Hilfe durchsuchen

Vorsicht vor Support-Betrug: Wir fordern Sie niemals auf, eine Telefonnummer anzurufen, eine SMS an eine Telefonnummer zu senden oder persönliche Daten preiszugeben. Bitte melden Sie verdächtige Aktivitäten über die Funktion „Missbrauch melden“.

Weitere Informationen

Cookies get changed unexpectedly when making requests to web app

  • 3 Antworten
  • 1 hat dieses Problem
  • 7 Aufrufe
  • Letzte Antwort von eingleVi

more options

I'm Developing a Web Application

I make a GET request to a web app with Fetch API, It shows "No headers for this request" in developer tools, and the cookies get changed as if the request were sent without any cookies and the web app assigned a new cookie. Are cookies sent by default with GET request using Fetch API in firefox?

When accessing page directly instead of Fetch API the request seems to go through every other "F5 Press", and otherwise the same problem occurs.

It works on chromium - trying to figure out what could be different - if it's a problem with firefox or my backend - any ideas? Thanks

Firefox Version 79.0 on ArchLinux Flask/Gunicorn/Nginx on Debian

I'm Developing a Web Application I make a GET request to a web app with Fetch API, It shows "No headers for this request" in developer tools, and the cookies get changed as if the request were sent without any cookies and the web app assigned a new cookie. Are cookies sent by default with GET request using Fetch API in firefox? When accessing page directly instead of Fetch API the request seems to go through every other "F5 Press", and otherwise the same problem occurs. It works on chromium - trying to figure out what could be different - if it's a problem with firefox or my backend - any ideas? Thanks Firefox Version 79.0 on ArchLinux Flask/Gunicorn/Nginx on Debian

Alle Antworten (3)

more options

I forgot to mention - it does work when connecting to a server running on localhost, but not on the remote server. It works in both cases on chrome.

more options

Geändert am von cor-el

more options

Solved. Sort of.

nginx was configured to push that page with every request. Stopping this (removed http2_push directive) fixed it. I'm not sure why this broke Firefox but not Chrome. Is this a bug?

This GET request that I was making was being used to determine if the user was logged in. It would be nice to be able to push the page for latency/responsiveness reasons.

Thanks again.