Ben,
I didn't change anything. It was actually working like it is supposed
to all the time. The "problem" was that my manifest only consisted of
about 70 files, all of them fairly small in filesize. As our corporate
intranet is pretty fast, the conditional GET's on these files took
almost as "long" time as actually downloading the files. To me it
appeared as if Gears was downloading these files but it was just
checking their last-modification date.
To test this I'm now using a manifest with 411 files, with a total
filesize of 426 MB. With this large amount of data it is easy to see
that Gears does not download the full files when the manifest version
is changed:
411 files, 426 MB initial download = 2 min
Same files, manifest version change = 15 seconds
I'm considering doing some research on how Apache handles these kind
of conditional GET requests. Perhaps there are some tweaking
possibilities to speed up this process a bit, if you know of any or
where to start I'd be happy to know :)
On Aug 8, 6:48 pm, "Ben Lisbakken" <
lisba...@google.com> wrote:
> Andreas --
>
> Yes, that is correct. It does depend on the server responding with a
> correct last-modification date. Did you change anything to make it work as
> it is supposed to? If so, maybe you could share that with the group.
>
> Thanks,
> Ben
>