Github user elakito commented on the pull request:

    https://github.com/apache/cxf/pull/89#issuecomment-151432528
  
    @sberyozkin somewhere I remember reading the missing charset is supposed to 
be interpreted as charset utf-8 in http. But the current mime RFC [1] as well 
as w3c's internationalization document both mention the missing charset means 
iso-8859-1. So, I don't remember where I read the defautl utf-8 convention. 
    
    But here I was talking about not the default but the invalid charset 
syntax. Something went wrong or programmed wrong and a client is sending a 
content-type header with
    Content-Type: text/xml; charset=
    
    The above specs say the charset value must be a valid IANA charset value.  
In this case, we don't know why the client generated this invalid charset 
entry. Was it trying to set the system default charset and didn't realize the 
value was null? Or something else went wrong? Hence, simply ignoring this 
invalid charset parameter and defaulting to utf-8 will hide this problem from 
our eyes and potentially lead to the incorrect decoding.
    
    [1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230
    [2] http://www.w3.org/International/O-HTTP-charset#charset


---
If your project is set up for it, you can reply to this email and have your
reply appear on GitHub as well. If your project does not have this feature
enabled and wishes so, or if the feature is enabled but not working, please
contact infrastructure at [email protected] or file a JIRA ticket
with INFRA.
---

Reply via email to