On my box, that also happens with a plain cgi script that fails to compile: firefox downloads it. I'm digging into that...
(...)
Hm. The downloaded "script" just contains the the ErrorDocument (500 Internal Server Error). It is not displayed because it's Content-type reads application/x-perl. I guess it's a bug (or a config issue?) in apache - it serves an error page with the wrong header. It should set Content-type: text/html when serving an error document.
What is the content in your case?
<update>
Well, just in case... seems to be a mod_mime issue. It seems that even for error documents served instead of failed cgi output, the mime type is set according to the cgi file extension (brr!).
This might help:
- Sniff the traffic with e.g. wireshark (formerly ethereal) and look what apache sends as Content-type in the response header.
- Search for the directive TypesConfig in your apache configuration files.
- In the file that is configured under this term, search for the mime type apache sent in the header
- comment out that line
- change the DefaultType in your apache config to text/html (or text/plain)
</update>
--shmem
_($_=" "x(1<<5)."?\n".q·/)Oo. G°\ /
/\_¯/(q /
---------------------------- \__(m.====·.(_("always off the crowd"))."·
");sub _{s./.($e="'Itrs `mnsgdq Gdbj O`qkdq")=~y/"-y/#-z/;$e.e && print}
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