- From: Josh <josh@early.com>
- Date: Mon, 11 Aug 1997 11:12:07 -0400 (EDT)
- To: "Roy T. Fielding" <fielding@kiwi.ics.uci.edu>
- Cc: josh@early.com, http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
According to Roy T. Fielding, > > >> in the response chain, how about the following compromise: > >> > >> Follow the existing versioning requirements as-is, except that if the > >> request is HTTP/1.0 (and only HTTP/1.0), then make the response HTTP/1.0. > > > >and this is for proxy, server or both? > > Both. > > ....Roy > Umm, not to further complicate things.. We discussed this at the \wg and afterwards in an offline discussion, and it seems that if we assume that proxies will UPGRADE the request to their highest version, then leaving things as is will be livable. This is what 2145 seems to say..\ (this allows a proxy to use 1.1 when ever possible to the origin server and be able to satisfy 1.0 and 1.1 clients on cache hits with no ambiguity.. ) The only case still uncovered is the chunked upload.. Since that is a less common and more expensive operation, would it be wise to say that before you do a request like that, you should or must check the server version with OPTIONS? -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Josh R Cohen /Server Engineer josh@early.com Netscape Communications Corp. josh@geeks.org (This message is sent from my private email account to reach me for business related issues, mailto:josh@netscape.com ) -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Received on Monday, 11 August 1997 08:13:23 UTC