- From: Kalvinder Singh <singh@ozy.dec.com>
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 1999 16:04:49 +1000
- To: Robert Long <longr@conducent.com>
- Cc: "'http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com'" <http-wg@cuckoo.hpl.hp.com>
Robert Long wrote: > > I am wondering whether GET requests are allowed to have an Entity-Body? I can't see any reason why they would not. I have written a small http proxy, and I check for the "Content-Length" header to see if there is any entity body, and not the METHOD (except for HEAD :). > I have read through the HTTP RFC several times and have not been able to > find a specific prohibition of this, however several colleagues of mine > feel very strongly that GET requests are not permitted to provide an > Entity-Body. > Well, it doesn't make any sense for the GET to have a body, since all the information (both static and dynamic) are stored in the URL. So maybe there is an implementation of a proxy and/or server that gets all mixed up when there is a Body in a GET request. I guess this might be one of those times where you are forced to find out what the real world implementations do, by doing some testing...;) If you do find out, could you tell me, since I too would like to know, and am too lazy to work it out myself...;) Cheers, Kal. -- . Kalvinder Singh singh@ozy.dec.com _-_|\ Software Engineering Australia / \<-- Compaq \_.-._/ Research Park, Bond University Phone: +61 7 5575 0106 v Gold Coast, Qld, 4229, Australia Fax: +61 7 5575 0100
Received on Monday, 18 January 1999 22:06:14 UTC