- From: <Stan@rga.com>
- Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2002 22:00:56 -0400
- To: dhananjay.v.keskar@intel.com
- Cc: www-mobile@w3.org, Tayeb.Lemlouma@inrialpes.fr
Hello,
thanks very much for the feeback. I rarely use Pocket PC yet, I use the
Zaurus PDA the most right now.
I wrote a little tool myself which is not using CC/PP, for me that is still
far too complicated for that task. I have XML files which specifies user
agent, accept and a set of properties such as UA-pixels and so on.
My simple program takes such an XML file and a URL and makes the request
with the added values from the XML file. Purpose is right now merely quality
assurance to see wether certain parameters are picked up and used by the
application. So I don't need to use all kinds of emulators all the time if I
only want to make sure that all possible softbuttons are used, that all
availavle width and colors are used, .... I plan to put in a web site so
that quick tests for a given device and URL are straightforward.
Best,
Stan
-----Original Message-----
From: Keskar, Dhananjay V
To: 'Tayeb Lemlouma'; Stan@rga.com
Cc: www-mobile@w3.org
Sent: 6/4/02 3:00 PM
Subject: RE: HTTP request simulator
Hello,
You can use the Java proxy provided in the Intel CC/PP Toolkit.
The toolkit can be downloaded by via the "Software Download" link at :
http://developer.intel.com/pca/developernetwork/
<http://developer.intel.com/pca/developernetwork/>
The Java proxy is intended to be installed on a Pocket PC device.
However, once installed, you can easily use the .jar file on any other
machine.
One of the command-line parameter is a file-path name which contains
the device CC/PP profile in RDF/XML format. The proxy ensures that
the profile is added to the HTTP request per the CC/PP Exchange
protocol specification.
As Tayeb mentions, you can then configure your browser to use this
proxy for HTTP requests. The proxy will then add the CC/PP profile to
all browser requests. The toolkit also includes a library (for Pocket
PC)
that allows other programs and agents (e.g. GUI, monitors, etc.) to
modify the XML profile on the fly. You can either use that or write
something similar yourself.
If you have any questions, let me know.
thanks
dvk
-----Original Message-----
From: Tayeb Lemlouma [mailto:Tayeb.Lemlouma@inrialpes.fr]
Sent: Tuesday, June 04, 2002 1:25 AM
To: Stan@rga.com
Cc: www-mobile@w3.org
Subject: Re: HTTP request simulator
Hi Stan,
I don't know if there exists a http request simulator, but personally I
prefer to
open direct server connections (Using Java socket). For example, typing
the
url: "htt://www.inrialpes.fr/opera/" in a browser is equivalent to open
a direct
connection with the server: "www.inrialpes.fr" using the port 80 and
sending
an HTTP request with different headers.
To visualize the server delivered content, and change the user request
(for
example by adding new headers in its HTTP request), I think that the
best
way is to use a proxy. This third part between servers and the user
agent can
be easily implemented for your purpose. It will just send the user
request to
the corresponding server and the server answer to the client, and
display
exchanged requests in its level.
To give an example, I past here the content of a browser request (IE 6.0
under
Windows 2000 profesional), after typing the URL:
"http://opera.inrialpes.fr/people/Tayeb.Lemlouma/Profile.xml"
User agent Request (as it's displayed by the proxy):
GET http://opera.inrialpes.fr/people/Tayeb.Lemlouma/Profile.xml HTTP/1.0
Accept: image/gif, image/x-xbitmap, image/jpeg, image/pjpeg,
application/x-comet, application/vnd.ms-excel,
application/vnd.ms-powerpoint, application/msword, */*
Accept-Language: fr
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0b; Windows NT 5.0;
.NET CLR 1.0.2914)
Host: opera.inrialpes.fr
Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive
Server answer (I give only the HTTP head of the answer):
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 04 Jun 2002 07:11:34 GMT
Server: Apache/1.3.20 (Unix) (Red-Hat/Linux) mod_ssl/2.8.4
OpenSSL/0.9.6b DAV/1.0.2 PHP/4.0.6 mod_perl/1.24_01
Last-Modified: Tue, 12 Mar 2002 12:19:07 GMT
ETag: "80b2-f71-3c8df23b"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Content-Length: 3953
Connection: close
Content-Type: text/xml
Using a proxy allows also to modify the server answer, for example if
the
proxy adapt the content you will have to modify some headers (such as
the Content-Length and Content-Type) and send the new answer to the
client.
I hope this will help.
Tayeb*
----------
Tayeb Lemlouma
<http://www.inrialpes.fr/opera/people/Tayeb.Lemlouma/index.html>
http://www.inrialpes.fr/opera/people/Tayeb.Lemlouma/index.html
Opera project
National Research Institute in Computer Science and Control (INRIA
Rhône-Alpes, France )
Office B213, phone (+33) 04 76 61 52 81, Fax (+33) 04 76 61 52 07.
----- Original Message -----
From: < <mailto:Stan@rga.com> Stan@rga.com>
To: < <mailto:www-mobile@w3.org> www-mobile@w3.org>
Sent: Friday, May 31, 2002 11:01 PM
Subject: HTTP request simulator
>
> Is there a HTTP request simulator that lets you choose various
> device/profile settings and hit a URL to see the output?
>
> Thanks,
> Stan Wiechers
>
>
Received on Sunday, 9 June 2002 10:58:35 UTC