It is a great feature, but in my opinion it needs to be upgraded to something proper.
I'm thinking about something similar to our online banking: Don't do anything for the specified time, and a screen comes up blocking everything behind, with a note in the corner: log out, or carry on and stay logged in. With a count down of seconds left. Great.
In Plesk the feature is currently half-baked. It works, but with many annoying glitches.
Be in monitoring (the old "advanced monitoring") when you exceed the session idle time, and you get a weird error message, then it logs you out.
Be in mail log browser when it kicks in, and you stay on a gray screen till forever. Won't even refresh and go back to the login screen. Need to to a browser refresh.
At other times, you're actually busy doing something [I'll try remember in which extension that happened] and you get logged off right in the middle.
There is other examples, just didn't write them down at the time.
Just something that is clear-cut. Either you're logged in, or in the small time window where you can decide to yes still stay in, or at no input get forcefully logged off, or you come back to find you've been logged off and see the login screen.
Just my 2 pennies worth for some improvement.
Tom
I'm thinking about something similar to our online banking: Don't do anything for the specified time, and a screen comes up blocking everything behind, with a note in the corner: log out, or carry on and stay logged in. With a count down of seconds left. Great.
In Plesk the feature is currently half-baked. It works, but with many annoying glitches.
Be in monitoring (the old "advanced monitoring") when you exceed the session idle time, and you get a weird error message, then it logs you out.
Be in mail log browser when it kicks in, and you stay on a gray screen till forever. Won't even refresh and go back to the login screen. Need to to a browser refresh.
At other times, you're actually busy doing something [I'll try remember in which extension that happened] and you get logged off right in the middle.
There is other examples, just didn't write them down at the time.
Just something that is clear-cut. Either you're logged in, or in the small time window where you can decide to yes still stay in, or at no input get forcefully logged off, or you come back to find you've been logged off and see the login screen.
Just my 2 pennies worth for some improvement.
Tom