W3C HTTP 1992

HTTP Request fields

These header lines are sent by the client in a HTTP protocol transaction. All lines are RFC822 format headers. The list of headers is terminated by an empty line.



From:

In Internet mail format, this gives the name of the requesting user. This field may be used for logging purposes and an insecure form of access protection. The interpretation of this field is that the request is being performed on behalf of the person given, who accepts responsability for the method performed.

The Internet mail address in this field does not have to correspond to the internet host which issued the request. (For example, when a request is passed through a gateway, then the original issuer's address should be used).

The mail address should, if possible, be a valid mail address, whether or not it is in fact an internet mail address or the internet mail representation of an address on some other mail system.


Accept:

This field contains a semicolon-separated list of representation schemes ( Content-Type metainformation values) which will be accepted in the response to this request.

The set given may of course vary from request to request from the same user.

This field may be wrapped onto several lines according to RCFC822, and also more than one occurence of the field is allowed with the signifiance being the same as if all the entries has been in one field. The format of each entry in the list is (/ meaning "or")

        <field>  =    Accept: <entry> *[ , <entry> ]
        <entry>  =    <content type> *[ ; <param> ]
        <param>  =    <attr> = <float>
        <attr>   =    q / mxs / mxb
        <float>  =    <ANSI-C floating point text represntation>

See the appendix on the negotiation algorithm as a function and penalty model. Note that a semicolon has a higher precedence than a comma in this syntax, to conform to MIME use.

If no Accept: field is present, then it is assumed that text/plain and text/html are accepted.

Example

                Accept: text/plain, text/html
                Accept: text/x-dvi; q=.8; mxb=100000; mxt=5.0, text/x-c

Wildcards

In order to save time, and also allow clients to receive content types of which they may not be aware, an asterisk "*" may be used in place of either the second half of the content-type value, or both halves. This only applies to the Accept: filed, and not to the content-type field of course.

Example

                        Accept:  *.*, q=0.1
                        Accept:  audio/*, q=0.2
                        Accept:  audio/basic q=1

may be interpreted as "if you have basic audio, send it; otherwise send me some other audio, or failing that, just give me what you've got."

Type parameters

Parameters on the content type are extremely useful for describing resolutions, colour depths, etc. They will allow a client to specify in the Accept: field the resolution of its device. This may allow the server to economise greatly on transmission time by reducing the resultion of an image, for example, and enable a more appropriate custom-designed black and white image to be selected rathther than giving the client a color image to convert into monochrome.

These parameters are to be specified when types are registered.. @@ TBS.

Sugestions include the following. Please feed back any references to existing improved abreviations for these:

dpi
dots per inch: pixels per inch [cm?!]
pxmax
maximum width in pixels (image or video)
pymax
maximum height in pixels
bits
bits per sample (sound) or pixels (graphics)
mchrome
greyscale or black and white (no value)
sps
samples (sound) or frames (video) per second
length
total size of object in bytes [bits?]


Accept-Encoding:

Similar to Accept, but lists the Content-Encoding types which are acceptable in the response.

        <field>  =    Accept-Encoding: <entry> *[ , <entry> ]
        <entry>  =    <content transfer encoding> *[ , <param> ]

Example

                Accept-Encoding: x-compress; x-zip


Accept-Language:

Similar to Accept, but lists the Language values which are preferable in the response. A response in an unspecifies language is not illegal. See also: Language .

Language coding TBS. (ISO standard xxxx.)


User-Agent:

This line if present gives the software program used by the original client. This is for statistical purposes and the tracing of protocol violations. It should be included. The first white space delimited word must be the software product name, with an optional slash and version designator. Other products which form part of the user agent may be put as separate words.

        <field>   =   User-Agent: <product>+
        <product> =   <word> [/<version>]
        <version> =   <word>

Example:

               User-Agent:  LII-Cello/1.0  libwww/2.5


Referer:

This optional header field allows the client to specify, for the server's benefit, the address ( URI ) of the document (or element within the document) from which the URI in the request was obtained.

This allows a server to generate lists of back-links to documents, for interest, logging, etc. It allows bad links to be traced for maintenance.

If a partial URI is given, then it should be parsed relative to the URI of the object of the request.

Example:

               Referer: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/DataSources/Overview.html


Authorization:

If this line is present it contains authorization information. The format is To Be Specified (TBS). The format of this field is in extensible form. The first word is a specification of the authorisation system in use.

Basic

Specification for current one implemented by AL Sep 1993.

PGP/PEM Encryption

People at NCSA are designing a PGP/PEM based protection system.

User/Password scheme

                Authorization:  user  fred:mypassword

The scheme name is "user". The second word is a user name (typically derived from a USER environment variable or prompted for), with an optional password separated by a colon (as in the URL syntax for FTP). Without a password, this povides very low level security. With the password, it provides a low-level security as used by unmodified FTP, Telnet, etc.

Kerberos

                Authorization:  kerberos  kerberosauthenticationsparameters

The format of the kerberosauthenticationsparameters is to be specified.


ChargeTo:

This line if present contains account information for the costs of the application of the method requested. The format is TBS. The format of this field must be in extensible form. The first word starts with a specification of the namespace in which the account is . (This is similar to extensible URL definition.) No namespaces are currently defined. Namespaces will be registered with the registration authority .

The format of the rest of the line is a function of the charging system, but it is recommended that this include a maximum cost whose payment is authorized by the client for this transaction, and a cost unit.


If-Modified-Since: date

This request header is used with GET method to make it conditional: if the requested document has not changed since the time specified in this field the document will not be sent, but instead a Not Modified 304 reply.

Format of this field is the same as for Date:.


Pragma:

Syntax is the same as for other multiple-value fields in HTTP, like the Accept: field, namely, a comma-separated list of entries, for which the optional parameters are separated by semicolons.

Pragma directives should be understood by servers to which they are relevant, e.g. a proxy server; currently only one pragma is defined:

no-cache
When present the proxy should not return a document from the cache even though it has not expired, but it should always request the document from the actual server.

Pragmas should be passed through by proxies even though they might have significance to the proxy itself. This is necessary in cases when the request has to go through many proxies, and the pragma should affect all of them.


Last modified: May 3, 1994