HTTP/1.1, part 2: Message Semantics
draft-fielding-http-p2-semantics-00
| Document | Type | Expired Internet-Draft (individual) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Roy T. Fielding , Jim Gettys , Jeffrey Mogul , Henrik Nielsen , Larry M Masinter , Paul J. Leach , Tim Berners-Lee | ||
| Last updated | 2007-11-12 | ||
| Stream | (None) | ||
| Intended RFC status | (None) | ||
| Formats |
Expired & archived
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| Stream | Stream state | (No stream defined) | |
| Consensus boilerplate | Unknown | ||
| RFC Editor Note | (None) | ||
| IESG | IESG state | Expired | |
| Telechat date | (None) | ||
| Responsible AD | (None) | ||
| Send notices to | (None) |
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-fielding-http-p2-semantics-00.txt
Abstract
The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. HTTP has been in use by the World Wide Web global information initiative since 1990. This document is Part 2 of the eight-part specification that defines the protocol referred to as "HTTP/1.1" and, taken together, updates RFC 2616 and RFC 2617. Part 2 defines the semantics of HTTP messages as expressed by request methods, request-header fields, response status codes, and response- header fields.
Authors
Roy T. Fielding
Jim Gettys
Jeffrey Mogul
Henrik Nielsen
Larry M Masinter
Paul J. Leach
Tim Berners-Lee
(Note: The e-mail addresses provided for the authors of this Internet-Draft may no longer be valid.)