Thanks Miguel, >From the documentation, it simply says it throws an exception if not integrated so that should be simple to add. I wasn't aware that the pipelines existed in mono which is why I've not done it. Is there an example of doing a check that you know of off the top of your head?
In terms of usage, it's used in the WebAPI/MVC, and doesn't appear to be malicious related so maybe it's being misused there. I would imagine though that it's around theory of keeping connections open to the server (probably for something like websockets?). Thanks, Martin On 19 October 2014 00:56, Miguel de Icaza <mig...@xamarin.com> wrote: > Hey Martin, > > Thanks for the patch; The documentation describes that this has two > behaviors depending on the pipeline mode in use: > > > http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.web.httprequest.abort(v=vs.110).aspx > > It might be good to find out if there are other things that this call > should do beyond closing the connection. It seems like it was intended to > be used against a malicious HTTP client (which I have no information about > what they mean by this). > > > > On Sat, Oct 18, 2014 at 5:40 PM, Martin Thwaites <monofo...@my2cents.co.uk > > wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> I've just submitted a pull to add Request.Abort() to the HttpRequest >> class. It simply calls "CloseConnection" on the worker request so it's >> pretty simple. >> >> I'm not sure how to add a unit test for this so any help would be >> appreciated. >> >> This is for the work I'm doing on getting the aspnetwebstack working. >> >> https://github.com/mono/mono/pull/1354 >> >> Thanks >> Martin >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Mono-devel-list mailing list >> Mono-devel-list@lists.ximian.com >> http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-devel-list >> >> >
_______________________________________________ Mono-devel-list mailing list Mono-devel-list@lists.ximian.com http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-devel-list