OK, I understand what the messages means, but I'm really not sure what's causing it. I'm using Safari and the Web Inspector on Mac OS X, by the way.
I've got the following in my document head:
<script src="http://local.url/a/js/jquery.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="http://local.url/a/js/jquery.inplace.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
jquery.js
is handled fine, but the other file causes the warning. It also seems that the javascript in this file never gets executed.
The file is being served via mod_deflate
, so it is gzip encoded, but so is the other file.
Has anybody got any ideas what's causing this, or how to resolve it?
Cheers all, Gaz.
An image with an empty "src" attribute generates this error under Windows-Chrome:
<img src="">
... whereas ...
<img>
... does not.
I arrived here because my ajax resultset was returning "src" data which was empty yet the img was still being inserted into the page.
Solved!
I have had this error for several days. It was driving me crazy because it didnt allow me to use firefox firebug's script debugger. Finally, my error was solved when I removed an empty url in a "background-image: url()" style property.
This has been so much a pain than I really hope somebody can use this advice.
I don't think it is a bug, Try adding the MIME type to your .htaccess file For instance, put or add the following content to your .htaccess file (which should be in the same place of your .js or above folders)
#JavaScript
AddType application/x-javascript .js
This solved my tree "Resource interpreted as other but transfered ... " warnings. Everytime you have that kind of warning it means you don't have enough info in your .htaccess file.
BTW1: Since you are modifying .htaccess file, make sure you restart your server.
BTW2: I also could clear same warnings for GIF files in Safari 4 with this:
#GIF
AddType image/gif .gif
BTW3: For other file types: see w3schools list or htaccess-guide
seems to be a bug in safari / webkit. maybe this one, or any of these. try upgrading your safari. if there is no more recent stable version, try the 4 beta.
This warning appears because no default script type is specified. Try adding the following directive to your HTML file:
<meta http-equiv="content-script-type" content="text/javascript">
You can read more about default scripting specifications here: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/interact/scripts.html#h-18.2.2.1
You need to use a tool to view the HTTP headers sent with the file, something like LiveHTTPHeaders or HTTPFox are what I use. If the files are sent from the webserver without a MIME type, or with a default MIME type like text/plain, that might be what this error is about.
It is because of the period in the file name. It is stupid, but anytime there is a period in the js file name you will get this error, and I have come across situations where it will actually prevent the js file from loading.
It seems like a bug in Safari's cache handling policies.
Workaround in apache:
Header unset ETag
Header unset Last-Modified
I just got this and solved it locally on my mac. For some reason the javascript file in question had bad permissions. I noticed when I looked at it in firebug I was getting a 403. I hope that helps anyone.
I had the same issue with a css file instead of javascript. (using the xitami webserver)
what fixed for me was adding under the MIME section of xitami.cfg:
css=text/css
I found out that the naming of my css files was in conflict with the proxy filters
www.dating.com (which is not my site) was blocked and my css and js files were called dating.css and dating.js. The filter was blocking this. Maybe that is the case with some of you, working on corporates systems.
Another common cause of this error on the Mac is Apple's quarantine flag.
ls
the directory containing the resource(s) in question. If you see the extended attribute indicator, i.e., the little @
symbol at the end of the permissions block (e.g. -rw-r--r--@
) then the file could be quarantined.
Try ls -la@e
and look for com.apple.quarantine
The following command will remove the quarantine:
xattr -d com.apple.quarantine /path/to/file
There seem to be many things that cause this. For me it was a lowercase rewrite rule in IIS. Changed the problem files (js and png) to lowercase and problem went away.
On APACHE
Append these MIME types to .htaccess in your root. I recommend the second line, as it may help prevent any future potential MIME interpretation warnings with CSS files.
AddType application/x-javascript .js
AddType text/css .css
Restart Your Apache...
On NGINX
Add to your nginx.conf or your mime.types import file (Recommended Method). Add any or all as needed/relevant.
types {
text/html html htm shtml;
text/css css;
text/xml xml;
image/gif gif;
image/jpeg jpeg jpg;
application/x-javascript js;
application/rss+xml rss;
text/plain txt;
image/png png;
image/tiff tif tiff;
image/svg+xml svg svgz;
image/webp webp;
application/postscript ps eps ai;
application/pdf pdf;
application/rtf rtf;
application/vnd.ms-excel xls;
application/vnd.ms-powerpoint ppt;
application/msword doc;
application/x-shockwave-flash swf;
application/xhtml+xml xhtml;
application/zip zip;
}
Success story sharing
url()
- ie no src address - in your CSS or javascript is effectively the same thing and generates the same error. especially:background-image: url()