On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 10:22:35AM -0300, Gustavo Noronha wrote:
> On Mon, 2009-05-18 at 14:38 +0200, Julian Andres Klode wrote:
> > It seems that this was an error on the ubuntuone.com server which send
> > gzip encoded content, although the client did not explicitly request
> > it (the server was
On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 10:22:35AM -0300, Gustavo Noronha wrote:
> Yeah, I have read that before and I agree with this, but even then,
> there are many more broken servers out in the wild =(.
Than I suggest to send "Accept-Encoding: identity" and display an
error message to the user if the server r
On Mon, 2009-05-18 at 14:38 +0200, Julian Andres Klode wrote:
> It seems that this was an error on the ubuntuone.com server which send
> gzip encoded content, although the client did not explicitly request
> it (the server was thus violating a "SHOULD" of RFC2616).
Yeah, I have read that before an
On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 09:18:31AM -0300, Gustavo Noronha wrote:
> On Mon, 2009-05-18 at 13:22 +0200, Julian Andres Klode wrote:
> > Webkit does not support rendering pages send in Content-Encoding: gzip. This
> > makes it impossible to use them. One example for such a site is
> > ubuntuone.com.
>
On Mon, 2009-05-18 at 13:22 +0200, Julian Andres Klode wrote:
> Webkit does not support rendering pages send in Content-Encoding: gzip. This
> makes it impossible to use them. One example for such a site is ubuntuone.com.
>
> It just displays the binary data, but does not decode it.
That's right.
Package: libwebkit-1.0-2
Version: 1.1.7-1
Severity: important
Webkit does not support rendering pages send in Content-Encoding: gzip. This
makes it impossible to use them. One example for such a site is ubuntuone.com.
It just displays the binary data, but does not decode it.
-- System Informatio
6 matches
Mail list logo