On 2003.08.01, Daniel P. Stasinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Capture the entire HTTP request that isn't logged,
using tcpdump -s 2000 -w tcpdump.out port 80 or
similar. Give us a URL to download tcpdump.out
so we can examine it.
http://www.avenues.org/tcpdump.out
Is this file
Is this file supposed to be 269 bytes? It looks like it
just contains a HTTP request. Where's the tcpdump data
itself?
Sorry, try again.
Daniel P. Stasinski
Software Engineer
Mayor Pharmaceutical Laboratories
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/
To Remove
I don't see anything weird about the HTTP request. Try creating a dummy
file, like /foo.txt, containing just a few ASCII characters, and see if
you can reproduce the problem with that URL. If so, post a tcpdump of
that.
--
AOLserver - http://www.aolserver.com/
To Remove yourself from this
I don't see anything weird about the HTTP request. Try
creating a dummy file, like /foo.txt, containing just a
few ASCII characters, and see if you can reproduce the
problem with that URL. If so, post a tcpdump of that.
In the tcpdump thats I posted in the last hour, the first hit
+-- On Aug 1, Daniel P. Stasinski said:
| In the tcpdump thats I posted in the last hour, the first hit
| returned the image (and response 200) but it was never logged .
| The second hit was when I clicked the refresh button and it
| returned 304 and WAS logged. It works the same way with
On 2003.07.31, Daniel P. Stasinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- What's your single biggest gripe about AOLserver? If you
could haveone thing changed or fixed, what would it be?
I discovered this in the last few days. If I instant message
someone a URL pointing to an image, it never gets
You mean when they click on the URL in the IM they receive
and the browser goes to fetch the image, the nsd/nslog never
logs the HTTP request?
Correct.
Is this reproducible? Always? For any image, or specific
images, or image types? Is it dependent on the recipient of
the IM?
I
+-- On Jul 31, Daniel P. Stasinski said:
| I have pasted URL's in AIM and on irc, and also typed in the
| specific url into the url box on IE 6 and Linux/Mozilla and in
| each case it was not logged.
Capture the entire HTTP request that isn't logged, using tcpdump -s
2000 -w tcpdump.out