If you have resources that do not have a file extension that Cloudflare caches we treat that resource as dynamic HTML. We don't cache it by default, and Cloudflare's system will send that resource gzipped and with chunked encoding.  


Note -- it isn't possible to have chunked encoding and content-length at the same time so this would explain why content-length would not be sent with these dynamic resource passing through Cloudflare.


Note -- Another reason you would not see a content-length header would be if you are sending HTTP 1.1 from your web server. For version 1.1 of the HTTP protocol, the chunked transfer mechanism is considered to be always acceptable, even if not listed in the TE request header field, and when used with other transfer mechanisms, should always be applied last to the transferred data and never more than one time. (Source: wikipedia "Chunked Encoding").  So in this case you will need to make sure you are sending HTTP 1.0 as the protocol from your web server if you specifically need the content-length header.


The solution/workaround - If you add a file extension to the resource so that it matches our list of supported file extensions so http://example.com/test/dynamicallyimage.php?size=3 becomes http://example.com/dynamicallyimage.jpg  Cloudflare's system will then send it with the content-length header as long as you're also sending HTTP 1.0 as the protocol.


vAlternatively you could use a PageRule and use the "custom caching" option to select "cache everything" which will force our system to cache http://example.com/test/dynamicallyimage.php?size=3 even though it doesn't have one of our usual file extensions -- in this case the content-length will also be preserved.