No,
I'm creating remote service and it's returning codes according to passed
parameters. I only wanted to test it using browsers...
I do not care about the output actually, but the status code
B.
It seems to me, that this is more html-related. Maybe the tags in the
html-document screws it
Hi,
I'm using following construction to send http status code
--
header('HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found');
header(Status: 404 Not Found);
exit;
--
MSIE displays Page not found, but FireFox and Opera don't display
anything. Just blank page with no text...
full headers sent by
Are you seeing the IE-specific 404 page? The one that looks like this:
http://redvip.homelinux.net/varios/404-ie.jpg
On 3/30/06, Bronislav Klucka [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm using following construction to send http status code
--
header('HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found');
Yes, I do...
B.
Anthony Ettinger wrote:
Are you seeing the IE-specific 404 page? The one that looks like this:
http://redvip.homelinux.net/varios/404-ie.jpg
On 3/30/06, Bronislav Klucka [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I'm using following construction to send http status code
--
Then it's workingFireFox, et. al. show you the server 404, IE on
the otherhand has it's own 404 error page (for those newbies who don't
know what a 404 is). You can disable it under IE options.
On 3/30/06, Bronislav Klucka [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, I do...
B.
Anthony Ettinger wrote:
In other words, if you want Firefox/Opera/etc to display something, you
have to output something. Strange, that. :P
Jasper
Anthony Ettinger wrote:
Then it's workingFireFox, et. al. show you the server 404, IE on
the otherhand has it's own 404 error page (for those newbies who don't
know
well, you typically would redirect 404 to something like foo.com/404.html
Otherwise, it's whatever your server (apache/IIS) has as the default
404 handler...
Default is something like this:
Not Found
The requested URL /asdf was not found on this server.
The default Apache error handler is not called when PHP sends a 404
header. The code that does Apache error handling happens *before* PHP
gets in the loop, and checks to see if the script being referenced
exists, which it indeed does, whether it sends a 404 header or not.
Tested on Apache 2.2
No,
I'm creating remote service and it's returning codes according to passed
parameters. I only wanted to test it using browsers...
I do not care about the output actually, but the status code
B.
Jasper Bryant-Greene wrote:
The default Apache error handler is not called when PHP sends a 404
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