Now the #ZZZ is legitimate in the sense that my YYY.html does
contain that hypertext. However, in my experience, browsers do
not normally send the #ZZZ, as explained above.
My question is "how should I respond to it?" Here are choices:
1. Send 403 (Forbidden), which is what I do now.
Boyle Owen wrote:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike -
>> EMAIL IGNORED
>> Sent: Monday, June 19, 2006 6:21 PM
>> To: users@httpd.apache.org
>> Subject: [EMAIL PROTECTED] RE: /my.html#mySection
>> L
On 19.06.06 12:21, Mike - EMAIL IGNORED wrote:
>64.233.173.67 - - [18/Jun/2006:14:03:11 -0400]
> "GET /XXX/XXX/YYY.html#ZZZ
> HTTP/1.1" 403 - "http://www.XXX.net/religion/XXX/XXX/YYY.html";
> "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1
> .NET CLR 1.1.4322)"
>
> -Original Message-
> From: news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike -
> EMAIL IGNORED
> Sent: Monday, June 19, 2006 6:21 PM
> To: users@httpd.apache.org
> Subject: [EMAIL PROTECTED] RE: /my.html#mySection
> Linux mbrc20 2.6.14-1.1656_FC4 #1 Thu Jan 5 22:13:
On Mon, 19 Jun 2006 09:05:42 +0200, Boyle Owen wrote:
>> -Original Message-
>> From: news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike -
>> EMAIL IGNORED
>> Sent: Sunday, June 18, 2006 4:09 AM
>> To: users@httpd.apache.org
>> Subject: [EMAIL PROTECTED] /my.html#mySection
>>
>> I have seen