I recently had a similar behaviour with a company. I called to complain
but they could not see any issue.
The error would appear when the application switched from http to a
https link.
Their content protected by https was unable to be accessed through IE 7
(on Vista Business).
I was able to acc
> At 01:09 PM 1/28/2009, you wrote:
>
> >A "Page not Found" error is a DNS resolution issue. Since apache
> >does not provide DNS resolution, make sure that DNS servers in place
> >on that machine are reliable, and if possible, disable DNS caching.
On 28.01.09 13:16, Evan Platt wrote:
> Good ca
At 02:42 PM 1/28/2009, you wrote:
The one customer I am working on this problem with is a developer at
an ISP thankfully, but he doesn't know Apache or Linux.
He does have friendly errors turned off and he is getting the message:
Internet Explorer cannot display the webpage
That still sou
That is a pretty useless error, indeed.
The number of serious errors should not be considerable enough to
prevent you from looking at each one of them separately, barring the
obvious 404's.
Frank.
Ian Lauder wrote:
The one customer I am working on this problem with is a developer at
an ISP
The one customer I am working on this problem with is a developer at
an ISP thankfully, but he doesn't know Apache or Linux.
He does have friendly errors turned off and he is getting the message:
Internet Explorer cannot display the webpage
I'm still trying to get his IP address to compare to
Hi.
You may or may not know that there is a particularity in IE about
showing error pages.
IE has some option called "show friendly error messages", in the
advanced settings somewhere, which has the effect of not displaying many
HTTP server's sent error pages, but instead displaying a built-in
Ian,
I'll put my reply on top to keep this thread readable.
This is leaning on microsoft windows support, but you can go to
tools->Internet Options->Advanced, and uncheck the "Show friendly HTTP
error messages" box and the real error should be reported on their
screen, should anything happen.
Thanks for the comments. I'm in the early stages of trying to track
down this problem and its not something I can replicate.
All I know is that when I send out a mass mailing to 20,000
customers, I get on average 2 to 4 people saying the site is down and
when I talk to them it turns out they
At 01:09 PM 1/28/2009, you wrote:
A "Page not Found" error is a DNS resolution issue. Since apache
does not provide DNS resolution, make sure that DNS servers in place
on that machine are reliable, and if possible, disable DNS caching.
Good catch... forgot that. IE of course has some of the w
At 01:05 PM 1/28/2009, you wrote:
For the most part everyone can access my web sites on an Apache
server V2.0.54 running on RedHat Linux Fedora 4
I keep getting sporadic reports from people who can not access the
web sites from Internet Explorer, but they can access it from other
browsers or
Ian Lauder wrote:
For the most part everyone can access my web sites on an Apache server
V2.0.54 running on RedHat Linux Fedora 4
I keep getting sporadic reports from people who can not access the web
sites from Internet Explorer, but they can access it from other
browsers or computers (i.e.
For the most part everyone can access my web sites on an Apache
server V2.0.54 running on RedHat Linux Fedora 4
I keep getting sporadic reports from people who can not access the
web sites from Internet Explorer, but they can access it from other
browsers or computers (i.e. switching to Firefo
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