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  4. HTTP resources and specifications

HTTP resources and specifications

HTTP was first specified in the early 1990s. Designed with extensibility in mind, it has seen numerous additions over the years; this lead to its specification being scattered through numerous specification documents (in the midst of experimental abandoned extensions). This page lists relevant resources about HTTP.

SpecificationTitleStatus
RFC 9110HTTP SemanticsInternet Standard
RFC 9111HTTP CachingInternet Standard
RFC 9112HTTP/1.1Internet Standard
RFC 9113HTTP/2Proposed Standard
RFC 9114HTTP/3Proposed Standard
RFC 5861HTTP Cache-Control Extensions for Stale ContentInformational
RFC 8246HTTP Immutable ResponsesProposed Standard
RFC 6265HTTP State Management MechanismDefines CookiesProposed Standard
Draft specCookie PrefixesIETF Draft
Draft specSame-Site CookiesIETF Draft
Draft specDeprecate modification of 'secure' cookies from non-secure originsIETF Draft
RFC 2145Use and Interpretation of HTTP Version NumbersInformational
RFC 6585Additional HTTP Status CodesProposed Standard
RFC 7725An HTTP Status Code to Report Legal ObstaclesOn the standard track
RFC 2397The "data" URL schemeProposed Standard
RFC 3986Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic SyntaxInternet Standard
RFC 5988Web LinkingDefines theLink headerProposed Standard
Draft specHTTP Client HintsIETF Draft
RFC 7578Returning Values from Forms: multipart/form-dataProposed Standard
RFC 6266Use of the Content-Disposition Header Field in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)Proposed Standard
RFC 2183Communicating Presentation Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header FieldOnly a subset of syntax of theContent-Disposition header can be used in the context of HTTP messages.Proposed Standard
RFC 7239Forwarded HTTP ExtensionProposed Standard
RFC 6455The WebSocket ProtocolProposed Standard
RFC 5246The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2This specification has been modified by subsequent RFCs, but these modifications have no effect on the HTTP protocol.Proposed Standard
RFC 8446The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3Supersedes TLS 1.2.Proposed Standard
RFC 2817Upgrading to TLS Within HTTP/1.1Proposed Standard
RFC 7541HPACK: Header Compression for HTTP/2On the standard track
RFC 7838HTTP Alternative ServicesOn the standard track
RFC 7301Transport Layer Security (TLS) Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation ExtensionUsed to negotiate HTTP/2 at the transport to save an extra request/response round trip.Proposed Standard
RFC 6454The Web Origin ConceptProposed Standard
FetchCross-Origin Resource SharingLiving Standard
RFC 7034HTTP Header Field X-Frame-OptionsInformational
RFC 6797HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS)Proposed Standard
Upgrade Insecure RequestsUpgrade Insecure RequestsCandidate Recommendation
Content Security Policy specificationContent Security Policy Level 3Obsolete
Microsoft documentSpecifying legacy document modes*Defines X-UA-CompatibleNote
RFC 5689HTTP Extensions for Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)These extensions of the Web, as well as CardDAV and CalDAV, are out-of-scope for HTTP on the Web. Modern APIs for application are defines using the RESTful pattern nowadays.Proposed Standard
RFC 2324Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol (HTCPCP/1.0)April 1st joke spec
RFC 7168The Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol for Tea Efflux Appliances (HTCPCP-TEA)April 1st joke spec
HTML Living StandardHTMLDefines extensions of HTTP for Server-Sent EventsLiving Standard
Reporting APIReport-To headerDraft
Draft specExpect-CT Extension for HTTPIETF Draft
RFC 7486HTTP Origin-Bound Auth (HOBA)Experimental
RFC 7240Prefer Header for HTTPProposed Standard

See also

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