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793ecc8e60
re: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/issues/1876 and: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf-c/pull/1835 and: https://github.com/Unidata/netcdf4-python/issues/1041 The change in PR 1835 was correct with respect to using %20 instead of '+' for encoding blanks. However, it was a mistake to assume everything was unencoded and then to do encoding ourselves. The problem is that different servers do different things, with Columbia being an outlier. So, I have added a set of client controls that can at least give the caller some control over this. The caller can append the following fragment to his URL to control what gets encoded before sending it to the server. The syntax is as follows: ```` https://<host>/<path>/<query>#encode=path|query|all|none ```` The possible values: * path -- URL encode (i.e. %xx encode) as needed in the path part of the URL. * query -- URL encode as needed in the query part of the URL. * all -- equivalent to ````#encode=path,query````. * none -- do not url encode any part of the URL sent to the server; not strictly necessary, so mostly for completeness. Note that if "encode=" is used, then before it is processed, all encoding is turned of so that ````#encode=path```` will only encode the path and not the query. The default is ````#encode=query````, so the path is left untouched, but the query is always encoded. Internally, this required changes to pass the encode flags down into the OC2 library. Misc. Unrelated Changes: * Shut up those irritating warning from putget.m4
14 lines
302 B
C
14 lines
302 B
C
/* Copyright 2018, UCAR/Unidata and OPeNDAP, Inc.
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See the COPYRIGHT file for more information. */
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#ifndef READ_H
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#define READ_H
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extern int readDDS(OCstate*, OCtree*, OCflags);
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extern int readDAS(OCstate*, OCtree*, OCflags);
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extern int readDATADDS(OCstate*, OCtree*, OCflags);
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#endif /*READ_H*/
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