The HTTP specification doesn't mandate the usuage of the Referer header. Some browsers may opt not to send the header. Proxies may strip out the header (what do you mean "the site cannot be accessed by proxy"? You can't always know whether there's a proxy involved). And in some cases, browsers should not send a Referer header, for instance when following a bookmark, or when the user types in a URL.

See also the HTTP specification. Denying or allowing access based on a Referer header is a bad thing to do.

Abigail


In reply to Re: Referer check within domain problem by Abigail-II
in thread Referer check within domain problem by jerrygarciuh

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