In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DU writes
>--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>tion, but I am not seeing that request when I read their port
>--- end of quote ---
>There is no request.  The server automatically gets sent all cookies that your 
>browser has relating to that domain and path.  
>
>If you look at the headers the server returns to you, you can see what the 
>cookies it's sending are.  YOu can then send these back when accessing pages. 
>This is what your browser does.

Okay, this is what I get sent back to me...

HTTP/1.1 302 Object moved

Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0

Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 21:41:20 GMT

Location: /sms

Connection: Keep-Alive

Content-Length: 125

Content-Type: text/html

Expires: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 21:41:19 GMT

Set-Cookie: mtnsms%2Et%2E2=skey=a really long url encoded string of
characters; domain=.mtnsms.com; path=/

Set-Cookie: mtnsms%2Ep%2E2=akey=another really long url encoded
string=gchiu%40compkarori%2Eco%2Enz; expires=Mon, 23-Nov-2009 21:41:20
GMT; domain=.mtnsms.com; path=/

Cache-control: private

so, I guess all I have to do is incorporate these two lines in my http
header but with Cookie: instead of Set-Cookie

-------
Regards,        Graham Chiu
gchiu<at>compkarori.co.nz
http://www.compkarori.com/dynamo - The Homebuilt Dynamo
http://www.compkarori.com/dbase - The dBase bulletin

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