On Friday 02 December 2005 14:46, Andrew Milton wrote:
+-------[ Gaute Amundsen ]----------------------
<snip>
| Sorry about that. | Thought I had checked that, but I must have mixed it up with | MysqlUserFolder, which setup alerted me to this whole mess. | | Will try an upgrade, but since MysqlUserFolder displays the same problem | I suspect I will be back shortly :-/
Given there's two user folders giving you the same response, it's unlikely to be the same bug in two different user folder implementations :-)
My thoughts exactly. It's worth a try anyway at this stage, but I have not had time for that yet.
Since your index_html and docLogin both seem to require permissions to view, No, no, and NO again. docLogin noes NOT require permission. I can access it without problem. If I cold not this would probably be a simple problem, and I would not be posting to the list.
I would check to make sure that your 'header' and 'footer' items aren't doing something restricted.
If you're using DTML, then I'd check that standard_html_header and standard_html_footer.
Make sure that in addition to the 'View' permission that also the 'Access Contents information' permissions are set for Anonymous on headers, footers and docLogin (and index_html if required).
I am sorry, but I have been down that path numerous times, and it is all in order. I remove 'view' permission for anonymous from a folder or index.html file way below acl_users, and I get the described problem when I try to access it. I restore that permission, and everything displays properly. If I go to acl_users/docLogin directly, I can log in with cookies, and everything works fine. I believe that neatly eliminates the concerns you raise here. To be frank I really think my first post described the situation quite precisely. I do not think exUserFolder is faulty in any way, except possibly by our own modification, but that is what I have to work with to try to figure out what is going on. I was hoping it would be a product that many would be familiar with, and that as such it wold be a good reference point to grapple with the more general principles. Noting beats assistance from the author of course, but please don't insist on treating this as a newbee question :) G. -- -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Gaute Amundsen "Technology today is the campfire gaute@div.org around which we tell our stories. There's this attraction to light and to this kind of power, which is both warm and destructive." Laurie Anderson http://www.div.org --------------------------------------------------------------------