I have a web application that works just fine in modern webkit-based browsers (http://montecarlo-tester.appspot.com/). Basically it uses a webworker to fetch data from a server, and then sends it back after performing some computations.
It works just fine in Chrome/Safari (no errors in console), but when I try to use it in Firefox, it doesn't. I've deduced that somehow the variable 'iterations' is not set properly in Firefox. Unfortunately, Firefox lacks a debugger (for web workers), and javascript has functional scoping, so it's really hard to pinpoint where the problem is. I've posted the javascript code for my web worker, and I was wondering if anybody could point out where I went wrong:
importScripts('/static/js/mylibs/jquery.hive.pollen-mod.js');
$(function (data) {
main();
//while(main());
close();
});
function main() {
//make an ajax call to get a param
var iterations//value will be set by server response
var key//key of the datastore object
var continueloop = true;
p.ajax.post({
url:'/getdataurl',
dataType: "json",
success: function(responseText){
if (responseText === null) {
var workermessage = {
"log":"responseText is null. Either the server has issues or we have run out of stuff to compute."
};
$.send(workermessage);
continueloop = false;
}
iterations = responseText.iterationsjob;
key = responseText.key;
}
});
if (continueloop === false) {
return false;
}
//here is where I think the problems begin. In chrome/safari, iterations = 1000.
//In Firefox however, iterations = null. As a result, everything after that does not work.
var i,x,y,z;
var count = 0;
var pi;
start = new Date();
for (i=0;i<iterations;i++) {
x = Math.random();
y = Math.random();
z = x*x+y*y;
if(z<=1.0){
count++;
}
}//end for loop
pi = count/(iterations)*4.0;
end = new Date();
result = {
"estimated_pi":pi,
"num_iter":iterations,
"duration_ms":end.valueOf()-start.valueOf(),
"key":key
};
//send results to the server
p.ajax.post({
url: "/resultshandler",
dataType:'json',
data: result,
success: function()
{
//do nothing!
}
});
$.send(result);
return true;//persists the loop
}
var iterationsandvar key? – jfriend00 Dec 16 '11 at 1:04p.ajax.postfunction doing asynchronous or synchronous ajax? If async, theniterationswill only be set in your success handler, not where you're asking for it to be set because the ajax call hasn't completed yet soiterationsisn't set yet. Call an async ajax call just starts the operation and then your javascript continues executing. It isn't completed until sometime later when the success handler runs. – jfriend00 Dec 16 '11 at 1:06