It turns out the stricter server settings also broke the /java page on gcc.gnu.org.
This restores showing two columns on this page (though it still uses non-standard CSS extensions). That said, looking at the page, and how since 2005 nearly all changes have been maintainance ones from me, is it really worthwhile keeping this (short of historic reasons)? 2016-04-08 Gerald Pfeifer <ger...@pfeifer.com> * index.html: Replace manual style to establish two columns by new global CSS class "twocolumns". Index: gcc.css =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/gcc/wwwdocs/htdocs/gcc.css,v retrieving revision 1.38 diff -u -r1.38 gcc.css --- gcc.css 5 Apr 2016 16:20:29 -0000 1.38 +++ gcc.css 9 Apr 2016 16:22:40 -0000 @@ -15,6 +15,8 @@ .highlight{ color: darkslategray; font-weight:bold; } .smaller { font-size: 80%; } +.twocolumns { column-counts:2; -moz-column-count:2; } + td.news { width: 50%; padding-right: 8px; } td.news h2 { font-size: 1.2em; margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 2%; } td.news dl { margin-top:0; } Index: java/index.html =================================================================== RCS file: /cvs/gcc/wwwdocs/htdocs/java/index.html,v retrieving revision 1.177 diff -u -r1.177 index.html --- java/index.html 27 Jun 2014 15:04:39 -0000 1.177 +++ java/index.html 9 Apr 2016 16:22:41 -0000 @@ -32,7 +33,7 @@ <h2><a name="news">GCJ News</a></h2> -<div style="column-count:2; -moz-column-count:2;"> +<div class="twocolumns"> <!-- News entries start here -->