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http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-600?page=comments#action_12434962
 ] 
            
Roland Weber commented on HTTPCLIENT-600:
-----------------------------------------

Hi Denis,

HttpClient behaves exactly as intended. If there is no Content-Length header, 
HttpClient tries to compute one.
If you think you know better what the Content-Length header should be, and set 
it explicitly, then you do so on
your own risk and responsibility. HttpClient will not modify headers that were 
set explicitly. That's mainly because
somebody might have to create requests that are actually invalid, but are 
similar to what some other, broken
HTTP application generates. If you want HttpClient to provide the content 
length, then just don't set it. If you
want to verify the value you set, then use RequestEntity.getContentLength() in 
your application.

Reverse proxies are supposed to know which headers can be sent on and which can 
not. A proxy that
modifies the request entity is also responsible for updating all entity headers 
that might be affected by
that change. Please open an issue against the reverse proxy program that 
misbehaves.

I suggest to mark this issue invalid.

cheers,
  Roland


> Http Client does not fix incorrect content-lenght headers
> ---------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HTTPCLIENT-600
>                 URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HTTPCLIENT-600
>             Project: HttpComponents HttpClient
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: HttpClient
>    Affects Versions: 3.1 Alpha 1
>         Environment: All
>            Reporter: Denis Valdenaire
>
> I discovered that the method 
> addContentLengthRequestHeader (found in file 
> methods/MultipartPostMethod.java) doesn't "fix" the content-lenght when this 
> one is incorrect. It adds one if getRequestHeader("Content-Lenght") is null, 
> but it should also verify that the content-lenght is correct.
> I suggest something like :
> long len = getRequestContentLength();
> if (getRequestHeader("Content-Length") == null || 
> getRequestHeader("Content-Length") != len) { 
>             setRequestHeader("Content-Length", String.valueOf(len));
> }
> Sending an incorrect Content-Length blocks the server if the string sent is 
> smaller than announced : waiting for more, and finally reset the connection. 
> If it's too big, you lose data.
> I've seen this problem in a reverse proxy program (with httpclient 
> communicating with the real servers) when the client send urlencoded data and 
> this data is modified (partly urldecoded) but not the content-lenght.

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