- From: Ben Laurie <ben@gonzo.ben.algroup.co.uk>
- Date: Sat, 21 Dec 1996 17:26:53 +0000 (GMT)
- To: "David W. Morris" <dwm@xpasc.com>
- Cc: S.N.Brodie@ecs.soton.ac.uk, brian@organic.com, hedlund@best.com, dmk@research.bell-labs.com, http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com, www-talk@www10.w3.org
David W. Morris wrote: > On Sat, 21 Dec 1996 S.N.Brodie@ecs.soton.ac.uk wrote: > > I read the message that the AOL proxy has been issuing that blames the > > remote site for the failure (in Apache Week). It would seem that their > > proxy does not implement HTTP/1.0 correctly if it does not accept a > > response in the same major version (which is all servers have to provide) > > Perhaps they don't implement the non-standard HTTP/1.0 RFC 'correctly' > which may not have even existed when they implemented... This is not the case. AOL implemented this change in the last few weeks, in response, they say, to "broken" servers issuing HTTP/1.1 responses. It seems unfortunate to me that they elected to do this without discussion, either with the authors of the "broken" servers, or with HTTP-WG. It also seems to me that the spec is not clear on this issue. There is clear intent in HTTP/1.1, in that the word "major" was added to the version of the response, but, AFAICS, no clear requirement to respond either 1.0 or 1.1 to a 1.0 request. Since a requirement of the spec is to be liberal in what is accepted, it seems to me that the correct interpretation of the spec is that a 1.1 reponse to a 1.0 request is permitted. I forget where we are wrt modifications to the spec. It seems to me that a modification should be made to clarify this point, whichever way it goes. Cheers, Ben. -- Ben Laurie Phone: +44 (181) 994 6435 Email: ben@algroup.co.uk Freelance Consultant and Fax: +44 (181) 994 6472 Technical Director URL: http://www.algroup.co.uk/Apache-SSL A.L. Digital Ltd, Apache Group member (http://www.apache.org) London, England. Apache-SSL author
Received on Saturday, 21 December 1996 12:04:15 UTC