This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

সহায়তা খুঁজুন

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

আরও জানুন

Why did Firefox respond with REFUSED_STREAM for an HTTP2 server push?

  • 3 উত্তরসমূহ
  • 1 এই সমস্যাটি আছে
  • 36 দেখুন
  • শেষ জবাব দ্বারা cor-el

more options

I have a site that pushes a few resources back with the initial page load via HTTP2 server push. This site worked well in Firefox 72, and still works well with Chrome 80. It does not work in Firefox 74. Charles proxy reports that Firefox is resetting the push stream via REFUSED_STREAM (0x7).

Before I take the time to setup a publicly accessible repro: 1. Has anyone else seen this? 2. Are there other debugging tools folks recommend? I'd like to rule out some of the many legitimate reasons (https://jakearchibald.com/2017/h2-push-tougher-than-i-thought/) the stream could have been refused before reporting this as a bug.

I have a site that pushes a few resources back with the initial page load via HTTP2 server push. This site worked well in Firefox 72, and still works well with Chrome 80. It does not work in Firefox 74. Charles proxy reports that Firefox is resetting the push stream via REFUSED_STREAM (0x7). Before I take the time to setup a publicly accessible repro: 1. Has anyone else seen this? 2. Are there other debugging tools folks recommend? I'd like to rule out some of the many legitimate reasons (https://jakearchibald.com/2017/h2-push-tougher-than-i-thought/) the stream could have been refused before reporting this as a bug.

All Replies (3)

more options

Hi adam43, I'm not familiar with this. Does anything in the developer-oriented release notes relate to this change?

If you didn't test in Firefox 73, you might check those release notes as well.

more options

Hi adam43

This is a user oriented support forum. For developer support please post a question on stackoverflow and tag it firefox:

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/firefox

Cheers!

...Roland

more options

You can remove all data stored in Firefox for a specific domain via "Forget About This Site" in the right-click context menu of an history entry ("History -> Show All History" or "View -> Sidebar -> History").

Using "Forget About This Site" will remove all data stored in Firefox for this domain like history and cookies and passwords and exceptions and cache, so be cautious. If you have a password or other data for that domain that you do not want to lose then make sure to backup this data or make a note.

You can't recover from this 'forget' unless you have a backup of involved files.

If you revisit a 'forgotten' website then data for that website will be saved once again.