- From: Christian Parpart <trapni@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 11 Jul 2013 11:49:30 +0200
- To: Amos Jeffries <squid3@treenet.co.nz>
- Cc: ietf-http-wg@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CA+qvzFOrZEaaXKRYeaU=_X7vmemmjybGX9xLe3=VtEh6b8Nwgw@mail.gmail.com>
On Thu, Jul 11, 2013 at 4:53 AM, Amos Jeffries <squid3@treenet.co.nz> wrote: > On 11/07/2013 10:52 a.m., Christian Parpart wrote: > >> Hey guys, >> >> I am just new to this list and I've just recently started working through >> the HTTP/2 draft and all the blog articles found about. >> That being said, I myself have also very concerns others have noticed as >> well, and would like to deeply show my intention to help standing aside :) >> >> I am the implementor of one of the many HTTP servers that's being used in >> production, and one major feature is HTTP routing / load balancing, >> and I would really love to implement an HTTP/1.1 successor that is (to >> be) officially labeled HTTP/2[.0]. >> >> However, as a varnish [1] and a BSD [2] guy also raised there hands on, >> is the lag of easy extraction of envelop information of an HTTP request >> message, such as method, path, but most certainly the host. >> >> Please forgive me if this is already on-topic somewhere hidden, however, >> I would really highly encourage you to consider >> adding some dedicated frame type for this kind of envelope information. >> >> With that in mind, one might say that an HTTP/2 stream is not initiated >> by a HEADERS frame but the ENVELOPE frame that contains the actual >> uncompressed and unmystified but compact information about this request >> message. >> >> One humble proposal might indeed be: >> >> type: (something unassigned) >> flags: bit 1 = END_STREAM /* this HTTP message is complete with just >> these envelope frame, e.g. a simple GET, and no need for user-agent etc. */ >> id: unique stream ID, semantics like any other stream ID >> body: a key/value table of the envelope data >> >> ENVELOPE FRAME DATA: >> >> The envelope data table is a simple table of key/value pairs where the >> key is an 8bit value identifying the entry >> and a variable length value that is interpreted depending on the key. The >> list of provided envelope fields ends >> as the end of the envelope frame has been reached. that means, an >> envelope must always fit into a single (first) frame. >> >> ENVELOPE KEY/VALUE FIELDS: >> >> * :scheme => uint8: 0x01 >> o http => uint8: 0x01 >> o https => uint8: 0x02 >> o custom => same as in method (if this is distinction is really >> demanded) >> * :method => uint8: 0x02 >> o GET => uint8: 0x01 >> o POST => uint8: 0x02 >> o PUT => uint8: 0x03 >> o DELETE => uint8:0x04 >> o custom => uint8: 0xFF, followed by one uint8 encoding the size >> >> of the following bytes declaring the plaintext method value, >> e.g. "PROPFIND" >> * :path => uint8: 0x03, uint16 length in network byte order, >> >> followed by $length octects declaring the path's value. >> * :host => uint8: 0x04, uint16: length in network byte order, >> >> $length octets declaring the host's value. >> * :route => uint8: 0x05, uint8: length, $length octets that declare >> >> this value. (field is only specified if known, thus previousely >> announced by the remote server or this frame is part of a response >> and we are to announce a routing identifier) >> * :status => uint8: 0x06, uint16: code in network byte order /* if >> >> HTTP/2 considers starting response streams the same way */ >> >> This is the exact information an HTTP client (scheme,method,path,host) or >> server (status) MUST currently sent as part of the (first) HEADERS frame. >> So the change I propose is, to extract this information from the HEADERS >> frame and put it into its own frame that also initiates the stream >> implicitly. >> >> Having this in mind, it is a pleasure to implement HTTP routers because >> those now don't have to decode the full HEADERS frames but just decode the >> ENVELOPE frame and pass any continued frame to the directed next-hop server. >> > > Sadly the compression draft as written is completely incompatible with > this type of load balancing. It operates a *stateful* compressor, such that > every single HEADERS frame being received has to be decoded in order to > re-encode using a separate connection-specific stateful compressor on the > next-hop connections. This is mandatory for the compressed frames > regardless of whether the ENVELOPE header is used to provide uncompressed > details. > I hope we did not misunderstand each other, with "ENVELOPE" I meant a frame on its own that 1.) initiates a stream and 2.) contains the most important envelope information needed to route a message. > The best load balancers can do under the current compression draft is to > avoid complex re-encoding by emiting only Literal header representations > and skipping all the traffic optimizations compression offers. Which > converts them into near perfect DDoS bandwidth-amplification sources. > here I don't think that will be much of the case, since HTTP/2 header encoding should still be a way smaller in bytes than HTTP/1.1 and prior. > > The sad state of affairs is that the *only* type of middleware which > benefits from the proposed HTTP/2 is those which performs transparent > interception and passive monitoring/recording of users traffic (ie the > worst kind). Anything which starts modifying or manipulating (ie doing > something useful for the ISP or CDN) MUST implement a full > compressor/decompressor pair in order to keep the HTTP/2 statefulness in > order. If HTTP/2 now would just put the routing information (method, path, host, scheme [, routing-key]) cleartext upfront (still binary) an active HTTP router could just parse this and pass the remaining as-is (e.g. unmodified) to the next-hop. Although, if it then still whishes to add special headers (such as Via), it could do so via the trailing HEADERS frame) - if I am not too wrong. Regards, Christian Parpart.
Received on Thursday, 11 July 2013 09:49:58 UTC