HTTP Header Checker Tool By Ciphertronix

Use our fast and accurate HTTP Header Checker to quickly analyze HTTP response headers for any website or server. Verify server configurations, including security headers, compression settings like Gzip or Brotli, and caching mechanisms, to ensure optimal performance and security.
Need help troubleshooting your server? Our tool identifies issues and provides a detailed breakdown of all HTTP headers returned by the server.
Enter your website address below to analyze the HTTP response headers and check for server configurations.
Enter Website Address: (e.g: ciphertronix.com)


FAQs:

How Does the Ciphertronix HTTP Header Checker Work?

How Does the Ciphertronix HTTP Header Checker Work?
Our tool uses a curl-based approach to fetch and analyze HTTP response headers for the provided domain or IP address. This allows you to quickly:

  • Verify server software and security configurations.
  • Identify vulnerabilities such as missing security headers.
  • Troubleshoot issues with compression, caching, or cookie settings.

Common Uses Of HTTP Headers

HTTP headers provide valuable information about the server and its responses. This can include:

  • Server Information: Identify server software and its version.
  • Content Delivery: Understand compression types like Brotli and Gzip.
  • Caching Rules: Learn about cache-control and expiration headers.
  • Security Features: Check for X-Frame-Options, HSTS, and X-XSS-Protection headers.

Why Use Ciphertronix HTTP Header Checker Only?

Quick Results: Analyze headers in seconds.
Accurate Insights: Identify vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, and performance bottlenecks.
Comprehensive Analysis: Review all headers returned by the server.
Optimize your website’s performance and security with the Ciphertronix HTTP Header Checker Tool nowf!

Ciphertronix has identified top 100 commonly used HTTP headers:

1. HTTP Header: Description
Content-Type: Tells the browser what type of content is being sent (e.g., text, images).
2. Date: Shows the date and time of the server’s response.
3. Server: Provides information about the server software.
4. Set-Cookie: Sends cookies from the server to the browser.
5. Connection: Manages how the connection between server and browser works.
6. Content-Encoding: Specifies how the data is compressed (e.g., Gzip, Brotli).
7. Cache-Control: Controls how the browser or cache stores the response.
8. Transfer-Encoding: Describes how the data is sent (e.g., chunked).
9. Expires: Indicates when the content should be considered outdated.
10. Content-Length: The size of the response content in bytes.
11. X-Powered-By: Shows the technology powering the server (e.g., PHP, ASP.NET).
12. Strict-Transport-Security: Forces browsers to only connect using HTTPS.
13. X-Frame-Options: Prevents the webpage from being loaded in an iframe.
14. X-XSS-Protection: Protects against cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks.
15. Content-Security-Policy CSP: Controls what resources the browser can load.
16. ETag: A unique tag to identify if content has changed for caching.
17. X-Content-Type-Options: Prevents browsers from guessing file types.
18. X-Robots-Tag: Controls how search engines crawl and index the page.
19. Vary: Tells the browser when to reuse a cached response.
20. Age: Shows how long the response has been stored in a cache.