Guest Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 I am getting a error page, which I posted below, when I get to my cart and click the link to continue shopping. I am not real sure when it started since I never tested it until now. I have installed a few contributions including google xml, SEO, Amazon Payment, CVS file, and a few others. Ran into a dead end with this error. Has anybody else got this one or can point me in the right place to begin looking. This webpage has a redirect loop. The webpage at http://coolbeachstuff.com/index.php?amp;am...fkreltbp4dlv5f3 has resulted in too many redirects. Clearing your cookies for this site may fix the problem. If not, it is possibly a server configuration issue and not a problem with your computer. Here are some sug OCS 2.2rc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
♥ecartz Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 The webpage at http://coolbeachstuff.com/index.php?amp;am...fkreltbp4dlv5f3 has resulted in too many redirects. Clearing your cookies for this site may fix the problem. If not, it is possibly a server configuration issue and not a problem with your computer.My first question would be why it has amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp; in the URL. Is that the target of the Continue Shopping link (if you right click on it and do a Copy Link Location in Firefox, that will give you the URL)? Or is it redirecting to that? Shouldn't there be a cPath in that URL? I guess if you add the product from the home page, the application wouldn't know. Ok, looked at the site. The target of the link is http://coolbeachstuff.com/index.php?osCsid...fkreltbp4dlv5f3 It adds the amp; and gets rid of one of the osCsids during the redirecting. Even if I remove the osCsids, just the products_id is enough to cause the problem. Are you using mod_rewrite (possibly in a search engine friendly URL contribution)? Looking at the product info page, it seems that you are. Perhaps you could post your mod_rewrite rules? Does it do the same thing in both Firefox and IE? You may want to consider installing Live HTTP Headers in Firefox and looking at the output from that. There will be a lot of it, but it can give you some idea of what is redirecting to what. I usually clear the output; then perform the action; then paste the entire output of Live HTTP Headers into something else (notepad or whatever) so I can read it full width with search capability. If your host gives you access to them, the Apache logs might help with a mod_rewrite issue. You also might be able to turn logging up. There is a RewriteLogLevel attribute that you can use. Always back up before making changes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted July 6, 2009 Share Posted July 6, 2009 Ok, Thanks with your help I found the problem. In the SEO URLs contribution I installed in the admin area I had the "enable url redirect" set to "true" so when I switched it to "false" the problem went away. Now I will have to work on the solution. My first question would be why it has amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp; in the URL. Is that the target of the Continue Shopping link (if you right click on it and do a Copy Link Location in Firefox, that will give you the URL)? Or is it redirecting to that? Shouldn't there be a cPath in that URL? I guess if you add the product from the home page, the application wouldn't know. Ok, looked at the site. The target of the link is http://coolbeachstuff.com/index.php?osCsid...fkreltbp4dlv5f3 It adds the amp; and gets rid of one of the osCsids during the redirecting. Even if I remove the osCsids, just the products_id is enough to cause the problem. Are you using mod_rewrite (possibly in a search engine friendly URL contribution)? Looking at the product info page, it seems that you are. Perhaps you could post your mod_rewrite rules? Does it do the same thing in both Firefox and IE? You may want to consider installing Live HTTP Headers in Firefox and looking at the output from that. There will be a lot of it, but it can give you some idea of what is redirecting to what. I usually clear the output; then perform the action; then paste the entire output of Live HTTP Headers into something else (notepad or whatever) so I can read it full width with search capability. If your host gives you access to them, the Apache logs might help with a mod_rewrite issue. You also might be able to turn logging up. There is a RewriteLogLevel attribute that you can use. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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