"Accept-Charset", "Accept-Language", and "Content-Type" are the same in all cases. Moreover, I think that is no related to the encoding supported by the server, is about the encoding, languages and type of files supported -or preferred- by the browser.
An example:
Host: localhost
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; es-ES; rv:1.9.0.1) Gecko/2008070208 Firefox/3.0.1
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8
Accept-Language: es-es,es;q=0.8,en-us;q=0.5,en;q=0.3
Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate
Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7
Keep-Alive: 300
Connection: keep-alive
Cookie: dbx-pagemeta=grabit:0-|1-|2-|3-|4-|5-|6-|7-&advancedstuff:0-; dbx-postmeta=grabit:0+|5+|1+|2+|3+|4+&advancedstuff:0-|1-|2-; Autoescuela-Cesantes=1b37db2f26e6ef9a184a82a9d8a2c3e8; Eventos=54414e45d6a1ef59736e088e70aef327; Redondela-en-Foto=c49b771ebb3e75304f42087fc7d20664
HTTP/1.x 403 Forbidden
Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2008 08:49:17 GMT
Server: Apache/2.0.59 (Win32) PHP/5.2.4
Content-Length: 291
Keep-Alive: timeout=15, max=100
Connection: Keep-Alive
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1
2008/9/23 André Warnier <aw@xxxxxxxxxx>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_securityin
the picture?"... but, well, I have nothing called mod_security in mySorry, I meant "in the picture" as an idiom for "involved"
httpd.conf, so I suppose that the answer is no.
--
Eric Covener
covener@xxxxxxxxx
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