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Brad Fitzpatrick authored
The Transport's automatic gzip uncompression lost information in the process (the compressed Content-Length, if known). Normally that's okay, but it's not okay for reverse proxies which have to be able to generate a valid HTTP response from the Transport's provided *Response. Reverse proxies should normally be disabling compression anyway and just piping the compressed pipes though and not wasting CPU cycles decompressing them. So also document that on the new Uncompressed field. Then, using the new field, fix Response.Write to not inject a bogus "Connection: close" header when it doesn't see a transfer encoding or content-length. Updates #15366 (the http2 side remains, once this is submitted) Change-Id: I476f40aa14cfa7aa7b3bf99021bebba4639f9640 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/22671Reviewed-by: Andrew Gerrand <adg@golang.org> Run-TryBot: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org>
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dump.go | ||
dump_test.go | ||
example_test.go | ||
httputil.go | ||
persist.go | ||
reverseproxy.go | ||
reverseproxy_test.go |