Updated: 9/1/2002; 7:00:47 PM.
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Monday, April 22, 2002 |
Joe Gregorio: Competition is good. Standards are good.
9:51:08 PM
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diveintomark: Sam, your weblog is totally gone again. Hope you had backups. I believe I have tracked this down.
Event |
What happened |
Time |
Secs |
Upstream |
1 file was deleted on radio.xmlstoragesystem.com without error. |
4:37:09 PM |
33.009 |
Steps to reproduce:
- cd C:\Program Files\Radio UserLand\www
- vim test.txt
- Enter some random content
- Save but do not exit (:s)
- Note that a hidden file (.test.txt.swp is created)
- browse http://127.0.0.1:5335/test.txt
- wait 30 seconds
- exit vim (:q)
- Note that the hidden file is removed
- wait 60 seconds
- check your radio event log http://127.0.0.1:5335/system/pages/eventsLog. If you see an entry like the one in the table above, then your website is gone. To recover, Open Radio, then select Radio -> Publish -> Entire WebSite.
It appears that invoking the browser against the local radio web server is a necessary step in the process. I hope this provides enough information for the Radio development team to debug the problem.
6:48:23 PM
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Looks like 0xDECAFBAD and DiveIntoMark have found my rambling essay - still the top google hit for the words "rambling essay" over a month later. In any case, it looks like there are products like Netstat that can help analyze referrers, trends, etc - by geographic location, by time of day, etc. My feeling based on my referrer logs is that there is a growing demand for accessible information on WSDL, particularly in Europe.
9:34:52 AM
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Julian Bond gets it: There's one solution that I whole heartedly support. "Use named params. Ignore parameters you don't recognise. Default parameters that are not passed". This advice applies whether you are using HTTP GET with CGI, can be applied to XML-RPC, and applies to SOAP.
6:19:00 AM
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