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22:56
0
A: AJAX request progress percentage log

RaffaeleThe problem may be with the server side, since the client seems correct. That long call to usleep() may freeze server output, and if the client doesn't receive the HTTP response status line, it can't even fire the start event on the XHR object (for example the service may respond with a 404 statu...

I try that, but same result.
@user1477508 can you better describe the problem? Do you see any JS error in the console? Can you set a breakpoint in the progress callback? And how can the browser know evt.total if your server script doesn't send any Content-Length header?
No errors in console, server script is as above, lease describe what i need to add..
Please, set a breakpoint in the progress listener and tell what the value for evt.total is.
First, in xhr.upload listeneru event.total is 198, then in second xhr listeneru event.total is 0
22:56
What if you try with the updated script in my answer?
Then in second xhr listeneru event.total is 10
And is the progress listener called 10 times?
No, only 2 times :(
hi
Hi. I don't hi
don't think there's any problem. Just try to increse the size of the message
You are dangerus :)
22:59
like echo "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA"
and adjust Content-Length accordingly
What are the values for evt.loaded when your progress listener is called?
first xhr.upload listenet print in console evt.total 198
then
second
chr listener print 10 when everything is complete
I'm interested in the second.
only twice console.log i have
But you said the second listener is called two times
Let me check on my machine. Hold on
i add in my php script only
header("Content-Type: text/plain");
header("Content-Length: 10");
flush();
for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {
echo "A";
flush();
sleep(1);
}
*ed
23:04
Try this way:
header("Content-Type: text/plain");
header("Content-Length: 100");
flush();
for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) {
  echo "AAAAAAAAAA";
  flush();
  sleep(1);
}
console.log again twice
second event.total = 100
event.loaded?
sorry
event.loaded=100
Do you try this on your own maschine?
Yes, I'm trying the snippet posted above
maybe is problem in jquery version
i have 1.9.1
23:15
I'm trying with 2.0.3 but doesn't work
So many places where i find working examples but in my case problem :(
The problem is with the server, I think
Hey there
I'm just updating the answer
see the code
<?php
header("Content-Type: text/plain");
header("Content-Length: " . ($size * $times));
flush();
ob_flush();

$size = 4096;
$times = 5;

function send($size) {
  while($size-- > 0) {
    echo "A";
  }
  echo "\n";
}

for ($i = 0; $i < $times; $i++) {
  send($size);
  flush();
  ob_flush();
  sleep(1);
}
This works
A single byte was too few and the browser didn't send the event
23:31
ok
thanks
just on more question
tell me
what if i have in php script only
for example
connection to db
and update on couple rows
then you aren't gonna need a progress bar
without this looops?
a progress bar may be of some use when the task is long. at least 5-6 seconds
For database operations a progress bar is useless, because they complete in matters of millis
Btw, can you confirm that my answer works for you?
23:34
i can make mysql query that lasts 5-6 sec
yes work
then is progress useful
Ok, so would you mind accept & upvote the answer before leaving this discussion? :P
A query that lasts 5-6 seconds is unusual
You'd better tune the service, for example by indexing the relevant columns
Because the main point is that while the query is executing you can't know the progress
done :p
ok
If you really can't speed up the query, you can use a fake progress bar
for example, if you measure that under normal load the page loads in 5 seconds on average,
but on this way with realtime percentage
no database I know of notifies you about the percentage :)
So if you don't have the data, you can't display it to the user
23:40
ok raffaele thanks for time
i'm going to sleep

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