- From: Yaron Goland <yarong@microsoft.com>
- Date: Tue, 6 Jan 1998 22:26:04 -0800
- To: 'Scott Lawrence' <lawrence@agranat.com>, HTTP Working Group <http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com>
Hum... now call me picky but it seems bad pool to make clients who implement based on an RFC non-compatible when switching from draft to proposed. It was a MAY in RFC 2068 and should continue to be a may in the proposed standard. If this makes the feature useless then pull it out but don't go around punishing people who implement based on RFCs. Yaron > -----Original Message----- > From: Scott Lawrence [SMTP:lawrence@agranat.com] > Sent: Monday, January 05, 1998 7:48 AM > To: HTTP Working Group > Subject: MUST use Content-Base > > > In the course of our interoperability testing, we have found that > many browsers ignore the Content-Base header field (see > http://test11.agranat.com/basetest/). The spec now reads: > > ================ > 14.11 Content-Base > > The Content-Base entity-header field may be used to specify the base > URI > for resolving relative URLs within the entity. > > Content-Base = "Content-Base" ":" absoluteURI > > If no Content-Base field is present, the base URI of an entity is > defined either by its Content-Location (if that Content-Location URI > is > an absolute URI) or the URI used to initiate the request, in that > order > of precedence. Note, however, that the base URI of the contents within > the entity-body may be redefined within that entity-body. > ================ > > To get the proposal in at the front, I would like to see this > changed to require that this header field be used if present: > > ================ > The Content-Base entity-header field may be used by a server to > specify the base URI for resolving relative URLs within the > entity. > > Content-Base = "Content-Base" ":" absoluteURI > > If the Content-Base header field is present, clients MUST use its > value as the base URI of the response entity unless it is > overridden within the entity-body. If the base is not defined > within the entity body and no Content-Base is present, the base > URI is defined either by its Content-Location (if that > Content-Location URI is an absolute URI) or the URI used to > initiate the request, in that order of precedence. > ================ > > This is consistent with the idea of 'nested' definition of the base > URI as described in RFC 1808 "Relative Uniform Resource Locators" > (which is already referenced from the HTTP/1.1 spec). > > This is very useful to the origin server and content author; it > provides a mechanism for providing the base value in a number of > situations: > > - When the request URL is not the base for the response > ( http://server.co.xx/cgi-bin/search ); in some cases, the > response may not have a location that could be retrieved otherwise, > so that it may be inappropriate to send a Content-Location. > > - When the request URL uses extra information in the path (as in the > CGI PATH_INFO mechanism): http://server.co.xx/foobar/param1/param2 > where http://server.co.xx/foobar is the real entity and param1 and > param2 are inputs to it encoded as path components. > > - When the Content-Location is being used to identify a negotiated > variant, but relative links within the entity are the same for all > variants ( /foo/en/welcome.html and /foo/fr/welcome.html both > contain relative links to /foo/... ). > > It is true that if the entity returned is HTML then it can include a > BASE tag, but this means that the content author must know the > absoluteURI where the content is installed, and that information > must be either generated dynamically for each request or globally > changed when the content is moved (problematic for replicated sites, > for example). > > If we decide not to add the proposed normative requirement, then I > suggest that it would be better to strike the Content-Base mechanism > from the spec altogether; as it stands now it appears to provide a > mechanism for solving a common content-author problem, but it will > not work uniformly enough to be actually useful (if the author must > do something else to get the base correct for clients that ignore > Content-Base, then sending it at all is a waste of bytes). > > -- > Scott Lawrence EmWeb Embedded Server > <lawrence@agranat.com> > Agranat Systems, Inc. Engineering > http://www.agranat.com/
Received on Tuesday, 6 January 1998 22:28:55 UTC