Maybe I'm on the wrong thread, but I had some problems with
a netscape browser and an Apache server when the date/time on
these to machines were more than 2 days apart......
Setting them both to the correct (same) date/time solved my
problem....
Well, htdig is a sort of browser, so...
On Tue, 3 Oct 2000, Geoff Hutchison wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Oct 2000, Roger Weiss wrote:
>
> > Neither approach is good for us. We have many static html pages, and many
> > more being created every day.
> > It's not feasible for us to put the extra code into each html file, or to
> > change the x bit on each file as well.
> >
>
> I'm going to be completely honest. I've *never* had this problem on an
> Apache installation. Out of the box, Apache serves up Last-Modified
> headers for all static HTML pages for any version of Apache I've used.
> (Please note, I compile my own Apache and don't include things like
> mod_usertrack.)
>
> > It seems like a pretty simple request, and yet we can't find any answer in
> > the apache docs or htdig.
>
> Since people seem to have this problem with increasing frequency, why
> don't you post some information about your Apache configuration? Include
> as much as you can.
--jesse
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J. op den Brouw Johanna Westerdijkplein 75
Haagse Hogeschool 2521 EN DEN HAAG
Faculty of Engeneering Netherlands
Electrical Engeneering +31 70 4458936
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Linux - because reboots are for hardware changes
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