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Re: AW: AW: AW: documentation archive
- To: <cygwin at sources dot redhat dot com>
- Subject: Re: AW: AW: AW: documentation archive
- From: "Robert Collins" <robert dot collins at itdomain dot com dot au>
- Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2000 05:36:57 +1300
- References: <17B78BDF120BD411B70100500422FC6309E1A1@IIS000>
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bernard Dautrevaux" <Dautrevaux@microprocess.com>
To: "'Earnie Boyd'" <earnie_boyd@yahoo.com>; "Larry Hall (RFK Partners,
Inc)" <lhall@rfk.com>; <cygwin@sources.redhat.com>
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2000 3:05 AM
Subject: RE: AW: AW: AW: documentation archive
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Earnie Boyd [mailto:earnie_boyd@yahoo.com]
> > Sent: Wednesday, December 20, 2000 5:11 PM
> > To: Larry Hall (RFK Partners, Inc); cygwin@sources.redhat.com
> > Subject: RE: AW: AW: AW: documentation archive
> >
> >
> Are you sure of that ? I was thinking that unrecognized files were always
> transfered as binary data and BTW, I'm not sure that IE5 has any knowledge
> of a '.gz' suffix :-)
>
> Note that as windows FTP client are concerned they effectively try to use
> the suffix to choose between binary and text format while UNIX clients
> ususally ALWAYS use text format unless explicitely directed to binary mode
> :-)
>
> Regards,
>
> Bernard
>
Check out rfc 2616 - Ie 5.5 (possibly 5.0) supports content-encoding,
allowing it to download any file in a compressed format and decompress to
the users chosen filetype on arrival. So .tar.gz becomes .tar. However it is
at least slightly broken - it doesn't rename it (default will save as
.tar.gz still) and it should only decompress when the HTTP server send a
Content-Encoding header AND a different mime type header...
Rob
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