According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
servlets, same as the value of the CGI variable REMOTE_HOST.
Based on that I would say
On Mon, 7 May 2001, Marc Saegesser wrote:
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
servlets, same as the value of the CGI
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the
request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
servlets, same as the value of the CGI variable REMOTE_HOST.
Based on that I would say
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the
request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
servlets, same as the value of the CGI variable REMOTE_HOST.
Based on that I would
]]
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2001 11:16 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: About bug#208
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the
request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
, 2001 11:16 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: About bug#208
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the
request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined. For HTTP
servlets, same
, May 07, 2001 4:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: About bug#208
I just commited the fix for 3.2.2.
Not really.
When the hostname is null or missing, you copy the host IP
adress, but we there the name (DNS resolution). Something
done by the caller (which agree to pay the price
The previous behavior violated the spec and therefore had to be changed
prior to releasing 3.2.2. Right now I can live with a simple solution.
And you fix it.
I'm waiting to hear back from a user to make sure that the
last change for
JDK 1.1 support fixed his problem and then I plan to call a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig R. McClanahan) writes:
On Mon, 7 May 2001, Marc Saegesser wrote:
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the request, or the
IP address of the client if the name cannot be determined.
implementation is no more broken then the previous
one.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2001 4:58 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: About bug#208
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig R. McClanahan) writes:
On Mon, 7 May 2001, Marc
On 7 May 2001, Nick Holloway wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Craig R. McClanahan) writes:
On Mon, 7 May 2001, Marc Saegesser wrote:
According to the JavaDoc for ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()
Returns the fully qualified name of the client that sent the request, or the
IP address of
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