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Today I've came across an interesting Google Chrome behaviour.

Let's say that I have a web App that lets us see the information about the user:

http://app.com/user/Rok/info

Now let's assume we have an user named ... When we visit his information page,

http://app.com/user/../info

you can see in the Developer Tools that the browser makes the request to app.com/info.

Why is the browser doing that? It should pass this decision to the server.

Novadays, URIs are no longer directly bound to the filesystem. I was wondering whether there is a spec that targets this specific.

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    No, this is not opinion based, I'm asking whether there is a Spec targeting this. Read the question, please.
    – Rok Kralj
    Dec 9, 2013 at 17:43
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    You say Chrome's behavior is "clearly wrong" and that in your opinion it's "unacceptable". This belongs in a bug report to Google or the Chromium project, not a Stack Overflow question.
    – Wooble
    Dec 9, 2013 at 18:30
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    For better or worse, URLs have always been treated as a hierarchical path. Removing dot-segments is important for resolving relative paths and normalizing URLs.
    – mcrumley
    Dec 10, 2013 at 22:44
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    Yes, but is there a reason for browser to do that? Server - maybe - but browser?
    – Rok Kralj
    Dec 11, 2013 at 14:05
  • So what did you do in the end? And I don't see how this type of "resolving" and "normalizing" might be useful...(?!). I have the same problem that I can't link to a stylesheet file using dotdots since the browser(Chrome) seems to be removing it! That's weird because exactly the same relative paths work for importing font files and images!
    – aderchox
    Jul 26, 2021 at 15:25

1 Answer 1

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I was just trying to figure this out for myself, and it looks like it's specifically addressed in RFC 3986, § 5.2.4:

The pseudocode also refers to a remove_dot_segments routine for interpreting and removing the special . and .. complete path segments from a referenced path. This is done after the path is extracted from a reference, whether or not the path was relative, in order to remove any invalid or extraneous dot-segments prior to forming the target URI.

[…]

Note that dot-segments are intended for use in URI references to express an identifier relative to the hierarchy of names in the base URI. The remove_dot_segments algorithm respects that hierarchy by removing extra dot-segments rather than treat them as an error or leaving them to be misinterpreted by dereference implementations.

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