Dette websted vil have begrænset funktionalitet, mens vi gennemgår vedligeholdelse for at forbedre din oplevelse. Hvis en artikel ikke løser dit problem, og du vil stille et spørgsmål, har vi vores supportfællesskab, der venter på at hjælpe dig på @FirefoxSupport på Twitter og/r/firefox på Reddit.

Søg i Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Læs mere

When uploading large file from network, all other requests are not being sent to server

  • 1 svar
  • 1 har dette problem
  • 6 visninger
  • Seneste svar af guigs

more options

In our application we are facing a weird scenario in which when we try to upload a huge file(600+ MB) from network, all other requests(AJAX) are getting blocked. But when the same file is being uploaded from local location(E drive) then everything works fine.

In our application we are facing a weird scenario in which when we try to upload a huge file(600+ MB) from network, all other requests(AJAX) are getting blocked. But when the same file is being uploaded from local location(E drive) then everything works fine.

Valgt løsning

How are you uploading the file via network?

If you are troubleshooting the network bandwidth? or the threads where one process takes precedent over the other you will have to troubleshoot the QoS of the network you see this on.

To give a better visual please use Firebug or the Web Developer tool called Network to analyze the requests. The "XMLHttpRequest" will give better clues for Ajax. Reference http://ajaxian.com/archives/ajax-debugging-with-firebug

There may be a about:config option that allows mutithreading or max persistent connections per server you can check.

Læs dette svar i sammenhæng 👍 0

Alle svar (1)

more options

Valgt løsning

How are you uploading the file via network?

If you are troubleshooting the network bandwidth? or the threads where one process takes precedent over the other you will have to troubleshoot the QoS of the network you see this on.

To give a better visual please use Firebug or the Web Developer tool called Network to analyze the requests. The "XMLHttpRequest" will give better clues for Ajax. Reference http://ajaxian.com/archives/ajax-debugging-with-firebug

There may be a about:config option that allows mutithreading or max persistent connections per server you can check.