- From: Chuck Shotton <cshotton@biap.com>
- Date: Thu, 18 May 1995 08:10:01 -0500
- To: Gavin Nicol <gtn@ebt.com>, luotonen@netscape.com
- Cc: www-talk@w3.org, http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
At 8:44 AM 5/18/95, Gavin Nicol wrote: >I do not like the idea of byte ranges being part of a URL. >In DynaWeb for example > > http://www.ebt.com/collection/readers?byterange=1-500 > >is absolutely meaningless, because the actual file size is not >related to the size of the documents retrieved. Worse even, >there are cases (and DynaWeb is one) where a single URL >can possibly reference documents that differ in an >arbitrary manner. > >In other words, byte ranges are not generally applicable to >all objects accessible via a URL, so we cannot make this >a requirement. I guess I don't see a problem here. If byte ranges don't apply to data stored in your server, why would you ever have to worry about URLs requesting them? Why should your server ever receive them, and why shouldn't it just ignore them? ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Chuck Shotton cshotton@biap.com http://www.biap.com/ cshotton@oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu "I am NOT here."
Received on Thursday, 18 May 1995 09:08:34 UTC