HTTP Time Protocol 1.0.2 (KIS branch)


 
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Old 09-01-2008
HTTP Time Protocol 1.0.2 (KIS branch)

ImageHTTP Time Protocol is a time synchronization tool that uses Web server responses (HTTP headers) instead of the NTP protocol. If you are behind a corporate firewall, NAT device, or proxy server, HTP will still be able to synchronize the time.For high precision time synchronization, use ntpd.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
A buffer overflow has been fixed.Image

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HTTP::Message(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  HTTP::Message(3)

NAME
HTTP::Message - Class encapsulating HTTP messages SYNOPSIS
package HTTP::Request; # or HTTP::Response require HTTP::Message; @ISA=qw(HTTP::Message); DESCRIPTION
An "HTTP::Message" object contains some headers and a content (body). The class is abstract, i.e. it only used as a base class for "HTTP::Request" and "HTTP::Response" and should never instantiated as itself. The following methods are available: $mess = HTTP::Message->new This is the object constructor. It should only be called internally by this library. External code should construct "HTTP::Request" or "HTTP::Response" objects. $mess->clone() Returns a copy of the object. $mess->protocol([$proto]) Sets the HTTP protocol used for the message. The protocol() is a string like "HTTP/1.0" or "HTTP/1.1". $mess->content([$content]) The content() method sets the content if an argument is given. If no argument is given the content is not touched. In either case the previous content is returned. $mess->add_content($data) The add_content() methods appends more data to the end of the current content buffer. $mess->content_ref The content_ref() method will return a reference to content buffer string. It can be more efficient to access the content this way if the content is huge, and it can even be used for direct manipulation of the content, for instance: ${$res->content_ref} =~ s/foo/bar/g; $mess->headers; Return the embedded HTTP::Headers object. $mess->headers_as_string([$endl]) Call the as_string() method for the headers in the message. This will be the same as: $mess->headers->as_string but it will make your program a whole character shorter :-) All unknown "HTTP::Message" methods are delegated to the "HTTP::Headers" object that is part of every message. This allows convenient access to these methods. Refer to HTTP::Headers for details of these methods: $mess->header($field => $val); $mess->push_header($field => $val); $mess->init_header($field => $val); $mess->remove_header($field); $mess->scan(&doit); $mess->date; $mess->expires; $mess->if_modified_since; $mess->if_unmodified_since; $mess->last_modified; $mess->content_type; $mess->content_encoding; $mess->content_length; $mess->content_language $mess->title; $mess->user_agent; $mess->server; $mess->from; $mess->referer; $mess->www_authenticate; $mess->authorization; $mess->proxy_authorization; $mess->authorization_basic; $mess->proxy_authorization_basic; COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1995-2001 Gisle Aas. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. libwww-perl-5.65 2001-11-15 HTTP::Message(3)