- From: Scott Lawrence <lawrence@agranat.com>
- Date: Wed, 30 Apr 1997 11:03:25 -0400
- To: ipp@pwg.org
- Cc: http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com
On the Internet Printing Protocol list the following issues were raised in the context of a discussion of whether or not IPP should use HTTP/1.1 as a 'transport' protocol, defining IPP operations as usage conventions and extentions. I will attempt to respond based on my understanding; if anyone else on http-wg disagrees, please correct or amplify. IPP> We discussed how MIME differs from the HTTP MIME-like IPP> protocol. There was a concern that the HTTP version of MIME IPP> doesn't support Content-Transfer-Encoding, though we think that IPP> we probably could add such an entity-header as an extension and IPP> support it through a CGI script if necessary (though we aren't IPP> sure about this). Content-Transfer-Encoding is not supported by HTTP because it isn't needed; the HTTP transport is 8 bit clean. IPP> There was also a question about how to send binary data in a IPP> multipart/mixed, especially in the chunked case because there is IPP> no way to know if a CRLF in the midst of binary data is really a IPP> CRLF. Thus it is hard to find the boundary string. CRLF is what it is - if it is in the binary data and is followed by the specified boundary string and another CRLF then you are at the end of the body part. What is the question? As I understand it, the selection of a boundary string in MIME is already 'probabilistic'; the sender is responsible for choosing a string that 'probably' won't appear in the body (I do not claim to be an authority on MIME). IPP> We believe that chunked applies to the entire multipart/mixed IPP> entity and cannot be used for one of the sub-entities alone. IPP> Thus there is no length to mark the boundary of a sub-entity. Correct; the 'Transfer-Encoding: chunked' applies to all of the HTTP message body. For completeness, my companys' server implementation does support chunked encoding of the entire multipart/* body part, but we think it doesn't make much sense (because it is redundant) so that support may be compiled out to save code. -- Scott Lawrence EmWeb Embedded Server <lawrence@agranat.com> Agranat Systems, Inc. Engineering http://www.agranat.com/
Received on Wednesday, 30 April 1997 08:53:38 UTC