On Tue, 06 Jan 2015 08:35:54 +0100, Julian Reschke <julian.resc...@gmx.de>
wrote:
On 2014-12-11 09:09, Simon Pieters wrote:
The spec's parsing rules of meta refresh causes infinite reloading on
some pages. In particular, the spec requires the "url=" to be present,
but there are pages that omit it. IE9 also requires "url=" apparently.
Gecko/Blink/WebKit allow "url=" to be omitted.
For example, there is http://www.only-for-winners.com/ which has
<meta http-equiv="refresh"
content="0;http://www.aldanitinetwork.com" />
Clearly this is intended to redirect, not reload the current page after
0 seconds.
SELECT page, COUNT(*) AS num
FROM [httparchive:runs.2014_08_15_requests_body]
WHERE page = url
AND mimeType CONTAINS "html"
AND REGEXP_MATCH(LOWER(body),
r"<meta\s+[^>]*http-equiv\s*=\s*[\"']?refresh")
AND REGEXP_MATCH(LOWER(body),
r"<meta\s+[^>]*content\s*=\s*[\"']?\s*\d+\s*;\s*[^\"'>]")
AND NOT REGEXP_MATCH(LOWER(body),
r"<meta\s+[^>]*content\s*=\s*[\"']?\s*\d+\s*;\s*url=")
GROUP BY page
23 rows.
I also noticed that Gecko allows the number to be omitted. I only found
one page doing that and it was using <meta http-equiv="refresh"
content=";URL="> so it seems we can fail parsing for that case.
I hear (a) these pages have been broken in IE for a long time, and (b)
only 23 (?) pages in your DB are found.
Right.
So why not just leave them broken?
It's a worse user experience and it's a shorter path to interop to change
IE.
--
Simon Pieters
Opera Software