We had this, and since we are using razor with html, the pages can't adapt automatically. For me, the simplest fix was to change the content-type in the _ViewStart.cshtml
:
Response.ContentType = "text/html";
The "figure out the content-type yourself" insanity only happens when nothing is set explicitly. So... set it.
Your actual views can still override this:
@{
Layout = null;
Response.ContentType = "application/atom+xml";
}
For info, to test for this issue on your local dev server (with a clean cache to avoid false results by previous cached data), do something like wget or Fiddler:
wget yourpage --header="Accept: text/vnd.wap.wml" --server-response --header="Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate"
and look for:
Content-Type: text/vnd.wap.wml; charset=utf-8
in the result; if you see that, IIS/ASP.NET has decided to pretend your reply satisfies the request's "Accept" header... even if it doesn't. Worse: you might now be able to get that "text/vnd.wap.wml" from a wget without specifying the Accept header (or specifying something like "text/html"); if you see this you have a problem (or: your users do) - you have a cached response for WAP that is being fed to non-WAP clients.
With the above tweak, the first wget will return "text/html" - since that is what our content is. Sorry, down-level browsers; you should have included "text/html" as an option - and if you can't handle "text/html"... sucks to be you.