looks for the string <quote>http://</quote>, either in plain text
(invalid but often used) or encoded as <quote>http%3a//</quote>.
Some sites use their own URL encoding scheme, encrypt the address
- of the target server or replace it with a database id. In theses cases
+ of the target server or replace it with a database id. In these cases
<literal>fast-redirects</literal> is fooled and the request reaches the
redirection server where it probably gets logged.
</para>
<para>
Note that some (rare) ill-configured sites don't handle requests for uncompressed
documents correctly. Broken PHP applications tend to send an empty document body,
- some IIS versions only send the beginning of the content. If you enable
- <literal>prevent-compression</literal> per default, you might want to add
- exceptions for those sites. See the example for how to do that.
+ some IIS versions only send the beginning of the content and some content delivery
+ networks let the connection time out.
+ If you enable <literal>prevent-compression</literal> per default, you might
+ want to add exceptions for those sites. See the example for how to do that.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
sometimes appear on some pages, or user agents that don't correct for this on
the fly.
<!--
- My version of Mozilla (ancient) shows litte square boxes for quote
+ My version of Mozilla (ancient) shows little square boxes for quote
characters, and apostrophes on moronized pages. So many pages have this, I
can read them fine now. HB 08/27/06
-->