Hi Tim,
One thing that would help is to understand that the server is still running on a very old version of Squeak (3.x), and that the serialization takes longer than your local image's timeout setting. So you can avoid the timeout error by increasing your timeout, or just be aware of that to know it'll eventually get saved.
As for your 404, the instructions at the wiki:
http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/6180
instruct you to select "Create New Release" (step 8). The additional "Edit Release" step was put in only after you had changed the SqueakMap client to default to the "template" script instead of the script of the selected release. I have since fixed that, so maybe we can put the wiki instructions back.
But why did you think you wanted "Edit Release" to create a new release? If you edited your old Release to make a new version, then the old version will become no longer available to those older versions of Squeak. Please keep your old versions around, and instead, Create a New Release.
- Chris On Sun, Sep 16, 2018 at 1:14 PM tim Rowledge tim@rowledge.org wrote:
After updating my swiki page on MQTT I attempted to update the SqueakMap stuff for the new version.
The first attempt to save the new release failed because of a connection timeout. A second attempt appeared to work, and after updating the catalogue the new version was listed in the in-image tool but not on the relevant webpage. Attempting to 'Edit Release' produced this error in the release tool text pane -
error occured retrieving http://map.squeak.org/accountbyid/4340a66e-2296-48b7-9aa8-5305d303752f/files...: HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
server: nginx/1.14.0
date: Sun, 16 Sep 2018 18:07:33 GMT
content-type: text/html
transfer-encoding: chunked
connection: keep-alive
set-cookie: SessionID=CEF4C614B7F7F868; path=/
content-encoding: gzip
The object you requested was not found on this server.
I've tried adding another release and got the same error (except for the new version number in the filename). The relevant map.queak.org pages do not show any new data.
What have I broken this time? I'm pretty sure I shouldn't go trawling around the file structure...
tim
tim Rowledge; tim@rowledge.org; http://www.rowledge.org/tim Useful Latin Phrases:- Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo = Don't call me, I'll call you.