On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 1:47 AM, Grant Edwards <invalid@invalid.invalid> wrote: > I'm maintaining a web app were the original author(s) went to a little > bit of trouble to always use absolute URIs in links in the pages.
The advantage is that someone who downloads the bare page will still be referencing images, CSS, other links, etc, from the original server. The disadvantage is... exactly the same. These days, it's MUCH better to use relative links, and then let something like wget rewrite them as necessary. In fact, if all your links are relative (not even the leading slash - use ../../../ as many times as is necessary), they don't even need rewriting, and you can test your web site by just pointing your browser at the file system. The original code seems rather fragile. The port number isn't incorporated, so incoming requests on 8443 will end up going through to https:// with the default port of 443. Any other port will be sent back through 80. Strongly recommend not doing this. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list