-----Original Message----- From: Sam Gendler [mailto:sgendler@impossible.com]
Use absolute URLS (accessed via the absolute_url method) or else make sure that your relative urls have the correct number of ../'s. Since acquisition will let you access any sibling folder as a subfolder, it is possible to get deeper and deeper into a 'heirarchy' when you are really just accessing the same folder every time.
Yes, this is a common new user error. It is often manefisted by using the wrong URLx value (like URL instead of URL1 etc). This makes an object, or set of objects, acquire from itself: http://host/object/object/object/object.... or http://host/A/B/A/B/A/B... Threre is nothing inheritly wrong in this, you will allways get the correct object (and I beleive acquisition is smart enough to short circuit an object wrapped by itself) but it is a programming error, and eventually web servers and clients will complain about URL being too long (there is no rfc defined standard URL 'maximum' length). -Michel