This is the new home of the egghelp.org community forum.
All data has been migrated (including user logins/passwords) to a new phpBB version.
For more information, see this announcement post . Click the X in the top right-corner of this box to dismiss this message.
Old posts that have not been replied to for several years.
u
uTc
Post
by uTc » Tue Mar 19, 2002 1:35 pm
How can i find out what HTTP Headers are posted to a site because i need to put them in a script because the script is returning the website in currency $ and timezone GMT but on my browser its returning correctly currency £ and timezone GMT i guess the first one is just its default if no headers are posted and how do i put it in a script?
something like:
puts $sock "GET $url/ HTTP/1.0
nConnection: Keep-Alive
nUser-Agent: Mozilla/4.61 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.2.13 i586; Nav)
nPragma: no-cache
nAccept: image/gif, iimage/jpeg, image/pjpeg, image/png, */*
nAccept-Encoding: gzip
nAccept-Language: en-uk
nAccept-Charset: iso-8859-1,*,utf-1
nContent-type: application/x-www-form-urlencodedn"
allthough that doesn't work
Thanks./
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: utc on 2002-03-19 11:00 ]</font>
stdragon
Owner
Posts: 959 Joined: Sun Sep 23, 2001 8:00 pm
Contact:
Post
by stdragon » Wed Mar 20, 2002 2:41 pm
You could write a little script to capture the output your web browser sends when you try to connect to yourself.
Code: Select all
socket -server on_connect 12345
proc on_connect {chan addr port} {
while {[gets $chan line] > 0} {
puts "client said: $line"
}
close $chan
}
vwait hi
Just type that in using tclsh, then connect to
http://localhost:12345 (or where you're running it) in your browser.
If the "vwait hi" line gives you an error, then type "update" after you try connecting.
u
uTc
Post
by uTc » Wed Mar 20, 2002 4:27 pm
Thanks stdragon
ppslim
Revered One
Posts: 3914 Joined: Sun Sep 23, 2001 8:00 pm
Location: Liverpool, England
Post
by ppslim » Thu Mar 28, 2002 11:33 am
Your might also find that the "Accept-language" is wrong.
It should infect be "en-gb"