Kevin
January 10th 04, 02:35 AM
Are the images located in a subfolder? The only thing I
can come up with is that you may have them in a subfolder
and don't have the permissions set correctly?
Perhaps someone else has a bettter suggestion.
>-----Original Message-----
>A very strange problem: have XP pro, running IIS. When
>remote users open webpages, the domain resolves
>appropriately and is found on the XP/IIS machine but then
>chokes when requesting image files (.gif, .jpg, .jpeg).
>The remote browser hangs until timeout.
>
>There does not seem to be a problem sending text or std.
>html rendering. But almost all images are unservable.
>Nor does it seem to be a file issue with the image itself
>since good-ol'-reliable UNIX web servers can serve 'em up
>just fine. What makes the problem even stranger is that
>SOME images are servable. But, the only images that work
>are the default .gifs that microsoft stores in the
>wwwroot folder of IIS' default web site. But, as
>mentioned, those images can be served ... all others,
>however, fail.
>.
>
can come up with is that you may have them in a subfolder
and don't have the permissions set correctly?
Perhaps someone else has a bettter suggestion.
>-----Original Message-----
>A very strange problem: have XP pro, running IIS. When
>remote users open webpages, the domain resolves
>appropriately and is found on the XP/IIS machine but then
>chokes when requesting image files (.gif, .jpg, .jpeg).
>The remote browser hangs until timeout.
>
>There does not seem to be a problem sending text or std.
>html rendering. But almost all images are unservable.
>Nor does it seem to be a file issue with the image itself
>since good-ol'-reliable UNIX web servers can serve 'em up
>just fine. What makes the problem even stranger is that
>SOME images are servable. But, the only images that work
>are the default .gifs that microsoft stores in the
>wwwroot folder of IIS' default web site. But, as
>mentioned, those images can be served ... all others,
>however, fail.
>.
>