you call strip_tags.
>>
>> $stripped = strip_tags($data, '');
>
> I can do that, but my question had to do with strip_tags seeming to get
> rid of \n's, not tags. This is why I was concerned. If I run
>
Chris wrote:
RTM.
Supply the tags you want to keep when you call strip_tags.
$stripped = strip_tags($data, '');
I can do that, but my question had to do with strip_tags seeming to get
rid of \n's, not tags. This is why I was concerned. If I run
strip_tags(), followed by nl2br, the tags
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