Revision be26c4f22f52f4c488d8e9d586db50eea2428a10 authored by Jim Evans on 15 March 2018, 21:21:56 UTC, committed by Jim Evans on 15 March 2018, 21:21:56 UTC
For the domain attribute of a returned cookie, if the attribute value
conatains a domain with a single dot ('.'), some user agents prepend a
leading dot onto the beginning of the attribute value. This is consistent
with RFC 2965. Some user agents expressly omit the leading dot, which is
consistent with the later RFC 6265. This commit allows both values as the
returned value of the domain attribute.
1 parent 750cfaf
Raw File
accept_ch.sub.https.html
<html>
<body>
<script src="/resources/testharness.js"></script>
<script src="/resources/testharnessreport.js"></script>

<script>

// If the response for the HTML file contains "Accept-CH" in the response
// headers, then the browser should attach the specified client hints in the
// HTTP request headers. Test this functionality by fetching an
// XHR from this page. The response headers for this page include
// "Accept-CH: device-memory, dpr, viewport-width".
//
// echo_client_hints_received.py includes "device-memory-received",
// "dpr-received" and "viewport-width-received" in the response headers
// depending on the set of client hints it receives in the request headers.

  promise_test(t => {
  return fetch("https://{{domains[]}}:{{ports[https][0]}}/client-hints/echo_client_hints_received.py", {"mode": "no-cors"}).then(r => {
    assert_equals(r.status, 200)
    // Verify that the browser includes client hints in the headers when
    // fetching the XHR.
    assert_true(r.headers.has("device-memory-received"), "device-memory-received");
    assert_true(r.headers.has("dpr-received"), "dpr-received");
    assert_true(r.headers.has("viewport-width-received"), "viewport-width-received");
  });
}, "Accept-CH header test");

</script>

</body>
</html>
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