In Natural for Ajax applications, timeouts between the browser and the web application as well as timeouts between the web application and the Natural server can be configured.
This document covers the following topics:
Most users keep their browser open with several applications running in multiple browser tabs for many hours or even days. More often than not, they do not remember which of the applications are still running in one of the browser tabs. For security reasons and to avoid resource bottlenecks, web applications should therefore timeout after a certain period of inactivity of the user.
By setting sessiontimeout
in the
Ajax Configuration you can configure such a timeout.
Between the web application and the Natural server each user of your application usually has one or several Natural connections active. There are two situations in which you would like to close these connections automatically:
When the web application does not receive an appropriate answer for a request from the Natural server in a defined time, thereby indicating that something could be wrong with
either the server side execution,
the Natural server or
the connection to the Natural server.
Using the parameter Timeout (in Seconds) the timeout for this situation can be configured for each session individually. For details, refer to the description of this parameter in the table under Overview of Session Options in section Session Configuration.
When the Natural server does not receive any more requests from the web application for a defined time, thereby indicating that something could be wrong with
either the web application or
with the connection from the web application to the Natural server
or the user unintendedly did not close/end the application.
Using the global setting Last activity timeout (in seconds) the timeout for this situation can be configured for all sessions globally. For details, refer to the description of this setting in Global Settings under Session Configuration.
We recommend, that you use the same value for the Last
activity timeout (as in
Situation B)
and the sessiontimeout
in the Ajax configuration.
The Last activity timeout covers a subset of
situations to which the sessiontimeout
applies. The
sessiontimeout
also applies to
"non-Natural" Ajax pages such as workplace
applications.