Is there a way to not require a favicon? - .htaccess

Is there a way, to take out the HTML link and provide a favicon or alternatively, not let it be requested - perhaps using .htaccess?
<link rel=icon href=icon>
For instance, when a user opens a [.pdf] or otherwise, there is no icon - displaying 'nothing' or at least it is transparent. The purpose, is to minimise the number of HTTP requests. You see, I do not want to have [the HTML link] at all - so a data URI is not necessarily an option. In other words, I wish to remove this HTML tag - displaying nothing like a [.pdf] file, in the browser.

If you don't have a tag specifying the url of a favicon, most browsers will just send a blind request to www.yourdomain.com/favicon.ico and hope for the best (thanks to w3d for pointing this out). This isn't something you can prevent them from doing.
Although, from what I know, favicons are cached in the clients browser, so they won't even be sending requests for it on every page-load.

Related

how to remove id of div in url with htaccess

I am having in an url the id of a div (#latest) like this at the end:
http://example.com/discussion/64/moderators-only#latest
http://example.com/discussion/32/bugs#latest
// and so on...
How can i remove the #latest in all these url's with htaccess?
You can't. Anything after the # is a URL fragment that the browser never even sends to the server. So the only thing the webserver sees is: http://example.com/discussion/64/moderators-only. So nothing in the htaccess or even in the apache config can do anything about those fragments.
You'll need to employ some sort of javascript or client-side solution if you want to remove it. But a better question is, do you need this in order to display the content correctly? If so, then how do you expect to display the content if this is gone?

How can I tell when an SVG is finished rendering

I have an SVG which takes a short time to load (about 2-3) seconds. During that time, it looks a little funny. Is there anyway to tell when an SVG is done rendering so I can put up a spinner or hide it or something else?
You can't tell. The restriction is to safeguard user's security. See https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=608030 for a more detailed explanation of when this was considered for Firefox but other UAs will come to the same conclusion so you're unlikely to be able to do this in any UA ever.
From the referenced bug...
Doing anything conditionally on the visitedness of a link seems dangerous. I haven't tried this, but suppose the attacker wants to know if the user has been to example.com. An attacker could set the href of a hyperlink to example.com, then navigate to example.com in a hidden iframe. If a MozAfterPaint event fires on the document where the hyperlink lives, you'd know the user hasn't been to www.example.com yet. Otherwise, they have.

How to customize the way objects/resources load from my website created with Joomla?

Suppose I want the browser to load an image right on the first connection it makes to my website. How do I do that, considering that by default the image loads later on when it's actually called for?
Also, after the whole page finishes loading, suppose I want to load more objects (say images) that aren't required yet but are just for buffer. How do I do that? Help me people, I've been at it for quite a long time.
I'm somewhat successful with the first problem by adding a script tag while actually calling an image at the beginning of my index.php's html head part which goes like:
<script src="http://www.mysite.com/my/image/url.png"></script>
But this I realize is bad scripting.
As for "Why would you want to do that?", it's for educational purposes and also because when someone visits my site, I need to load and display certain things before other things get loaded.
For preloading you probably could start with
<body onLoad="Preload('image1.jpg', 'image.gif', 'image.png', ...)">
And preload is a JavaScript function which adds each of the array of images to DOM like
document.imageArray[i].src = args[i];

Using an animated GIF in a Dialog loading screen. JSF 1.1

This problem is the result of IE7 not displaying animated GIF's that are hidden.
for reference:
http://crunchlife.com/articles/2008/06/11/ie7s-inanimate-gif
These 2 solutions involve the use of the setTimeout function and innerHTML. These examples use absolute URL's to the images. Since I'm using JSF, I would like to use relative URL's. Is there a proper way to do this in JSF?
Those examples doesn't use absolute URL's. Your problem lies somewhere else. At least, the URL pointing to the image should be relative to the request URL of the JSF page in question. You can easily check it in the browser's address bar.
A common mistake among starters is namely that they think that it should be relative to the location of the page in the server side folder structure. This is untrue. You should look at the request URL. Determine the absolute request URL of both the JSF page and the image, then you should be able to extract the relative URL to the image from it.

Preventing iframe caching in browser

How do you prevent Firefox and Safari from caching iframe content?
I have a simple webpage with an iframe to a page on a different site. Both the outer page and the inner page have HTTP response headers to prevent caching. When I click the "back" button in the browser, the outer page works properly, but no matter what, the browser always retrieves a cache of the iframed page. IE works just fine, but Firefox and Safari are giving me trouble.
My webpage looks something like this:
<html>
<head><!-- stuff --></head>
<body>
<!-- stuff -->
<iframe src="webpage2.html?var=xxx" />
<!-- stuff -->
</body>
</html>
The var variable always changes. Although the URL of the iframe has changed (and thus, the browser should be making a new request to that page), the browser just fetches the cached content.
I've examined the HTTP requests and responses going back and forth, and I noticed that even if the outer page contains <iframe src="webpage2.html?var=222" />, the browser will still fetch webpage2.html?var=111.
Here's what I've tried so far:
Changing iframe URL with random var value
Adding Expires, Cache-Control, and Pragma headers to outer webpage
Adding Expires, Cache-Control, and Pragma headers to inner webpage
I'm unable to do any JavaScript tricks because I'm blocked by the same-origin policy.
I'm running out of ideas. Does anyone know how to stop the browser from caching the iframed content?
Update
I installed Fiddler2 as Daniel suggested to perform another test, and unfortunately, I am still getting the same results.
This is the test I performed:
Outer page generates random number using Math.random() in JSP.
Outer page displays a random number on the webpage.
Outer page calls iframe, passing in a random number.
Inner page displays a random number.
With this test, I'm able to see exactly which pages are updating, and which pages are cached.
Visual Test
For a quick test, I load the page, navigate to another page, and then press "back." Here are the results:
Original Page:
Outer Page: 0.21300034290246206
Inner Page: 0.21300034290246206
Leaving page, then hitting back:
Outer page: 0.4470929019483644
Inner page: 0.21300034290246206
This shows that the inner page is being cached, even though the outer page is calling it with a different GET parameter in the URL. For some reason, the browser is ignoring the fact that the iframe is requesting a new URL; it simply loads the old one.
Fiddler Test
Sure enough, Fiddler confirms the same thing.
(I load the page.)
Outer page is called. HTML:
0.21300034290246206
<iframe src="http://ipv4.fiddler:1416/page1.aspx?var=0.21300034290246206" />
http://ipv4.fiddler:1416/page1.aspx?var=0.21300034290246206 is called.
(I navigate away from the page and then hit back.)
Outer page is called. HTML:
0.4470929019483644
<iframe src="http://ipv4.fiddler:1416/page1.aspx?var=0.4470929019483644" />
http://ipv4.fiddler:1416/page1.aspx?var=0.21300034290246206 is called.
Well, from this test, it looks as though the web browser isn't caching the page, but it's caching the URL of the iframe and then making a new request on that cached URL. However, I'm still stumped as to how to solve this issue.
Does anyone have any ideas on how to stop the web browser from caching iframe URLs?
This is a bug in Firefox:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=356558
Try this workaround:
<iframe src="webpage2.html?var=xxx" id="theframe"></iframe>
<script>
var _theframe = document.getElementById("theframe");
_theframe.contentWindow.location.href = _theframe.src;
</script>
I have been able to work around this bug by setting a unique name attribute on the iframe - for whatever reason, this seems to bust the cache. You can use whatever dynamic data you have as the name attribute - or simply the current ms or ns time in whatever templating language you're using. This is a nicer solution than those above because it does not directly require JS.
In my particular case, the iframe is being built via JS (but you could do the same via PHP, Ruby, whatever), so I simply use Date.now():
return '<iframe src="' + src + '" name="' + Date.now() + '" />';
This fixes the bug in my testing; probably because the window.name in the inner window changes.
As you said, the issue here is not iframe content caching, but iframe url caching.
As of September 2018, it seems the issue still occurs in Chrome but not in Firefox.
I've tried many things (adding a changing GET parameter, clearing the iframe url in onbeforeunload, detecting a "reload from cache" using a cookie, setting up various response headers) and here are the only two solutions that worked from me:
1- Easy way: create your iframe dynamically from javascript
For example:
const iframe = document.createElement('iframe')
iframe.id = ...
...
iframe.src = myIFrameUrl
document.body.appendChild(iframe)
2- Convoluted way
Server-side, as explained here, disable content caching for the content you serve for the iframe OR for the parent page (either will do).
AND
Set the iframe url from javascript with an additional changing search param, like this:
const url = myIFrameUrl + '?timestamp=' + new Date().getTime()
document.getElementById('my-iframe-id').src = url
(simplified version, beware of other search params)
After trying everything else (except using a proxy for the iframe content), I found a way to prevent iframe content caching, from the same domain:
Use .htaccess and a rewrite rule and change the iframe src attribute.
RewriteRule test/([0-9]+)/([a-zA-Z0-9]+).html$ /test/index.php?idEntity=$1&token=$2 [QSA]
The way I use this is that the iframe's URL end up looking this way: example.com/test/54/e3116491e90e05700880bf8b269a8cc7.html
Where [token] is a randomly generated value. This URL prevents iframe caching since the token is never the same, and the iframe thinks it's a totally different webpage since a single refresh loads a totally different URL :
example.com/test/54/e3116491e90e05700880bf8b269a8cc7.html
example.com/test/54/d2cc21be7cdcb5a1f989272706de1913.html
both lead to the same page.
You can access your hidden url parameters with $_SERVER["QUERY_STRING"]
To get the iframe to always load fresh content, add the current Unix timestamp to the end of the GET parameters. The browser then sees it as a 'different' request and will seek new content.
In Javascript, it might look like:
frames['my_iframe'].location.href='load_iframe_content.php?group_ID=' + group_ID + '&timestamp=' + timestamp;
I found this problem in the latest Chrome as well as the latest Safari on the Mac OS X as of Mar 17, 2016. None of the fixes above worked for me, including assigning src to empty and then back to some site, or adding in some randomly-named "name" parameter, or adding in a random number on the end of the URL after the hash, or assigning the content window href to the src after assigning the src.
In my case, it was because I was using Javascript to update the IFRAME, and only switching the hash in the URL.
The workaround in my case was that I created an interim URL that had a 0 second meta redirect to that other page. It happens so fast that I hardly notice the screen flash. Plus, I made the background color of the interim page the same as the other page, and so you notice it even less.
It is a bug in Firefox 3.5.
Have a look..
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=279048
I set iframe src attribute later in my app. To get rid of the cached content inside iframe at the start of the application I simply do:
myIframe.src = "";
... somewhere in the beginning of js code (for instance in jquery $() handler)
Thanks to
http://www.freshsupercool.com/2008/07/10/firefox-caching-iframe-data/
I also had this problem in 2016 with iOS Safari. What seemed to work for me was
giving a GET-parameter to the iframe src and a value for it like this
<iframe width="60%" src="../other/url?cachebust=1" allowfullscreen></iframe>
I also met this issue, after trying different browsers, and a ton of trial and error, I came up with this solution, which works well in my case:
import { defineComponent } from 'vue'
import { v4 as uuid } from 'uuid'
export default defineComponent({
setup() {
return () => (
// append a uuid after `?` to prevent browsers from caching it
<iframe src={`https://www.example.com?${uuid()}`} frameborder='0' />
)
},
})
If you want to get really crazy you could implement the page name as a dynamic url that always resolves to the same page, rather than the querystring option?
Assuming you're in an office, check whether there's any caching going on at a network level. Believe me, it's a possibility. Your IT folks will be able to tell you if there's any network infrastructure around HTTP caching, although since this only happens for the iframe it's unlikely.
Have you installed Fiddler2?
It will let you see exactly what is being requested, what is being sent back, etc. It doesn't sound plausible that the browser would really hit its cache for different URLs.
Make the URL of the iframe point to a page on your site which acts as a proxy to retrieve and return the actual contents of the iframe. Now you are no longer bound by the same-origin policy (EDIT: does not prevent the iframe caching issue).

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