try turning on the anonymizer function and putting in a Netscape user aggent so
that the server thinks it is talking to a netscape client and doens't try to do
ms-ms special mode.
Chris McDonough wrote:
> OK.
>
> Here's the situation... I've read the FAQ, researched the mailing list
> archives and DejaNews, et. al. We've got Squid 2.2-STABLE4 running on Linux
> 2.2.10 kernel. Users access all http, https, and ftp URLs through this
> single Squid proxy. All users run IE 4 (which rev, I dont know, possibly
> many revs). The problem:
>
> Certain HTML documents which contain POST forms (for example, the
> subscription form at
> http://www.winntmag.com/OurProducts/Sub/Index.cfm?Action=Subscribe&Code=99IN
> XTUP, or for another example the "send" button used for a new message under
> MS Outlook Web Access) cause IE4 to "hang" (no error response from Squid)
> when the user presses the submit button. In the access.log, an entry is
> generated that looks something like:
>
> 936152282.992 901930 172.21.10.50 TCP_MISS/504 0 POST
> http://www.winntmag.com/OurProducts/Sub/Index.cfm? - DIRECT/www.winntmag.com
> -
>
> OR
>
> 936152338.670 896169 172.21.10.50 TCP_MISS/500 0 POST
> http://www.winntmag.com/OurProducts/Sub/Index.cfm? - DIRECT/www.winntmag.com
> -
>
> (note the difference is the return code - 500 vs 504, either is returned,
> same symptoms from user perspective, however).
>
> The problem does not happen when a user submits the form via Netscape 4.5.
>
> A Netscape user's entry in access.log looks like:
>
> 936151112.151 700 172.21.10.50 TCP_MISS/302 450 POST
> http://www.winntmag.com/OurProducts/Sub/Index.cfm? - DIRECT/www.winntmag.com
> text/html
>
> .. and the Netscape user is able to access the page generated by the POST
> request.
>
> The only other constant I've sort of been able to determine is that the
> server is always running IIS in the problem cases. In the case a user of IE
> submits a POSTed form to a server running, for example, Linux, the POST
> always works.
>
> Ugly. I wish it was even a remote option to suggest switching to Netscape,
> but its really not.
>
> The real kicker is that this problem did not surface under the combination
> of Squid 2.0 and Linux kernel version 2.0X (we only recently upgraded the
> proxy server to 2.2-STABLE4 and 2.2.10 from an older setup).
>
> Additionally, and I don't know if it's meaningful, but in cache.log, we get
> errors occuring every minute like this:
>
> 1999/08/31 23:28:06| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:29:06| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:30:07| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:31:07| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:32:07| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:33:08| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:34:08| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:35:08| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:36:09| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
> 1999/08/31 23:37:09| clientReadRequest: FD 18 Invalid Request
>
> The filedescriptor number does change, but the error is constant, this was
> just a log snippet.
>
> Little help?
Received on Tue Aug 31 1999 - 23:33:56 MDT
This archive was generated by hypermail pre-2.1.9 : Tue Dec 09 2003 - 16:48:09 MST