httpd: When sending gzipped content use content-length header

Today for gzipped content httpd is using a header with name
Transfer-Length. However I can't find a header with that name in the
standards. Instead use Content-Length.

function                                             old     new   delta
.rodata                                           157940  157936      -4
send_headers                                         980     939     -41
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(add/remove: 0/0 grow/shrink: 0/2 up/down: 0/-45)             Total: -45 bytes

Signed-off-by: Alexander Vickberg <wickbergster@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alexander Vickberg 2019-04-17 11:34:21 +02:00 committed by Denys Vlasenko
parent 1d37186fe2
commit 210b52476c

View File

@ -1150,18 +1150,61 @@ static void send_headers(unsigned responseNum)
file_size = range_end - range_start + 1;
}
#endif
//RFC 2616 4.4 Message Length
// The transfer-length of a message is the length of the message-body as
// it appears in the message; that is, after any transfer-codings have
// been applied. When a message-body is included with a message, the
// transfer-length of that body is determined by one of the following
// (in order of precedence):
// 1.Any response message which "MUST NOT" include a message-body (such
// as the 1xx, 204, and 304 responses and any response to a HEAD
// request) is always terminated by the first empty line after the
// header fields, regardless of the entity-header fields present in
// the message.
// 2.If a Transfer-Encoding header field (section 14.41) is present and
// has any value other than "identity", then the transfer-length is
// defined by use of the "chunked" transfer-coding (section 3.6),
// unless the message is terminated by closing the connection.
// 3.If a Content-Length header field (section 14.13) is present, its
// decimal value in OCTETs represents both the entity-length and the
// transfer-length. The Content-Length header field MUST NOT be sent
// if these two lengths are different (i.e., if a Transfer-Encoding
// header field is present). If a message is received with both a
// Transfer-Encoding header field and a Content-Length header field,
// the latter MUST be ignored.
// 4.If the message uses the media type "multipart/byteranges" ...
// 5.By the server closing the connection.
//
// (NB: standards do not define "Transfer-Length:" _header_,
// transfer-length above is just a concept).
len += sprintf(iobuf + len,
#if ENABLE_FEATURE_HTTPD_RANGES
"Accept-Ranges: bytes\r\n"
#endif
"Last-Modified: %s\r\n"
"%s-Length: %"OFF_FMT"u\r\n",
/* Because of 4.4 (5), we can forgo sending of "Content-Length"
* since we close connection afterwards, but it helps clients
* to e.g. estimate download times, show progress bars etc.
* Theoretically we should not send it if page is compressed,
* but de-facto standard is to send it (see comment below).
*/
"Content-Length: %"OFF_FMT"u\r\n",
date_str,
content_gzip ? "Transfer" : "Content",
file_size
);
}
/* This should be "Transfer-Encoding", not "Content-Encoding":
* "data is compressed for transfer", not "data is an archive".
* But many clients were not handling "Transfer-Encoding" correctly
* (they were not uncompressing gzipped pages, tried to show
* raw compressed data), and servers worked around it by using
* "Content-Encoding" instead... and this become de-facto standard.
* https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=68517
* https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=94730
*/
if (content_gzip)
len += sprintf(iobuf + len, "Content-Encoding: gzip\r\n");