- From: <Harald.T.Alvestrand@uninett.no>
- Date: Mon, 25 Mar 1996 13:00:56 +0100
- To: "Roy T. Fielding" <fielding@avron.ICS.UCI.EDU>
- Cc: http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
Just clearing out the tail end of the chain here.. "Roy T. Fielding": > > - It STILL loses the method information. > > I don't understand this one -- the method is still there. The only thing > that is lost is the original URL scheme and that information is inherent > in the connection to the origin server or gateway. My point: I think that it was a design mistake to link together: - The thing is identified by a "name-like" thing that starts with HTTP, and has a last resort access method using the HTTP protocol - The fact that we are currently using the HTTP protocol to access it. Even on the link to the origin server. But if we all accept that: - HTTP/1.1 is a stopgap until multiplexed HTTP (2.0) comes along - HTTP/2.0 will have full URLs and no Host: header then I don't see any reason to keep on beating this dead horse at this moment. > > - It STILL gives us no path to where it seems everyone wants to be, namely > > with full URLs, until we throw out HTTP/1.x altogether > > We have a path. HTTP/1.0 now --> HTTP/1.1 on May 1 --> HTTP/2.0 as soon > as multiplexing + PEP + cookies have a solid, agreed-upon syntax. > HTTP/1.1 contains the mechanisms necessary to make deployment of HTTP/2.0 > possible. > Is it possible to get this strategy written down in a 4-page "strategy" document? It might be nice to have the words down on phosphor that we agree upon. (Or I might just have missed the URL of the document, of course....) Thanks for caring! Harald A
Received on Monday, 25 March 1996 04:05:06 UTC