Fragments are reserved for client-side processing, see
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110.html#section-7.1
Also, some servers don't like to receive HTTP requests with fragments.
$ fetch 'https://dropbox.com/a/b' fetch: https://dropbox.com/a/b: Not Found $ fetch 'https://dropbox.com/a/b#' fetch: https://dropbox.com/a/b#: Bad Request
This is a real-world scenario, where some download link from dropbox
(eventually) redirects to an URL with a fragment:
$ fetch -v 'https://www.dropbox.com/sh/<some>/<thing>?dl=1' 2>&1 | grep requesting requesting https://www.dropbox.com/sh/<some>/<thing>?dl=1 requesting https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/<foo>/<bar>?rlkey=<baz>&dl=1 requesting https://<boo>.dl.dropboxusercontent.com/zip_download_get/<some-long-strig>#
See how the last redirect ends with a #.
Currently, libfetch includes the ending fragment and makes it impossible
to download the file.