- From: Albert Lunde <Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu>
- Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 17:32:34 +0100 (BST)
- To: http-wg-request@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com
> I would agree with Josh Cohen and David Morris that introducing a new
> URL scheme will affect proxies and is a bad idea. I also agree with
> David Morris that a new HTTP scheme should be avoided for the same
> reasons.
>
> Using a new default port is okay. The stuff about firewalls being
> affected is true to the extent that they also had to be opened up for
> the default ports used for other protocols - It really isn't a big
> hassle reconfiguring them.
>
> However, I side with David Morris in questioning the need distinguish
> between IPP and HTTP. Is there one?
I'm not an expert in this area, but I'd speculate that the suggestion of
introducing a new URL scheme and a new port number, comes from
considerations of firewalls and security. If one is implementing a policy
of "deny-everything-not-explicitly-allowed", it might be regarded as a
"feature" that IPP would not go thru existing firewalls or proxies until
they were reconfigured.
I guess the reasonableness of this condition depends on the intended market
for IPP, and the default security policy it should be expected to have.
I'd argue that a new URL scheme is a reasonable way to introduce a
different default port; but again the price is that a lot of existing web
clients will give you dumb looks if handed a new URL scheme. But this may
not matter if HTTP is just seen as a transport for IPP.
---
Albert Lunde Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu
Received on Friday, 5 June 1998 11:50:48 UTC