?
I don't know what hellhole you live in where companies casually
broadcasing your every interaction with them is considered acceptable.
Nicholas Sherlock
'
'60.195.252.106', '24'
'64.27.116.177', '12'
'68.87.42.115', '68'
'81.0.134.157', '37'
'92.106.225.35', '1'
Cheers,
Nicholas Sherlock
productive in Eclipse
than Emacs.
So I'm wondering if I'm missing something similar that could be used
when I work on Apache.
Eclipse has CDT, the C/C++ Development Tooling, have you tried that out?
Cheers,
Nicholas Sherlock
Graham Leggett wrote:
Nicholas Sherlock wrote:
But couldn't it just send a 304 Not Modified code instead? At the moment
it ends up wasting large amounts of bandwidth on my website in the case
where you press refresh on an unmodified object in Firefox, which sends
these request headers:
I kept
?
Cheers,
Nicholas Sherlock
Dan Poirier wrote:
Nicholas Sherlock n.sherl...@gmail.com writes:
If you make a conditional request for a cached document, but the
document is expired in the cache, mod_cache currently passes on the
conditional request to the backend. If the backend responds with a
304 Not Modified response
Nicholas Sherlock wrote:
Thanks, I wasn't certain if the behaviour I wanted was HTTP-correct, but
it seems that it is (and anyway it'll save me on bandwidth costs, so I
really want to fix it). I'll go add it now.
This is now bug report #47580
https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi