On 11/8/06, Dave Methvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Better than that, it's probably exploitable. (insert evil grin) Be sure to > report it using Windows Error Reporting, if you can.
Good point. > > Would it be possible for you to launder the response through a proxy? For > example, have a small server program take your incoming request, initiate a > new request to the broken program, strip out anything ahead of the <html>, > and send it back to you. It would add some frequent flyer mileage to those > bits but it should work. Assuming the malformed response doesn't crash your > server... Unfortunately not. Had I access to such server resources I would hopefully not be required to use this old CGI. What's really frustrating is that due to the nature of the problem (lockdown) I can't debug.... grrrr. > > > Tuesday, 14-Dec-1971 04:30:00 GMT > > Nice touch with the special date. No 01-01-1980 for these guys. Does that > date change, or is it the programmer's birthday? Yeah.. pretty random. I have no idea. Many things about this CGI baffle me. Thanks _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list [email protected] http://jquery.com/discuss/
