Depending on your browser there’s a few tools that can help. IE (version 9 at least) and Chrome have their own built-in consoles, and FireFox has FireBug for the same thing. To get to each of those you hit F12 and you’ll see the console window pop up. The terminolog is slighly different on each, but you’ll need to find a tab that’s “Network” or “Net”. That will show you the individual file requests that have been made by that page along with how long they have taken to download. That wil qucikyl show you what isn’t being loaded correctly.
Most times this is releated to some sort of external JavaScript library file that is either not available, or not set up the right way.
Thank you Michael.
I did what you suggested and finally found what plugin cause lots of errors. When I deactivated it, the running progress indicator stopped.
Since I really need the plugin, now I need to figure out how to overcome the plugin error. The plugin was perfectly fine before, btw.
Do you think it will be possible by limiting the allocation of time for the php execution?
P.S : the plugin called YSlider, a news slider like on Yahoo homepage.
Thank you very much for your help.
It is possible. By default PHP scripts are run with a 30-second timer attached to them. You can change or remove this in yoru code by using the set_time_limit() function, so if it’s a PHP processing error, this is what the plugin would be doing. You didn’t say what actual file/process was causing the problems, so it’s very hard to say if there’s anything that can be done.
This two processes take really long time and seems never end.
It might be right like what you said that it’s related to jquerry problem.
on chrome browser, the errors were this:
show_image.php /wp-content/plugins/yslider
method: GET
Tyep: image/png
Inititator: jquery.js:2 Script
show_image.php
/wp-content/plugins/yslider
method: GET
Tyep: image/png
Inititator: jquery.accessible-news-slider.js:65