Hi Stas,

Good idea, but I've tested it, and it doesn't help (I created on alias in my host file with the same length, yes).

regards,

   Michael

Stas Bekman wrote:
Geoffrey Young wrote:

I have written a OutputFilter that finds a string in a response and
replaces the string with another. It works fine with static files, but
not on response from a reverse proxy, and that is just what I want to
achieve. I'm trying to run my Outlook Web Access backend behind an
Apache frontend.

Running Apache::Clean for instance does work on reverse proxied content,
it seems.


are you saying that Apache::Clean works fine but your altered code does not?
  I didn't see anything in your code that looked unusual. if you could
reduce the Apache::Clean test suite to a minimal code + test that reproduced
your problem it would help alot.

Michael's filter is different in a sense that it may enlarge the original input, whereas Apache::Clean always shrinks it. So in this code:

   while ($f->read(my $buffer, BUFF_LEN)) {
       $buffer =~ s/$src/$dst/ig;
       $f->print($buffer);
   }

perl never allocates extra memory for

 $buffer =~ s/$src/$dst/ig;

whereas in Michael's case it will if length($src) < length($dst). Michael, if you test with length($src) == length($dst), does the problem go away?

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