I am receiving the following headers in response to a web request:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
...
Pragma: no-cache
Content-Type: binary/octet-stream
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
...
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// in hex the encoded data reads:
// 00000000 9f 92 开发者_开发百科e2 fd dd a9 cb 49 4a 8b 73 e7 0a ff 02 2d IJ s -
Question:
- Is this a valid or properly encoded chunked response? I don't see any 0 length chunks in there. What am I missing?
No, this does not seem to be properly encoded. In general, the commonly used chunked transfer encoding has the following scheme:
<chunk-size> <CRLF>
<chunk-data> <CRLF>
<chunk-size> <CRLF>
<chunk-data> <CRLF>
⋮
<chunk-size> <CRLF>
<chunk-data> <CRLF>
0 <CRLF>
<CRLF>
The chunk-size is a string of hex digits indicating the size of the following chunk-data, both terminated by a CRLF sequence. The chunked encoding is ended by any chunk whose size is zero which is terminated by an empty line.
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