Mercurial > hg > nginx
view auto/endianness @ 8057:ae2d62bb12c0
Range filter: clearing of pre-existing Content-Range headers.
Some servers might emit Content-Range header on 200 responses, and this
does not seem to contradict RFC 9110: as per RFC 9110, the Content-Range
header has no meaning for status codes other than 206 and 416. Previously
this resulted in duplicate Content-Range headers in nginx responses handled
by the range filter. Fix is to clear pre-existing headers.
author | Maxim Dounin <mdounin@mdounin.ru> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 15 Jul 2022 07:01:44 +0300 |
parents | e3faa5fb7772 |
children |
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# Copyright (C) Igor Sysoev # Copyright (C) Nginx, Inc. echo $ngx_n "checking for system byte ordering ...$ngx_c" cat << END >> $NGX_AUTOCONF_ERR ---------------------------------------- checking for system byte ordering END cat << END > $NGX_AUTOTEST.c int main(void) { int i = 0x11223344; char *p; p = (char *) &i; if (*p == 0x44) return 0; return 1; } END ngx_test="$CC $CC_TEST_FLAGS $CC_AUX_FLAGS \ -o $NGX_AUTOTEST $NGX_AUTOTEST.c $NGX_LD_OPT $ngx_feature_libs" eval "$ngx_test >> $NGX_AUTOCONF_ERR 2>&1" if [ -x $NGX_AUTOTEST ]; then if $NGX_AUTOTEST >/dev/null 2>&1; then echo " little endian" have=NGX_HAVE_LITTLE_ENDIAN . auto/have else echo " big endian" fi rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST* else rm -rf $NGX_AUTOTEST* echo echo "$0: error: cannot detect system byte ordering" exit 1 fi