Learn More About This
Directory
This directory sponsored by SIQL, a Spider Makers company...
25. Running Headers
- www.dpawson.co.uk
- | Reading on XSL-FO | Properties | Region body | Running Headers@ | Special Techniques | Subscript and Superscript |.
- Running Headers.
- Running headers.
26. Yahoo! Mail - Online Support
- help.yahoo.com
- What are headers, and how can I display "all" versus "brief" headers?.
- Email headers are used to deliver a message over the Internet and contain a record of the specific route taken by the email. ...
- Open the message you would like to view the headers for. ...
- Click on the "Full Headers" link located on the top right-hand side of the message window .
- Your message will then appear with full headers. ...
- Please note: This option will only apply towards the message you have selected to view full headers for. ...
- Locate the Show Headers heading and select either "Brief" or "All. ...
- If you are using a different client to read your email, please consult with your mail administrator or mail program's help system for more information on viewing full headers. ...
27. Network Working Group K. Moore Request for Comments: 2047 ...
- www.ietf.org
- Abstract STD 11, RFC 822, defines a message representation protocol specifying considerable detail about US-ASCII message headers, and leaves the message content, or message body, as flat US-ASCII text. ... Moore Standards Track Page 1 RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996 Other documents in this series include: + RFC 2045, which specifies the various headers used to describe the structure of MIME messages. ... Like the encoding techniques described in RFC 2045, the techniques outlined here were designed to allow the use of non-ASCII characters in message headers in a way which is unlikely to be disturbed by the quirks of existing Internet mail handling programs. In particular, some mail relaying programs are known to (a) delete some message header fields while retaining others, (b) rearrange the order of addresses in To or Cc fields, (c) rearrange the (vertical) order of header fields, and/or (d) "wrap" message headers at different places than those in the original message. In addition, some mail reading programs are known to have difficulty correctly parsing message headers which, while legal according to RFC 822, make use of backslash-quoting to "hide" special characters such as " especials = "(" / ")" / "" / "@" / "," / ";" / ":" / " / "/" / " " / " " / "?" / ". " / "=" encoded-text = 1* ; (but see "Use of encoded-words in message ; headers", section 5) Both 'encoding' and 'charset' names are case-independent. ... Use of encoded-words in message headers An 'encoded-word' may appear in a message header or body part header according to the following rules: (1) An 'encoded-word' may replace a 'text' token (as defined by RFC 822) in any Subject or Comments header field, any extension message header field, or any MIME body part field for which the field body is defined as '*text'. ... Recognition of 'encoded-word's in message headers A mail reader must parse the message and body part headers according to the rules in RFC 822 to correctly recognize 'encoded-word's. ... A mail reading program claiming compliance with this specification must be able to distinguish 'encoded-word's from 'text', 'ctext', or 'word's, according to the rules in section 6, anytime they appear in appropriate places in message headers. ... Examples The following are examples of message headers containing 'encoded- word's: From: =?US-ASCII?Q?Keith_Moore?= To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Keld_J=F8rn_Simonsen?= CC: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Andr=E9?= Pirard Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?B?SWYgeW91IGNhbiByZWFkIHRoaXMgeW8=?= =?ISO-8859-2?B?dSB1bmRlcnN0YW5kIHRoZSBleGFtcGxlLg==?= Note: In the first 'encoded-word' of the Subject field above, the last "=" at the end of the 'encoded-text' is necessary because each 'encoded-word' must be self-contained (the "=" character completes a group of 4 base64 characters representing 2 octets). ... + clarify that encoded-words are allowed in '*text' fields in both RFC822 headers and MIME body part headers, but NOT as parameter values.
28. SpamCop.net - SpamCop FAQ: Eudora
- spamcop.net
- This shows the extended headers. ...
- Select the whole message including headers and paste into SpamCop. ...
- How to know if it's HTML mail: once you have opened the email, look near the bottom of the headers (see below for revealing headers) for a line like the following: Content-Type: text/html. ... you can frequently spot HTML email because it has font effects, pictures, etc but this is not always true so you have to take a quick look at the headers. ...
- Click the 'blah blah blah' button to reveal the headers. ...
- Hi-lite the headers only. Copy and paste the headers into SpamCop as above. ...
- Hit enter twice after the pasted headers to force a blank line after the headers. ...
29. MIT Stopit: Instructions on forwarding full mail headers
- web.mit.edu
- Forwarding Full Mail Headers .
- From time to time you may be required to either view and/or forward full headers of e-mail messages you receive. ... Follow the links below to learn how to view and forward full mail headers with your mail client. ...
- This should expand the headers.
- When the drop down menu appears, select Headers.
- x users must click Forward to see the full headers. ...
- Pine may not be initially configured to view full headers. To set up pine to view full headers:.
- When viewing message, type H to view full headers.
30. Network Magazine | Revealing E-mail Headers | December 5, 2000
- www.networkmagazine.com
- Revealing E-mail Headers.
- E-mail headers represent an Achilles' heel for potential attackers to exploit. ...
- And then there are the e-mail headers themselves. ... But there's more to e-mail headers than what your friendly mailtool reveals, and the information in the other headers can be very illuminating. Your headers can reveal the name and version of the mailtool you use, as well as what operating system, the name and version of your mail server, internal IP addresses, and the type of firewall your organization uses (if any). ...
- For these reasons, it's time to examine e-mail headers to get a better idea of why they are used, the information they contain, and why some firewalls actually remove some information in these headers. ...
- Like anything used on the Internet, e-mail headers are governed by a standard-specifically RFC 822. ... So the headers I am talking about are required for sending any e-mail across the Internet, or even between two internal e-mail servers that are using TCP/IP and are not using a proprietary format. ...
- Your mailtool may also allow you to view e-mail headers. ...
- When you are trying to learn something more about an e-mail sender, the Received: headers are much more interesting than the From: headers, which can be spoofed. To be accurate, any header line can be tampered with up to a point, as the headers are just textual data, and only the headers added by trusted servers can be considered reliable. Received: headers are added by each mail server that relays the e-mail, with the most recent e-mail server first, and the first mail server that relayed the e-mail last. ...
- The example e-mail header shown in Figure 1 only has two Received: headers. Sometimes there are many more, and those headers may reveal other internal network addresses and mail server names, as well as internal hostnames. ...
- So far, I've identified two mail servers, Sendmail and Postfix, from the Received: headers. Microsoft Exchange and Lotus Notes also leave their marks in the Received: headers, as do other Unix mail servers. ...
31. MPEG headers Quick Reference
- dvd.sourceforge.net
- MPEG Headers Quick Reference.
- This is a quick reference to the various headers and streams found in MPEG/DVD. ...
32. MT-NW Manual: Appendix B - Message Headers
- www.smfr.org
- Appendix B - Message Headers.
- Preface About Usenet Getting Started Setting up News Servers Personalities Binaries Sorting & Threading Filtering Filter Editing Regular Expressions Filtering Junk Articles Finding & Searching Language Support Opening URLs Multi-Threading Faster Group Opening Group Settings Sharing Newsrc Files Speech Recognition MIME in News Articles AppleScripting Keyboard Shortcuts Lists & Text Shortcuts Windows Commands Preferences Saving Files Files FAQ A: Helper Programs B: Message Headers MT-NW Home.
- Other headers .
- The other headers are only occasionally useful. ...
- Headers lines always come at the start of the message, and are separated from the body of the message by one or more blank lines. ...
- If your site requires this, find out what Path header your administrator wants you to use, and enter it in the Extra news header lines field in the Signature & Headers dialog, which is accessible from the Personalities dialog. ...
- To create your X-Face header, use the program Saving Face, and paste the resulting header into the Extra News (and, if you wish, Extra Mail) headers in your Personalities. ...
- Other headers.
- Additional headers may be inserted into news and mail messages, both by the news or email transport system, or by the originator or recipient of the message. Some such headers contain additional information about any transformations that have been performed on the message, or extra information about the recipient. Some senders also make up humorous or informational headers. ...
- If you do create additional headers, their names must start with "X-", e. ... "X-No-Archive", to avoid conflict with essential message headers. ... You can enter such additional headers in the Signature & Headers dialog which is available from the Personalities dialog, or enter them in the fields in the message window. ...
- Appendix B (Message Headers) .
33. Common Internet Message Header Fields
- www.dsv.su.se
- draft-palme-mailext-headers-08. ...
- se/jpalme/ietf/mail-headers/. ...
- Another list of headers can be found at URL http://www. ... fi/~jkorpela/headers. ...
- se/jpalme/ietf/mail-headers/.
- Jukka "Yucca" Korpela: Quick reference to Internet message headers, http://www. ... fi/~jkorpela/headers. ...
34. LinuxDevCenter.com: Cache-Friendly Web Pages
- www.linuxdevcenter.com
- 1) specifies that caches must obey Expires and Cache-Control headers--but do your pages have them? How do you add them? What happens to your pages if you don't? .
- The RFC was written with the expectation that Web pages would include expiration headers. If the expiration times in the headers are chosen carefully, caches can serve stored pages without losing any meaning. ...
- When origin servers don't provide expiration headers, caches use heuristics based on headers like "Last-Modified" to guess at a suitable expiration. ...
- The simplest way to assist caching is to keep accurate time on your HTTP server and always send the Date and Last-Modified headers with your responses. ...
- To be a really cache-friendly webmaster, though, include the cache headers in your pages. ...
- Available cache headers.
- This article uses Apache as an example for setting up headers and discusses the Cache-Control header in more detail during the example. ...
- Setting up cache headers in Apache.
35. RootsWeb HelpDesk: List Administrators
- helpdesk.rootsweb.com
- Headers: Interpret Key Lines .
- How to Expand or Get Full Headers .
- Most e-mail programs display partial headers, which typically show the basic to/from information, the date, and a subject line. Full or extended headers (raw headers) have additional fields, including information on how the message reached you. ...
- The following instructions for viewing full headers were contributed by RootsWeb users, and verified when possible with instructions offered on the help pages of mail programs and SpamCop. ...
- Instructions for viewing full or expanded headers.
- Click on "details" to see full or expanded headers.
- Full headers are displayed on every e-mail, beneath the message area.
- Choose "Show Long Headers. ...
- Choose "Show Original Headers. ...
- Place a check the box for "Show all headers (even the ugly ones). ...
- Uncheck the "Show all headers" option when you are finished, if you don't want to view full headers on every message.
- Click on "Message Headers. ...
- Select "Show Message Headers. ...
- " Select the "Fields" tab to find the "Additional Headers" field. ...
- Select the "Fields" tab to find the "Additional Headers" field. ...
36. HTTP::Headers - Class encapsulating HTTP Message headers
- www.xav.com
- Headers.
- HTTP::Headers - Class encapsulating HTTP Message headers.
- HTTP::Headers - Class encapsulating HTTP Message headers.
- require HTTP::Headers; $h = new HTTP::Headers; .
- The HTTP::Headers class encapsulates HTTP-style message headers. The headers consist of attribute-value pairs, which may be repeated, and which are printed in a particular order.
- $h = new HTTP::Headers.
- Constructs a new HTTP::Headers object. ... : $h = new HTTP::Headers Date => 'Thu, 03 Feb 1994 00:00:00 GMT', Content_Type => 'text/html; version=3. ...
- To make the life easier for perl users who wants to avoid quoting before the => operator, you can use '_' as a synonym for '-' in header names (this behaviour can be suppressed by setting $HTTP::Headers::TRANSLATE_UNDERSCORE to a FALSE value). ...
- The field name passed to the callback routine has case as suggested by HTTP Spec, and the headers will be visited in the recommended ``Good Practice'' order. ...
- This function removes the headers with the specified names. ...
- Returns a copy of this HTTP::Headers object. ...
- The most frequently used headers can also be accessed through the following convenience methods. ...
- A user agent that wishes to authenticate itself with a server or a proxy, may do so by including these headers. ...
- HTTP::Headers - Class encapsulating HTTP Message headers.
Other related topics:
Do you have a great site about Headers? Is
your Headers site listed here?
Would you like a prefered placement of your site in this directory?
It's easy! First place, the HTML from the box below on your page that
you would like listed in this directory.
Then use our link submission request with
your name, your contact information, and the URL of your site that has
a link to this directory. After we
verify your link to us, we'll make sure your site stays in our directory,
and we'll give it prefered placement here also.
Here is how to make a simple text link to us. Just copy the code in this
box to your website:
We can also develop a custom Guide To The Internet for your site. Please
request your own
custom Guide To The Internet.
This custom Guide To The Internet produced by
Siql. Visit us today, and find out how to get your own
custom guide to the Internet, and how to get your site
listed in our guides.
Copyright 1995-2005 by Siql. All
Rights Reserved.