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342 | content: "INTERNET DRAFT"; |
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344 | @top-right { |
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345 | content: "November 2008"; |
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346 | } |
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347 | @top-center { |
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348 | content: "HTTP/1.1, Part 3"; |
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349 | } |
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350 | @bottom-left { |
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351 | content: "Fielding, et al."; |
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372 | </style><link rel="Contents" href="#rfc.toc"> |
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373 | <link rel="Author" href="#rfc.authors"> |
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374 | <link rel="Copyright" href="#rfc.copyright"> |
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375 | <link rel="Index" href="#rfc.index"> |
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376 | <link rel="Chapter" title="1 Introduction" href="#rfc.section.1"> |
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377 | <link rel="Chapter" title="2 Notational Conventions and Generic Grammar" href="#rfc.section.2"> |
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378 | <link rel="Chapter" title="3 Protocol Parameters" href="#rfc.section.3"> |
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379 | <link rel="Chapter" title="4 Entity" href="#rfc.section.4"> |
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380 | <link rel="Chapter" title="5 Content Negotiation" href="#rfc.section.5"> |
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381 | <link rel="Chapter" title="6 Header Field Definitions" href="#rfc.section.6"> |
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382 | <link rel="Chapter" title="7 IANA Considerations" href="#rfc.section.7"> |
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383 | <link rel="Chapter" title="8 Security Considerations" href="#rfc.section.8"> |
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384 | <link rel="Chapter" title="9 Acknowledgments" href="#rfc.section.9"> |
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385 | <link rel="Chapter" href="#rfc.section.10" title="10 References"> |
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386 | <link rel="Appendix" title="A Differences Between HTTP Entities and RFC 2045 Entities" href="#rfc.section.A"> |
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387 | <link rel="Appendix" title="B Additional Features" href="#rfc.section.B"> |
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388 | <link rel="Appendix" title="C Compatibility with Previous Versions" href="#rfc.section.C"> |
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389 | <link rel="Appendix" title="D Change Log (to be removed by RFC Editor before publication)" href="#rfc.section.D"> |
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390 | <meta name="generator" content="http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/rfc2629.xslt, Revision 1.400, 2008-10-10 14:04:14, XSLT vendor: SAXON 8.9 from Saxonica http://www.saxonica.com/"> |
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391 | <link rel="schema.DC" href="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"> |
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392 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Fielding, R."> |
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393 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Gettys, J."> |
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394 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Mogul, J."> |
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395 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Frystyk, H."> |
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396 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Masinter, L."> |
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397 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Leach, P."> |
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398 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Berners-Lee, T."> |
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399 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Lafon, Y."> |
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400 | <meta name="DC.Creator" content="Reschke, J. F."> |
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401 | <meta name="DC.Identifier" content="urn:ietf:id:draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-latest"> |
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402 | <meta name="DC.Date.Issued" scheme="ISO8601" content="2008-11"> |
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403 | <meta name="DC.Relation.Replaces" content="urn:ietf:rfc:2616"> |
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404 | <meta name="DC.Description.Abstract" content="The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. HTTP has been in use by the World Wide Web global information initiative since 1990. This document is Part 3 of the seven-part specification that defines the protocol referred to as "HTTP/1.1" and, taken together, obsoletes RFC 2616. Part 3 defines HTTP message content, metadata, and content negotiation."> |
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405 | </head> |
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406 | <body> |
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407 | <table summary="header information" class="header" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"> |
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408 | <tr> |
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409 | <td class="header left">Network Working Group</td> |
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410 | <td class="header right">R. Fielding, Editor</td> |
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411 | </tr> |
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412 | <tr> |
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413 | <td class="header left">Internet Draft</td> |
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414 | <td class="header right">Day Software</td> |
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415 | </tr> |
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416 | <tr> |
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417 | <td class="header left"> |
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418 | <draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-latest> |
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419 | |
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420 | </td> |
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421 | <td class="header right">J. Gettys</td> |
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422 | </tr> |
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423 | <tr> |
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424 | <td class="header left">Obsoletes: <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">2616</a> (if approved) |
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425 | </td> |
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426 | <td class="header right">One Laptop per Child</td> |
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427 | </tr> |
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428 | <tr> |
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429 | <td class="header left">Intended status: Standards Track</td> |
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430 | <td class="header right">J. Mogul</td> |
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431 | </tr> |
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432 | <tr> |
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433 | <td class="header left">Expires: May 2009</td> |
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434 | <td class="header right">HP</td> |
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435 | </tr> |
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436 | <tr> |
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437 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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438 | <td class="header right">H. Frystyk</td> |
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439 | </tr> |
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440 | <tr> |
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441 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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442 | <td class="header right">Microsoft</td> |
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443 | </tr> |
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444 | <tr> |
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445 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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446 | <td class="header right">L. Masinter</td> |
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447 | </tr> |
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448 | <tr> |
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449 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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450 | <td class="header right">Adobe Systems</td> |
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451 | </tr> |
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452 | <tr> |
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453 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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454 | <td class="header right">P. Leach</td> |
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455 | </tr> |
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456 | <tr> |
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457 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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458 | <td class="header right">Microsoft</td> |
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459 | </tr> |
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460 | <tr> |
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461 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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462 | <td class="header right">T. Berners-Lee</td> |
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463 | </tr> |
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464 | <tr> |
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465 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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466 | <td class="header right">W3C/MIT</td> |
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467 | </tr> |
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468 | <tr> |
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469 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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470 | <td class="header right">Y. Lafon, Editor</td> |
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471 | </tr> |
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472 | <tr> |
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473 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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474 | <td class="header right">W3C</td> |
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475 | </tr> |
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476 | <tr> |
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477 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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478 | <td class="header right">J. F. Reschke, Editor</td> |
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479 | </tr> |
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480 | <tr> |
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481 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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482 | <td class="header right">greenbytes</td> |
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483 | </tr> |
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484 | <tr> |
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485 | <td class="header left"></td> |
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486 | <td class="header right">November 14, 2008</td> |
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487 | </tr> |
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488 | </table> |
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489 | <p class="title">HTTP/1.1, part 3: Message Payload and Content Negotiation<br><span class="filename">draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-latest</span></p> |
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490 | <h1><a id="rfc.status" href="#rfc.status">Status of this Memo</a></h1> |
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491 | <p>By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she |
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492 | is aware have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section |
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493 | 6 of BCP 79. |
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494 | </p> |
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495 | <p>Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note |
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496 | that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. |
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497 | </p> |
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498 | <p>Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other |
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499 | documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as “work |
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500 | in progress”. |
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501 | </p> |
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502 | <p>The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at <<a href="http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt">http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt</a>>. |
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503 | </p> |
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504 | <p>The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at <<a href="http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html">http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html</a>>. |
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505 | </p> |
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506 | <p>This Internet-Draft will expire in May 2009.</p> |
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507 | <h1 id="rfc.abstract"><a href="#rfc.abstract">Abstract</a></h1> |
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508 | <p>The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information |
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509 | systems. HTTP has been in use by the World Wide Web global information initiative since 1990. This document is Part 3 of the |
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510 | seven-part specification that defines the protocol referred to as "HTTP/1.1" and, taken together, obsoletes RFC 2616. Part |
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511 | 3 defines HTTP message content, metadata, and content negotiation. |
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512 | </p> |
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513 | <h1 id="rfc.note.1"><a href="#rfc.note.1">Editorial Note (To be removed by RFC Editor)</a></h1> |
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514 | <p>Discussion of this draft should take place on the HTTPBIS working group mailing list (ietf-http-wg@w3.org). The current issues |
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515 | list is at <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/report/11">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/report/11</a>> and related documents (including fancy diffs) can be found at <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/</a>>. |
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516 | </p> |
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517 | <p>The changes in this draft are summarized in <a href="#changes.since.05" title="Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-05">Appendix D.7</a>. |
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518 | </p> |
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519 | <hr class="noprint"> |
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520 | <h1 class="np" id="rfc.toc"><a href="#rfc.toc">Table of Contents</a></h1> |
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521 | <ul class="toc"> |
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522 | <li class="tocline0">1. <a href="#introduction">Introduction</a><ul class="toc"> |
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523 | <li class="tocline1">1.1 <a href="#intro.requirements">Requirements</a></li> |
---|
524 | </ul> |
---|
525 | </li> |
---|
526 | <li class="tocline0">2. <a href="#notation">Notational Conventions and Generic Grammar</a></li> |
---|
527 | <li class="tocline0">3. <a href="#protocol.parameters">Protocol Parameters</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
528 | <li class="tocline1">3.1 <a href="#character.sets">Character Sets</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
529 | <li class="tocline1">3.1.1 <a href="#missing.charset">Missing Charset</a></li> |
---|
530 | </ul> |
---|
531 | </li> |
---|
532 | <li class="tocline1">3.2 <a href="#content.codings">Content Codings</a></li> |
---|
533 | <li class="tocline1">3.3 <a href="#media.types">Media Types</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
534 | <li class="tocline1">3.3.1 <a href="#canonicalization.and.text.defaults">Canonicalization and Text Defaults</a></li> |
---|
535 | <li class="tocline1">3.3.2 <a href="#multipart.types">Multipart Types</a></li> |
---|
536 | </ul> |
---|
537 | </li> |
---|
538 | <li class="tocline1">3.4 <a href="#quality.values">Quality Values</a></li> |
---|
539 | <li class="tocline1">3.5 <a href="#language.tags">Language Tags</a></li> |
---|
540 | </ul> |
---|
541 | </li> |
---|
542 | <li class="tocline0">4. <a href="#entity">Entity</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
543 | <li class="tocline1">4.1 <a href="#entity.header.fields">Entity Header Fields</a></li> |
---|
544 | <li class="tocline1">4.2 <a href="#entity.body">Entity Body</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
545 | <li class="tocline1">4.2.1 <a href="#type">Type</a></li> |
---|
546 | <li class="tocline1">4.2.2 <a href="#entity.length">Entity Length</a></li> |
---|
547 | </ul> |
---|
548 | </li> |
---|
549 | </ul> |
---|
550 | </li> |
---|
551 | <li class="tocline0">5. <a href="#content.negotiation">Content Negotiation</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
552 | <li class="tocline1">5.1 <a href="#server-driven.negotiation">Server-driven Negotiation</a></li> |
---|
553 | <li class="tocline1">5.2 <a href="#agent-driven.negotiation">Agent-driven Negotiation</a></li> |
---|
554 | <li class="tocline1">5.3 <a href="#transparent.negotiation">Transparent Negotiation</a></li> |
---|
555 | </ul> |
---|
556 | </li> |
---|
557 | <li class="tocline0">6. <a href="#header.fields">Header Field Definitions</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
558 | <li class="tocline1">6.1 <a href="#header.accept">Accept</a></li> |
---|
559 | <li class="tocline1">6.2 <a href="#header.accept-charset">Accept-Charset</a></li> |
---|
560 | <li class="tocline1">6.3 <a href="#header.accept-encoding">Accept-Encoding</a></li> |
---|
561 | <li class="tocline1">6.4 <a href="#header.accept-language">Accept-Language</a></li> |
---|
562 | <li class="tocline1">6.5 <a href="#header.content-encoding">Content-Encoding</a></li> |
---|
563 | <li class="tocline1">6.6 <a href="#header.content-language">Content-Language</a></li> |
---|
564 | <li class="tocline1">6.7 <a href="#header.content-location">Content-Location</a></li> |
---|
565 | <li class="tocline1">6.8 <a href="#header.content-md5">Content-MD5</a></li> |
---|
566 | <li class="tocline1">6.9 <a href="#header.content-type">Content-Type</a></li> |
---|
567 | </ul> |
---|
568 | </li> |
---|
569 | <li class="tocline0">7. <a href="#IANA.considerations">IANA Considerations</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
570 | <li class="tocline1">7.1 <a href="#message.header.registration">Message Header Registration</a></li> |
---|
571 | </ul> |
---|
572 | </li> |
---|
573 | <li class="tocline0">8. <a href="#security.considerations">Security Considerations</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
574 | <li class="tocline1">8.1 <a href="#privacy.issues.connected.to.accept.headers">Privacy Issues Connected to Accept Headers</a></li> |
---|
575 | <li class="tocline1">8.2 <a href="#content-disposition.issues">Content-Disposition Issues</a></li> |
---|
576 | </ul> |
---|
577 | </li> |
---|
578 | <li class="tocline0">9. <a href="#ack">Acknowledgments</a></li> |
---|
579 | <li class="tocline0">10. <a href="#rfc.references">References</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
580 | <li class="tocline1">10.1 <a href="#rfc.references.1">Normative References</a></li> |
---|
581 | <li class="tocline1">10.2 <a href="#rfc.references.2">Informative References</a></li> |
---|
582 | </ul> |
---|
583 | </li> |
---|
584 | <li class="tocline0"><a href="#rfc.authors">Authors' Addresses</a></li> |
---|
585 | <li class="tocline0">A. <a href="#differences.between.http.entities.and.rfc.2045.entities">Differences Between HTTP Entities and RFC 2045 Entities</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
586 | <li class="tocline1">A.1 <a href="#mime-version">MIME-Version</a></li> |
---|
587 | <li class="tocline1">A.2 <a href="#conversion.to.canonical.form">Conversion to Canonical Form</a></li> |
---|
588 | <li class="tocline1">A.3 <a href="#introduction.of.content-encoding">Introduction of Content-Encoding</a></li> |
---|
589 | <li class="tocline1">A.4 <a href="#no.content-transfer-encoding">No Content-Transfer-Encoding</a></li> |
---|
590 | <li class="tocline1">A.5 <a href="#introduction.of.transfer-encoding">Introduction of Transfer-Encoding</a></li> |
---|
591 | <li class="tocline1">A.6 <a href="#mhtml.line.length">MHTML and Line Length Limitations</a></li> |
---|
592 | </ul> |
---|
593 | </li> |
---|
594 | <li class="tocline0">B. <a href="#additional.features">Additional Features</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
595 | <li class="tocline1">B.1 <a href="#content-disposition">Content-Disposition</a></li> |
---|
596 | </ul> |
---|
597 | </li> |
---|
598 | <li class="tocline0">C. <a href="#compatibility">Compatibility with Previous Versions</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
599 | <li class="tocline1">C.1 <a href="#changes.from.rfc.2068">Changes from RFC 2068</a></li> |
---|
600 | <li class="tocline1">C.2 <a href="#changes.from.rfc.2616">Changes from RFC 2616</a></li> |
---|
601 | </ul> |
---|
602 | </li> |
---|
603 | <li class="tocline0">D. <a href="#change.log">Change Log (to be removed by RFC Editor before publication)</a><ul class="toc"> |
---|
604 | <li class="tocline1">D.1 <a href="#rfc.section.D.1">Since RFC2616</a></li> |
---|
605 | <li class="tocline1">D.2 <a href="#rfc.section.D.2">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-00</a></li> |
---|
606 | <li class="tocline1">D.3 <a href="#rfc.section.D.3">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-01</a></li> |
---|
607 | <li class="tocline1">D.4 <a href="#changes.since.02">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-02</a></li> |
---|
608 | <li class="tocline1">D.5 <a href="#changes.since.03">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-03</a></li> |
---|
609 | <li class="tocline1">D.6 <a href="#changes.since.04">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-04</a></li> |
---|
610 | <li class="tocline1">D.7 <a href="#changes.since.05">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-05</a></li> |
---|
611 | </ul> |
---|
612 | </li> |
---|
613 | <li class="tocline0"><a href="#rfc.ipr">Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements</a></li> |
---|
614 | <li class="tocline0"><a href="#rfc.index">Index</a></li> |
---|
615 | </ul> |
---|
616 | <h1 id="rfc.section.1" class="np"><a href="#rfc.section.1">1.</a> <a id="introduction" href="#introduction">Introduction</a></h1> |
---|
617 | <p id="rfc.section.1.p.1">This document defines HTTP/1.1 message payloads (a.k.a., content), the associated metadata header fields that define how the |
---|
618 | payload is intended to be interpreted by a recipient, the request header fields that may influence content selection, and |
---|
619 | the various selection algorithms that are collectively referred to as HTTP content negotiation. |
---|
620 | </p> |
---|
621 | <p id="rfc.section.1.p.2">This document is currently disorganized in order to minimize the changes between drafts and enable reviewers to see the smaller |
---|
622 | errata changes. The next draft will reorganize the sections to better reflect the content. In particular, the sections on |
---|
623 | entities will be renamed payload and moved to the first half of the document, while the sections on content negotiation and |
---|
624 | associated request header fields will be moved to the second half. The current mess reflects how widely dispersed these topics |
---|
625 | and associated requirements had become in <a href="#RFC2616" id="rfc.xref.RFC2616.1"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2616]</cite></a>. |
---|
626 | </p> |
---|
627 | <h2 id="rfc.section.1.1"><a href="#rfc.section.1.1">1.1</a> <a id="intro.requirements" href="#intro.requirements">Requirements</a></h2> |
---|
628 | <p id="rfc.section.1.1.p.1">The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" |
---|
629 | in this document are to be interpreted as described in <a href="#RFC2119" id="rfc.xref.RFC2119.1"><cite title="Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels">[RFC2119]</cite></a>. |
---|
630 | </p> |
---|
631 | <p id="rfc.section.1.1.p.2">An implementation is not compliant if it fails to satisfy one or more of the <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> or <em class="bcp14">REQUIRED</em> level requirements for the protocols it implements. An implementation that satisfies all the <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> or <em class="bcp14">REQUIRED</em> level and all the <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> level requirements for its protocols is said to be "unconditionally compliant"; one that satisfies all the <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> level requirements but not all the <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> level requirements for its protocols is said to be "conditionally compliant." |
---|
632 | </p> |
---|
633 | <h1 id="rfc.section.2"><a href="#rfc.section.2">2.</a> <a id="notation" href="#notation">Notational Conventions and Generic Grammar</a></h1> |
---|
634 | <p id="rfc.section.2.p.1">This specification uses the ABNF syntax defined in <a href="p1-messaging.html#notation.abnf" title="ABNF Extension: #rule">Section 2.1</a> of <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.1"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a> and the core rules defined in <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a> of <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.2"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>: |
---|
635 | </p> |
---|
636 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.1"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#notation" class="smpl">ALPHA</a> = <ALPHA, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.3"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
637 | <a href="#notation" class="smpl">DIGIT</a> = <DIGIT, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.4"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
638 | <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OCTET</a> = <OCTET, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.5"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
639 | </pre><div id="rfc.figure.u.2"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#notation" class="smpl">quoted-string</a> = <quoted-string, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.6"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
640 | <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> = <token, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.7"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
641 | <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> = <OWS, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.8"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#basic.rules" title="Basic Rules">Section 2.2</a>> |
---|
642 | </pre><div id="abnf.dependencies"> |
---|
643 | <p id="rfc.section.2.p.4"> The ABNF rules below are defined in other parts:</p> |
---|
644 | </div> |
---|
645 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.3"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">absolute-URI</a> = <absolute-URI, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.9"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#uri" title="Uniform Resource Identifiers">Section 3.2</a>> |
---|
646 | <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Content-Length</a> = <Content-Length, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.10"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#header.content-length" title="Content-Length">Section 8.2</a>> |
---|
647 | <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">relativeURI</a> = <relativeURI, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.11"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#uri" title="Uniform Resource Identifiers">Section 3.2</a>> |
---|
648 | <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">message-header</a> = <message-header, defined in <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.12"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#message.headers" title="Message Headers">Section 4.2</a>> |
---|
649 | </pre><div id="rfc.figure.u.4"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Last-Modified</a> = <Last-Modified, defined in <a href="#Part4" id="rfc.xref.Part4.1"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 4: Conditional Requests">[Part4]</cite></a>, <a href="p4-conditional.html#header.last-modified" title="Last-Modified">Section 7.6</a>> |
---|
650 | </pre><div id="rfc.figure.u.5"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Content-Range</a> = <Content-Range, defined in <a href="#Part5" id="rfc.xref.Part5.1"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 5: Range Requests and Partial Responses">[Part5]</cite></a>, <a href="p5-range.html#header.content-range" title="Content-Range">Section 6.2</a>> |
---|
651 | </pre><div id="rfc.figure.u.6"></div><pre class="inline"> <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Expires</a> = <Expires, defined in <a href="#Part6" id="rfc.xref.Part6.1"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching">[Part6]</cite></a>, <a href="p6-cache.html#header.expires" title="Expires">Section 16.3</a>> |
---|
652 | </pre><h1 id="rfc.section.3"><a href="#rfc.section.3">3.</a> <a id="protocol.parameters" href="#protocol.parameters">Protocol Parameters</a></h1> |
---|
653 | <h2 id="rfc.section.3.1"><a href="#rfc.section.3.1">3.1</a> <a id="character.sets" href="#character.sets">Character Sets</a></h2> |
---|
654 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.1">HTTP uses the same definition of the term "character set" as that described for MIME:</p> |
---|
655 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.2">The term "character set" is used in this document to refer to a method used with one or more tables to convert a sequence |
---|
656 | of octets into a sequence of characters. Note that unconditional conversion in the other direction is not required, in that |
---|
657 | not all characters may be available in a given character set and a character set may provide more than one sequence of octets |
---|
658 | to represent a particular character. This definition is intended to allow various kinds of character encoding, from simple |
---|
659 | single-table mappings such as US-ASCII to complex table switching methods such as those that use ISO-2022's techniques. However, |
---|
660 | the definition associated with a MIME character set name <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> fully specify the mapping to be performed from octets to characters. In particular, use of external profiling information |
---|
661 | to determine the exact mapping is not permitted. |
---|
662 | </p> |
---|
663 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
664 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> This use of the term "character set" is more commonly referred to as a "character encoding." However, since HTTP and MIME |
---|
665 | share the same registry, it is important that the terminology also be shared. |
---|
666 | </dd> |
---|
667 | </dl> |
---|
668 | <div id="rule.charset"> |
---|
669 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.4"> HTTP character sets are identified by case-insensitive tokens. The complete set of tokens is defined by the IANA Character |
---|
670 | Set registry (<<a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets">http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets</a>>). |
---|
671 | </p> |
---|
672 | </div> |
---|
673 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.7"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.1"></span> <a href="#rule.charset" class="smpl">charset</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
674 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.6">Although HTTP allows an arbitrary token to be used as a charset value, any token that has a predefined value within the IANA |
---|
675 | Character Set registry <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> represent the character set defined by that registry. Applications <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> limit their use of character sets to those defined by the IANA registry. |
---|
676 | </p> |
---|
677 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.7">HTTP uses charset in two contexts: within an Accept-Charset request header (in which the charset value is an unquoted token) |
---|
678 | and as the value of a parameter in a Content-Type header (within a request or response), in which case the parameter value |
---|
679 | of the charset parameter may be quoted. |
---|
680 | </p> |
---|
681 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.p.8">Implementors should be aware of IETF character set requirements <a href="#RFC3629" id="rfc.xref.RFC3629.1"><cite title="UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646">[RFC3629]</cite></a> <a href="#RFC2277" id="rfc.xref.RFC2277.1"><cite title="IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages">[RFC2277]</cite></a>. |
---|
682 | </p> |
---|
683 | <h3 id="rfc.section.3.1.1"><a href="#rfc.section.3.1.1">3.1.1</a> <a id="missing.charset" href="#missing.charset">Missing Charset</a></h3> |
---|
684 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.1.p.1">Some HTTP/1.0 software has interpreted a Content-Type header without charset parameter incorrectly to mean "recipient should |
---|
685 | guess." Senders wishing to defeat this behavior <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> include a charset parameter even when the charset is ISO-8859-1 (<a href="#ISO-8859-1" id="rfc.xref.ISO-8859-1.1"><cite title="Information technology -- 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets -- Part 1: Latin alphabet No. 1">[ISO-8859-1]</cite></a>) and <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> do so when it is known that it will not confuse the recipient. |
---|
686 | </p> |
---|
687 | <p id="rfc.section.3.1.1.p.2">Unfortunately, some older HTTP/1.0 clients did not deal properly with an explicit charset parameter. HTTP/1.1 recipients <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> respect the charset label provided by the sender; and those user agents that have a provision to "guess" a charset <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> use the charset from the content-type field if they support that charset, rather than the recipient's preference, when initially |
---|
688 | displaying a document. See <a href="#canonicalization.and.text.defaults" title="Canonicalization and Text Defaults">Section 3.3.1</a>. |
---|
689 | </p> |
---|
690 | <h2 id="rfc.section.3.2"><a href="#rfc.section.3.2">3.2</a> <a id="content.codings" href="#content.codings">Content Codings</a></h2> |
---|
691 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.1">Content coding values indicate an encoding transformation that has been or can be applied to an entity. Content codings are |
---|
692 | primarily used to allow a document to be compressed or otherwise usefully transformed without losing the identity of its underlying |
---|
693 | media type and without loss of information. Frequently, the entity is stored in coded form, transmitted directly, and only |
---|
694 | decoded by the recipient. |
---|
695 | </p> |
---|
696 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.8"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.2"></span> <a href="#content.codings" class="smpl">content-coding</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
697 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.3">All content-coding values are case-insensitive. HTTP/1.1 uses content-coding values in the Accept-Encoding (<a href="#header.accept-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.1" title="Accept-Encoding">Section 6.3</a>) and Content-Encoding (<a href="#header.content-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.1" title="Content-Encoding">Section 6.5</a>) header fields. Although the value describes the content-coding, what is more important is that it indicates what decoding |
---|
698 | mechanism will be required to remove the encoding. |
---|
699 | </p> |
---|
700 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.4">The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) acts as a registry for content-coding value tokens. Initially, the registry |
---|
701 | contains the following tokens: |
---|
702 | </p> |
---|
703 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.5">gzip<span id="rfc.iref.g.3"></span> |
---|
704 | </p> |
---|
705 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
706 | <dd>An encoding format produced by the file compression program "gzip" (GNU zip) as described in <a href="#RFC1952" id="rfc.xref.RFC1952.1"><cite title="GZIP file format specification version 4.3">[RFC1952]</cite></a>. This format is a Lempel-Ziv coding (LZ77) with a 32 bit CRC. |
---|
707 | </dd> |
---|
708 | </dl> |
---|
709 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.6">compress<span id="rfc.iref.c.1"></span> |
---|
710 | </p> |
---|
711 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
712 | <dd>The encoding format produced by the common UNIX file compression program "compress". This format is an adaptive Lempel-Ziv-Welch |
---|
713 | coding (LZW). |
---|
714 | </dd> |
---|
715 | <dd>Use of program names for the identification of encoding formats is not desirable and is discouraged for future encodings. |
---|
716 | Their use here is representative of historical practice, not good design. For compatibility with previous implementations |
---|
717 | of HTTP, applications <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> consider "x-gzip" and "x-compress" to be equivalent to "gzip" and "compress" respectively. |
---|
718 | </dd> |
---|
719 | </dl> |
---|
720 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.7">deflate<span id="rfc.iref.d.1"></span> |
---|
721 | </p> |
---|
722 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
723 | <dd>The "zlib" format defined in <a href="#RFC1950" id="rfc.xref.RFC1950.1"><cite title="ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification version 3.3">[RFC1950]</cite></a> in combination with the "deflate" compression mechanism described in <a href="#RFC1951" id="rfc.xref.RFC1951.1"><cite title="DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification version 1.3">[RFC1951]</cite></a>. |
---|
724 | </dd> |
---|
725 | </dl> |
---|
726 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.8">identity<span id="rfc.iref.i.1"></span> |
---|
727 | </p> |
---|
728 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
729 | <dd>The default (identity) encoding; the use of no transformation whatsoever. This content-coding is used only in the Accept-Encoding |
---|
730 | header, and <em class="bcp14">SHOULD NOT</em> be used in the Content-Encoding header. |
---|
731 | </dd> |
---|
732 | </dl> |
---|
733 | <p id="rfc.section.3.2.p.9">New content-coding value tokens <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be registered; to allow interoperability between clients and servers, specifications of the content coding algorithms needed |
---|
734 | to implement a new value <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be publicly available and adequate for independent implementation, and conform to the purpose of content coding defined in |
---|
735 | this section. |
---|
736 | </p> |
---|
737 | <h2 id="rfc.section.3.3"><a href="#rfc.section.3.3">3.3</a> <a id="media.types" href="#media.types">Media Types</a></h2> |
---|
738 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.1">HTTP uses Internet Media Types <a href="#RFC2046" id="rfc.xref.RFC2046.1"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types">[RFC2046]</cite></a> in the Content-Type (<a href="#header.content-type" id="rfc.xref.header.content-type.1" title="Content-Type">Section 6.9</a>) and Accept (<a href="#header.accept" id="rfc.xref.header.accept.1" title="Accept">Section 6.1</a>) header fields in order to provide open and extensible data typing and type negotiation. |
---|
739 | </p> |
---|
740 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.9"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.4"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.5"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.6"></span> <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">media-type</a> = <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">type</a> "/" <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">subtype</a> *( <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">parameter</a> ) |
---|
741 | <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">type</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
742 | <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">subtype</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
743 | </pre><div id="rule.parameter"> |
---|
744 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.3"> Parameters <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> follow the type/subtype in the form of attribute/value pairs. |
---|
745 | </p> |
---|
746 | </div> |
---|
747 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.10"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.7"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.8"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.9"></span> <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">parameter</a> = <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">attribute</a> "=" <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">value</a> |
---|
748 | <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">attribute</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
749 | <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">value</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> / <a href="#notation" class="smpl">quoted-string</a> |
---|
750 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.5">The type, subtype, and parameter attribute names are case-insensitive. Parameter values might or might not be case-sensitive, |
---|
751 | depending on the semantics of the parameter name. The presence or absence of a parameter might be significant to the processing |
---|
752 | of a media-type, depending on its definition within the media type registry. |
---|
753 | </p> |
---|
754 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.6">A parameter value that matches the <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> production may be transmitted as either a token or within a quoted-string. The quoted and unquoted values are equivalent. |
---|
755 | </p> |
---|
756 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.7">Note that some older HTTP applications do not recognize media type parameters. When sending data to older HTTP applications, |
---|
757 | implementations <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> only use media type parameters when they are required by that type/subtype definition. |
---|
758 | </p> |
---|
759 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.p.8">Media-type values are registered with the Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA). The media type registration process is |
---|
760 | outlined in <a href="#RFC4288" id="rfc.xref.RFC4288.1"><cite title="Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures">[RFC4288]</cite></a>. Use of non-registered media types is discouraged. |
---|
761 | </p> |
---|
762 | <h3 id="rfc.section.3.3.1"><a href="#rfc.section.3.3.1">3.3.1</a> <a id="canonicalization.and.text.defaults" href="#canonicalization.and.text.defaults">Canonicalization and Text Defaults</a></h3> |
---|
763 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.1.p.1">Internet media types are registered with a canonical form. An entity-body transferred via HTTP messages <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be represented in the appropriate canonical form prior to its transmission except for "text" types, as defined in the next |
---|
764 | paragraph. |
---|
765 | </p> |
---|
766 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.1.p.2">When in canonical form, media subtypes of the "text" type use CRLF as the text line break. HTTP relaxes this requirement and |
---|
767 | allows the transport of text media with plain CR or LF alone representing a line break when it is done consistently for an |
---|
768 | entire entity-body. HTTP applications <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> accept CRLF, bare CR, and bare LF as being representative of a line break in text media received via HTTP. In addition, if |
---|
769 | the text is represented in a character set that does not use octets 13 and 10 for CR and LF respectively, as is the case for |
---|
770 | some multi-byte character sets, HTTP allows the use of whatever octet sequences are defined by that character set to represent |
---|
771 | the equivalent of CR and LF for line breaks. This flexibility regarding line breaks applies only to text media in the entity-body; |
---|
772 | a bare CR or LF <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> be substituted for CRLF within any of the HTTP control structures (such as header fields and multipart boundaries). |
---|
773 | </p> |
---|
774 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.1.p.3">If an entity-body is encoded with a content-coding, the underlying data <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be in a form defined above prior to being encoded. |
---|
775 | </p> |
---|
776 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.1.p.4">The "charset" parameter is used with some media types to define the character set (<a href="#character.sets" title="Character Sets">Section 3.1</a>) of the data. When no explicit charset parameter is provided by the sender, media subtypes of the "text" type are defined |
---|
777 | to have a default charset value of "ISO-8859-1" when received via HTTP. Data in character sets other than "ISO-8859-1" or |
---|
778 | its subsets <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be labeled with an appropriate charset value. See <a href="#missing.charset" title="Missing Charset">Section 3.1.1</a> for compatibility problems. |
---|
779 | </p> |
---|
780 | <h3 id="rfc.section.3.3.2"><a href="#rfc.section.3.3.2">3.3.2</a> <a id="multipart.types" href="#multipart.types">Multipart Types</a></h3> |
---|
781 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.2.p.1">MIME provides for a number of "multipart" types -- encapsulations of one or more entities within a single message-body. All |
---|
782 | multipart types share a common syntax, as defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2046#section-5.1.1">Section 5.1.1</a> of <a href="#RFC2046" id="rfc.xref.RFC2046.2"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types">[RFC2046]</cite></a>, and <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> include a boundary parameter as part of the media type value. The message body is itself a protocol element and <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> therefore use only CRLF to represent line breaks between body-parts. Unlike in RFC 2046, the epilogue of any multipart message <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be empty; HTTP applications <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> transmit the epilogue (even if the original multipart contains an epilogue). These restrictions exist in order to preserve |
---|
783 | the self-delimiting nature of a multipart message-body, wherein the "end" of the message-body is indicated by the ending multipart |
---|
784 | boundary. |
---|
785 | </p> |
---|
786 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.2.p.2">In general, HTTP treats a multipart message-body no differently than any other media type: strictly as payload. The one exception |
---|
787 | is the "multipart/byteranges" type (<a href="p5-range.html#internet.media.type.multipart.byteranges" title="Internet Media Type multipart/byteranges">Appendix A</a> of <a href="#Part5" id="rfc.xref.Part5.2"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 5: Range Requests and Partial Responses">[Part5]</cite></a>) when it appears in a 206 (Partial Content) response. In all other cases, an HTTP user agent <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> follow the same or similar behavior as a MIME user agent would upon receipt of a multipart type. The MIME header fields within |
---|
788 | each body-part of a multipart message-body do not have any significance to HTTP beyond that defined by their MIME semantics. |
---|
789 | </p> |
---|
790 | <p id="rfc.section.3.3.2.p.3">In general, an HTTP user agent <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> follow the same or similar behavior as a MIME user agent would upon receipt of a multipart type. If an application receives |
---|
791 | an unrecognized multipart subtype, the application <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> treat it as being equivalent to "multipart/mixed". |
---|
792 | </p> |
---|
793 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
794 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> The "multipart/form-data" type has been specifically defined for carrying form data suitable for processing via the POST request |
---|
795 | method, as described in <a href="#RFC2388" id="rfc.xref.RFC2388.1"><cite title="Returning Values from Forms: multipart/form-data">[RFC2388]</cite></a>. |
---|
796 | </dd> |
---|
797 | </dl> |
---|
798 | <h2 id="rfc.section.3.4"><a href="#rfc.section.3.4">3.4</a> <a id="quality.values" href="#quality.values">Quality Values</a></h2> |
---|
799 | <p id="rfc.section.3.4.p.1">HTTP content negotiation (<a href="#content.negotiation" title="Content Negotiation">Section 5</a>) uses short "floating point" numbers to indicate the relative importance ("weight") of various negotiable parameters. A weight |
---|
800 | is normalized to a real number in the range 0 through 1, where 0 is the minimum and 1 the maximum value. If a parameter has |
---|
801 | a quality value of 0, then content with this parameter is `not acceptable' for the client. HTTP/1.1 applications <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> generate more than three digits after the decimal point. User configuration of these values <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> also be limited in this fashion. |
---|
802 | </p> |
---|
803 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.11"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.10"></span> <a href="#quality.values" class="smpl">qvalue</a> = ( "0" [ "." 0*3<a href="#notation" class="smpl">DIGIT</a> ] ) |
---|
804 | / ( "1" [ "." 0*3("0") ] ) |
---|
805 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.4.p.3">"Quality values" is a misnomer, since these values merely represent relative degradation in desired quality.</p> |
---|
806 | <h2 id="rfc.section.3.5"><a href="#rfc.section.3.5">3.5</a> <a id="language.tags" href="#language.tags">Language Tags</a></h2> |
---|
807 | <p id="rfc.section.3.5.p.1">A language tag identifies a natural language spoken, written, or otherwise conveyed by human beings for communication of information |
---|
808 | to other human beings. Computer languages are explicitly excluded. HTTP uses language tags within the Accept-Language and |
---|
809 | Content-Language fields. |
---|
810 | </p> |
---|
811 | <p id="rfc.section.3.5.p.2">The syntax and registry of HTTP language tags is the same as that defined by <a href="#RFC1766" id="rfc.xref.RFC1766.1"><cite title="Tags for the Identification of Languages">[RFC1766]</cite></a>. In summary, a language tag is composed of 1 or more parts: A primary language tag and a possibly empty series of subtags: |
---|
812 | </p> |
---|
813 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.12"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.11"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.12"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.13"></span> <a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">language-tag</a> = <a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">primary-tag</a> *( "-" <a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">subtag</a> ) |
---|
814 | <a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">primary-tag</a> = 1*8<a href="#notation" class="smpl">ALPHA</a> |
---|
815 | <a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">subtag</a> = 1*8<a href="#notation" class="smpl">ALPHA</a> |
---|
816 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.5.p.4">White space is not allowed within the tag and all tags are case-insensitive. The name space of language tags is administered |
---|
817 | by the IANA. Example tags include: |
---|
818 | </p> |
---|
819 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.13"></div><pre class="text"> en, en-US, en-cockney, i-cherokee, x-pig-latin |
---|
820 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.3.5.p.6">where any two-letter primary-tag is an ISO-639 language abbreviation and any two-letter initial subtag is an ISO-3166 country |
---|
821 | code. (The last three tags above are not registered tags; all but the last are examples of tags which could be registered |
---|
822 | in future.) |
---|
823 | </p> |
---|
824 | <h1 id="rfc.section.4"><a href="#rfc.section.4">4.</a> <a id="entity" href="#entity">Entity</a></h1> |
---|
825 | <p id="rfc.section.4.p.1">Request and Response messages <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> transfer an entity if not otherwise restricted by the request method or response status code. An entity consists of entity-header |
---|
826 | fields and an entity-body, although some responses will only include the entity-headers. |
---|
827 | </p> |
---|
828 | <p id="rfc.section.4.p.2">In this section, both sender and recipient refer to either the client or the server, depending on who sends and who receives |
---|
829 | the entity. |
---|
830 | </p> |
---|
831 | <h2 id="rfc.section.4.1"><a href="#rfc.section.4.1">4.1</a> <a id="entity.header.fields" href="#entity.header.fields">Entity Header Fields</a></h2> |
---|
832 | <p id="rfc.section.4.1.p.1">Entity-header fields define metainformation about the entity-body or, if no body is present, about the resource identified |
---|
833 | by the request. |
---|
834 | </p> |
---|
835 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.14"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.14"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.15"></span> <a href="#entity.header.fields" class="smpl">entity-header</a> = <a href="#header.content-encoding" class="smpl">Content-Encoding</a> ; <a href="#header.content-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.2" title="Content-Encoding">Section 6.5</a> |
---|
836 | / <a href="#header.content-language" class="smpl">Content-Language</a> ; <a href="#header.content-language" id="rfc.xref.header.content-language.1" title="Content-Language">Section 6.6</a> |
---|
837 | / <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Content-Length</a> ; <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.13"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="p1-messaging.html#header.content-length" title="Content-Length">Section 8.2</a> |
---|
838 | / <a href="#header.content-location" class="smpl">Content-Location</a> ; <a href="#header.content-location" id="rfc.xref.header.content-location.1" title="Content-Location">Section 6.7</a> |
---|
839 | / <a href="#header.content-md5" class="smpl">Content-MD5</a> ; <a href="#header.content-md5" id="rfc.xref.header.content-md5.1" title="Content-MD5">Section 6.8</a> |
---|
840 | / <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Content-Range</a> ; <a href="#Part5" id="rfc.xref.Part5.3"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 5: Range Requests and Partial Responses">[Part5]</cite></a>, <a href="p5-range.html#header.content-range" title="Content-Range">Section 6.2</a> |
---|
841 | / <a href="#header.content-type" class="smpl">Content-Type</a> ; <a href="#header.content-type" id="rfc.xref.header.content-type.2" title="Content-Type">Section 6.9</a> |
---|
842 | / <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Expires</a> ; <a href="#Part6" id="rfc.xref.Part6.2"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching">[Part6]</cite></a>, <a href="p6-cache.html#header.expires" title="Expires">Section 16.3</a> |
---|
843 | / <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">Last-Modified</a> ; <a href="#Part4" id="rfc.xref.Part4.2"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 4: Conditional Requests">[Part4]</cite></a>, <a href="p4-conditional.html#header.last-modified" title="Last-Modified">Section 7.6</a> |
---|
844 | / <a href="#entity.header.fields" class="smpl">extension-header</a> |
---|
845 | |
---|
846 | <a href="#entity.header.fields" class="smpl">extension-header</a> = <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">message-header</a> |
---|
847 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.4.1.p.3">The extension-header mechanism allows additional entity-header fields to be defined without changing the protocol, but these |
---|
848 | fields cannot be assumed to be recognizable by the recipient. Unrecognized header fields <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be ignored by the recipient and <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be forwarded by transparent proxies. |
---|
849 | </p> |
---|
850 | <h2 id="rfc.section.4.2"><a href="#rfc.section.4.2">4.2</a> <a id="entity.body" href="#entity.body">Entity Body</a></h2> |
---|
851 | <p id="rfc.section.4.2.p.1">The entity-body (if any) sent with an HTTP request or response is in a format and encoding defined by the entity-header fields.</p> |
---|
852 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.15"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.16"></span> <a href="#entity.body" class="smpl">entity-body</a> = *<a href="#notation" class="smpl">OCTET</a> |
---|
853 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.4.2.p.3">An entity-body is only present in a message when a message-body is present, as described in <a href="p1-messaging.html#message.body" title="Message Body">Section 4.3</a> of <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.14"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>. The entity-body is obtained from the message-body by decoding any Transfer-Encoding that might have been applied to ensure |
---|
854 | safe and proper transfer of the message. |
---|
855 | </p> |
---|
856 | <h3 id="rfc.section.4.2.1"><a href="#rfc.section.4.2.1">4.2.1</a> <a id="type" href="#type">Type</a></h3> |
---|
857 | <p id="rfc.section.4.2.1.p.1">When an entity-body is included with a message, the data type of that body is determined via the header fields Content-Type |
---|
858 | and Content-Encoding. These define a two-layer, ordered encoding model: |
---|
859 | </p> |
---|
860 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.16"></div><pre class="text"> entity-body := Content-Encoding( Content-Type( data ) ) |
---|
861 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.4.2.1.p.3">Content-Type specifies the media type of the underlying data. Content-Encoding may be used to indicate any additional content |
---|
862 | codings applied to the data, usually for the purpose of data compression, that are a property of the requested resource. There |
---|
863 | is no default encoding. |
---|
864 | </p> |
---|
865 | <p id="rfc.section.4.2.1.p.4">Any HTTP/1.1 message containing an entity-body <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> include a Content-Type header field defining the media type of that body. If and only if the media type is not given by a |
---|
866 | Content-Type field, the recipient <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> attempt to guess the media type via inspection of its content and/or the name extension(s) of the URI used to identify the |
---|
867 | resource. If the media type remains unknown, the recipient <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> treat it as type "application/octet-stream". |
---|
868 | </p> |
---|
869 | <h3 id="rfc.section.4.2.2"><a href="#rfc.section.4.2.2">4.2.2</a> <a id="entity.length" href="#entity.length">Entity Length</a></h3> |
---|
870 | <p id="rfc.section.4.2.2.p.1">The entity-length of a message is the length of the message-body before any transfer-codings have been applied. <a href="p1-messaging.html#message.length" title="Message Length">Section 4.4</a> of <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.15"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a> defines how the transfer-length of a message-body is determined. |
---|
871 | </p> |
---|
872 | <h1 id="rfc.section.5"><a href="#rfc.section.5">5.</a> <a id="content.negotiation" href="#content.negotiation">Content Negotiation</a></h1> |
---|
873 | <p id="rfc.section.5.p.1">Most HTTP responses include an entity which contains information for interpretation by a human user. Naturally, it is desirable |
---|
874 | to supply the user with the "best available" entity corresponding to the request. Unfortunately for servers and caches, not |
---|
875 | all users have the same preferences for what is "best," and not all user agents are equally capable of rendering all entity |
---|
876 | types. For that reason, HTTP has provisions for several mechanisms for "content negotiation" -- the process of selecting the |
---|
877 | best representation for a given response when there are multiple representations available. |
---|
878 | </p> |
---|
879 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
880 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> This is not called "format negotiation" because the alternate representations may be of the same media type, but use different |
---|
881 | capabilities of that type, be in different languages, etc. |
---|
882 | </dd> |
---|
883 | </dl> |
---|
884 | <p id="rfc.section.5.p.2">Any response containing an entity-body <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be subject to negotiation, including error responses. |
---|
885 | </p> |
---|
886 | <p id="rfc.section.5.p.3">There are two kinds of content negotiation which are possible in HTTP: server-driven and agent-driven negotiation. These two |
---|
887 | kinds of negotiation are orthogonal and thus may be used separately or in combination. One method of combination, referred |
---|
888 | to as transparent negotiation, occurs when a cache uses the agent-driven negotiation information provided by the origin server |
---|
889 | in order to provide server-driven negotiation for subsequent requests. |
---|
890 | </p> |
---|
891 | <h2 id="rfc.section.5.1"><a href="#rfc.section.5.1">5.1</a> <a id="server-driven.negotiation" href="#server-driven.negotiation">Server-driven Negotiation</a></h2> |
---|
892 | <p id="rfc.section.5.1.p.1">If the selection of the best representation for a response is made by an algorithm located at the server, it is called server-driven |
---|
893 | negotiation. Selection is based on the available representations of the response (the dimensions over which it can vary; e.g. |
---|
894 | language, content-coding, etc.) and the contents of particular header fields in the request message or on other information |
---|
895 | pertaining to the request (such as the network address of the client). |
---|
896 | </p> |
---|
897 | <p id="rfc.section.5.1.p.2">Server-driven negotiation is advantageous when the algorithm for selecting from among the available representations is difficult |
---|
898 | to describe to the user agent, or when the server desires to send its "best guess" to the client along with the first response |
---|
899 | (hoping to avoid the round-trip delay of a subsequent request if the "best guess" is good enough for the user). In order to |
---|
900 | improve the server's guess, the user agent <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> include request header fields (Accept, Accept-Language, Accept-Encoding, etc.) which describe its preferences for such a response. |
---|
901 | </p> |
---|
902 | <p id="rfc.section.5.1.p.3">Server-driven negotiation has disadvantages: </p> |
---|
903 | <ol> |
---|
904 | <li>It is impossible for the server to accurately determine what might be "best" for any given user, since that would require |
---|
905 | complete knowledge of both the capabilities of the user agent and the intended use for the response (e.g., does the user want |
---|
906 | to view it on screen or print it on paper?). |
---|
907 | </li> |
---|
908 | <li>Having the user agent describe its capabilities in every request can be both very inefficient (given that only a small percentage |
---|
909 | of responses have multiple representations) and a potential violation of the user's privacy. |
---|
910 | </li> |
---|
911 | <li>It complicates the implementation of an origin server and the algorithms for generating responses to a request.</li> |
---|
912 | <li>It may limit a public cache's ability to use the same response for multiple user's requests.</li> |
---|
913 | </ol> |
---|
914 | <p id="rfc.section.5.1.p.4">HTTP/1.1 includes the following request-header fields for enabling server-driven negotiation through description of user agent |
---|
915 | capabilities and user preferences: Accept (<a href="#header.accept" id="rfc.xref.header.accept.2" title="Accept">Section 6.1</a>), Accept-Charset (<a href="#header.accept-charset" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.1" title="Accept-Charset">Section 6.2</a>), Accept-Encoding (<a href="#header.accept-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.2" title="Accept-Encoding">Section 6.3</a>), Accept-Language (<a href="#header.accept-language" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-language.1" title="Accept-Language">Section 6.4</a>), and User-Agent (<a href="p2-semantics.html#header.user-agent" title="User-Agent">Section 10.9</a> of <a href="#Part2" id="rfc.xref.Part2.1"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 2: Message Semantics">[Part2]</cite></a>). However, an origin server is not limited to these dimensions and <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> vary the response based on any aspect of the request, including information outside the request-header fields or within extension |
---|
916 | header fields not defined by this specification. |
---|
917 | </p> |
---|
918 | <p id="rfc.section.5.1.p.5">The Vary header field (<a href="p6-cache.html#header.vary" title="Vary">Section 16.5</a> of <a href="#Part6" id="rfc.xref.Part6.3"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching">[Part6]</cite></a>) can be used to express the parameters the server uses to select a representation that is subject to server-driven negotiation. |
---|
919 | </p> |
---|
920 | <h2 id="rfc.section.5.2"><a href="#rfc.section.5.2">5.2</a> <a id="agent-driven.negotiation" href="#agent-driven.negotiation">Agent-driven Negotiation</a></h2> |
---|
921 | <p id="rfc.section.5.2.p.1">With agent-driven negotiation, selection of the best representation for a response is performed by the user agent after receiving |
---|
922 | an initial response from the origin server. Selection is based on a list of the available representations of the response |
---|
923 | included within the header fields or entity-body of the initial response, with each representation identified by its own URI. |
---|
924 | Selection from among the representations may be performed automatically (if the user agent is capable of doing so) or manually |
---|
925 | by the user selecting from a generated (possibly hypertext) menu. |
---|
926 | </p> |
---|
927 | <p id="rfc.section.5.2.p.2">Agent-driven negotiation is advantageous when the response would vary over commonly-used dimensions (such as type, language, |
---|
928 | or encoding), when the origin server is unable to determine a user agent's capabilities from examining the request, and generally |
---|
929 | when public caches are used to distribute server load and reduce network usage. |
---|
930 | </p> |
---|
931 | <p id="rfc.section.5.2.p.3">Agent-driven negotiation suffers from the disadvantage of needing a second request to obtain the best alternate representation. |
---|
932 | This second request is only efficient when caching is used. In addition, this specification does not define any mechanism |
---|
933 | for supporting automatic selection, though it also does not prevent any such mechanism from being developed as an extension |
---|
934 | and used within HTTP/1.1. |
---|
935 | </p> |
---|
936 | <p id="rfc.section.5.2.p.4">HTTP/1.1 defines the 300 (Multiple Choices) and 406 (Not Acceptable) status codes for enabling agent-driven negotiation when |
---|
937 | the server is unwilling or unable to provide a varying response using server-driven negotiation. |
---|
938 | </p> |
---|
939 | <h2 id="rfc.section.5.3"><a href="#rfc.section.5.3">5.3</a> <a id="transparent.negotiation" href="#transparent.negotiation">Transparent Negotiation</a></h2> |
---|
940 | <p id="rfc.section.5.3.p.1">Transparent negotiation is a combination of both server-driven and agent-driven negotiation. When a cache is supplied with |
---|
941 | a form of the list of available representations of the response (as in agent-driven negotiation) and the dimensions of variance |
---|
942 | are completely understood by the cache, then the cache becomes capable of performing server-driven negotiation on behalf of |
---|
943 | the origin server for subsequent requests on that resource. |
---|
944 | </p> |
---|
945 | <p id="rfc.section.5.3.p.2">Transparent negotiation has the advantage of distributing the negotiation work that would otherwise be required of the origin |
---|
946 | server and also removing the second request delay of agent-driven negotiation when the cache is able to correctly guess the |
---|
947 | right response. |
---|
948 | </p> |
---|
949 | <p id="rfc.section.5.3.p.3">This specification does not define any mechanism for transparent negotiation, though it also does not prevent any such mechanism |
---|
950 | from being developed as an extension that could be used within HTTP/1.1. |
---|
951 | </p> |
---|
952 | <h1 id="rfc.section.6"><a href="#rfc.section.6">6.</a> <a id="header.fields" href="#header.fields">Header Field Definitions</a></h1> |
---|
953 | <p id="rfc.section.6.p.1">This section defines the syntax and semantics of HTTP/1.1 header fields related to the payload of messages.</p> |
---|
954 | <p id="rfc.section.6.p.2">For entity-header fields, both sender and recipient refer to either the client or the server, depending on who sends and who |
---|
955 | receives the entity. |
---|
956 | </p> |
---|
957 | <div id="rfc.iref.a.1"></div> |
---|
958 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.1"></div> |
---|
959 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.1"><a href="#rfc.section.6.1">6.1</a> <a id="header.accept" href="#header.accept">Accept</a></h2> |
---|
960 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.1">The request-header field "Accept" can be used to specify certain media types which are acceptable for the response. Accept |
---|
961 | headers can be used to indicate that the request is specifically limited to a small set of desired types, as in the case of |
---|
962 | a request for an in-line image. |
---|
963 | </p> |
---|
964 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.17"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.17"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.18"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.19"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.20"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.21"></span> <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">Accept</a> = "Accept" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">Accept-v</a> |
---|
965 | <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">Accept-v</a> = #( <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">media-range</a> [ <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">accept-params</a> ] ) |
---|
966 | |
---|
967 | <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">media-range</a> = ( "*/*" |
---|
968 | / ( <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">type</a> "/" "*" ) |
---|
969 | / ( <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">type</a> "/" <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">subtype</a> ) |
---|
970 | ) *( <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#rule.parameter" class="smpl">parameter</a> ) |
---|
971 | <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">accept-params</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> "q=" <a href="#quality.values" class="smpl">qvalue</a> *( <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">accept-ext</a> ) |
---|
972 | <a href="#header.accept" class="smpl">accept-ext</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
973 | [ "=" ( <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> / <a href="#notation" class="smpl">quoted-string</a> ) ] |
---|
974 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.3">The asterisk "*" character is used to group media types into ranges, with "*/*" indicating all media types and "type/*" indicating |
---|
975 | all subtypes of that type. The media-range <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> include media type parameters that are applicable to that range. |
---|
976 | </p> |
---|
977 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.4">Each media-range <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be followed by one or more accept-params, beginning with the "q" parameter for indicating a relative quality factor. The first |
---|
978 | "q" parameter (if any) separates the media-range parameter(s) from the accept-params. Quality factors allow the user or user |
---|
979 | agent to indicate the relative degree of preference for that media-range, using the qvalue scale from 0 to 1 (<a href="#quality.values" title="Quality Values">Section 3.4</a>). The default value is q=1. |
---|
980 | </p> |
---|
981 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
982 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> Use of the "q" parameter name to separate media type parameters from Accept extension parameters is due to historical practice. |
---|
983 | Although this prevents any media type parameter named "q" from being used with a media range, such an event is believed to |
---|
984 | be unlikely given the lack of any "q" parameters in the IANA media type registry and the rare usage of any media type parameters |
---|
985 | in Accept. Future media types are discouraged from registering any parameter named "q". |
---|
986 | </dd> |
---|
987 | </dl> |
---|
988 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.5">The example</p> |
---|
989 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.18"></div><pre class="text"> Accept: audio/*; q=0.2, audio/basic |
---|
990 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.7"> <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be interpreted as "I prefer audio/basic, but send me any audio type if it is the best available after an 80% mark-down in |
---|
991 | quality." |
---|
992 | </p> |
---|
993 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.8">If no Accept header field is present, then it is assumed that the client accepts all media types. If an Accept header field |
---|
994 | is present, and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable according to the combined Accept field value, then |
---|
995 | the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> send a 406 (Not Acceptable) response. |
---|
996 | </p> |
---|
997 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.9">A more elaborate example is</p> |
---|
998 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.19"></div><pre class="text"> Accept: text/plain; q=0.5, text/html, |
---|
999 | text/x-dvi; q=0.8, text/x-c |
---|
1000 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.11">Verbally, this would be interpreted as "text/html and text/x-c are the preferred media types, but if they do not exist, then |
---|
1001 | send the text/x-dvi entity, and if that does not exist, send the text/plain entity." |
---|
1002 | </p> |
---|
1003 | <p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.12">Media ranges can be overridden by more specific media ranges or specific media types. If more than one media range applies |
---|
1004 | to a given type, the most specific reference has precedence. For example, |
---|
1005 | </p> |
---|
1006 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.20"></div><pre class="text"> Accept: text/*, text/html, text/html;level=1, */* |
---|
1007 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.14">have the following precedence:</p> |
---|
1008 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.21"></div><pre class="text"> 1) text/html;level=1 |
---|
1009 | 2) text/html |
---|
1010 | 3) text/* |
---|
1011 | 4) */* |
---|
1012 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.16">The media type quality factor associated with a given type is determined by finding the media range with the highest precedence |
---|
1013 | which matches that type. For example, |
---|
1014 | </p> |
---|
1015 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.22"></div><pre class="text"> Accept: text/*;q=0.3, text/html;q=0.7, text/html;level=1, |
---|
1016 | text/html;level=2;q=0.4, */*;q=0.5 |
---|
1017 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.18">would cause the following values to be associated:</p> |
---|
1018 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.23"></div><pre class="text"> text/html;level=1 = 1 |
---|
1019 | text/html = 0.7 |
---|
1020 | text/plain = 0.3 |
---|
1021 | image/jpeg = 0.5 |
---|
1022 | text/html;level=2 = 0.4 |
---|
1023 | text/html;level=3 = 0.7 |
---|
1024 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.1.p.20"> <b>Note:</b> A user agent might be provided with a default set of quality values for certain media ranges. However, unless the user agent |
---|
1025 | is a closed system which cannot interact with other rendering agents, this default set ought to be configurable by the user. |
---|
1026 | </p> |
---|
1027 | <div id="rfc.iref.a.2"></div> |
---|
1028 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.2"></div> |
---|
1029 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.2"><a href="#rfc.section.6.2">6.2</a> <a id="header.accept-charset" href="#header.accept-charset">Accept-Charset</a></h2> |
---|
1030 | <p id="rfc.section.6.2.p.1">The request-header field "Accept-Charset" can be used to indicate what character sets are acceptable for the response. This |
---|
1031 | field allows clients capable of understanding more comprehensive or special-purpose character sets to signal that capability |
---|
1032 | to a server which is capable of representing documents in those character sets. |
---|
1033 | </p> |
---|
1034 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.24"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.22"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.23"></span> <a href="#header.accept-charset" class="smpl">Accept-Charset</a> = "Accept-Charset" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> |
---|
1035 | <a href="#header.accept-charset" class="smpl">Accept-Charset-v</a> |
---|
1036 | <a href="#header.accept-charset" class="smpl">Accept-Charset-v</a> = 1#( ( <a href="#rule.charset" class="smpl">charset</a> / "*" ) |
---|
1037 | [ <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> "q=" <a href="#quality.values" class="smpl">qvalue</a> ] ) |
---|
1038 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.2.p.3">Character set values are described in <a href="#character.sets" title="Character Sets">Section 3.1</a>. Each charset <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be given an associated quality value which represents the user's preference for that charset. The default value is q=1. An |
---|
1039 | example is |
---|
1040 | </p> |
---|
1041 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.25"></div><pre class="text"> Accept-Charset: iso-8859-5, unicode-1-1;q=0.8 |
---|
1042 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.2.p.5">The special value "*", if present in the Accept-Charset field, matches every character set (including ISO-8859-1) which is |
---|
1043 | not mentioned elsewhere in the Accept-Charset field. If no "*" is present in an Accept-Charset field, then all character sets |
---|
1044 | not explicitly mentioned get a quality value of 0, except for ISO-8859-1, which gets a quality value of 1 if not explicitly |
---|
1045 | mentioned. |
---|
1046 | </p> |
---|
1047 | <p id="rfc.section.6.2.p.6">If no Accept-Charset header is present, the default is that any character set is acceptable. If an Accept-Charset header is |
---|
1048 | present, and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable according to the Accept-Charset header, then the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> send an error response with the 406 (Not Acceptable) status code, though the sending of an unacceptable response is also allowed. |
---|
1049 | </p> |
---|
1050 | <div id="rfc.iref.a.3"></div> |
---|
1051 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.3"></div> |
---|
1052 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.3"><a href="#rfc.section.6.3">6.3</a> <a id="header.accept-encoding" href="#header.accept-encoding">Accept-Encoding</a></h2> |
---|
1053 | <p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.1">The request-header field "Accept-Encoding" is similar to Accept, but restricts the content-codings (<a href="#content.codings" title="Content Codings">Section 3.2</a>) that are acceptable in the response. |
---|
1054 | </p> |
---|
1055 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.26"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.24"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.25"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.26"></span> <a href="#header.accept-encoding" class="smpl">Accept-Encoding</a> = "Accept-Encoding" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> |
---|
1056 | <a href="#header.accept-encoding" class="smpl">Accept-Encoding-v</a> |
---|
1057 | <a href="#header.accept-encoding" class="smpl">Accept-Encoding-v</a> = |
---|
1058 | #( <a href="#header.accept-encoding" class="smpl">codings</a> [ <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> "q=" <a href="#quality.values" class="smpl">qvalue</a> ] ) |
---|
1059 | <a href="#header.accept-encoding" class="smpl">codings</a> = ( <a href="#content.codings" class="smpl">content-coding</a> / "*" ) |
---|
1060 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.3">Each codings value <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be given an associated quality value which represents the preference for that encoding. The default value is q=1. |
---|
1061 | </p> |
---|
1062 | <p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.4">Examples of its use are:</p> |
---|
1063 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.27"></div><pre class="text"> Accept-Encoding: compress, gzip |
---|
1064 | Accept-Encoding: |
---|
1065 | Accept-Encoding: * |
---|
1066 | Accept-Encoding: compress;q=0.5, gzip;q=1.0 |
---|
1067 | Accept-Encoding: gzip;q=1.0, identity; q=0.5, *;q=0 |
---|
1068 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.6">A server tests whether a content-coding is acceptable, according to an Accept-Encoding field, using these rules: </p> |
---|
1069 | <ol> |
---|
1070 | <li>If the content-coding is one of the content-codings listed in the Accept-Encoding field, then it is acceptable, unless it |
---|
1071 | is accompanied by a qvalue of 0. (As defined in <a href="#quality.values" title="Quality Values">Section 3.4</a>, a qvalue of 0 means "not acceptable.") |
---|
1072 | </li> |
---|
1073 | <li>The special "*" symbol in an Accept-Encoding field matches any available content-coding not explicitly listed in the header |
---|
1074 | field. |
---|
1075 | </li> |
---|
1076 | <li>If multiple content-codings are acceptable, then the acceptable content-coding with the highest non-zero qvalue is preferred.</li> |
---|
1077 | <li>The "identity" content-coding is always acceptable, unless specifically refused because the Accept-Encoding field includes |
---|
1078 | "identity;q=0", or because the field includes "*;q=0" and does not explicitly include the "identity" content-coding. If the |
---|
1079 | Accept-Encoding field-value is empty, then only the "identity" encoding is acceptable. |
---|
1080 | </li> |
---|
1081 | </ol> |
---|
1082 | <p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.7">If an Accept-Encoding field is present in a request, and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable according |
---|
1083 | to the Accept-Encoding header, then the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> send an error response with the 406 (Not Acceptable) status code. |
---|
1084 | </p> |
---|
1085 | <p id="rfc.section.6.3.p.8">If no Accept-Encoding field is present in a request, the server <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> assume that the client will accept any content coding. In this case, if "identity" is one of the available content-codings, |
---|
1086 | then the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> use the "identity" content-coding, unless it has additional information that a different content-coding is meaningful to the |
---|
1087 | client. |
---|
1088 | </p> |
---|
1089 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
1090 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> If the request does not include an Accept-Encoding field, and if the "identity" content-coding is unavailable, then content-codings |
---|
1091 | commonly understood by HTTP/1.0 clients (i.e., "gzip" and "compress") are preferred; some older clients improperly display |
---|
1092 | messages sent with other content-codings. The server might also make this decision based on information about the particular |
---|
1093 | user-agent or client. |
---|
1094 | </dd> |
---|
1095 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> Most HTTP/1.0 applications do not recognize or obey qvalues associated with content-codings. This means that qvalues will |
---|
1096 | not work and are not permitted with x-gzip or x-compress. |
---|
1097 | </dd> |
---|
1098 | </dl> |
---|
1099 | <div id="rfc.iref.a.4"></div> |
---|
1100 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.4"></div> |
---|
1101 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.4"><a href="#rfc.section.6.4">6.4</a> <a id="header.accept-language" href="#header.accept-language">Accept-Language</a></h2> |
---|
1102 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.1">The request-header field "Accept-Language" is similar to Accept, but restricts the set of natural languages that are preferred |
---|
1103 | as a response to the request. Language tags are defined in <a href="#language.tags" title="Language Tags">Section 3.5</a>. |
---|
1104 | </p> |
---|
1105 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.28"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.27"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.28"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.29"></span> <a href="#header.accept-language" class="smpl">Accept-Language</a> = "Accept-Language" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> |
---|
1106 | <a href="#header.accept-language" class="smpl">Accept-Language-v</a> |
---|
1107 | <a href="#header.accept-language" class="smpl">Accept-Language-v</a> = |
---|
1108 | 1#( <a href="#header.accept-language" class="smpl">language-range</a> [ <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> "q=" <a href="#quality.values" class="smpl">qvalue</a> ] ) |
---|
1109 | <a href="#header.accept-language" class="smpl">language-range</a> = |
---|
1110 | <language-range, defined in <a href="#RFC4647" id="rfc.xref.RFC4647.1"><cite title="Matching of Language Tags">[RFC4647]</cite></a>, <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647#section-2.1">Section 2.1</a>> |
---|
1111 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.3">Each language-range can be given an associated quality value which represents an estimate of the user's preference for the |
---|
1112 | languages specified by that range. The quality value defaults to "q=1". For example, |
---|
1113 | </p> |
---|
1114 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.29"></div><pre class="text"> Accept-Language: da, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7 |
---|
1115 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.5">would mean: "I prefer Danish, but will accept British English and other types of English."</p> |
---|
1116 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.6">For matching, the "Basic Filtering" matching scheme, defined in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647#section-3.3.1">Section 3.3.1</a> of <a href="#RFC4647" id="rfc.xref.RFC4647.2"><cite title="Matching of Language Tags">[RFC4647]</cite></a>, is used: |
---|
1117 | </p> |
---|
1118 | <blockquote id="rfc.section.6.4.p.7" cite="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647#section-3.3.1"> |
---|
1119 | <p>A language range matches a particular language tag if, in a case-insensitive comparison, it exactly equals the tag, or if |
---|
1120 | it exactly equals a prefix of the tag such that the first character following the prefix is "-". |
---|
1121 | </p> |
---|
1122 | </blockquote> |
---|
1123 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.8">The special range "*", if present in the Accept-Language field, matches every tag not matched by any other range present in |
---|
1124 | the Accept-Language field. |
---|
1125 | </p> |
---|
1126 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
1127 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> This use of a prefix matching rule does not imply that language tags are assigned to languages in such a way that it is always |
---|
1128 | true that if a user understands a language with a certain tag, then this user will also understand all languages with tags |
---|
1129 | for which this tag is a prefix. The prefix rule simply allows the use of prefix tags if this is the case. |
---|
1130 | </dd> |
---|
1131 | </dl> |
---|
1132 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.9">The language quality factor assigned to a language-tag by the Accept-Language field is the quality value of the longest language-range |
---|
1133 | in the field that matches the language-tag. If no language-range in the field matches the tag, the language quality factor |
---|
1134 | assigned is 0. If no Accept-Language header is present in the request, the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> assume that all languages are equally acceptable. If an Accept-Language header is present, then all languages which are assigned |
---|
1135 | a quality factor greater than 0 are acceptable. |
---|
1136 | </p> |
---|
1137 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.10">It might be contrary to the privacy expectations of the user to send an Accept-Language header with the complete linguistic |
---|
1138 | preferences of the user in every request. For a discussion of this issue, see <a href="#privacy.issues.connected.to.accept.headers" title="Privacy Issues Connected to Accept Headers">Section 8.1</a>. |
---|
1139 | </p> |
---|
1140 | <p id="rfc.section.6.4.p.11">As intelligibility is highly dependent on the individual user, it is recommended that client applications make the choice |
---|
1141 | of linguistic preference available to the user. If the choice is not made available, then the Accept-Language header field <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> be given in the request. |
---|
1142 | </p> |
---|
1143 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
1144 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> When making the choice of linguistic preference available to the user, we remind implementors of the fact that users are not |
---|
1145 | familiar with the details of language matching as described above, and should provide appropriate guidance. As an example, |
---|
1146 | users might assume that on selecting "en-gb", they will be served any kind of English document if British English is not available. |
---|
1147 | A user agent might suggest in such a case to add "en" to get the best matching behavior. |
---|
1148 | </dd> |
---|
1149 | </dl> |
---|
1150 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.2"></div> |
---|
1151 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.5"></div> |
---|
1152 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.5"><a href="#rfc.section.6.5">6.5</a> <a id="header.content-encoding" href="#header.content-encoding">Content-Encoding</a></h2> |
---|
1153 | <p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.1">The entity-header field "Content-Encoding" is used as a modifier to the media-type. When present, its value indicates what |
---|
1154 | additional content codings have been applied to the entity-body, and thus what decoding mechanisms must be applied in order |
---|
1155 | to obtain the media-type referenced by the Content-Type header field. Content-Encoding is primarily used to allow a document |
---|
1156 | to be compressed without losing the identity of its underlying media type. |
---|
1157 | </p> |
---|
1158 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.30"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.30"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.31"></span> <a href="#header.content-encoding" class="smpl">Content-Encoding</a> = "Content-Encoding" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#header.content-encoding" class="smpl">Content-Encoding-v</a> |
---|
1159 | <a href="#header.content-encoding" class="smpl">Content-Encoding-v</a> = 1#<a href="#content.codings" class="smpl">content-coding</a> |
---|
1160 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.3">Content codings are defined in <a href="#content.codings" title="Content Codings">Section 3.2</a>. An example of its use is |
---|
1161 | </p> |
---|
1162 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.31"></div><pre class="text"> Content-Encoding: gzip |
---|
1163 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.5">The content-coding is a characteristic of the entity identified by the Request-URI. Typically, the entity-body is stored with |
---|
1164 | this encoding and is only decoded before rendering or analogous usage. However, a non-transparent proxy <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> modify the content-coding if the new coding is known to be acceptable to the recipient, unless the "no-transform" cache-control |
---|
1165 | directive is present in the message. |
---|
1166 | </p> |
---|
1167 | <p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.6">If the content-coding of an entity is not "identity", then the response <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> include a Content-Encoding entity-header (<a href="#header.content-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.3" title="Content-Encoding">Section 6.5</a>) that lists the non-identity content-coding(s) used. |
---|
1168 | </p> |
---|
1169 | <p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.7">If the content-coding of an entity in a request message is not acceptable to the origin server, the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> respond with a status code of 415 (Unsupported Media Type). |
---|
1170 | </p> |
---|
1171 | <p id="rfc.section.6.5.p.8">If multiple encodings have been applied to an entity, the content codings <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be listed in the order in which they were applied. Additional information about the encoding parameters <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be provided by other entity-header fields not defined by this specification. |
---|
1172 | </p> |
---|
1173 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.3"></div> |
---|
1174 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.6"></div> |
---|
1175 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.6"><a href="#rfc.section.6.6">6.6</a> <a id="header.content-language" href="#header.content-language">Content-Language</a></h2> |
---|
1176 | <p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.1">The entity-header field "Content-Language" describes the natural language(s) of the intended audience for the enclosed entity. |
---|
1177 | Note that this might not be equivalent to all the languages used within the entity-body. |
---|
1178 | </p> |
---|
1179 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.32"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.32"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.33"></span> <a href="#header.content-language" class="smpl">Content-Language</a> = "Content-Language" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#header.content-language" class="smpl">Content-Language-v</a> |
---|
1180 | <a href="#header.content-language" class="smpl">Content-Language-v</a> = 1#<a href="#language.tags" class="smpl">language-tag</a> |
---|
1181 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.3">Language tags are defined in <a href="#language.tags" title="Language Tags">Section 3.5</a>. The primary purpose of Content-Language is to allow a user to identify and differentiate entities according to the user's |
---|
1182 | own preferred language. Thus, if the body content is intended only for a Danish-literate audience, the appropriate field is |
---|
1183 | </p> |
---|
1184 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.33"></div><pre class="text"> Content-Language: da |
---|
1185 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.5">If no Content-Language is specified, the default is that the content is intended for all language audiences. This might mean |
---|
1186 | that the sender does not consider it to be specific to any natural language, or that the sender does not know for which language |
---|
1187 | it is intended. |
---|
1188 | </p> |
---|
1189 | <p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.6">Multiple languages <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be listed for content that is intended for multiple audiences. For example, a rendition of the "Treaty of Waitangi," presented |
---|
1190 | simultaneously in the original Maori and English versions, would call for |
---|
1191 | </p> |
---|
1192 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.34"></div><pre class="text"> Content-Language: mi, en |
---|
1193 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.8">However, just because multiple languages are present within an entity does not mean that it is intended for multiple linguistic |
---|
1194 | audiences. An example would be a beginner's language primer, such as "A First Lesson in Latin," which is clearly intended |
---|
1195 | to be used by an English-literate audience. In this case, the Content-Language would properly only include "en". |
---|
1196 | </p> |
---|
1197 | <p id="rfc.section.6.6.p.9">Content-Language <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be applied to any media type -- it is not limited to textual documents. |
---|
1198 | </p> |
---|
1199 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.4"></div> |
---|
1200 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.7"></div> |
---|
1201 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.7"><a href="#rfc.section.6.7">6.7</a> <a id="header.content-location" href="#header.content-location">Content-Location</a></h2> |
---|
1202 | <p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.1">The entity-header field "Content-Location" <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be used to supply the resource location for the entity enclosed in the message when that entity is accessible from a location |
---|
1203 | separate from the requested resource's URI. A server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> provide a Content-Location for the variant corresponding to the response entity; especially in the case where a resource has |
---|
1204 | multiple entities associated with it, and those entities actually have separate locations by which they might be individually |
---|
1205 | accessed, the server <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> provide a Content-Location for the particular variant which is returned. |
---|
1206 | </p> |
---|
1207 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.35"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.34"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.35"></span> <a href="#header.content-location" class="smpl">Content-Location</a> = "Content-Location" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> |
---|
1208 | <a href="#header.content-location" class="smpl">Content-Location-v</a> |
---|
1209 | <a href="#header.content-location" class="smpl">Content-Location-v</a> = |
---|
1210 | <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">absolute-URI</a> / <a href="#abnf.dependencies" class="smpl">relativeURI</a> |
---|
1211 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.3">The value of Content-Location also defines the base URI for the entity.</p> |
---|
1212 | <p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.4">The Content-Location value is not a replacement for the original requested URI; it is only a statement of the location of |
---|
1213 | the resource corresponding to this particular entity at the time of the request. Future requests <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> specify the Content-Location URI as the request-URI if the desire is to identify the source of that particular entity. |
---|
1214 | </p> |
---|
1215 | <p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.5">A cache cannot assume that an entity with a Content-Location different from the URI used to retrieve it can be used to respond |
---|
1216 | to later requests on that Content-Location URI. However, the Content-Location can be used to differentiate between multiple |
---|
1217 | entities retrieved from a single requested resource, as described in <a href="p6-cache.html#caching.negotiated.responses" title="Caching Negotiated Responses">Section 8</a> of <a href="#Part6" id="rfc.xref.Part6.4"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching">[Part6]</cite></a>. |
---|
1218 | </p> |
---|
1219 | <p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.6">If the Content-Location is a relative URI, the relative URI is interpreted relative to the Request-URI.</p> |
---|
1220 | <p id="rfc.section.6.7.p.7">The meaning of the Content-Location header in PUT or POST requests is undefined; servers are free to ignore it in those cases.</p> |
---|
1221 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.5"></div> |
---|
1222 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.8"></div> |
---|
1223 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.8"><a href="#rfc.section.6.8">6.8</a> <a id="header.content-md5" href="#header.content-md5">Content-MD5</a></h2> |
---|
1224 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.1">The entity-header field "Content-MD5", as defined in <a href="#RFC1864" id="rfc.xref.RFC1864.1"><cite title="The Content-MD5 Header Field">[RFC1864]</cite></a>, is an MD5 digest of the entity-body for the purpose of providing an end-to-end message integrity check (MIC) of the entity-body. |
---|
1225 | (Note: a MIC is good for detecting accidental modification of the entity-body in transit, but is not proof against malicious |
---|
1226 | attacks.) |
---|
1227 | </p> |
---|
1228 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.36"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.36"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.37"></span> <a href="#header.content-md5" class="smpl">Content-MD5</a> = "Content-MD5" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#header.content-md5" class="smpl">Content-MD5-v</a> |
---|
1229 | <a href="#header.content-md5" class="smpl">Content-MD5-v</a> = <base64 of 128 bit MD5 digest as per <a href="#RFC1864" id="rfc.xref.RFC1864.2"><cite title="The Content-MD5 Header Field">[RFC1864]</cite></a>> |
---|
1230 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.3">The Content-MD5 header field <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> be generated by an origin server or client to function as an integrity check of the entity-body. Only origin servers or clients <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> generate the Content-MD5 header field; proxies and gateways <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> generate it, as this would defeat its value as an end-to-end integrity check. Any recipient of the entity-body, including |
---|
1231 | gateways and proxies, <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> check that the digest value in this header field matches that of the entity-body as received. |
---|
1232 | </p> |
---|
1233 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.4">The MD5 digest is computed based on the content of the entity-body, including any content-coding that has been applied, but |
---|
1234 | not including any transfer-encoding applied to the message-body. If the message is received with a transfer-encoding, that |
---|
1235 | encoding <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be removed prior to checking the Content-MD5 value against the received entity. |
---|
1236 | </p> |
---|
1237 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.5">This has the result that the digest is computed on the octets of the entity-body exactly as, and in the order that, they would |
---|
1238 | be sent if no transfer-encoding were being applied. |
---|
1239 | </p> |
---|
1240 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.6">HTTP extends RFC 1864 to permit the digest to be computed for MIME composite media-types (e.g., multipart/* and message/rfc822), |
---|
1241 | but this does not change how the digest is computed as defined in the preceding paragraph. |
---|
1242 | </p> |
---|
1243 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.7">There are several consequences of this. The entity-body for composite types <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> contain many body-parts, each with its own MIME and HTTP headers (including Content-MD5, Content-Transfer-Encoding, and Content-Encoding |
---|
1244 | headers). If a body-part has a Content-Transfer-Encoding or Content-Encoding header, it is assumed that the content of the |
---|
1245 | body-part has had the encoding applied, and the body-part is included in the Content-MD5 digest as is -- i.e., after the application. |
---|
1246 | The Transfer-Encoding header field is not allowed within body-parts. |
---|
1247 | </p> |
---|
1248 | <p id="rfc.section.6.8.p.8">Conversion of all line breaks to CRLF <em class="bcp14">MUST NOT</em> be done before computing or checking the digest: the line break convention used in the text actually transmitted <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> be left unaltered when computing the digest. |
---|
1249 | </p> |
---|
1250 | <dl class="empty"> |
---|
1251 | <dd> <b>Note:</b> while the definition of Content-MD5 is exactly the same for HTTP as in RFC 1864 for MIME entity-bodies, there are several |
---|
1252 | ways in which the application of Content-MD5 to HTTP entity-bodies differs from its application to MIME entity-bodies. One |
---|
1253 | is that HTTP, unlike MIME, does not use Content-Transfer-Encoding, and does use Transfer-Encoding and Content-Encoding. Another |
---|
1254 | is that HTTP more frequently uses binary content types than MIME, so it is worth noting that, in such cases, the byte order |
---|
1255 | used to compute the digest is the transmission byte order defined for the type. Lastly, HTTP allows transmission of text types |
---|
1256 | with any of several line break conventions and not just the canonical form using CRLF. |
---|
1257 | </dd> |
---|
1258 | </dl> |
---|
1259 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.6"></div> |
---|
1260 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.9"></div> |
---|
1261 | <h2 id="rfc.section.6.9"><a href="#rfc.section.6.9">6.9</a> <a id="header.content-type" href="#header.content-type">Content-Type</a></h2> |
---|
1262 | <p id="rfc.section.6.9.p.1">The entity-header field "Content-Type" indicates the media type of the entity-body sent to the recipient or, in the case of |
---|
1263 | the HEAD method, the media type that would have been sent had the request been a GET. |
---|
1264 | </p> |
---|
1265 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.37"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.38"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.39"></span> <a href="#header.content-type" class="smpl">Content-Type</a> = "Content-Type" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#header.content-type" class="smpl">Content-Type-v</a> |
---|
1266 | <a href="#header.content-type" class="smpl">Content-Type-v</a> = <a href="#media.types" class="smpl">media-type</a> |
---|
1267 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.9.p.3">Media types are defined in <a href="#media.types" title="Media Types">Section 3.3</a>. An example of the field is |
---|
1268 | </p> |
---|
1269 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.38"></div><pre class="text"> Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-4 |
---|
1270 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.6.9.p.5">Further discussion of methods for identifying the media type of an entity is provided in <a href="#type" title="Type">Section 4.2.1</a>. |
---|
1271 | </p> |
---|
1272 | <h1 id="rfc.section.7"><a href="#rfc.section.7">7.</a> <a id="IANA.considerations" href="#IANA.considerations">IANA Considerations</a></h1> |
---|
1273 | <h2 id="rfc.section.7.1"><a href="#rfc.section.7.1">7.1</a> <a id="message.header.registration" href="#message.header.registration">Message Header Registration</a></h2> |
---|
1274 | <p id="rfc.section.7.1.p.1">The Message Header Registry located at <<a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/message-headers/message-header-index.html">http://www.iana.org/assignments/message-headers/message-header-index.html</a>> should be updated with the permanent registrations below (see <a href="#RFC3864" id="rfc.xref.RFC3864.1"><cite title="Registration Procedures for Message Header Fields">[RFC3864]</cite></a>): |
---|
1275 | </p> |
---|
1276 | <div id="rfc.table.1"> |
---|
1277 | <div id="iana.header.registration.table"></div> |
---|
1278 | <table summary="" class="tt full" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0"> |
---|
1279 | <thead> |
---|
1280 | <tr> |
---|
1281 | <th>Header Field Name</th> |
---|
1282 | <th>Protocol</th> |
---|
1283 | <th>Status</th> |
---|
1284 | <th>Reference</th> |
---|
1285 | </tr> |
---|
1286 | </thead> |
---|
1287 | <tbody> |
---|
1288 | <tr> |
---|
1289 | <td>Accept</td> |
---|
1290 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1291 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1292 | <td> <a href="#header.accept" id="rfc.xref.header.accept.3" title="Accept">Section 6.1</a> |
---|
1293 | </td> |
---|
1294 | </tr> |
---|
1295 | <tr> |
---|
1296 | <td>Accept-Charset</td> |
---|
1297 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1298 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1299 | <td> <a href="#header.accept-charset" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.2" title="Accept-Charset">Section 6.2</a> |
---|
1300 | </td> |
---|
1301 | </tr> |
---|
1302 | <tr> |
---|
1303 | <td>Accept-Encoding</td> |
---|
1304 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1305 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1306 | <td> <a href="#header.accept-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.3" title="Accept-Encoding">Section 6.3</a> |
---|
1307 | </td> |
---|
1308 | </tr> |
---|
1309 | <tr> |
---|
1310 | <td>Accept-Language</td> |
---|
1311 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1312 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1313 | <td> <a href="#header.accept-language" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-language.2" title="Accept-Language">Section 6.4</a> |
---|
1314 | </td> |
---|
1315 | </tr> |
---|
1316 | <tr> |
---|
1317 | <td>Content-Disposition</td> |
---|
1318 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1319 | <td></td> |
---|
1320 | <td> <a href="#content-disposition" id="rfc.xref.content-disposition.1" title="Content-Disposition">Appendix B.1</a> |
---|
1321 | </td> |
---|
1322 | </tr> |
---|
1323 | <tr> |
---|
1324 | <td>Content-Encoding</td> |
---|
1325 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1326 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1327 | <td> <a href="#header.content-encoding" id="rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.4" title="Content-Encoding">Section 6.5</a> |
---|
1328 | </td> |
---|
1329 | </tr> |
---|
1330 | <tr> |
---|
1331 | <td>Content-Language</td> |
---|
1332 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1333 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1334 | <td> <a href="#header.content-language" id="rfc.xref.header.content-language.2" title="Content-Language">Section 6.6</a> |
---|
1335 | </td> |
---|
1336 | </tr> |
---|
1337 | <tr> |
---|
1338 | <td>Content-Location</td> |
---|
1339 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1340 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1341 | <td> <a href="#header.content-location" id="rfc.xref.header.content-location.2" title="Content-Location">Section 6.7</a> |
---|
1342 | </td> |
---|
1343 | </tr> |
---|
1344 | <tr> |
---|
1345 | <td>Content-MD5</td> |
---|
1346 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1347 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1348 | <td> <a href="#header.content-md5" id="rfc.xref.header.content-md5.2" title="Content-MD5">Section 6.8</a> |
---|
1349 | </td> |
---|
1350 | </tr> |
---|
1351 | <tr> |
---|
1352 | <td>Content-Type</td> |
---|
1353 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1354 | <td>standard</td> |
---|
1355 | <td> <a href="#header.content-type" id="rfc.xref.header.content-type.3" title="Content-Type">Section 6.9</a> |
---|
1356 | </td> |
---|
1357 | </tr> |
---|
1358 | <tr> |
---|
1359 | <td>MIME-Version</td> |
---|
1360 | <td>http</td> |
---|
1361 | <td></td> |
---|
1362 | <td> <a href="#mime-version" id="rfc.xref.mime-version.1" title="MIME-Version">Appendix A.1</a> |
---|
1363 | </td> |
---|
1364 | </tr> |
---|
1365 | </tbody> |
---|
1366 | </table> |
---|
1367 | </div> |
---|
1368 | <p id="rfc.section.7.1.p.2">The change controller is: "IETF (iesg@ietf.org) - Internet Engineering Task Force".</p> |
---|
1369 | <h1 id="rfc.section.8"><a href="#rfc.section.8">8.</a> <a id="security.considerations" href="#security.considerations">Security Considerations</a></h1> |
---|
1370 | <p id="rfc.section.8.p.1">This section is meant to inform application developers, information providers, and users of the security limitations in HTTP/1.1 |
---|
1371 | as described by this document. The discussion does not include definitive solutions to the problems revealed, though it does |
---|
1372 | make some suggestions for reducing security risks. |
---|
1373 | </p> |
---|
1374 | <h2 id="rfc.section.8.1"><a href="#rfc.section.8.1">8.1</a> <a id="privacy.issues.connected.to.accept.headers" href="#privacy.issues.connected.to.accept.headers">Privacy Issues Connected to Accept Headers</a></h2> |
---|
1375 | <p id="rfc.section.8.1.p.1">Accept request-headers can reveal information about the user to all servers which are accessed. The Accept-Language header |
---|
1376 | in particular can reveal information the user would consider to be of a private nature, because the understanding of particular |
---|
1377 | languages is often strongly correlated to the membership of a particular ethnic group. User agents which offer the option |
---|
1378 | to configure the contents of an Accept-Language header to be sent in every request are strongly encouraged to let the configuration |
---|
1379 | process include a message which makes the user aware of the loss of privacy involved. |
---|
1380 | </p> |
---|
1381 | <p id="rfc.section.8.1.p.2">An approach that limits the loss of privacy would be for a user agent to omit the sending of Accept-Language headers by default, |
---|
1382 | and to ask the user whether or not to start sending Accept-Language headers to a server if it detects, by looking for any |
---|
1383 | Vary response-header fields generated by the server, that such sending could improve the quality of service. |
---|
1384 | </p> |
---|
1385 | <p id="rfc.section.8.1.p.3">Elaborate user-customized accept header fields sent in every request, in particular if these include quality values, can be |
---|
1386 | used by servers as relatively reliable and long-lived user identifiers. Such user identifiers would allow content providers |
---|
1387 | to do click-trail tracking, and would allow collaborating content providers to match cross-server click-trails or form submissions |
---|
1388 | of individual users. Note that for many users not behind a proxy, the network address of the host running the user agent will |
---|
1389 | also serve as a long-lived user identifier. In environments where proxies are used to enhance privacy, user agents ought to |
---|
1390 | be conservative in offering accept header configuration options to end users. As an extreme privacy measure, proxies could |
---|
1391 | filter the accept headers in relayed requests. General purpose user agents which provide a high degree of header configurability <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> warn users about the loss of privacy which can be involved. |
---|
1392 | </p> |
---|
1393 | <h2 id="rfc.section.8.2"><a href="#rfc.section.8.2">8.2</a> <a id="content-disposition.issues" href="#content-disposition.issues">Content-Disposition Issues</a></h2> |
---|
1394 | <p id="rfc.section.8.2.p.1"> <a href="#RFC2183" id="rfc.xref.RFC2183.1"><cite title="Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header Field">[RFC2183]</cite></a>, from which the often implemented Content-Disposition (see <a href="#content-disposition" id="rfc.xref.content-disposition.2" title="Content-Disposition">Appendix B.1</a>) header in HTTP is derived, has a number of very serious security considerations. Content-Disposition is not part of the |
---|
1395 | HTTP standard, but since it is widely implemented, we are documenting its use and risks for implementors. See <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2183#section-5">Section 5</a> of <a href="#RFC2183" id="rfc.xref.RFC2183.2"><cite title="Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header Field">[RFC2183]</cite></a> for details. |
---|
1396 | </p> |
---|
1397 | <h1 id="rfc.section.9"><a href="#rfc.section.9">9.</a> <a id="ack" href="#ack">Acknowledgments</a></h1> |
---|
1398 | <h1 id="rfc.references"><a id="rfc.section.10" href="#rfc.section.10">10.</a> References |
---|
1399 | </h1> |
---|
1400 | <h2 id="rfc.references.1"><a href="#rfc.section.10.1" id="rfc.section.10.1">10.1</a> Normative References |
---|
1401 | </h2> |
---|
1402 | <table summary="Normative References"> |
---|
1403 | <tr> |
---|
1404 | <td class="reference"><b id="ISO-8859-1">[ISO-8859-1]</b></td> |
---|
1405 | <td class="top">International Organization for Standardization, “ |
---|
1406 | Information technology -- 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets -- Part 1: Latin alphabet No. 1 |
---|
1407 | ”, ISO/IEC 8859-1:1998, 1998. |
---|
1408 | </td> |
---|
1409 | </tr> |
---|
1410 | <tr> |
---|
1411 | <td class="reference"><b id="Part1">[Part1]</b></td> |
---|
1412 | <td class="top"><a title="Day Software">Fielding, R., Ed.</a>, <a title="One Laptop per Child">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Hewlett-Packard Company">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Adobe Systems, Incorporated">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Lafon, Y., Ed.</a>, and <a title="greenbytes GmbH">J. F. Reschke, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-p1-messaging-latest">HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing</a>”, Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-p1-messaging-latest (work in progress), November 2008. |
---|
1413 | </td> |
---|
1414 | </tr> |
---|
1415 | <tr> |
---|
1416 | <td class="reference"><b id="Part2">[Part2]</b></td> |
---|
1417 | <td class="top"><a title="Day Software">Fielding, R., Ed.</a>, <a title="One Laptop per Child">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Hewlett-Packard Company">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Adobe Systems, Incorporated">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Lafon, Y., Ed.</a>, and <a title="greenbytes GmbH">J. F. Reschke, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-latest">HTTP/1.1, part 2: Message Semantics</a>”, Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-latest (work in progress), November 2008. |
---|
1418 | </td> |
---|
1419 | </tr> |
---|
1420 | <tr> |
---|
1421 | <td class="reference"><b id="Part4">[Part4]</b></td> |
---|
1422 | <td class="top"><a title="Day Software">Fielding, R., Ed.</a>, <a title="One Laptop per Child">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Hewlett-Packard Company">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Adobe Systems, Incorporated">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Lafon, Y., Ed.</a>, and <a title="greenbytes GmbH">J. F. Reschke, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-p4-conditional-latest">HTTP/1.1, part 4: Conditional Requests</a>”, Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-p4-conditional-latest (work in progress), November 2008. |
---|
1423 | </td> |
---|
1424 | </tr> |
---|
1425 | <tr> |
---|
1426 | <td class="reference"><b id="Part5">[Part5]</b></td> |
---|
1427 | <td class="top"><a title="Day Software">Fielding, R., Ed.</a>, <a title="One Laptop per Child">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Hewlett-Packard Company">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Adobe Systems, Incorporated">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Lafon, Y., Ed.</a>, and <a title="greenbytes GmbH">J. F. Reschke, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-p5-range-latest">HTTP/1.1, part 5: Range Requests and Partial Responses</a>”, Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-p5-range-latest (work in progress), November 2008. |
---|
1428 | </td> |
---|
1429 | </tr> |
---|
1430 | <tr> |
---|
1431 | <td class="reference"><b id="Part6">[Part6]</b></td> |
---|
1432 | <td class="top"><a title="Day Software">Fielding, R., Ed.</a>, <a title="One Laptop per Child">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Hewlett-Packard Company">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Adobe Systems, Incorporated">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="World Wide Web Consortium">Lafon, Y., Ed.</a>, and <a title="greenbytes GmbH">J. F. Reschke, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-httpbis-p6-cache-latest">HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching</a>”, Internet-Draft draft-ietf-httpbis-p6-cache-latest (work in progress), November 2008. |
---|
1433 | </td> |
---|
1434 | </tr> |
---|
1435 | <tr> |
---|
1436 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1766">[RFC1766]</b></td> |
---|
1437 | <td class="top"><a title="UNINETT">Alvestrand, H.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1766">Tags for the Identification of Languages</a>”, RFC 1766, March 1995. |
---|
1438 | </td> |
---|
1439 | </tr> |
---|
1440 | <tr> |
---|
1441 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1864">[RFC1864]</b></td> |
---|
1442 | <td class="top"><a title="Carnegie Mellon University">Myers, J.</a> and <a title="Dover Beach Consulting, Inc.">M. Rose</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1864">The Content-MD5 Header Field</a>”, RFC 1864, October 1995. |
---|
1443 | </td> |
---|
1444 | </tr> |
---|
1445 | <tr> |
---|
1446 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1950">[RFC1950]</b></td> |
---|
1447 | <td class="top"><a title="Aladdin Enterprises">Deutsch, L.P.</a> and J-L. Gailly, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1950">ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification version 3.3</a>”, RFC 1950, May 1996.<br>RFC 1950 is an Informational RFC, thus it may be less stable than this specification. On the other hand, this downward reference |
---|
1448 | was present since the publication of RFC 2068 in 1997 (<a href="#RFC2068" id="rfc.xref.RFC2068.1"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2068]</cite></a>), therefore it is unlikely to cause problems in practice. See also <a href="#BCP97" id="rfc.xref.BCP97.1"><cite title="Handling Normative References to Standards-Track Documents">[BCP97]</cite></a>. |
---|
1449 | </td> |
---|
1450 | </tr> |
---|
1451 | <tr> |
---|
1452 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1951">[RFC1951]</b></td> |
---|
1453 | <td class="top"><a title="Aladdin Enterprises">Deutsch, P.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1951">DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification version 1.3</a>”, RFC 1951, May 1996.<br>RFC 1951 is an Informational RFC, thus it may be less stable than this specification. On the other hand, this downward reference |
---|
1454 | was present since the publication of RFC 2068 in 1997 (<a href="#RFC2068" id="rfc.xref.RFC2068.2"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2068]</cite></a>), therefore it is unlikely to cause problems in practice. See also <a href="#BCP97" id="rfc.xref.BCP97.2"><cite title="Handling Normative References to Standards-Track Documents">[BCP97]</cite></a>. |
---|
1455 | </td> |
---|
1456 | </tr> |
---|
1457 | <tr> |
---|
1458 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1952">[RFC1952]</b></td> |
---|
1459 | <td class="top"><a title="Aladdin Enterprises">Deutsch, P.</a>, <a>Gailly, J-L.</a>, <a>Adler, M.</a>, <a>Deutsch, L.P.</a>, and <a>G. Randers-Pehrson</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1952">GZIP file format specification version 4.3</a>”, RFC 1952, May 1996.<br>RFC 1952 is an Informational RFC, thus it may be less stable than this specification. On the other hand, this downward reference |
---|
1460 | was present since the publication of RFC 2068 in 1997 (<a href="#RFC2068" id="rfc.xref.RFC2068.3"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2068]</cite></a>), therefore it is unlikely to cause problems in practice. See also <a href="#BCP97" id="rfc.xref.BCP97.3"><cite title="Handling Normative References to Standards-Track Documents">[BCP97]</cite></a>. |
---|
1461 | </td> |
---|
1462 | </tr> |
---|
1463 | <tr> |
---|
1464 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2045">[RFC2045]</b></td> |
---|
1465 | <td class="top"><a title="Innosoft International, Inc.">Freed, N.</a> and <a title="First Virtual Holdings">N.S. Borenstein</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2045">Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies</a>”, RFC 2045, November 1996. |
---|
1466 | </td> |
---|
1467 | </tr> |
---|
1468 | <tr> |
---|
1469 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2046">[RFC2046]</b></td> |
---|
1470 | <td class="top"><a title="Innosoft International, Inc.">Freed, N.</a> and <a title="First Virtual Holdings">N. Borenstein</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2046">Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types</a>”, RFC 2046, November 1996. |
---|
1471 | </td> |
---|
1472 | </tr> |
---|
1473 | <tr> |
---|
1474 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2119">[RFC2119]</b></td> |
---|
1475 | <td class="top"><a title="Harvard University">Bradner, S.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119">Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels</a>”, BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |
---|
1476 | </td> |
---|
1477 | </tr> |
---|
1478 | <tr> |
---|
1479 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC4647">[RFC4647]</b></td> |
---|
1480 | <td class="top"><a title="Yahoo! Inc.">Phillips, A., Ed.</a> and <a title="Google">M. Davis, Ed.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4647">Matching of Language Tags</a>”, BCP 47, RFC 4647, September 2006. |
---|
1481 | </td> |
---|
1482 | </tr> |
---|
1483 | </table> |
---|
1484 | <h2 id="rfc.references.2"><a href="#rfc.section.10.2" id="rfc.section.10.2">10.2</a> Informative References |
---|
1485 | </h2> |
---|
1486 | <table summary="Informative References"> |
---|
1487 | <tr> |
---|
1488 | <td class="reference"><b id="BCP97">[BCP97]</b></td> |
---|
1489 | <td class="top"><a>Klensin, J.</a> and <a title="MIT">S. Hartman</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4897">Handling Normative References to Standards-Track Documents</a>”, BCP 97, RFC 4897, June 2007. |
---|
1490 | </td> |
---|
1491 | </tr> |
---|
1492 | <tr> |
---|
1493 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC1945">[RFC1945]</b></td> |
---|
1494 | <td class="top"><a title="MIT, Laboratory for Computer Science">Berners-Lee, T.</a>, <a title="University of California, Irvine, Department of Information and Computer Science">Fielding, R.T.</a>, and <a title="W3 Consortium, MIT Laboratory for Computer Science">H.F. Nielsen</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1945">Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0</a>”, RFC 1945, May 1996. |
---|
1495 | </td> |
---|
1496 | </tr> |
---|
1497 | <tr> |
---|
1498 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2049">[RFC2049]</b></td> |
---|
1499 | <td class="top"><a title="Innosoft International, Inc.">Freed, N.</a> and <a title="First Virtual Holdings">N.S. Borenstein</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2049">Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Five: Conformance Criteria and Examples</a>”, RFC 2049, November 1996. |
---|
1500 | </td> |
---|
1501 | </tr> |
---|
1502 | <tr> |
---|
1503 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2068">[RFC2068]</b></td> |
---|
1504 | <td class="top"><a title="University of California, Irvine, Department of Information and Computer Science">Fielding, R.</a>, <a title="MIT Laboratory for Computer Science">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Digital Equipment Corporation, Western Research Laboratory">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="MIT Laboratory for Computer Science">Nielsen, H.</a>, and <a title="MIT Laboratory for Computer Science">T. Berners-Lee</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2068">Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1</a>”, RFC 2068, January 1997. |
---|
1505 | </td> |
---|
1506 | </tr> |
---|
1507 | <tr> |
---|
1508 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2076">[RFC2076]</b></td> |
---|
1509 | <td class="top"><a title="Stockholm University/KTH">Palme, J.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2076">Common Internet Message Headers</a>”, RFC 2076, February 1997. |
---|
1510 | </td> |
---|
1511 | </tr> |
---|
1512 | <tr> |
---|
1513 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2183">[RFC2183]</b></td> |
---|
1514 | <td class="top"><a title="New Century Systems">Troost, R.</a>, <a title="QUALCOMM Incorporated">Dorner, S.</a>, and <a title="Department of Computer Science">K. Moore</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2183">Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header Field</a>”, RFC 2183, August 1997. |
---|
1515 | </td> |
---|
1516 | </tr> |
---|
1517 | <tr> |
---|
1518 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2277">[RFC2277]</b></td> |
---|
1519 | <td class="top"><a title="UNINETT">Alvestrand, H.T.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2277">IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages</a>”, BCP 18, RFC 2277, January 1998. |
---|
1520 | </td> |
---|
1521 | </tr> |
---|
1522 | <tr> |
---|
1523 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2388">[RFC2388]</b></td> |
---|
1524 | <td class="top"><a title="Xerox Palo Alto Research Center">Masinter, L.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2388">Returning Values from Forms: multipart/form-data</a>”, RFC 2388, August 1998. |
---|
1525 | </td> |
---|
1526 | </tr> |
---|
1527 | <tr> |
---|
1528 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2557">[RFC2557]</b></td> |
---|
1529 | <td class="top"><a title="Stockholm University and KTH">Palme, F.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Hopmann, A.</a>, <a title="Lotus Development Corporation">Shelness, N.</a>, and <a>E. Stefferud</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2557">MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML (MHTML)</a>”, RFC 2557, March 1999. |
---|
1530 | </td> |
---|
1531 | </tr> |
---|
1532 | <tr> |
---|
1533 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC2616">[RFC2616]</b></td> |
---|
1534 | <td class="top"><a title="University of California, Irvine">Fielding, R.</a>, <a title="W3C">Gettys, J.</a>, <a title="Compaq Computer Corporation">Mogul, J.</a>, <a title="MIT Laboratory for Computer Science">Frystyk, H.</a>, <a title="Xerox Corporation">Masinter, L.</a>, <a title="Microsoft Corporation">Leach, P.</a>, and <a title="W3C">T. Berners-Lee</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2616">Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1</a>”, RFC 2616, June 1999. |
---|
1535 | </td> |
---|
1536 | </tr> |
---|
1537 | <tr> |
---|
1538 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC3629">[RFC3629]</b></td> |
---|
1539 | <td class="top"><a title="Alis Technologies">Yergeau, F.</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3629">UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646</a>”, RFC 3629, STD 63, November 2003. |
---|
1540 | </td> |
---|
1541 | </tr> |
---|
1542 | <tr> |
---|
1543 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC3864">[RFC3864]</b></td> |
---|
1544 | <td class="top"><a title="Nine by Nine">Klyne, G.</a>, <a title="BEA Systems">Nottingham, M.</a>, and <a title="HP Labs">J. Mogul</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3864">Registration Procedures for Message Header Fields</a>”, BCP 90, RFC 3864, September 2004. |
---|
1545 | </td> |
---|
1546 | </tr> |
---|
1547 | <tr> |
---|
1548 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC4288">[RFC4288]</b></td> |
---|
1549 | <td class="top"><a title="Sun Microsystems">Freed, N.</a> and <a>J. Klensin</a>, “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4288">Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures</a>”, BCP 13, RFC 4288, December 2005. |
---|
1550 | </td> |
---|
1551 | </tr> |
---|
1552 | <tr> |
---|
1553 | <td class="reference"><b id="RFC5322">[RFC5322]</b></td> |
---|
1554 | <td class="top">Resnick, P., “<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322">Internet Message Format</a>”, RFC 5322, October 2008. |
---|
1555 | </td> |
---|
1556 | </tr> |
---|
1557 | </table> |
---|
1558 | <h1 id="rfc.authors"><a href="#rfc.authors">Authors' Addresses</a></h1> |
---|
1559 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Roy T. Fielding</span> |
---|
1560 | (editor) |
---|
1561 | <span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Fielding</span><span class="given-name">Roy T.</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">Day Software</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">23 Corporate Plaza DR, Suite 280</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Newport Beach</span>, <span class="region">CA</span> <span class="postal-code">92660</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline tel">Phone: <a href="tel:+1-949-706-5300"><span class="value">+1-949-706-5300</span></a></span><span class="vcardline tel"><span class="type">Fax</span>: <a href="fax:+1-949-706-5305"><span class="value">+1-949-706-5305</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">fielding@gbiv.com</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://roy.gbiv.com/" class="url">http://roy.gbiv.com/</a></span></address> |
---|
1562 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Jim Gettys</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Gettys</span><span class="given-name">Jim</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">One Laptop per Child</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">21 Oak Knoll Road</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Carlisle</span>, <span class="region">MA</span> <span class="postal-code">01741</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">jg@laptop.org</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://www.laptop.org/" class="url">http://www.laptop.org/</a></span></address> |
---|
1563 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Jeffrey C. Mogul</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Mogul</span><span class="given-name">Jeffrey C.</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">Hewlett-Packard Company</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">HP Labs, Large Scale Systems Group</span><span class="street-address vcardline">1501 Page Mill Road, MS 1177</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Palo Alto</span>, <span class="region">CA</span> <span class="postal-code">94304</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">JeffMogul@acm.org</span></a></span></address> |
---|
1564 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Henrik Frystyk Nielsen</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Frystyk</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">Microsoft Corporation</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">1 Microsoft Way</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Redmond</span>, <span class="region">WA</span> <span class="postal-code">98052</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">henrikn@microsoft.com</span></a></span></address> |
---|
1565 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Larry Masinter</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Masinter</span><span class="given-name">Larry</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">Adobe Systems, Incorporated</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">345 Park Ave</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">San Jose</span>, <span class="region">CA</span> <span class="postal-code">95110</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">LMM@acm.org</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://larry.masinter.net/" class="url">http://larry.masinter.net/</a></span></address> |
---|
1566 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Paul J. Leach</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Leach</span><span class="given-name">Paul J.</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">Microsoft Corporation</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">1 Microsoft Way</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Redmond</span>, <span class="region">WA</span> <span class="postal-code">98052</span></span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">paulle@microsoft.com</span></a></span></address> |
---|
1567 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Tim Berners-Lee</span><span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Berners-Lee</span><span class="given-name">Tim</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">World Wide Web Consortium</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory</span><span class="street-address vcardline">The Stata Center, Building 32</span><span class="street-address vcardline">32 Vassar Street</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Cambridge</span>, <span class="region">MA</span> <span class="postal-code">02139</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">USA</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">timbl@w3.org</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/" class="url">http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/</a></span></address> |
---|
1568 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Yves Lafon</span> |
---|
1569 | (editor) |
---|
1570 | <span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Lafon</span><span class="given-name">Yves</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">World Wide Web Consortium</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">W3C / ERCIM</span><span class="street-address vcardline">2004, rte des Lucioles</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Sophia-Antipolis</span>, <span class="region">AM</span> <span class="postal-code">06902</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">France</span></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">ylafon@w3.org</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://www.raubacapeu.net/people/yves/" class="url">http://www.raubacapeu.net/people/yves/</a></span></address> |
---|
1571 | <address class="vcard"><span class="vcardline"><span class="fn">Julian F. Reschke</span> |
---|
1572 | (editor) |
---|
1573 | <span class="n hidden"><span class="family-name">Reschke</span><span class="given-name">Julian F.</span></span></span><span class="org vcardline">greenbytes GmbH</span><span class="adr"><span class="street-address vcardline">Hafenweg 16</span><span class="vcardline"><span class="locality">Muenster</span>, <span class="region">NW</span> <span class="postal-code">48155</span></span><span class="country-name vcardline">Germany</span></span><span class="vcardline tel">Phone: <a href="tel:+492512807760"><span class="value">+49 251 2807760</span></a></span><span class="vcardline tel"><span class="type">Fax</span>: <a href="fax:+492512807761"><span class="value">+49 251 2807761</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">EMail: <a><span class="email">julian.reschke@greenbytes.de</span></a></span><span class="vcardline">URI: <a href="http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/" class="url">http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/</a></span></address> |
---|
1574 | <h1 id="rfc.section.A"><a href="#rfc.section.A">A.</a> <a id="differences.between.http.entities.and.rfc.2045.entities" href="#differences.between.http.entities.and.rfc.2045.entities">Differences Between HTTP Entities and RFC 2045 Entities</a></h1> |
---|
1575 | <p id="rfc.section.A.p.1">HTTP/1.1 uses many of the constructs defined for Internet Mail (<a href="#RFC5322" id="rfc.xref.RFC5322.1"><cite title="Internet Message Format">[RFC5322]</cite></a>) and the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME <a href="#RFC2045" id="rfc.xref.RFC2045.1"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies">[RFC2045]</cite></a>) to allow entities to be transmitted in an open variety of representations and with extensible mechanisms. However, RFC 2045 |
---|
1576 | discusses mail, and HTTP has a few features that are different from those described in RFC 2045. These differences were carefully |
---|
1577 | chosen to optimize performance over binary connections, to allow greater freedom in the use of new media types, to make date |
---|
1578 | comparisons easier, and to acknowledge the practice of some early HTTP servers and clients. |
---|
1579 | </p> |
---|
1580 | <p id="rfc.section.A.p.2">This appendix describes specific areas where HTTP differs from RFC 2045. Proxies and gateways to strict MIME environments <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be aware of these differences and provide the appropriate conversions where necessary. Proxies and gateways from MIME environments |
---|
1581 | to HTTP also need to be aware of the differences because some conversions might be required. |
---|
1582 | </p> |
---|
1583 | <div id="rfc.iref.m.1"></div> |
---|
1584 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.10"></div> |
---|
1585 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.1"><a href="#rfc.section.A.1">A.1</a> <a id="mime-version" href="#mime-version">MIME-Version</a></h2> |
---|
1586 | <p id="rfc.section.A.1.p.1">HTTP is not a MIME-compliant protocol. However, HTTP/1.1 messages <em class="bcp14">MAY</em> include a single MIME-Version general-header field to indicate what version of the MIME protocol was used to construct the |
---|
1587 | message. Use of the MIME-Version header field indicates that the message is in full compliance with the MIME protocol (as |
---|
1588 | defined in <a href="#RFC2045" id="rfc.xref.RFC2045.2"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies">[RFC2045]</cite></a>). Proxies/gateways are responsible for ensuring full compliance (where possible) when exporting HTTP messages to strict MIME |
---|
1589 | environments. |
---|
1590 | </p> |
---|
1591 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.39"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.40"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.41"></span> <a href="#mime-version" class="smpl">MIME-Version</a> = "MIME-Version" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#mime-version" class="smpl">MIME-Version-v</a> |
---|
1592 | <a href="#mime-version" class="smpl">MIME-Version-v</a> = 1*<a href="#notation" class="smpl">DIGIT</a> "." 1*<a href="#notation" class="smpl">DIGIT</a> |
---|
1593 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.A.1.p.3">MIME version "1.0" is the default for use in HTTP/1.1. However, HTTP/1.1 message parsing and semantics are defined by this |
---|
1594 | document and not the MIME specification. |
---|
1595 | </p> |
---|
1596 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.2"><a href="#rfc.section.A.2">A.2</a> <a id="conversion.to.canonical.form" href="#conversion.to.canonical.form">Conversion to Canonical Form</a></h2> |
---|
1597 | <p id="rfc.section.A.2.p.1"> <a href="#RFC2045" id="rfc.xref.RFC2045.3"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies">[RFC2045]</cite></a> requires that an Internet mail entity be converted to canonical form prior to being transferred, as described in <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2049#section-4">Section 4</a> of <a href="#RFC2049" id="rfc.xref.RFC2049.1"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Five: Conformance Criteria and Examples">[RFC2049]</cite></a>. <a href="#canonicalization.and.text.defaults" title="Canonicalization and Text Defaults">Section 3.3.1</a> of this document describes the forms allowed for subtypes of the "text" media type when transmitted over HTTP. <a href="#RFC2046" id="rfc.xref.RFC2046.3"><cite title="Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types">[RFC2046]</cite></a> requires that content with a type of "text" represent line breaks as CRLF and forbids the use of CR or LF outside of line |
---|
1598 | break sequences. HTTP allows CRLF, bare CR, and bare LF to indicate a line break within text content when a message is transmitted |
---|
1599 | over HTTP. |
---|
1600 | </p> |
---|
1601 | <p id="rfc.section.A.2.p.2">Where it is possible, a proxy or gateway from HTTP to a strict MIME environment <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> translate all line breaks within the text media types described in <a href="#canonicalization.and.text.defaults" title="Canonicalization and Text Defaults">Section 3.3.1</a> of this document to the RFC 2049 canonical form of CRLF. Note, however, that this might be complicated by the presence of |
---|
1602 | a Content-Encoding and by the fact that HTTP allows the use of some character sets which do not use octets 13 and 10 to represent |
---|
1603 | CR and LF, as is the case for some multi-byte character sets. |
---|
1604 | </p> |
---|
1605 | <p id="rfc.section.A.2.p.3">Implementors should note that conversion will break any cryptographic checksums applied to the original content unless the |
---|
1606 | original content is already in canonical form. Therefore, the canonical form is recommended for any content that uses such |
---|
1607 | checksums in HTTP. |
---|
1608 | </p> |
---|
1609 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.3"><a href="#rfc.section.A.3">A.3</a> <a id="introduction.of.content-encoding" href="#introduction.of.content-encoding">Introduction of Content-Encoding</a></h2> |
---|
1610 | <p id="rfc.section.A.3.p.1">RFC 2045 does not include any concept equivalent to HTTP/1.1's Content-Encoding header field. Since this acts as a modifier |
---|
1611 | on the media type, proxies and gateways from HTTP to MIME-compliant protocols <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> either change the value of the Content-Type header field or decode the entity-body before forwarding the message. (Some experimental |
---|
1612 | applications of Content-Type for Internet mail have used a media-type parameter of ";conversions=<content-coding>" to perform |
---|
1613 | a function equivalent to Content-Encoding. However, this parameter is not part of RFC 2045). |
---|
1614 | </p> |
---|
1615 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.4"><a href="#rfc.section.A.4">A.4</a> <a id="no.content-transfer-encoding" href="#no.content-transfer-encoding">No Content-Transfer-Encoding</a></h2> |
---|
1616 | <p id="rfc.section.A.4.p.1">HTTP does not use the Content-Transfer-Encoding field of RFC 2045. Proxies and gateways from MIME-compliant protocols to HTTP <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> remove any Content-Transfer-Encoding prior to delivering the response message to an HTTP client. |
---|
1617 | </p> |
---|
1618 | <p id="rfc.section.A.4.p.2">Proxies and gateways from HTTP to MIME-compliant protocols are responsible for ensuring that the message is in the correct |
---|
1619 | format and encoding for safe transport on that protocol, where "safe transport" is defined by the limitations of the protocol |
---|
1620 | being used. Such a proxy or gateway <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> label the data with an appropriate Content-Transfer-Encoding if doing so will improve the likelihood of safe transport over |
---|
1621 | the destination protocol. |
---|
1622 | </p> |
---|
1623 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.5"><a href="#rfc.section.A.5">A.5</a> <a id="introduction.of.transfer-encoding" href="#introduction.of.transfer-encoding">Introduction of Transfer-Encoding</a></h2> |
---|
1624 | <p id="rfc.section.A.5.p.1">HTTP/1.1 introduces the Transfer-Encoding header field (<a href="p1-messaging.html#header.transfer-encoding" title="Transfer-Encoding">Section 8.7</a> of <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.16"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>). Proxies/gateways <em class="bcp14">MUST</em> remove any transfer-coding prior to forwarding a message via a MIME-compliant protocol. |
---|
1625 | </p> |
---|
1626 | <h2 id="rfc.section.A.6"><a href="#rfc.section.A.6">A.6</a> <a id="mhtml.line.length" href="#mhtml.line.length">MHTML and Line Length Limitations</a></h2> |
---|
1627 | <p id="rfc.section.A.6.p.1">HTTP implementations which share code with MHTML <a href="#RFC2557" id="rfc.xref.RFC2557.1"><cite title="MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML (MHTML)">[RFC2557]</cite></a> implementations need to be aware of MIME line length limitations. Since HTTP does not have this limitation, HTTP does not |
---|
1628 | fold long lines. MHTML messages being transported by HTTP follow all conventions of MHTML, including line length limitations |
---|
1629 | and folding, canonicalization, etc., since HTTP transports all message-bodies as payload (see <a href="#multipart.types" title="Multipart Types">Section 3.3.2</a>) and does not interpret the content or any MIME header lines that might be contained therein. |
---|
1630 | </p> |
---|
1631 | <h1 id="rfc.section.B"><a href="#rfc.section.B">B.</a> <a id="additional.features" href="#additional.features">Additional Features</a></h1> |
---|
1632 | <p id="rfc.section.B.p.1"> <a href="#RFC1945" id="rfc.xref.RFC1945.1"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0">[RFC1945]</cite></a> and <a href="#RFC2068" id="rfc.xref.RFC2068.4"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2068]</cite></a> document protocol elements used by some existing HTTP implementations, but not consistently and correctly across most HTTP/1.1 |
---|
1633 | applications. Implementors are advised to be aware of these features, but cannot rely upon their presence in, or interoperability |
---|
1634 | with, other HTTP/1.1 applications. Some of these describe proposed experimental features, and some describe features that |
---|
1635 | experimental deployment found lacking that are now addressed in the base HTTP/1.1 specification. |
---|
1636 | </p> |
---|
1637 | <p id="rfc.section.B.p.2">A number of other headers, such as Content-Disposition and Title, from SMTP and MIME are also often implemented (see <a href="#RFC2076" id="rfc.xref.RFC2076.1"><cite title="Common Internet Message Headers">[RFC2076]</cite></a>). |
---|
1638 | </p> |
---|
1639 | <div id="rfc.iref.h.11"></div> |
---|
1640 | <div id="rfc.iref.c.7"></div> |
---|
1641 | <h2 id="rfc.section.B.1"><a href="#rfc.section.B.1">B.1</a> <a id="content-disposition" href="#content-disposition">Content-Disposition</a></h2> |
---|
1642 | <p id="rfc.section.B.1.p.1">The Content-Disposition response-header field has been proposed as a means for the origin server to suggest a default filename |
---|
1643 | if the user requests that the content is saved to a file. This usage is derived from the definition of Content-Disposition |
---|
1644 | in <a href="#RFC2183" id="rfc.xref.RFC2183.3"><cite title="Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header Field">[RFC2183]</cite></a>. |
---|
1645 | </p> |
---|
1646 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.40"></div><pre class="inline"><span id="rfc.iref.g.42"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.43"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.44"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.45"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.46"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.47"></span><span id="rfc.iref.g.48"></span> <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">content-disposition</a> = "Content-Disposition" ":" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> |
---|
1647 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">content-disposition-v</a> |
---|
1648 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">content-disposition-v</a> = <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disposition-type</a> |
---|
1649 | *( <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> ";" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">OWS</a> <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disposition-parm</a> ) |
---|
1650 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disposition-type</a> = "attachment" / <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disp-extension-token</a> |
---|
1651 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disposition-parm</a> = <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">filename-parm</a> / <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disp-extension-parm</a> |
---|
1652 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">filename-parm</a> = "filename" "=" <a href="#notation" class="smpl">quoted-string</a> |
---|
1653 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disp-extension-token</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> |
---|
1654 | <a href="#content-disposition" class="smpl">disp-extension-parm</a> = <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> "=" ( <a href="#notation" class="smpl">token</a> / <a href="#notation" class="smpl">quoted-string</a> ) |
---|
1655 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.B.1.p.3">An example is</p> |
---|
1656 | <div id="rfc.figure.u.41"></div><pre class="text"> Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="fname.ext" |
---|
1657 | </pre><p id="rfc.section.B.1.p.5">The receiving user agent <em class="bcp14">SHOULD NOT</em> respect any directory path information present in the filename-parm parameter, which is the only parameter believed to apply |
---|
1658 | to HTTP implementations at this time. The filename <em class="bcp14">SHOULD</em> be treated as a terminal component only. |
---|
1659 | </p> |
---|
1660 | <p id="rfc.section.B.1.p.6">If this header is used in a response with the application/octet-stream content-type, the implied suggestion is that the user |
---|
1661 | agent should not display the response, but directly enter a `save response as...' dialog. |
---|
1662 | </p> |
---|
1663 | <p id="rfc.section.B.1.p.7">See <a href="#content-disposition.issues" title="Content-Disposition Issues">Section 8.2</a> for Content-Disposition security issues. |
---|
1664 | </p> |
---|
1665 | <h1 id="rfc.section.C"><a href="#rfc.section.C">C.</a> <a id="compatibility" href="#compatibility">Compatibility with Previous Versions</a></h1> |
---|
1666 | <h2 id="rfc.section.C.1"><a href="#rfc.section.C.1">C.1</a> <a id="changes.from.rfc.2068" href="#changes.from.rfc.2068">Changes from RFC 2068</a></h2> |
---|
1667 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.1">Transfer-coding and message lengths all interact in ways that required fixing exactly when chunked encoding is used (to allow |
---|
1668 | for transfer encoding that may not be self delimiting); it was important to straighten out exactly how message lengths are |
---|
1669 | computed. (<a href="#entity.length" title="Entity Length">Section 4.2.2</a>, see also <a href="#Part1" id="rfc.xref.Part1.17"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 1: URIs, Connections, and Message Parsing">[Part1]</cite></a>, <a href="#Part5" id="rfc.xref.Part5.4"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 5: Range Requests and Partial Responses">[Part5]</cite></a> and <a href="#Part6" id="rfc.xref.Part6.5"><cite title="HTTP/1.1, part 6: Caching">[Part6]</cite></a>). |
---|
1670 | </p> |
---|
1671 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.2">Charset wildcarding is introduced to avoid explosion of character set names in accept headers. (<a href="#header.accept-charset" id="rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.3" title="Accept-Charset">Section 6.2</a>) |
---|
1672 | </p> |
---|
1673 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.3">Content-Base was deleted from the specification: it was not implemented widely, and there is no simple, safe way to introduce |
---|
1674 | it without a robust extension mechanism. In addition, it is used in a similar, but not identical fashion in MHTML <a href="#RFC2557" id="rfc.xref.RFC2557.2"><cite title="MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML (MHTML)">[RFC2557]</cite></a>. |
---|
1675 | </p> |
---|
1676 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.4">A content-coding of "identity" was introduced, to solve problems discovered in caching. (<a href="#content.codings" title="Content Codings">Section 3.2</a>) |
---|
1677 | </p> |
---|
1678 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.5">Quality Values of zero should indicate that "I don't want something" to allow clients to refuse a representation. (<a href="#quality.values" title="Quality Values">Section 3.4</a>) |
---|
1679 | </p> |
---|
1680 | <p id="rfc.section.C.1.p.6">The Alternates<span id="rfc.iref.a.5"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.12"></span>, Content-Version<span id="rfc.iref.c.8"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.13"></span>, Derived-From<span id="rfc.iref.d.2"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.14"></span>, Link<span id="rfc.iref.l.1"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.15"></span>, URI<span id="rfc.iref.u.1"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.16"></span>, Public<span id="rfc.iref.p.1"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.17"></span> and Content-Base<span id="rfc.iref.c.9"></span><span id="rfc.iref.h.18"></span> header fields were defined in previous versions of this specification, but not commonly implemented. See <a href="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2068#section-19.6.2">Section 19.6.2</a> of <a href="#RFC2068" id="rfc.xref.RFC2068.5"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2068]</cite></a>. |
---|
1681 | </p> |
---|
1682 | <h2 id="rfc.section.C.2"><a href="#rfc.section.C.2">C.2</a> <a id="changes.from.rfc.2616" href="#changes.from.rfc.2616">Changes from RFC 2616</a></h2> |
---|
1683 | <p id="rfc.section.C.2.p.1">Clarify contexts that charset is used in. (<a href="#character.sets" title="Character Sets">Section 3.1</a>) |
---|
1684 | </p> |
---|
1685 | <p id="rfc.section.C.2.p.2">Remove reference to non-existant identity transfer-coding value tokens. (<a href="#no.content-transfer-encoding" title="No Content-Transfer-Encoding">Appendix A.4</a>) |
---|
1686 | </p> |
---|
1687 | <h1 id="rfc.section.D"><a href="#rfc.section.D">D.</a> <a id="change.log" href="#change.log">Change Log (to be removed by RFC Editor before publication)</a></h1> |
---|
1688 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.1"><a href="#rfc.section.D.1">D.1</a> Since RFC2616 |
---|
1689 | </h2> |
---|
1690 | <p id="rfc.section.D.1.p.1">Extracted relevant partitions from <a href="#RFC2616" id="rfc.xref.RFC2616.2"><cite title="Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1">[RFC2616]</cite></a>. |
---|
1691 | </p> |
---|
1692 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.2"><a href="#rfc.section.D.2">D.2</a> Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-00 |
---|
1693 | </h2> |
---|
1694 | <p id="rfc.section.D.2.p.1">Closed issues: </p> |
---|
1695 | <ul> |
---|
1696 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/8">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/8</a>>: "Media Type Registrations" (<<a href="http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#media-reg">http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#media-reg</a>>) |
---|
1697 | </li> |
---|
1698 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/14">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/14</a>>: "Clarification regarding quoting of charset values" (<<a href="http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#charactersets">http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#charactersets</a>>) |
---|
1699 | </li> |
---|
1700 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/16">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/16</a>>: "Remove 'identity' token references" (<<a href="http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#identity">http://purl.org/NET/http-errata#identity</a>>) |
---|
1701 | </li> |
---|
1702 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/25">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/25</a>>: "Accept-Encoding BNF" |
---|
1703 | </li> |
---|
1704 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/35">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/35</a>>: "Normative and Informative references" |
---|
1705 | </li> |
---|
1706 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/46">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/46</a>>: "RFC1700 references" |
---|
1707 | </li> |
---|
1708 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/55">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/55</a>>: "Updating to RFC4288" |
---|
1709 | </li> |
---|
1710 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/65">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/65</a>>: "Informative references" |
---|
1711 | </li> |
---|
1712 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/66">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/66</a>>: "ISO-8859-1 Reference" |
---|
1713 | </li> |
---|
1714 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/68">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/68</a>>: "Encoding References Normative" |
---|
1715 | </li> |
---|
1716 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/86">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/86</a>>: "Normative up-to-date references" |
---|
1717 | </li> |
---|
1718 | </ul> |
---|
1719 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.3"><a href="#rfc.section.D.3">D.3</a> Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-01 |
---|
1720 | </h2> |
---|
1721 | <p id="rfc.section.D.3.p.1">Ongoing work on ABNF conversion (<<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/36">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/36</a>>): |
---|
1722 | </p> |
---|
1723 | <ul> |
---|
1724 | <li>Add explicit references to BNF syntax and rules imported from other parts of the specification.</li> |
---|
1725 | </ul> |
---|
1726 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.4"><a href="#rfc.section.D.4">D.4</a> <a id="changes.since.02" href="#changes.since.02">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-02</a></h2> |
---|
1727 | <p id="rfc.section.D.4.p.1">Closed issues: </p> |
---|
1728 | <ul> |
---|
1729 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/67">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/67</a>>: "Quoting Charsets" |
---|
1730 | </li> |
---|
1731 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/105">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/105</a>>: "Classification for Allow header" |
---|
1732 | </li> |
---|
1733 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/115">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/115</a>>: "missing default for qvalue in description of Accept-Encoding" |
---|
1734 | </li> |
---|
1735 | </ul> |
---|
1736 | <p id="rfc.section.D.4.p.2">Ongoing work on IANA Message Header Registration (<<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/40">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/40</a>>): |
---|
1737 | </p> |
---|
1738 | <ul> |
---|
1739 | <li>Reference RFC 3984, and update header registrations for headers defined in this document.</li> |
---|
1740 | </ul> |
---|
1741 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.5"><a href="#rfc.section.D.5">D.5</a> <a id="changes.since.03" href="#changes.since.03">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-03</a></h2> |
---|
1742 | <p id="rfc.section.D.5.p.1">Closed issues: </p> |
---|
1743 | <ul> |
---|
1744 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/67">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/67</a>>: "Quoting Charsets" |
---|
1745 | </li> |
---|
1746 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/113">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/113</a>>: "language tag matching (Accept-Language) vs RFC4647" |
---|
1747 | </li> |
---|
1748 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/121">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/121</a>>: "RFC 1806 has been replaced by RFC2183" |
---|
1749 | </li> |
---|
1750 | </ul> |
---|
1751 | <p id="rfc.section.D.5.p.2">Other changes: </p> |
---|
1752 | <ul> |
---|
1753 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/68">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/68</a>>: "Encoding References Normative" -- rephrase the annotation and reference <a href="#BCP97" id="rfc.xref.BCP97.4"><cite title="Handling Normative References to Standards-Track Documents">[BCP97]</cite></a>. |
---|
1754 | </li> |
---|
1755 | </ul> |
---|
1756 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.6"><a href="#rfc.section.D.6">D.6</a> <a id="changes.since.04" href="#changes.since.04">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-04</a></h2> |
---|
1757 | <p id="rfc.section.D.6.p.1">Closed issues: </p> |
---|
1758 | <ul> |
---|
1759 | <li> <<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/132">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/132</a>>: "RFC 2822 is updated by RFC 5322" |
---|
1760 | </li> |
---|
1761 | </ul> |
---|
1762 | <p id="rfc.section.D.6.p.2">Ongoing work on ABNF conversion (<<a href="http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/36">http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/36</a>>): |
---|
1763 | </p> |
---|
1764 | <ul> |
---|
1765 | <li>Use "/" instead of "|" for alternatives.</li> |
---|
1766 | <li>Introduce new ABNF rules for "bad" whitespace ("BWS"), optional whitespace ("OWS") and required whitespace ("RWS").</li> |
---|
1767 | <li>Rewrite ABNFs to spell out whitespace rules, factor out header value format definitions.</li> |
---|
1768 | </ul> |
---|
1769 | <h2 id="rfc.section.D.7"><a href="#rfc.section.D.7">D.7</a> <a id="changes.since.05" href="#changes.since.05">Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p3-payload-05</a></h2> |
---|
1770 | <h1><a id="rfc.copyright" href="#rfc.copyright">Full Copyright Statement</a></h1> |
---|
1771 | <p>This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the |
---|
1772 | authors retain all their rights. |
---|
1773 | </p> |
---|
1774 | <p>This document and the information contained herein are provided on an “AS IS” basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION |
---|
1775 | HE/SHE REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE |
---|
1776 | DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN |
---|
1777 | WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. |
---|
1778 | </p> |
---|
1779 | <h1><a id="rfc.ipr" href="#rfc.ipr">Intellectual Property</a></h1> |
---|
1780 | <p>The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might |
---|
1781 | be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in this document or the extent to which any |
---|
1782 | license under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has made any independent effort to |
---|
1783 | identify any such rights. Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and |
---|
1784 | BCP 79. |
---|
1785 | </p> |
---|
1786 | <p>Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result |
---|
1787 | of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users |
---|
1788 | of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at <<a href="http://www.ietf.org/ipr">http://www.ietf.org/ipr</a>>. |
---|
1789 | </p> |
---|
1790 | <p>The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary |
---|
1791 | rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF |
---|
1792 | at <a href="mailto:ietf-ipr@ietf.org">ietf-ipr@ietf.org</a>. |
---|
1793 | </p> |
---|
1794 | <h1 id="rfc.index"><a href="#rfc.index">Index</a></h1> |
---|
1795 | <p class="noprint"><a href="#rfc.index.A">A</a> <a href="#rfc.index.B">B</a> <a href="#rfc.index.C">C</a> <a href="#rfc.index.D">D</a> <a href="#rfc.index.G">G</a> <a href="#rfc.index.H">H</a> <a href="#rfc.index.I">I</a> <a href="#rfc.index.L">L</a> <a href="#rfc.index.M">M</a> <a href="#rfc.index.P">P</a> <a href="#rfc.index.R">R</a> <a href="#rfc.index.U">U</a> |
---|
1796 | </p> |
---|
1797 | <div class="print2col"> |
---|
1798 | <ul class="ind"> |
---|
1799 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.A" href="#rfc.index.A"><b>A</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1800 | <li class="indline1">Accept header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.2">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.a.1"><b>6.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1801 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Charset header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.1">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.a.2"><b>6.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.2">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.3">C.1</a></li> |
---|
1802 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Encoding header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.2">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.a.3"><b>6.3</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1803 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Language header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-language.1">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.a.4"><b>6.4</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-language.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1804 | <li class="indline1">Alternates header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.a.5"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1805 | </ul> |
---|
1806 | </li> |
---|
1807 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.B" href="#rfc.index.B"><b>B</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1808 | <li class="indline1"><em>BCP97</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.BCP97.1">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.BCP97.2">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.BCP97.3">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#BCP97"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.BCP97.4">D.5</a></li> |
---|
1809 | </ul> |
---|
1810 | </li> |
---|
1811 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.C" href="#rfc.index.C"><b>C</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1812 | <li class="indline1">compress <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.1">3.2</a></li> |
---|
1813 | <li class="indline1">Content-Base header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.9"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1814 | <li class="indline1">Content-Disposition header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.content-disposition.1">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.content-disposition.2">8.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.7"><b>B.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.extref.c.32">B.1</a></li> |
---|
1815 | <li class="indline1">Content-Encoding header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.2"><b>6.5</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.3">6.5</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.4">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1816 | <li class="indline1">Content-Language header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-language.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.3"><b>6.6</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-language.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1817 | <li class="indline1">Content-Location header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-location.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.4"><b>6.7</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-location.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1818 | <li class="indline1">Content-MD5 header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-md5.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.5"><b>6.8</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-md5.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1819 | <li class="indline1">Content-Type header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.6"><b>6.9</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1820 | <li class="indline1">Content-Version header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.c.8"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1821 | </ul> |
---|
1822 | </li> |
---|
1823 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.D" href="#rfc.index.D"><b>D</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1824 | <li class="indline1">deflate <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.d.1">3.2</a></li> |
---|
1825 | <li class="indline1">Derived-From header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.d.2"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1826 | </ul> |
---|
1827 | </li> |
---|
1828 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.G" href="#rfc.index.G"><b>G</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1829 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Grammar</tt> |
---|
1830 | <ul class="ind"> |
---|
1831 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.17"><b>6.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1832 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Charset</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.22"><b>6.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1833 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Charset-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.23"><b>6.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1834 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Encoding</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.24"><b>6.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1835 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Encoding-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.25"><b>6.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1836 | <li class="indline1"><tt>accept-ext</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.21"><b>6.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1837 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Language</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.27"><b>6.4</b></a></li> |
---|
1838 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-Language-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.28"><b>6.4</b></a></li> |
---|
1839 | <li class="indline1"><tt>accept-params</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.20"><b>6.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1840 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Accept-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.18"><b>6.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1841 | <li class="indline1"><tt>attribute</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.8"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1842 | <li class="indline1"><tt>charset</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.1"><b>3.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1843 | <li class="indline1"><tt>codings</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.26"><b>6.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1844 | <li class="indline1"><tt>content-coding</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.2"><b>3.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1845 | <li class="indline1"><tt>content-disposition</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.42"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1846 | <li class="indline1"><tt>content-disposition-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.43"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1847 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Encoding</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.30"><b>6.5</b></a></li> |
---|
1848 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Encoding-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.31"><b>6.5</b></a></li> |
---|
1849 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Language</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.32"><b>6.6</b></a></li> |
---|
1850 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Language-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.33"><b>6.6</b></a></li> |
---|
1851 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Location</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.34"><b>6.7</b></a></li> |
---|
1852 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Location-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.35"><b>6.7</b></a></li> |
---|
1853 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-MD5</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.36"><b>6.8</b></a></li> |
---|
1854 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-MD5-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.37"><b>6.8</b></a></li> |
---|
1855 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Type</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.38"><b>6.9</b></a></li> |
---|
1856 | <li class="indline1"><tt>Content-Type-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.39"><b>6.9</b></a></li> |
---|
1857 | <li class="indline1"><tt>disp-extension-parm</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.48"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1858 | <li class="indline1"><tt>disp-extension-token</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.47"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1859 | <li class="indline1"><tt>disposition-parm</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.45"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1860 | <li class="indline1"><tt>disposition-type</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.44"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1861 | <li class="indline1"><tt>entity-body</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.16"><b>4.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1862 | <li class="indline1"><tt>entity-header</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.14"><b>4.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1863 | <li class="indline1"><tt>extension-header</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.15"><b>4.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1864 | <li class="indline1"><tt>filename-parm</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.46"><b>B.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1865 | <li class="indline1"><tt>language-range</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.29"><b>6.4</b></a></li> |
---|
1866 | <li class="indline1"><tt>language-tag</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.11"><b>3.5</b></a></li> |
---|
1867 | <li class="indline1"><tt>media-range</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.19"><b>6.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1868 | <li class="indline1"><tt>media-type</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.4"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1869 | <li class="indline1"><tt>MIME-Version</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.40"><b>A.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1870 | <li class="indline1"><tt>MIME-Version-v</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.41"><b>A.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1871 | <li class="indline1"><tt>parameter</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.7"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1872 | <li class="indline1"><tt>primary-tag</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.12"><b>3.5</b></a></li> |
---|
1873 | <li class="indline1"><tt>qvalue</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.10"><b>3.4</b></a></li> |
---|
1874 | <li class="indline1"><tt>subtag</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.13"><b>3.5</b></a></li> |
---|
1875 | <li class="indline1"><tt>subtype</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.6"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1876 | <li class="indline1"><tt>type</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.5"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1877 | <li class="indline1"><tt>value</tt> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.9"><b>3.3</b></a></li> |
---|
1878 | </ul> |
---|
1879 | </li> |
---|
1880 | <li class="indline1">gzip <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.g.3">3.2</a></li> |
---|
1881 | </ul> |
---|
1882 | </li> |
---|
1883 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.H" href="#rfc.index.H"><b>H</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1884 | <li class="indline1">Headers |
---|
1885 | <ul class="ind"> |
---|
1886 | <li class="indline1">Accept <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.2">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.1"><b>6.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1887 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Charset <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.1">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.2"><b>6.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.2">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-charset.3">C.1</a></li> |
---|
1888 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Encoding <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.2">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.3"><b>6.3</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-encoding.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1889 | <li class="indline1">Accept-Language <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-language.1">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.4"><b>6.4</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.accept-language.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1890 | <li class="indline1">Alternate <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.12"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1891 | <li class="indline1">Content-Base <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.18"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1892 | <li class="indline1">Content-Disposition <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.content-disposition.1">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.content-disposition.2">8.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.11"><b>B.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.extref.c.32">B.1</a></li> |
---|
1893 | <li class="indline1">Content-Encoding <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.5"><b>6.5</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.3">6.5</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-encoding.4">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1894 | <li class="indline1">Content-Language <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-language.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.6"><b>6.6</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-language.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1895 | <li class="indline1">Content-Location <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-location.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.7"><b>6.7</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-location.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1896 | <li class="indline1">Content-MD5 <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-md5.1">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.8"><b>6.8</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-md5.2">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1897 | <li class="indline1">Content-Type <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.9"><b>6.9</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.header.content-type.3">7.1</a></li> |
---|
1898 | <li class="indline1">Content-Version <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.13"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1899 | <li class="indline1">Derived-From <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.14"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1900 | <li class="indline1">Link <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.15"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1901 | <li class="indline1">MIME-Version <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.mime-version.1">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.10"><b>A.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1902 | <li class="indline1">Public <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.17"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1903 | <li class="indline1">URI <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.h.16"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1904 | </ul> |
---|
1905 | </li> |
---|
1906 | </ul> |
---|
1907 | </li> |
---|
1908 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.I" href="#rfc.index.I"><b>I</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1909 | <li class="indline1">identity <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.i.1">3.2</a></li> |
---|
1910 | <li class="indline1"><em>ISO-8859-1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.ISO-8859-1.1">3.1.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#ISO-8859-1"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1911 | </ul> |
---|
1912 | </li> |
---|
1913 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.L" href="#rfc.index.L"><b>L</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1914 | <li class="indline1">Link header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.l.1"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1915 | </ul> |
---|
1916 | </li> |
---|
1917 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.M" href="#rfc.index.M"><b>M</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1918 | <li class="indline1">MIME-Version header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.mime-version.1">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.m.1"><b>A.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1919 | </ul> |
---|
1920 | </li> |
---|
1921 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.P" href="#rfc.index.P"><b>P</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1922 | <li class="indline1"><em>Part1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.2">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.3">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.4">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.5">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.6">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.7">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.8">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.9">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.10">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.11">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.12">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.13">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.14">4.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.15">4.2.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#Part1"><b>10.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.16">A.5</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.17">C.1</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1923 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 2.1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.1">2</a></li> |
---|
1924 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 2.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.2">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.3">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.4">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.5">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.6">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.7">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.8">2</a></li> |
---|
1925 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 3.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.9">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.11">2</a></li> |
---|
1926 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 4.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.12">2</a></li> |
---|
1927 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 4.3</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.14">4.2</a></li> |
---|
1928 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 4.4</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.15">4.2.2</a></li> |
---|
1929 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 8.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.10">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.13">4.1</a></li> |
---|
1930 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 8.7</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part1.16">A.5</a></li> |
---|
1931 | </ul> |
---|
1932 | </li> |
---|
1933 | <li class="indline1"><em>Part2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part2.1">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#Part2"><b>10.1</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1934 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 10.9</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part2.1">5.1</a></li> |
---|
1935 | </ul> |
---|
1936 | </li> |
---|
1937 | <li class="indline1"><em>Part4</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part4.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part4.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#Part4"><b>10.1</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1938 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 7.6</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part4.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part4.2">4.1</a></li> |
---|
1939 | </ul> |
---|
1940 | </li> |
---|
1941 | <li class="indline1"><em>Part5</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.2">3.3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.3">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#Part5"><b>10.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.4">C.1</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1942 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 6.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.3">4.1</a></li> |
---|
1943 | <li class="indline1"><em>Appendix A</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part5.2">3.3.2</a></li> |
---|
1944 | </ul> |
---|
1945 | </li> |
---|
1946 | <li class="indline1"><em>Part6</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.2">4.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.3">5.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.4">6.7</a>, <a class="iref" href="#Part6"><b>10.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.5">C.1</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1947 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 8</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.4">6.7</a></li> |
---|
1948 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 16.3</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.1">2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.2">4.1</a></li> |
---|
1949 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 16.5</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.Part6.3">5.1</a></li> |
---|
1950 | </ul> |
---|
1951 | </li> |
---|
1952 | <li class="indline1">Public header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.p.1"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1953 | </ul> |
---|
1954 | </li> |
---|
1955 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.R" href="#rfc.index.R"><b>R</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1956 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1766</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1766.1">3.5</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC1766"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1957 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1864</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1864.1">6.8</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1864.2">6.8</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC1864"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1958 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1945</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC1945"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1945.1">B</a></li> |
---|
1959 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1950</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1950.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC1950"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1960 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1951</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1951.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC1951"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1961 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC1952</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC1952.1">3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC1952"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1962 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2045</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC2045"><b>10.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2045.1">A</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2045.2">A.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2045.3">A.2</a></li> |
---|
1963 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2046</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2046.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2046.2">3.3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2046"><b>10.1</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2046.3">A.2</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1964 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 5.1.1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2046.2">3.3.2</a></li> |
---|
1965 | </ul> |
---|
1966 | </li> |
---|
1967 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2049</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC2049"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2049.1">A.2</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1968 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 4</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2049.1">A.2</a></li> |
---|
1969 | </ul> |
---|
1970 | </li> |
---|
1971 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2068</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.1">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.2">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.3">10.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2068"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.4">B</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.5">C.1</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1972 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 19.6.2</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2068.5">C.1</a></li> |
---|
1973 | </ul> |
---|
1974 | </li> |
---|
1975 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2076</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC2076"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2076.1">B</a></li> |
---|
1976 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2119</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2119.1">1.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2119"><b>10.1</b></a></li> |
---|
1977 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2183</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2183.1">8.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2183.2">8.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2183"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2183.3">B.1</a><ul class="ind"> |
---|
1978 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 5</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2183.2">8.2</a></li> |
---|
1979 | </ul> |
---|
1980 | </li> |
---|
1981 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2277</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2277.1">3.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2277"><b>10.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1982 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2388</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2388.1">3.3.2</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2388"><b>10.2</b></a></li> |
---|
1983 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2557</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC2557"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2557.1">A.6</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2557.2">C.1</a></li> |
---|
1984 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC2616</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2616.1">1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC2616"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC2616.2">D.1</a></li> |
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1985 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC3629</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC3629.1">3.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC3629"><b>10.2</b></a></li> |
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1986 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC3864</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC3864.1">7.1</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC3864"><b>10.2</b></a></li> |
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1987 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC4288</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC4288.1">3.3</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC4288"><b>10.2</b></a></li> |
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1988 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC4647</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC4647.1">6.4</a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC4647.2">6.4</a>, <a class="iref" href="#RFC4647"><b>10.1</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
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1989 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 2.1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC4647.1">6.4</a></li> |
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1990 | <li class="indline1"><em>Section 3.3.1</em> <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC4647.2">6.4</a></li> |
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1991 | </ul> |
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1992 | </li> |
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1993 | <li class="indline1"><em>RFC5322</em> <a class="iref" href="#RFC5322"><b>10.2</b></a>, <a class="iref" href="#rfc.xref.RFC5322.1">A</a></li> |
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1994 | </ul> |
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1995 | </li> |
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1996 | <li class="indline0"><a id="rfc.index.U" href="#rfc.index.U"><b>U</b></a><ul class="ind"> |
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1997 | <li class="indline1">URI header <a class="iref" href="#rfc.iref.u.1"><b>C.1</b></a></li> |
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1998 | </ul> |
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1999 | </li> |
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2000 | </ul> |
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2001 | </div> |
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2002 | </body> |
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2003 | </html> |
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