Network Working Group                                       J. Whitehead
Request for Comments: 4437                               U.C. Santa Cruz
Category: Experimental                                          G. Clemm
                                                                    IBM
                                                        J. Reschke, Ed.
                                                             greenbytes
                                                             March 2006


          Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)
                     Redirect Reference Resources


Status of This Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.
  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).

Abstract

  This specification defines an extension to Web Distributed Authoring
  and Versioning (WebDAV) to allow clients to author HTTP redirect
  reference resources whose default response is an HTTP/1.1 3xx
  (Redirection) status code.  A redirect reference makes it possible to
  access the target resourced indirectly through any URI mapped to the
  redirect reference resource.  This specification does not address
  remapping of trees of resources or regular expression based
  redirections.  There are no integrity guarantees associated with
  redirect reference resources.  Other mechanisms can also be used to
  achieve the same functionality as this specification.  This
  specification allows operators to experiment with this mechanism and
  develop experience on what is the best approach to the problem.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Notational Conventions ..........................................4
  3. Terminology .....................................................4
  4. Overview of Redirect Reference Resources ........................5
  5. Operations on Redirect Reference Resources ......................6
  6. MKREDIRECTREF Method ............................................7




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     6.1. Example: Creating a Redirect Reference Resource
          with MKREDIRECTREF .........................................8
  7. UPDATEREDIRECTREF Method ........................................9
     7.1. Example: Updating a Redirect Reference Resource with
          UPDATEREDIRECTREF .........................................10
  8. Operations on Collections That Contain Redirect
     Reference Resources ............................................11
     8.1. Example: PROPFIND on a Collection with Redirect
          Reference .................................................11
     8.2. Example: PROPFIND with Apply-To-Redirect-Ref on a
          Collection with Redirect Reference Resources ..............13
  9. Operations on Targets of Redirect Reference Resources ..........15
  10. Relative References in DAV:reftarget ..........................15
     10.1. Example: Resolving a Relative Reference in a
           Multi-Status Response.....................................16
  11. Redirect References to Collections ............................17
  12. Headers .......................................................18
     12.1. Redirect-Ref Response Header .............................18
     12.2. Apply-To-Redirect-Ref Request Header .....................19
  13. Redirect Reference Resource Properties ........................19
     13.1. DAV:redirect-lifetime (protected) ........................19
     13.2. DAV:reftarget (protected) ................................19
  14. XML Elements ..................................................19
     14.1. redirectref XML Element ..................................19
  15. Extensions to the DAV:response XML Element for Multi-Status
      Responses .....................................................20
  16. Capability Discovery ..........................................20
     16.1. Example: Discovery of Support for Redirect
           Reference Resources ......................................20
  17. Security Considerations .......................................21
     17.1. Privacy Concerns .........................................21
     17.2. Redirect Loops ...........................................21
     17.3. Redirect Reference Resources and Denial of Service .......21
     17.4. Revealing Private Locations ..............................22
  18. Internationalization Considerations ...........................22
  19. IANA Considerations ...........................................22
     19.1. HTTP headers .............................................22
          19.1.1. Redirect-Ref ......................................22
          19.1.2. Apply-To-Redirect-Ref .............................23
  20. Contributors ..................................................23
  21. Acknowledgements ..............................................23
  22. Normative References ..........................................23









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1.  Introduction

  This specification extends the Web Distributed Authoring Protocol
  (WebDAV) to enable clients to create new access paths to existing
  resources.  This capability is useful for several reasons.

  WebDAV makes it possible to organize HTTP resources into hierarchies,
  placing them into groupings, known as collections, that are more
  easily browsed and manipulated than a single flat collection.
  However, hierarchies require categorization decisions that locate
  resources at a single location in the hierarchy, a drawback when a
  resource has multiple valid categories.  For example, in a hierarchy
  of vehicle descriptions containing collections for cars and boats, a
  description of a combination car/boat vehicle could belong in either
  collection.  Ideally, the description should be accessible from both.
  Allowing clients to create new URIs that access the existing resource
  lets them put that resource into multiple collections.

  Hierarchies also make resource sharing more difficult, since
  resources that have utility across many collections are still forced
  into a single collection.  For example, the mathematics department at
  one university might create a collection of information on fractals
  that contains bindings to some local resources, but also provides
  access to some resources at other universities.  For many reasons, it
  may be undesirable to make physical copies of the shared resources:
  to conserve disk space, to respect copyright constraints, or to make
  any changes in the shared resources visible automatically.  Being
  able to create new access paths to existing resources in other
  collections or even on other unrelated systems is useful for this
  sort of case.

  The redirect reference resources defined here provide a mechanism for
  creating alternative access paths to existing resources.  A redirect
  reference resource is a resource in one collection whose purpose is
  to redirect requests to another resource (its target), possibly in a
  different collection.  In this way, it allows clients to submit
  requests to the target resource from another collection.  It
  redirects most requests to the target resource using an HTTP status
  code from the 3xx range (Redirection), thereby providing a form of
  mediated access to the target resource.











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  A redirect reference is a resource with properties but with no body
  of its own.  Properties of a redirect reference resource can contain
  information such as who created the reference, when, and why.  Since
  redirect reference resources are implemented using HTTP 3xx
  responses, it generally takes two round trips to submit a request to
  the intended resource.  Redirect references work equally well for
  local resources and for resources that reside on a different system
  from the reference.

  The remainder of this document is structured as follows: Section 3
  defines terms that will be used throughout the specification.
  Section 4 provides an overview of redirect reference resources.
  Section 5 defines the semantics of existing methods when applied to
  redirect reference resources.  Section 6 discusses how to create a
  redirect reference resource, and Section 7 discusses updating
  redirect references.  Section 8 discusses their semantics when
  applied to collections that contain redirect reference resources.
  Sections 9 through 11 discuss several other issues raised by the
  existence of redirect reference resources.  Sections 12 through 15
  define the new headers, properties, and XML elements required to
  support redirect reference resources.  Section 16 discusses
  capability discovery.  Sections 17 through 19 present the security,
  internationalization, and IANA concerns raised by this specification.
  The remaining sections provide a variety of supporting information.

2.  Notational Conventions

  Since this document describes a set of extensions to the WebDAV
  Distributed Authoring Protocol [RFC2518], itself an extension to the
  HTTP/1.1 protocol, the augmented BNF used here to describe protocol
  elements is exactly the same as described in Section 2.1 of
  [RFC2616].  Since this augmented BNF uses the basic production rules
  provided in Section 2.2 of [RFC2616], these rules apply to this
  document as well.

  In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED",
  "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY",
  and "OPTIONAL" are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].

3.  Terminology

  The terminology used here follows and extends that in the WebDAV
  Distributed Authoring Protocol specification [RFC2518].  Definitions
  of the terms resource, Uniform Resource Identifier (URI), and Uniform
  Resource Locator (URL) are provided in [RFC3986].






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  Redirect Reference Resource

     A resource created to redirect all requests made to it, using an
     HTTP status code from the 3xx range, to a defined target resource.

  Non-Reference Resource

     A resource that is not a reference to another resource.

  Target Resource

     The resource to which requests are redirected by a redirect
     reference resource.  A target resource can be anything that can be
     identified by an absolute URI (see [RFC3986], "absolute-URI").

  This document uses the terms "precondition", "postcondition", and
  "protected property" as defined in [RFC3253].  Servers MUST report
  pre-/postcondition failures as described in Section 1.6 of this
  document.

4.  Overview of Redirect Reference Resources

  For all operations submitted to a redirect reference resource, the
  default response is a 302 (Found), accompanied by the Redirect-Ref
  header (defined in Section 12.1, below) and the Location header
  ([RFC2616], Section 14.30) set to the URI of the target resource.
  With this information, the client can resubmit the request to the URI
  of the target resource.

  A redirect reference resource never automatically forwards requests
  to its target resource.  Redirect resources bring the same benefits
  as links in HTML documents.  They can be created and maintained
  without the involvement or even knowledge of their target resource.
  This reduces the cost of linking between resources.

  If the client is aware that it is operating on a redirect reference
  resource, it can resolve the reference by retrieving the reference
  resource's DAV:reftarget property (defined in Section 13.2, below),
  whose value contains the URI of the target resource.  It can then
  submit requests to the target resource.

  A redirect reference resource is a new type of resource.  To
  distinguish redirect reference resources from non-reference
  resources, a new value of the DAV:resourcetype property (defined in
  [RFC2518]), DAV:redirectref, is defined in Section 14.1, below.

  Since a redirect reference resource is a resource, methods can be
  applied to the reference resource as well as to its target resource.



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  The Apply-To-Redirect-Ref request header (defined in Section 12.2,
  below) is provided so that referencing-aware clients can control
  whether an operation is applied to the redirect reference resource or
  standard HTTP/WebDAV behaviour (redirection with a 3xx status code)
  should occur.  The Apply-To-Redirect-Ref header can be used with most
  requests to redirect reference resources.  This header is
  particularly useful with PROPFIND, to retrieve the reference
  resource's own properties.

  Implementation Note: Operations on the target of a redirect reference
  usually do not affect the redirect reference itself.  However,
  clients should not rely on this behaviour (for instance, some servers
  may update redirect references as a result of namespace operations on
  the reference's target).

5.  Operations on Redirect Reference Resources

  Although non-referencing-aware clients cannot create reference
  resources, they should be able to submit requests through the
  reference resources created by reference-aware WebDAV clients.  They
  should be able to follow any references to their targets.  To make
  this possible, a server that receives any request made via a redirect
  reference resource MUST return a 3xx range (Redirection) status code,
  unless the request includes an Apply-To-Redirect-Ref header
  specifying "T".  The client and server MUST follow [RFC2616], Section
  10.3, but with these additional rules:

  o  The Location response header MUST contain a URI (see [RFC3986],
     Section 3) that identifies the target of the reference resource.

  o  The response MUST include the Redirect-Ref header.  This header
     allows reference-aware WebDAV clients to recognize the resource as
     a reference resource and to understand the reason for the
     redirection.

  A reference-aware WebDAV client can, like a non-referencing client,
  resubmit the request to the URI in the Location header in order to
  operate on the target resource.  Alternatively, it can resubmit the
  request to the URI of the redirect reference resource with the
  "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T" header in order to operate on the
  reference resource itself.  In this case, the request MUST be applied
  to the reference resource itself, and a 3xx response MUST NOT be
  returned.

  As redirect references do not have bodies, GET and PUT requests with
  "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T" MUST fail with status 403 (forbidden).





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6.  MKREDIRECTREF Method

  The MKREDIRECTREF method requests the creation of a redirect
  reference resource.

  If a MKREDIRECTREF request fails, the server state preceding the
  request MUST be restored.

  Responses from a MKREDIRECTREF request MUST NOT be cached, as
  MKREDIRECTREF has non-idempotent and non-safe semantics (see
  [RFC2616], Section 9.1).

  Marshalling

     The request body MUST be a DAV:mkredirectref XML element.

     <!ELEMENT mkredirectref (reftarget, redirect-lifetime?)>
     <!ELEMENT reftarget (href)>
     <!ELEMENT redirect-lifetime (permanent | temporary)>
     <!ELEMENT permanent EMPTY>
     <!ELEMENT temporary EMPTY>

     The DAV:href element is defined in [RFC2518] (Section 12.3) and
     MUST contain either a URI or a relative-ref (see [RFC3986],
     Sections 3 and 4.2).

     If no DAV:redirect-lifetime element is specified, the server MUST
     behave as if a value of DAV:temporary was specified.

     If the request succeeds, the server MUST return 201 (Created)
     status.

     If a response body for a successful request is included, it MUST
     be a DAV:mkredirectref-response XML element.  Note that this
     document does not define any elements for the MKREDIRECTREF
     response body, but the DAV:mkredirectref-response element is
     defined to ensure interoperability between future extensions that
     do define elements for the response body.

     <!ELEMENT mkredirectref-response ANY>

  Preconditions

     (DAV:resource-must-be-null): A resource MUST NOT exist at the
     Request-URI.

     (DAV:parent-resource-must-be-non-null): The Request-URI minus the
     last past segment MUST identify a collection.



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     (DAV:name-allowed): The last segment of the Request-URI is
     available for use as a resource name.

     (DAV:locked-update-allowed): If the collection identified by the
     Request-URI minus the last path segment is write-locked, then the
     appropriate token MUST be specified in an If request header.

     (DAV:redirect-lifetime-supported): If the request body contains a
     DAV:redirect-lifetime element, the server MUST support the
     specified lifetime.  Support for DAV:temporary is REQUIRED, while
     support for DAV:permanent is OPTIONAL.

     (DAV:legal-reftarget): The specified is a legal URI or relative-
     ref.

  Postconditions

     (DAV:new-redirectref): a new redirect reference resource is
     created whose DAV:reftarget property has the value specified in
     the request body.

6.1.  Example: Creating a Redirect Reference Resource with MKREDIRECTREF

  >> Request:

  MKREDIRECTREF /~whitehead/dav/spec08.ref HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.com
  Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
  Content-Length: xxx

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
  <D:mkredirectref xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:reftarget>
      <D:href>/i-d/draft-webdav-protocol-08.txt</D:href>
    </D:reftarget>
  </D:mkredirectref>

  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 201 Created











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  This request resulted in the creation of a new redirect reference
  resource at http://www.example.com/~whitehead/dav/spec08.ref, which
  points to the resource identified by the DAV:reftarget property.  In
  this example, the target resource is identified by the URI
  http://www.example.com/i-d/draft-webdav-protocol-08.txt.  The
  redirect reference resource's DAV:resourcetype property is set to
  DAV:redirectref, and its DAV:redirect-lifetime property has the value
  DAV:temporary.

7.  UPDATEREDIRECTREF Method

  The UPDATEREDIRECTREF method requests the update of a redirect
  reference resource.

  If a UPDATEREDIRECTREF request fails, the server state preceding the
  request MUST be restored.

  Responses from a UPDATEREDIRECTREF request MUST NOT be cached, as
  UPDATEREDIRECTREF has non-safe semantics (see [RFC2616], Section
  9.1).

  Marshalling

     The request body MUST be a DAV:updateredirectref XML element.

     <!ELEMENT updateredirectref (reftarget?, redirect-lifetime?)>

     See Section 6 for a definition of DAV:reftarget and DAV:redirect-
     lifetime.

     If no DAV:reftarget element is specified, the server MUST NOT
     change the target of the redirect reference.

     If no DAV:redirect-lifetime element is specified, the server MUST
     NOT change the lifetime of the redirect reference.

     If a response body for a successful request is included, it MUST
     be a DAV:updateredirectref-response XML element.  Note that this
     document does not define any elements for the UPDATEREDIRECTREF
     response body, but the DAV:updateredirectref-response element is
     defined to ensure interoperability between future extensions that
     do define elements for the response body.

     <!ELEMENT updateredirectref-response ANY>







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  Preconditions

     (DAV:locked-update-allowed): if the resource is write-locked, then
     the appropriate token MUST be specified in an If request header.

     (DAV:must-be-redirectref): the resource identified by the
     Request-URI must be a redirect reference resource as defined by
     this specification.

     (DAV:redirect-lifetime-supported): see Section 6.

     (DAV:redirect-lifetime-update-supported): servers MAY support
     changing the DAV:redirect-lifetime property; if they don't, this
     condition code can be used to signal failure.

     (DAV:legal-reftarget): see Section 6.

  Postconditions

     (DAV:redirectref-updated): the DAV:reftarget and DAV:redirect-
     lifetime properties of the redirect reference have been updated
     accordingly.

7.1.  Example: Updating a Redirect Reference Resource with
     UPDATEREDIRECTREF

  >> Request:

  UPDATEREDIRECTREF /~whitehead/dav/spec08.ref HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.com
  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T
  Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
  Content-Length: xxx

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
  <D:updateredirectref xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:reftarget>
      <D:href>/i-d/draft-webdav-protocol-08b.txt</D:href>
    </D:reftarget>
  </D:updateredirectref>

  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 200 OK

  This request has updated the redirect reference's DAV:reftarget
  property to "/i-d/draft-webdav-protocol-08b.txt" and has not changed
  the DAV:redirect-lifetime value.  Note that the "Apply-To-Redirect-



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  Ref" request header must be used; otherwise, the request would result
  in a redirect (3xx) response status.

8.  Operations on Collections That Contain Redirect Reference Resources

  According to [RFC2518], Section 9.2, methods that have defined
  interactions with the "Depth" request header should apply all other
  request headers to each resource in scope.  However, applying this
  principle to the "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref" header uniformly would make
  it impractical to implement this specification on top of existing
  servers and also would result in unexpected server behaviour for
  clients that do not take the existence of redirect references into
  account.  On the other hand, the definition of the "Depth" header
  allows alternate behaviours to be explicitly defined.

  For this reason, this specification defines the interaction between
  "Depth" and "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref" request headers on a case-by-case
  basis and also provides a default for methods not mentioned here that
  do not specify the behaviour themselves.

   +-------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+
   | method name | defined in      | supported depths | behaviour |
   +-------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+
   | COPY        | [RFC2518], 8.9  | 0, infinity      | "T"       |
   | DELETE      | [RFC2518], 8.7  | infinity         | "T"       |
   | LOCK        | [RFC2518], 8.11 | 0, infinity      | "T"       |
   | MOVE        | [RFC2518], 8.10 | 0, infinity      | "T"       |
   | PROPFIND    | [RFC2518], 8.2  | 0, 1, infinity   | inherit   |
   | REPORT      | [RFC3253], 3.6  | 0, 1, infinity   | inherit   |
   | default     |                 |                  | "T"       |
   +-------------+-----------------+------------------+-----------+

  When the behaviour is defined to be "inherit", the method should
  follow RFC2518's default behaviour for "Depth" operations, which
  means applying the value given for "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref" to each
  resource in scope.  On the other hand, when it is defined to be "T",
  the method should behave as if a "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T" header
  was specified for each operation on child resources.  The latter
  ensures that "Depth: infinity" operations will not fail unexpectedly
  just because there was a redirect reference resource in scope.

8.1.  Example: PROPFIND on a Collection with Redirect Reference
     Resources

  Suppose a PROPFIND request with Depth: infinity is submitted to the
  following collection, with the members shown here:





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  /MyCollection/
       (non-reference resource) diary.html
       (redirect reference resource) nunavut

  >> Request:

  PROPFIND /MyCollection/ HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.com
  Depth: infinity
  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: F
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: xxxx

  <?xml version="1.0" ?>
  <D:propfind xmlns:D="DAV: ">
    <D:prop xmlns:J="http://example.com/jsprops/">
      <D:resourcetype/>
      <J:keywords/>
    </D:prop>
  </D:propfind>

  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: xxxx

  <?xml version="1.0" ?>
  <D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:" xmlns:J="http://example.com/jsprops/">
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype><D:collection/></D:resourcetype>
          <J:keywords>diary, interests, hobbies</J:keywords>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
    </D:response>
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/diary.html</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype/>
          <J:keywords>diary, travel, family, history</J:keywords>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>



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    </D:response>
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/nunavut</D:href>
      <D:status>HTTP/1.1 302 Found</D:status>
      <D:location>
        <D:href>http://example.ca/art/inuit/</D:href>
      </D:location>
    </D:response>
  </D:multistatus>

  In this example, the Depth header is set to infinity, and the Apply-
  To-Redirect-Ref header is set to "F".  The collection contains one
  URI that identifies a redirect reference resource.  The response
  element for the redirect reference resource has a status of 302
  (Found) and includes a DAV:location extension element to allow
  clients to retrieve the properties of its target resource.  (The
  response element for the redirect reference resource does not include
  the requested properties.  The client can submit another PROPFIND
  request to the URI in the DAV:location pseudo-property to retrieve
  those properties.)

8.2.  Example: PROPFIND with Apply-To-Redirect-Ref on a Collection with
     Redirect Reference Resources

  Suppose a PROPFIND request with "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T" and Depth:
  infinity is submitted to the following collection, with the members
  shown here:

  /MyCollection/
       (non-reference resource) diary.html
       (redirect reference resource) nunavut

  >> Request:

  PROPFIND /MyCollection/ HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.com
  Depth: infinity
  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: xxxx











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  <?xml version="1.0" ?>
  <D:propfind xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:prop>
      <D:resourcetype/>
      <D:reftarget/>
      <D:redirect-lifetime/>
    </D:prop>
  </D:propfind>

  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: xxxx

  <?xml version="1.0" ?>
  <D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype><D:collection/></D:resourcetype>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:reftarget/>
          <D:redirect-lifetime/>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
    </D:response>
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/diary.html</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype/>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:reftarget/>
          <D:redirect-lifetime/>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found</D:status>
      </D:propstat>



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    </D:response>
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/MyCollection/nunavut</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype><D:redirectref/></D:resourcetype>
          <D:reftarget>
            <D:href>http://example.ca/art/inuit/</D:href>
          </D:reftarget>
          <D:redirect-lifetime><D:temporary/></D:redirect-lifetime>
        </D:prop>
      <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
    </D:response>
  </D:multistatus>

  Since the "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T" header is present, the response
  shows the properties of the redirect reference resource in the
  collection rather than reporting a 302 status.

9.  Operations on Targets of Redirect Reference Resources

  Operations on targets of redirect reference resources have no effect
  on the reference resource.

10.  Relative References in DAV:reftarget

  The URI in the href in a DAV:reftarget property MAY be a relative
  reference.  In this case, the base URI to be used for resolving it to
  absolute form is the URI used in the HTTP message to identify the
  redirect reference resource to which the DAV:reftarget property
  belongs.

  When DAV:reftarget appears in the context of a Multi-Status response,
  it is in a DAV:response element that contains a single DAV:href
  element.  The value of this DAV:href element serves as the base URI
  for resolving a relative reference in DAV:reftarget.  The value of
  DAV:href may itself be relative, in which case it must be resolved
  first in order to serve as the base URI for the relative reference in
  DAV:reftarget.  If the DAV:href element is relative, its base URI is
  constructed from the scheme component "http", the value of the Host
  header in the request, and the Request-URI.









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10.1.  Example: Resolving a Relative Reference in a Multi-Status
      Response

  >> Request:

  PROPFIND /geog/ HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.com
  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref: T
  Depth: 1
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: nnn

  <?xml version="1.0" ?>
  <D:propfind xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:prop>
      <D:resourcetype/>
      <D:reftarget/>
    </D:prop>
  </D:propfind>

  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
  Content-Type: text/xml
  Content-Length: nnn

  <?xml version="1/0" ?>
  <D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/geog/</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype><D:collection/></D:resourcetype>
        </D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop><D:reftarget/></D:prop>
        <D:status>HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
    </D:response>
    <D:response>
      <D:href>/geog/stats.html</D:href>
      <D:propstat>
        <D:prop>
          <D:resourcetype><D:redirectref/></D:resourcetype>
          <D:reftarget>
            <D:href>statistics/population/1997.html</D:href>



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          </D:reftarget>
        </D:prop>
      <D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
      </D:propstat>
    </D:response>
  </D:multistatus>

  In this example, the relative reference
  "statistics/population/1997.html" is returned as the value of the
  DAV:reftarget property for the reference resource identified by href
  /geog/stats.html.  The href is itself a relative reference, which
  resolves to http://example.com/geog/stats.html.  This is the base URI
  for resolving the relative reference in reftarget.  The absolute URI
  of reftarget is
  http://example.com/geog/statistics/population/1997.html.

11.  Redirect References to Collections

  In a Request-URI /segment1/segment2/segment3, any of the three
  segments may identify a redirect reference resource.  (See [RFC3986],
  Section 3.3, for definitions of "path" and "segment".)  If any
  segment in a Request-URI identifies a redirect reference resource,
  the response SHOULD be a 3xx.  The value of the Location header in
  the response is as follows:

  The leftmost path segment of the Request-URI that identifies a
  redirect reference resource, together with all path segments and
  separators to the left of it, is replaced by the value of the
  redirect reference resource's DAV:reftarget property (resolved to an
  absolute URI).  The remainder of the Request-URI is concatenated to
  this path.

  Note: If the DAV:reftarget property ends with a "/" and the remainder
  of the Request-URI is non-empty (and therefore must begin with a
  "/"), the final "/" in the DAV:reftarget property is dropped before
  the remainder of the Request-URI is appended.

  Consider Request-URI /x/y/z.html.  Suppose that /x/ is a redirect
  reference resource, whose target resource is collection /a/, which
  contains redirect reference resource y whose target resource is
  collection /b/, which contains redirect reference resource z.html,
  whose target resource is /c/d.html.









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                       /x/y/z.html
                           |
                           | /x -> /a
                           |
                           v
                       /a/y/z.html
                           |
                           | /a/y -> /b
                           |
                           v
                       /b/z.html
                           |
                           | /b/z.html -> /c/d.html
                           |
                           v
                       /c/d.html

  In this case, the client must follow up three separate 3xx responses
  before finally reaching the target resource.  The server responds to
  the initial request with a 3xx with Location: /a/y/z.html, and the
  client resubmits the request to /a/y/z.html.  The server responds to
  this request with a 3xx with Location: /b/z.html, and the client
  resubmits the request to /b/z.html.  The server responds to this
  request with a 3xx with Location: /c/d.html, and the client resubmits
  the request to /c/d.html.  This final request succeeds.

     Note: The behaviour described above may have a very serious impact
     on the efficiency of mapping Request-URIs to resources in HTTP
     request processing.  Therefore, servers MAY respond with a 404
     status code if the cost of checking all leading path segments for
     redirect references seems prohibitive.

12.  Headers

12.1.  Redirect-Ref Response Header

  Redirect-Ref = "Redirect-Ref:" (URI | relative-ref)
  ; URI: see [RFC3986], Section 3
  ; relative-ref: see [RFC3986], Section 4.2

  The Redirect-Ref header is used in all 3xx responses from redirect
  reference resources.  The value is the link target as specified
  during redirect reference resource creation.








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12.2.  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref Request Header

  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref = "Apply-To-Redirect-Ref" ":" ("T" | "F")

  The optional Apply-To-Redirect-Ref header can be used on any request
  to a redirect reference resource.  When it is present and set to "T",
  the request MUST be applied to the reference resource itself, and a
  3xx response MUST NOT be returned.

  If the Apply-To-Redirect-Ref header is used on a request to any other
  sort of resource besides a redirect reference resource, the server
  MUST ignore it.

13.  Redirect Reference Resource Properties

  The properties defined below are REQUIRED on redirect reference
  resources.  A PROPFIND/allprop request SHOULD NOT return any of the
  properties defined in this document.

13.1.  DAV:redirect-lifetime (protected)

  This property provides information about the lifetime of a redirect.
  It can be either DAV:permanent (HTTP status 301) or DAV:temporary
  (HTTP status 302).  Future protocols may define additional values.

  <!ELEMENT redirect-lifetime (permanent | temporary)>
  <!ELEMENT permanent EMPTY>
  <!ELEMENT temporary EMPTY>

13.2.  DAV:reftarget (protected)

  This property provides an efficient way for clients to discover the
  URI of the target resource.  This is a read-only property after its
  initial creation.  Its value can only be set in a MKREDIRECTREF
  request.  The value is a DAV:href element containing the URI of the
  target resource.

  <!ELEMENT reftarget href >

14.  XML Elements

14.1.  redirectref XML Element

  Name: redirectref

  Namespace: DAV:





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  Purpose: Used as the value of the DAV:resourcetype property to
     specify that the resource type is a redirect reference resource.

  <!ELEMENT redirectref EMPTY >

15.  Extensions to the DAV:response XML Element for Multi-Status
    Responses

  As described in Section 8, the DAV:location element may be returned
  in the DAV:response element of a 207 Multi-Status response, to allow
  clients to resubmit their requests to the target resource of a
  redirect reference resource.

  Consequently, the definition of the DAV:response XML element changes
  to the following:

  <!ELEMENT response (href, ((href*, status)|(propstat+)),
                      responsedescription?, location?) >
  <!ELEMENT location (href) >

16.  Capability Discovery

  Sections 9.1 and 15 of [RFC2518] describe the use of compliance
  classes with the DAV header in responses to OPTIONS, to indicate
  which parts of the WebDAV Distributed Authoring protocols the
  resource supports.  This specification defines an OPTIONAL extension
  to [RFC2518].  It defines a new compliance class, called
  redirectrefs, for use with the DAV header in responses to OPTIONS
  requests.  If a resource does support redirect references, its
  response to an OPTIONS request may indicate that it does, by listing
  the new redirectrefs compliance class in the DAV header and by
  listing the MKREDIRECTREF method as one it supports.

  When responding to an OPTIONS request, any type of resource can
  include redirectrefs in the value of the DAV header.  Doing so
  indicates that the server permits a redirect reference resource at
  the Request-URI.

16.1.  Example: Discovery of Support for Redirect Reference Resources

  >> Request:

  OPTIONS /somecollection/someresource HTTP/1.1
  Host: example.org







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  >> Response:

  HTTP/1.1 200 OK
  Allow: OPTIONS, GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, TRACE, COPY, MOVE
  Allow: MKCOL, PROPFIND, PROPPATCH, LOCK, UNLOCK, MKREDIRECTREF
  DAV: 1, 2, redirectrefs

  The DAV header in the response indicates that the resource
  /somecollection/someresource is level 1 and level 2 compliant, as
  defined in [RFC2518].  In addition, /somecollection/someresource
  supports redirect reference resources.  The Allow header indicates
  that MKREDIRECTREF requests can be submitted to
  /somecollection/someresource.

17.  Security Considerations

  This section is provided to make applications that implement this
  protocol aware of the security implications of this protocol.

  All of the security considerations of HTTP/1.1 and the WebDAV
  Distributed Authoring Protocol specification also apply to this
  protocol specification.  In addition, redirect reference resources
  introduce several new security concerns and increase the risk of some
  existing threats.  These issues are detailed below.

17.1.  Privacy Concerns

  By creating redirect reference resources on a trusted server, it is
  possible for a hostile agent to induce users to send private
  information to a target on an unrelated system.  This risk is
  mitigated somewhat, since clients are required to notify the user of
  the redirection for any request other than GET or HEAD.  (See
  [RFC2616], Section 10.3.3, 302 Found.)

17.2.  Redirect Loops

  Although redirect loops were already possible in HTTP 1.1, the
  introduction of the MKREDIRECTREF method creates a new avenue for
  clients to create loops accidentally or maliciously.  If the
  reference resource and its target are on the same server, the server
  may be able to detect MKREDIRECTREF requests that would create loops.
  See also [RFC2616], Section 10.3, "Redirection 3xx."

17.3.  Redirect Reference Resources and Denial of Service

  Denial of service attacks were already possible by posting URLs that
  were intended for limited use at heavily used Web sites.  The
  introduction of MKREDIRECTREF creates a new avenue for similar denial



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  of service attacks.  Clients can now create redirect reference
  resources at heavily used sites to target locations that were not
  designed for heavy usage.

17.4.  Revealing Private Locations

  There are several ways that redirect reference resources may reveal
  information about collection structures.  First, the DAV:reftarget
  property of every redirect reference resource contains the URI of the
  target resource.  Anyone who has access to the reference resource can
  discover the collection path that leads to the target resource.  The
  owner of the target resource may have wanted to limit knowledge of
  this collection structure.

  Sufficiently powerful access control mechanisms can control this risk
  to some extent.  Property-level access control could prevent users
  from examining the DAV:reftarget property.  (The Location header
  returned in responses to requests on redirect reference resources
  reveals the same information, however.)

  This risk is no greater than the similar risk posed by HTML links.

18.  Internationalization Considerations

  All internationalization considerations mentioned in [RFC2518] also
  apply to this document.

19.  IANA Considerations

  All IANA considerations mentioned in [RFC2518] also apply to this
  document.

19.1.  HTTP headers

  This document specifies the two new HTTP headers listed below.

19.1.1.  Redirect-Ref

  Header field name: Redirect-Ref

  Applicable protocol: http

  Status: standard

  Author/Change controller: IETF

  Specification document: this specification (Section 12.1)




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19.1.2  Apply-To-Redirect-Ref

  Header field name: Apply-To-Redirect-Ref

  Applicable protocol: http

  Status: standard

  Author/Change controller: IETF

  Specification document: this specification (Section 12.2)

20.  Contributors

  Many thanks to Jason Crawford, Jim Davis, Chuck Fay, and Judith
  Slein, who can take credit for big parts of the original design of
  this specification.

21.  Acknowledgements

  This document has benefited from thoughtful discussion by Jim Amsden,
  Peter Carlson, Steve Carter, Tyson Chihaya, Ken Coar, Ellis Cohen,
  Bruce Cragun, Spencer Dawkins, Mark Day, Rajiv Dulepet, David Durand,
  Lisa Dusseault, Stefan Eissing, Roy Fielding, Yaron Goland, Fred
  Hitt, Alex Hopmann, James Hunt, Marcus Jager, Chris Kaler, Manoj
  Kasichainula, Rohit Khare, Daniel LaLiberte, Steve Martin, Larry
  Masinter, Jeff McAffer, Joe Orton, Surendra Koduru Reddy, Juergen
  Reuter, Max Rible, Sam Ruby, Bradley Sergeant, Nick Shelness, John
  Stracke, John Tigue, John Turner, Kevin Wiggen, and others.

22.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC2518]  Goland, Y., Whitehead, E., Faizi, A., Carter, S., and D.
             Jensen, "HTTP Extensions for Distributed Authoring --
             WEBDAV", RFC 2518, February 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.

  [RFC3253]  Clemm, G., Amsden, J., Ellison, T., Kaler, C., and J.
             Whitehead, "Versioning Extensions to WebDAV (Web
             Distributed Authoring and Versioning)", RFC 3253, March
             2002.




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  [RFC3986]  Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
             Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC
             3986, January 2005.

Authors' Addresses

  Jim Whitehead
  UC Santa Cruz, Dept. of Computer Science
  1156 High Street
  Santa Cruz, CA  95064
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Geoff Clemm
  IBM
  20 Maguire Road
  Lexington, MA  02421
  US

  EMail: [email protected]


  Julian F. Reschke (editor)
  greenbytes GmbH
  Hafenweg 16
  Muenster, NW  48155
  Germany

  Phone: +49 251 2807760
  Fax:   +49 251 2807761
  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/

















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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).

  This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
  contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
  retain all their rights.

  This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
  OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
  ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
  INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
  INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

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  The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
  Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
  pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
  this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
  might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
  made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information
  on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
  found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.

  Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
  assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
  attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
  such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
  specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
  http://www.ietf.org/ipr.

  The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
  copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
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  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at
  [email protected].

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF
  Administrative Support Activity (IASA).







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