Large images missing, thumbs and intermediate are ok Large images missing, thumbs and intermediate are ok
 

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Large images missing, thumbs and intermediate are ok

Started by chadeldridge, December 05, 2008, 03:37:25 PM

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chadeldridge

I recently used  the batch upload process to send a large group of files into coppermine.  Most all of these came through perfectly  except around 100 of them only have thumbs and intermediate and no original sized image. When you click the intermediate image to display the large you only get the gray background and the url link of the  image.  Clicking that link  obviously just closes the image. 

Since the large image is the original size image and that image is still in the directory where i uploaded it  i can only assume this is some kind of indexing issue where it has lost touch with how or where to  find that large image.  Is there a way to correct this or do i have to delete those pics and readd them?

Thanks in advance.

Hein Traag


chadeldridge

danke  .. i have no idea why  but for some reason all those   images were set to read only although the 6k other pics i have taken and uploaded were 777.  Thanks for the easy fix.

Fabricio Ferrero

Sometimes our FTP client indicate that the atriubutes of a group of files are YYY when they actually are ZZZ. This is because an error of the reading of your FTP client. The only way to be sure of your files' atributes in reading them with the file manager that your hosting service provides you. ;)

Regards,
Read Docs and Search the Forum before posting. - Soporte en español
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Catching up! :)

Joachim Müller

From the docs:
QuoteFTP application
Setting the permissions using your FTP application will be the option available for most users who are webhosted. Depending on the FTP app you use, the user interface will slightly differ: some apps will allow you to enter the CHMOD command by entering the numbers (777 or 755), others will provide you with checkboxes where you can tick the permissions separately for each group. More advanced FTP apps may even provide you with both mechanisms. As this documentation can't cover all individual FTP apps that are available, the exact method might differ a bit from what you have.
Your FTP app will probably have two windows, one showing your local files, the other one showing the files on your server. In the window that shows the remote files on the server, navigate to the folder your coppermine files reside in. Highlight the "albums" folder that resides within the coppermine folder. From the context menu (right-click!), choose "properties" (might be named "chmod" or similar as well). The permissions dialog will then pop up. Choose the proper permissions as suggested above (777 or 755, depending on your server setup). If you have a checkbox that enables the permissions to propagate for all sub-folders and files, tick it. If you don't have it, nevermind. Then click "OK" on the dialog box to apply the permissions. Keep in mind that your FTP app might not have the power to actually find out about the current permissions that are applied, so you mustn't trust the information displayed in the dialog box: even if it appears that the permissions are already set as needed, this may not be the case, so you should re-apply the permissions no matter what.