You can not change the web browser's network timeout setting for HTTP requests. The timeout()
operator throws a JavaScript error when the timer is reached, but this has nothing to do with the network timeout for communications.
For example; I can use the timeout()
operator on any observable.
of("hello").pipe(delay(5000), timeout(1000));
The above will timeout after 1 second.
My angular 4.3.2 code is calling my back-end service that takes 2-4 minutes to return
The server must transmit a HTTP header and a partial body during the duration of 2-4 minutes. This is required to continue the HTTP connection, and there is nothing the client can do to keep the connection alive.
It is a bad practice for a HTTP request to not complete quickly.
You can either ask the server to start a task, and then poll on an interval to see if the task is complete, or you can use websockets to communicate with the server and remain connected until it is complete.
Both approaches are broad topics and I can't go into more details than that.
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