|
Posted by Rik Wasmus on 10/11/97 12:00
On Tue, 15 Jan 2008 07:23:37 +0100, jodleren <sonnich@hot.ee> wrote:
> On Jan 14, 4:15 pm, Kim André Akerø <kiman...@NOSPAMbetadome.com>
> wrote:
>> Rik Wasmus wrote:
>> > On Mon, 14 Jan 2008 13:31:55 +0100, jodleren <sonn...@hot.ee> wrote:
>> > >On Jan 14, 1:39 pm, Captain Paralytic <paul_laut...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> > >>On 14 Jan, 11:27, jodleren <sonn...@hot.ee> wrote:
>>
>
>> > >>> I have an app, where I should upload files...
>> > >>> Problem: when e.g. uploading 14MB (just 10MB) the page will load,
>> > then >>> go back to the original page.... by some reason I cannot
>> > upload large >>> files, larger than some 5 MB.
>
>> > > > What does phpinfo() tell you about maximum upload size?
>> > > Got it - it says 12M(b). I'll look for a way to prompt that to the
>> > > user,
>>
>> > if($_FILES['keyname']['error'] == UPLOAD_ERR_INI_SIZE) //alert user
>>
>> That is, of course, if post_max_size hasn't been exceeded as
>> well.http://www.php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php#ini.post-max-size
>
> I really see my problem now - but my system is hosted at one.com,
> where my client holds their stuff. I was just looking at/trying
> ini_set, but that failed. Since I am new to this - can I change these
> values in any way?
post max size/upload max size are AFAIK both PHP_INI_DIR, so you can
change those in php.ini/httpd.conf (which you probably can't reach), or an
..htaccess file, which most hosters allow. Most shared hosters I encounter
have a limit of something like 2M (which IMO is extremely low), but have
no problem if you up the limits for a specific script receiving files.
--
Rik Wasmus
[Back to original message]
|