On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, Giuseppe Bilotta wrote:
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 03:34:34 -0600, Rob Landley wrote:
On Monday 31 October 2005 03:13, David Lang wrote:
I was thinking about doing thatn in hidden input fields and
passing form back and forth. After all what real git bisect
keeps locally are one bad commit ID and bunch of good commit
IDs.
if it's kept in a file or cookie then it can survive a reboot and other
distractions (remember that this process can take days if the problem
doesn't show up at boot). a cookie can hold a couple K worth of data, a
file has no size limit.
Actually, lots of Linux browsers these days treats all cookies as session
cookies for security reasons. So surviving a reboot still isn't guaranteed.
But it's possible.
I haven't seen a browser that does this (it would break a lot of sites), I
have seen the option when you go to accept a cookie to accept it for this
session only, so a note to the user to allow the cookie to persist may be
enough, or we can just go the tarball route and the file that gets saved
and uploaded would be enough.
what browser have you seen this default bahavior on?
You can also have 'em bookmark a URL...
Trac has a 'Session ID' key that stores something like a cookie,
except that it's serverside. Something halfway a cookie and an actual
login. The user can write down the session ID or just assign its own,
and the re-enter the session ID and all things are restored to the
settings he had chosen. Something like this, maybe?
saving the state on the server means that you have to deal with (or
somehow eliminate) collisions between different users, it means that you
need to have the server-side data time out and get garbage collected, and
in general adds significant complexity to the project.
David Lang
--
There are two ways of constructing a software design. One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies. And the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies.
-- C.A.R. Hoare
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