After login, I was redirected to https://stackoverflow.com/?t=repeatingalarm
... What does that mean?
Specifically, t=repeatingalarm
sounds alarming ... This is the first time I am seeing this.
After login, I was redirected to https://stackoverflow.com/?t=repeatingalarm
... What does that mean?
Specifically, t=repeatingalarm
sounds alarming ... This is the first time I am seeing this.
Well, I can confirm what you report. From our web logs, it looks like you landed (GET
) on /
(no query-string), then the next GET
is on /users/login?ssrc=head&returnurl=http%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2f%3ft%3drepeatingalarm
(which is url-encoded for https://stackoverflow.com/?t=repeatingalarm
). So the interesting question to me is... where did that returnurl
come from?. I've checked our core codebase, and repeatingalarm
isn't there. I will do some more digging into our auxiliary tools, but I wonder if it is possible whether this came from a browser plugin of some kind.
It isn't something that has some special meaning to us or our code, as far as I know (yet).
By contrast - if I do this in an incognito Chrome window, the login link is returnurl=https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2f
Update:
It looks like fallout from the tag repeatingalarm and the [OutputCache]
not differentiating on the t
in the query-string; in future, the homepage will include "t"
in the VaryByParam
.
t
wasn't in the list. So anonymous user "A" visits /?t=foo
(somehow) - then another anonymous user "B" can be given their cached page with that in the return URL. Not sure where we use this t
, but it happens a lot in the logs for multiple tags.
– Marc Gravell♦
Aug 12 '16 at 16:37