If you can, try using Firefox, with the "LiveHttpHeaders" add-on.That is an add-on that will - if you ask it - capture the outgoing HTTP request and all its headers, and the incoming response with all its headers. In this case, I am curious about headers like "Accept-Charset", "Accept-Language", and "Content-Type".
Also about how the browser really sends the request URLs "on the wire".Now of course, another possibility is a bug in the particular Apache version you are running. It happens sometimes.
You could try to install a slightly different version, just to check. #V[Á]lentín wrote:
So I got it ;-) I have nothing called mod_security in my httpd.conf, and I don't find anything related to filesystem encoding or something like that... :S 2008/9/23 Eric Covener <covener@xxxxxxxxx>On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 9:50 AM, #V[Á]lentín <valentin@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Err... I really don't understand the sentence "Nothing like mod_securityinthe picture?"... but, well, I have nothing called mod_security in my httpd.conf, so I suppose that the answer is no.Sorry, I meant "in the picture" as an idiom for "involved" -- Eric Covener covener@xxxxxxxxx --------------------------------------------------------------------- The official User-To-User support forum of the Apache HTTP Server Project. See <URL:http://httpd.apache.org/userslist.html> for more info. To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx " from the digest: users-digest-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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