Re: test of new Location header usage

ts ([email protected])
Wed, 9 Aug 1995 14:18:27 +0200


>
> Hi.
> On Wed, 9 Aug 1995, lilley wrote:
> > I presume your intent by outputting Status:200 is to generate a header? But
> > the headers are generated by the server, not the script.
>
> The CGI specification says:
>
> [ From <URL:http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/out.html> ]
> ] Any headers which are not server directives are sent directly back
> ] to the client. Currently, this specification defines three server
> ] directives:
> [...]
> ] Content-type
> [...]
> ] Location
> [...]
> ] Status
> ]
> ] This is used to give the server an HTTP/1.0 status line to
> ] send to the client. The format is nnn xxxxx, where nnn is the 3-digit
> ] status code, and xxxxx is the reason string, such as "Forbidden".
>
> The spec does not say anything about the issue at hand: what a server
> should do when given both a Location: and a Status: header by a CGI
> program.
>
> (Just a little rant:)
> Honestly, I'm grateful to those who put in the work to produce the CGI
> specification. Thank you all. But I get really worried by documents which
> call themselves "specifications" and yet repeatedly say things like
> "Examples of the command line usage are much better demonstrated than
> explained." That's appropriate for a tutorial, but it's utterly hopeless
> for anything that's supposed to be definitive.
>

Only historical reason : the first spec (CGI 1.0) defined only `Content-type'
and `Location'. `Status' was added for CGI 1.1

I don't know why you want add a status code, when Location imply a code 302.

Guy Decoux