The current implementation causes duplicate `Content-Type` headers when users
override headers in the UI or use OAuth2 authentication with the agent.
Web servers receive multiple `Content-Type` headers which causes
undefined behavior and 400 errors for backends that don't accept duplicate headers.
This also fixes inconsistent behavior when overriding the `Content-Type` header
with custom values (e.g., `application/json;v=2`).
While HTTP/1.1 headers are case-insensitive per RFC 7230, inconsistent handling
across server implementations can treat differently-cased variations (e.g.,
"Content-Type" vs "content-type") as distinct headers. HTTP/2 (RFC 7540) mandates
converting all header field names to lowercase, which would prevent this issue.
This patch removes the automatic content-type header insertion, allowing user-defined
headers to take precedence without duplication. The is a temporary
workaround until we implement a HTTP/2-compliant solution with proper normalization.
This was implemented initially to support moving lower level handling
towards the kernel, although since the larger refactor has been slightly
deferred in favor of stability, this change is suitable for current
state.
This will be revisited when we implement HTTP/2 compliant header handling in the
kernel layer as part of our upcoming kernel efforts.
Use the following request to test this out on Desktop app and Agent and
override `Content-Type` header to `application/json;=v2`:
```
curl --request POST \
--url 'https://echo.qubit.codes/?qp=1' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json;v=2' \
--data '{ "test-key": "test-value" }'
```
This change sorts environment variables alphabetically before they're
processed with import-meta-env that injects them into the index.html.
This makes sure consistent hashes across pod restarts when there aren't
any functional changes made to the `.env` file.
The issue was affecting desktop app reconnections after k8s pod restarts.
The cause was non-deterministic env var ordering (a sideeffect of `Map`)
during the import-meta-env injection process. Even when the env vars
themselves didn't change, their order in the injected JSON could change,
ultimately resulting in different file hashes.
This fix ensures that regardless of the order in which env vars are
provided by the runtime, they will be sorted alphabetically before being
written to the build.env file.
This is observed particularly in the cloud offering. The proposed changes ensure the relevant login state is confirmed before the network call, maintaining backwards compatibility with SH.