- From: Jim Whitehead <ejw@fdr.ics.uci.edu>
- Date: Thu, 12 Feb 1998 18:11:59 -0800
- To: http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com
*** CALL FOR PARTICIPATION *** "Towards a New Generation of HTTP" A workshop on global hypermedia infrastructure Held in Conjunction with the 7th Int'l WWW Conference April 14th, 1998 - Brisbane, Australia http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/httpng/ ABSTRACT Current Web infrastructure, based on HTML, URIs, and HTTP has created a dynamic, vibrant global hypermedia information space. As groups rush to add diverse facilities such as document management and printing, both locally and globally the extensibility limitations of the current infrastructure are exposed. The inertia of the installed base makes the key technical question how to gracefully evolve the web to include these and other next-generation services. This workshop provides a timely opportunity to collect researchers and practitioners from the Web and Hypermedia communities to broadly consider the future infrastructure of the global hypermedia information space. DESCRIPTION The Web community has a broad agenda for the future evolution of Web infrastructure. Today's infrastructure, based on the triad of HTML, URIs, and HTTP, has created the main platform for a large and diverse set of applications providing mission critical services for a dramatically growing Web community. But, the existing infrastructure is starting to show its limitations, a victim of its success. The growing complexity of often undefined or even unintended (or even conflicting) interactions between extensions has become a threat to the future evolution of the Web. Over the next year or so there will be significant, concrete progress on assessing the limitations of HTTP/1.x and designing extensions to address them. Some of these areas include performance engineering, support for extensibility, distributed authoring and versioning, asynchronous notification, distributed object interfaces, tuning for embedded Web devices, and realtime multimedia support. This workshop offers a timely opportunity to collect researchers and practitioners from the Web and Hypermedia communities to broadly consider the future infrastructure of the global hypermedia information space. With over 1.8 million web servers fielded on the Internet, there is tremendous inertia in the existing Web infrastructure. Adoption of new Web infrastructure will be slow, and its effects long-lasting. New infrastructure must be significantly better in all critical aspects, meeting the needs of a broad spectrum of users, while resolving existing problems of the current infrastructure and providing a solid, yet extensible foundation for future growth. There are many visions for the future web infrastructure being developed today: * The IETF WebDAV working group is an existing effort working to define the future of the Web. WebDAV, World Wide Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning, is working to extend the HTTP/1.x protocol to support remote, asynchronous, collaborative authoring of Web documents. WebDAV provides an infrastructure for creating locks, recording properties on resources, collection and namespace operations, and versioning. Lessons learned from this effort will inform the development of HTTP-NG. * Simplifying HTTP implementations and multiplexing concurrent connections were the twin goals of Simon Spero's 1994-5 era Session Control Protocol (SCP) and ASN.1-encoded binary HTTP-NG. Both aspects of his proposal have been quietly explored in the research community while HTTP/1.1 standardization was in the foreground. * The Open Hypermedia community has developed the Open Hypermedia Protocol (OHP) as a communications path between a constellation of hypermedia aware applications on a user's machine, and a hypermedia server. OHP raises key issues, questioning why the browser is the nexus for a user's hypertext interaction, and what services are necessary to extend the Web's hypermedia capabilities. * The Web community and the TCP community are coming together to solve the problem of how to prevent the often highly congested links on the Internet. Recent studies have shown the importance of collaboration between all network layers, from IP, to the applications layer, even extending to Web content. * W3C officially launched an HTTP-NG activity in July, 1997. This project will be investigating issues (focusing on simplicity and extensibility) relevant to the next generation of HTTP, led by Henrik Frystyk Nielsen and Jim Gettys. The goal of this project is to investigate whether a generic distributed object system can form a reliable foundation for the Web. Complementing this effort to build the Web on top of a distributed object infrastructure, in August 1997, the IETF held a BOF session for HTTP directions in Munich. We believe the HTTP-NG development process is beginning to coalesce and the WWW7 conference in April 1998 is an ideal point to discuss technical and political influences on the future of HTTP. WWW7 offers a unique, neutral forum to discuss these issues within the Web community, a forum distinct from existing next generation development and standardization processes. PARTICIPATING IN THE WORKSHOP This workshop solicits participation from individuals who wish to discuss the future infrastructure of the World Wide Web. Specifically, Web and Hypertext practitioners and researchers are invited to participate. Participants must submit either a 2-4 page position paper or a full-length paper on an issue directly related to the next generation hypermedia infrastructure. Topics of interest include, but are not restricted to: - requirements for global hypermedia infrastructure - prototypes and case studies of innovative hypermedia protocols - requirements based on evolution of network-layer protocols - architectural models and approaches - scenarios of use of next generation hypermedia services - adoption and deployment issues - standards process issues Submission Deadline: March 26, 1998 Acceptance: Rolling acceptance, notification will be mailed within a week Final Submissions: April 8, 1998 Please submit your paper via email to the workshop organizers at <http-future@xent.ics.uci.edu> in either HTML 3.2 or Adobe PDF format by March 26, 1998. Acceptance notification will be made on a rolling basis within a week of your submission. RELATED PAPERS Workshop participants will find the following materials to be helpful background for the workshop. W3C's HyperText Transfer Protocol Overview http://www.w3.org/Protocols/ W3C's HyperText Transfer Protocol - Next Generation Overview http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP-NG/ W3C's Protocol Extension Protocol for HTTP Overview http://www.w3.org/Protocols/PEP/ IETF WebDAV Working Group http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/webdav/ Open Hypermedia Protocol http://www.csdl.tamu.edu/ohs/ W3C Note on Network Performance Effects of HTTP/1.1, CSS1, and PNG http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/Performance/Pipeline.html ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Workshop Chairs * Rohit Khare, U.C. Irvine, <rohit@uci.edu> * Jim Whitehead, U.C. Irvine, <ejw@ics.uci.edu> * Henrik Nielsen, World Wide Web Consortium, <frystyk@w3.org> Workshop Committee * Roy Fielding, U.C. Irvine, <fielding@ics.uci.edu> * Henry Sanders, Microsoft, <henrysa@microsoft.com> WORKSHOP REGISTRATION Information on the WWW7 conference can be found at: http://www7.conf.au/ Information on this workshop can be found at: http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/httpng/ Information on registering for the workshop once you have been accepted can be found at: http://www.webventures.com.au/javelin/jssi/www7/welcome.jhtml
Received on Thursday, 12 February 1998 18:27:04 UTC