On 5/10/07, Guillermo Pallarés <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 What kind of "call to this file" do you use?
 The call is <frame marginwidth = "0" marginheight = "5" src="clock.html"
name = "sac" scrolling = "no" frameborder = "0">
 If this line is removed, then the second autenticathion doesn't appear.


 You should trace all the requests your browser is making as part of
 whatever document is being requested. In one of these requests, the
 hostname is probably changing, resulting in the new auth.
 (Alternatively, perhaps there is simply a browser bug causing it to
 forget credentials.) But there is really no way for us to know what is
 going on from this side of the firewall. I have tried to perform a trace by
using Ethereal. Please find the complete .cat file attached, from the first
log in until the second autenticathion is requested. I guess the most
important part is the end, because at some point the browser stops sending
the aut info at the end of the frame. I don't know if it is casual but that
point is when a .JAR file request is sent.

Yes, the key is here:

GET /lib/sv600.jar HTTP/1.1
[...]
User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (Windows XP 5.1) Java/1.6.0_01
[...]

So firefox isn't making this request, it is java doing it directly.
And java doesn't have the required credentials resulting in a new
password prompt.

I know nothing about embedding java applets. You're probably better
off looking for a forum with some expertise in that subject. Here
you'll find mostly apache experts, and this problem has nothing to do
with apache.

Joshua.

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