Hi Group I'm fairly confident I've found a bug in mod_proxy in Apache 2.2.9 but would like your opinion before I log anything to the bug tracker. It's something I discovered while working in mod_python, but I've managed to get it occurring with a bare-bones Apache 2.2.9 setup using only mod_proxy and mod_headers: This is my vhost configuration: ProxyRequests Off <Proxy *> Order Deny,Allow Allow from all </Proxy> <VirtualHost *:80> ServerName munchkin.synthesis.co.za Header add Set-Cookie "MOD_PROXY_FOOD=FOO;" early Header add Set-Cookie "MOD_PROXY_KEEP=BAR;" <Location /sonik/> ProxyPass http://192.168.16.225:8118/sonik/ </Location> ErrorLog /home/tom/dev/apache/deploy/logs/error.log LogLevel notice CustomLog /home/tom/dev/apache/deploy/logs/access.log combined </VirtualHost> The config above is forwarding requests to /sonik/ to another host after setting two cookies, one early and one late. I am no Apache guru, but as I understand it the early cookie is set before handlers are processed (i.e. before modproxy kicks in) and the late will be appended to the response after modproxy has done it's processing and produced a complete response. Also (as far as I understand) modproxy should try to preserve any headers already set before processing by merging the headers before and after processing (especially any Set-Cookie headers). So in general this works as expected, with both cookies being returned to the caller for regular GET and POST requests. However the problem I've noticed is where the request contains an "Expect:100-Continue", that the early cookie is discarded by modproxy. After some further investigation the root problem appears that modproxy doesn't handle the "HTTP/1.1 100 Continue\r\n\r\n" within the response from the back-end host nicely when performing the merging of headers. I discovered this by writing back both of these responses from the back-end host: "HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Length: 1 " And "HTTP/1.1 100 Continue HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Length: 1 " The first response produces a final response to the client which contains both Set-Cookie headers, and the second response produces a final response to the client which contains only the late Set-Cookie header. Maybe this is normal modproxy behaviour, I can't be certain, but reading through some of mod_proxy_http.c seems to show that this is the intention. However I was able to test this on another Apache instance running 2.2.4 and modproxy retains both cookies in both cases. So either this is a bug in 2.2.9 or it's a bug that was fixed since 2.2.4. Your thoughts? Thanks, Tom -- http://www.tomwells.org --------------------------------------------------------------------- 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