Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Info page]

PROPOSED STANDARD
Network Working Group                                           J. MogulRequest for Comments: 3229                                    Compaq WRLCategory: Standards Track                               B. Krishnamurthy                                                              F. Douglis                                                                    AT&T                                                             A. Feldmann                                                   Univ. of Saarbruecken                                                               Y. Goland                                                             A. van Hoff                                                                 Marimba                                                          D. Hellerstein                                                                ERS/USDA                                                            January 2002Delta encoding in HTTPStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document describes how delta encoding can be supported as a   compatible extension to HTTP/1.1.   Many HTTP (Hypertext Transport Protocol) requests cause the retrieval   of slightly modified instances of resources for which the client   already has a cache entry.  Research has shown that such modifying   updates are frequent, and that the modifications are typically much   smaller than the actual entity.  In such cases, HTTP would make more   efficient use of network bandwidth if it could transfer a minimal   description of the changes, rather than the entire new instance of   the resource.  This is called "delta encoding."Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002Table of Contents1 Introduction....................................................31.1 Related research and proposals...........................42 Goals...........................................................53 Terminology.....................................................64 The HTTP message-generation sequence............................84.1 Relationship between deltas and ranges...................115 Basic mechanisms................................................135.1 Background: an overview of HTTP cache validation.........135.2 Requesting the transmission of deltas....................145.3 Choice of delta algorithm and format.....................165.4 Identification of delta-encoded responses................165.5 Guaranteeing cache safety................................175.6 Transmission of delta-encoded responses..................185.7 Examples of requests combining Range and delta encoding..196 Encoding algorithms and formats.................................227 Management of base instances....................................237.1 Multiple entity tags in the If-None-Match header.........247.2 Hints for managing the client cache......................258 Deltas and intermediate caches..................................279 Digests for data integrity......................................2810 Specification..................................................2810.1 Protocol parameter specifications.......................2810.2 IANA Considerations.....................................3010.3 Basic requirements for delta-encoded responses..........3010.4 Status code specifications..............................3010.4.1 226 IM Used......................................3110.5 Header specifications...................................3110.5.1 Delta-Base.......................................3110.5.2 IM...............................................3210.5.3 A-IM.............................................3310.6 Caching rules for 226 responses.........................3510.7 Rules for deltas in the presence of content-codings.....36             10.7.1 Rules for generating deltas in the presence of                    content-codings..................................37             10.7.2 Rules for applying deltas in the presence of                    content-codings..................................37             10.7.3 Examples for using A-IM, IM, and content-codings. 3810.8 New Cache-Control directives............................4010.8.1 Retain directive.................................4010.8.2 IM directive.....................................4010.9 Use of compression with delta encoding..................4110.10 Delta encoding and multipart/byteranges................4211 Quantifying the protocol overhead..............................4212 Security Considerations........................................4413 Acknowledgements...............................................4414 Intellectual Property Rights...................................44Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200215 References.....................................................4416 Authors' addresses.............................................4717 Full Copyright Statement.......................................491 Introduction   The World Wide Web is a distributed system, and so often benefits   from caching to reduce retrieval delays.  Retrieval of a Web resource   (such as a  document, image, icon, or applet) over the Internet or   other wide-area networks usually takes enough time that the delay is   over the human threshold of perception.  Often, that delay is   measured in seconds.  Caching can often eliminate or significantly   reduce retrieval delays.   Many Web resources change over time, so a practical caching approach   must include a coherency mechanism, to avoid presenting stale   information to the user.  Originally, the Hypertext Transfer Protocol   (HTTP) provided little support for caching, but under operational   pressures, it quickly evolved to support a simple mechanism for   maintaining cache coherency.   In HTTP/1.0 [2], the server may supply a "last-modified" timestamp   with a response.  If a client stores this response in a cache entry,   and then later wishes to re-use the response, it may transmit a   request message with an "If-modified-since" field containing that   timestamp; this is known as a conditional retrieval.  Upon receiving   a conditional request, the server may either reply with a full   response, or, if the resource has not changed, it may send an   abbreviated reply, indicating that the client's cache entry is still   valid.  HTTP/1.0 also includes a means for the server to indicate,   via an "Expires" timestamp, that a response will be valid until that   time; if so, a client may use a cached copy of the response until   that time, without first validating it using a conditional retrieval.   HTTP/1.1 [10] adds many new features to improve cache coherency and   performance.  However, it preserves the all-or-none model for   responses to conditional retrievals: either the server indicates that   the resource value has not changed at all, or it must transmit the   entire current value.   Common sense suggests (and traces confirm), however, that even when a   Web resource does change, the new instance is often substantially   similar to the old one.  If the difference, or "delta", between the   two instances could be sent to the client instead of the entire new   instance, a client holding a cached copy of the old instance could   apply the delta to construct the new version.  In a world of finite   bandwidth, the reduction in response size and delay could be   significant.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   One can think of deltas as a way to squeeze as much benefit as   possible from client and proxy caches.  Rather than treating an   entire response as the "cache line", with deltas we can treat   arbitrary pieces of a cached response as the replaceable unit, and   avoid transferring pieces that have not changed.   This document proposes a set of compatible extensions to HTTP/1.1   that allow clients and servers to use delta encoding with minimal   overhead.   We assume that the reader is familiar with the HTTP/1.1   specification.1.1 Related research and proposals   The idea of delta encoding to reduce communication or storage costs   is not new.  For example, the MPEG-1 video compression standard   transmits occasional still-image frames, but most of the frames sent   are encoded (to oversimplify) as changes from an adjacent frame.  The   SCCS and RCS [27] systems for software version control represent   intermediate versions as deltas; SCCS starts with an original version   and encodes subsequent ones with forward deltas, whereas RCS encodes   previous versions as reverse deltas from their successors.   Jacobson's technique for compressing IP and TCP headers over slow   links [17] uses a clever, highly specialized form of delta encoding.   In spite of this history, it appears to have taken several years   before anyone thought of applying delta encoding to HTTP, perhaps   because the development of HTTP caching has been somewhat haphazard.   The first published suggestion for delta encoding appears to have   been by Williams et al. in a paper about HTTP cache removal policies   [30], but these authors did not elaborate on their design until later   [29].   The WebExpress project [15] appears to be the first published   description of an implementation of delta encoding for HTTP (which   they call "differencing").  WebExpress is aimed specifically at   wireless environments, and includes a number of orthogonal   optimizations.  Also, the WebExpress design does not propose changing   the HTTP protocol itself, but rather uses a pair of interposed   proxies to convert the HTTP message stream into an optimized form.   The results reported for WebExpress differencing are impressive, but   are limited to a few selected benchmarks.   Banga et al. [1] describe the use of optimistic deltas, in which a   layer of interposed proxies on either end of a slow link collaborate   to reduce latency.  If the client-side proxy has a cached copy of a   resource, the server-side proxy can simply send a delta (or a 304Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   [Not Modified] response).  If only the server-side proxy has a cached   copy, it may optimistically send its (possibly stale) copy to the   client-side proxy, followed (if necessary) by a delta once the   server-side proxy has validated its own cache entry with the origin   server.  The use of optimistic deltas, unlike delta encoding,   actually increases the number of bytes sent over the network, in an   attempt to improve latency by anticipating a "Not Modified" response   from the origin server.  The optimistic delta paper, like the   WebExpress paper, did not propose a change to the HTTP protocol   itself, and reported results only for a small set of selected URLs.   Mogul et al. [23] collected lengthy traces, at two different sites,   of the full contents of HTTP messages, to quantify the potential   benefits of delta-encoded responses.  They showed that delta encoding   can provide remarkable improvements in response-size and response-   delay for an important subset of HTTP content types.  They proposed a   set of HTTP extensions, but without the level of detail required for   a specification.  Douglis et al. [8] used the same sets of full-   content traces to quantify the rate at which resources change in the   Web.   The HTTP Distribution and Replication Protocol (DRP), proposed to W3C   by Marimba, Netscape, Sun, Novell, and At Home, aims to provide a   collection of new features for HTTP, to support "the efficient   replication of data over HTTP" [13].  One aspect of the DRP proposal   is the use of "differential downloading," which is essentially a form   of delta encoding.  The original DRP proposal uses a different   approach than is described here, but a forthcoming revision of DRP   will be revised to conform to the proposal in this document.   Tridgell and Mackerras [28] describe the "rsync" algorithm, which   accomplishes something similar to delta encoding.  In rsync, the   client breaks a cache entry into a series of fixed-sized blocks,   computes a digest value for each block, and sends the series of   digest values to the server as part of its request.  The origin   server does the same block-based computation, and returns only those   blocks whose digest values differ.  We believe that it might be   possible to support rsync using the "instance manipulation" framework   described later in this document, but this has not been worked out in   any detail.2 Goals   The goals of this proposal are:      1. Reduce the mean size of HTTP responses, thereby improving         latency and network utilization.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      2. Avoid any extra network round trips.      3. Minimize the amount of per-request and per-response overheads.      4. Support a variety of encoding algorithms and formats.      5. Interoperate with HTTP/1.0 and HTTP/1.1.      6. Be fully optional for clients, proxies, and servers.      7. Allow moderately simple implementations.   The goals do not include:      -  Reducing the number of HTTP requests sent to an origin server.      -  Reducing the size of every HTTP message.      -  Increasing the cache-hit ratio of HTTP caches.      -  Allowing excessively simplistic implementations of delta         encoding.      -  Delta encoding of request messages, or of responses to methods         other than GET.         Nothing in this specification specifically precludes the use of         a delta encoding for the body of a PUT request.  However, no         mechanism currently exists for the client to discover if the         server can interpret such messages, and so we do not attempt to         specify how they might be used.3 Terminology   HTTP/1.1 [10] defines the following terms:   resource        A network data object or service that can be                   identified by a URI, as defined insection 3.2.                   Resources may be available in multiple                   representations (e.g. multiple languages, data                   formats, size, resolutions) or vary in other ways.   entity          The information transferred as the payload of a                   request or response.  An entity consists of                   metainformation in the form of entity-header fields                   and content in the form of an entity-body, as                   described insection 7.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   variant         A resource may have one, or more than one,                   representation(s) associated with it at any given                   instant.  Each of these representations is termed a                   `variant.' Use of the term `variant' does not                   necessarily imply that the resource is subject to                   content negotiation.   The dictionary definition for "entity" is "something that has   separate and distinct existence and objective or conceptual reality"   [21].  Unfortunately, the definition for "entity" in HTTP/1.1 is   similar to that used in MIME [12], based on a false analogy between   MIME and HTTP.   In MIME, electronic mail messages do have distinct and separate   existences.  MIME defines "entity" as something that "refers   specifically to the MIME-defined header fields and contents of either   a message or one of the parts in the body of a multipart entity."   In HTTP, however, a response message to a GET does not have a   distinct and separate existence.  Rather, it reflects the current   state of a resource (or a variant, subject to a set of constraints).   The HTTP/1.1 specification has no term to describe "the value that   would be returned in response to a GET request at the current time   for the selected variant of the specified resource."  This leads to   awkward wordings in the HTTP/1.1 specification in places where this   concept is necessary.   To express this concept, we define a new term, for use in this   document:   instance        The entity that would be returned in a status-200                   response to a GET request, at the current time, for                   the selected variant of the specified resource, with                   the application of zero or more content-codings, but                   without the application of any instance manipulations                   (see below) or transfer-codings.   It is convenient to think of an entity tag, in HTTP/1.1, as being   associated with an instance, rather than an entity.  That is, for a   given resource, two different response messages might include the   same entity tag, but two different instances of the resource should   never be associated with the same (strong) entity tag.   We will informally use the term "delta," in this document, to mean an   HTTP response encoded as the difference between two instances.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   More formally, delta encodings are members of a potentially larger   class of transformations on instances, leading to this new term:   instance manipulation                   An operation on one or more instances which may                   result in an instance being conveyed from server to                   client in parts, or in more than one response                   message.  For example, a range selection or a delta                   encoding.  Instance manipulations are end-to-end, and                   often involve the use of a cache at the client.   For reasons that will become clear later on, it is convenient to   think about subrange selection as a form of instance manipulation.   In some contexts, compression might also be treated as an instance   manipulation, rather than as a content-coding or transfer-coding.4 The HTTP message-generation sequence   HTTP/1.1 supports a number of different transformations on the body   of a value:   Content-coding  According to the specification, "Content coding                   values indicate an encoding transformation that has                   been or can be applied to an entity.  Content codings                   are primarily used to allow a document to be                   compressed or otherwise usefully transformed without                   losing the identity of its underlying media type and                   without loss of information.  Frequently, the entity                   is stored in coded form, transmitted directly, and                   only decoded by the recipient."  Content-codings are                   normally end-to-end transformations; i.e., once                   applied at the sender, they are not removed except at                   the ultimate recipient.  An intermediate server may                   apply a content-coding, in appropriate circumstances.   Transfer-coding According to the specification, "Transfer coding                   values are used to indicate an encoding                   transformation that has been, can be, or may need to                   be applied to an entity-body in order to ensure "safe                   transport" through the network.  This differs from a                   content coding in that the transfer coding is a                   property of the message, not of the original entity."                   Transfer-codings are explicitly hop-by-hop                   transformations (although, as an optimization, an                   intermediate proxy may store the transfer-coded                   version of a message if this behavior is not                   inconsistent with its externally visible function.)Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   Ranges          An HTTP client, using the Range header, may request                   that the server return one or more subranges of the                   instance, rather than the entire instance value.                   HTTP/1.1 only supports byte-ranges, although there is                   some possibility that future extensions will allow                   for other kinds of range-specifiers (such as chapters                   of a document).   A client signals its willingness to receive a content-coding by   sending an "Accept-Encoding" header, listing the set of content-   codings that it understands.  It may optionally include information   about which content-codings it prefers.  If a server uses any non-   identity content-coding(s), it includes a "Content-Encoding" header   field in the response, listing these content-codings in their order   of application.RFC 2068 [9] did not include an analogous mechanism for negotiating   the use of transfer-codings, although it does include an analogous   "Transfer-Encoding" header for marking the response.  A new "TE"   header has since been added to HTTP/1.1 [10], analogous to the   "Accept-Encoding" header.   In this document, we add new, optional message headers to support the   use of instance manipulations.  A client signals its willingness to   receive an instance-manipulation by sending an "A-IM" header (short   for "Accept-Instance-Manipulation", which is far too long to spell   out), analogous to the "Accept-Encoding" header.  Similarly, a server   lists the set of instance-manipulations it has applied using an "IM"   header.   One must understand the relationship between these transformations in   order to see how delta encoding applies to HTTP responses.   Conceptually, the various transformations are applied in the   following sequence:      1. Upon receiving a GET request, the server uses the URI in the         request to identify the requested resource.      2. Optionally, it uses information from the request (and perhaps         additional information) to select a variant of that resource.      3. At this point, the server may apply a non-identity content-         coding to the instance, or one might have been inherent in its         generation.  This also results in a Content-Encoding header.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      4. The result of the first three steps, at the time when the         request is processed, is an instance.  The instance includes a         body (possibly empty) and possibly some instance headers.  The         entity tag, if any, is assigned at this point.  That is, an         entity tag is associated with an instance, NOT an entity.      5. The server may then apply an instance-manipulation.  For         example, if the request included a Range header, the server may         optionally produce a range response, consisting of the original         set of headers, a Content-Range header, and the appropriate         range(s) from the (possibly encoded) body.  Delta encodings are         instance-manipulations, and are computed at this stage.      6. The result of the fifth step becomes the entity, consisting of         entity headers and an entity body.      7. The server may then apply a non-identity transfer-coding; on-         the-fly compression could be done in this step.  If so, a         Transfer-Encoding header is added to the message.      8. The results of the seventh step is the message, consisting of a         message body (the transfer-coded version of the entity body),         the entity headers, and additional response and general         headers.      Note:Section 14.13 of the HTTP/1.1 specification [10] says "The      Content-Length entity-header field indicates the size of the      entity-body."  In other words, Content-Length measures the length      of an entity, not of an instance or of a variant.  For example, if      the message is a delta encoding, Content-Length gives the length      of the delta encoding, not the length of the current instance.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   Diagrammatically, the sequence is:       datatype        operation leading to next datatype       ========        ==================================       resource                   |   choose acceptable variant, if needed                   v       variant                   |   apply content-coding, if any                   v                   |   compute/assign entity tag                   v       instance                   |   apply instance manipulation, if any                   v      (delta encoding, range selection, etc.)       entity-body                   |   apply transfer-coding, if any                   v       message-body   This formalization of the HTTP message generation sequence has not   previously been described.  However, it is clear that Range selection   needs to be done after the entity tag has been assigned and after any   content-coding has been applied, and before any transfer-coding is   applied.  Therefore, this formalization is fully consistent with   previous practice and specification.4.1 Relationship between deltas and ranges   If both Ranges and delta encodings are forms of instance   manipulation, which should be applied first?  This depends on how the   Range is being used.   Ranges are used for two main purposes, at the discretion of the   requesting client:      1. to complete a partial response after a premature termination of         a message transmission.      2. to obtain just selected sections of an instance.   In the first use of Range, it would have to be applied after any   delta encoding, since the intended use is to recover an intact copy   of the delta-encoded instance.  In the second use of Range, it would   have to be applied before any delta encoding, because otherwise theMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   offsets specified in the Range request would be meaningless (the   client generally cannot know how a server's delta encoding maps   instance byte offsets to entity byte offsets).   Therefore, we need a mechanism to allow the client to specify the   order in which two or more instance-manipulations should be applied.   This is easily provided as part of the specification of the "A-IM"   header (seesection 10.5.3), where we require that the server apply   instance-manipulations in the order that they are listed in the "A-   IM" header.  We also include a "range" literal in the set of   registered instance-manipulations, to allow the client to specify (by   its ordering with respect to other instance-manipulations) whether   range selection is done before or after delta encoding.   We also need a mechanism for the server to indicate in which order   two or more instance-manipulations have been applied; this is part of   the specification of the "IM" header (seesection 10.5.2), where we   follow the same practice used for the "Content-Encoding" header:  the   "IM" header lists the instance-manipulations in the order that were   applied (including, perhaps, the special "range" literal).   A similar issue arises when Ranges are combined with compression.  If   the client is using a Range to complete a partial response after a   premature termination of a compressed message, then the Range would   have to be applied after the compression.  This is feasible in   unmodified HTTP/1.1, because the compression can be done as a   content-coding.  However, if the client is using a Range to obtain   selected sections of an instance, it would normally be able to   specify offsets only in terms of the uncompressed variant.  If the   selected portion was large enough to warrant compression, the client   could request a compressed transfer-coding, but this is a hop-by-hop   transformation and is not the most efficient approach (especially if   an HTTP/1.0 proxy is in the path).   We can resolve this issue by supporting the use of compression as an   instance-manipulation (as well as as a content-coding or transfer-   coding), and by using the new mechanism that allows the client to   specify that the compression instance-manipulation is done after the   Range instance-manipulation.   This also allows the client to control whether compression is done   before or after delta encoding, since some simple differencing   algorithms (such as the UNIX "diff" command) require post-compression   of their output to yield the best results.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 20025 Basic mechanisms   In this section, we explain the concepts behind delta encoding.  This   is not meant as a formal specification of the proposed extensions;   seesection 10 for that.5.1 Background: an overview of HTTP cache validation   When a client has a response in its cache, and wishes to ensure that   this cache entry is current, HTTP/1.1 allows the client to do a   "conditional GET", using one of two forms of "cache validators."  In   the traditional form, available in both HTTP/1.0 and in HTTP/1.1, the   client may use the "If-Modified-Since" request-header to present to   the server the "Last-Modified" timestamp (if any) that the server   provided with the response.  If the server's timestamp for the   resource has not changed, it may send a response with a status code   of 304 (Not Modified), which does not transmit the body of the   resource.  If the timestamp has changed, the server would normally   send a response with a status code of 200 (OK), which carries a   complete copy of the resource, and a new Last-Modified timestamp.   This timestamp-based approach is prone to error because of the lack   of timestamp resolution: if a resource changes twice during one   second, the change might not be detectable.  Therefore, HTTP/1.1 also   allows the server to provide an entity tag with a response.  An   entity tag is an opaque string, constructed by the server according   to its own needs; the protocol specification imposes a bare minimum   of requirements on entity tags.  (In particular, a "strong" entity   tag must change if the value of the resource changes.) In this case,   the client may validate its cache entry by sending its conditional   request using the "If-None-Match" request-header, presenting the   entity tag associated with the cached response.  (The protocol   defines several other ways to transmit entity tags, such as the "If-   Range" header, used for short-circuiting an otherwise necessary round   trip.) If the presented entity tag matches the server's current tag   for the resource, the server should send a 304 (Not Modified)   response.  Otherwise, the server should send a 200 (OK) response,   along with a complete copy of the resource.   In the existing HTTP protocol (HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1), a client   sending a conditional request can expect either of two responses:      -  status = 200 (OK), with a full copy of the resource, because         the server's copy of the resource is presumably different from         the client's cached copy.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      -  status = 304 (Not Modified), with no body, because the server's         copy of the resource is presumably the same as the client's         cached copy.   Informally, one could think of these as "deltas" of 100% and 0% of   the resource, respectively.  Note that these deltas are relative to a   specific cached response.  That is, a client cannot request a delta   without specifying, somehow, which two instances of a resource are   being differenced.  The "new" instance is implicitly the current   instance that the server would return for an unconditional request,   and the "old" instance is the one that is currently in the client's   cache.  The cache validator (last-modified time or entity tag) is   what is used to communicate to the server the identity of the old   instance.5.2 Requesting the transmission of deltas   In order to support the transmission of actual deltas, an extension   to HTTP/1.1 needs to provide these features:      1. A way to mark a request as conditional.      2. A way to specify the old instance, to which the delta will be         applied by the client.      3. A way to indicate that the client is able to apply one or more         specific forms of delta encoding.      4. A way to mark a response as being delta-encoded in a particular         format.   The first two features are already provided by HTTP/1.1: the presence   of a conditional request-header (such as "If-Modified-Since" or "If-   None-Match") marks a request as conditional, and the value of that   header uniquely specifies the old instance (ignoring the problem of   last-modified timestamp granularity).   We defer discussion of the fourth feature, untilsection 5.6.   The third feature, a way for the client to indicate that it is able   to apply deltas (aside from the trivial 0% and 100% deltas), can be   accomplished by transmitting a list of acceptable delta-encoding   formats in a request-header field; specifically, the "A-IM" header.   The presence of this list in a conditional request indicates that the   client is able to apply delta-encoded cache updates.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   For example, a client might send this request:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      Host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "123xyz"      A-IM: vcdiff, diffe, gzip   The meaning of this request is that:      -  The client wants to obtain the current value of /foo.html.      -  It already has a cached response (instance) for that resource,         whose entity tag is "123xyz".      -  It is willing to accept delta-encoded updates using either of         two formats, "diffe" (i.e., output from the UNIX "diff -e"         command), and "vcdiff".  (Encoding algorithms and formats, such         as "vcdiff", are described insection 6.)      -  It is willing to accept responses that have been compressed         using "gzip," whether or not these are delta-encoded.  (It         might be useful to compress the output of "diff -e".)  However,         based on the mandatory ordering constraint specified insection10.5.3, if both delta encoding and compression are applied,         then this "A-IM" request header specifies that compression         should be done last.   If, in this example, the server's current entity tag for the resource   is still "123xyz", then it should simply return a 304 (Not Modified)   response, as would a traditional server.   If the entity tag has changed, presumably but not necessarily because   of a modification of the resource, the server could instead compute   the delta between the instance whose entity tag was "123xyz" and the   current instance.   We defer discussion of what the server needs to store, in order to   compute deltas, untilsection 7.   We note that if a client indicates it is willing to accept deltas,   but the server does not support this form of instance-manipulation,   the server will simply ignore this aspect of the request.  (HTTP   always allows an implementation to ignore a header that is not   required by a specification that the implementation complies with,   and the specification of "A-IM" allows the server to ignore an   instance-manipulation it does not understand.)  So if a server either   does not implement the A-IM header at all, or does not implement anyMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   of the instance manipulations listed in the A-IM header, it acts as   if the client had not requested a delta-encoded response: the server   generates a status-200 response.5.3 Choice of delta algorithm and format   The server is not required to transmit a delta-encoded response.  For   example, the result might be larger than the current size of the   resource.  The server might not be able to compute a delta for this   type of resource (e.g., a compressed binary format); the server might   not have sufficient CPU cycles for the delta computation; the server   might not support any of the delta formats supported by the client;   or, the network bandwidth might be high enough that the delay   involved in computing the delta is not worth the delay avoided by   sending a smaller response.   However, if the server does want to compute a delta, and the set of   encodings it supports has more than one encoding in common with the   set offered by the client, which encoding should it use?  This is   mostly at the option of the server, although the client can express   preferences using "Quality Values" (or "qvalues") in the "A-IM"   header.  The HTTP/1.1 specification [10] describes qvalues in more   detail.  (Clients may prefer one delta encoding format over another   that generates a smaller encoding, if the decoding costs for the   first format are lower and the client is resource-constrained.)   Server implementations have a number of possible approaches.  For   example, if CPU cycles are plentiful and network bandwidth is scarce,   the server might compute each of the possible encodings and then send   the smallest result.  Or the server might use heuristics to choose an   encoding format, based on things such as the content-type of the   resource, the current size of the resource, and the expected amount   of change between instances of the resource.   Note that it might pay to cache the deltas internally to the server,   if a resource is typically requested by several different delta-   capable clients between modifications.  In this case, the cost of   computing a delta may be amortized over many responses, and so the   server might use a more expensive computation.5.4 Identification of delta-encoded responses   A response using delta encoding must be identified as such.  This is   done using the "IM" response-header, specified insection 10.5.2.   However, a simplistic application of this approach would cause   serious problems if a delta-encoded response flows through an   intermediate (proxy) cache that is not cognizant of the deltaMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   mechanism.  Because the Internet still includes a significant number   of HTTP/1.0 caches, which might never be entirely replaced, and   because the HTTP specifications insist that message recipients ignore   any header field that they do not understand, a non-delta-capable   proxy cache that receives a delta-encoded response might store that   response, and might later return it to a non-delta-capable client   that has made a request for the same resource.  This naive client   would believe that it has received a valid copy of the entire   resource, with predictably unpleasant results.   To solve this problem, we propose that delta-encoded responses   (actually, all instance-manipulated responses) be identified as such   using a new HTTP status code.  For specificity in the discussion that   follows, we will use the (currently unassigned) code of 226, with a   reason phrase of "IM Used".  (We see no benefit in spelling out the   words "Instance Manipulation Used," since this requires the   transmission of unnecessary bytes, and this Reason-phrase should not   normally be seen by human users.)  There is some precedent for this   approach:  the HTTP/1.1 specification introduces the 206 (Partial   Content) status code, for the transmission of sub-ranges of a   resource.  Existing proxies apparently forward responses with unknown   status codes, and do not attempt to cache them.   An alternative to using a new status code would be to use the   "Expires" header to prevent HTTP/1.0 caches from storing the   response, then use "Cache-Control: max-age" (defined in HTTP/1.1) to   allow more modern caches to store delta-encoded responses.  This adds   many bytes to the response headers, and so would reduce the   effectiveness of delta encoding.  It is also not entirely clear that   this approach suppresses all caching by all HTTP/1.0 proxies.      We were reluctant to define an additional status code as part of      the support for delta encoding.  However, we see no other      efficient way to remain compatible with the deployed base of      HTTP/1.0 cache implementations.5.5 Guaranteeing cache safety   Although we are not aware of any HTTP/1.1 proxy implementations that   would attempt to cache a response with an unknown 2xx status code,   the HTTP/1.1 specification does allow this behavior if the response   carries an Expires or Cache-Control header field that explicitly   allows caching.  This would present a problem when a 226 (IM Used)   response carries such headers.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   The solution in that case is to exploit the Cache Control Extensions   mechanism from the HTTP/1.1 specification.  We define a new cache-   directive, "im", which indicates that the "no-store" cache-directive   may be ignored by implementations that conform to the specification   for the IM and A-IM headers.   For example, this response:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      ETag: "489uhw"      IM: vcdiff      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      Cache-Control: no-store, im, max-age=30      ...   "MUST NOT" be stored by a cache that complies with the HTTP/1.1   specification (which states that the max-age cache-directive "implies   that the response is cacheable [...] unless some other, more   restrictive cache directive is also present.").  However, a cache   that does comply with the specification for the im cache-directive   (i.e., a cache that complies with the specification for the A-IM and   IM header fields, and the 226 status code) ignores the no-store   directive, and therefore sees the max-age directive as allowing   caching.      We are not entirely sure that all HTTP/1.1 caches obey the rule      that the max-age directive is overridden by the no-store      directive.  If operational testing reveals this to be a problem,      more elaborate solutions are possible.   Warning to origin server implementors: it does not suffice to send      Vary: If-None-Match, A-IM   in status-226 responses.  We have discovered at least one scenario   where this does not prevent a proxy cache that does not implement IM   and A-IM from incorrectly "validating" a cached 226 response.5.6 Transmission of delta-encoded responses   A delta-encoded response differs from a standard response in four   ways:      1. It carries a status code of 226 (IM Used).      2. It carries an "IM" response-header field, indicating which         delta encoding is used in this response.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      3. Its message-body is a delta encoding of the current instance,         rather than a full copy of the instance.      4. It might carry several other new headers, as described later in         this document.   For example, a response to the request given insection 5.2 might   look like:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      ETag: "489uhw"      IM: vcdiff      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      ...   (We do not show the actual contents of the response body, since this   is a binary format.)      Note: the Etag header in a 226 response with a delta encoding      provides the entity tag of the current instance of the resource      variant.  It is not meaningful to associate an entity tag with the      delta value, which is not an instance.5.7 Examples of requests combining Range and delta encoding   In the example used insection 5.2, the client sends:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      Host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "123xyz"      A-IM: vcdiff, diffe, gzip   and the server either responds with a 304 (Not Modified) response, or   with the appropriate delta encoding.   Here are a few more examples, to clarify how the client request   should be interpreted.   If the client sends      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      Host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "123xyz"      A-IM: vcdiff, diffe, gzip, range      Range: bytes=0-99Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   then the meaning is the same as in the example above, except that   after the delta encoding (and compression, if any) is computed, the   server then returns only the first 100 bytes of the output of the   delta encoding.  (If it is shorter than 100 bytes, the entire delta   encoding is returned.)  Because the "range" token appears last in the   "A-IM" header, this tells the origin server to apply any range   selection after the other instance-manipulations.   The interaction between the If-Range mechanism and delta encoding is   somewhat complex.  (If-Range means, informally, "if the entity is   unchanged, send me the part(s) that I am missing; otherwise, send me   the entire new entity.")  Here is an example that should clarify the   use of this combination.   Suppose that the client wants to have the complete current instance   of http://bar.example.net/foo.html.  It already has a (complete)   cache entry for this URI, with entity tag "A", so it issues this   request:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "A"      A-IM: vcdiff   Suppose that the server's current instance has entity tag "B", and   that the server also has retained a copy of the instance with entity   tag "A".  Then, the server could compute the difference between "B"   and "A", and respond with:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      Etag: "B"      IM: vcdiff      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      Content-Length: 1000      ...   but the network connection is terminated after the client has   received exactly 900 bytes of the message body for the delta-encoded   content.   The client wants to retrieve the remaining 100 bytes of the delta   encoding that was being sent in the interrupted response.  It   therefore should send:Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "A"      If-Range: "B"      A-IM: vcdiff,range      Range: bytes=900-   This rather elaborate request has a well-defined meaning, which   depends on the current entity tag Tcur of the instance when the   server receives the request:   Tcur = "A"      (i.e., for some reason, the instance has reverted to                   the value already in the client's cache).  The server                   should return a 304 (Not Modified) response, as                   required by the HTTP/1.1 specification for "If-None-                   Match".   Tcur = "B"      (i.e., the instance has not changed again).  The                   HTTP/1.1 specification for "If-None-Match", in this                   case, is that the header field is ignored (by a                   server that does not understand delta encoding).                   Therefore, this is equivalent to the client's                   previous request, except that the Range selection is                   applied after the vcdiff instance manipulation (if                   both are to be applied).  So the (delta-aware) server                   again computes the delta between the "A" instance and                   the "B" instance (or uses a cached computation of the                   delta), then applies the Range selection, and returns                   a 226 (IM Used) response, with an message-body                   containing bytes 900 to 999 of the result of the                   vcdiff encoding, with an "IM:vcdiff,range" response                   header.   Tcur = "C"      (i.e., the instance has changed again).  In this                   case, the HTTP/1.1 specification for "If-None-Match"                   again means that this is equivalent to an                   unconditional request for the current instance.  The                   specification for "If-Range" requires the server to                   return the entire current instance.  However, a                   delta-aware server can construct the delta between                   the "A" instance described by the "If-None-Match"                   field and the current ("C") instance, and return a                   226 (IM Used) response, with an "IM:vcdiff" response                   header.   If the client's request had not included the "If-None-Match: "A""   header field, the server could not have computed a delta, since it   would not have known which entire instance was already available toMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   the client.  If the request had not included the "If-Range: "B""   header field, the server could not have distinguished between the   latter two cases (Tcur = "B" or Tcur = "C") and would not have been   able to apply the Range selection to the result of delta encoding.   On the other hand, suppose that the client has a cache entry for the   "A" instance of http://bar.example.net/foo.html, and it has already   received the first 900 bytes of a new instance "B" (perhaps as the   result of an aborted transfer).  Now the client wants to receive the   entire current instance, so it could send this request:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "A"      If-Range: "B"      A-IM: range,vcdiff      Range: bytes=900-   In this example, as in the previous example, if Tcur = "A" then the   server should send 304 (Not Modified), and if Tcur = "C", then the   server should send the entire new instance, either as a 200 response   or as a delta encoding against instance "A".   However, if Tcur = "B", in this case the server should first select   the specified range (bytes 900 through the end) from both instances   "A" and "B", then compute the delta encoding between these ranges   (using vcdiff), and then transmit the result using a 226 (IM Used)   response with an "IM:range,vcdiff" response header.6 Encoding algorithms and formats   A number of delta encoding algorithms and formats have been described   in the literature:   diff -e         The UNIX "diff" program is ubiquitously available,                   and is relatively fast for both encoding and decoding                   (decoding is actually done using the "ed" program).                   However, the size of the resulting deltas is                   relatively large.  This algorithm can only be used on                   text-format files.   diff -e | gzip  Running the output of "diff" through a compression                   algorithm such as "gzip" [5] (or, perhaps better,                   "deflate" [7, 6]) yields a more compact encoding, but                   the costs of encoding and decoding are much higher                   than for "diff" by itself.  This algorithm can only                   be used on text-format files.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   vcdiff (vdelta) The algorithm that generates the "vcdiff" format [19,                   20] inherently compresses its output, and generally                   produces smaller results than the combination of                   "diff" and "gzip".  The algorithm also runs much                   faster, and can be applied to binary-format input.                   The "vcdiff" format is based on previous work on an                   algorithm named "vdelta."  (Note that the "vcdiff"                   format can be used either for delta encoding or as a                   compressed format, so two different instance-                   manipulation values would have to be registered in                   order to distinguish these two uses, should its use                   as a compressed format be adopted.)  The most recent                   published study suggests that "vdelta" is the best                   overall delta algorithm [16].   gdiff           The gdiff format [14] was specified as a generic,                   algorithm-independent format for expressing deltas.                   Because it is more generic it is easy to implement,                   but it may not be the most compact encoding format.   Our proposal does not recommend any specific algorithm or format, but   rather encourages client and server implementors to choose the most   appropriate one(s).  However, to avoid the possibility of excessively   long "A-IM" headers, we suggest that, after some period of   experimentation, it might be reasonable to specify a "recommended"   set of delta formats for general-purpose HTTP implementations.   We suspect that it should be possible to devise a delta encoding   algorithm appropriate for use on typical image encodings, such as GIF   and JPEG.  Although experiments with vdelta have not shown much   potential [23], this may simply be because these experiments used   vdelta directly on the already-compressed forms of these encodings.   However, it might be necessary to devise a delta encoding algorithm   that is aware of the two-dimensional nature of images.  We have some   expectation that this is possible, since MPEG compression relies on   computing deltas between successive frames of a video stream.7 Management of base instances   If the time between modifications of a resource is less than the   typical eviction time for responses in client caches, this means that   the "old instance" indicated in a client's conditional request might   not refer to the most recent prior instance.  This raises the   question of how many old instances of a resource should be maintained   by the server, if any.  We call these old instances "base instances."Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   There are many possible options for server implementors.  For   example:      -  The server might not store any old instances, and so would         never respond with a delta.      -  The server might only store the most recent prior instance;         requests attempting to validate this instance could be answered         with a delta, but requests attempting to validate older         instances would be answered with a full copy of the resource.      -  The server might store all prior instances, allowing it to         provide a delta response for any client request.      -  The server might store only a subset of the prior instances.         The use of a Least Recently Used (LRU) algorithm to determine         this kind of subset has proved effective in some similar         circumstances, such as cache replacement.   The server might not have to store prior instances explicitly.  It   might, instead, store just the deltas between specific base instances   and subsequent instances (or the inverse deltas between base   instances and prior instances).  This approach might be integrated   with a cache of computed deltas.   None of these approaches necessarily requires additional protocol   support.  However, if a server administrator wants to store only a   subset of the prior instances, but would like the server to be able   to respond using deltas as often as possible, then the client needs   some additional information.  Otherwise, the client's "If-None-Match"   header might specify a base instance not stored at the server, even   though an appropriate base instance is held in the client's cache.   We identify two additional protocol changes to help solve this   problem.7.1 Multiple entity tags in the If-None-Match header   Although the examples we have given so far show only one entity tag   in an "If-None-Match" header, the HTTP/1.1 specification allows the   header to carry more than one entity-tag.  This feature was included   in HTTP/1.1 to support efficient caching of multiple variants of a   resource, but it is not restricted to that use.   Suppose that a client has kept more than one instance of a resource   in its cache.  That is, not only does it keep the most recent   instance, but it also holds onto copies of one or more prior, invalid   instances.  (Alternatively, it might retain sufficient delta orMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   inverse-delta information to reconstruct older instances.)  In this   case, it could use its conditional request to tell the server about   all of the instances it could apply a delta to.  For example, the   client might send:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      host: bar.example.net      If-None-Match: "123xyz", "337pey", "489uhw"      A-IM: vcdiff   to indicate that it has three instances of this resource in its   cache.  If the server is able to generate a delta from any of these   prior instances, it can select the appropriate base instance, compute   the delta, and return the result to the client.   In this case, however, the server must also tell the client which   base instance to use, and so we need to define a response header,   named "Delta-Base", for this purpose.  For example, the server might   reply:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      ETag: "1acl059"      IM: vcdiff      Delta-Base: "337pey"      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT   This response tells the client to apply the delta to the cached   response with entity tag "337pey", and to associate the entity tag   "1acl059" with the result.   Of course, if the server has retained more than one of the prior   instances identified by the client, this could complicate the problem   of choosing the optimal delta to return, since now the server has a   choice not only of the delta format, but also of the base instance to   use.7.2 Hints for managing the client cache   Support for multiple entity tags in choosing the base instance   implies that a client might benefit from storing multiple old   instances of a resource in its cache.  A client with finite space   would not want to keep all old instances, so it must manage its cache   for maximal effectiveness by saving those instances most likely to be   useful for future deltas.  Although this could be accomplished using   information purely local to the client (e.g., an LRU algorithm),   certain "hint" information from the server could improve the client's   ability to manage its cache.  The use of hints for improving Web   cache performance has been described previously [4, 22].Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   If the server intends to retain certain instances and not others, it   can label the responses that transmit the retained instances.  This   would help the client manage its cache, since it would not have to   retain all prior instances on the possibility that only some of them   might be useful later.  The label is a hint to the client, not a   promise that the server will indefinitely retain an instance.   We propose adding a new directive to the existing "Cache-Control"   header for this purpose, named "retain".  For example, in response to   an unconditional request, the server might send:      HTTP/1.1 200 OK      ETag: "337pey"      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      Cache-Control: retain   to suggest that a delta-capable client should retain this instance.   The "retain" directive could also appear in a delta response,   referring to the current instance:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      ETag: "1acl059"      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      Cache-Control: retain      IM: vcdiff      Delta-Base: "337pey"   The "retain" directive includes an optional timeout parameter, which   the server can use if it expects to delete an old base instance at a   particular time.  For example,      HTTP/1.1 200 OK      ETag: "337pey"      Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 18:30:05 GMT      Cache-Control: retain=3600   means that the server intends to retain this base instance for one   hour.   Another situation where a server can provide a hint to a client is   where the server supports the delta mechanism in general, but does   not intend to provide delta-encoded responses for a particular   resource.  By sending a "retain=0" directive, it indicates that the   client should not waste request-header bytes attempting to obtain a   delta-encoded response using this base instance (and, by implication,   for this resource).  It also indicates that the client ought not   waste cache space on this instance after it has become stale.  ToMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   avoid wasting response-header bytes, a server ought not send   "retain=0", except in reply to a request that attempts to obtain a   delta-encoded response.      Note that the "retain" directive is orthogonal to the "max-age"      directive.  The "max-age" directive indicates how long a cache      entry remains fresh (i.e.,can be used without contacting the      origin server for revalidation); the "retain" directive is of      interest to a client AFTER the cache entry has become stale.   In practice, the "Cache-Control" response-header field might already   be present, so the cost (in bytes) of sending this directive might be   smaller than these examples implies.8 Deltas and intermediate caches   Although we have designed the delta-encoded responses so that they   will not be stored by naive proxy caches, if a proxy does understand   the delta mechanism, it might be beneficial for it to participate in   sending and receiving deltas.   A proxy could participate in several independent ways:      -  In addition to forwarding a delta-encoded response, the proxy         might store it, and then use it to reply to a subsequent         request with a compatible "If-None-Match" field (i.e., one that         is either a superset of the corresponding field of the request         that first elicited the response, or one that includes the         "Delta-Base" value in the cached response), and with a         compatible "IM" response-header field (one that includes the         actual delta-encoding format used in the response.)  Of course,         such uses are subject to all of the other HTTP rules concerning         the validity of cache entries.      -  In addition to forwarding a delta-encoded response, the proxy         might apply the delta to the appropriate entry in its own         cache, which could then be used for later responses (even from         non-delta-capable clients).      -  When the proxy receives a conditional request from a delta-         capable client, and the proxy has a complete copy of an up-to-         date ("fresh," in HTTP/1.1 terminology) response in its cache,         it could generate a delta locally and return it to the         requesting client.      -  When the proxy receives a request from a non-delta-capable         client, it might convert this into a delta request before         forwarding it to the server, and then (after applying aMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002         resulting delta response to one of its own cache entries) it         would return a full-body response to the client (or a response         with status code 206 or 304, as appropriate).   All of these optional techniques increase proxy software complexity,   and might increase proxy storage or CPU requirements.  However, if   applied carefully, they should help to reduce the latencies seen by   end users, and load on the network.  Generally, CPU speed and disk   costs are improving faster than network latencies, so we expect to   see increasing value available from complex proxy implementations.9 Digests for data integrity   When a recipient reassembles a complete HTTP response from several   individual messages, it might be necessary to check the integrity of   the complete response.  For example, the client's cache might be   corrupt, or the implementation of delta encoding (either at client or   server) might have a bug.   HTTP/1.1 includes mechanisms for ensuring the integrity of individual   messages.  A message may include a "Content-MD5" response header,   which provides an MD5 message digest of the body of the message (but   not the headers).  The Digest Authentication mechanism [11] provides   a similar message-digest function, except that it includes certain   header fields.  Neither of these mechanisms makes any provision for   covering a set of data transmitted over several messages, as would be   the case for the result of applying a delta-encoded response (or, for   that matter, a Range response).   Data integrity for reassembled messages requires the introduction of   a new message header.  Such a mechanism is proposed in a separate   document [24].  One might still want to use the Digest Authentication   mechanism, or something stronger, to protect delta messages against   tampering.10 Specification   In this specification, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD",   "SHOULD NOT", and "MAY" are to be interpreted as described inRFC2119 [3].10.1 Protocol parameter specifications   This specification defines a new HTTP parameter type, an instance-   manipulation:Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      instance-manipulation = token [imparams]      imparams = ";" imparam-name [ "=" ( token | quoted-string ) ]      imparam-name = token   Note that the imparam-name MUST NOT be "q", to avoid ambiguity with   the use of qvalues (see [10]).   The set of instance-manipulation values is initially:      -  vcdiff         A delta using the "vcdiff" encoding format [19, 20].      -  diffe         The output of the UNIX "diff -e" command [26].      -  gdiff         The GDIFF encoding format [14].      -  gzip         Same definition as the HTTP "gzip" content-coding.      -  deflate         Same definition as the HTTP "deflate" content-coding.      -  range         A token indicating that the result is partial content, as the         result of a range selection.      -  identity         A token used only in the A-IM header (not in the IM header), to         indicate whether or not the identity instance-manipulation is         acceptable.   For convenience in the rest of this specification, we define a subset   of instance-manipulation values as delta-coding values:      delta-coding = "vcdiff" | "diffe" | "gdiff" | token   Future instance-manipulation values might also be included in this   list.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.2 IANA Considerations   The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) administers the name   space for instance-manipulation values.  Values and their meaning   must be documented in an RFC or other peer-reviewed, permanent, and   readily available reference, in sufficient detail so that   interoperability between independent implementations is possible.   Subject to these constraints, name assignments are First Come, First   Served (seeRFC 2434 [25]).   This specification also inserts a new value in the IANA HTTP Status   Code Registry (seeRFC 2817 [18]).  Seesection 10.4.1 for the   specification of this code.10.3 Basic requirements for delta-encoded responses   A server MAY send a delta-encoded response if all of these conditions   are true:      1. The server would be able to send a 200 (OK) response for the         request.      2. The client's request includes an A-IM header field listing at         least one delta-coding.      3. The client's request includes an If-None-Match header field         listing at least one valid entity tag for an instance of the         Request-URI (a "base instance").   A delta-encoded response:      -  MUST carry a status code of 226 (IM Used).      -  MUST include an IM header field listing, at least, the delta-         coding employed.      -  MAY include a Delta-Base header field listing the entity tag of         the base-instance.10.4 Status code specifications   The following new status code is defined for HTTP.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.4.1 226 IM Used   The server has fulfilled a GET request for the resource, and the   response is a representation of the result of one or more instance-   manipulations applied to the current instance.  The actual current   instance might not be available except by combining this response   with other previous or future responses, as appropriate for the   specific instance-manipulation(s).  If so, the headers of the   resulting instance are the result of combining the headers from the   status-226 response and the other instances, following the rules insection 13.5.3 of the HTTP/1.1 specification [10].   The request MUST have included an A-IM header field listing at least   one instance-manipulation.  The response MUST include an Etag header   field giving the entity tag of the current instance.   A response received with a status code of 226 MAY be stored by a   cache and used in reply to a subsequent request, subject to the HTTP   expiration mechanism and any Cache-Control headers, and to the   requirements insection 10.6.   A response received with a status code of 226 MAY be used by a cache,   in conjunction with a cache entry for the base instance, to create a   cache entry for the current instance.10.5 Header specifications   The following headers are defined, for use as entity-headers.  (Due   to the terminological confusion discussed insection 3, some entity-   headers are more properly associated with instances than with   entities.)10.5.1 Delta-Base   The Delta-Base entity-header field is used in a delta-encoded   response to specify the entity tag of the base instance.      Delta-Base = "Delta-Base" ":" entity-tag   A Delta-Base header field MUST be included in a response with an IM   header that includes a delta-coding, if the request included more   than one entity tag in its If-None-Match header field.   Any response with an IM header that includes a delta-coding MAY   include a Delta-Base header.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      We are not aware of other cases where a delta-encoded response      MUST or SHOULD include a Delta-Base header, but we have not done      an exhaustive or formal analysis.  Implementors might be wise to      include a Delta-Base header in every delta-encoded response.   A cache or proxy that receives a delta-encoded response that lacks a   Delta-base header MAY add a Delta-Base header whose value is the   entity tag given in the If-None-Match field of the request (but only   if that field lists exactly one entity tag).10.5.2 IM   The IM response-header field is used to indicate the instance-   manipulations, if any, that have been applied to the instance   represented by the response.  Typical instance manipulations include   delta encoding and compression.      IM = "IM" ":" #(instance-manipulation)   Instance-manipulations are defined insection 10.1.   As a special case, if the instance-manipulations include both range   selection and at least one other non-identity instance-manipulation,   the IM header field MUST be used to indicate the order in which all   of these instance-manipulations, including range selection, were   applied.  If the IM header lists the "range" instance-manipulation,   the response MUST include either a Content-Range header or a   multipart/byteranges Content-Type in which each part contains a   Content-Range header.  (Seesection 10.10 for specific discussion of   combining delta encoding and multipart/byteranges.)   Responses that include an IM header MUST carry a response status code   of 226 (IM Used), as specified insection 10.4.1.   The server SHOULD omit the IM header if it would list only the   "range" instance-manipulation.  Such responses would normally be sent   with response status code 206 (Partial Content), as specified by   HTTP/1.1 [10].   Examples of the use of the IM header include:      IM: vcdiff   This example indicates that the entity-body is a delta encoding of   the instance, using the vcdiff encoding.      IM: diffe, deflate, rangeMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   This example indicates that the instance has first been delta-encoded   using the diffe encoding, then the result of that has been compressed   using deflate, and finally one or more ranges of that compressed   encoding have been selected.      IM: range, vcdiff   This example indicates that one or more ranges of the instance have   been selected, and the result has then been delta encoded against   identical ranges of a previous base instance.   A cache using a response received in reply to one request to reply to   a subsequent request MUST follow the rules insection 10.6 if the   cached response includes an IM header field.10.5.3 A-IM   The A-IM request-header field is similar to Accept, but restricts the   instance-manipulations (section 10.1) that are acceptable in the   response.  As specified insection 10.5.2, a response may be the   result of applying multiple instance-manipulations.      A-IM = "A-IM" ":" #( instance-manipulation                               [ ";" "q" "=" qvalue ] )   When an A-IM request-header field includes one or more delta-coding   values, the request MUST contain an If-None-Match header field,   listing one or more entity tags from prior responses for the   request-URI.   A server tests whether an instance-manipulation (among the ones it is   capable of employing) is acceptable, according to a given A-IM header   field, using these rules:      1. If the instance-manipulation is listed in the A-IM field, then         it is acceptable, unless it is accompanied by a qvalue of 0.         (As defined insection 3.9 of the HTTP/1.1 specification [10],         a qvalue of 0 means "not acceptable.")  A server MUST NOT use a         non-identity instance-manipulation for a response unless the         instance-manipulation is listed in an A-IM header in the         request.      2. If multiple but incompatible instance-manipulations are         acceptable, then the acceptable instance-manipulation with the         highest non-zero qvalue is preferred.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      3. The "identity" instance-manipulation is always acceptable,         unless specifically refused because the A-IM field includes         "identity;q=0".   If an A-IM field is present in a request, and if the server cannot   send a response which is acceptable according to the A-IM header,   then the server SHOULD send an error response with the 406 (Not   Acceptable) status code.   If a response uses more than one instance-manipulation, the   instance-manipulations MUST be applied in the order in which they   appear in the A-IM request-header field.   The server's choice about whether to apply an instance-manipulation   SHOULD be independent of its choice to apply any subsequent two-input   instance-manipulations to the response.  (Two-input instance-   manipulations include delta-codings, because they take two different   values as input.  Compression and "range" instance-manipulations take   only one input.  Other instance-manipulations may be defined in the   future.)      Note: the intent of this requirement is to prevent the server from      generating a delta-encoded response that the client can only      decode by first applying an instance-manipulation encoding to its      cached base instance.  A server implementor might wish to consider      what the client would logically have in its cache, when deciding      which instance-manipulations to apply prior to a delta-coding.   Examples:      A-IM: vcdiff, gdiff   This example means that the client will accept a delta encoding in   either vcdiff or gdiff format.      A-IM: vcdiff, gdiff;q=0.3   This example means that the client will accept a delta encoding in   either vcdiff or gdiff format, but prefers the vcdiff format.      A-IM: vcdiff, diffe, gzip   This example means that the client will accept a delta encoding in   either vcdiff or diffe format, and will accept the output of the   delta encoding compressed with gzip.  It also means that the client   will accept a gzip compression of the instance, without any delta   encoding, because A-IM provides no way to insist that gzip be used   only if diffe is used.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   It is left to the server implementor to choose useful combinations of   acceptable instance-manipulations (for example, following diffe by   gzip is useful, but following vcdiff by gzip probably is not useful).10.6 Caching rules for 226 responses   When a client or proxy receives a 226 (IM Used) response, it MAY use   this response to create a cache entry in three ways:      1. It MAY decode all of the instance-manipulations to recover the         original instance, and store that instance in the cache.  In         this case, the recovered instance is stored as a status-200         response, and MUST be used in accordance with the normal HTTP         caching rules.      2. It MAY decode all of the instance-manipulations except for         range selection(s), and store the result in the cache.  In this         case, the result is stored as a status-206 response, and MUST         be used in accordance with the normal HTTP caching rules for         Partial Content.      3. It MAY store the status-226 (IM Used) response as a cache         entry.   A status-226 cache entry MUST NOT be used in response to a subsequent   request under any of these conditions (a cache that never stores   status-226 responses may ignore these tests):      1. If any of the instance-manipulation values from the IM header         field in the cached response do not appear in the subsequent         request's A-IM header field.  The comparison between the         headers is done using an exact match on each instance-         manipulation value including any associated imparams values         (seesection 10.1).      2. If the order of instance-manipulation values appearing in the         cached IM header field differs from the order of that set of         instance-manipulations in the A-IM header field of the         subsequent request.      3. If the cache implementation is not aware of, or is not at least         conditionally compliant with, the specification of any of the         instance-manipulation values in the cached IM header field.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002         Note: This rule allows for extending the set of instance-         manipulations without causing deployed cache implementations to         commit errors.  The specification of new instance-manipulations         may include additional caching rules to improve cache-hit rates         in cognizant implementations.      4. If any of the instance-manipulation values in the cached IM         header field is a delta-coding, and the cache entry includes a         Delta-Base header field, and that Delta-Base entity tag is not         one of the entity tags listed in an If-None-Match header field         of the subsequent request.      5. If any of the instance-manipulation values in the cached IM         header field is a delta-coding, the cache entry does not         include a Delta-Base header field, and the If-None-Match header         field of the request that led to that cache entry does not         match the If-None-Match header field of the subsequent request.   If the IM header field of the cached response includes the "range"   instance-manipulation, then a status-226 cache entry MUST NOT be used   in response to a subsequent request if the cached response is   inconsistent with the Range header field value(s) in the request, as   would be the case for a cached 206 (Partial Content) response.      Note: we know of no existing, published formal specification for      deciding if a cached status-206 response is consistent with a      subsequent request.  We believe that either of these conditions is      sufficient:         1. The ranges specified in the headers of the request that led            to the cached response are the same as specified in the            headers of the subsequent request.         2. The ranges specified in the cached response are the same as            specified in the headers of the subsequent request.      Further analysis might be necessary.10.7 Rules for deltas in the presence of content-codings   The use of delta encoding with content-encoded instances adds some   slight complexity.  When a client (perhaps a proxy) has received a   delta encoded response, either or both of that new response and a   cached previous response may have non-identity content-codings.  We   specify rules for the server and client, to prevent situations where   the client is unable to make sense of the server's response.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.7.1 Rules for generating deltas in the presence of content-codings   When a server generates a delta-encoded response, the list of   content-codings the server uses (i.e., the value of the response's   Content-Encoding header field) SHOULD be a prefix of the list of   content-codings the server would have used had it not generated a   delta encoding.   This requirement allows a client receiving a delta-encoded response   to apply the delta to a cached base instance without having to apply   any content-codings during the process (although the client might, of   course, be required to decode some content-codings).10.7.2 Rules for applying deltas in the presence of content-codings   When a client receives a delta response with one or more non-identity   content codings:      1. If both the new (delta) response and the cached response         (instance) have exactly the same set of content-codings, the         client applies the delta response to the cached response         without removing the content-codings from either response.      2. If the new (delta) response and the cached response have a         different set of content-codings, before applying the delta the         client decodes one or more content-codings from the cached         response, until the result has the same set of content-codings         as the delta response.      3. If a proxy or cache is forwarding the result of applying the         delta response to a cached base instance response, or later         forwards this result from a cache entry, the forwarded response         MUST carry the same Content-Encoding header field as the new         (delta) response (and so it must be content-encoded as         indicated by that header field).   The intent of these rules (and in particular, rule #3) is that the   results are always consistent with the rule that the entity tag is   associated with the result of the content-coding, and that any   recipient after the application of the delta-coding receives exactly   the same response it would have received as a status-200 response   from the origin server (without any delta-coding).Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.7.3 Examples for using A-IM, IM, and content-codings   Suppose a client, with an empty cache, sends this request:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      Host: example.com      Accept-encoding: gzip   and the origin server responds with:      HTTP/1.1 200 OK      Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 14:00:00 GMT      Etag: "abc"      Content-encoding: gzip   We will use the notation URI;entity-tag to denote specific instances,   so this response would cause the client to store in its cache the   entity GZIP(foo.html;"abc").   Then suppose that the client, a minute later, issues this conditional   request:      GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1      Host: example.com      If-none-match: "abc"      Accept-encoding: gzip      A-IM: vcdiff   If the server is able to generate a delta-encoded response, it might   choose one of two alternatives.  The first is to compute the delta   from the compressed instances (although this might not yield the most   efficient coding):      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 14:01:00 GMT      Etag: "def"      Delta-base: "abc"      Content-encoding: gzip      IM: vcdiff   The body of this response would be the result of   VCDIFF_DELTA(GZIP(foo.html;"abc"), GZIP(foo.html;"def")).  The client   would store as a new cache entry the entity GZIP(foo.html;"def"),   after recovering that entity by applying the delta to its previous   cache entry.   The server's other alternative would be to compute the delta from the   uncompressed values, returning:Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 14:01:00 GMT      Delta-base: "abc"      Etag: "ghi"      IM: vcdiff   The body of this response would be the result of   VCDIFF_DELTA(GUNZIP(GZIP(foo.html;"abc")), foo.html;"ghi"), or more   simply VCDIFF_DELTA(foo.html;"abc", foo.html;"ghi").  The client   would store as a new cache entry the entity foo.html;"ghi" (i.e.,   without any content-coding), after recovering that entity by applying   the delta to its previous cache entry.   Note that the new value of foo.html (at 14:01:00 GMT) without the   gzip content-coding must have a different entity tag from the   compressed instance of the same underlying file.   The client's second request might have been:       GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1       Host: example.com       If-none-match: "abc"       Accept-encoding: gzip       A-IM: diffe, gzip   The client lists gzip in both the Accept-Encoding and A-IM headers,   because if the server does not support delta encoding, the client   would at least like to achieve the benefits of compression (as a   content-coding).  However, if the server does support the diffe   delta-coding, the client would like the result to be compressed, and   this must be done as an instance-manipulation.   A server that does support diffe might reply:      HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used      Date: Wed, 24 Dec 1997 14:01:00 GMT      Delta-base: "abc"      Etag: "ghi"      IM: diffe, gzip   The body of this response would be the result of   GZIP(DIFFE_DELTA(GUNZIP(GZIP(foo.html;"abc")), foo.html;"ghi")), or   more simply GZIP(DIFFE_DELTA(foo.html;"abc", foo.html;"ghi")).   Because the gzip compression is, in this case, an instance-   manipulation and not a content-coding, it is not retained when the   reassembled response is stored or forwarded, so the client would   store as a new cache entry the entity foo.html;"ghi" (without any   content-coding or compression).Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.8 New Cache-Control directives   We define two new cache-directives (seesection 14.9 of RFC 2616 [10]   for the specification of cache-directive).10.8.1 Retain directive   The set of cache-response-directive values is augmented to include   the retain directive.      cache-response-directive = ...              | "retain" [ "=" delta-seconds ]   A retain directive is always a "hint" from a server to a client; it   never specifies a mandatory action for the recipient.   The presence of a retain directive indicates that a delta-capable   client ought to retain the instance in the response in its cache,   space permitting, and ought to use the corresponding entity tag in a   future request for a delta-encoded response.  I.e., the server is   likely to provide delta-encoded responses using the corresponding   instance as a base instance.  By implication, if a client has   retrieved and cached several instances of a resource, some of which   are marked with "retain" and some not, then there is no point in   caching the instances not marked with "retain".   If the retain directive includes a delta-seconds value, then the   server is likely to stop using the corresponding instance as a base   instance after the specified number of seconds.  A client ought not   use the corresponding entity tag in a future request for a delta-   encoded response after that interval ends.  The interval is measured   from the time that the response is generated, so a client ought to   include the response's Age in its calculations.   If the retain directive includes a delta-seconds value of zero, a   client SHOULD NOT use the corresponding entity tag in a future   request for a delta-encoded response.      Note: We recommend that server implementors consider the bandwidth      implications of sending the "retain=0" directive to clients or      proxies that might not have the ability to make use of it.10.8.2 IM directive   The set of cache-response-directive values is augmented to include   the im directive.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002      cache-response-directive = ...              | "im"   A cache that complies with the specification for the IM header, the   A-IM header, and the 226 response-status code SHOULD ignore a no-   store cache-directive if an im directive is present in the same   response.  All other implementations MUST ignore the im directive   (i.e., MUST observe a no-store directive, if present).10.9 Use of compression with delta encoding   The application of data compression to the diffe and gdiff delta   codings has been shown to greatly reduce the size of the resulting   message bodies, in many cases.  (The vcdiff coding, on the other   hand, is inherently compressed and does not benefit from further   compression.)  Therefore, it is strongly recommended that   implementations that support the diffe and/or gdiff delta codings   also support the gzip and/or deflate compression codings.  (The   deflate coding provides a more compact result.)  However, this is not   a requirement for the use of delta encoding, primarily because the   CPU-time costs associated with compression and decompression may be   excessive in some environments.   A client that supports both delta encoding and compression as   instance-manipulations signals this by, for example      A-IM: diffe, deflate   The ordering rule stated insection 10.5.3 requires, if the server   uses both instance-manipulations in the response, that compression be   applied to the result of the delta encoding, rather than vice versa.   I.e., the response in this case would include      IM: diffe, deflate   Note that a client might accept compression either as a content-   coding or as an instance-manipulation.  For example:      Accept-Encoding: gzip      A-IM: gzip, gdiff   In this example, the server may apply the gzip compression, either as   a content-coding or as an instance-manipulation, before delta   encoding.  Remember that the entity tag is assigned after content-   coding but before instance-manipulation, so this choice does affect   the semantics of delta encoding.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200210.10 Delta encoding and multipart/byteranges   A client may request multiple, non-contiguous byte ranges in a single   request.  The server's response uses the "multipart/byteranges" media   type (section 19.2 of [10]) to convey multiple ranges in a response.   If a multipart/byteranges response is delta encoded (i.e, uses a   delta-coding as an instance-manipulation), the delta-related headers   are associated with the entire response, not with the individual   parts.  (This is because there is only one base instance and one   current instance involved.)  A delta-encoded response with multiple   ranges MUST use the same delta-coding for all of the ranges.   If a server chooses to use a delta encoding for a   multipart/byteranges response, it MUST generate a response in   accordance with the following rules.   When a multipart/byteranges response uses a delta-coding prior to a   range selection, the A-IM and IM header fields list the delta-coding   before the "range" literal.  (Recall that this is the approach taken   to obtain a partial response after a premature termination of a   message transmission.)  The server firsts generates a sequence of   bytes representing the difference (delta) between the base instance   and the current instance, then selects the specified ranges of bytes,   and transmits each such range in a part of the multipart/byteranges   media type.   When a multipart/byteranges response uses a delta-coding after a   range selection, the A-IM and IM header fields list the delta-coding   after the "range" literal.  (Recall that this is the approach taken   to obtain an updated version just of selected sections of an   instance.)  The server first selects the specified ranges from the   current instance, and also selects the same specified ranges from the   base instance.  (Some of these selected ranges might be the empty   sequence, if the instance is not long enough.)  The server then   generates the individual differences (deltas) between the pairs of   ranges, and transmits each such difference in a part of the   multipart/byteranges media type.11 Quantifying the protocol overhead   The proposed protocol changes increase the size of the HTTP message   headers slightly.  In the simplest case, a conditional request (i.e.,   one for a URI for which the client already has a cache entry) would   include one more header, e.g.:      A-IM:vcdiffMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   This is about 13 extra bytes.  A recent study [23] reports mean   request sizes from two different traces of 281 and 306 bytes, so the   net increase in request size would be between 4% and 5%.   Because a client must have an existing cache entry to use as a base   for a delta-encoded response, it would never send "A-IM: vcdiff" (or   listing other delta encoding formats) for its unconditional requests.   The same study showed that at least 46% of the requests in lengthy   traces were for URLs not seen previously in the trace; this means   that no more than about half of typical client requests could be   conditional (and the actual fraction is likely to be smaller, given   the finite size of real caches).   The study also showed that 64% of the responses in a lengthy trace   were for image content-types (GIF and JPEG).  As noted insection 6,   we do not currently know of a delta-encoding format suitable for such   image types.  Unless a client did support such a delta-encoding   format, it would presumably not ask for a delta when making a   conditional request for image content-types.   Taken together, these factors suggest that the mean increase in   request header size would be much less than 5%, and probably below   1%.   Delta-encoded responses carry slightly longer headers.  In the   simplest case, a response carries one more header, e.g.:      IM:vcdiff   This is about 11 bytes.  Other headers (such as "Delta-Base") might   also be included.  However, none of these extra headers would be   included except in cases where a delta encoding is actually employed,   and the sender of the response can avoid sending a delta encoding if   this results in a net increase in response size.  Thus, a delta-   encoded response should never be larger than a regular response for   the same request.   Simulations suggest that, when delta encoding pays off at all, it   saves several thousand bytes [23].  Thus, adding a few dozen bytes to   the response headers should almost never obviate the savings in the   message-body size.   Finally, the use of the "retain" Cache-Control directive might cause   some additional overhead.  Some server heuristics might be successful   in limiting the use of these headers to situations where they would   probably optimize future responses.  Neither of these headers is   necessary for the simpler uses of delta encoding.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200212 Security Considerations   We are not aware of any aspects of the basic delta encoding mechanism   that affect the existing security considerations for the HTTP/1.1   protocol.13 Acknowledgements   Phong Vo has provided a great deal of guidance in the choice of delta   encoding algorithms and formats.  Issac Goldstand and Mike Dahlin   provided a number of useful comments on the specification.  Dave   Kristol suggested many textual corrections.14 Intellectual Property Rights   The IETF has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in   regard to some or all of the specification contained in this   document.  For more information consult the online list of claimed   rights, at <http://www.ietf.org/ipr.html>.   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it   has made any effort to identify any such rights.  Information on the   IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and   standards-related documentation can be found inBCP 11.  Copies of   claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of   licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to   obtain a general license or permission for the use of such   proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification can   be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.15 References   1.  Gaurav Banga, Fred Douglis, and Michael Rabinovich.  Optimistic       Deltas for WWW Latency Reduction.  Proc. 1997 USENIX Technical       Conference, Anaheim, CA, January, 1997, pp. 289-303.   2.  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R. and H. Frystyk, "Hypertext Transfer       Protocol -- HTTP/1.0",RFC 1945, May 1996.   3.  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement       Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   4.  Edith Cohen, Balachander Krishnamurthy, and Jennifer Rexford.       Improving End-to-End Performance of the Web Using Server Volumes       and Proxy Filters.  Proc. SIGCOMM '98, September, 1998, pp. 241-       253.   5.  Deutsch, P., "GZIP file format specification version 4.3",RFC1952, May 1996.   6.  Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification       version 1.3",RFC 1951, May 1996.   7.  Deutsch, P. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data Format       Specification version 3.3",RFC 1950, May 1996.   8.  Fred Douglis, Anja Feldmann, Balachander Krishnamurthy, and       Jeffrey Mogul.  Rate of Change and Other Metrics:  a Live Study       of the World Wide Web.  Proc. Symposium on Internet Technologies       and Systems, USENIX, Monterey, CA, December, 1997, pp. 147-158.   9.  Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Nielsen, H. and T. Berners-       Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1",RFC 2068, January       1997.   10. Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Nielsen, H., Masinter, L.,       Leach, P. and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --       HTTP/1.1",RFC 2616, June 1999.   11. Franks, J., Hallam-Baker, P., Hostetler, J., Leach, P., Luotonen,       A., Luotonen, L. and L. Stewart, "HTTP Authentication:  Basic and       Digest Access Authnetication",RFC 2617, June 1999.   12. Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail       Extensions (MIME) Part One:  Format of Internet Message Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.   13. Arthur van Hoff, John Giannandrea, Mark Hapner, Steve Carter, and       Milo Medin.  The HTTP Distribution and Replication Protocol.       Technical Report NOTE-DRP, World Wide Web Consortium, August,       1997.   14. Arthur van Hoff and Jonathan Payne.  Generic Diff Format       Specification.  Technical Report NOTE-GDIFF, World Wide Web       Consortium, August, 1997.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   15. Barron C. Housel and David B. Lindquist.  WebExpress: A System       for Optimizing Web Browsing in a Wireless Environment.  Proc. 2nd       Annual Intl. Conf. on Mobile Computing and Networking, ACM, Rye,       New York, November, 1996, pp. 108-116.   16. James J. Hunt, Kiem-Phong Vo, and Walter F. Tichy.  An Empirical       Study of Delta Algorithms.  IEEE Soft. Config. and Maint.       Workshop, 1996.   17. Jacobson, V., "Compressing TCP/IP Headers for Low-Speed Serial       Links",RFC 1144, February 1990.   18. Khare, R. and S. Lawrence, "Upgrading to TLS Within HTTP/1.1",RFC 2817, May 2000.   19. David G. Korn and Kiem-Phong Vo.  A Generic Differencing and       Compression Data Format.  Technical Report HA1630000-021899-02TM,       AT&T Labs - Research, February, 1999.   20. Korn, D. and K. Vo, "The VCDIFF Generic Differencing and       Compression Data Format", Work in Progress.   21. Merriam-Webster.   Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary.       G. & C. Merriam Co., Springfield, MA, 1963.   22. Jeffrey C. Mogul.  Hinted caching in the Web.  Proc. Seventh ACM       SIGOPS European Workshop, Connemara, Ireland, September, 1996,       pp.  103-108.   23. Jeffrey C. Mogul, Fred Douglis, Anja Feldmann, and Balachander       Krishnamurthy.  Potential benefits of delta encoding and data       compression for HTTP.  Research Report 97/4, DECWRL, July, 1997.   24. Mogul, J. and A. Van Hoff, "Instance Digests in HTTP",RFC 3230,       January 2002.   25. Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA       Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 2434, October 1998.   26. The Open Group.  The Single UNIX Specification, Version 2 - 6 Vol       Set for UNIX 98.  Document number T912, The Open Group, February,       1997.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   27. W. Tichy.  "RCS - A System For Version Control".  Software -       Practice and Experience 15, 7 (July 1985), 637-654.   28. Andrew Tridgell and Paul Mackerras.  The rsync algorithm.       Technical Report TR-CS-96-05, Department of Computer Science,       Australian National University, June, 1996.   29. Stephen Williams.  Personal communication.http://ei.cs.vt.edu/~williams/DIFF/prelim.html.   30. Stephen Williams, Marc Abrams, Charles R. Standridge, Ghaleb       Abdulla, and Edward A. Fox.  Removal Policies in Network Caches       for World-Wide Web Documents.  Proc. SIGCOMM '96, Stanford, CA,       August, 1996, pp. 293-305.16 Authors' addresses   Jeffrey C. Mogul   Western Research Laboratory   Compaq Computer Corporation   250 University Avenue   Palo Alto, California, 94305, U.S.A.   Phone: 1 650 617 3304 (email preferred)   EMail: JeffMogul@acm.org   Balachander Krishnamurthy   AT&T Labs - Research   180 Park Ave, Room D-229   Florham Park, NJ 07932-0971, U.S.A.   EMail: bala@research.att.com   Fred Douglis   AT&T Labs - Research   180 Park Ave, Room B-137   Florham Park, NJ 07932-0971, U.S.A.   Phone: 1 973 360-8775   EMail: douglis@research.att.com   Anja Feldmann   University of Saarbruecken, Germany,   Computer Science Department   Im Stadtwald, Geb. 36.1, Zimmer 310   D-66123 Saarbruecken, Germany   EMail: anja@cs.uni-sb.deMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 2002   Yaron Y. Goland   Email: yaron@goland.org   Arthur van Hoff   Marimba, Inc.   440 Clyde Avenue   Mountain View, CA 94043, U.S.A.   Phone: 1 650 930 5283   EMail: avh@marimba.com   Daniel M. Hellerstein   Economic Research Service, USDA   1909 Franwall Ave, Wheaton MD 20902   Phone: 1 202 694-5613 or 1 301 649-4728   EMail: danielh@crosslink.net or webmaster@srehttp.orgMogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 3229                 Delta encoding in HTTP             January 200217 Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Mogul, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 49]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp