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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-1995?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17153551#comment-17153551
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Oleg Kalnichevski commented on HTTPCLIENT-1995:
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[~michael-o] In the wake of all this `Ahh. How dare you re-encode my URI?`
nonsense I did a full review of HttpClient code and found it pretty much
comformant to RFC 3986. It should not be such a big deal to make it _almost_
3986 conformant.
The trouble is that {{java.net.URI}} is _NOT_ RFC 3986 conformant. It is just
not. All this righteous indignation at us for sticking to RFC 2396 support only
it really misplaced.
Anyhow, the main stumbling point is whether or not we should continue using
{{java.net.URI}} for request URI representation. We already discussed it and
that discussion led nowhere.
Oleg
> Percent-encoded ampersand in URI path not preserved
> ---------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HTTPCLIENT-1995
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-1995
> Project: HttpComponents HttpClient
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: HttpClient (classic)
> Affects Versions: 4.5.8, 4.5.9
> Environment: Linux Mint 19, OpenJDK 8
> Reporter: none_
> Priority: Major
>
> Starting with HttpClient 4.5.8, percent-encoded ampersand characters in URI
> path segments are not preserved any longer but written in decoded form to
> wire due to path normalization performed by URIUtils.rewriteURI(URI,
> HttpHost).
>
> According to RFC 3986 (page 11+), the ampersand character is a delimiter and
> thus needs to be percent-encoded when not used for this purpose. Path
> normalization, as performed by HttpClient v4.5.8+, creates a new URI that is
> not equivalent to the original URI and thus leads to misinterpretation on
> server/receiver side.
> ??URIs that differ in the replacement of a reserved character with its??
> ??corresponding percent-encoded octet are not equivalent. Percent-??
> ??encoding a reserved character, or decoding a percent-encoded octet??
> ??that corresponds to a reserved character, will change how the URI is??
> ??interpreted by most applications??.
>
> A very simple test case is as follows:
> {code:java}
> @Test
> public void testAmpersand() throws Throwable
> {
> final URI uri = new
> URI("http://example.org/some/path%26with%20percent/encoded/segments");
> final URI uri2 = URIUtils.rewriteURI(uri, null);
>
> Assert.assertEquals(uri, uri2);
> }
> {code}
>
>
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