- From: Life is hard, and then you die <ronald@innovation.ch>
- Date: Tue, 20 Jun 2000 11:21:07 -0700
- To: Fred Bohle <fbohle@neonsys.com>
- Cc: http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com
On Tue, Jun 20, 2000 at 12:51:11PM -0500, Fred Bohle wrote: > > No, not the CRLF between the headers and the body. We are asking > about a CRLF that follows the body. It does not seem to be in > the 1.0 spec, and the 1.1 spec seems to specifically prohibit it. > And yet, IE5 and Netscape both will send a CRLF after the body > for Content-type: application/x-www-url-encoded. The spec clearly disallows this extra CRLF, i.e. it's a bug in those browsers. However, there is an easy workaround which many people use: when reading the request line, ignore all whitespace (or empty lines) until you hit the actual request line. > What do other web servers do to handle this CRLF? We find that > if we decide to close the connection with the end of the response > we generate, (Connection: close) and THEN the CRLF arrives from > the client, the TCP layer will generate a Reset packet. This > causes (IE5 at least) the client to fail processing the response > we just sent. So the application stops, dead in the water. This is a little tricky, but not much. Basically you need to do a shutdown on the socket, i.e. only close for sends; then you keep reading from the socket (and just discard the data) until either you get an EOF (in which case the client did the close), or until some timeout (a few seconds) in case the client doesn't close the connection. Note that this problem is a general problem (i.e. not limited to the extra CRLF), because you can get the same effect when a client pipelines requests. Cheers, Ronald P.S. take a look at the Apache source: read_request_line() in http_protocol.c for the first problem, and lingering_close() in http_main.c for the second - the comments are enlightening.
Received on Tuesday, 20 June 2000 11:25:25 UTC