I have instructions to give to customers for how to send in har files for debugging SSO issues for all common browsers but Safari. Remote debug is not an option. My current instructions basically say "you can't do this on Safari"; I've seen others say this too.
I found this relatively recent stackoverflow post yesterday that says you can at least make the data persist now:
Safari Developer Tools: Preserve Network Log on Navigation
So now I need to export it. I found this link that gives some instructions, but at the last step, we don't see the 'copy all as HAR' selection.
http://help.catchsoftware.com/display/ET/Collecting+Browser+Performance+Information
Does anyone know how to export the browser network traffic on Safari? Am I missing something?
When you have the "Web inspector" visible in Safari and you're viewing the "Network" tab, the "Export" button at the top right will export a HAR file of the last loaded page.
You can also right click on a single request and click save to a file.
Related
Until today I have been able to download data studio reports as pdfs and, with the exception of some content errors, it has always worked as expected. Now, rather than downloading as a pdf, the report opens as a pdf looking file with a blob:https:/ /datastudio.google.com/4138d etc. URL which according to Chrome is an insecure connection. Trying to download this file results in a "Network Error"
page that I get when selecting download as pdf
I have tried checking for malware on Chrome and cannot see anything wrong. I have also restarted my PC and refreshed data studio.
Any help or suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
I agree with #wilburforcethebrave - all dashboards were downloading without an issue until yesterday and now receiving intermittent errors such as "blob:https:/ /datastudio.google.com/4138d"
Printing the dashboard as a PDF is helpful if the report is one page, but does not work for multiple pages.
I think I found a fix though so you can download Data Studio reports in Chrome.
Click the 3 dots next to your photo in chrome (right under the 'X' button on windows)
Go to 'Settings'
Select 'Privacy and Security' from the left side menu
Select 'Site Settings' from the presented menu
Under the 'Content' section, select 'Additional content settings'
Click 'PDF documents'
Click the 'Download PDFs' button
Changing this setting will download PDFs directly to your downloads folder without opening a separate PDF window in Chrome. To make sure your downloads folder is the default folder click 'Advanced' on the left side menu then click 'Downloads'. You can change your download location from here or turn on the option to have Chrome ask where to save with each download request.
Also, downloading the reports with another browser will work too. I did not have any issues downloading reports with Firefox.
I have been having the same issue with this today, and have found a work around. Instead of downloading it in the new tab that opens, click the print button instead. From the print menu, change the printer to "Save as PDF", and it should be able to save as normal. Not sure why we had this issue but this seemed to allow us to download it as a PDF.
I do not have any problem when I export multiple pages dashboard and print as pdf. I suggest you may want to check your pdf print driver within the browser itself.
I have my resume linked in my home page.
But I found when I host the pdf file on two different storage server, the default behavior when click on the link differs: one directly download the pdf file bug the other preview in a new tab.
the two links are as below:
http://data-10045577.file.myqcloud.com/doc/Zhao.Kai_ShanghaiUniv.pdf
http://7xocv2.dl1.z0.glb.clouddn.com/doc/Zhao.Kai_ShanghaiUniv.pdf
I have tested on firefox chrome IE that this is not a browser issue.
For some price issue I have to switch to the storage server of which the default behavior is downloading pdf file.
what settings should I have so that click the pdf link then preview instead of downlod?
Additionally, the storage server provide a configure option that can set the "http header", I know little about the web, so can setting a header work, if so, how to ?
I googled it and it seems the content-disposition argument in http header account for this. But I add content-disposition='inline', doesn't help.
if not the browser's issue, then the download one is added programmatically with headers, and the preview one is just putting your file in that folder on the server
I have set up a webdav folder that I can access thorugh chrome and edit files and save them back to the server, for example, I can open a word doc, edit it and save it back.
When I come to open a pdf, it wont save back to the server and downloads a copy of the pdf instead of the original.
Is there a way of enabling this to edit a pdf?
My end goal is to be able to open a pdf, add comments/highlights and save it back to the server, through my browser.
Thank you
Edit:
I have set this up through Apache 2.4, no plug ins through chrome, I have mapped a network drive to the server folder where I can open and edit files. Except PDFs, I would like to add comments to a off but when I open one the option is greyed out and when I try and save it after opening it tries to save to my desktop.
I'm not sure i've got your use case right, but if i've understood you correctly you have a link in a web page to a PDF which you're viewing in chrome. You click on that link and the PDF downloads to a temp file from which it is opened. If you edit and save those changes are simply saved to the temp file on your local PC. Is that correct?
If so, then this is simply normal behaviour for links in web pages. There is absolutely nothing in the HTML standard which suggests links should be opened by an editor with knowledge of the source location.
What you really want is for the link to launch an editor program which retrieves the remote document in edit mode (probably locking the remote resource) and then have edits saved back to the server. For this to happen there generally needs to be some special interaction in the browser. In Internet Explorer this is provided by the sharepoint dll and special script code. I think there's a plugin for Chrome which does the same thing, although differently.
I havent used the Chrome plugin, but i think this might help - https://code.google.com/p/npapi-msdocs/
I wrote an application using the HTML5 Cache Manifest and I'm having a problem using it in IE 10.
I used Fiddler to witness the manifest file being downloaded and all resources fetched on the initial load of the application. If I disable my network adapter to force the machine offline, the application continues to work as expected as long as I don't close the browser window.
However, when I close the browser window, then attempt to re-open the page from a favorite, IE 10 tells me "You're not connected to a network". Obviously I know that, I'm trying to use the app offline. These exact steps work in Chrome.
Is this behavior by design? Is there a workaround? I can't test with IE 11 right now...is this different in IE 11?
Hearing of some issues of the appcache clearing if your company utilizes gpo settings and has "empty temporary internet files folder when browser is closed" enabled.
Did you find the answer to this? I have the same problem. I did get a bit further though. I found that if you go to the IE10 File menu option and tick Work Offline then try and access your cached app it loads the page but I still have an issue as it does not appear to be using the javascript file that should also be cached. All works ok on Google Chrome but our clients are restricted to IE so Chrome is not an option.
I have an ASP.NET site which should transport completely over HTTPS. However, in Google Chrome I get a warning that the page includes resources which are not secure. How can I find out which those resources are and why they wouldn't be going over HTTPS?
I've just had this problem in Chrome also. I checked in the Network tab but all resources were loaded over https.
Solution: close Chrome and re-open.
Chrome must cache its secure-content detection so that even when you fix the problems the insecure content message won't disappear.
Usually this occurs because you are loading Images, javascript include files or external CSS files without using https. You can use a program such as FireBug: http://getfirebug.com/
FireBug will tell you how your elements are loading and which aren't going through the ssl layer. If you don't have firefox, then I am pretty sure Chrome also has something similar to FireBug built in.
Here's how to use firebug:
Open firebug
Click on the Console Tab
Reload the page
Any https errors will show in the console and tell you which resource is not working.
Hope this helps
I have nothing to do with the people providing this online script, but it's easy and can be bookmarked in any browser.. works well and quickly to solve the problem.. http://www.whynopadlock.com
In Google Chrome: You can view the offending resource in the Console tab of the Inspect Element window.
It will be listed as:
The page at https://example.com/page displayed insecure content from http://example.com/resource
Of course you might have to reload the page with the Inspect Element window already open.
One of the easiest ways to do it is to right-click the page in Firefox and select View Page Info. Then go to the Media tab and find anything that is loading from http instead of https.
We've scratched our own itch and wrote a tool that crawls your web-site and tells you what pages have non-SSL resources on them. You just need to enter the root URL of your web site – no need to check every page manually.
http://www.jitbit.com/sslcheck/
I noticed that when I had this problem that a toolbar(uTorrent) was causing the error. I removed the toolbar and the error went away. Not sure why a toolbar would cause an error on my site, but no more problems here with the SSL certificate.
To add to this I right-clicked on the column headings in the Network tab view and selected Protocol.
If you then click on the Protocol heading, the contents of the report will be grouped by HTTPS, etc
In Chrome, you can find out which resources were loaded via http versus https by doing the following:
1) In Wrench menu, choose Tools > Developer tools
2) Click on "Resources" toolbar icon
3) Expand the Frames folder to see the different pages. Expand the page whose resources you want to see. The individual Resources for the page are then listed, broken down by Images, Scripts, and Stylesheets
4) To see the URL that was used to load that resource, just hover the mouse over the resource name and the URL will appear, either with http or https. You can also click on an image name to see the image on the right side, along with its URL
Chrome has their own developer tool.
you can right click a page, inspect it.. and then click the "network" tab and reload the page. you'll see the workflow.
I dont know if any one will be checking this answer
Or you might have found the solution already, but anyway, my answer might help other people suffering from similar issue
http://www.whynopadlock.com/
This is the link that I used to check the insecure content /file which was being loaded to my page.
Hope it helps. :)
I just discovered same behaviour in chrome (firefox showed a green lock), even though all resources were loaded via https.
The reason in my case was that the server supported broken (google poodle) SSLv3.
Setting ssl_protocols to exclude SSLv2 in nginx.conf like so
ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2; # Dropping SSLv3, ref: POODLE
fixed the problem for me.
I consider it unfortunate that chrome doesn't make this reason more transparent. "this page loads some resources insecurely" is very misleading if not wrong.
If you want to crawl your own site from your own desktop for a list of all reasources loaded (not loaded by javascript though, which is worth bearing in mind), if using windows you can use Xenu's link sleuth. Export the TSV file and then right click and open with excel, then sort by URL, you can then find those pesky http resources for all pages on the site!