- From: Koen Holtman <koen@win.tue.nl>
- Date: Fri, 20 Jun 1997 21:31:40 +0200 (MET DST)
- To: Graham Klyne <GK@acm.org>
- Cc: http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com, ietf-fax@imc.org
Graham Klyne: > [...] >This suggests to me that it might be desirable to tag negotiable features >as 'transient' as a warning to intermediate systems to avoid caching these >(negotiable feature) values in an attempt to 'optimize' future >negotiations. Here is how caching of negotiation metadata is handled in HTTP transparent content negotiation: - information about the feature set of the browser, if it is sent over the wire at all, is never cached (at least not under HTTP/1.1, a future protocol extension may provide sticky header or dictionary mechanisms which could cache such information for a short while). - information about the (features of the) content available at the server end can be cached, and the whole package (the complete variant list) can be assigned a caching lifetime according to the normal HTTP/1.1 max-age model. Conditional GETs can refresh the package if it is becomes stale. So there is no cache control at the level of individual features. I don't know whether such fine-grained caching would be useful in fax applications. >GK. Koen.
Received on Friday, 20 June 1997 12:34:27 UTC