- From: Roy T. Fielding <fielding@gbiv.com>
- Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2005 21:25:42 -0700
- To: W3C TAG <www-tag@w3.org>
As everyone here knows, the TAG has spent a great deal of time discussing the httpRange-14 issue, as described at http://www.w3.org/2001/tag/issues.html#httpRange-14 I am happy to report that we came up with a reasonable compromise solution at the recent TAG f2f meeting at MIT. <TAG type="RESOLVED"> That we provide advice to the community that they may mint "http" URIs for any resource provided that they follow this simple rule for the sake of removing ambiguity: a) If an "http" resource responds to a GET request with a 2xx response, then the resource identified by that URI is an information resource; b) If an "http" resource responds to a GET request with a 303 (See Other) response, then the resource identified by that URI could be any resource; c) If an "http" resource responds to a GET request with a 4xx (error) response, then the nature of the resource is unknown. </TAG> I believe that this solution enables people to name arbitrary resources using the "http" namespace without any dependence on fragment vs non-fragment URIs, while at the same time providing a mechanism whereby information can be supplied via the 303 redirect without leading to ambiguous interpretation of such information as being a representation of the resource (rather, the redirection points to a different resource in the same way as an external link from one resource to the other). Cheers, Roy T. Fielding <http://roy.gbiv.com/> Chief Scientist, Day Software <http://www.day.com/>
Received on Sunday, 19 June 2005 04:25:38 UTC