I am playing around the cloud9 IDE, the preview is using https, but I have some CDN resource embedded in the page which use http, this is a conflict so that my page does not work. But seems that cloud9 preview only support https. Can I change it to http?
Thanks
If you use the "pop-out" button on the preview pane the page will open in a new browser window. There you can easily change the protocol from https to http.
However it would be preferable to load the data over https if your CDN support that.
Related
I have developed cloud application in ASP.NET. After every deployment, the portal either shows white screen or shows older version of the application.
Any suggestions would be highly appreciated.
I have already tried:
1) Updating JS version in each deployment (white screen issue was resolved by this)
2) Recycling Application Pool
3) IIS manager->http response header->set common headers->enable web content
4) Restarting IIS(8.5) after each deployment
However, none of these have worked. The application works fine in incognito mode of Chrome browser but not the regular one.
However, none of these have worked. The application works fine in incognito mode of Chrome browser but not the regular one.
As far as I know, if your brower has accessed your web application once, it will store the cache in client side.
If you modify the content and add the response header, it will not re-send the request to the server, it will use the cache page.
To aovid this, the only way is clear the browser's cache or use Ctrl+F5 to refresh the page.
Then if your reponse haeder contains the no-cache next time, the browser will not store the cache again.
I'm working on a project where i don't need the https protocol, so for this reason I would like to disable it on my workspace. I need just the normal http protocol
It is possible?
As you may have noticed, previews in C9 default to https. To view with http you'll need to pop-out the preview (diagonal double arrow next to URL) to a new tab and change to http.
I need a Portable web Browser, or any install-able (Windows) Browser, which will only load my URL.
Some thing Like I will have my Shortcut in the desktop, when User click, the Web browser with my URL loads.
Is it possible with portable Firefox to modify, I also need cookies to work along, thats the reason I need to find a custom Web browser.
I just found out a partial solution using
Mozilla Client Customization Kit , we can create a extension which allows to customize firefox upto certain limitations.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/cck/
this is an updated question:
I am trying to include a picture on an external server.
PROBLEM HERE: my home website is using https:// and the picture on the external server is just http. The picture is fine (tested) but IE seems not to allow to access http:// sources when on a https:// website.
I am looking for html or javascript code to allow access for loading pictures from other domain WHEN my home domain is HTTPS and my external domain is HTTP
thanks
Klaus
I'm afraid this is a feature of the browser. When you enter a page like this on IE and some other browsers, it will give the user the option to disallow "unsecured" elements on the page (this includes elements served over HTTP); and will not display them. Your page cannot override the users' action.
I have some pages that are sent via HTTPS. Internet Explorer sometimes complains about "This webpage contains content that will not be delivered using a secure HTTPS".
I looked in the html source to confirm all content calls (href, src, etc...) are sent via https. My CSS files use relative paths. But I'm still getting these warnings.
Is there an easy way to track down which items are not sent via HTTPS?
You could fire up Fiddler to see what exactly IE is requesting over regular HTTP.
In Fiddler's default configuration, HTTPS requests will show up with a lock and CONNECT as the host. HTTP requests will have a non-lock icon.
(source: josh3736.net)
I usually use Firefox + Firebug (the "Net" tab) to find the offending request. You could also use Fiddler for this. (with any browser)
I've used the following site before - I finding it easier than loading up firebug / fiddler.
http://www.whynopadlock.com/
You can use SslCheck
It's a free online tool that crawls a website recursively (following all internal links) and scans for unsecure content - images, scripts and CSS.
(disclaimer: I'm one of the developers)
In Google Chrome, similar to Firefox w/ FireBug, you can use the 'Network' tab of the Developer Tools console.
Open the Developers Tools console, go to the 'Network' tab, and reload the target page. Any warnings with the page, such as insecure content being loaded, will be indicated with the number of warning and an 'alert' icon in the bottom right corner (Chrome v23.x). Click on the icon and a list of the warnings, in this case, the resources being loaded insecurely, will be displayed.
Using following tools could help:
Firefox's FireBug . opening tab Network shows you connection details to multiple resource
Fiddler - acts as sniffer allows you explore details of connect.
using firefox - view generated source vs viewing source
there is probably a javascript file that is creating a div/iframe that is insecure