On 12/23/05, David Faught <dave_faught at yahoo.com> wrote:
Gee, did somebody get ticked off at my diary entry on SqueakPeople yesterday? Or was there some other problem that required the server to be restored? Just curious ...
Cees De Groot wrote:
Neither. The last entry is from 22 dec 15:11, both in the website and on disk. You posted since then?
David Faught wrote:
It was just my browser reading the page from cache instead of refreshing it. Silly me! Sorry about that. Now I wonder what it was that changed the setting in my browser ...
Sorry to stay with this, but it's not my browser at all. Something else (probably our firewall) is caching the page and not properly updating when the newer page version is fetched.
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On 12/23/05, David Faught dave_faught@yahoo.com wrote:
Sorry to stay with this, but it's not my browser at all. Something else (probably our firewall) is caching the page and not properly updating when the newer page version is fetched.
It could be mod_cache - I enabled it yesterday, because the box that runs SqP runs a whole platoon of different appservers, which all spit out a page per minute or so, and subsequently get stashed away on disk. So for a lot of requests, Linux needs to swap in the appserver, which made a lot of sites slow.
mod_cache helps here, but of course that brings refresh problems with it. I'll try to see whether these can be reduced.
There does seem to be something a little off. I had to forcibly refresh the home page to get David's 22nd posting listed in the Recent diary entries block.
Ken
On Fri, 2005-12-23 at 18:15 +0100, Cees De Groot wrote:
On 12/23/05, David Faught dave_faught@yahoo.com wrote:
Sorry to stay with this, but it's not my browser at all. Something else (probably our firewall) is caching the page and not properly updating when the newer page version is fetched.
It could be mod_cache - I enabled it yesterday, because the box that runs SqP runs a whole platoon of different appservers, which all spit out a page per minute or so, and subsequently get stashed away on disk. So for a lot of requests, Linux needs to swap in the appserver, which made a lot of sites slow.
mod_cache helps here, but of course that brings refresh problems with it. I'll try to see whether these can be reduced.
Ok, I removed mod_cache again...
On 12/23/05, Ken Causey ken@kencausey.com wrote:
There does seem to be something a little off. I had to forcibly refresh the home page to get David's 22nd posting listed in the Recent diary entries block.
OK, it's unfortunate that you had to remove it, I hope you can work out a solution using it in time.
It was interesting that in (Firefox 1.5 at least) if I hit the refresh button I would see a front page where David's last entry was in November. If I hit shift-refresh I would see the December entry listed. I could go back and forth at will. Now I get the latest version with the December entry every time.
Ken
On Fri, 2005-12-23 at 21:34 +0100, Cees De Groot wrote:
Ok, I removed mod_cache again...
On 12/23/05, Ken Causey ken@kencausey.com wrote:
There does seem to be something a little off. I had to forcibly refresh the home page to get David's 22nd posting listed in the Recent diary entries block.
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