draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-23

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HTTPbis Working Group R. Fielding, Ed.
Internet-Draft Adobe
Obsoletes: 2616 (if approved) J. Reschke, Ed.
Updates: 2817 (if approved) greenbytes
Intended status: Standards Track July 15, 2013
Expires: January 16, 2014
 Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content
 draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-23
Abstract
 The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level
 protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypertext information
 systems. This document defines the semantics of HTTP/1.1 messages,
 as expressed by request methods, request header fields, response
 status codes, and response header fields, along with the payload of
 messages (metadata and body content) and mechanisms for content
 negotiation.
Editorial Note (To be removed by RFC Editor)
 Discussion of this draft takes place on the HTTPBIS working group
 mailing list (ietf-http-wg@w3.org), which is archived at
 <http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/ietf-http-wg/>.
 The current issues list is at
 <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/report/3> and related
 documents (including fancy diffs) can be found at
 <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/>.
 The changes in this draft are summarized in Appendix E.3.
Status of This Memo
 This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
 provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
 Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
 Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
 working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
 Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
 Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
 and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
 time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
 material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
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 Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
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Table of Contents
 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 1.1. Conformance and Error Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 1.2. Syntax Notation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 2. Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
 3. Representations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
 3.1. Representation Metadata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
 3.1.1. Processing the Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
 3.1.2. Encoding for Compression or Integrity . . . . . . . . 11
 3.1.3. Audience Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 3.1.4. Identification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
 3.2. Representation Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 3.3. Payload Semantics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 3.4. Content Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 3.4.1. Proactive Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 3.4.2. Reactive Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
 4. Request Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
 4.1. Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
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 4.2. Common Method Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 4.2.1. Safe Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 4.2.2. Idempotent Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 4.2.3. Cacheable Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 4.3. Method Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 4.3.1. GET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 4.3.2. HEAD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 4.3.3. POST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
 4.3.4. PUT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
 4.3.5. DELETE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
 4.3.6. CONNECT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
 4.3.7. OPTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
 4.3.8. TRACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 5. Request Header Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 5.1. Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 5.1.1. Expect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
 5.1.2. Max-Forwards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 5.2. Conditionals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 5.3. Content Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 5.3.1. Quality Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 5.3.2. Accept . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 5.3.3. Accept-Charset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
 5.3.4. Accept-Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
 5.3.5. Accept-Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
 5.4. Authentication Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
 5.5. Request Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 5.5.1. From . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 5.5.2. Referer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 5.5.3. User-Agent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
 6. Response Status Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
 6.1. Overview of Status Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
 6.2. Informational 1xx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
 6.2.1. 100 Continue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
 6.2.2. 101 Switching Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
 6.3. Successful 2xx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
 6.3.1. 200 OK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
 6.3.2. 201 Created . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 6.3.3. 202 Accepted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 6.3.4. 203 Non-Authoritative Information . . . . . . . . . . 51
 6.3.5. 204 No Content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
 6.3.6. 205 Reset Content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
 6.4. Redirection 3xx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
 6.4.1. 300 Multiple Choices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
 6.4.2. 301 Moved Permanently . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
 6.4.3. 302 Found . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
 6.4.4. 303 See Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
 6.4.5. 305 Use Proxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
 6.4.6. 306 (Unused) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
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 6.4.7. 307 Temporary Redirect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 6.5. Client Error 4xx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 6.5.1. 400 Bad Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 6.5.2. 402 Payment Required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 6.5.3. 403 Forbidden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 6.5.4. 404 Not Found . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 6.5.5. 405 Method Not Allowed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 6.5.6. 406 Not Acceptable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 6.5.7. 408 Request Timeout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
 6.5.8. 409 Conflict . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
 6.5.9. 410 Gone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
 6.5.10. 411 Length Required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
 6.5.11. 413 Payload Too Large . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
 6.5.12. 414 URI Too Long . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
 6.5.13. 415 Unsupported Media Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
 6.5.14. 417 Expectation Failed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
 6.5.15. 426 Upgrade Required . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
 6.6. Server Error 5xx . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
 6.6.1. 500 Internal Server Error . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
 6.6.2. 501 Not Implemented . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
 6.6.3. 502 Bad Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 6.6.4. 503 Service Unavailable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 6.6.5. 504 Gateway Timeout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 6.6.6. 505 HTTP Version Not Supported . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 7. Response Header Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 7.1. Control Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
 7.1.1. Origination Date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
 7.1.2. Location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
 7.1.3. Retry-After . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
 7.1.4. Vary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
 7.2. Validator Header Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
 7.3. Authentication Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
 7.4. Response Context . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
 7.4.1. Allow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
 7.4.2. Server . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
 8.1. Method Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
 8.1.1. Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
 8.1.2. Considerations for New Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
 8.1.3. Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
 8.2. Status Code Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
 8.2.1. Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
 8.2.2. Considerations for New Status Codes . . . . . . . . . 74
 8.2.3. Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
 8.3. Header Field Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
 8.3.1. Considerations for New Header Fields . . . . . . . . . 77
 8.3.2. Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
 8.4. Content Coding Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
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 8.4.1. Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
 8.4.2. Registrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
 9.1. Attacks Based On File and Path Names . . . . . . . . . . . 80
 9.2. Personal Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
 9.3. Sensitive Information in URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
 9.4. Product Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
 9.5. Fragment after Redirects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
 9.6. Browser Fingerprinting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
 10. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
 11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
 11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
 11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
 Appendix A. Differences between HTTP and MIME . . . . . . . . . . 87
 A.1. MIME-Version . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
 A.2. Conversion to Canonical Form . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
 A.3. Conversion of Date Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
 A.4. Conversion of Content-Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
 A.5. Conversion of Content-Transfer-Encoding . . . . . . . . . 88
 A.6. MHTML and Line Length Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
 Appendix B. Changes from RFC 2616 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
 Appendix C. Imported ABNF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
 Appendix D. Collected ABNF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
 Appendix E. Change Log (to be removed by RFC Editor before
 publication) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
 E.1. Since RFC 2616 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
 E.2. Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-21 . . . . . . . . . 95
 E.3. Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-22 . . . . . . . . . 96
 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
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1. Introduction
 Each Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) message is either a request
 or a response. A server listens on a connection for a request,
 parses each message received, interprets the message semantics in
 relation to the identified request target, and responds to that
 request with one or more response messages. A client constructs
 request messages to communicate specific intentions, and examines
 received responses to see if the intentions were carried out and
 determine how to interpret the results. This document defines
 HTTP/1.1 request and response semantics in terms of the architecture
 defined in [Part1].
 HTTP provides a uniform interface for interacting with a resource
 (Section 2), regardless of its type, nature, or implementation, via
 the manipulation and transfer of representations (Section 3).
 HTTP semantics include the intentions defined by each request method
 (Section 4), extensions to those semantics that might be described in
 request header fields (Section 5), the meaning of status codes to
 indicate a machine-readable response (Section 6), and the meaning of
 other control data and resource metadata that might be given in
 response header fields (Section 7).
 This document also defines representation metadata that describe how
 a payload is intended to be interpreted by a recipient, the request
 header fields that might influence content selection, and the various
 selection algorithms that are collectively referred to as "content
 negotiation" (Section 3.4).
1.1. Conformance and Error Handling
 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
 Conformance criteria and considerations regarding error handling are
 defined in Section 2.5 of [Part1].
1.2. Syntax Notation
 This specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF)
 notation of [RFC5234] with the list rule extension defined in Section
 1.2 of [Part1]. Appendix C describes rules imported from other
 documents. Appendix D shows the collected ABNF with the list rule
 expanded.
 This specification uses the terms "character", "character encoding
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 scheme", "charset", and "protocol element" as they are defined in
 [RFC6365].
2. Resources
 The target of each HTTP request is called a resource. HTTP does not
 limit the nature of a resource; it merely defines an interface that
 might be used to interact with resources. Each resource is
 identified by a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI), as described in
 Section 2.7 of [Part1].
 When a client constructs an HTTP/1.1 request message, it sends the
 target URI in one of various forms, as defined in (Section 5.3 of
 [Part1]). When a request is received, the server reconstructs an
 effective request URI for the target resource (Section 5.5 of
 [Part1]).
 One design goal of HTTP is to separate resource identification from
 request semantics, which is made possible by vesting the request
 semantics in the request method (Section 4) and a few request-
 modifying header fields (Section 5). Resource owners SHOULD NOT
 include request semantics within a URI, such as by specifying an
 action to invoke within the path or query components of the effective
 request URI, unless those semantics are disabled when they are
 inconsistent with the request method.
3. Representations
 If we consider that a resource could be anything, and that the
 uniform interface provided by HTTP is similar to a window through
 which one can observe and act upon such a thing only through the
 communication of messages to some independent actor on the other
 side, then we need an abstraction to represent ("take the place of")
 the current or desired state of that thing in our communications. We
 call that abstraction a representation [REST].
 For the purposes of HTTP, a "representation" is information that is
 intended to reflect a past, current, or desired state of a given
 resource, in a format that can be readily communicated via the
 protocol, and that consists of a set of representation metadata and a
 potentially unbounded stream of representation data.
 An origin server might be provided with, or capable of generating,
 multiple representations that are each intended to reflect the
 current state of a target resource. In such cases, some algorithm is
 used by the origin server to select one of those representations as
 most applicable to a given request, usually based on content
 negotiation. We refer to that one representation as the "selected
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 representation" and use its particular data and metadata for
 evaluating conditional requests [Part4] and constructing the payload
 for 200 (OK) and 304 (Not Modified) responses to GET (Section 4.3.1).
3.1. Representation Metadata
 Representation header fields provide metadata about the
 representation. When a message includes a payload body, the
 representation header fields describe how to interpret the
 representation data enclosed in the payload body. In a response to a
 HEAD request, the representation header fields describe the
 representation data that would have been enclosed in the payload body
 if the same request had been a GET.
 The following header fields are defined to convey representation
 metadata:
 +-------------------+-----------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+-----------------+
 | Content-Type | Section 3.1.1.5 |
 | Content-Encoding | Section 3.1.2.2 |
 | Content-Language | Section 3.1.3.2 |
 | Content-Location | Section 3.1.4.2 |
 +-------------------+-----------------+
3.1.1. Processing the Data
3.1.1.1. Media Type
 HTTP uses Internet Media Types [RFC2046] in the Content-Type
 (Section 3.1.1.5) and Accept (Section 5.3.2) header fields in order
 to provide open and extensible data typing and type negotiation.
 Media types define both a data format and various processing models:
 how to process that data in accordance with each context in which it
 is received.
 media-type = type "/" subtype *( OWS ";" OWS parameter )
 type = token
 subtype = token
 The type/subtype MAY be followed by parameters in the form of
 attribute/value pairs.
 parameter = attribute "=" value
 attribute = token
 value = word
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 The type, subtype, and parameter attribute names are case-
 insensitive. Parameter values might or might not be case-sensitive,
 depending on the semantics of the parameter name. The presence or
 absence of a parameter might be significant to the processing of a
 media-type, depending on its definition within the media type
 registry.
 A parameter value that matches the token production can be
 transmitted as either a token or within a quoted-string. The quoted
 and unquoted values are equivalent. For example, the following
 examples are all equivalent, but the first is preferred for
 consistency:
 text/html;charset=utf-8
 text/html;charset=UTF-8
 Text/HTML;Charset="utf-8"
 text/html; charset="utf-8"
 Internet media types ought to be registered with IANA according to
 the procedures defined in [BCP13].
 Note: Unlike some similar constructs in other header fields, media
 type parameters do not allow whitespace (even "bad" whitespace)
 around the "=" character.
3.1.1.2. Charset
 HTTP uses charset names to indicate or negotiate the character
 encoding scheme of a textual representation [RFC6365]. A charset is
 identified by a case-insensitive token.
 charset = token
 Charset names ought to be registered in IANA Character Set registry
 (<http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets>) according to the
 procedures defined in [RFC2978].
3.1.1.3. Canonicalization and Text Defaults
 Internet media types are registered with a canonical form in order to
 be interoperable among systems with varying native encoding formats.
 Representations selected or transferred via HTTP ought to be in
 canonical form, for many of the same reasons described by the
 Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) [RFC2045]. However, the
 performance characteristics of email deployments (i.e., store and
 forward messages to peers) are significantly different from those
 common to HTTP and the Web (server-based information services).
 Furthermore, MIME's constraints for the sake of compatibility with
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 older mail transfer protocols do not apply to HTTP (see Appendix A).
 MIME's canonical form requires that media subtypes of the "text" type
 use CRLF as the text line break. HTTP allows the transfer of text
 media with plain CR or LF alone representing a line break, when such
 line breaks are consistent for an entire representation. HTTP
 senders MAY generate, and recipients MUST be able to parse, line
 breaks in text media that consist of CRLF, bare CR, or bare LF. In
 addition, text media in HTTP is not limited to charsets that use
 octets 13 and 10 for CR and LF, respectively. This flexibility
 regarding line breaks applies only to text within a representation
 that has been assigned a "text" media type; it does not apply to
 "multipart" types or HTTP elements outside the payload body (e.g.,
 header fields).
 If a representation is encoded with a content-coding, the underlying
 data ought to be in a form defined above prior to being encoded.
3.1.1.4. Multipart Types
 MIME provides for a number of "multipart" types -- encapsulations of
 one or more representations within a single message body. All
 multipart types share a common syntax, as defined in Section 5.1.1 of
 [RFC2046], and include a boundary parameter as part of the media type
 value. The message body is itself a protocol element; a sender MUST
 generate only CRLF to represent line breaks between body parts.
 HTTP message framing does not use the multipart boundary as an
 indicator of message body length, though it might be used by
 implementations that generate or process the payload. For example,
 the "multipart/form-data" type is often used for carrying form data
 in a request, as described in [RFC2388], and the "multipart/
 byteranges" type is defined by this specification for use in some 206
 (Partial Content) responses [Part5].
3.1.1.5. Content-Type
 The "Content-Type" header field indicates the media type of the
 associated representation: either the representation enclosed in the
 message payload or the selected representation, as determined by the
 message semantics. The indicated media type defines both the data
 format and how that data is intended to be processed by a recipient,
 within the scope of the received message semantics, after any content
 codings indicated by Content-Encoding are decoded.
 Content-Type = media-type
 Media types are defined in Section 3.1.1.1. An example of the field
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 is
 Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-4
 A sender that generates a message containing a payload body SHOULD
 generate a Content-Type header field in that message unless the
 intended media type of the enclosed representation is unknown to the
 sender. If a Content-Type header field is not present, recipients
 MAY either assume a media type of "application/octet-stream"
 ([RFC2046], Section 4.5.1) or examine the data to determine its type.
 In practice, resource owners do not always properly configure their
 origin server to provide the correct Content-Type for a given
 representation, with the result that some clients will examine a
 payload's content and override the specified type. Clients that do
 so risk drawing incorrect conclusions, which might expose additional
 security risks (e.g., "privilege escalation"). Furthermore, it is
 impossible to determine the sender's intent by examining the data
 format: many data formats match multiple media types that differ only
 in processing semantics. Implementers are encouraged to provide a
 means of disabling such "content sniffing" when it is used.
3.1.2. Encoding for Compression or Integrity
3.1.2.1. Content Codings
 Content coding values indicate an encoding transformation that has
 been or can be applied to a representation. Content codings are
 primarily used to allow a representation to be compressed or
 otherwise usefully transformed without losing the identity of its
 underlying media type and without loss of information. Frequently,
 the representation is stored in coded form, transmitted directly, and
 only decoded by the recipient.
 content-coding = token
 All content-coding values are case-insensitive and ought to be
 registered within the HTTP Content Coding registry, as defined in
 Section 8.4. They are used in the Accept-Encoding (Section 5.3.4)
 and Content-Encoding (Section 3.1.2.2) header fields.
 The following content-coding values are defined by this
 specification:
 compress (and x-compress): See Section 4.2.1 of [Part1].
 deflate: See Section 4.2.2 of [Part1].
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 gzip (and x-gzip): See Section 4.2.3 of [Part1].
3.1.2.2. Content-Encoding
 The "Content-Encoding" header field indicates what content codings
 have been applied to the representation, beyond those inherent in the
 media type, and thus what decoding mechanisms have to be applied in
 order to obtain data in the media type referenced by the Content-Type
 header field. Content-Encoding is primarily used to allow a
 representation's data to be compressed without losing the identity of
 its underlying media type.
 Content-Encoding = 1#content-coding
 An example of its use is
 Content-Encoding: gzip
 If multiple encodings have been applied to a representation, the
 content codings MUST be listed in the order in which they were
 applied. Additional information about the encoding parameters MAY be
 provided by other header fields not defined by this specification.
 Unlike Transfer-Encoding (Section 3.3.1 of [Part1]), the codings
 listed in Content-Encoding are a characteristic of the
 representation; the representation is defined in terms of the coded
 form, and all other metadata about the representation is about the
 coded form unless otherwise noted in the metadata definition.
 Typically, the representation is only decoded just prior to rendering
 or analogous usage.
 If the media type includes an inherent encoding, such as a data
 format that is always compressed, then that encoding would not be
 restated in Content-Encoding even if it happens to be the same
 algorithm as one of the content codings. Such a content coding would
 only be listed if, for some bizarre reason, it is applied a second
 time to form the representation. Likewise, an origin server might
 choose to publish the same data as multiple representations that
 differ only in whether the coding is defined as part of Content-Type
 or Content-Encoding, since some user agents will behave differently
 in their handling of each response (e.g., open a "Save as ..." dialog
 instead of automatic decompression and rendering of content).
 An origin server MAY respond with a status code of 415 (Unsupported
 Media Type) if a representation in the request message has a content
 coding that is not acceptable.
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3.1.3. Audience Language
3.1.3.1. Language Tags
 A language tag, as defined in [RFC5646], identifies a natural
 language spoken, written, or otherwise conveyed by human beings for
 communication of information to other human beings. Computer
 languages are explicitly excluded. HTTP uses language tags within
 the Accept-Language and Content-Language header fields.
 Accept-Language uses the looser language-range production defined in
 Section 5.3.5, whereas Content-Language uses the stricter language-
 tag production defined below.
 language-tag = <Language-Tag, defined in [RFC5646], Section 2.1>
 A language tag is composed of one or more parts: a primary language
 subtag followed by a possibly empty series of subtags. White space
 is not allowed within the tag and all tags are case-insensitive.
 Example tags include:
 en, en-US, es-419, az-Arab, x-pig-latin, man-Nkoo-GN
 See [RFC5646] for further information.
3.1.3.2. Content-Language
 The "Content-Language" header field describes the natural language(s)
 of the intended audience for the representation. Note that this
 might not be equivalent to all the languages used within the
 representation.
 Content-Language = 1#language-tag
 Language tags are defined in Section 3.1.3.1. The primary purpose of
 Content-Language is to allow a user to identify and differentiate
 representations according to the users' own preferred language.
 Thus, if the content is intended only for a Danish-literate audience,
 the appropriate field is
 Content-Language: da
 If no Content-Language is specified, the default is that the content
 is intended for all language audiences. This might mean that the
 sender does not consider it to be specific to any natural language,
 or that the sender does not know for which language it is intended.
 Multiple languages MAY be listed for content that is intended for
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 multiple audiences. For example, a rendition of the "Treaty of
 Waitangi", presented simultaneously in the original Maori and English
 versions, would call for
 Content-Language: mi, en
 However, just because multiple languages are present within a
 representation does not mean that it is intended for multiple
 linguistic audiences. An example would be a beginner's language
 primer, such as "A First Lesson in Latin", which is clearly intended
 to be used by an English-literate audience. In this case, the
 Content-Language would properly only include "en".
 Content-Language MAY be applied to any media type -- it is not
 limited to textual documents.
3.1.4. Identification
3.1.4.1. Identifying a Representation
 When a complete or partial representation is transferred in a message
 payload, it is often desirable for the sender to supply, or the
 recipient to determine, an identifier for a resource corresponding to
 that representation.
 For a request message:
 o If the request has a Content-Location header field, then the
 sender asserts that the payload is a representation of the
 resource identified by the Content-Location field-value. However,
 such an assertion cannot be trusted unless it can be verified by
 other means (not defined by HTTP). The information might still be
 useful for revision history links.
 o Otherwise, the payload is unidentified.
 For a response message, the following rules are applied in order
 until a match is found:
 1. If the request is GET or HEAD and the response status code is 200
 (OK), 204 (No Content), 206 (Partial Content), or 304 (Not
 Modified), the payload is a representation of the resource
 identified by the effective request URI (Section 5.5 of [Part1]).
 2. If the request is GET or HEAD and the response status code is 203
 (Non-Authoritative Information), the payload is a potentially
 modified or enhanced representation of the target resource as
 provided by an intermediary.
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 3. If the response has a Content-Location header field and its
 field-value is a reference to the same URI as the effective
 request URI, the payload is a representation of the resource
 identified by the effective request URI.
 4. If the response has a Content-Location header field and its
 field-value is a reference to a URI different from the effective
 request URI, then the sender asserts that the payload is a
 representation of the resource identified by the Content-Location
 field-value. However, such an assertion cannot be trusted unless
 it can be verified by other means (not defined by HTTP).
 5. Otherwise, the payload is unidentified.
3.1.4.2. Content-Location
 The "Content-Location" header field references a URI that can be used
 as an identifier for a specific resource corresponding to the
 representation in this message's payload. In other words, if one
 were to perform a GET request on this URI at the time of this
 message's generation, then a 200 (OK) response would contain the same
 representation that is enclosed as payload in this message.
 Content-Location = absolute-URI / partial-URI
 The Content-Location value is not a replacement for the effective
 Request URI (Section 5.5 of [Part1]). It is representation metadata.
 It has the same syntax and semantics as the header field of the same
 name defined for MIME body parts in Section 4 of [RFC2557]. However,
 its appearance in an HTTP message has some special implications for
 HTTP recipients.
 If Content-Location is included in a 2xx (Successful) response
 message and its value refers (after conversion to absolute form) to a
 URI that is the same as the effective request URI, then the recipient
 MAY consider the payload to be a current representation of that
 resource at the time indicated by the message origination date. For
 a GET or HEAD request, this is the same as the default semantics when
 no Content-Location is provided by the server. For a state-changing
 request like PUT or POST, it implies that the server's response
 contains the new representation of that resource, thereby
 distinguishing it from representations that might only report about
 the action (e.g., "It worked!"). This allows authoring applications
 to update their local copies without the need for a subsequent GET
 request.
 If Content-Location is included in a 2xx (Successful) response
 message and its field-value refers to a URI that differs from the
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 effective request URI, then the origin server claims that the URI is
 an identifier for a different resource corresponding to the enclosed
 representation. Such a claim can only be trusted if both identifiers
 share the same resource owner, which cannot be programmatically
 determined via HTTP.
 o For a response to a GET or HEAD request, this is an indication
 that the effective request URI refers to a resource that is
 subject to content negotiation and the Content-Location field-
 value is a more specific identifier for the selected
 representation.
 o For a 201 (Created) response to a state-changing method, a
 Content-Location field-value that is identical to the Location
 field-value indicates that this payload is a current
 representation of the newly created resource.
 o Otherwise, such a Content-Location indicates that this payload is
 a representation reporting on the requested action's status and
 that the same report is available (for future access with GET) at
 the given URI. For example, a purchase transaction made via a
 POST request might include a receipt document as the payload of
 the 200 (OK) response; the Content-Location field-value provides
 an identifier for retrieving a copy of that same receipt in the
 future.
 A user agent that sends Content-Location in a request message is
 stating that its value refers to where the user agent originally
 obtained the content of the enclosed representation (prior to any
 modifications made by that user agent). In other words, the user
 agent is providing a back link to the source of the original
 representation.
 An origin server that receives a Content-Location field in a request
 message MUST treat the information as transitory request context
 rather than as metadata to be saved verbatim as part of the
 representation. An origin server MAY use that context to guide in
 processing the request or to save it for other uses, such as within
 source links or versioning metadata. However, an origin server MUST
 NOT use such context information to alter the request semantics.
 For example, if a client makes a PUT request on a negotiated resource
 and the origin server accepts that PUT (without redirection), then
 the new state of that resource is expected to be consistent with the
 one representation supplied in that PUT; the Content-Location cannot
 be used as a form of reverse content selection identifier to update
 only one of the negotiated representations. If the user agent had
 wanted the latter semantics, it would have applied the PUT directly
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 to the Content-Location URI.
3.2. Representation Data
 The representation data associated with an HTTP message is either
 provided as the payload body of the message or referred to by the
 message semantics and the effective request URI. The representation
 data is in a format and encoding defined by the representation
 metadata header fields.
 The data type of the representation data is determined via the header
 fields Content-Type and Content-Encoding. These define a two-layer,
 ordered encoding model:
 representation-data := Content-Encoding( Content-Type( bits ) )
3.3. Payload Semantics
 Some HTTP messages transfer a complete or partial representation as
 the message "payload". In some cases, a payload might contain only
 the associated representation's header fields (e.g., responses to
 HEAD) or only some part(s) of the representation data (e.g., the 206
 (Partial Content) status code).
 The purpose of a payload in a request is defined by the method
 semantics. For example, a representation in the payload of a PUT
 request (Section 4.3.4) represents the desired state of the target
 resource if the request is successfully applied, whereas a
 representation in the payload of a POST request (Section 4.3.3)
 represents an anonymous resource for providing data to be processed,
 such as the information that a user entered within an HTML form.
 In a response, the payload's purpose is defined by both the request
 method and the response status code. For example, the payload of a
 200 (OK) response to GET (Section 4.3.1) represents the current state
 of the target resource, as observed at the time of the message
 origination date (Section 7.1.1.2), whereas the payload of the same
 status code in a response to POST might represent either the
 processing result or the new state of the target resource after
 applying the processing. Response messages with an error status code
 usually contain a payload that represents the error condition, such
 that it describes the error state and what next steps are suggested
 for resolving it.
 Header fields that specifically describe the payload, rather than the
 associated representation, are referred to as "payload header
 fields". Payload header fields are defined in other parts of this
 specification, due to their impact on message parsing.
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 +-------------------+--------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+--------------------------+
 | Content-Length | Section 3.3.2 of [Part1] |
 | Content-Range | Section 4.2 of [Part5] |
 | Transfer-Encoding | Section 3.3.1 of [Part1] |
 +-------------------+--------------------------+
3.4. Content Negotiation
 When responses convey payload information, whether indicating a
 success or an error, the origin server often has different ways of
 representing that information; for example, in different formats,
 languages, or encodings. Likewise, different users or user agents
 might have differing capabilities, characteristics, or preferences
 that could influence which representation, among those available,
 would be best to deliver. For this reason, HTTP provides mechanisms
 for content negotiation.
 This specification defines two patterns of content negotiation that
 can be made visible within the protocol: "proactive", where the
 server selects the representation based upon the user agent's stated
 preferences, and "reactive" negotiation, where the server provides a
 list of representations for the user agent to choose from. Other
 patterns of content negotiation include "conditional content", where
 the representation consists of multiple parts that are selectively
 rendered based on user agent parameters, "active content", where the
 representation contains a script that makes additional (more
 specific) requests based on the user agent characteristics, and
 "Transparent Content Negotiation" ([RFC2295]), where content
 selection is performed by an intermediary. These patterns are not
 mutually exclusive, and each has trade-offs in applicability and
 practicality.
 Note that, in all cases, the supplier of representations to the
 origin server determines which representations might be considered to
 be the "same information".
3.4.1. Proactive Negotiation
 When content negotiation preferences are sent by the user agent in a
 request in order to encourage an algorithm located at the server to
 select the preferred representation, it is called proactive
 negotiation (a.k.a., server-driven negotiation). Selection is based
 on the available representations for a response (the dimensions over
 which it might vary, such as language, content-coding, etc.) compared
 to various information supplied in the request, including both the
 explicit negotiation fields of Section 5.3 and implicit
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 characteristics, such as the client's network address or parts of the
 User-Agent field.
 Proactive negotiation is advantageous when the algorithm for
 selecting from among the available representations is difficult to
 describe to a user agent, or when the server desires to send its
 "best guess" to the user agent along with the first response (hoping
 to avoid the round-trip delay of a subsequent request if the "best
 guess" is good enough for the user). In order to improve the
 server's guess, a user agent MAY send request header fields that
 describe its preferences.
 Proactive negotiation has serious disadvantages:
 o It is impossible for the server to accurately determine what might
 be "best" for any given user, since that would require complete
 knowledge of both the capabilities of the user agent and the
 intended use for the response (e.g., does the user want to view it
 on screen or print it on paper?);
 o Having the user agent describe its capabilities in every request
 can be both very inefficient (given that only a small percentage
 of responses have multiple representations) and a potential risk
 to the user's privacy;
 o It complicates the implementation of an origin server and the
 algorithms for generating responses to a request; and,
 o It limits the reusability of responses for shared caching.
 A user agent cannot rely on proactive negotiation preferences being
 consistently honored, since the origin server might not implement
 proactive negotiation for the requested resource or might decide that
 sending a response that doesn't conform to the user agent's
 preferences is better than sending a 406 (Not Acceptable) response.
 An origin server MAY generate a Vary header field (Section 7.1.4) in
 responses that are subject to proactive negotiation to indicate what
 parameters of request information might be used in its selection
 algorithm, thereby providing a means for recipients to determine the
 reusability of that same response for user agents with differing
 request information.
3.4.2. Reactive Negotiation
 With reactive negotiation (a.k.a., agent-driven negotiation),
 selection of the best representation for a response is performed by
 the user agent after receiving an initial response from the origin
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 server with a list of alternative resources. If the user agent is
 not satisfied by the initial response, it can perform a GET request
 on one or more of the alternative resources, selected based on
 metadata included in the list, to obtain a different form of
 representation. Selection of alternatives might be performed
 automatically by the user agent or manually by the user selecting
 from a generated (possibly hypertext) menu.
 A server can send a 300 (Multiple Choices) response to indicate that
 reactive negotiation by the user agent is desired, or a 406 (Not
 Acceptable) status code to indicate that proactive negotiation has
 failed. In both cases, the response ought to include information
 about the available representations so that the user or user agent
 can react by making a selection.
 Reactive negotiation is advantageous when the response would vary
 over commonly-used dimensions (such as type, language, or encoding),
 when the origin server is unable to determine a user agent's
 capabilities from examining the request, and generally when public
 caches are used to distribute server load and reduce network usage.
 Reactive negotiation suffers from the disadvantages of transmitting a
 list of alternatives to the user agent, which degrades user-perceived
 latency if transmitted in the header section, and needing a second
 request to obtain an alternate representation. Furthermore, this
 specification does not define a mechanism for supporting automatic
 selection, though it does not prevent such a mechanism from being
 developed as an extension.
4. Request Methods
4.1. Overview
 The request method token is the primary source of request semantics;
 it indicates the purpose for which the client has made this request
 and what is expected by the client as a successful result. The
 request semantics might be further specialized by the semantics of
 some header fields when present in a request (Section 5) if those
 additional semantics do not conflict with the method.
 method = token
 HTTP was originally designed to be usable as an interface to
 distributed object systems. The request method was envisioned as
 applying semantics to a target resource in much the same way as
 invoking a defined method on an identified object would apply
 semantics. The method token is case-sensitive because it might be
 used as a gateway to object-based systems with case-sensitive method
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 names.
 Unlike distributed objects, the standardized request methods in HTTP
 are not resource-specific, since uniform interfaces provide for
 better visibility and reuse in network-based systems [REST]. Once
 defined, a standardized method ought to have the same semantics when
 applied to any resource, though each resource determines for itself
 whether those semantics are implemented or allowed.
 This specification defines a number of standardized methods that are
 commonly used in HTTP, as outlined by the following table. By
 convention, standardized methods are defined in all-uppercase ASCII
 letters.
 +---------+-------------------------------------------------+-------+
 | Method | Description | Sec. |
 +---------+-------------------------------------------------+-------+
 | GET | Transfer a current representation of the target | 4.3.1 |
 | | resource. | |
 | HEAD | Same as GET, but only transfer the status line | 4.3.2 |
 | | and header block. | |
 | POST | Perform resource-specific processing on the | 4.3.3 |
 | | request payload. | |
 | PUT | Replace all current representations of the | 4.3.4 |
 | | target resource with the request payload. | |
 | DELETE | Remove all current representations of the | 4.3.5 |
 | | target resource. | |
 | CONNECT | Establish a tunnel to the server identified by | 4.3.6 |
 | | the target resource. | |
 | OPTIONS | Describe the communication options for the | 4.3.7 |
 | | target resource. | |
 | TRACE | Perform a message loop-back test along the path | 4.3.8 |
 | | to the target resource. | |
 +---------+-------------------------------------------------+-------+
 All general-purpose servers MUST support the methods GET and HEAD.
 All other methods are OPTIONAL; when implemented, a server MUST
 implement the above methods according to the semantics defined for
 them in Section 4.3.
 Additional methods, outside the scope of this specification, have
 been standardized for use in HTTP. All such methods ought to be
 registered within the HTTP Method Registry maintained by IANA, as
 defined in Section 8.1.
 The set of methods allowed by a target resource can be listed in an
 Allow header field (Section 7.4.1). However, the set of allowed
 methods can change dynamically. When a request method is received
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 that is unrecognized or not implemented by an origin server, the
 origin server SHOULD respond with the 501 (Not Implemented) status
 code. When a request method is received that is known by an origin
 server but not allowed for the target resource, the origin server
 SHOULD respond with the 405 (Method Not Allowed) status code.
 A client can send conditional request header fields (Section 5.2) to
 make the requested action conditional on the current state of the
 target resource ([Part4]).
4.2. Common Method Properties
4.2.1. Safe Methods
 Request methods are considered "safe" if their defined semantics are
 essentially read-only; i.e., the client does not request, and does
 not expect, any state change on the origin server as a result of
 applying a safe method to a target resource. Likewise, reasonable
 use of a safe method is not expected to cause any harm, loss of
 property, or unusual burden on the origin server.
 This definition of safe methods does not prevent an implementation
 from including behavior that is potentially harmful, not entirely
 read-only, or which causes side-effects while invoking a safe method.
 What is important, however, is that the client did not request that
 additional behavior and cannot be held accountable for it. For
 example, most servers append request information to access log files
 at the completion of every response, regardless of the method, and
 that is considered safe even though the log storage might become full
 and crash the server. Likewise, a safe request initiated by
 selecting an advertisement on the Web will often have the side-effect
 of charging an advertising account.
 Of the request methods defined by this specification, the GET, HEAD,
 OPTIONS, and TRACE methods are defined to be safe.
 The purpose of distinguishing between safe and unsafe methods is to
 allow automated retrieval processes (spiders) and cache performance
 optimization (pre-fetching) to work without fear of causing harm. In
 addition, it allows a user agent to apply appropriate constraints on
 the automated use of unsafe methods when processing potentially
 untrusted content.
 A user agent SHOULD distinguish between safe and unsafe methods when
 presenting potential actions to a user, such that the user can be
 made aware of an unsafe action before it is requested.
 When a resource is constructed such that parameters within the
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 effective request URI have the effect of selecting an action, it is
 the resource owner's responsibility to ensure that the action is
 consistent with the request method semantics. For example, it is
 common for Web-based content editing software to use actions within
 query parameters, such as "page?do=delete". If the purpose of such a
 resource is to perform an unsafe action, then the resource MUST
 disable or disallow that action when it is accessed using a safe
 request method. Failure to do so will result in unfortunate side-
 effects when automated processes perform a GET on every URI reference
 for the sake of link maintenance, pre-fetching, building a search
 index, etc.
4.2.2. Idempotent Methods
 Request methods are considered "idempotent" if the intended effect of
 multiple identical requests is the same as for a single request. Of
 the request methods defined by this specification, the PUT, DELETE,
 and safe request methods are idempotent.
 Like the definition of safe, the idempotent property only applies to
 what has been requested by the user; a server is free to log each
 request separately, retain a revision control history, or implement
 other non-idempotent side-effects for each idempotent request.
 Idempotent methods are distinguished because the request can be
 repeated automatically if a communication failure occurs before the
 client is able to read the server's response. For example, if a
 client sends a PUT request and the underlying connection is closed
 before any response is received, then it can establish a new
 connection and retry the idempotent request because it knows that
 repeating the request will have the same effect even if the original
 request succeeded. Note, however, that repeated failures would
 indicate a problem within the server.
4.2.3. Cacheable Methods
 Request methods are considered "cacheable" if it is possible and
 useful to answer a current client request with a stored response from
 a prior request. GET and HEAD are defined to be cacheable. In
 general, safe methods that do not depend on a current or
 authoritative response are cacheable, though the overwhelming
 majority of caches only support GET and HEAD. HTTP requirements for
 cache behavior and cacheable responses are defined in [Part6].
4.3. Method Definitions
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4.3.1. GET
 The GET method requests transfer of a current selected representation
 for the target resource. GET is the primary mechanism of information
 retrieval and the focus of almost all performance optimizations.
 Hence, when people speak of retrieving some identifiable information
 via HTTP, they are generally referring to making a GET request.
 It is tempting to think of resource identifiers as remote filesystem
 pathnames, and of representations as being a copy of the contents of
 such files. In fact, that is how many resources are implemented (see
 Section 9.1 for related security considerations). However, there are
 no such limitations in practice. The HTTP interface for a resource
 is just as likely to be implemented as a tree of content objects, a
 programmatic view on various database records, or a gateway to other
 information systems. Even when the URI mapping mechanism is tied to
 a filesystem, an origin server might be configured to execute the
 files with the request as input and send the output as the
 representation, rather than transfer the files directly. Regardless,
 only the origin server needs to know how each of its resource
 identifiers corresponds to an implementation, and how each
 implementation manages to select and send a current representation of
 the target resource in a response to GET.
 A client can alter the semantics of GET to be a "range request",
 requesting transfer of only some part(s) of the selected
 representation, by sending a Range header field in the request
 ([Part5]).
 A payload within a GET request message has no defined semantics;
 sending a payload body on a GET request might cause some existing
 implementations to reject the request.
 The response to a GET request is cacheable; a cache MAY use it to
 satisfy subsequent GET and HEAD requests unless otherwise indicated
 by the Cache-Control header field (Section 7.2 of [Part6]).
4.3.2. HEAD
 The HEAD method is identical to GET except that the server MUST NOT
 send a message body in the response (i.e., the response terminates at
 the end of the header block). Aside from the payload header fields
 (Section 3.3), the server SHOULD send the same header fields in
 response to a HEAD request as it would have sent if the request had
 been a GET. This method can be used for obtaining metadata about the
 selected representation without transferring the representation data.
 This method is often used for testing hypertext links for validity,
 accessibility, and recent modification.
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 A payload within a HEAD request message has no defined semantics;
 sending a payload body on a HEAD request might cause some existing
 implementations to reject the request.
 The response to a HEAD request is cacheable; a cache MAY use it to
 satisfy subsequent HEAD requests unless otherwise indicated by the
 Cache-Control header field (Section 7.2 of [Part6]). A HEAD response
 might also have an effect on previously cached responses to GET; see
 Section 5 of [Part6].
4.3.3. POST
 The POST method requests that the target resource process the
 representation enclosed in the request according to the resource's
 own specific semantics. For example, POST is used for the following
 functions (among others):
 o Providing a block of data, such as the fields entered into an HTML
 form, to a data-handling process;
 o Posting a message to a bulletin board, newsgroup, mailing list,
 blog, or similar group of articles;
 o Creating a new resource that has yet to be identified by the
 origin server; and
 o Appending data to a resource's existing representation(s).
 An origin server indicates response semantics by choosing an
 appropriate status code depending on the result of processing the
 POST request; almost all of the status codes defined by this
 specification might be received in a response to POST (the exceptions
 being 206, 304, and 416).
 If one or more resources has been created on the origin server as a
 result of successfully processing a POST request, the origin server
 SHOULD send a 201 (Created) response containing a Location header
 field that provides an identifier for the primary resource created
 (Section 7.1.2) and a representation that describes the status of the
 request while referring to the new resource(s).
 Responses to POST requests are only cacheable when they include
 explicit freshness information (see Section 4.1.1 of [Part6]).
 However, POST caching is not widely implemented. For cases where an
 origin server wishes the client to be able to cache the result of a
 POST in a way that can be reused by a later GET, the origin server
 MAY send a 200 (OK) response containing the result and a Content-
 Location header field that has the same value as the POST's effective
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 request URI (Section 3.1.4.2).
 If the result of processing a POST would be equivalent to a
 representation of an existing resource, an origin server MAY redirect
 the user agent to that resource by sending a 303 (See Other) response
 with the existing resource's identifier in the Location field. This
 has the benefits of providing the user agent a resource identifier
 and transferring the representation via a method more amenable to
 shared caching, though at the cost of an extra request if the user
 agent does not already have the representation cached.
4.3.4. PUT
 The PUT method requests that the state of the target resource be
 created or replaced with the state defined by the representation
 enclosed in the request message payload. A successful PUT of a given
 representation would suggest that a subsequent GET on that same
 target resource will result in an equivalent representation being
 sent in a 200 (OK) response. However, there is no guarantee that
 such a state change will be observable, since the target resource
 might be acted upon by other user agents in parallel, or might be
 subject to dynamic processing by the origin server, before any
 subsequent GET is received. A successful response only implies that
 the user agent's intent was achieved at the time of its processing by
 the origin server.
 If the target resource does not have a current representation and the
 PUT successfully creates one, then the origin server MUST inform the
 user agent by sending a 201 (Created) response. If the target
 resource does have a current representation and that representation
 is successfully modified in accordance with the state of the enclosed
 representation, then either a 200 (OK) or 204 (No Content) response
 SHOULD be sent to indicate successful completion of the request.
 An origin server SHOULD ignore unrecognized header fields received in
 a PUT request (i.e., do not save them as part of the resource state).
 An origin server SHOULD verify that the PUT representation is
 consistent with any constraints the server has for the target
 resource that cannot or will not be changed by the PUT. This is
 particularly important when the origin server uses internal
 configuration information related to the URI in order to set the
 values for representation metadata on GET responses. When a PUT
 representation is inconsistent with the target resource, the origin
 server SHOULD either make them consistent, by transforming the
 representation or changing the resource configuration, or respond
 with an appropriate error message containing sufficient information
 to explain why the representation is unsuitable. The 409 (Conflict)
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 or 415 (Unsupported Media Type) status codes are suggested, with the
 latter being specific to constraints on Content-Type values.
 For example, if the target resource is configured to always have a
 Content-Type of "text/html" and the representation being PUT has a
 Content-Type of "image/jpeg", then the origin server SHOULD do one
 of:
 a. reconfigure the target resource to reflect the new media type;
 b. transform the PUT representation to a format consistent with that
 of the resource before saving it as the new resource state; or,
 c. reject the request with a 415 (Unsupported Media Type) response
 indicating that the target resource is limited to "text/html",
 perhaps including a link to a different resource that would be a
 suitable target for the new representation.
 HTTP does not define exactly how a PUT method affects the state of an
 origin server beyond what can be expressed by the intent of the user
 agent request and the semantics of the origin server response. It
 does not define what a resource might be, in any sense of that word,
 beyond the interface provided via HTTP. It does not define how
 resource state is "stored", nor how such storage might change as a
 result of a change in resource state, nor how the origin server
 translates resource state into representations. Generally speaking,
 all implementation details behind the resource interface are
 intentionally hidden by the server.
 An origin server MUST NOT send a validator header field
 (Section 7.2), such as an ETag or Last-Modified field, in a
 successful response to PUT unless the request's representation data
 was saved without any transformation applied to the body (i.e., the
 resource's new representation data is identical to the representation
 data received in the PUT request) and the validator field value
 reflects the new representation. This requirement allows a user
 agent to know when the representation body it has in memory remains
 current as a result of the PUT, thus not in need of retrieving again
 from the origin server, and that the new validator(s) received in the
 response can be used for future conditional requests in order to
 prevent accidental overwrites (Section 5.2).
 The fundamental difference between the POST and PUT methods is
 highlighted by the different intent for the enclosed representation.
 The target resource in a POST request is intended to handle the
 enclosed representation according to the resource's own semantics,
 whereas the enclosed representation in a PUT request is defined as
 replacing the state of the target resource. Hence, the intent of PUT
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 is idempotent and visible to intermediaries, even though the exact
 effect is only known by the origin server.
 Proper interpretation of a PUT request presumes that the user agent
 knows which target resource is desired. A service that selects a
 proper URI on behalf of the client, after receiving a state-changing
 request, SHOULD be implemented using the POST method rather than PUT.
 If the origin server will not make the requested PUT state change to
 the target resource and instead wishes to have it applied to a
 different resource, such as when the resource has been moved to a
 different URI, then the origin server MUST send an appropriate 3xx
 (Redirection) response; the user agent MAY then make its own decision
 regarding whether or not to redirect the request.
 A PUT request applied to the target resource MAY have side-effects on
 other resources. For example, an article might have a URI for
 identifying "the current version" (a resource) that is separate from
 the URIs identifying each particular version (different resources
 that at one point shared the same state as the current version
 resource). A successful PUT request on "the current version" URI
 might therefore create a new version resource in addition to changing
 the state of the target resource, and might also cause links to be
 added between the related resources.
 An origin server SHOULD reject any PUT request that contains a
 Content-Range header field (Section 4.2 of [Part5]), since it might
 be misinterpreted as partial content (or might be partial content
 that is being mistakenly PUT as a full representation). Partial
 content updates are possible by targeting a separately identified
 resource with state that overlaps a portion of the larger resource,
 or by using a different method that has been specifically defined for
 partial updates (for example, the PATCH method defined in [RFC5789]).
 Responses to the PUT method are not cacheable. If a PUT request
 passes through a cache that has one or more stored responses for the
 effective request URI, those stored responses will be invalidated
 (see Section 6 of [Part6]).
4.3.5. DELETE
 The DELETE method requests that the origin server remove the
 association between the target resource and its current
 functionality. In effect, this method is similar to the rm command
 in UNIX: it expresses a deletion operation on the URI mapping of the
 origin server, rather than an expectation that the previously
 associated information be deleted.
 If the target resource has one or more current representations, they
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 might or might not be destroyed by the origin server, and the
 associated storage might or might not be reclaimed, depending
 entirely on the nature of the resource and its implementation by the
 origin server (which are beyond the scope of this specification).
 Likewise, other implementation aspects of a resource might need to be
 deactivated or archived as a result of a DELETE, such as database or
 gateway connections. In general, it is assumed that the origin
 server will only allow DELETE on resources for which it has a
 prescribed mechanism for accomplishing the deletion.
 Relatively few resources allow the DELETE method -- its primary use
 is for remote authoring environments, where the user has some
 direction regarding its effect. For example, a resource that was
 previously created using a PUT request, or identified via the
 Location header field after a 201 (Created) response to a POST
 request, might allow a corresponding DELETE request to undo those
 actions. Similarly, custom user agent implementations that implement
 an authoring function, such as revision control clients using HTTP
 for remote operations, might use DELETE based on an assumption that
 the server's URI space has been crafted to correspond to a version
 repository.
 If a DELETE method is successfully applied, the origin server SHOULD
 send a 202 (Accepted) status code if the action seems okay but has
 not yet been enacted, a 204 (No Content) status code if the action
 has been enacted and no further information is to be supplied, or a
 200 (OK) status code if the action has been enacted and the response
 message includes a representation describing the status.
 A payload within a DELETE request message has no defined semantics;
 sending a payload body on a DELETE request might cause some existing
 implementations to reject the request.
 Responses to the DELETE method are not cacheable. If a DELETE
 request passes through a cache that has one or more stored responses
 for the effective request URI, those stored responses will be
 invalidated (see Section 6 of [Part6]).
4.3.6. CONNECT
 The CONNECT method requests that the recipient establish a tunnel to
 the destination origin server identified by the request-target and,
 if successful, thereafter restrict its behavior to blind forwarding
 of packets, in both directions, until the connection is closed.
 CONNECT is intended only for use in requests to a proxy. An origin
 server that receives a CONNECT request for itself MAY respond with a
 2xx status code to indicate that a connection is established.
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 However, most origin servers do not implement CONNECT.
 A client sending a CONNECT request MUST send the authority form of
 request-target (Section 5.3 of [Part1]); i.e., the request-target
 consists of only the host name and port number of the tunnel
 destination, separated by a colon. For example,
 CONNECT server.example.com:80 HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com:80
 The recipient proxy can establish a tunnel either by directly
 connecting to the request-target or, if configured to use another
 proxy, by forwarding the CONNECT request to the next inbound proxy.
 Any 2xx (Successful) response indicates that the sender (and all
 inbound proxies) will switch to tunnel mode immediately after the
 blank line that concludes the successful response's header block;
 data received after that blank line is from the server identified by
 the request-target. Any response other than a successful response
 indicates that the tunnel has not yet been formed and that the
 connection remains governed by HTTP.
 A server SHOULD NOT send any Transfer-Encoding or Content-Length
 header fields in a successful response. A client MUST ignore any
 Content-Length or Transfer-Encoding header fields received in a
 successful response.
 There are significant risks in establishing a tunnel to arbitrary
 servers, particularly when the destination is a well-known or
 reserved TCP port that is not intended for Web traffic. For example,
 a CONNECT to a request-target of "example.com:25" would suggest that
 the proxy connect to the reserved port for SMTP traffic; if allowed,
 that could trick the proxy into relaying spam email. Proxies that
 support CONNECT SHOULD restrict its use to a limited set of known
 ports or a configurable whitelist of safe request targets.
 Proxy authentication might be used to establish the authority to
 create a tunnel. For example,
 CONNECT server.example.com:80 HTTP/1.1
 Host: server.example.com:80
 Proxy-Authorization: basic aGVsbG86d29ybGQ=
 When a tunnel intermediary detects that either side has closed its
 connection, any outstanding data that came from that side will first
 be sent to the other side and then the intermediary will close both
 connections. If there is outstanding data left undelivered, that
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 data will be discarded.
 A payload within a CONNECT request message has no defined semantics;
 sending a payload body on a CONNECT request might cause some existing
 implementations to reject the request.
 Responses to the CONNECT method are not cacheable.
4.3.7. OPTIONS
 The OPTIONS method requests information about the communication
 options available on the request/response chain identified by the
 effective request URI. This method allows a client to determine the
 options and/or requirements associated with a resource, or the
 capabilities of a server, without implying a resource action.
 An OPTIONS request with an asterisk ("*") as the request-target
 (Section 5.3 of [Part1]) applies to the server in general rather than
 to a specific resource. Since a server's communication options
 typically depend on the resource, the "*" request is only useful as a
 "ping" or "no-op" type of method; it does nothing beyond allowing the
 client to test the capabilities of the server. For example, this can
 be used to test a proxy for HTTP/1.1 conformance (or lack thereof).
 If the request-target is not an asterisk, the OPTIONS request applies
 to the options that are available when communicating with the target
 resource.
 A server generating a successful response to OPTIONS SHOULD send any
 header fields that might indicate optional features implemented by
 the server and applicable to the target resource (e.g., Allow),
 including potential extensions not defined by this specification.
 The response payload, if any, might also describe the communication
 options in a machine or human-readable representation. A standard
 format for such a representation is not defined by this
 specification, but might be defined by future extensions to HTTP. A
 server MUST generate a Content-Length field with a value of "0" if no
 payload body is to be sent in the response.
 A client MAY send a Max-Forwards header field in an OPTIONS request
 to target a specific recipient in the request chain (see
 Section 5.1.2). A proxy MUST NOT generate a Max-Forwards header
 field while forwarding a request unless that request was received
 with a Max-Forwards field.
 A client that generates an OPTIONS request containing a payload body
 MUST send a valid Content-Type header field describing the
 representation media type. Although this specification does not
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 define any use for such a payload, future extensions to HTTP might
 use the OPTIONS body to make more detailed queries about the target
 resource.
 Responses to the OPTIONS method are not cacheable.
4.3.8. TRACE
 The TRACE method requests a remote, application-level loop-back of
 the request message. The final recipient of the request SHOULD
 reflect the message received, excluding some fields described below,
 back to the client as the message body of a 200 (OK) response with a
 Content-Type of "message/http" (Section 7.3.1 of [Part1]). The final
 recipient is either the origin server or the first server to receive
 a Max-Forwards value of zero (0) in the request (Section 5.1.2).
 A client MUST NOT send header fields in a TRACE request containing
 sensitive data that might be disclosed by the response. For example,
 it would be foolish for a user agent to send stored user credentials
 [Part7] or cookies [RFC6265] in a TRACE request. The final recipient
 SHOULD exclude any request header fields from the response body that
 are likely to contain sensitive data.
 TRACE allows the client to see what is being received at the other
 end of the request chain and use that data for testing or diagnostic
 information. The value of the Via header field (Section 5.7.1 of
 [Part1]) is of particular interest, since it acts as a trace of the
 request chain. Use of the Max-Forwards header field allows the
 client to limit the length of the request chain, which is useful for
 testing a chain of proxies forwarding messages in an infinite loop.
 A client MUST NOT send a message body in a TRACE request.
 Responses to the TRACE method are not cacheable.
5. Request Header Fields
 A client sends request header fields to provide more information
 about the request context, make the request conditional based on the
 target resource state, suggest preferred formats for the response,
 supply authentication credentials, or modify the expected request
 processing. These fields act as request modifiers, similar to the
 parameters on a programming language method invocation.
5.1. Controls
 Controls are request header fields that direct specific handling of
 the request.
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 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Cache-Control | Section 7.2 of [Part6] |
 | Expect | Section 5.1.1 |
 | Host | Section 5.4 of [Part1] |
 | Max-Forwards | Section 5.1.2 |
 | Pragma | Section 7.4 of [Part6] |
 | Range | Section 3.1 of [Part5] |
 | TE | Section 4.3 of [Part1] |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
5.1.1. Expect
 The "Expect" header field is used to indicate that particular server
 behaviors are required by the client.
 Expect = 1#expectation
 expectation = expect-name [ BWS "=" BWS expect-value ]
 *( OWS ";" [ OWS expect-param ] )
 expect-param = expect-name [ BWS "=" BWS expect-value ]
 expect-name = token
 expect-value = token / quoted-string
 If all received Expect header field(s) are syntactically valid but
 contain an expectation that the recipient does not understand or
 cannot comply with, the recipient MUST respond with a 417
 (Expectation Failed) status code. A recipient of a syntactically
 invalid Expectation header field MUST respond with a 4xx status code
 other than 417.
 Comparison is case-insensitive for names (expect-name), and case-
 sensitive for values (expect-value).
 The Expect header field MUST be forwarded if the request is
 forwarded.
 Many older HTTP/1.0 and HTTP/1.1 servers do not understand the Expect
 header field.
5.1.1.1. Use of the 100 (Continue) Status
 The only expectation defined by this specification is:
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 100-continue
 The request includes a payload body and the client will wait for a
 100 (Continue) response after sending the request header section
 but before sending the payload body. The 100-continue expectation
 does not use any expect-params.
 The primary purpose of the 100 (Continue) status code (Section 6.2.1)
 is to allow a client that is sending a request message with a payload
 to determine if the origin server is willing to accept the request
 (based on the request header fields) before the client sends the
 payload body. In some cases, it might either be inappropriate or
 highly inefficient for the client to send the payload body if the
 server will reject the message without looking at the body.
 Requirements for HTTP/1.1 clients:
 o If a client will wait for a 100 (Continue) response before sending
 the payload body, it MUST send an Expect header field with the
 "100-continue" expectation.
 o A client MUST NOT send an Expect header field with the "100-
 continue" expectation if it does not intend to send a payload
 body.
 Because of the presence of older implementations, the protocol allows
 ambiguous situations in which a client might send "Expect: 100-
 continue" without receiving either a 417 (Expectation Failed) or a
 100 (Continue) status code. Therefore, when a client sends this
 header field to an origin server (possibly via a proxy) from which it
 has never seen a 100 (Continue) status code, the client SHOULD NOT
 wait for an indefinite period before sending the payload body.
 Requirements for HTTP/1.1 origin servers:
 o Upon receiving a request that includes an Expect header field with
 the "100-continue" expectation, an origin server MUST either
 respond with 100 (Continue) status code and continue to read from
 the input stream, or respond with a final status code. The origin
 server MUST NOT wait for the payload body before sending the 100
 (Continue) response. If the origin server responds with a final
 status code, it MUST NOT have performed the request method and MAY
 either close the connection or continue to read and discard the
 rest of the request.
 o An origin server SHOULD NOT send a 100 (Continue) response if the
 request message does not include an Expect header field with the
 "100-continue" expectation, and MUST NOT send a 100 (Continue)
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 response if such a request comes from an HTTP/1.0 (or earlier)
 client. There is an exception to this rule: for compatibility
 with [RFC2068], a server MAY send a 100 (Continue) status code in
 response to an HTTP/1.1 PUT or POST request that does not include
 an Expect header field with the "100-continue" expectation. This
 exception, the purpose of which is to minimize any client
 processing delays associated with an undeclared wait for 100
 (Continue) status code, applies only to HTTP/1.1 requests, and not
 to requests with any other HTTP-version value.
 o An origin server MAY omit a 100 (Continue) response if it has
 already received some or all of the payload body for the
 corresponding request.
 o An origin server that sends a 100 (Continue) response MUST
 ultimately send a final status code, once the payload body is
 received and processed, unless it terminates the transport
 connection prematurely.
 o If an origin server receives a request that does not include an
 Expect header field with the "100-continue" expectation, the
 request includes a payload body, and the server responds with a
 final status code before reading the entire payload body from the
 transport connection, then the server SHOULD NOT close the
 transport connection until it has read the entire request, or
 until the client closes the connection. Otherwise, the client
 might not reliably receive the response message. However, this
 requirement ought not be construed as preventing a server from
 defending itself against denial-of-service attacks, or from badly
 broken client implementations.
 Requirements for HTTP/1.1 proxies:
 o If a proxy receives a request that includes an Expect header field
 with the "100-continue" expectation, and the proxy either knows
 that the next-hop server complies with HTTP/1.1 or higher, or does
 not know the HTTP version of the next-hop server, it MUST forward
 the request, including the Expect header field.
 o If the proxy knows that the version of the next-hop server is
 HTTP/1.0 or lower, it MUST NOT forward the request, and it MUST
 respond with a 417 (Expectation Failed) status code.
 o Proxies SHOULD maintain a record of the HTTP version numbers
 received from recently-referenced next-hop servers.
 o A proxy MUST NOT forward a 100 (Continue) response if the request
 message was received from an HTTP/1.0 (or earlier) client and did
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 not include an Expect header field with the "100-continue"
 expectation. This requirement overrides the general rule for
 forwarding of 1xx responses (see Section 6.2.1).
5.1.2. Max-Forwards
 The "Max-Forwards" header field provides a mechanism with the TRACE
 (Section 4.3.8) and OPTIONS (Section 4.3.7) methods to limit the
 number of times that the request is forwarded by proxies. This can
 be useful when the client is attempting to trace a request that
 appears to be failing or looping mid-chain.
 Max-Forwards = 1*DIGIT
 The Max-Forwards value is a decimal integer indicating the remaining
 number of times this request message can be forwarded.
 Each recipient of a TRACE or OPTIONS request containing a Max-
 Forwards header field MUST check and update its value prior to
 forwarding the request. If the received value is zero (0), the
 recipient MUST NOT forward the request; instead, it MUST respond as
 the final recipient. If the received Max-Forwards value is greater
 than zero, then the forwarded message MUST contain an updated Max-
 Forwards field with a value decremented by one (1).
 The Max-Forwards header field MAY be ignored for all other request
 methods.
5.2. Conditionals
 The HTTP conditional request header fields [Part4] allow a client to
 place a precondition on the state of the target resource, so that the
 action corresponding to the method semantics will not be applied if
 the precondition evaluates to false. Each precondition defined by
 this specification consists of a comparison between a set of
 validators obtained from prior representations of the target resource
 to the current state of validators for the selected representation
 (Section 7.2). Hence, these preconditions evaluate whether the state
 of the target resource has changed since a given state known by the
 client. The effect of such an evaluation depends on the method
 semantics and choice of conditional, as defined in Section 5 of
 [Part4].
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 +---------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +---------------------+------------------------+
 | If-Match | Section 3.1 of [Part4] |
 | If-None-Match | Section 3.2 of [Part4] |
 | If-Modified-Since | Section 3.3 of [Part4] |
 | If-Unmodified-Since | Section 3.4 of [Part4] |
 | If-Range | Section 3.2 of [Part5] |
 +---------------------+------------------------+
5.3. Content Negotiation
 The following request header fields are sent by a user agent to
 engage in proactive negotiation of the response content, as defined
 in Section 3.4.1. The preferences sent in these fields apply to any
 content in the response, including representations of the target
 resource, representations of error or processing status, and
 potentially even the miscellaneous text strings that might appear
 within the protocol.
 +-------------------+---------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+---------------+
 | Accept | Section 5.3.2 |
 | Accept-Charset | Section 5.3.3 |
 | Accept-Encoding | Section 5.3.4 |
 | Accept-Language | Section 5.3.5 |
 +-------------------+---------------+
5.3.1. Quality Values
 Many of the request header fields for proactive negotiation use a
 common parameter, named "q" (case-insensitive), to assign a relative
 "weight" to the preference for that associated kind of content. This
 weight is referred to as a "quality value" (or "qvalue") because the
 same parameter name is often used within server configurations to
 assign a weight to the relative quality of the various
 representations that can be selected for a resource.
 The weight is normalized to a real number in the range 0 through 1,
 where 0.001 is the least preferred and 1 is the most preferred; a
 value of 0 means "not acceptable". If no "q" parameter is present,
 the default weight is 1.
 weight = OWS ";" OWS "q=" qvalue
 qvalue = ( "0" [ "." 0*3DIGIT ] )
 / ( "1" [ "." 0*3("0") ] )
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 A sender of qvalue MUST NOT generate more than three digits after the
 decimal point. User configuration of these values ought to be
 limited in the same fashion.
5.3.2. Accept
 The "Accept" header field can be used by user agents to specify
 response media types that are acceptable. Accept header fields can
 be used to indicate that the request is specifically limited to a
 small set of desired types, as in the case of a request for an in-
 line image.
 Accept = #( media-range [ accept-params ] )
 media-range = ( "*/*"
 / ( type "/" "*" )
 / ( type "/" subtype )
 ) *( OWS ";" OWS parameter )
 accept-params = weight *( accept-ext )
 accept-ext = OWS ";" OWS token [ "=" word ]
 The asterisk "*" character is used to group media types into ranges,
 with "*/*" indicating all media types and "type/*" indicating all
 subtypes of that type. The media-range can include media type
 parameters that are applicable to that range.
 Each media-range might be followed by zero or more applicable media
 type parameters (e.g., charset), an optional "q" parameter for
 indicating a relative weight (Section 5.3.1), and then zero or more
 extension parameters. The "q" parameter is necessary if any
 extensions (accept-ext) are present, since it acts as a separator
 between the two parameter sets.
 Note: Use of the "q" parameter name to separate media type
 parameters from Accept extension parameters is due to historical
 practice. Although this prevents any media type parameter named
 "q" from being used with a media range, such an event is believed
 to be unlikely given the lack of any "q" parameters in the IANA
 media type registry and the rare usage of any media type
 parameters in Accept. Future media types are discouraged from
 registering any parameter named "q".
 The example
 Accept: audio/*; q=0.2, audio/basic
 SHOULD be interpreted as "I prefer audio/basic, but send me any audio
 type if it is the best available after an 80% mark-down in quality".
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 A request without any Accept header field implies that the user agent
 will accept any media type in response. If the header field is
 present in a request and none of the available representations for
 the response have a media type that is listed as acceptable, the
 origin server can either honor the header field by sending a 406 (Not
 Acceptable) response or disregard the header field by treating the
 response as if it is not subject to content negotiation.
 A more elaborate example is
 Accept: text/plain; q=0.5, text/html,
 text/x-dvi; q=0.8, text/x-c
 Verbally, this would be interpreted as "text/html and text/x-c are
 the equally preferred media types, but if they do not exist, then
 send the text/x-dvi representation, and if that does not exist, send
 the text/plain representation".
 Media ranges can be overridden by more specific media ranges or
 specific media types. If more than one media range applies to a
 given type, the most specific reference has precedence. For example,
 Accept: text/*, text/plain, text/plain;format=flowed, */*
 have the following precedence:
 1. text/plain;format=flowed
 2. text/plain
 3. text/*
 4. */*
 The media type quality factor associated with a given type is
 determined by finding the media range with the highest precedence
 that matches the type. For example,
 Accept: text/*;q=0.3, text/html;q=0.7, text/html;level=1,
 text/html;level=2;q=0.4, */*;q=0.5
 would cause the following values to be associated:
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 +-------------------+---------------+
 | Media Type | Quality Value |
 +-------------------+---------------+
 | text/html;level=1 | 1 |
 | text/html | 0.7 |
 | text/plain | 0.3 |
 | image/jpeg | 0.5 |
 | text/html;level=2 | 0.4 |
 | text/html;level=3 | 0.7 |
 +-------------------+---------------+
 Note: A user agent might be provided with a default set of quality
 values for certain media ranges. However, unless the user agent is a
 closed system that cannot interact with other rendering agents, this
 default set ought to be configurable by the user.
5.3.3. Accept-Charset
 The "Accept-Charset" header field can be sent by a user agent to
 indicate what charsets are acceptable in textual response content.
 This field allows user agents capable of understanding more
 comprehensive or special-purpose charsets to signal that capability
 to an origin server that is capable of representing information in
 those charsets.
 Accept-Charset = 1#( ( charset / "*" ) [ weight ] )
 Charset names are defined in Section 3.1.1.2. A user agent MAY
 associate a quality value with each charset to indicate the user's
 relative preference for that charset, as defined in Section 5.3.1.
 An example is
 Accept-Charset: iso-8859-5, unicode-1-1;q=0.8
 The special value "*", if present in the Accept-Charset field,
 matches every charset that is not mentioned elsewhere in the Accept-
 Charset field. If no "*" is present in an Accept-Charset field, then
 any charsets not explicitly mentioned in the field are considered
 "not acceptable" to the client.
 A request without any Accept-Charset header field implies that the
 user agent will accept any charset in response. Most general-purpose
 user agents do not send Accept-Charset, unless specifically
 configured to do so, because a detailed list of supported charsets
 makes it easier for a server to identify an individual by virtue of
 the user agent's request characteristics (Section 9.6).
 If an Accept-Charset header field is present in a request and none of
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 the available representations for the response has a charset that is
 listed as acceptable, the origin server can either honor the header
 field, by sending a 406 (Not Acceptable) response, or disregard the
 header field by treating the resource as if it is not subject to
 content negotiation.
5.3.4. Accept-Encoding
 The "Accept-Encoding" header field can be used by user agents to
 indicate what response content-codings (Section 3.1.2.1) are
 acceptable in the response. An "identity" token is used as a synonym
 for "no encoding" in order to communicate when no encoding is
 preferred.
 Accept-Encoding = #( codings [ weight ] )
 codings = content-coding / "identity" / "*"
 Each codings value MAY be given an associated quality value
 representing the preference for that encoding, as defined in
 Section 5.3.1. The asterisk "*" symbol in an Accept-Encoding field
 matches any available content-coding not explicitly listed in the
 header field.
 For example,
 Accept-Encoding: compress, gzip
 Accept-Encoding:
 Accept-Encoding: *
 Accept-Encoding: compress;q=0.5, gzip;q=1.0
 Accept-Encoding: gzip;q=1.0, identity; q=0.5, *;q=0
 A request without an Accept-Encoding header field implies that the
 user agent has no preferences regarding content-codings. Although
 this allows the server to use any content-coding in a response, it
 does not imply that the user agent will be able to correctly process
 all encodings.
 A server tests whether a content-coding for a given representation is
 acceptable using these rules:
 1. If no Accept-Encoding field is in the request, any content-coding
 is considered acceptable by the user agent.
 2. If the representation has no content-coding, then it is
 acceptable by default unless specifically excluded by the Accept-
 Encoding field stating either "identity;q=0" or "*;q=0" without a
 more specific entry for "identity".
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 3. If the representation's content-coding is one of the content-
 codings listed in the Accept-Encoding field, then it is
 acceptable unless it is accompanied by a qvalue of 0. (As
 defined in Section 5.3.1, a qvalue of 0 means "not acceptable".)
 4. If multiple content-codings are acceptable, then the acceptable
 content-coding with the highest non-zero qvalue is preferred.
 An Accept-Encoding header field with a combined field-value that is
 empty implies that the user agent does not want any content-coding in
 response. If an Accept-Encoding header field is present in a request
 and none of the available representations for the response have a
 content-coding that is listed as acceptable, the origin server SHOULD
 send a response without any content-coding.
 Note: Most HTTP/1.0 applications do not recognize or obey qvalues
 associated with content-codings. This means that qvalues might
 not work and are not permitted with x-gzip or x-compress.
5.3.5. Accept-Language
 The "Accept-Language" header field can be used by user agents to
 indicate the set of natural languages that are preferred in the
 response. Language tags are defined in Section 3.1.3.1.
 Accept-Language = 1#( language-range [ weight ] )
 language-range =
 <language-range, defined in [RFC4647], Section 2.1>
 Each language-range can be given an associated quality value
 representing an estimate of the user's preference for the languages
 specified by that range, as defined in Section 5.3.1. For example,
 Accept-Language: da, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7
 would mean: "I prefer Danish, but will accept British English and
 other types of English".
 A request without any Accept-Language header field implies that the
 user agent will accept any language in response. If the header field
 is present in a request and none of the available representations for
 the response have a matching language tag, the origin server can
 either disregard the header field by treating the response as if it
 is not subject to content negotiation, or honor the header field by
 sending a 406 (Not Acceptable) response. However, the latter is not
 encouraged, as doing so can prevent users from accessing content that
 they might be able to use (with translation software, for example).
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 Note that some recipients treat the order in which language tags are
 listed as an indication of descending priority, particularly for tags
 that are assigned equal quality values (no value is the same as q=1).
 However, this behavior cannot be relied upon. For consistency and to
 maximize interoperability, many user agents assign each language tag
 a unique quality value while also listing them in order of decreasing
 quality. Additional discussion of language priority lists can be
 found in Section 2.3 of [RFC4647].
 For matching, Section 3 of [RFC4647] defines several matching
 schemes. Implementations can offer the most appropriate matching
 scheme for their requirements. The "Basic Filtering" scheme
 ([RFC4647], Section 3.3.1) is identical to the matching scheme that
 was previously defined for HTTP in Section 14.4 of [RFC2616].
 It might be contrary to the privacy expectations of the user to send
 an Accept-Language header field with the complete linguistic
 preferences of the user in every request (Section 9.6).
 Since intelligibility is highly dependent on the individual user,
 user agents need to allow user control over the linguistic
 preference. A user agent that does not provide such control to the
 user MUST NOT send an Accept-Language header field.
 Note: User agents ought to provide guidance to users when setting
 a preference, since users are rarely familiar with the details of
 language matching as described above. For example, users might
 assume that on selecting "en-gb", they will be served any kind of
 English document if British English is not available. A user
 agent might suggest, in such a case, to add "en" to the list for
 better matching behavior.
5.4. Authentication Credentials
 Two header fields are used for carrying authentication credentials,
 as defined in [Part7]. Note that various custom mechanisms for user
 authentication use the Cookie header field for this purpose, as
 defined in [RFC6265].
 +---------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +---------------------+------------------------+
 | Authorization | Section 4.1 of [Part7] |
 | Proxy-Authorization | Section 4.3 of [Part7] |
 +---------------------+------------------------+
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5.5. Request Context
 The following request header fields provide additional information
 about the request context, including information about the user, user
 agent, and resource behind the request.
 +-------------------+---------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+---------------+
 | From | Section 5.5.1 |
 | Referer | Section 5.5.2 |
 | User-Agent | Section 5.5.3 |
 +-------------------+---------------+
5.5.1. From
 The "From" header field contains an Internet email address for a
 human user who controls the requesting user agent. The address ought
 to be machine-usable, as defined by "mailbox" in Section 3.4 of
 [RFC5322]:
 From = mailbox
 mailbox = <mailbox, defined in [RFC5322], Section 3.4>
 An example is:
 From: webmaster@example.org
 The From header field is rarely sent by non-robotic user agents. A
 user agent SHOULD NOT send a From header field without explicit
 configuration by the user, since that might conflict with the user's
 privacy interests or their site's security policy.
 Robotic user agents SHOULD send a valid From header field so that the
 person responsible for running the robot can be contacted if problems
 occur on servers, such as if the robot is sending excessive,
 unwanted, or invalid requests.
 Servers SHOULD NOT use the From header field for access control or
 authentication, since most recipients will assume that the field
 value is public information.
5.5.2. Referer
 The "Referer" [sic] header field allows the user agent to specify a
 URI reference for the resource from which the target URI was obtained
 (i.e., the "referrer", though the field name is misspelled). A user
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 agent MUST exclude any fragment or userinfo components [RFC3986] when
 generating the Referer field value.
 Referer = absolute-URI / partial-URI
 Referer allows servers to generate back-links to other resources for
 simple analytics, logging, optimized caching, etc. It also allows
 obsolete or mistyped links to be found for maintenance. Some servers
 use Referer as a means of denying links from other sites (so-called
 "deep linking") or restricting cross-site request forgery (CSRF), but
 not all requests contain a Referer header field.
 Example:
 Referer: http://www.example.org/hypertext/Overview.html
 If the target URI was obtained from a source that does not have its
 own URI (e.g., input from the user keyboard, or an entry within the
 user's bookmarks/favorites), the user agent MUST either exclude
 Referer or send it with a value of "about:blank".
 The Referer field has the potential to reveal information about the
 request context or browsing history of the user, which is a privacy
 concern if the referring resource's identifier reveals personal
 information (such as an account name) or a resource that is supposed
 to be confidential (such as behind a firewall or internal to a
 secured service). Most general-purpose user agents do not send the
 Referer header field when the referring resource is a local "file" or
 "data" URI. A user agent SHOULD NOT send a Referer header field in
 an unsecured HTTP request if the referring page was received with a
 secure protocol. See Section 9.3 for additional security
 considerations.
 Some intermediaries have been known to indiscriminately remove
 Referer header fields from outgoing requests. This has the
 unfortunate side-effect of interfering with protection against CSRF
 attacks, which can be far more harmful to their users.
 Intermediaries and user agent extensions that wish to limit
 information disclosure in Referer ought to restrict their changes to
 specific edits, such as replacing internal domain names with
 pseudonyms or truncating the query and/or path components.
 Intermediaries SHOULD NOT modify or delete the Referer field when the
 field value shares the same scheme and host as the request target.
5.5.3. User-Agent
 The "User-Agent" header field contains information about the user
 agent originating the request, which is often used by servers to help
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 identify the scope of reported interoperability problems, to work
 around or tailor responses to avoid particular user agent
 limitations, and for analytics regarding browser or operating system
 use. A user agent SHOULD send a User-Agent field in each request
 unless specifically configured not to do so.
 User-Agent = product *( RWS ( product / comment ) )
 The User-Agent field-value consists of one or more product
 identifiers, each followed by zero or more comments (Section 3.2 of
 [Part1]), which together identify the user agent software and its
 significant subproducts. By convention, the product identifiers are
 listed in decreasing order of their significance for identifying the
 user agent software. Each product identifier consists of a name and
 optional version.
 product = token ["/" product-version]
 product-version = token
 Senders SHOULD limit generated product identifiers to what is
 necessary to identify the product; senders MUST NOT generate
 advertising or other non-essential information within the product
 identifier. Senders SHOULD NOT generate information in product-
 version that is not a version identifier (i.e., successive versions
 of the same product name ought to only differ in the product-version
 portion of the product identifier).
 Example:
 User-Agent: CERN-LineMode/2.15 libwww/2.17b3
 A user agent SHOULD NOT generate a User-Agent field containing
 needlessly fine-grained detail and SHOULD limit the addition of
 subproducts by third parties. Overly long and detailed User-Agent
 field values increase request latency and the risk of a user being
 identified against their wishes ("fingerprinting").
 Likewise, implementations are encouraged not to use the product
 tokens of other implementations in order to declare compatibility
 with them, as this circumvents the purpose of the field. If a user
 agent masquerades as a different user agent, recipients can assume
 that the user intentionally desires to see responses tailored for
 that identified user agent, even if they might not work as well for
 the actual user agent being used.
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6. Response Status Codes
 The status-code element is a 3-digit integer code giving the result
 of the attempt to understand and satisfy the request.
 HTTP status codes are extensible. HTTP clients are not required to
 understand the meaning of all registered status codes, though such
 understanding is obviously desirable. However, clients MUST
 understand the class of any status code, as indicated by the first
 digit, and treat an unrecognized status code as being equivalent to
 the x00 status code of that class, with the exception that a response
 with an unrecognized status code MUST NOT be cached.
 For example, if an unrecognized status code of 471 is received by a
 client, the client can assume that there was something wrong with its
 request and treat the response as if it had received a 400 status
 code. The response message will usually contain a representation
 that explains the status.
 The first digit of the status-code defines the class of response.
 The last two digits do not have any categorization role. There are 5
 values for the first digit:
 o 1xx (Informational): The request was received, continuing process
 o 2xx (Successful): The request was successfully received,
 understood, and accepted
 o 3xx (Redirection): Further action needs to be taken in order to
 complete the request
 o 4xx (Client Error): The request contains bad syntax or cannot be
 fulfilled
 o 5xx (Server Error): The server failed to fulfill an apparently
 valid request
6.1. Overview of Status Codes
 The status codes listed below are defined in this specification,
 Section 4 of [Part4], Section 4 of [Part5], and Section 3 of [Part7].
 The reason phrases listed here are only recommendations -- they can
 be replaced by local equivalents without affecting the protocol.
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 +------+-------------------------------+------------------------+
 | code | reason-phrase | Defined in... |
 +------+-------------------------------+------------------------+
 | 100 | Continue | Section 6.2.1 |
 | 101 | Switching Protocols | Section 6.2.2 |
 | 200 | OK | Section 6.3.1 |
 | 201 | Created | Section 6.3.2 |
 | 202 | Accepted | Section 6.3.3 |
 | 203 | Non-Authoritative Information | Section 6.3.4 |
 | 204 | No Content | Section 6.3.5 |
 | 205 | Reset Content | Section 6.3.6 |
 | 206 | Partial Content | Section 4.1 of [Part5] |
 | 300 | Multiple Choices | Section 6.4.1 |
 | 301 | Moved Permanently | Section 6.4.2 |
 | 302 | Found | Section 6.4.3 |
 | 303 | See Other | Section 6.4.4 |
 | 304 | Not Modified | Section 4.1 of [Part4] |
 | 305 | Use Proxy | Section 6.4.5 |
 | 307 | Temporary Redirect | Section 6.4.7 |
 | 400 | Bad Request | Section 6.5.1 |
 | 401 | Unauthorized | Section 3.1 of [Part7] |
 | 402 | Payment Required | Section 6.5.2 |
 | 403 | Forbidden | Section 6.5.3 |
 | 404 | Not Found | Section 6.5.4 |
 | 405 | Method Not Allowed | Section 6.5.5 |
 | 406 | Not Acceptable | Section 6.5.6 |
 | 407 | Proxy Authentication Required | Section 3.2 of [Part7] |
 | 408 | Request Time-out | Section 6.5.7 |
 | 409 | Conflict | Section 6.5.8 |
 | 410 | Gone | Section 6.5.9 |
 | 411 | Length Required | Section 6.5.10 |
 | 412 | Precondition Failed | Section 4.2 of [Part4] |
 | 413 | Payload Too Large | Section 6.5.11 |
 | 414 | URI Too Long | Section 6.5.12 |
 | 415 | Unsupported Media Type | Section 6.5.13 |
 | 416 | Range Not Satisfiable | Section 4.4 of [Part5] |
 | 417 | Expectation Failed | Section 6.5.14 |
 | 426 | Upgrade Required | Section 6.5.15 |
 | 500 | Internal Server Error | Section 6.6.1 |
 | 501 | Not Implemented | Section 6.6.2 |
 | 502 | Bad Gateway | Section 6.6.3 |
 | 503 | Service Unavailable | Section 6.6.4 |
 | 504 | Gateway Time-out | Section 6.6.5 |
 | 505 | HTTP Version Not Supported | Section 6.6.6 |
 +------+-------------------------------+------------------------+
 Note that this list is not exhaustive -- it does not include
 extension status codes defined in other specifications.
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 Responses with status codes that are defined as cacheable by default
 (e.g., 200, 203, 206, 300, 301, and 410 in this specification) can be
 reused by a cache with heuristic expiration unless otherwise
 indicated by the method definition or explicit cache controls
 [Part6]; all other status codes are not cacheable by default.
6.2. Informational 1xx
 The 1xx (Informational) class of status code indicates an interim
 response for communicating connection status or request progress
 prior to completing the requested action and sending a final
 response. All 1xx responses consist of only the status-line and
 optional header fields, and thus are terminated by the empty line at
 the end of the header block. Since HTTP/1.0 did not define any 1xx
 status codes, servers MUST NOT send a 1xx response to an HTTP/1.0
 client except under experimental conditions.
 A client MUST be prepared to accept one or more 1xx status responses
 prior to a final response, even if the client does not expect one. A
 user agent MAY ignore unexpected 1xx status responses.
 Proxies MUST forward 1xx responses, unless the connection between the
 proxy and its client has been closed, or unless the proxy itself
 requested the generation of the 1xx response. For example, if a
 proxy adds an "Expect: 100-continue" field when it forwards a
 request, then it need not forward the corresponding 100 (Continue)
 response(s).
6.2.1. 100 Continue
 The 100 (Continue) status code indicates that the initial part of a
 request has been received and has not yet been rejected by the
 server. The server intends to send a final response after the
 request has been fully received and acted upon.
 When the request contains an Expect header field that includes a 100-
 continue expectation, the 100 response indicates that the server
 wishes to receive the request payload body, as described in
 Section 5.1.1.1. The client ought to continue sending the request
 and discard the 100 response.
 If the request did not contain an Expect header field containing the
 100-continue expectation, the client can simply discard this interim
 response.
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6.2.2. 101 Switching Protocols
 The 101 (Switching Protocols) status code indicates that the server
 understands and is willing to comply with the client's request, via
 the Upgrade header field (Section 6.7 of [Part1]), for a change in
 the application protocol being used on this connection. The server
 MUST generate an Upgrade header field in the response that indicates
 which protocol(s) will be switched to immediately after the empty
 line that terminates the 101 response.
 It is assumed that the server will only agree to switch protocols
 when it is advantageous to do so. For example, switching to a newer
 version of HTTP might be advantageous over older versions, and
 switching to a real-time, synchronous protocol might be advantageous
 when delivering resources that use such features.
6.3. Successful 2xx
 The 2xx (Successful) class of status code indicates that the client's
 request was successfully received, understood, and accepted.
6.3.1. 200 OK
 The
 200 (OK) status code indicates that the request has succeeded. The
 payload sent in a 200 response depends on the request method. For
 the methods defined by this specification, the intended meaning of
 the payload can be summarized as:
 GET a representation of the target resource;
 HEAD the same representation as GET, but without the representation
 data;
 POST a representation of the status of, or results obtained from,
 the action;
 PUT, DELETE a representation of the status of the action;
 OPTIONS a representation of the communications options;
 TRACE a representation of the request message as received by the end
 server.
 Aside from responses to CONNECT, a 200 response always has a payload,
 though an origin server MAY generate a payload body of zero length.
 If no payload is desired, an origin server ought to send 204 (No
 Content) instead. For CONNECT, no payload is allowed because the
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 successful result is a tunnel, which begins immediately after the 200
 response header block.
 A 200 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.3.2. 201 Created
 The 201 (Created) status code indicates that the request has been
 fulfilled and has resulted in one or more new resources being
 created. The primary resource created by the request is identified
 by either a Location header field in the response or, if no Location
 field is received, by the effective request URI.
 The 201 response payload typically describes and links to the
 resource(s) created. See Section 7.2 for a discussion of the meaning
 and purpose of validator header fields, such as ETag and Last-
 Modified, in a 201 response.
6.3.3. 202 Accepted
 The 202 (Accepted) status code indicates that the request has been
 accepted for processing, but the processing has not been completed.
 The request might or might not eventually be acted upon, as it might
 be disallowed when processing actually takes place. There is no
 facility in HTTP for re-sending a status code from an asynchronous
 operation.
 The 202 response is intentionally non-committal. Its purpose is to
 allow a server to accept a request for some other process (perhaps a
 batch-oriented process that is only run once per day) without
 requiring that the user agent's connection to the server persist
 until the process is completed. The representation sent with this
 response ought to describe the request's current status and point to
 (or embed) a status monitor that can provide the user with an
 estimate of when the request will be fulfilled.
6.3.4. 203 Non-Authoritative Information
 The 203 (Non-Authoritative Information) status code indicates that
 the request was successful but the enclosed payload has been modified
 from that of the origin server's 200 (OK) response by a transforming
 proxy (Section 5.7.2 of [Part1]). This status code allows the proxy
 to notify recipients when a transformation has been applied, since
 that knowledge might impact later decisions regarding the content.
 For example, future cache validation requests for the content might
 only be applicable along the same request path (through the same
 proxies).
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 The 203 response is similar to the Warning code of 214 Transformation
 Applied (Section 7.5 of [Part6]), which has the advantage of being
 applicable to responses with any status code.
 A 203 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.3.5. 204 No Content
 The 204 (No Content) status code indicates that the server has
 successfully fulfilled the request and that there is no additional
 content to send in the response payload body. Metadata in the
 response header fields refer to the target resource and its selected
 representation after the requested action was applied.
 For example, if a 204 status code is received in response to a PUT
 request and the response contains an ETag header field, then the PUT
 was successful and the ETag field-value contains the entity-tag for
 the new representation of that target resource.
 The 204 response allows a server to indicate that the action has been
 successfully applied to the target resource, while implying that the
 user agent does not need to traverse away from its current "document
 view" (if any). The server assumes that the user agent will provide
 some indication of the success to its user, in accord with its own
 interface, and apply any new or updated metadata in the response to
 its active representation.
 For example, a 204 status code is commonly used with document editing
 interfaces corresponding to a "save" action, such that the document
 being saved remains available to the user for editing. It is also
 frequently used with interfaces that expect automated data transfers
 to be prevalent, such as within distributed version control systems.
 A 204 response is terminated by the first empty line after the header
 fields because it cannot contain a message body.
 A 204 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.3.6. 205 Reset Content
 The 205 (Reset Content) status code indicates that the server has
 fulfilled the request and desires that the user agent reset the
 "document view", which caused the request to be sent, to its original
 state as received from the origin server.
 This response is intended to support a common data entry use case
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 where the user receives content that supports data entry (a form,
 notepad, canvas, etc.), enters or manipulates data in that space,
 causes the entered data to be submitted in a request, and then the
 data entry mechanism is reset for the next entry so that the user can
 easily initiate another input action.
 Since the 205 status code implies that no additional content will be
 provided in the payload, the server MUST send a message body of zero
 length. In other words, the server MUST send a "Content-Length: 0"
 field in a 205 response or close the connection immediately after
 sending the blank line terminating the header section.
6.4. Redirection 3xx
 The 3xx (Redirection) class of status code indicates that further
 action needs to be taken by the user agent in order to fulfill the
 request. If a Location header field (Section 7.1.2) is provided, the
 user agent MAY automatically redirect its request to the URI
 referenced by the Location field value, even if the specific status
 code is not understood. Automatic redirection needs to done with
 care for methods not known to be safe, as defined in Section 4.2.1,
 since the user might not wish to redirect an unsafe request.
 There are several types of redirects:
 1. Redirects that indicate the resource might be available at a
 different URI, as provided by the Location field, as in the
 status codes 301 (Moved Permanently), 302 (Found), and 307
 (Temporary Redirect).
 2. Redirection that offers a choice of matching resources, each
 capable of representing the original request target, as in the
 300 (Multiple Choices) status code.
 3. Redirection to a different resource, identified by the Location
 field, that can represent an indirect response to the request, as
 in the 303 (See Other) status code.
 4. Redirection to a previously cached result, as in the 304 (Not
 Modified) status code.
 Note: In HTTP/1.0, the status codes 301 (Moved Permanently) and
 302 (Found) were defined for the first type of redirect
 ([RFC1945], Section 9.3). Early user agents split on whether the
 method applied to the redirect target would be the same as the
 original request or would be rewritten as GET. Although HTTP
 originally defined the former semantics for 301 and 302 (to match
 its original implementation at CERN), and defined 303 (See Other)
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 to match the latter semantics, prevailing practice gradually
 converged on the latter semantics for 301 and 302 as well. The
 first revision of HTTP/1.1 added 307 (Temporary Redirect) to
 indicate the former semantics without being impacted by divergent
 practice. Over 10 years later, most user agents still do method
 rewriting for 301 and 302; therefore, this specification makes
 that behavior conformant when the original request is POST.
 Clients SHOULD detect and intervene in cyclical redirections (i.e.,
 "infinite" redirection loops).
 Note: An earlier version of this specification recommended a
 maximum of five redirections ([RFC2068], Section 10.3). Content
 developers need to be aware that some clients might implement such
 a fixed limitation.
6.4.1. 300 Multiple Choices
 The 300 (Multiple Choices) status code indicates that the target
 resource has more than one representation, each with its own more
 specific identifier, and information about the alternatives is being
 provided so that the user (or user agent) can select a preferred
 representation by redirecting its request to one or more of those
 identifiers. In other words, the server desires that the user agent
 engage in reactive negotiation to select the most appropriate
 representation(s) for its needs (Section 3.4).
 If the server has a preferred choice, the server SHOULD generate a
 Location header field containing a preferred choice's URI reference.
 The user agent MAY use the Location field value for automatic
 redirection.
 For request methods other than HEAD, the server SHOULD generate a
 payload in the 300 response containing a list of representation
 metadata and URI reference(s) from which the user or user agent can
 choose the one most preferred. The user agent MAY make a selection
 from that list automatically, depending upon the list format, but
 this specification does not define a standard for such automatic
 selection.
 A 300 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
 Note: The original proposal for 300 defined the URI header field
 as providing a list of alternative representations, such that it
 would be usable for 200, 300, and 406 responses and be transferred
 in responses to the HEAD method. However, lack of deployment and
 disagreement over syntax led to both URI and Alternates (a
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 subsequent proposal) being dropped from this specification. It is
 possible to communicate the list using a set of Link header fields
 [RFC5988], each with a relationship of "alternate", though
 deployment is a chicken-and-egg problem.
6.4.2. 301 Moved Permanently
 The 301 (Moved Permanently) status code indicates that the target
 resource has been assigned a new permanent URI and any future
 references to this resource ought to use one of the enclosed URIs.
 Clients with link editing capabilities ought to automatically re-link
 references to the effective request URI to one or more of the new
 references sent by the server, where possible.
 The server SHOULD generate a Location header field in the response
 containing a preferred URI reference for the new permanent URI. The
 user agent MAY use the Location field value for automatic
 redirection. The server's response payload usually contains a short
 hypertext note with a hyperlink to the new URI(s).
 Note: For historic reasons, user agents MAY change the request
 method from POST to GET for the subsequent request. If this
 behavior is undesired, status code 307 (Temporary Redirect) can be
 used instead.
 A 301 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.4.3. 302 Found
 The 302 (Found) status code indicates that the target resource
 resides temporarily under a different URI. Since the redirection
 might be altered on occasion, the client ought to continue to use the
 effective request URI for future requests.
 The server SHOULD generate a Location header field in the response
 containing a URI reference for the different URI. The user agent MAY
 use the Location field value for automatic redirection. The server's
 response payload usually contains a short hypertext note with a
 hyperlink to the different URI(s).
 Note: For historic reasons, user agents MAY change the request
 method from POST to GET for the subsequent request. If this
 behavior is undesired, status code 307 (Temporary Redirect) can be
 used instead.
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6.4.4. 303 See Other
 The 303 (See Other) status code indicates that the server is
 redirecting the user agent to a different resource, as indicated by a
 URI in the Location header field, that is intended to provide an
 indirect response to the original request. In order to satisfy the
 original request, a user agent ought to perform a retrieval request
 using the Location URI (a GET or HEAD request if using HTTP), which
 can itself be redirected further, and present the eventual result as
 an answer to the original request. Note that the new URI in the
 Location header field is not considered equivalent to the effective
 request URI.
 This status code is applicable to any HTTP method. It is primarily
 used to allow the output of a POST action to redirect the user agent
 to a selected resource, since doing so provides the information
 corresponding to the POST response in a form that can be separately
 identified, bookmarked, and cached independent of the original
 request.
 A 303 response to a GET request indicates that the origin server does
 not have a representation of the target resource that can be
 transferred by the server over HTTP. However, the Location field
 value refers to a resource that is descriptive of the target
 resource, such that making a retrieval request on that other resource
 might result in a representation that is useful to recipients without
 implying that it represents the original target resource. Note that
 answers to the questions of what can be represented, what
 representations are adequate, and what might be a useful description
 are outside the scope of HTTP.
 Except for responses to a HEAD request, the representation of a 303
 response ought to contain a short hypertext note with a hyperlink to
 the same URI reference provided in the Location header field.
6.4.5. 305 Use Proxy
 The 305 (Use Proxy) status code was defined in a previous version of
 this specification and is now deprecated (Appendix B).
6.4.6. 306 (Unused)
 The 306 status code was defined in a previous version of this
 specification, is no longer used, and the code is reserved.
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6.4.7. 307 Temporary Redirect
 The 307 (Temporary Redirect) status code indicates that the target
 resource resides temporarily under a different URI and the user agent
 MUST NOT change the request method if it performs an automatic
 redirection to that URI. Since the redirection can change over time,
 the client ought to continue using the original effective request URI
 for future requests.
 The server SHOULD generate a Location header field in the response
 containing a URI reference for the different URI. The user agent MAY
 use the Location field value for automatic redirection. The server's
 response payload usually contains a short hypertext note with a
 hyperlink to the different URI(s).
 Note: This status code is similar to 302 (Found), except that it
 does not allow changing the request method from POST to GET. This
 specification defines no equivalent counterpart for 301 (Moved
 Permanently) ([status-308], however, defines the status code 308
 (Permanent Redirect) for this purpose).
6.5. Client Error 4xx
 The 4xx (Client Error) class of status code indicates that the client
 seems to have erred. Except when responding to a HEAD request, the
 server SHOULD send a representation containing an explanation of the
 error situation, and whether it is a temporary or permanent
 condition. These status codes are applicable to any request method.
 User agents SHOULD display any included representation to the user.
6.5.1. 400 Bad Request
 The 400 (Bad Request) status code indicates that the server cannot or
 will not process the request because the received syntax is invalid,
 nonsensical, or exceeds some limitation on what the server is willing
 to process.
6.5.2. 402 Payment Required
 The 402 (Payment Required) status code is reserved for future use.
6.5.3. 403 Forbidden
 The 403 (Forbidden) status code indicates that the server understood
 the request but refuses to authorize it. A server that wishes to
 make public why the request has been forbidden can describe that
 reason in the response payload (if any).
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 If authentication credentials were provided in the request, the
 server considers them insufficient to grant access. The client
 SHOULD NOT repeat the request with the same credentials. The client
 MAY repeat the request with new or different credentials. However, a
 request might be forbidden for reasons unrelated to the credentials.
 An origin server that wishes to "hide" the current existence of a
 forbidden target resource MAY instead respond with a status code of
 404 (Not Found).
6.5.4. 404 Not Found
 The 404 (Not Found) status code indicates that the origin server did
 not find a current representation for the target resource or is not
 willing to disclose that one exists. A 404 status does not indicate
 whether this lack of representation is temporary or permanent; the
 410 (Gone) status code is preferred over 404 if the origin server
 knows, presumably through some configurable means, that the condition
 is likely to be permanent.
 A 404 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.5.5. 405 Method Not Allowed
 The 405 (Method Not Allowed) status code indicates that the method
 specified in the request-line is known by the origin server but not
 supported by the target resource. The origin server MUST generate an
 Allow header field in a 405 response containing a list of the target
 resource's currently supported methods.
 A 405 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.5.6. 406 Not Acceptable
 The 406 (Not Acceptable) status code indicates that the target
 resource does not have a current representation that would be
 acceptable to the user agent, according to the proactive negotiation
 header fields received in the request (Section 5.3), and the server
 is unwilling to supply a default representation.
 The server SHOULD generate a payload containing a list of available
 representation characteristics and corresponding resource identifiers
 from which the user or user agent can choose the one most
 appropriate. A user agent MAY automatically select the most
 appropriate choice from that list. However, this specification does
 not define any standard for such automatic selection, as described in
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 Section 6.4.1.
6.5.7. 408 Request Timeout
 The 408 (Request Timeout) status code indicates that the server did
 not receive a complete request message within the time that it was
 prepared to wait. A server SHOULD send the close connection option
 (Section 6.1 of [Part1]) in the response, since 408 implies that the
 server has decided to close the connection rather than continue
 waiting. If the client has an outstanding request in transit, the
 client MAY repeat that request on a new connection.
6.5.8. 409 Conflict
 The 409 (Conflict) status code indicates that the request could not
 be completed due to a conflict with the current state of the
 resource. This code is used in situations where the user might be
 able to resolve the conflict and resubmit the request. The server
 SHOULD generate a payload that includes enough information for a user
 to recognize the source of the conflict.
 Conflicts are most likely to occur in response to a PUT request. For
 example, if versioning were being used and the representation being
 PUT included changes to a resource that conflict with those made by
 an earlier (third-party) request, the origin server might use a 409
 response to indicate that it can't complete the request. In this
 case, the response representation would likely contain information
 useful for merging the differences based on the revision history.
6.5.9. 410 Gone
 The 410 (Gone) status code indicates that access to the target
 resource is no longer available at the origin server and that this
 condition is likely to be permanent. If the origin server does not
 know, or has no facility to determine, whether or not the condition
 is permanent, the status code 404 (Not Found) ought to be used
 instead.
 The 410 response is primarily intended to assist the task of web
 maintenance by notifying the recipient that the resource is
 intentionally unavailable and that the server owners desire that
 remote links to that resource be removed. Such an event is common
 for limited-time, promotional services and for resources belonging to
 individuals no longer associated with the origin server's site. It
 is not necessary to mark all permanently unavailable resources as
 "gone" or to keep the mark for any length of time -- that is left to
 the discretion of the server owner.
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 A 410 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.5.10. 411 Length Required
 The 411 (Length Required) status code indicates that the server
 refuses to accept the request without a defined Content-Length
 (Section 3.3.2 of [Part1]). The client MAY repeat the request if it
 adds a valid Content-Length header field containing the length of the
 message body in the request message.
6.5.11. 413 Payload Too Large
 The 413 (Payload Too Large) status code indicates that the server is
 refusing to process a request because the request payload is larger
 than the server is willing or able to process. The server MAY close
 the connection to prevent the client from continuing the request.
 If the condition is temporary, the server SHOULD generate a Retry-
 After header field to indicate that it is temporary and after what
 time the client MAY try again.
6.5.12. 414 URI Too Long
 The 414 (URI Too Long) status code indicates that the server is
 refusing to service the request because the request-target (Section
 5.3 of [Part1]) is longer than the server is willing to interpret.
 This rare condition is only likely to occur when a client has
 improperly converted a POST request to a GET request with long query
 information, when the client has descended into a "black hole" of
 redirection (e.g., a redirected URI prefix that points to a suffix of
 itself), or when the server is under attack by a client attempting to
 exploit potential security holes.
 A 414 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.5.13. 415 Unsupported Media Type
 The 415 (Unsupported Media Type) status code indicates that the
 origin server is refusing to service the request because the payload
 is in a format not supported by the target resource for this method.
 The format problem might be due to the request's indicated Content-
 Type or Content-Encoding, or as a result of inspecting the data
 directly.
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6.5.14. 417 Expectation Failed
 The 417 (Expectation Failed) status code indicates that the
 expectation given in the request's Expect header field
 (Section 5.1.1) could not be met by at least one of the inbound
 servers.
6.5.15. 426 Upgrade Required
 The 426 (Upgrade Required) status code indicates that the server
 refuses to perform the request using the current protocol but might
 be willing to do so after the client upgrades to a different
 protocol. The server MUST send an Upgrade header field in a 426
 response to indicate the required protocol(s) (Section 6.7 of
 [Part1]).
 Example:
 HTTP/1.1 426 Upgrade Required
 Upgrade: HTTP/3.0
 Connection: Upgrade
 Content-Length: 53
 Content-Type: text/plain
 This service requires use of the HTTP/3.0 protocol.
6.6. Server Error 5xx
 The 5xx (Server Error) class of status code indicates that the server
 is aware that it has erred or is incapable of performing the
 requested method. Except when responding to a HEAD request, the
 server SHOULD send a representation containing an explanation of the
 error situation, and whether it is a temporary or permanent
 condition. User agents SHOULD display any included representation to
 the user. These response codes are applicable to any request method.
6.6.1. 500 Internal Server Error
 The 500 (Internal Server Error) status code indicates that the server
 encountered an unexpected condition that prevented it from fulfilling
 the request.
6.6.2. 501 Not Implemented
 The 501 (Not Implemented) status code indicates that the server does
 not support the functionality required to fulfill the request. This
 is the appropriate response when the server does not recognize the
 request method and is not capable of supporting it for any resource.
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 A 501 response is cacheable unless otherwise indicated by the method
 definition or explicit cache controls (see Section 4.1.2 of [Part6]).
6.6.3. 502 Bad Gateway
 The 502 (Bad Gateway) status code indicates that the server, while
 acting as a gateway or proxy, received an invalid response from an
 inbound server it accessed while attempting to fulfill the request.
6.6.4. 503 Service Unavailable
 The 503 (Service Unavailable) status code indicates that the server
 is currently unable to handle the request due to a temporary overload
 or scheduled maintenance, which will likely be alleviated after some
 delay. The server MAY send a Retry-After header field
 (Section 7.1.3) to suggest an appropriate amount of time for the
 client to wait before retrying the request.
 Note: The existence of the 503 status code does not imply that a
 server has to use it when becoming overloaded. Some servers might
 simply refuse the connection.
6.6.5. 504 Gateway Timeout
 The 504 (Gateway Timeout) status code indicates that the server,
 while acting as a gateway or proxy, did not receive a timely response
 from an upstream server it needed to access in order to complete the
 request.
6.6.6. 505 HTTP Version Not Supported
 The 505 (HTTP Version Not Supported) status code indicates that the
 server does not support, or refuses to support, the major version of
 HTTP that was used in the request message. The server is indicating
 that it is unable or unwilling to complete the request using the same
 major version as the client, as described in Section 2.6 of [Part1],
 other than with this error message. The server SHOULD generate a
 representation for the 505 response that describes why that version
 is not supported and what other protocols are supported by that
 server.
7. Response Header Fields
 The response header fields allow the server to pass additional
 information about the response beyond what is placed in the status-
 line. These header fields give information about the server, about
 further access to the target resource, or about related resources.
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 Although each response header field has a defined meaning, in
 general, the precise semantics might be further refined by the
 semantics of the request method and/or response status code.
7.1. Control Data
 Response header fields can supply control data that supplements the
 status code, directs caching, or instructs the client where to go
 next.
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Age | Section 7.1 of [Part6] |
 | Cache-Control | Section 7.2 of [Part6] |
 | Expires | Section 7.3 of [Part6] |
 | Date | Section 7.1.1.2 |
 | Location | Section 7.1.2 |
 | Retry-After | Section 7.1.3 |
 | Vary | Section 7.1.4 |
 | Warning | Section 7.5 of [Part6] |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
7.1.1. Origination Date
7.1.1.1. Date/Time Formats
 Prior to 1995, there were three different formats commonly used by
 servers to communicate timestamps. For compatibility with old
 implementations, all three are defined here. The preferred format is
 a fixed-length and single-zone subset of the date and time
 specification used by the Internet Message Format [RFC5322].
 HTTP-date = IMF-fixdate / obs-date
 An example of the preferred format is
 1994年11月06日 08:49:37 GMT ; IMF-fixdate
 Examples of the two obsolete formats are
 Sunday, 06-Nov-94 08:49:37 GMT ; obsolete RFC 850 format
 Sun Nov 6 08:49:37 1994 ; ANSI C's asctime() format
 A recipient that parses a timestamp value in an HTTP header field
 MUST accept all three formats. A sender MUST generate the IMF-
 fixdate format when sending an HTTP-date value in a header field.
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 An HTTP-date value represents time as an instance of Coordinated
 Universal Time (UTC). The first two formats indicate UTC by the
 three-letter abbreviation for Greenwich Mean Time, "GMT", a
 predecessor of the UTC name; values in the asctime format are assumed
 to be in UTC. A sender that generates HTTP-date values from a local
 clock ought to use NTP ([RFC1305]) or some similar protocol to
 synchronize its clock to UTC.
 Preferred format:
 IMF-fixdate = day-name "," SP date1 SP time-of-day SP GMT
 ; fixed length/zone subset of the format defined in
 ; Section 3.3 of [RFC5322]
 day-name = %x4D.6F.6E ; "Mon", case-sensitive
 / %x54.75.65 ; "Tue", case-sensitive
 / %x57.65.64 ; "Wed", case-sensitive
 / %x54.68.75 ; "Thu", case-sensitive
 / %x46.72.69 ; "Fri", case-sensitive
 / %x53.61.74 ; "Sat", case-sensitive
 / %x53.75.6E ; "Sun", case-sensitive
 date1 = day SP month SP year
 ; e.g., 02 Jun 1982
 day = 2DIGIT
 month = %x4A.61.6E ; "Jan", case-sensitive
 / %x46.65.62 ; "Feb", case-sensitive
 / %x4D.61.72 ; "Mar", case-sensitive
 / %x41.70.72 ; "Apr", case-sensitive
 / %x4D.61.79 ; "May", case-sensitive
 / %x4A.75.6E ; "Jun", case-sensitive
 / %x4A.75.6C ; "Jul", case-sensitive
 / %x41.75.67 ; "Aug", case-sensitive
 / %x53.65.70 ; "Sep", case-sensitive
 / %x4F.63.74 ; "Oct", case-sensitive
 / %x4E.6F.76 ; "Nov", case-sensitive
 / %x44.65.63 ; "Dec", case-sensitive
 year = 4DIGIT
 GMT = %x47.4D.54 ; "GMT", case-sensitive
 time-of-day = hour ":" minute ":" second
 ; 00:00:00 - 23:59:60 (leap second)
 hour = 2DIGIT
 minute = 2DIGIT
 second = 2DIGIT
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 Obsolete formats:
 obs-date = rfc850-date / asctime-date
 rfc850-date = day-name-l "," SP date2 SP time-of-day SP GMT
 date2 = day "-" month "-" 2DIGIT
 ; e.g., 02-Jun-82
 day-name-l = %x4D.6F.6E.64.61.79 ; "Monday", case-sensitive
 / %x54.75.65.73.64.61.79 ; "Tuesday", case-sensitive
 / %x57.65.64.6E.65.73.64.61.79 ; "Wednesday", case-sensitive
 / %x54.68.75.72.73.64.61.79 ; "Thursday", case-sensitive
 / %x46.72.69.64.61.79 ; "Friday", case-sensitive
 / %x53.61.74.75.72.64.61.79 ; "Saturday", case-sensitive
 / %x53.75.6E.64.61.79 ; "Sunday", case-sensitive
 asctime-date = day-name SP date3 SP time-of-day SP year
 date3 = month SP ( 2DIGIT / ( SP 1DIGIT ))
 ; e.g., Jun 2
 HTTP-date is case sensitive. A sender MUST NOT generate additional
 whitespace in an HTTP-date beyond that specifically included as SP in
 the grammar. The semantics of day-name, day, month, year, and time-
 of-day are the same as those defined for the Internet Message Format
 constructs with the corresponding name ([RFC5322], Section 3.3).
 Recipients of a timestamp value in rfc850-date format, which uses a
 two-digit year, SHOULD interpret a timestamp that appears to be more
 than 50 years in the future as representing the most recent year in
 the past that had the same last two digits.
 Recipients of timestamp values are encouraged to be robust in parsing
 timestamps unless otherwise restricted by the field definition. For
 example, messages are occasionally forwarded over HTTP from a non-
 HTTP source that might generate any of the date and time
 specifications defined by the Internet Message Format.
 Note: HTTP requirements for the date/time stamp format apply only
 to their usage within the protocol stream. Implementations are
 not required to use these formats for user presentation, request
 logging, etc.
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7.1.1.2. Date
 The "Date" header field represents the date and time at which the
 message was originated, having the same semantics as the Origination
 Date Field (orig-date) defined in Section 3.6.1 of [RFC5322]. The
 field value is an HTTP-date, as defined in Section 7.1.1.1.
 Date = HTTP-date
 An example is
 Date: 1994年11月15日 08:12:31 GMT
 When a Date header field is generated, the sender SHOULD generate its
 field value as the best available approximation of the date and time
 of message generation. In theory, the date ought to represent the
 moment just before the payload is generated. In practice, the date
 can be generated at any time during message origination.
 An origin server MUST NOT send a Date header field if it does not
 have a clock capable of providing a reasonable approximation of the
 current instance in Coordinated Universal Time. An origin server MAY
 send a Date header field if the response is in the 1xx
 (Informational) or 5xx (Server Error) class of status codes. An
 origin server MUST send a Date header field in all other cases.
 A recipient with a clock that receives a response message without a
 Date header field MUST record the time it was received and append a
 corresponding Date header field to the message's header block if it
 is cached or forwarded downstream.
 A user agent MAY send a Date header field in a request, though
 generally will not do so unless it is believed to convey useful
 information to the server. For example, custom applications of HTTP
 might convey a Date if the server is expected to adjust its
 interpretation of the user's request based on differences between the
 user agent and server clocks.
7.1.2. Location
 The "Location" header field is used in some responses to refer to a
 specific resource in relation to the response. The type of
 relationship is defined by the combination of request method and
 status code semantics.
 Location = URI-reference
 The field value consists of a single URI-reference. When it has the
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 form of a relative reference ([RFC3986], Section 4.2), the final
 value is computed by resolving it against the effective request URI
 ([RFC3986], Section 5).
 For 201 (Created) responses, the Location value refers to the primary
 resource created by the request. For 3xx (Redirection) responses,
 the Location value refers to the preferred target resource for
 automatically redirecting the request.
 When Location is provided in a 3xx (Redirection) response and the URI
 reference that the user agent used to generate the request target
 contains a fragment identifier, the user agent SHOULD process the
 redirection as if the Location field value inherits the original
 fragment. In other words, if the Location does not have a fragment
 component, the user agent SHOULD interpret the Location reference as
 if it had the original reference's fragment.
 For example, a GET request generated for the URI reference
 "http://www.example.org/~tim" might result in a 303 (See Other)
 response containing the header field:
 Location: /People.html#tim
 which suggests that the user agent redirect to
 "http://www.example.org/People.html#tim"
 Likewise, a GET request generated for the URI reference
 "http://www.example.org/index.html#larry" might result in a 301
 (Moved Permanently) response containing the header field:
 Location: http://www.example.net/index.html
 which suggests that the user agent redirect to
 "http://www.example.net/index.html#larry", preserving the original
 fragment identifier.
 There are circumstances in which a fragment identifier in a Location
 value would not be appropriate. For example, the Location header
 field in a 201 (Created) response is supposed to provide a URI that
 is specific to the created resource.
 Note: Some recipients attempt to recover from Location fields that
 are not valid URI references. This specification does not mandate
 or define such processing, but does allow it for the sake of
 robustness.
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 Note: The Content-Location header field (Section 3.1.4.2) differs
 from Location in that the Content-Location refers to the most
 specific resource corresponding to the enclosed representation.
 It is therefore possible for a response to contain both the
 Location and Content-Location header fields.
7.1.3. Retry-After
 Servers send the "Retry-After" header field to indicate how long the
 user agent ought to wait before making a follow-up request. When
 sent with a 503 (Service Unavailable) response, Retry-After indicates
 how long the service is expected to be unavailable to the client.
 When sent with any 3xx (Redirection) response, Retry-After indicates
 the minimum time that the user agent is asked to wait before issuing
 the redirected request.
 The value of this field can be either an HTTP-date or an integer
 number of seconds (in decimal) after the time of the response.
 Retry-After = HTTP-date / delta-seconds
 Time spans are non-negative decimal integers, representing time in
 seconds.
 delta-seconds = 1*DIGIT
 Two examples of its use are
 Retry-After: 1999年12月31日 23:59:59 GMT
 Retry-After: 120
 In the latter example, the delay is 2 minutes.
7.1.4. Vary
 The "Vary" header field describes what parts of a request message,
 aside from the method, the Host header field and the request target,
 might influence the origin server's process for selecting and
 representing the response. The value consists of either a single
 asterisk ("*") or a list of header field names (case-insensitive).
 Vary = "*" / 1#field-name
 A Vary field value of "*" signals that anything about the request
 might play a role in selecting the response representation, possibly
 including elements outside the message syntax (e.g., the client's
 network address), and thus a recipient will not be able to determine
 whether this response is appropriate for a later request without
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 forwarding the request to the origin server. A proxy MUST NOT
 generate a Vary field with a "*" value.
 A Vary field value consisting of a comma-separated list of names
 indicates that the named request header fields, known as the
 selecting header fields, might have a role in selecting the
 representation. The potential selecting header fields are not
 limited to those defined by this specification.
 For example, a response that contains
 Vary: accept-encoding, accept-language
 indicates that the origin server might have used the request's
 Accept-Encoding and Accept-Language fields (or lack thereof) as
 determining factors while choosing the content for this response.
 An origin server might send Vary with a list of fields for two
 purposes:
 1. To inform cache recipients that they MUST NOT use this response
 to satisfy a later request unless the later request has the same
 values for the listed fields as the original request (Section 4.3
 of [Part6]). In other words, Vary expands the cache key required
 to match a new request to the stored cache entry.
 2. To inform user agent recipients that this response is subject to
 content negotiation (Section 5.3) and that a different
 representation might be sent in a subsequent request if
 additional parameters are provided in the listed header fields
 (proactive negotiation).
 An origin server SHOULD send a Vary header field when its algorithm
 for selecting a representation varies based on aspects of the request
 message other than the method and request target, unless the variance
 cannot be crossed or the origin server has been deliberately
 configured to prevent cache transparency. For example, there is no
 need to send the Authorization field name in Vary because reuse
 across users is constrained by the field definition (Section 4.1 of
 [Part7]). Likewise, an origin server might use Cache-Control
 directives (Section 7.2 of [Part6]) to supplant Vary if it considers
 the variance less significant than the performance cost of Vary's
 impact on caching.
7.2. Validator Header Fields
 Validator header fields convey metadata about the selected
 representation (Section 3). In responses to safe requests, validator
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 fields describe the selected representation chosen by the origin
 server while handling the response. Note that, depending on the
 status code semantics, the selected representation for a given
 response is not necessarily the same as the representation enclosed
 as response payload.
 In a successful response to a state-changing request, validator
 fields describe the new representation that has replaced the prior
 selected representation as a result of processing the request.
 For example, an ETag header field in a 201 response communicates the
 entity-tag of the newly created resource's representation, so that it
 can be used in later conditional requests to prevent the "lost
 update" problem [Part4].
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | ETag | Section 2.3 of [Part4] |
 | Last-Modified | Section 2.2 of [Part4] |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
7.3. Authentication Challenges
 Authentication challenges indicate what mechanisms are available for
 the client to provide authentication credentials in future requests.
 +--------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +--------------------+------------------------+
 | WWW-Authenticate | Section 4.4 of [Part7] |
 | Proxy-Authenticate | Section 4.2 of [Part7] |
 +--------------------+------------------------+
7.4. Response Context
 The remaining response header fields provide more information about
 the target resource for potential use in later requests.
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Header Field Name | Defined in... |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
 | Accept-Ranges | Section 2.3 of [Part5] |
 | Allow | Section 7.4.1 |
 | Server | Section 7.4.2 |
 +-------------------+------------------------+
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7.4.1. Allow
 The "Allow" header field lists the set of methods advertised as
 supported by the target resource. The purpose of this field is
 strictly to inform the recipient of valid request methods associated
 with the resource.
 Allow = #method
 Example of use:
 Allow: GET, HEAD, PUT
 The actual set of allowed methods is defined by the origin server at
 the time of each request. An origin server MUST generate an Allow
 field in a 405 (Method Not Allowed) response and MAY do so in any
 other response. An empty Allow field value indicates that the
 resource allows no methods, which might occur in a 405 response if
 the resource has been temporarily disabled by configuration.
 A proxy MUST NOT modify the Allow header field -- it does not need to
 understand all of the indicated methods in order to handle them
 according to the generic message handling rules.
7.4.2. Server
 The "Server" header field contains information about the software
 used by the origin server to handle the request, which is often used
 by clients to help identify the scope of reported interoperability
 problems, to work around or tailor requests to avoid particular
 server limitations, and for analytics regarding server or operating
 system use. An origin server MAY generate a Server field in its
 responses.
 Server = product *( RWS ( product / comment ) )
 The Server field-value consists of one or more product identifiers,
 each followed by zero or more comments (Section 3.2 of [Part1]),
 which together identify the origin server software and its
 significant subproducts. By convention, the product identifiers are
 listed in decreasing order of their significance for identifying the
 origin server software. Each product identifier consists of a name
 and optional version, as defined in Section 5.5.3.
 Example:
 Server: CERN/3.0 libwww/2.17
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 An origin server SHOULD NOT generate a Server field containing
 needlessly fine-grained detail and SHOULD limit the addition of
 subproducts by third parties. Overly long and detailed Server field
 values increase response latency and potentially reveal internal
 implementation details that might make it (slightly) easier for
 attackers to find and exploit known security holes.
8. IANA Considerations
8.1. Method Registry
 The HTTP Method Registry defines the name space for the request
 method token (Section 4). The method registry will be created and
 maintained at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-methods>.
8.1.1. Procedure
 HTTP method registrations MUST include the following fields:
 o Method Name (see Section 4)
 o Safe ("yes" or "no", see Section 4.2.1)
 o Idempotent ("yes" or "no", see Section 4.2.2)
 o Pointer to specification text
 Values to be added to this name space require IETF Review (see
 [RFC5226], Section 4.1).
8.1.2. Considerations for New Methods
 Standardized methods are generic; that is, they are potentially
 applicable to any resource, not just one particular media type, kind
 of resource, or application. As such, it is preferred that new
 methods be registered in a document that isn't specific to a single
 application or data format, since orthogonal technologies deserve
 orthogonal specification.
 Since message parsing (Section 3.3 of [Part1]) needs to be
 independent of method semantics (aside from responses to HEAD),
 definitions of new methods cannot change the parsing algorithm or
 prohibit the presence of a message body on either the request or the
 response message. Definitions of new methods can specify that only a
 zero-length message body is allowed by requiring a Content-Length
 header field with a value of "0".
 A new method definition needs to indicate whether it is safe
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 (Section 4.2.1), idempotent (Section 4.2.2), cacheable
 (Section 4.2.3), what semantics are to be associated with the payload
 body if any is present in the request, and what refinements the
 method makes to header field or status code semantics. If the new
 method is cacheable, its definition ought to describe how, and under
 what conditions, a cache can store a response and use it to satisfy a
 subsequent request. The new method ought to describe whether it can
 be made conditional (Section 5.2) and, if so, how a server responds
 when the condition is false. Likewise, if the new method might have
 some use for partial response semantics ([Part5]), it ought to
 document this too.
 Note: Avoid defining a method name that starts with "M-", since
 that prefix might be misinterpreted as having the semantics
 assigned to it by [RFC2774].
8.1.3. Registrations
 The HTTP Method Registry shall be populated with the registrations
 below:
 +---------+------+------------+---------------+
 | Method | Safe | Idempotent | Reference |
 +---------+------+------------+---------------+
 | CONNECT | no | no | Section 4.3.6 |
 | DELETE | no | yes | Section 4.3.5 |
 | GET | yes | yes | Section 4.3.1 |
 | HEAD | yes | yes | Section 4.3.2 |
 | OPTIONS | yes | yes | Section 4.3.7 |
 | POST | no | no | Section 4.3.3 |
 | PUT | no | yes | Section 4.3.4 |
 | TRACE | yes | yes | Section 4.3.8 |
 +---------+------+------------+---------------+
8.2. Status Code Registry
 The HTTP Status Code Registry defines the name space for the response
 status-code token (Section 6). The status code registry is
 maintained at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-status-codes>.
 This Section replaces the registration procedure for HTTP Status
 Codes previously defined in Section 7.1 of [RFC2817].
8.2.1. Procedure
 A registration MUST include the following fields:
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 o Status Code (3 digits)
 o Short Description
 o Pointer to specification text
 Values to be added to the HTTP status code name space require IETF
 Review (see [RFC5226], Section 4.1).
8.2.2. Considerations for New Status Codes
 When it is necessary to express semantics for a response that are not
 defined by current status codes, a new status code can be registered.
 Status codes are generic; they are potentially applicable to any
 resource, not just one particular media type, kind of resource, or
 application of HTTP. As such, it is preferred that new status codes
 be registered in a document that isn't specific to a single
 application.
 New status codes are required to fall under one of the categories
 defined in Section 6. To allow existing parsers to process the
 response message, new status codes cannot disallow a payload,
 although they can mandate a zero-length payload body.
 Proposals for new status codes that are not yet widely deployed ought
 to avoid allocating a specific number for the code until there is
 clear consensus that it will be registered; instead, early drafts can
 use a notation such as "4NN", or "3N0" .. "3N9", to indicate the
 class of the proposed status code(s) without consuming a number
 prematurely.
 The definition of a new status code ought to explain the request
 conditions that would cause a response containing that status code
 (e.g., combinations of request header fields and/or method(s)) along
 with any dependencies on response header fields (e.g., what fields
 are required, what fields can modify the semantics, and what header
 field semantics are further refined when used with the new status
 code).
 The definition of a new status code ought to specify whether or not
 it is cacheable. Note that all status codes can be cached if the
 response they occur in has explicit freshness information; however,
 status codes that are defined as being cacheable are allowed to be
 cached without explicit freshness information. Likewise, the
 definition of a status code can place constraints upon cache
 behavior. See [Part6] for more information.
 Finally, the definition of a new status code ought to indicate
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 whether the payload has any implied association with an identified
 resource (Section 3.1.4.1).
8.2.3. Registrations
 The HTTP Status Code Registry shall be updated with the registrations
 below:
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 +-------+-------------------------------+----------------+
 | Value | Description | Reference |
 +-------+-------------------------------+----------------+
 | 100 | Continue | Section 6.2.1 |
 | 101 | Switching Protocols | Section 6.2.2 |
 | 200 | OK | Section 6.3.1 |
 | 201 | Created | Section 6.3.2 |
 | 202 | Accepted | Section 6.3.3 |
 | 203 | Non-Authoritative Information | Section 6.3.4 |
 | 204 | No Content | Section 6.3.5 |
 | 205 | Reset Content | Section 6.3.6 |
 | 300 | Multiple Choices | Section 6.4.1 |
 | 301 | Moved Permanently | Section 6.4.2 |
 | 302 | Found | Section 6.4.3 |
 | 303 | See Other | Section 6.4.4 |
 | 305 | Use Proxy | Section 6.4.5 |
 | 306 | (Unused) | Section 6.4.6 |
 | 307 | Temporary Redirect | Section 6.4.7 |
 | 400 | Bad Request | Section 6.5.1 |
 | 402 | Payment Required | Section 6.5.2 |
 | 403 | Forbidden | Section 6.5.3 |
 | 404 | Not Found | Section 6.5.4 |
 | 405 | Method Not Allowed | Section 6.5.5 |
 | 406 | Not Acceptable | Section 6.5.6 |
 | 408 | Request Timeout | Section 6.5.7 |
 | 409 | Conflict | Section 6.5.8 |
 | 410 | Gone | Section 6.5.9 |
 | 411 | Length Required | Section 6.5.10 |
 | 413 | Payload Too Large | Section 6.5.11 |
 | 414 | URI Too Long | Section 6.5.12 |
 | 415 | Unsupported Media Type | Section 6.5.13 |
 | 417 | Expectation Failed | Section 6.5.14 |
 | 426 | Upgrade Required | Section 6.5.15 |
 | 500 | Internal Server Error | Section 6.6.1 |
 | 501 | Not Implemented | Section 6.6.2 |
 | 502 | Bad Gateway | Section 6.6.3 |
 | 503 | Service Unavailable | Section 6.6.4 |
 | 504 | Gateway Timeout | Section 6.6.5 |
 | 505 | HTTP Version Not Supported | Section 6.6.6 |
 +-------+-------------------------------+----------------+
8.3. Header Field Registry
 HTTP header fields are registered within the Message Header Field
 Registry located at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/message-headers/
 message-header-index.html>, as defined by [BCP90].
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8.3.1. Considerations for New Header Fields
 Header fields are key:value pairs that can be used to communicate
 data about the message, its payload, the target resource, or the
 connection (i.e., control data). See Section 3.2 of [Part1] for a
 general definition of header field syntax in HTTP messages.
 The requirements for header field names are defined in [BCP90].
 Authors of specifications defining new fields are advised to keep the
 name as short as practical and to not prefix the name with "X-"
 unless the header field will never be used on the Internet. (The
 "x-" prefix idiom has been extensively misused in practice; it was
 intended to only be used as a mechanism for avoiding name collisions
 inside proprietary software or intranet processing, since the prefix
 would ensure that private names never collide with a newly registered
 Internet name.)
 New header field values typically have their syntax defined using
 ABNF ([RFC5234]), using the extension defined in Appendix B of
 [Part1] as necessary, and are usually constrained to the range of
 ASCII characters. Header fields needing a greater range of
 characters can use an encoding such as the one defined in [RFC5987].
 Leading and trailing whitespace in raw field values is removed upon
 field parsing (Section 3.2.4 of [Part1]). Field definitions where
 leading or trailing whitespace in values is significant will have to
 use a container syntax such as quoted-string.
 Because commas (",") are used as a generic delimiter between field-
 values, they need to be treated with care if they are allowed in the
 field-value. Typically, components that might contain a comma are
 protected with double-quotes using the quoted-string ABNF production
 (Section 3.2.6 of [Part1]).
 For example, a textual date and a URI (either of which might contain
 a comma) could be safely carried in field-values like these:
 Example-URI-Field: "http://example.com/a.html,foo",
 "http://without-a-comma.example.com/"
 Example-Date-Field: "1996年5月04日", "2005年9月14日"
 Note that double-quote delimiters almost always are used with the
 quoted-string production; using a different syntax inside double-
 quotes will likely cause unnecessary confusion.
 Many header fields use a format including (case-insensitively) named
 parameters (for instance, Content-Type, defined in Section 3.1.1.5).
 Allowing both unquoted (token) and quoted (quoted-string) syntax for
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 the parameter value enables recipients to use existing parser
 components. When allowing both forms, the meaning of a parameter
 value ought to be independent of the syntax used for it (for an
 example, see the notes on parameter handling for media types in
 Section 3.1.1.1).
 Authors of specifications defining new header fields are advised to
 consider documenting:
 o Whether the field is a single value, or whether it can be a list
 (delimited by commas; see Section 3.2 of [Part1]).
 If it does not use the list syntax, document how to treat messages
 where the field occurs multiple times (a sensible default would be
 to ignore the field, but this might not always be the right
 choice).
 Note that intermediaries and software libraries might combine
 multiple header field instances into a single one, despite the
 field's definition not allowing the list syntax. A robust format
 enables recipients to discover these situations (good example:
 "Content-Type", as the comma can only appear inside quoted
 strings; bad example: "Location", as a comma can occur inside a
 URI).
 o Under what conditions the header field can be used; e.g., only in
 responses or requests, in all messages, only on responses to a
 particular request method, etc.
 o Whether the field should be stored by origin servers that
 understand it upon a PUT request.
 o Whether the field semantics are further refined by the context,
 such as by existing request methods or status codes.
 o Whether it is appropriate to list the field-name in the Connection
 header field (i.e., if the header field is to be hop-by-hop; see
 Section 6.1 of [Part1]).
 o Under what conditions intermediaries are allowed to insert,
 delete, or modify the field's value.
 o Whether it is appropriate to list the field-name in a Vary
 response header field (e.g., when the request header field is used
 by an origin server's content selection algorithm; see
 Section 7.1.4).
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 o Whether the header field is useful or allowable in trailers (see
 Section 4.1 of [Part1]).
 o Whether the header field ought to be preserved across redirects.
8.3.2. Registrations
 The Message Header Field Registry shall be updated with the following
 permanent registrations:
 +-------------------+----------+----------+-----------------+
 | Header Field Name | Protocol | Status | Reference |
 +-------------------+----------+----------+-----------------+
 | Accept | http | standard | Section 5.3.2 |
 | Accept-Charset | http | standard | Section 5.3.3 |
 | Accept-Encoding | http | standard | Section 5.3.4 |
 | Accept-Language | http | standard | Section 5.3.5 |
 | Allow | http | standard | Section 7.4.1 |
 | Content-Encoding | http | standard | Section 3.1.2.2 |
 | Content-Language | http | standard | Section 3.1.3.2 |
 | Content-Location | http | standard | Section 3.1.4.2 |
 | Content-Type | http | standard | Section 3.1.1.5 |
 | Date | http | standard | Section 7.1.1.2 |
 | Expect | http | standard | Section 5.1.1 |
 | From | http | standard | Section 5.5.1 |
 | Location | http | standard | Section 7.1.2 |
 | MIME-Version | http | standard | Appendix A.1 |
 | Max-Forwards | http | standard | Section 5.1.2 |
 | Referer | http | standard | Section 5.5.2 |
 | Retry-After | http | standard | Section 7.1.3 |
 | Server | http | standard | Section 7.4.2 |
 | User-Agent | http | standard | Section 5.5.3 |
 | Vary | http | standard | Section 7.1.4 |
 +-------------------+----------+----------+-----------------+
 The change controller for the above registrations is: "IETF
 (iesg@ietf.org) - Internet Engineering Task Force".
8.4. Content Coding Registry
 The HTTP Content Coding Registry defines the name space for content
 coding names (Section 4.2 of [Part1]). The content coding registry
 is maintained at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters>.
8.4.1. Procedure
 Content Coding registrations MUST include the following fields:
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 o Name
 o Description
 o Pointer to specification text
 Names of content codings MUST NOT overlap with names of transfer
 codings (Section 4 of [Part1]), unless the encoding transformation is
 identical (as is the case for the compression codings defined in
 Section 4.2 of [Part1]).
 Values to be added to this name space require IETF Review (see
 Section 4.1 of [RFC5226]), and MUST conform to the purpose of content
 coding defined in this section.
8.4.2. Registrations
 The HTTP Content Codings Registry shall be updated with the
 registrations below:
 +------------+--------------------------------------+---------------+
 | Name | Description | Reference |
 +------------+--------------------------------------+---------------+
 | compress | UNIX "compress" data format [Welch] | Section 4.2.1 |
 | | | of [Part1] |
 | deflate | "deflate" compressed data | Section 4.2.2 |
 | | ([RFC1951]) inside the "zlib" data | of [Part1] |
 | | format ([RFC1950]) | |
 | gzip | GZIP file format [RFC1952] | Section 4.2.3 |
 | | | of [Part1] |
 | identity | Reserved (synonym for "no encoding" | Section 5.3.4 |
 | | in Accept-Encoding) | |
 | x-compress | Deprecated (alias for compress) | Section 4.2.1 |
 | | | of [Part1] |
 | x-gzip | Deprecated (alias for gzip) | Section 4.2.3 |
 | | | of [Part1] |
 +------------+--------------------------------------+---------------+
9. Security Considerations
 This section is meant to inform developers, information providers,
 and users of known security concerns relevant to HTTP/1.1 semantics
 and its use for transferring information over the Internet.
9.1. Attacks Based On File and Path Names
 Origin servers frequently make use of their local file system to
 manage the mapping from effective request URI to resource
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 representations. Implementers need to be aware that most file
 systems are not designed to protect against malicious file or path
 names, and thus depend on the origin server to avoid mapping to file
 names, folders, or directories that have special significance to the
 system.
 For example, UNIX, Microsoft Windows, and other operating systems use
 ".." as a path component to indicate a directory level above the
 current one, and use specially named paths or file names to send data
 to system devices. Similar naming conventions might exist within
 other types of storage systems. Likewise, local storage systems have
 an annoying tendency to prefer user-friendliness over security when
 handling invalid or unexpected characters, recomposition of
 decomposed characters, and case-normalization of case-insensitive
 names.
 Attacks based on such special names tend to focus on either denial of
 service (e.g., telling the server to read from a COM port) or
 disclosure of configuration and source files that are not meant to be
 served.
9.2. Personal Information
 Clients are often privy to large amounts of personal information,
 including both information provided by the user to interact with
 resources (e.g., the user's name, location, mail address, passwords,
 encryption keys, etc.) and information about the user's browsing
 activity over time (e.g., history, bookmarks, etc.). Implementations
 need to prevent unintentional leakage of personal information.
9.3. Sensitive Information in URIs
 URIs are intended to be shared, not secured, even when they identify
 secure resources. URIs are often shown on displays, added to
 templates when a page is printed, and stored in a variety of
 unprotected bookmark lists. It is therefore unwise to include
 information within a URI that is sensitive, personally identifiable,
 or a risk to disclose.
 Authors of services ought to avoid GET-based forms for the submission
 of sensitive data because that data will be placed in the request-
 target. Many existing servers, proxies, and user agents log or
 display the request-target in places where it might be visible to
 third parties. Such services ought to use POST-based form submission
 instead.
 Since the Referer header field tells a target site about the context
 that resulted in a request, it has the potential to reveal
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 information about the user's immediate browsing history and any
 personal information that might be found in the referring resource's
 URI. Limitations on Referer are described in Section 5.5.2 to
 address some of its security considerations.
9.4. Product Information
 The User-Agent (Section 5.5.3), Via (Section 5.7.1 of [Part1]), and
 Server (Section 7.4.2) header fields often reveal information about
 the respective sender's software systems. In theory, this can make
 it easier for an attacker to exploit known security holes; in
 practice, attackers tend to try all potential holes regardless of the
 apparent software versions being used.
 Proxies that serve as a portal through a network firewall ought to
 take special precautions regarding the transfer of header information
 that might identify hosts behind the firewall. The Via header field
 allows intermediaries to replace sensitive machine names with
 pseudonyms.
9.5. Fragment after Redirects
 Although fragment identifiers used within URI references are not sent
 in requests, implementers ought to be aware that they will be visible
 to the user agent and any extensions or scripts running as a result
 of the response. In particular, when a redirect occurs and the
 original request's fragment identifier is inherited by the new
 reference in Location (Section 7.1.2), this might have the effect of
 leaking one site's fragment to another site. If the first site uses
 personal information in fragments, it ought to ensure that redirects
 to other sites include a (possibly empty) fragment component in order
 to block that inheritance.
9.6. Browser Fingerprinting
 Browser fingerprinting is a set of techniques for identifying a
 specific user agent over time through its unique set of
 characteristics. These characteristics might include information
 related to its TCP behavior, feature capabilities, and scripting
 environment, though of particular interest here is the set of unique
 characteristics that might be communicated via HTTP. Fingerprinting
 is considered a privacy concern because it enables tracking of a user
 agent's behavior over time without the corresponding controls that
 the user might have over other forms of data collection (e.g.,
 cookies). Many general-purpose user agents (i.e., Web browsers) have
 taken steps to reduce their fingerprints.
 There are a number of request header fields that might reveal
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 information to servers that is sufficiently unique to enable
 fingerprinting. The From header field is the most obvious, though it
 is expected that From will only be sent when self-identification is
 desired by the user. Likewise, Cookie header fields are deliberately
 designed to enable re-identification, so we can assume that
 fingerprinting concerns only apply to situations where cookies are
 disabled or restricted by browser configuration.
 The User-Agent header field might contain enough information to
 uniquely identify a specific device, usually when combined with other
 characteristics, particularly if the user agent sends excessive
 details about the user's system or extensions. However, the source
 of unique information that is least expected by users is proactive
 negotiation (Section 5.3), including the Accept, Accept-Charset,
 Accept-Encoding, and Accept-Language header fields.
 In addition to the fingerprinting concern, detailed use of the
 Accept-Language header field can reveal information the user might
 consider to be of a private nature, because the understanding of
 particular languages is often strongly correlated to membership in a
 particular ethnic group. An approach that limits such loss of
 privacy would be for a user agent to omit the sending of Accept-
 Language except for sites that have been whitelisted, perhaps via
 interaction after detecting a Vary header field that would indicate
 language negotiation might be useful.
 In environments where proxies are used to enhance privacy, user
 agents ought to be conservative in sending proactive negotiation
 header fields. General-purpose user agents that provide a high
 degree of header field configurability ought to inform users about
 the loss of privacy that might result if too much detail is provided.
 As an extreme privacy measure, proxies could filter the proactive
 negotiation header fields in relayed requests.
10. Acknowledgments
 See Section 9 of [Part1].
11. References
11.1. Normative References
 [Part1] Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext
 Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and
 Routing", draft-ietf-httpbis-p1-messaging-23 (work in
 progress), July 2013.
 [Part4] Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext
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 Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Conditional Requests",
 draft-ietf-httpbis-p4-conditional-23 (work in
 progress), July 2013.
 [Part5] Fielding, R., Ed., Lafon, Y., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed.,
 "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Range
 Requests", draft-ietf-httpbis-p5-range-23 (work in
 progress), July 2013.
 [Part6] Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke,
 Ed., "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Caching",
 draft-ietf-httpbis-p6-cache-23 (work in progress),
 July 2013.
 [Part7] Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext
 Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Authentication",
 draft-ietf-httpbis-p7-auth-23 (work in progress),
 July 2013.
 [RFC1950] Deutsch, L. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data
 Format Specification version 3.3", RFC 1950, May 1996.
 [RFC1951] Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format
 Specification version 1.3", RFC 1951, May 1996.
 [RFC1952] Deutsch, P., Gailly, J-L., Adler, M., Deutsch, L., and
 G. Randers-Pehrson, "GZIP file format specification
 version 4.3", RFC 1952, May 1996.
 [RFC2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet
 Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet
 Message Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.
 [RFC2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet
 Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types",
 RFC 2046, November 1996.
 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter,
 "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax",
 STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005.
 [RFC4647] Phillips, A., Ed. and M. Davis, Ed., "Matching of
 Language Tags", BCP 47, RFC 4647, September 2006.
 [RFC5234] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for
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 Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
 January 2008.
 [RFC5646] Phillips, A., Ed. and M. Davis, Ed., "Tags for
 Identifying Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646,
 September 2009.
 [RFC6365] Hoffman, P. and J. Klensin, "Terminology Used in
 Internationalization in the IETF", BCP 166, RFC 6365,
 September 2011.
 [Welch] Welch, T., "A Technique for High Performance Data
 Compression", IEEE Computer 17(6), June 1984.
11.2. Informative References
 [BCP13] Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
 Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
 RFC 6838, January 2013.
 [BCP90] Klyne, G., Nottingham, M., and J. Mogul, "Registration
 Procedures for Message Header Fields", BCP 90,
 RFC 3864, September 2004.
 [REST] Fielding, R., "Architectural Styles and the Design of
 Network-based Software Architectures", Doctoral
 Dissertation, University of California, Irvine ,
 September 2000,
 <http://roy.gbiv.com/pubs/dissertation/top.htm>.
 [RFC1305] Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)
 Specification, Implementation", RFC 1305, March 1992.
 [RFC1945] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and H. Nielsen,
 "Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0", RFC 1945,
 May 1996.
 [RFC2049] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet
 Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Five: Conformance Criteria
 and Examples", RFC 2049, November 1996.
 [RFC2068] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Nielsen, H., and
 T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --
 HTTP/1.1", RFC 2068, January 1997.
 [RFC2295] Holtman, K. and A. Mutz, "Transparent Content
 Negotiation in HTTP", RFC 2295, March 1998.
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 [RFC2388] Masinter, L., "Returning Values from Forms: multipart/
 form-data", RFC 2388, August 1998.
 [RFC2557] Palme, F., Hopmann, A., Shelness, N., and E. Stefferud,
 "MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as
 HTML (MHTML)", RFC 2557, March 1999.
 [RFC2616] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
 Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
 Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.
 [RFC2774] Frystyk, H., Leach, P., and S. Lawrence, "An HTTP
 Extension Framework", RFC 2774, February 2000.
 [RFC2817] Khare, R. and S. Lawrence, "Upgrading to TLS Within
 HTTP/1.1", RFC 2817, May 2000.
 [RFC2978] Freed, N. and J. Postel, "IANA Charset Registration
 Procedures", BCP 19, RFC 2978, October 2000.
 [RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing
 an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
 RFC 5226, May 2008.
 [RFC5322] Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
 October 2008.
 [RFC5789] Dusseault, L. and J. Snell, "PATCH Method for HTTP",
 RFC 5789, March 2010.
 [RFC5987] Reschke, J., "Character Set and Language Encoding for
 Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Header Field
 Parameters", RFC 5987, August 2010.
 [RFC5988] Nottingham, M., "Web Linking", RFC 5988, October 2010.
 [RFC6265] Barth, A., "HTTP State Management Mechanism", RFC 6265,
 April 2011.
 [RFC6266] Reschke, J., "Use of the Content-Disposition Header
 Field in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)",
 RFC 6266, June 2011.
 [status-308] Reschke, J., "The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
 Status Code 308 (Permanent Redirect)",
 draft-reschke-http-status-308-07 (work in progress),
 March 2012.
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Appendix A. Differences between HTTP and MIME
 HTTP/1.1 uses many of the constructs defined for the Internet Message
 Format [RFC5322] and the Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME)
 [RFC2045] to allow a message body to be transmitted in an open
 variety of representations and with extensible header fields.
 However, RFC 2045 is focused only on email; applications of HTTP have
 many characteristics that differ from email, and hence HTTP has
 features that differ from MIME. These differences were carefully
 chosen to optimize performance over binary connections, to allow
 greater freedom in the use of new media types, to make date
 comparisons easier, and to acknowledge the practice of some early
 HTTP servers and clients.
 This appendix describes specific areas where HTTP differs from MIME.
 Proxies and gateways to and from strict MIME environments need to be
 aware of these differences and provide the appropriate conversions
 where necessary.
A.1. MIME-Version
 HTTP is not a MIME-compliant protocol. However, messages can include
 a single MIME-Version header field to indicate what version of the
 MIME protocol was used to construct the message. Use of the MIME-
 Version header field indicates that the message is in full
 conformance with the MIME protocol (as defined in [RFC2045]).
 Senders are responsible for ensuring full conformance (where
 possible) when exporting HTTP messages to strict MIME environments.
A.2. Conversion to Canonical Form
 MIME requires that an Internet mail body part be converted to
 canonical form prior to being transferred, as described in Section 4
 of [RFC2049]. Section 3.1.1.3 of this document describes the forms
 allowed for subtypes of the "text" media type when transmitted over
 HTTP. [RFC2046] requires that content with a type of "text"
 represent line breaks as CRLF and forbids the use of CR or LF outside
 of line break sequences. HTTP allows CRLF, bare CR, and bare LF to
 indicate a line break within text content.
 A proxy or gateway from HTTP to a strict MIME environment ought to
 translate all line breaks within the text media types described in
 Section 3.1.1.3 of this document to the RFC 2049 canonical form of
 CRLF. Note, however, this might be complicated by the presence of a
 Content-Encoding and by the fact that HTTP allows the use of some
 charsets that do not use octets 13 and 10 to represent CR and LF,
 respectively.
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 Conversion will break any cryptographic checksums applied to the
 original content unless the original content is already in canonical
 form. Therefore, the canonical form is recommended for any content
 that uses such checksums in HTTP.
A.3. Conversion of Date Formats
 HTTP/1.1 uses a restricted set of date formats (Section 7.1.1.1) to
 simplify the process of date comparison. Proxies and gateways from
 other protocols ought to ensure that any Date header field present in
 a message conforms to one of the HTTP/1.1 formats and rewrite the
 date if necessary.
A.4. Conversion of Content-Encoding
 MIME does not include any concept equivalent to HTTP/1.1's Content-
 Encoding header field. Since this acts as a modifier on the media
 type, proxies and gateways from HTTP to MIME-compliant protocols
 ought to either change the value of the Content-Type header field or
 decode the representation before forwarding the message. (Some
 experimental applications of Content-Type for Internet mail have used
 a media-type parameter of ";conversions=<content-coding>" to perform
 a function equivalent to Content-Encoding. However, this parameter
 is not part of the MIME standards).
A.5. Conversion of Content-Transfer-Encoding
 HTTP does not use the Content-Transfer-Encoding field of MIME.
 Proxies and gateways from MIME-compliant protocols to HTTP need to
 remove any Content-Transfer-Encoding prior to delivering the response
 message to an HTTP client.
 Proxies and gateways from HTTP to MIME-compliant protocols are
 responsible for ensuring that the message is in the correct format
 and encoding for safe transport on that protocol, where "safe
 transport" is defined by the limitations of the protocol being used.
 Such a proxy or gateway ought to transform and label the data with an
 appropriate Content-Transfer-Encoding if doing so will improve the
 likelihood of safe transport over the destination protocol.
A.6. MHTML and Line Length Limitations
 HTTP implementations that share code with MHTML [RFC2557]
 implementations need to be aware of MIME line length limitations.
 Since HTTP does not have this limitation, HTTP does not fold long
 lines. MHTML messages being transported by HTTP follow all
 conventions of MHTML, including line length limitations and folding,
 canonicalization, etc., since HTTP transfers message-bodies as
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 payload and, aside from the "multipart/byteranges" type (Appendix A
 of [Part5]), does not interpret the content or any MIME header lines
 that might be contained therein.
Appendix B. Changes from RFC 2616 
 The primary changes in this revision have been editorial in nature:
 extracting the messaging syntax and partitioning HTTP semantics into
 separate documents for the core features, conditional requests,
 partial requests, caching, and authentication. The conformance
 language has been revised to clearly target requirements and the
 terminology has been improved to distinguish payload from
 representations and representations from resources. An algorithm has
 been added for determining if a payload is associated with a specific
 identifier (Section 3.1.4.1).
 A new requirement has been added that semantics embedded in a URI
 should be disabled when those semantics are inconsistent with the
 request method, since this is a common cause of interoperability
 failure.
 The default charset of ISO-8859-1 for text media types has been
 removed; the default is now whatever the media type definition says
 (Section 3.1.1.3). Likewise, special treatment of ISO-8859-1 has
 been removed from the Accept-Charset header field (Section 5.3.3).
 The Content-Disposition header field has been removed since it is now
 defined by [RFC6266].
 The definition of Content-Location has been changed to no longer
 affect the base URI for resolving relative URI references, due to
 poor implementation support and the undesirable effect of potentially
 breaking relative links in content-negotiated resources
 (Section 3.1.4.2).
 The Content-MD5 header field has been removed because it was
 inconsistently implemented with respect to partial responses.
 To be consistent with the method-neutral parsing algorithm of
 [Part1], the definition of GET has been relaxed so that requests can
 have a body, even though a body has no meaning for GET
 (Section 4.3.1).
 Servers are no longer required to handle all Content-* header fields
 and use of Content-Range has been explicitly banned in PUT requests
 (Section 4.3.4).
 Definition of the CONNECT method has been moved from [RFC2817] to
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 this specification (Section 4.3.6).
 The OPTIONS (Section 4.3.7) and TRACE (Section 4.3.8) request methods
 have been defined as being safe.
 The definition of Expect has been both fixed to allow parameters for
 value-less expectations and simplified to allow trailing semicolons
 after "100-continue" (Section 5.1.1).
 The Max-Forwards header field (Section 5.1.2) has been restricted to
 the OPTIONS and TRACE methods; previously, extension methods could
 have used it as well.
 The "about:blank" URI has been suggested as a value for the Referer
 header field when no referring URI is applicable, which distinguishes
 that case from others where the Referer field is not sent or has been
 removed (Section 5.5.2).
 The 201 (Created) status description has been changed to allow for
 the possibility that more than one resource has been created
 (Section 6.3.2).
 The definition of 203 (Non-Authoritative Information) has been
 broadened to include cases of payload transformations as well
 (Section 6.3.4).
 The redirect status codes 301, 302, and 307 no longer have normative
 requirements on response payloads and user interaction (Section 6.4).
 The request methods that are safe to automatically redirect is no
 longer a closed set; user agents are able to make that determination
 based upon the request method semantics (Section 6.4).
 The description of 303 (See Other) status code has been changed to
 allow it to be cached if explicit freshness information is given, and
 a specific definition has been added for a 303 response to GET
 (Section 6.4.4).
 The status codes 301 and 302 (sections 6.4.2 and 6.4.3) have been
 changed to allow user agents to rewrite the method from POST to GET.
 The 305 (Use Proxy) status code has been deprecated due to security
 concerns regarding in-band configuration of a proxy (Section 6.4.5).
 The 400 (Bad Request) status code has been relaxed so that it isn't
 limited to syntax errors (Section 6.5.1).
 The 426 (Upgrade Required) status code has been incorporated from
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 [RFC2817] (Section 6.5.15).
 The following status codes are now cacheable (that is, they can be
 stored and reused by a cache without explicit freshness information
 present): 204, 404, 405, 414, 501.
 Allow has been reclassified as a response header field, removing the
 option to specify it in a PUT request. Requirements relating to the
 content of Allow have been relaxed; correspondingly, clients are not
 required to always trust its value (Section 7.4.1).
 The target of requirements on HTTP-date and the Date header field
 have been reduced to those systems generating the date, rather than
 all systems sending a date (Section 7.1.1).
 The syntax of the Location header field has been changed to allow all
 URI references, including relative references and fragments, along
 with some clarifications as to when use of fragments would not be
 appropriate (Section 7.1.2).
 A Method Registry has been defined (Section 8.1).
 The Status Code Registry (Section 8.2) has been redefined by this
 specification; previously, it was defined in Section 7.1 of
 [RFC2817].
 Registration of Content Codings has been changed to require IETF
 Review (Section 8.4).
Appendix C. Imported ABNF
 The following core rules are included by reference, as defined in
 Appendix B.1 of [RFC5234]: ALPHA (letters), CR (carriage return),
 CRLF (CR LF), CTL (controls), DIGIT (decimal 0-9), DQUOTE (double
 quote), HEXDIG (hexadecimal 0-9/A-F/a-f), HTAB (horizontal tab), LF
 (line feed), OCTET (any 8-bit sequence of data), SP (space), and
 VCHAR (any visible US-ASCII character).
 The rules below are defined in [Part1]:
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 BWS = <BWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 OWS = <OWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 RWS = <RWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 URI-reference = <URI-reference, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 absolute-URI = <absolute-URI, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 comment = <comment, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 field-name = <comment, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2>
 partial-URI = <partial-URI, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 quoted-string = <quoted-string, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 token = <token, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 word = <word, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
Appendix D. Collected ABNF
 In the collected ABNF below, list rules are expanded as per Section
 1.2 of [Part1].
 Accept = [ ( "," / ( media-range [ accept-params ] ) ) *( OWS "," [
 OWS ( media-range [ accept-params ] ) ] ) ]
 Accept-Charset = *( "," OWS ) ( ( charset / "*" ) [ weight ] ) *( OWS
 "," [ OWS ( ( charset / "*" ) [ weight ] ) ] )
 Accept-Encoding = [ ( "," / ( codings [ weight ] ) ) *( OWS "," [ OWS
 ( codings [ weight ] ) ] ) ]
 Accept-Language = *( "," OWS ) ( language-range [ weight ] ) *( OWS
 "," [ OWS ( language-range [ weight ] ) ] )
 Allow = [ ( "," / method ) *( OWS "," [ OWS method ] ) ]
 BWS = <BWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 Content-Encoding = *( "," OWS ) content-coding *( OWS "," [ OWS
 content-coding ] )
 Content-Language = *( "," OWS ) language-tag *( OWS "," [ OWS
 language-tag ] )
 Content-Location = absolute-URI / partial-URI
 Content-Type = media-type
 Date = HTTP-date
 Expect = *( "," OWS ) expectation *( OWS "," [ OWS expectation ] )
 From = mailbox
 GMT = %x47.4D.54 ; GMT
 HTTP-date = IMF-fixdate / obs-date
 IMF-fixdate = day-name "," SP date1 SP time-of-day SP GMT
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 Location = URI-reference
 Max-Forwards = 1*DIGIT
 OWS = <OWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 RWS = <RWS, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.3>
 Referer = absolute-URI / partial-URI
 Retry-After = HTTP-date / delta-seconds
 Server = product *( RWS ( product / comment ) )
 URI-reference = <URI-reference, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 User-Agent = product *( RWS ( product / comment ) )
 Vary = "*" / ( *( "," OWS ) field-name *( OWS "," [ OWS field-name ]
 ) )
 absolute-URI = <absolute-URI, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 accept-ext = OWS ";" OWS token [ "=" word ]
 accept-params = weight *accept-ext
 asctime-date = day-name SP date3 SP time-of-day SP year
 attribute = token
 charset = token
 codings = content-coding / "identity" / "*"
 comment = <comment, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 content-coding = token
 date1 = day SP month SP year
 date2 = day "-" month "-" 2DIGIT
 date3 = month SP ( 2DIGIT / ( SP DIGIT ) )
 day = 2DIGIT
 day-name = %x4D.6F.6E ; Mon
 / %x54.75.65 ; Tue
 / %x57.65.64 ; Wed
 / %x54.68.75 ; Thu
 / %x46.72.69 ; Fri
 / %x53.61.74 ; Sat
 / %x53.75.6E ; Sun
 day-name-l = %x4D.6F.6E.64.61.79 ; Monday
 / %x54.75.65.73.64.61.79 ; Tuesday
 / %x57.65.64.6E.65.73.64.61.79 ; Wednesday
 / %x54.68.75.72.73.64.61.79 ; Thursday
 / %x46.72.69.64.61.79 ; Friday
 / %x53.61.74.75.72.64.61.79 ; Saturday
 / %x53.75.6E.64.61.79 ; Sunday
 delta-seconds = 1*DIGIT
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 expect-name = token
 expect-param = expect-name [ BWS "=" BWS expect-value ]
 expect-value = token / quoted-string
 expectation = expect-name [ BWS "=" BWS expect-value ] *( OWS ";" [
 OWS expect-param ] )
 field-name = <comment, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2>
 hour = 2DIGIT
 language-range = <language-range, defined in [RFC4647], Section 2.1>
 language-tag = <Language-Tag, defined in [RFC5646], Section 2.1>
 mailbox = <mailbox, defined in [RFC5322], Section 3.4>
 media-range = ( "*/*" / ( type "/*" ) / ( type "/" subtype ) ) *( OWS
 ";" OWS parameter )
 media-type = type "/" subtype *( OWS ";" OWS parameter )
 method = token
 minute = 2DIGIT
 month = %x4A.61.6E ; Jan
 / %x46.65.62 ; Feb
 / %x4D.61.72 ; Mar
 / %x41.70.72 ; Apr
 / %x4D.61.79 ; May
 / %x4A.75.6E ; Jun
 / %x4A.75.6C ; Jul
 / %x41.75.67 ; Aug
 / %x53.65.70 ; Sep
 / %x4F.63.74 ; Oct
 / %x4E.6F.76 ; Nov
 / %x44.65.63 ; Dec
 obs-date = rfc850-date / asctime-date
 parameter = attribute "=" value
 partial-URI = <partial-URI, defined in [Part1], Section 2.7>
 product = token [ "/" product-version ]
 product-version = token
 quoted-string = <quoted-string, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 qvalue = ( "0" [ "." *3DIGIT ] ) / ( "1" [ "." *3"0" ] )
 rfc850-date = day-name-l "," SP date2 SP time-of-day SP GMT
 second = 2DIGIT
 subtype = token
 time-of-day = hour ":" minute ":" second
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 token = <token, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 type = token
 value = word
 weight = OWS ";" OWS "q=" qvalue
 word = <word, defined in [Part1], Section 3.2.6>
 year = 4DIGIT
Appendix E. Change Log (to be removed by RFC Editor before publication)
E.1. Since RFC 2616 
 Changes up to the first Working Group Last Call draft are summarized
 in <http://trac.tools.ietf.org/html/
 draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-21#appendix-F>.
E.2. Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-21 
 Closed issues:
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/22>: "ETag (and
 other metadata) in status messages"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/96>: "Conditional
 GET text"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/146>: "Clarify
 description of 405 (Not Allowed)"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/223>: "Allowing
 heuristic caching for new status codes"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/315>: "method
 semantics: retrieval/representation"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/388>: "User
 confirmation for unsafe methods"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/404>: "Tentative
 Status Codes"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/418>: "No-Transform"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/419>: "p2 editorial
 feedback"
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 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/424>: "Absence of
 Accept-Encoding"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/428>: "Accept-
 Language ordering for identical qvalues"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/432>: "Identify
 additional status codes as cacheable by default"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/434>: "mention in
 header field considerations that leading/trailing WS is lossy"
E.3. Since draft-ietf-httpbis-p2-semantics-22 
 Closed issues:
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/436>: "explain list
 expansion in ABNF appendices"
 o <http://trac.tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/448>: "Fallback
 for Accept-Language"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/449>: "Receiving a
 higher minor HTTP version number"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/456>: "Language-tag
 vs. language-range"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/457>: "Registering
 x-gzip and x-deflate"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/459>: "RFC2774 and
 method registrations"
 o <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/httpbis/trac/ticket/488>: "Selection
 based upon request target"
Index
 1
 1xx Informational (status code class) 49
 2
 2xx Successful (status code class) 50
 3
 3xx Redirection (status code class) 53
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 4
 4xx Client Error (status code class) 57
 5
 5xx Server Error (status code class) 61
 1
 100 Continue (status code) 49
 100-continue (expect value) 33
 101 Switching Protocols (status code) 50
 2
 200 OK (status code) 50
 201 Created (status code) 51
 202 Accepted (status code) 51
 203 Non-Authoritative Information (status code) 51
 204 No Content (status code) 52
 205 Reset Content (status code) 52
 3
 300 Multiple Choices (status code) 54
 301 Moved Permanently (status code) 55
 302 Found (status code) 55
 303 See Other (status code) 56
 305 Use Proxy (status code) 56
 306 (Unused) (status code) 56
 307 Temporary Redirect (status code) 57
 4
 400 Bad Request (status code) 57
 402 Payment Required (status code) 57
 403 Forbidden (status code) 57
 404 Not Found (status code) 58
 405 Method Not Allowed (status code) 58
 406 Not Acceptable (status code) 58
 408 Request Timeout (status code) 59
 409 Conflict (status code) 59
 410 Gone (status code) 59
 411 Length Required (status code) 60
 413 Payload Too Large (status code) 60
 414 URI Too Long (status code) 60
 415 Unsupported Media Type (status code) 60
 417 Expectation Failed (status code) 61
 426 Upgrade Required (status code) 61
 5
 500 Internal Server Error (status code) 61
 501 Not Implemented (status code) 61
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 502 Bad Gateway (status code) 62
 503 Service Unavailable (status code) 62
 504 Gateway Timeout (status code) 62
 505 HTTP Version Not Supported (status code) 62
 A
 Accept header field 38
 Accept-Charset header field 40
 Accept-Encoding header field 41
 Accept-Language header field 42
 Allow header field 71
 C
 cacheable 23
 compress (content coding) 11
 conditional request 36
 CONNECT method 29
 content coding 11
 content negotiation 6
 Content-Encoding header field 12
 Content-Language header field 13
 Content-Location header field 15
 Content-Transfer-Encoding header field 88
 Content-Type header field 10
 D
 Date header field 66
 deflate (content coding) 11
 DELETE method 28
 E
 Expect header field 33
 Expect Values
 100-continue 33
 F
 From header field 44
 G
 GET method 24
 Grammar
 Accept 38
 Accept-Charset 40
 Accept-Encoding 41
 accept-ext 38
 Accept-Language 42
 accept-params 38
 Allow 71
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 asctime-date 65
 attribute 8
 charset 9
 codings 41
 content-coding 11
 Content-Encoding 12
 Content-Language 13
 Content-Location 15
 Content-Type 10
 Date 66
 date1 64
 day 64
 day-name 64
 day-name-l 64
 delta-seconds 68
 Expect 33
 expect-name 33
 expect-param 33
 expect-value 33
 expectation 33
 From 44
 GMT 64
 hour 64
 HTTP-date 63
 IMF-fixdate 64
 language-range 42
 language-tag 13
 Location 66
 Max-Forwards 36
 media-range 38
 media-type 8
 method 20
 minute 64
 month 64
 obs-date 65
 parameter 8
 product 46
 product-version 46
 qvalue 37
 Referer 45
 Retry-After 68
 rfc850-date 65
 second 64
 Server 71
 subtype 8
 time-of-day 64
 type 8
 User-Agent 46
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 value 8
 Vary 68
 weight 37
 year 64
 gzip (content coding) 11
 H
 HEAD method 24
 I
 idempotent 23
 L
 Location header field 66
 M
 Max-Forwards header field 36
 MIME-Version header field 87
 O
 OPTIONS method 31
 P
 payload 17
 POST method 25
 PUT method 26
 R
 Referer header field 44
 representation 7
 Retry-After header field 68
 S
 safe 22
 selected representation 7, 69
 Server header field 71
 Status Codes Classes
 1xx Informational 49
 2xx Successful 50
 3xx Redirection 53
 4xx Client Error 57
 5xx Server Error 61
 T
 TRACE method 32
 U
 User-Agent header field 45
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Internet-Draft HTTP/1.1 Semantics and Content July 2013
 V
 Vary header field 68
 X
 x-compress (content coding) 11
 x-gzip (content coding) 11
Authors' Addresses
 Roy T. Fielding (editor)
 Adobe Systems Incorporated
 345 Park Ave
 San Jose, CA 95110
 USA
 EMail: fielding@gbiv.com
 URI: http://roy.gbiv.com/
 Julian F. Reschke (editor)
 greenbytes GmbH
 Hafenweg 16
 Muenster, NW 48155
 Germany
 EMail: julian.reschke@greenbytes.de
 URI: http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/
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