See http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_mime.htmlYou are propably using a wrong mime type which is set by apache based on the file extension.
bye David Am 11.05.2013 10:58, schrieb Bo Berglund:
I have a PHP logging script, which produces a file on the server in a logging directory. In order to make the file easier to read through a browser I have made the PHP script create each log line as a table row in a table. I let the script write the file header when the logfile is created as follows: <html> <body> <table border="1"><tr> <th align="left">Timestamp</th> <th align="left">Username</th> <th align="left">IP address</th> <th align="left">hostname</th> <th align="left">Page accessed</th> <th align="left">Referring page</th> <th align="left">Servername</th></tr> Then for each access I append one line with info like the following example from my test server (it is actually on a single line, but for easier reading here I have cut it into lines for each column in the table): <tr><td>2013-05-11 10:40:14</td> <td>Unknown User</td> <td>10.0.0.159</td> <td>AURIGA</td> <td>currentpage</td> <td>sourcepage</td> <td>servername</td></tr> Now I wanted to look at the logfile via my webserver so I entered the local URL (<myservername><sitename>/logs/testpage2013-05.log) into FireFox and what was shown was the above *source* text rather than the expected table! But if I open the exact same file directly in FireFox, bypassing Apache, then the table displays as intended! Why is this happening? I know that the file is open ended such that it lacks the closing </table></body></html> tags but that seems not to be a problem when viewing the file as a file:// URL in FireFox, so why does it happen through Apache?
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