vote up 4 vote down star
1

I have a site, e.g. example.com, where users can set their own subdomains (one user - one subdomain) and upload their own scripts, e.g. http://somedomain.example.com/xyzzy.php would map to /www/somedomain/xyzzy.php

Now, on some of those domains, Internet Explorer 7 won't/can't accept cookies. Checked with Fiddler: the server sends Set-Cookie response correctly, yet the cookie never shows up in IE - for JS or Developer Tools. On request, IE7 doesn't send the Cookie header either.

The cookies are set for the user's domain (e.g. somedomain.example.com), path is /, tried different expiration options (past, future, current, "0"), are not HttpOnly, are not secure.

FF, Opera, Safari and Chrome all work correctly.

Why does IE ignore the cookies?

flag

2 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

Does one of the subdomains use an underscore ? IE has problems accepting cookies from subdomain's that dont follow the URI RFC. (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2396.txt)

link|flag
vote up 7 vote down

According to RFC1035 (Domain names - implementation and specification):

[domain names] must start with a letter, end with a letter or digit, and have as interior characters only letters, digits, and hyphen.

Turns out some of the domains had an underscore ( "_" ) in them: some_domain.example.com. Although this is a violation of the RFC, all other browsers work normally.

MSIE 7, on a domain with an underscore, silently drops all cookies for that host and refuses to accept new ones.

The only solution is to use RFC-compliant domains (I've replaced all the "_"s with "-"s and set up a RewriteRule so that traffic is redirected to the compliant domains).

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.