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I was trying to run a profiler on some handler code up on appspot and was looking for a way to show the pstats output without writing directly to the response body (which is problematic for handlers responding with structured data such as JSON).

I decided to try writing the output to the response header, and added some js to my html-rendering handlers that could parse the header and console.log() it (turned out to be pretty simple and convenient to work with). For the non-html rendering handlers, I was thinking I might try and build a chrome extension to do something similar, but of course, whenever I'm making an ajax call to such a handler, the calling page (with the js to parse the header) can step in and handle the display.

All this looked good as I was testing on dev_appserver, but then I deployed to appspot and found that my custom header never showed up. I have similar pieces of code in this project that track the elapsed execution time of certain operations, and the custom headers I write that stuff to shows up fine.

I'm assuming there's a limit in place on appspot python runtime process that omits the header if it's greater than a certain length, but I don't see the size published anywhere on the developer site.

If there is in fact a limit, does anyone know what it is?

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  • Perhaps this is a silly question but I'll ask anyway. Is the header being cached? Mar 7, 2013 at 19:42
  • @bernie the custom headers I have showing execution times vary from request to request, so I don't believe cache is an issue here. Mar 7, 2013 at 22:42
  • I see. Thanks for clarifying, and apologies for the off-base question. Mar 7, 2013 at 22:44
  • What is the name of the header? Mar 8, 2013 at 5:24
  • First, there are some headers you're not allowed to set: developers.google.com/appengine/docs/python/runtime#Responses Second, at least for inbound headers, there is a limit of currently 16kb. That limit might also apply to the headers you send, but i haven't tested. Mar 8, 2013 at 13:29

1 Answer 1

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I cannot find any documentation about this, but the limit seems to be 497 bytes for the entire header line (including the key, the colon, the whitespace after the colon, but excluding the '\r\n' at the end of the line).

Here's a Go test handler:

func Test(c appengine.Context, w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
    l, err := strconv.ParseInt(r.URL.Query().Get("len"), 10, 64)
    if err != nil {
        http.Error(w, "", http.StatusBadRequest)
        return
    }
    value := ""
    for l != 0 {
        value += "X"
        l--
    }
    w.Header().Set("Set-Cookie", value)
    w.Header().Set("Test-Header", value)
    w.Header().Set("Very-Very-Long-Test-Header", value)
    w.Header().Set(value, "Test-Value")
    w.WriteHeader(http.StatusNoContent)
}

Setting the len query parameter to 469 is the largest value that does not remove the Very-Very-Long-Test-Header header. 484 is the largest that will keep the Test-Header header, and 485 is the largest that will keep the Xxxxx… header.

They all add up to 497 per line, or if you will, 495 excluding the ": ".

NOTE that this limit does not apply to incoming (request) headers.

UPDATE: The Set-Cookie header has a different limit: 4108 bytes instead of 497.

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  • This was incredibly helpful Atilla. We were really baffled as to why our headers disappeared in production. Now we're just using the Set-Cookie header in lieu of our old x-jwt header for authentication. Sep 8, 2014 at 23:05

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