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  • Subject: RE: eRPG question
  • From: "Stone, Brad V (TC)" <bvstone@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2001 07:12:38 -0600

Jim, 

that's what the AddType statements in your config are for.  :)  They tell
the server to output the mime type for you. Or if you really want, you could
write out the mimetype headers yourself.

Brad

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jim Langston [mailto:jimlangston@conexfreight.com]
> Sent: Monday, January 22, 2001 3:49 PM
> To: RPG400-L@midrange.com
> Subject: Re: eRPG question
> 
> 
> Hans,
> 
> I've created a few web pages served by both Windows NT and Unix,
> and create links for files to be downloaded and everything works
> fine without me, in my web page, specifying a MIME type.
> 
> Is this handled by the server automatically?  And does the AS/400
> have to be setup manually to do this?  
> 
> I just don't understand.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Jim Langston
> 
> boldt@ca.ibm.com wrote:
> > 
> > Jim wrote:
> > >Well, all you have to do is provide a web page with a link to
> > >the file you want them to be able to download.  Then when they
> > >click on this, you serve them that "page" which is actually the
> > >file to download.
> > >
> > >Their browser will then ask them where they want to save the file.
> > 
> > Fine so far.  Just link to the file using the "anchor" tag.
> > 
> > >Browsers look at the extension of files to determine what to do
> > >with them, display them as .HTM or HTML files, run or save them as
> > >.EXE or .ZIP files, play them as media files, etc...
> > 
> > No.  Browsers look at the MIME type, not the file extension.
> > (IE, however, violates the HTTP standards and often insists on
> > rendering data based on content or file extension regardless of
> > MIME type.)
> > 
> > >You really don't need to worry about that, just serve them 
> the object,
> > >the file, and their browser will take care of the rest.
> > 
> > You may have to configure the server to present the proper MIME
> > type in the HTTP header, though.  Be sure to test using Netscape.
> > Since IE isn't totally compliant to the standards, you can't use
> > it to tell if you're doing things properly.
> > 
> > Hans
> > 
> > Hans Boldt, ILE RPG Development, IBM Toronto Lab, boldt@ca.ibm.com
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