- From: Martin Gudgin <mgudgin@microsoft.com>
- Date: Thu, 26 Feb 2004 11:51:41 -0800
- To: "Marc Hadley" <Marc.Hadley@Sun.COM>
- Cc: "Jacek Kopecky" <jacek.kopecky@systinet.com>, "XMLP Dist App" <xml-dist-app@w3.org>
> -----Original Message----- > From: Marc Hadley [mailto:Marc.Hadley@Sun.COM] > Sent: 26 February 2004 16:11 > To: Martin Gudgin > Cc: Jacek Kopecky; XMLP Dist App > Subject: Re: Proposed resolution to issue 455 > > On Feb 26, 2004, at 10:52 AM, Martin Gudgin wrote: > >> > >> As I stated in the call, I think the use of the 'none' > role is wrong > >> in this case. Use of 'none' requires that intermediaries and the > >> ultimate recipient shouldn't process the header block directly (it > >> would be OK to process it if another header block targeted to the > >> node referred to the 'none' header block in some way). Having the > >> header block 'in scope' for URI resolution but not being > part of the > >> node processing of the message seems quite wrong to me. > > > > But surely such a URI would be refer "to the 'none' header block in > > some way" > > > I was thinking more along the lines of another header block > whose semantics specifically enable one or more > Representation headers. You could say that any header that > contains a URI that matches the URI of the Representation > header does that implicitly but the linkage seems rather > weak. This would also mean that you couldn't support the use > case in the issue: > > > "If I want to specifically cause two different > representations, of the > > same media type for the same resource, to be sent to A and B > > respectively, can I safely use multiple representation headers that > > differ in their soap:roles to do this? I would think so." > > If both Representation header blocks are in scope how could I > target them ? In that case surely you would just target rep1 at A and rep2 at B. What's the problem? Gudge
Received on Thursday, 26 February 2004 14:51:57 UTC