Hi nitin, It would return Content-Length as the main application of using HEAD is for proxies to find if the cached copy can be used or not, availability of Content-Length is mandatory to do those kind of checks. In any case you must be getting a redirection maybe 301, 302 in status code so you would need to follow the location. For example I just tried looking for header info on http://facebook.com/login.php and I got a redirection 301 to www.facebook.com/login.php and in that location u would receive content-length. I used this tool : http://www.rexswain.com/httpview.html First try with www.facebook.com/login.php and it would give u content-Length in first hit ( do not forget to use HEAD as method type) Then try with http://facebook.com/login.php and auto follow enabled and this time u would get it in the location 2. Cheers Dipen On Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 9:08 PM, nitin gupta <nitingupta.iitg@gmail.com>wrote:
Thanks Dipen, It works perfectly well. Thanks for making me aware of the HEAD method.
The headers does not contain "content-length" when invoked on a .php page, is this in accordance with the protocol?
-- Regards, Nitin Kumar Gupta http://publicmind.in/blog/
On Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 8:46 PM, Dipen <dipench@gmail.com> wrote:
I havent tried it doing it with drupal but try passing method = HEAD.
HEAD /index.html
would fetch only headers of that resource, where as GET for instance would also return the content.
Cheers dipen
On Sun, Dec 6, 2009 at 7:52 PM, nitin gupta <nitingupta.iitg@gmail.com>wrote:
Hi,
I am currently using curl (CURLOPT_NOBODY) to exclude the body and to just get the headers returned by the sever for a http request. I am specifically interested in the return status code and the content length. Can I do it using drupal_http_request? What will be the suitable value for the $headers, so that I don't need to download the whole page?
http://api.drupal.org/api/function/drupal_http_request/6
-- Regards, Nitin Kumar Gupta http://publicmind.in/blog/