Update:
I also tried with lowercase in AddDefaultCharset, with and without a 
dash (-):

AddDefaultCharset utf-8
    and
AddDefaultCharset utf8


but no luck. I also discovered that i could not download files from my 
webserver. I had one .rar file, and clicking on it gave me a screen with 
lots of misc characters.. no download window. Changed back to ISO-8859-1 
in apache config and I got the download window when I clicked on the file.

/Christopher



Christopher wrote:

>I'm setting up a webserver and thought I'd make it use UTF-8 right away.
>
>I've configured Apache2 and (re)started it:
>
>#AddDefaultCharset ISO-8859-1
>AddDefaultCharset UTF-8
>
>I've also installed glibc-locales, configured /etc/locales.conf to 
>include english and norwegian (see below) and I ran locales-gen afterwards.
>
>en_US UTF-8
>en_US ISO-8859-1
>nb_NO UTF-8
>nb_NO ISO-8859-1
>
>
>I then have a test file test.html which contains a norwegain sentence 
>with special norwegian letters (æ ø å). When I try to view the page, all 
>the special letters are displayed as something else. In opera (v8.5, 
>auto-select encoding selected) it is a square turned 45 degrees with a 
>questionmark inside. IE6, set to UTF-8, displayes some chinese/japanese 
>signs instead of the characters. If I select auto-select encoding in 
>IE6, I get the correct characters. Changing Opera manually to UTF-8 
>gives the same square, but choosing ISO-8859-1 gives me the correct 
>characters...
>
>Whats wrong? Should I just not bother trying to use UTF-8?
>
>
>/Christopher
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