Join the Mozilla’s Test Days event from Dec 2–8 to test the new Firefox address bar on Firefox Beta 134 and get a chance to win Mozilla swag vouchers! 🎁

Kërkoni te Asistenca

Shmangni karremëzime gjoja asistence. S’do t’ju kërkojmë kurrë të bëni një thirrje apo të dërgoni tekst te një numër telefoni, apo të na jepni të dhëna personale. Ju lutemi, raportoni veprimtari të dyshimtë duke përdorur mundësinë “Raportoni Abuzim”.

Mësoni Më Tepër

Our clients are having trouble downloading a text (.txt) file from our site on version 33.0 (using a filestream);

more options

Our clients are having trouble downloading a text (.txt) file from our site on version 33.0 (using a filestream). This worked fine in previous versions.

The error message they get reads: {user's download path and filename} could not be saved, because the source file could not be read.

Thanks, Mike

Our clients are having trouble downloading a text (.txt) file from our site on version 33.0 (using a filestream). This worked fine in previous versions. The error message they get reads: {user's download path and filename} could not be saved, because the source file could not be read. Thanks, Mike

Zgjidhje e zgjedhur

This is an old error message relating to corrupted downloads (http://kb.mozillazine.org/Source_file_could_not_be_read), but has become more prevalent in Firefox 33.

To make a long story short... before, if the server sent a response that was smaller than the stated size, the discrepancy was ignored and the download was treated as okay. Starting in Firefox 33, a file smaller than the stated size is treated as corrupted.

This comment in the bug tracking system has more information: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1083090#c8

Lexojeni këtë përgjigje brenda kontekstit 👍 1

Krejt Përgjigjet (2)

more options

Zgjidhja e Zgjedhur

This is an old error message relating to corrupted downloads (http://kb.mozillazine.org/Source_file_could_not_be_read), but has become more prevalent in Firefox 33.

To make a long story short... before, if the server sent a response that was smaller than the stated size, the discrepancy was ignored and the download was treated as okay. Starting in Firefox 33, a file smaller than the stated size is treated as corrupted.

This comment in the bug tracking system has more information: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1083090#c8

more options

If you have a few minutes for a test... what happens if you stop Firefox from telling the web server that you will accept compressed files? Here's how:

(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter. Click the button promising to be careful.

(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste enco and pause while the list is filtered

(3) Double-click the network.http.accept-encoding preference and

(A) If it has the default value (line is not bolded), delete all of the text and click OK.

(B) If it has a customized value, copy the current value to a safe place for potential later use, then delete all of the text and click OK.

When you visit the site again, Firefox should omit the usual headers saying that it accepts gzip/deflate encoded responses. Any difference?