- From: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- Date: Tue, 9 Aug 2022 11:20:23 +0200
- To: Eric J Bowman <mellowmutt@zoho.com>
- Cc: ietf-http-wg <ietf-http-wg@w3.org>
Am 09.08.2022 um 10:15 schrieb Eric J Bowman: > *Julian Reschke *wrote --- > > > > > BS. It started as standalone RFC as that is the way to define new > > methods. It's an extensibility point. It wasn't included in later > > revisions of the core specs because there simply was no need to. > > > > Oh, was that the reason? I didn't know (or remember). But it's still an > oddball isn't it? Are there any other standalone RFCs which define a > single HTTP method? Did the evolution of partial PUT result from PATCH Yes, there is at least one more (SEARCH). > not being in the core spec? Can we revisit that decision? Or if not, can No. > we revisit the definition of PATCH to decouple it from applying to a > single target resource, to allow patch files to be first-class resources > in their own right? I don't understand what you're trying to say here. Maybe an example would help. > > > > It would require a media type definition that supports that. > > > > Right. But I don't see any such media type defined after a very long > period of time in WWW years. I can't publish a media type definition > that does what I want, because it's disallowed by the RFC. So I hope the > definition of PATCH isn't set in stone. Again, it's unclear what you're after. Post an example. > > > > It didn't take 12 years. It was discussed when PATCH was defined. > > > > Discussed but not implemented, therefore dubious, as far as > standardization goes. Austin's work is really the first effort I've seen > in that regard, so I'd rather not handwave around the issue because it > dates back over a decade. > > Maybe I'm wrong, hence all the question marks. Best regards, Julian
Received on Tuesday, 9 August 2022 09:20:42 UTC