Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                  R. Fielding, Ed.
Request for Comments: 9112                                         Adobe
STD: 99                                               M. Nottingham, Ed.
Obsoletes: 7230                                                   Fastly
Category: Standards Track                                J. Reschke, Ed.
ISSN: 2070-1721                                               greenbytes
                                                              June 2022


                               HTTP/1.1

Abstract

  The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is a stateless application-
  level protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypertext information
  systems.  This document specifies the HTTP/1.1 message syntax,
  message parsing, connection management, and related security
  concerns.

  This document obsoletes portions of RFC 7230.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
  (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
  received public review and has been approved for publication by the
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9112.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2022 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

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  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
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  than English.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction
    1.1.  Requirements Notation
    1.2.  Syntax Notation
  2.  Message
    2.1.  Message Format
    2.2.  Message Parsing
    2.3.  HTTP Version
  3.  Request Line
    3.1.  Method
    3.2.  Request Target
      3.2.1.  origin-form
      3.2.2.  absolute-form
      3.2.3.  authority-form
      3.2.4.  asterisk-form
    3.3.  Reconstructing the Target URI
  4.  Status Line
  5.  Field Syntax
    5.1.  Field Line Parsing
    5.2.  Obsolete Line Folding
  6.  Message Body
    6.1.  Transfer-Encoding
    6.2.  Content-Length
    6.3.  Message Body Length
  7.  Transfer Codings
    7.1.  Chunked Transfer Coding
      7.1.1.  Chunk Extensions
      7.1.2.  Chunked Trailer Section
      7.1.3.  Decoding Chunked
    7.2.  Transfer Codings for Compression
    7.3.  Transfer Coding Registry
    7.4.  Negotiating Transfer Codings
  8.  Handling Incomplete Messages
  9.  Connection Management
    9.1.  Establishment
    9.2.  Associating a Response to a Request
    9.3.  Persistence
      9.3.1.  Retrying Requests
      9.3.2.  Pipelining
    9.4.  Concurrency
    9.5.  Failures and Timeouts
    9.6.  Tear-down
    9.7.  TLS Connection Initiation
    9.8.  TLS Connection Closure
  10. Enclosing Messages as Data
    10.1.  Media Type message/http
    10.2.  Media Type application/http
  11. Security Considerations
    11.1.  Response Splitting
    11.2.  Request Smuggling
    11.3.  Message Integrity
    11.4.  Message Confidentiality
  12. IANA Considerations
    12.1.  Field Name Registration
    12.2.  Media Type Registration
    12.3.  Transfer Coding Registration
    12.4.  ALPN Protocol ID Registration
  13. References
    13.1.  Normative References
    13.2.  Informative References
  Appendix A.  Collected ABNF
  Appendix B.  Differences between HTTP and MIME
    B.1.  MIME-Version
    B.2.  Conversion to Canonical Form
    B.3.  Conversion of Date Formats
    B.4.  Conversion of Content-Encoding
    B.5.  Conversion of Content-Transfer-Encoding
    B.6.  MHTML and Line Length Limitations
  Appendix C.  Changes from Previous RFCs
    C.1.  Changes from HTTP/0.9
    C.2.  Changes from HTTP/1.0
      C.2.1.  Multihomed Web Servers
      C.2.2.  Keep-Alive Connections
      C.2.3.  Introduction of Transfer-Encoding
    C.3.  Changes from RFC 7230
  Acknowledgements
  Index
  Authors' Addresses

1.  Introduction

  The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is a stateless application-
  level request/response protocol that uses extensible semantics and
  self-descriptive messages for flexible interaction with network-based
  hypertext information systems.  HTTP/1.1 is defined by:

  *  This document

  *  "HTTP Semantics" [HTTP]

  *  "HTTP Caching" [CACHING]

  This document specifies how HTTP semantics are conveyed using the
  HTTP/1.1 message syntax, framing, and connection management
  mechanisms.  Its goal is to define the complete set of requirements
  for HTTP/1.1 message parsers and message-forwarding intermediaries.

  This document obsoletes the portions of RFC 7230 related to HTTP/1.1
  messaging and connection management, with the changes being
  summarized in Appendix C.3.  The other parts of RFC 7230 are
  obsoleted by "HTTP Semantics" [HTTP].

1.1.  Requirements Notation

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
  "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
  BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
  capitals, as shown here.

  Conformance criteria and considerations regarding error handling are
  defined in Section 2 of [HTTP].

1.2.  Syntax Notation

  This specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF)
  notation of [RFC5234], extended with the notation for case-
  sensitivity in strings defined in [RFC7405].

  It also uses a list extension, defined in Section 5.6.1 of [HTTP],
  that allows for compact definition of comma-separated lists using a
  "#" operator (similar to how the "*" operator indicates repetition).
  Appendix A shows the collected grammar with all list operators
  expanded to standard ABNF notation.

  As a convention, ABNF rule names prefixed with "obs-" denote obsolete
  grammar rules that appear for historical reasons.

  The following core rules are included by reference, as defined in
  [RFC5234], Appendix B.1: 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 [USASCII] character).

  The rules below are defined in [HTTP]:

    BWS           = <BWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>
    OWS           = <OWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>
    RWS           = <RWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>
    absolute-path = <absolute-path, see [HTTP], Section 4.1>
    field-name    = <field-name, see [HTTP], Section 5.1>
    field-value   = <field-value, see [HTTP], Section 5.5>
    obs-text      = <obs-text, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.4>
    quoted-string = <quoted-string, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.4>
    token         = <token, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.2>
    transfer-coding =
                    <transfer-coding, see [HTTP], Section 10.1.4>

  The rules below are defined in [URI]:

    absolute-URI  = <absolute-URI, see [URI], Section 4.3>
    authority     = <authority, see [URI], Section 3.2>
    uri-host      = <host, see [URI], Section 3.2.2>
    port          = <port, see [URI], Section 3.2.3>
    query         = <query, see [URI], Section 3.4>

2.  Message

  HTTP/1.1 clients and servers communicate by sending messages.  See
  Section 3 of [HTTP] for the general terminology and core concepts of
  HTTP.

2.1.  Message Format

  An HTTP/1.1 message consists of a start-line followed by a CRLF and a
  sequence of octets in a format similar to the Internet Message Format
  [RFC5322]: zero or more header field lines (collectively referred to
  as the "headers" or the "header section"), an empty line indicating
  the end of the header section, and an optional message body.

    HTTP-message   = start-line CRLF
                     *( field-line CRLF )
                     CRLF
                     [ message-body ]

  A message can be either a request from client to server or a response
  from server to client.  Syntactically, the two types of messages
  differ only in the start-line, which is either a request-line (for
  requests) or a status-line (for responses), and in the algorithm for
  determining the length of the message body (Section 6).

    start-line     = request-line / status-line

  In theory, a client could receive requests and a server could receive
  responses, distinguishing them by their different start-line formats.
  In practice, servers are implemented to only expect a request (a
  response is interpreted as an unknown or invalid request method), and
  clients are implemented to only expect a response.

  HTTP makes use of some protocol elements similar to the Multipurpose
  Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) [RFC2045].  See Appendix B for the
  differences between HTTP and MIME messages.

2.2.  Message Parsing

  The normal procedure for parsing an HTTP message is to read the
  start-line into a structure, read each header field line into a hash
  table by field name until the empty line, and then use the parsed
  data to determine if a message body is expected.  If a message body
  has been indicated, then it is read as a stream until an amount of
  octets equal to the message body length is read or the connection is
  closed.

  A recipient MUST parse an HTTP message as a sequence of octets in an
  encoding that is a superset of US-ASCII [USASCII].  Parsing an HTTP
  message as a stream of Unicode characters, without regard for the
  specific encoding, creates security vulnerabilities due to the
  varying ways that string processing libraries handle invalid
  multibyte character sequences that contain the octet LF (%x0A).
  String-based parsers can only be safely used within protocol elements
  after the element has been extracted from the message, such as within
  a header field line value after message parsing has delineated the
  individual field lines.

  Although the line terminator for the start-line and fields is the
  sequence CRLF, a recipient MAY recognize a single LF as a line
  terminator and ignore any preceding CR.

  A sender MUST NOT generate a bare CR (a CR character not immediately
  followed by LF) within any protocol elements other than the content.
  A recipient of such a bare CR MUST consider that element to be
  invalid or replace each bare CR with SP before processing the element
  or forwarding the message.

  Older HTTP/1.0 user agent implementations might send an extra CRLF
  after a POST request as a workaround for some early server
  applications that failed to read message body content that was not
  terminated by a line-ending.  An HTTP/1.1 user agent MUST NOT preface
  or follow a request with an extra CRLF.  If terminating the request
  message body with a line-ending is desired, then the user agent MUST
  count the terminating CRLF octets as part of the message body length.

  In the interest of robustness, a server that is expecting to receive
  and parse a request-line SHOULD ignore at least one empty line (CRLF)
  received prior to the request-line.

  A sender MUST NOT send whitespace between the start-line and the
  first header field.

  A recipient that receives whitespace between the start-line and the
  first header field MUST either reject the message as invalid or
  consume each whitespace-preceded line without further processing of
  it (i.e., ignore the entire line, along with any subsequent lines
  preceded by whitespace, until a properly formed header field is
  received or the header section is terminated).  Rejection or removal
  of invalid whitespace-preceded lines is necessary to prevent their
  misinterpretation by downstream recipients that might be vulnerable
  to request smuggling (Section 11.2) or response splitting
  (Section 11.1) attacks.

  When a server listening only for HTTP request messages, or processing
  what appears from the start-line to be an HTTP request message,
  receives a sequence of octets that does not match the HTTP-message
  grammar aside from the robustness exceptions listed above, the server
  SHOULD respond with a 400 (Bad Request) response and close the
  connection.

2.3.  HTTP Version

  HTTP uses a "<major>.<minor>" numbering scheme to indicate versions
  of the protocol.  This specification defines version "1.1".
  Section 2.5 of [HTTP] specifies the semantics of HTTP version
  numbers.

  The version of an HTTP/1.x message is indicated by an HTTP-version
  field in the start-line.  HTTP-version is case-sensitive.

    HTTP-version  = HTTP-name "/" DIGIT "." DIGIT
    HTTP-name     = %s"HTTP"

  When an HTTP/1.1 message is sent to an HTTP/1.0 recipient [HTTP/1.0]
  or a recipient whose version is unknown, the HTTP/1.1 message is
  constructed such that it can be interpreted as a valid HTTP/1.0
  message if all of the newer features are ignored.  This specification
  places recipient-version requirements on some new features so that a
  conformant sender will only use compatible features until it has
  determined, through configuration or the receipt of a message, that
  the recipient supports HTTP/1.1.

  Intermediaries that process HTTP messages (i.e., all intermediaries
  other than those acting as tunnels) MUST send their own HTTP-version
  in forwarded messages, unless it is purposefully downgraded as a
  workaround for an upstream issue.  In other words, an intermediary is
  not allowed to blindly forward the start-line without ensuring that
  the protocol version in that message matches a version to which that
  intermediary is conformant for both the receiving and sending of
  messages.  Forwarding an HTTP message without rewriting the HTTP-
  version might result in communication errors when downstream
  recipients use the message sender's version to determine what
  features are safe to use for later communication with that sender.

  A server MAY send an HTTP/1.0 response to an HTTP/1.1 request if it
  is known or suspected that the client incorrectly implements the HTTP
  specification and is incapable of correctly processing later version
  responses, such as when a client fails to parse the version number
  correctly or when an intermediary is known to blindly forward the
  HTTP-version even when it doesn't conform to the given minor version
  of the protocol.  Such protocol downgrades SHOULD NOT be performed
  unless triggered by specific client attributes, such as when one or
  more of the request header fields (e.g., User-Agent) uniquely match
  the values sent by a client known to be in error.

3.  Request Line

  A request-line begins with a method token, followed by a single space
  (SP), the request-target, and another single space (SP), and ends
  with the protocol version.

    request-line   = method SP request-target SP HTTP-version

  Although the request-line grammar rule requires that each of the
  component elements be separated by a single SP octet, recipients MAY
  instead parse on whitespace-delimited word boundaries and, aside from
  the CRLF terminator, treat any form of whitespace as the SP separator
  while ignoring preceding or trailing whitespace; such whitespace
  includes one or more of the following octets: SP, HTAB, VT (%x0B), FF
  (%x0C), or bare CR.  However, lenient parsing can result in request
  smuggling security vulnerabilities if there are multiple recipients
  of the message and each has its own unique interpretation of
  robustness (see Section 11.2).

  HTTP does not place a predefined limit on the length of a request-
  line, as described in Section 2.3 of [HTTP].  A server that receives
  a method longer than any that it implements SHOULD respond with a 501
  (Not Implemented) status code.  A server that receives a request-
  target longer than any URI it wishes to parse MUST respond with a 414
  (URI Too Long) status code (see Section 15.5.15 of [HTTP]).

  Various ad hoc limitations on request-line length are found in
  practice.  It is RECOMMENDED that all HTTP senders and recipients
  support, at a minimum, request-line lengths of 8000 octets.

3.1.  Method

  The method token indicates the request method to be performed on the
  target resource.  The request method is case-sensitive.

    method         = token

  The request methods defined by this specification can be found in
  Section 9 of [HTTP], along with information regarding the HTTP method
  registry and considerations for defining new methods.

3.2.  Request Target

  The request-target identifies the target resource upon which to apply
  the request.  The client derives a request-target from its desired
  target URI.  There are four distinct formats for the request-target,
  depending on both the method being requested and whether the request
  is to a proxy.

    request-target = origin-form
                   / absolute-form
                   / authority-form
                   / asterisk-form

  No whitespace is allowed in the request-target.  Unfortunately, some
  user agents fail to properly encode or exclude whitespace found in
  hypertext references, resulting in those disallowed characters being
  sent as the request-target in a malformed request-line.

  Recipients of an invalid request-line SHOULD respond with either a
  400 (Bad Request) error or a 301 (Moved Permanently) redirect with
  the request-target properly encoded.  A recipient SHOULD NOT attempt
  to autocorrect and then process the request without a redirect, since
  the invalid request-line might be deliberately crafted to bypass
  security filters along the request chain.

  A client MUST send a Host header field (Section 7.2 of [HTTP]) in all
  HTTP/1.1 request messages.  If the target URI includes an authority
  component, then a client MUST send a field value for Host that is
  identical to that authority component, excluding any userinfo
  subcomponent and its "@" delimiter (Section 4.2 of [HTTP]).  If the
  authority component is missing or undefined for the target URI, then
  a client MUST send a Host header field with an empty field value.

  A server MUST respond with a 400 (Bad Request) status code to any
  HTTP/1.1 request message that lacks a Host header field and to any
  request message that contains more than one Host header field line or
  a Host header field with an invalid field value.

3.2.1.  origin-form

  The most common form of request-target is the "origin-form".

    origin-form    = absolute-path [ "?" query ]

  When making a request directly to an origin server, other than a
  CONNECT or server-wide OPTIONS request (as detailed below), a client
  MUST send only the absolute path and query components of the target
  URI as the request-target.  If the target URI's path component is
  empty, the client MUST send "/" as the path within the origin-form of
  request-target.  A Host header field is also sent, as defined in
  Section 7.2 of [HTTP].

  For example, a client wishing to retrieve a representation of the
  resource identified as

    http://www.example.org/where?q=now

  directly from the origin server would open (or reuse) a TCP
  connection to port 80 of the host "www.example.org" and send the
  lines:

  GET /where?q=now HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.org

  followed by the remainder of the request message.

3.2.2.  absolute-form

  When making a request to a proxy, other than a CONNECT or server-wide
  OPTIONS request (as detailed below), a client MUST send the target
  URI in "absolute-form" as the request-target.

    absolute-form  = absolute-URI

  The proxy is requested to either service that request from a valid
  cache, if possible, or make the same request on the client's behalf
  either to the next inbound proxy server or directly to the origin
  server indicated by the request-target.  Requirements on such
  "forwarding" of messages are defined in Section 7.6 of [HTTP].

  An example absolute-form of request-line would be:

  GET http://www.example.org/pub/WWW/TheProject.html HTTP/1.1

  A client MUST send a Host header field in an HTTP/1.1 request even if
  the request-target is in the absolute-form, since this allows the
  Host information to be forwarded through ancient HTTP/1.0 proxies
  that might not have implemented Host.

  When a proxy receives a request with an absolute-form of request-
  target, the proxy MUST ignore the received Host header field (if any)
  and instead replace it with the host information of the request-
  target.  A proxy that forwards such a request MUST generate a new
  Host field value based on the received request-target rather than
  forward the received Host field value.

  When an origin server receives a request with an absolute-form of
  request-target, the origin server MUST ignore the received Host
  header field (if any) and instead use the host information of the
  request-target.  Note that if the request-target does not have an
  authority component, an empty Host header field will be sent in this
  case.

  A server MUST accept the absolute-form in requests even though most
  HTTP/1.1 clients will only send the absolute-form to a proxy.

3.2.3.  authority-form

  The "authority-form" of request-target is only used for CONNECT
  requests (Section 9.3.6 of [HTTP]).  It consists of only the uri-host
  and port number of the tunnel destination, separated by a colon
  (":").

    authority-form = uri-host ":" port

  When making a CONNECT request to establish a tunnel through one or
  more proxies, a client MUST send only the host and port of the tunnel
  destination as the request-target.  The client obtains the host and
  port from the target URI's authority component, except that it sends
  the scheme's default port if the target URI elides the port.  For
  example, a CONNECT request to "http://www.example.com" looks like the
  following:

  CONNECT www.example.com:80 HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.com

3.2.4.  asterisk-form

  The "asterisk-form" of request-target is only used for a server-wide
  OPTIONS request (Section 9.3.7 of [HTTP]).

    asterisk-form  = "*"

  When a client wishes to request OPTIONS for the server as a whole, as
  opposed to a specific named resource of that server, the client MUST
  send only "*" (%x2A) as the request-target.  For example,

  OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1

  If a proxy receives an OPTIONS request with an absolute-form of
  request-target in which the URI has an empty path and no query
  component, then the last proxy on the request chain MUST send a
  request-target of "*" when it forwards the request to the indicated
  origin server.

  For example, the request

  OPTIONS http://www.example.org:8001 HTTP/1.1

  would be forwarded by the final proxy as

  OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.org:8001

  after connecting to port 8001 of host "www.example.org".

3.3.  Reconstructing the Target URI

  The target URI is the request-target when the request-target is in
  absolute-form.  In that case, a server will parse the URI into its
  generic components for further evaluation.

  Otherwise, the server reconstructs the target URI from the connection
  context and various parts of the request message in order to identify
  the target resource (Section 7.1 of [HTTP]):

  *  If the server's configuration provides for a fixed URI scheme, or
     a scheme is provided by a trusted outbound gateway, that scheme is
     used for the target URI.  This is common in large-scale
     deployments because a gateway server will receive the client's
     connection context and replace that with their own connection to
     the inbound server.  Otherwise, if the request is received over a
     secured connection, the target URI's scheme is "https"; if not,
     the scheme is "http".

  *  If the request-target is in authority-form, the target URI's
     authority component is the request-target.  Otherwise, the target
     URI's authority component is the field value of the Host header
     field.  If there is no Host header field or if its field value is
     empty or invalid, the target URI's authority component is empty.

  *  If the request-target is in authority-form or asterisk-form, the
     target URI's combined path and query component is empty.
     Otherwise, the target URI's combined path and query component is
     the request-target.

  *  The components of a reconstructed target URI, once determined as
     above, can be recombined into absolute-URI form by concatenating
     the scheme, "://", authority, and combined path and query
     component.

  Example 1: The following message received over a secure connection

  GET /pub/WWW/TheProject.html HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.org

  has a target URI of

    https://www.example.org/pub/WWW/TheProject.html

  Example 2: The following message received over an insecure connection

  OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1
  Host: www.example.org:8080

  has a target URI of

    http://www.example.org:8080

  If the target URI's authority component is empty and its URI scheme
  requires a non-empty authority (as is the case for "http" and
  "https"), the server can reject the request or determine whether a
  configured default applies that is consistent with the incoming
  connection's context.  Context might include connection details like
  address and port, what security has been applied, and locally defined
  information specific to that server's configuration.  An empty
  authority is replaced with the configured default before further
  processing of the request.

  Supplying a default name for authority within the context of a
  secured connection is inherently unsafe if there is any chance that
  the user agent's intended authority might differ from the default.  A
  server that can uniquely identify an authority from the request
  context MAY use that identity as a default without this risk.
  Alternatively, it might be better to redirect the request to a safe
  resource that explains how to obtain a new client.

  Note that reconstructing the client's target URI is only half of the
  process for identifying a target resource.  The other half is
  determining whether that target URI identifies a resource for which
  the server is willing and able to send a response, as defined in
  Section 7.4 of [HTTP].

4.  Status Line

  The first line of a response message is the status-line, consisting
  of the protocol version, a space (SP), the status code, and another
  space and ending with an OPTIONAL textual phrase describing the
  status code.

    status-line = HTTP-version SP status-code SP [ reason-phrase ]

  Although the status-line grammar rule requires that each of the
  component elements be separated by a single SP octet, recipients MAY
  instead parse on whitespace-delimited word boundaries and, aside from
  the line terminator, treat any form of whitespace as the SP separator
  while ignoring preceding or trailing whitespace; such whitespace
  includes one or more of the following octets: SP, HTAB, VT (%x0B), FF
  (%x0C), or bare CR.  However, lenient parsing can result in response
  splitting security vulnerabilities if there are multiple recipients
  of the message and each has its own unique interpretation of
  robustness (see Section 11.1).

  The status-code element is a 3-digit integer code describing the
  result of the server's attempt to understand and satisfy the client's
  corresponding request.  A recipient parses and interprets the
  remainder of the response message in light of the semantics defined
  for that status code, if the status code is recognized by that
  recipient, or in accordance with the class of that status code when
  the specific code is unrecognized.

    status-code    = 3DIGIT

  HTTP's core status codes are defined in Section 15 of [HTTP], along
  with the classes of status codes, considerations for the definition
  of new status codes, and the IANA registry for collecting such
  definitions.

  The reason-phrase element exists for the sole purpose of providing a
  textual description associated with the numeric status code, mostly
  out of deference to earlier Internet application protocols that were
  more frequently used with interactive text clients.

    reason-phrase  = 1*( HTAB / SP / VCHAR / obs-text )

  A client SHOULD ignore the reason-phrase content because it is not a
  reliable channel for information (it might be translated for a given
  locale, overwritten by intermediaries, or discarded when the message
  is forwarded via other versions of HTTP).  A server MUST send the
  space that separates the status-code from the reason-phrase even when
  the reason-phrase is absent (i.e., the status-line would end with the
  space).

5.  Field Syntax

  Each field line consists of a case-insensitive field name followed by
  a colon (":"), optional leading whitespace, the field line value, and
  optional trailing whitespace.

    field-line   = field-name ":" OWS field-value OWS

  Rules for parsing within field values are defined in Section 5.5 of
  [HTTP].  This section covers the generic syntax for header field
  inclusion within, and extraction from, HTTP/1.1 messages.

5.1.  Field Line Parsing

  Messages are parsed using a generic algorithm, independent of the
  individual field names.  The contents within a given field line value
  are not parsed until a later stage of message interpretation (usually
  after the message's entire field section has been processed).

  No whitespace is allowed between the field name and colon.  In the
  past, differences in the handling of such whitespace have led to
  security vulnerabilities in request routing and response handling.  A
  server MUST reject, with a response status code of 400 (Bad Request),
  any received request message that contains whitespace between a
  header field name and colon.  A proxy MUST remove any such whitespace
  from a response message before forwarding the message downstream.

  A field line value might be preceded and/or followed by optional
  whitespace (OWS); a single SP preceding the field line value is
  preferred for consistent readability by humans.  The field line value
  does not include that leading or trailing whitespace: OWS occurring
  before the first non-whitespace octet of the field line value, or
  after the last non-whitespace octet of the field line value, is
  excluded by parsers when extracting the field line value from a field
  line.

5.2.  Obsolete Line Folding

  Historically, HTTP/1.x field values could be extended over multiple
  lines by preceding each extra line with at least one space or
  horizontal tab (obs-fold).  This specification deprecates such line
  folding except within the "message/http" media type (Section 10.1).

    obs-fold     = OWS CRLF RWS
                 ; obsolete line folding

  A sender MUST NOT generate a message that includes line folding
  (i.e., that has any field line value that contains a match to the
  obs-fold rule) unless the message is intended for packaging within
  the "message/http" media type.

  A server that receives an obs-fold in a request message that is not
  within a "message/http" container MUST either reject the message by
  sending a 400 (Bad Request), preferably with a representation
  explaining that obsolete line folding is unacceptable, or replace
  each received obs-fold with one or more SP octets prior to
  interpreting the field value or forwarding the message downstream.

  A proxy or gateway that receives an obs-fold in a response message
  that is not within a "message/http" container MUST either discard the
  message and replace it with a 502 (Bad Gateway) response, preferably
  with a representation explaining that unacceptable line folding was
  received, or replace each received obs-fold with one or more SP
  octets prior to interpreting the field value or forwarding the
  message downstream.

  A user agent that receives an obs-fold in a response message that is
  not within a "message/http" container MUST replace each received
  obs-fold with one or more SP octets prior to interpreting the field
  value.

6.  Message Body

  The message body (if any) of an HTTP/1.1 message is used to carry
  content (Section 6.4 of [HTTP]) for the request or response.  The
  message body is identical to the content unless a transfer coding has
  been applied, as described in Section 6.1.

    message-body = *OCTET

  The rules for determining when a message body is present in an
  HTTP/1.1 message differ for requests and responses.

  The presence of a message body in a request is signaled by a
  Content-Length or Transfer-Encoding header field.  Request message
  framing is independent of method semantics.

  The presence of a message body in a response, as detailed in
  Section 6.3, depends on both the request method to which it is
  responding and the response status code.  This corresponds to when
  response content is allowed by HTTP semantics (Section 6.4.1 of
  [HTTP]).

6.1.  Transfer-Encoding

  The Transfer-Encoding header field lists the transfer coding names
  corresponding to the sequence of transfer codings that have been (or
  will be) applied to the content in order to form the message body.
  Transfer codings are defined in Section 7.

    Transfer-Encoding = #transfer-coding
                         ; defined in [HTTP], Section 10.1.4

  Transfer-Encoding is analogous to the Content-Transfer-Encoding field
  of MIME, which was designed to enable safe transport of binary data
  over a 7-bit transport service ([RFC2045], Section 6).  However, safe
  transport has a different focus for an 8bit-clean transfer protocol.
  In HTTP's case, Transfer-Encoding is primarily intended to accurately
  delimit dynamically generated content.  It also serves to distinguish
  encodings that are only applied in transit from the encodings that
  are a characteristic of the selected representation.

  A recipient MUST be able to parse the chunked transfer coding
  (Section 7.1) because it plays a crucial role in framing messages
  when the content size is not known in advance.  A sender MUST NOT
  apply the chunked transfer coding more than once to a message body
  (i.e., chunking an already chunked message is not allowed).  If any
  transfer coding other than chunked is applied to a request's content,
  the sender MUST apply chunked as the final transfer coding to ensure
  that the message is properly framed.  If any transfer coding other
  than chunked is applied to a response's content, the sender MUST
  either apply chunked as the final transfer coding or terminate the
  message by closing the connection.

  For example,

  Transfer-Encoding: gzip, chunked

  indicates that the content has been compressed using the gzip coding
  and then chunked using the chunked coding while forming the message
  body.

  Unlike Content-Encoding (Section 8.4.1 of [HTTP]), Transfer-Encoding
  is a property of the message, not of the representation.  Any
  recipient along the request/response chain MAY decode the received
  transfer coding(s) or apply additional transfer coding(s) to the
  message body, assuming that corresponding changes are made to the
  Transfer-Encoding field value.  Additional information about the
  encoding parameters can be provided by other header fields not
  defined by this specification.

  Transfer-Encoding MAY be sent in a response to a HEAD request or in a
  304 (Not Modified) response (Section 15.4.5 of [HTTP]) to a GET
  request, neither of which includes a message body, to indicate that
  the origin server would have applied a transfer coding to the message
  body if the request had been an unconditional GET.  This indication
  is not required, however, because any recipient on the response chain
  (including the origin server) can remove transfer codings when they
  are not needed.

  A server MUST NOT send a Transfer-Encoding header field in any
  response with a status code of 1xx (Informational) or 204 (No
  Content).  A server MUST NOT send a Transfer-Encoding header field in
  any 2xx (Successful) response to a CONNECT request (Section 9.3.6 of
  [HTTP]).

  A server that receives a request message with a transfer coding it
  does not understand SHOULD respond with 501 (Not Implemented).

  Transfer-Encoding was added in HTTP/1.1.  It is generally assumed
  that implementations advertising only HTTP/1.0 support will not
  understand how to process transfer-encoded content, and that an
  HTTP/1.0 message received with a Transfer-Encoding is likely to have
  been forwarded without proper handling of the chunked transfer coding
  in transit.

  A client MUST NOT send a request containing Transfer-Encoding unless
  it knows the server will handle HTTP/1.1 requests (or later minor
  revisions); such knowledge might be in the form of specific user
  configuration or by remembering the version of a prior received
  response.  A server MUST NOT send a response containing Transfer-
  Encoding unless the corresponding request indicates HTTP/1.1 (or
  later minor revisions).

  Early implementations of Transfer-Encoding would occasionally send
  both a chunked transfer coding for message framing and an estimated
  Content-Length header field for use by progress bars.  This is why
  Transfer-Encoding is defined as overriding Content-Length, as opposed
  to them being mutually incompatible.  Unfortunately, forwarding such
  a message can lead to vulnerabilities regarding request smuggling
  (Section 11.2) or response splitting (Section 11.1) attacks if any
  downstream recipient fails to parse the message according to this
  specification, particularly when a downstream recipient only
  implements HTTP/1.0.

  A server MAY reject a request that contains both Content-Length and
  Transfer-Encoding or process such a request in accordance with the
  Transfer-Encoding alone.  Regardless, the server MUST close the
  connection after responding to such a request to avoid the potential
  attacks.

  A server or client that receives an HTTP/1.0 message containing a
  Transfer-Encoding header field MUST treat the message as if the
  framing is faulty, even if a Content-Length is present, and close the
  connection after processing the message.  The message sender might
  have retained a portion of the message, in buffer, that could be
  misinterpreted by further use of the connection.

6.2.  Content-Length

  When a message does not have a Transfer-Encoding header field, a
  Content-Length header field (Section 8.6 of [HTTP]) can provide the
  anticipated size, as a decimal number of octets, for potential
  content.  For messages that do include content, the Content-Length
  field value provides the framing information necessary for
  determining where the data (and message) ends.  For messages that do
  not include content, the Content-Length indicates the size of the
  selected representation (Section 8.6 of [HTTP]).

  A sender MUST NOT send a Content-Length header field in any message
  that contains a Transfer-Encoding header field.

     |  *Note:* HTTP's use of Content-Length for message framing
     |  differs significantly from the same field's use in MIME, where
     |  it is an optional field used only within the "message/external-
     |  body" media-type.

6.3.  Message Body Length

  The length of a message body is determined by one of the following
  (in order of precedence):

  1.  Any response to a HEAD request and any response with a 1xx
      (Informational), 204 (No Content), or 304 (Not Modified) status
      code is always terminated by the first empty line after the
      header fields, regardless of the header fields present in the
      message, and thus cannot contain a message body or trailer
      section.

  2.  Any 2xx (Successful) response to a CONNECT request implies that
      the connection will become a tunnel immediately after the empty
      line that concludes the header fields.  A client MUST ignore any
      Content-Length or Transfer-Encoding header fields received in
      such a message.

  3.  If a message is received with both a Transfer-Encoding and a
      Content-Length header field, the Transfer-Encoding overrides the
      Content-Length.  Such a message might indicate an attempt to
      perform request smuggling (Section 11.2) or response splitting
      (Section 11.1) and ought to be handled as an error.  An
      intermediary that chooses to forward the message MUST first
      remove the received Content-Length field and process the
      Transfer-Encoding (as described below) prior to forwarding the
      message downstream.

  4.  If a Transfer-Encoding header field is present and the chunked
      transfer coding (Section 7.1) is the final encoding, the message
      body length is determined by reading and decoding the chunked
      data until the transfer coding indicates the data is complete.

      If a Transfer-Encoding header field is present in a response and
      the chunked transfer coding is not the final encoding, the
      message body length is determined by reading the connection until
      it is closed by the server.

      If a Transfer-Encoding header field is present in a request and
      the chunked transfer coding is not the final encoding, the
      message body length cannot be determined reliably; the server
      MUST respond with the 400 (Bad Request) status code and then
      close the connection.

  5.  If a message is received without Transfer-Encoding and with an
      invalid Content-Length header field, then the message framing is
      invalid and the recipient MUST treat it as an unrecoverable
      error, unless the field value can be successfully parsed as a
      comma-separated list (Section 5.6.1 of [HTTP]), all values in the
      list are valid, and all values in the list are the same (in which
      case, the message is processed with that single value used as the
      Content-Length field value).  If the unrecoverable error is in a
      request message, the server MUST respond with a 400 (Bad Request)
      status code and then close the connection.  If it is in a
      response message received by a proxy, the proxy MUST close the
      connection to the server, discard the received response, and send
      a 502 (Bad Gateway) response to the client.  If it is in a
      response message received by a user agent, the user agent MUST
      close the connection to the server and discard the received
      response.

  6.  If a valid Content-Length header field is present without
      Transfer-Encoding, its decimal value defines the expected message
      body length in octets.  If the sender closes the connection or
      the recipient times out before the indicated number of octets are
      received, the recipient MUST consider the message to be
      incomplete and close the connection.

  7.  If this is a request message and none of the above are true, then
      the message body length is zero (no message body is present).

  8.  Otherwise, this is a response message without a declared message
      body length, so the message body length is determined by the
      number of octets received prior to the server closing the
      connection.

  Since there is no way to distinguish a successfully completed, close-
  delimited response message from a partially received message
  interrupted by network failure, a server SHOULD generate encoding or
  length-delimited messages whenever possible.  The close-delimiting
  feature exists primarily for backwards compatibility with HTTP/1.0.

     |  *Note:* Request messages are never close-delimited because they
     |  are always explicitly framed by length or transfer coding, with
     |  the absence of both implying the request ends immediately after
     |  the header section.

  A server MAY reject a request that contains a message body but not a
  Content-Length by responding with 411 (Length Required).

  Unless a transfer coding other than chunked has been applied, a
  client that sends a request containing a message body SHOULD use a
  valid Content-Length header field if the message body length is known
  in advance, rather than the chunked transfer coding, since some
  existing services respond to chunked with a 411 (Length Required)
  status code even though they understand the chunked transfer coding.
  This is typically because such services are implemented via a gateway
  that requires a content length in advance of being called, and the
  server is unable or unwilling to buffer the entire request before
  processing.

  A user agent that sends a request that contains a message body MUST
  send either a valid Content-Length header field or use the chunked
  transfer coding.  A client MUST NOT use the chunked transfer coding
  unless it knows the server will handle HTTP/1.1 (or later) requests;
  such knowledge can be in the form of specific user configuration or
  by remembering the version of a prior received response.

  If the final response to the last request on a connection has been
  completely received and there remains additional data to read, a user
  agent MAY discard the remaining data or attempt to determine if that
  data belongs as part of the prior message body, which might be the
  case if the prior message's Content-Length value is incorrect.  A
  client MUST NOT process, cache, or forward such extra data as a
  separate response, since such behavior would be vulnerable to cache
  poisoning.

7.  Transfer Codings

  Transfer coding names are used to indicate an encoding transformation
  that has been, can be, or might need to be applied to a message's
  content in order to ensure "safe transport" through the network.
  This differs from a content coding in that the transfer coding is a
  property of the message rather than a property of the representation
  that is being transferred.

  All transfer-coding names are case-insensitive and ought to be
  registered within the HTTP Transfer Coding registry, as defined in
  Section 7.3.  They are used in the Transfer-Encoding (Section 6.1)
  and TE (Section 10.1.4 of [HTTP]) header fields (the latter also
  defining the "transfer-coding" grammar).

7.1.  Chunked Transfer Coding

  The chunked transfer coding wraps content in order to transfer it as
  a series of chunks, each with its own size indicator, followed by an
  OPTIONAL trailer section containing trailer fields.  Chunked enables
  content streams of unknown size to be transferred as a sequence of
  length-delimited buffers, which enables the sender to retain
  connection persistence and the recipient to know when it has received
  the entire message.

    chunked-body   = *chunk
                     last-chunk
                     trailer-section
                     CRLF

    chunk          = chunk-size [ chunk-ext ] CRLF
                     chunk-data CRLF
    chunk-size     = 1*HEXDIG
    last-chunk     = 1*("0") [ chunk-ext ] CRLF

    chunk-data     = 1*OCTET ; a sequence of chunk-size octets

  The chunk-size field is a string of hex digits indicating the size of
  the chunk-data in octets.  The chunked transfer coding is complete
  when a chunk with a chunk-size of zero is received, possibly followed
  by a trailer section, and finally terminated by an empty line.

  A recipient MUST be able to parse and decode the chunked transfer
  coding.

  HTTP/1.1 does not define any means to limit the size of a chunked
  response such that an intermediary can be assured of buffering the
  entire response.  Additionally, very large chunk sizes may cause
  overflows or loss of precision if their values are not represented
  accurately in a receiving implementation.  Therefore, recipients MUST
  anticipate potentially large hexadecimal numerals and prevent parsing
  errors due to integer conversion overflows or precision loss due to
  integer representation.

  The chunked coding does not define any parameters.  Their presence
  SHOULD be treated as an error.

7.1.1.  Chunk Extensions

  The chunked coding allows each chunk to include zero or more chunk
  extensions, immediately following the chunk-size, for the sake of
  supplying per-chunk metadata (such as a signature or hash), mid-
  message control information, or randomization of message body size.

    chunk-ext      = *( BWS ";" BWS chunk-ext-name
                        [ BWS "=" BWS chunk-ext-val ] )

    chunk-ext-name = token
    chunk-ext-val  = token / quoted-string

  The chunked coding is specific to each connection and is likely to be
  removed or recoded by each recipient (including intermediaries)
  before any higher-level application would have a chance to inspect
  the extensions.  Hence, the use of chunk extensions is generally
  limited to specialized HTTP services such as "long polling" (where
  client and server can have shared expectations regarding the use of
  chunk extensions) or for padding within an end-to-end secured
  connection.

  A recipient MUST ignore unrecognized chunk extensions.  A server
  ought to limit the total length of chunk extensions received in a
  request to an amount reasonable for the services provided, in the
  same way that it applies length limitations and timeouts for other
  parts of a message, and generate an appropriate 4xx (Client Error)
  response if that amount is exceeded.

7.1.2.  Chunked Trailer Section

  A trailer section allows the sender to include additional fields at
  the end of a chunked message in order to supply metadata that might
  be dynamically generated while the content is sent, such as a message
  integrity check, digital signature, or post-processing status.  The
  proper use and limitations of trailer fields are defined in
  Section 6.5 of [HTTP].

    trailer-section   = *( field-line CRLF )

  A recipient that removes the chunked coding from a message MAY
  selectively retain or discard the received trailer fields.  A
  recipient that retains a received trailer field MUST either store/
  forward the trailer field separately from the received header fields
  or merge the received trailer field into the header section.  A
  recipient MUST NOT merge a received trailer field into the header
  section unless its corresponding header field definition explicitly
  permits and instructs how the trailer field value can be safely
  merged.

7.1.3.  Decoding Chunked

  A process for decoding the chunked transfer coding can be represented
  in pseudo-code as:

    length := 0
    read chunk-size, chunk-ext (if any), and CRLF
    while (chunk-size > 0) {
       read chunk-data and CRLF
       append chunk-data to content
       length := length + chunk-size
       read chunk-size, chunk-ext (if any), and CRLF
    }
    read trailer field
    while (trailer field is not empty) {
       if (trailer fields are stored/forwarded separately) {
           append trailer field to existing trailer fields
       }
       else if (trailer field is understood and defined as mergeable) {
           merge trailer field with existing header fields
       }
       else {
           discard trailer field
       }
       read trailer field
    }
    Content-Length := length
    Remove "chunked" from Transfer-Encoding

7.2.  Transfer Codings for Compression

  The following transfer coding names for compression are defined by
  the same algorithm as their corresponding content coding:

  compress (and x-compress)
     See Section 8.4.1.1 of [HTTP].

  deflate
     See Section 8.4.1.2 of [HTTP].

  gzip (and x-gzip)
     See Section 8.4.1.3 of [HTTP].

  The compression codings do not define any parameters.  The presence
  of parameters with any of these compression codings SHOULD be treated
  as an error.

7.3.  Transfer Coding Registry

  The "HTTP Transfer Coding Registry" defines the namespace for
  transfer coding names.  It is maintained at
  <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters>.

  Registrations MUST include the following fields:

  *  Name

  *  Description

  *  Pointer to specification text

  Names of transfer codings MUST NOT overlap with names of content
  codings (Section 8.4.1 of [HTTP]) unless the encoding transformation
  is identical, as is the case for the compression codings defined in
  Section 7.2.

  The TE header field (Section 10.1.4 of [HTTP]) uses a pseudo-
  parameter named "q" as the rank value when multiple transfer codings
  are acceptable.  Future registrations of transfer codings SHOULD NOT
  define parameters called "q" (case-insensitively) in order to avoid
  ambiguities.

  Values to be added to this namespace require IETF Review (see
  Section 4.8 of [RFC8126]) and MUST conform to the purpose of transfer
  coding defined in this specification.

  Use of program names for the identification of encoding formats is
  not desirable and is discouraged for future encodings.

7.4.  Negotiating Transfer Codings

  The TE field (Section 10.1.4 of [HTTP]) is used in HTTP/1.1 to
  indicate what transfer codings, besides chunked, the client is
  willing to accept in the response and whether the client is willing
  to preserve trailer fields in a chunked transfer coding.

  A client MUST NOT send the chunked transfer coding name in TE;
  chunked is always acceptable for HTTP/1.1 recipients.

  Three examples of TE use are below.

  TE: deflate
  TE:
  TE: trailers, deflate;q=0.5

  When multiple transfer codings are acceptable, the client MAY rank
  the codings by preference using a case-insensitive "q" parameter
  (similar to the qvalues used in content negotiation fields; see
  Section 12.4.2 of [HTTP]).  The rank value is 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 the TE field value is empty or if no TE field is present, the only
  acceptable transfer coding is chunked.  A message with no transfer
  coding is always acceptable.

  The keyword "trailers" indicates that the sender will not discard
  trailer fields, as described in Section 6.5 of [HTTP].

  Since the TE header field only applies to the immediate connection, a
  sender of TE MUST also send a "TE" connection option within the
  Connection header field (Section 7.6.1 of [HTTP]) in order to prevent
  the TE header field from being forwarded by intermediaries that do
  not support its semantics.

8.  Handling Incomplete Messages

  A server that receives an incomplete request message, usually due to
  a canceled request or a triggered timeout exception, MAY send an
  error response prior to closing the connection.

  A client that receives an incomplete response message, which can
  occur when a connection is closed prematurely or when decoding a
  supposedly chunked transfer coding fails, MUST record the message as
  incomplete.  Cache requirements for incomplete responses are defined
  in Section 3.3 of [CACHING].

  If a response terminates in the middle of the header section (before
  the empty line is received) and the status code might rely on header
  fields to convey the full meaning of the response, then the client
  cannot assume that meaning has been conveyed; the client might need
  to repeat the request in order to determine what action to take next.

  A message body that uses the chunked transfer coding is incomplete if
  the zero-sized chunk that terminates the encoding has not been
  received.  A message that uses a valid Content-Length is incomplete
  if the size of the message body received (in octets) is less than the
  value given by Content-Length.  A response that has neither chunked
  transfer coding nor Content-Length is terminated by closure of the
  connection and, if the header section was received intact, is
  considered complete unless an error was indicated by the underlying
  connection (e.g., an "incomplete close" in TLS would leave the
  response incomplete, as described in Section 9.8).

9.  Connection Management

  HTTP messaging is independent of the underlying transport- or
  session-layer connection protocol(s).  HTTP only presumes a reliable
  transport with in-order delivery of requests and the corresponding
  in-order delivery of responses.  The mapping of HTTP request and
  response structures onto the data units of an underlying transport
  protocol is outside the scope of this specification.

  As described in Section 7.3 of [HTTP], the specific connection
  protocols to be used for an HTTP interaction are determined by client
  configuration and the target URI.  For example, the "http" URI scheme
  (Section 4.2.1 of [HTTP]) indicates a default connection of TCP over
  IP, with a default TCP port of 80, but the client might be configured
  to use a proxy via some other connection, port, or protocol.

  HTTP implementations are expected to engage in connection management,
  which includes maintaining the state of current connections,
  establishing a new connection or reusing an existing connection,
  processing messages received on a connection, detecting connection
  failures, and closing each connection.  Most clients maintain
  multiple connections in parallel, including more than one connection
  per server endpoint.  Most servers are designed to maintain thousands
  of concurrent connections, while controlling request queues to enable
  fair use and detect denial-of-service attacks.

9.1.  Establishment

  It is beyond the scope of this specification to describe how
  connections are established via various transport- or session-layer
  protocols.  Each HTTP connection maps to one underlying transport
  connection.

9.2.  Associating a Response to a Request

  HTTP/1.1 does not include a request identifier for associating a
  given request message with its corresponding one or more response
  messages.  Hence, it relies on the order of response arrival to
  correspond exactly to the order in which requests are made on the
  same connection.  More than one response message per request only
  occurs when one or more informational responses (1xx; see
  Section 15.2 of [HTTP]) precede a final response to the same request.

  A client that has more than one outstanding request on a connection
  MUST maintain a list of outstanding requests in the order sent and
  MUST associate each received response message on that connection to
  the first outstanding request that has not yet received a final (non-
  1xx) response.

  If a client receives data on a connection that doesn't have
  outstanding requests, the client MUST NOT consider that data to be a
  valid response; the client SHOULD close the connection, since message
  delimitation is now ambiguous, unless the data consists only of one
  or more CRLF (which can be discarded per Section 2.2).

9.3.  Persistence

  HTTP/1.1 defaults to the use of "persistent connections", allowing
  multiple requests and responses to be carried over a single
  connection.  HTTP implementations SHOULD support persistent
  connections.

  A recipient determines whether a connection is persistent or not
  based on the protocol version and Connection header field
  (Section 7.6.1 of [HTTP]) in the most recently received message, if
  any:

  *  If the "close" connection option is present (Section 9.6), the
     connection will not persist after the current response; else,

  *  If the received protocol is HTTP/1.1 (or later), the connection
     will persist after the current response; else,

  *  If the received protocol is HTTP/1.0, the "keep-alive" connection
     option is present, either the recipient is not a proxy or the
     message is a response, and the recipient wishes to honor the
     HTTP/1.0 "keep-alive" mechanism, the connection will persist after
     the current response; otherwise,

  *  The connection will close after the current response.

  A client that does not support persistent connections MUST send the
  "close" connection option in every request message.

  A server that does not support persistent connections MUST send the
  "close" connection option in every response message that does not
  have a 1xx (Informational) status code.

  A client MAY send additional requests on a persistent connection
  until it sends or receives a "close" connection option or receives an
  HTTP/1.0 response without a "keep-alive" connection option.

  In order to remain persistent, all messages on a connection need to
  have a self-defined message length (i.e., one not defined by closure
  of the connection), as described in Section 6.  A server MUST read
  the entire request message body or close the connection after sending
  its response; otherwise, the remaining data on a persistent
  connection would be misinterpreted as the next request.  Likewise, a
  client MUST read the entire response message body if it intends to
  reuse the same connection for a subsequent request.

  A proxy server MUST NOT maintain a persistent connection with an
  HTTP/1.0 client (see Appendix C.2.2 for information and discussion of
  the problems with the Keep-Alive header field implemented by many
  HTTP/1.0 clients).

  See Appendix C.2.2 for more information on backwards compatibility
  with HTTP/1.0 clients.

9.3.1.  Retrying Requests

  Connections can be closed at any time, with or without intention.
  Implementations ought to anticipate the need to recover from
  asynchronous close events.  The conditions under which a client can
  automatically retry a sequence of outstanding requests are defined in
  Section 9.2.2 of [HTTP].

9.3.2.  Pipelining

  A client that supports persistent connections MAY "pipeline" its
  requests (i.e., send multiple requests without waiting for each
  response).  A server MAY process a sequence of pipelined requests in
  parallel if they all have safe methods (Section 9.2.1 of [HTTP]), but
  it MUST send the corresponding responses in the same order that the
  requests were received.

  A client that pipelines requests SHOULD retry unanswered requests if
  the connection closes before it receives all of the corresponding
  responses.  When retrying pipelined requests after a failed
  connection (a connection not explicitly closed by the server in its
  last complete response), a client MUST NOT pipeline immediately after
  connection establishment, since the first remaining request in the
  prior pipeline might have caused an error response that can be lost
  again if multiple requests are sent on a prematurely closed
  connection (see the TCP reset problem described in Section 9.6).

  Idempotent methods (Section 9.2.2 of [HTTP]) are significant to
  pipelining because they can be automatically retried after a
  connection failure.  A user agent SHOULD NOT pipeline requests after
  a non-idempotent method, until the final response status code for
  that method has been received, unless the user agent has a means to
  detect and recover from partial failure conditions involving the
  pipelined sequence.

  An intermediary that receives pipelined requests MAY pipeline those
  requests when forwarding them inbound, since it can rely on the
  outbound user agent(s) to determine what requests can be safely
  pipelined.  If the inbound connection fails before receiving a
  response, the pipelining intermediary MAY attempt to retry a sequence
  of requests that have yet to receive a response if the requests all
  have idempotent methods; otherwise, the pipelining intermediary
  SHOULD forward any received responses and then close the
  corresponding outbound connection(s) so that the outbound user
  agent(s) can recover accordingly.

9.4.  Concurrency

  A client ought to limit the number of simultaneous open connections
  that it maintains to a given server.

  Previous revisions of HTTP gave a specific number of connections as a
  ceiling, but this was found to be impractical for many applications.
  As a result, this specification does not mandate a particular maximum
  number of connections but, instead, encourages clients to be
  conservative when opening multiple connections.

  Multiple connections are typically used to avoid the "head-of-line
  blocking" problem, wherein a request that takes significant server-
  side processing and/or transfers very large content would block
  subsequent requests on the same connection.  However, each connection
  consumes server resources.

  Furthermore, using multiple connections can cause undesirable side
  effects in congested networks.  Using larger numbers of connections
  can also cause side effects in otherwise uncongested networks,
  because their aggregate and initially synchronized sending behavior
  can cause congestion that would not have been present if fewer
  parallel connections had been used.

  Note that a server might reject traffic that it deems abusive or
  characteristic of a denial-of-service attack, such as an excessive
  number of open connections from a single client.

9.5.  Failures and Timeouts

  Servers will usually have some timeout value beyond which they will
  no longer maintain an inactive connection.  Proxy servers might make
  this a higher value since it is likely that the client will be making
  more connections through the same proxy server.  The use of
  persistent connections places no requirements on the length (or
  existence) of this timeout for either the client or the server.

  A client or server that wishes to time out SHOULD issue a graceful
  close on the connection.  Implementations SHOULD constantly monitor
  open connections for a received closure signal and respond to it as
  appropriate, since prompt closure of both sides of a connection
  enables allocated system resources to be reclaimed.

  A client, server, or proxy MAY close the transport connection at any
  time.  For example, a client might have started to send a new request
  at the same time that the server has decided to close the "idle"
  connection.  From the server's point of view, the connection is being
  closed while it was idle, but from the client's point of view, a
  request is in progress.

  A server SHOULD sustain persistent connections, when possible, and
  allow the underlying transport's flow-control mechanisms to resolve
  temporary overloads rather than terminate connections with the
  expectation that clients will retry.  The latter technique can
  exacerbate network congestion or server load.

  A client sending a message body SHOULD monitor the network connection
  for an error response while it is transmitting the request.  If the
  client sees a response that indicates the server does not wish to
  receive the message body and is closing the connection, the client
  SHOULD immediately cease transmitting the body and close its side of
  the connection.

9.6.  Tear-down

  The "close" connection option is defined as a signal that the sender
  will close this connection after completion of the response.  A
  sender SHOULD send a Connection header field (Section 7.6.1 of
  [HTTP]) containing the "close" connection option when it intends to
  close a connection.  For example,

  Connection: close

  as a request header field indicates that this is the last request
  that the client will send on this connection, while in a response,
  the same field indicates that the server is going to close this
  connection after the response message is complete.

  Note that the field name "Close" is reserved, since using that name
  as a header field might conflict with the "close" connection option.

  A client that sends a "close" connection option MUST NOT send further
  requests on that connection (after the one containing the "close")
  and MUST close the connection after reading the final response
  message corresponding to this request.

  A server that receives a "close" connection option MUST initiate
  closure of the connection (see below) after it sends the final
  response to the request that contained the "close" connection option.
  The server SHOULD send a "close" connection option in its final
  response on that connection.  The server MUST NOT process any further
  requests received on that connection.

  A server that sends a "close" connection option MUST initiate closure
  of the connection (see below) after it sends the response containing
  the "close" connection option.  The server MUST NOT process any
  further requests received on that connection.

  A client that receives a "close" connection option MUST cease sending
  requests on that connection and close the connection after reading
  the response message containing the "close" connection option; if
  additional pipelined requests had been sent on the connection, the
  client SHOULD NOT assume that they will be processed by the server.

  If a server performs an immediate close of a TCP connection, there is
  a significant risk that the client will not be able to read the last
  HTTP response.  If the server receives additional data from the
  client on a fully closed connection, such as another request sent by
  the client before receiving the server's response, the server's TCP
  stack will send a reset packet to the client; unfortunately, the
  reset packet might erase the client's unacknowledged input buffers
  before they can be read and interpreted by the client's HTTP parser.

  To avoid the TCP reset problem, servers typically close a connection
  in stages.  First, the server performs a half-close by closing only
  the write side of the read/write connection.  The server then
  continues to read from the connection until it receives a
  corresponding close by the client, or until the server is reasonably
  certain that its own TCP stack has received the client's
  acknowledgement of the packet(s) containing the server's last
  response.  Finally, the server fully closes the connection.

  It is unknown whether the reset problem is exclusive to TCP or might
  also be found in other transport connection protocols.

  Note that a TCP connection that is half-closed by the client does not
  delimit a request message, nor does it imply that the client is no
  longer interested in a response.  In general, transport signals
  cannot be relied upon to signal edge cases, since HTTP/1.1 is
  independent of transport.

9.7.  TLS Connection Initiation

  Conceptually, HTTP/TLS is simply sending HTTP messages over a
  connection secured via TLS [TLS13].

  The HTTP client also acts as the TLS client.  It initiates a
  connection to the server on the appropriate port and sends the TLS
  ClientHello to begin the TLS handshake.  When the TLS handshake has
  finished, the client may then initiate the first HTTP request.  All
  HTTP data MUST be sent as TLS "application data" but is otherwise
  treated like a normal connection for HTTP (including potential reuse
  as a persistent connection).

9.8.  TLS Connection Closure

  TLS uses an exchange of closure alerts prior to (non-error)
  connection closure to provide secure connection closure; see
  Section 6.1 of [TLS13].  When a valid closure alert is received, an
  implementation can be assured that no further data will be received
  on that connection.

  When an implementation knows that it has sent or received all the
  message data that it cares about, typically by detecting HTTP message
  boundaries, it might generate an "incomplete close" by sending a
  closure alert and then closing the connection without waiting to
  receive the corresponding closure alert from its peer.

  An incomplete close does not call into question the security of the
  data already received, but it could indicate that subsequent data
  might have been truncated.  As TLS is not directly aware of HTTP
  message framing, it is necessary to examine the HTTP data itself to
  determine whether messages are complete.  Handling of incomplete
  messages is defined in Section 8.

  When encountering an incomplete close, a client SHOULD treat as
  completed all requests for which it has received either

  1.  as much data as specified in the Content-Length header field or

  2.  the terminal zero-length chunk (when Transfer-Encoding of chunked
      is used).

  A response that has neither chunked transfer coding nor Content-
  Length is complete only if a valid closure alert has been received.
  Treating an incomplete message as complete could expose
  implementations to attack.

  A client detecting an incomplete close SHOULD recover gracefully.

  Clients MUST send a closure alert before closing the connection.
  Clients that do not expect to receive any more data MAY choose not to
  wait for the server's closure alert and simply close the connection,
  thus generating an incomplete close on the server side.

  Servers SHOULD be prepared to receive an incomplete close from the
  client, since the client can often locate the end of server data.

  Servers MUST attempt to initiate an exchange of closure alerts with
  the client before closing the connection.  Servers MAY close the
  connection after sending the closure alert, thus generating an
  incomplete close on the client side.

10.  Enclosing Messages as Data

10.1.  Media Type message/http

  The "message/http" media type can be used to enclose a single HTTP
  request or response message, provided that it obeys the MIME
  restrictions for all "message" types regarding line length and
  encodings.  Because of the line length limitations, field values
  within "message/http" are allowed to use line folding (obs-fold), as
  described in Section 5.2, to convey the field value over multiple
  lines.  A recipient of "message/http" data MUST replace any obsolete
  line folding with one or more SP characters when the message is
  consumed.

  Type name:  message

  Subtype name:  http

  Required parameters:  N/A

  Optional parameters:  version, msgtype

     version:  The HTTP-version number of the enclosed message (e.g.,
        "1.1").  If not present, the version can be determined from the
        first line of the body.

     msgtype:  The message type -- "request" or "response".  If not
        present, the type can be determined from the first line of the
        body.

  Encoding considerations:  only "7bit", "8bit", or "binary" are
     permitted

  Security considerations:  see Section 11

  Interoperability considerations:  N/A

  Published specification:  RFC 9112 (see Section 10.1).

  Applications that use this media type:  N/A

  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A

  Additional information:  Magic number(s):  N/A

                           Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A

                           File extension(s):  N/A

                           Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See Aut
     hors' Addresses section.

  Intended usage:  COMMON

  Restrictions on usage:  N/A

  Author:  See Authors' Addresses section.

  Change controller:  IESG

10.2.  Media Type application/http

  The "application/http" media type can be used to enclose a pipeline
  of one or more HTTP request or response messages (not intermixed).

  Type name:  application

  Subtype name:  http

  Required parameters:  N/A

  Optional parameters:  version, msgtype

     version:  The HTTP-version number of the enclosed messages (e.g.,
        "1.1").  If not present, the version can be determined from the
        first line of the body.

     msgtype:  The message type -- "request" or "response".  If not
        present, the type can be determined from the first line of the
        body.

  Encoding considerations:  HTTP messages enclosed by this type are in
     "binary" format; use of an appropriate Content-Transfer-Encoding
     is required when transmitted via email.

  Security considerations:  see Section 11

  Interoperability considerations:  N/A

  Published specification:  RFC 9112 (see Section 10.2).

  Applications that use this media type:  N/A

  Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A

  Additional information:  Deprecated alias names for this type:  N/A

                           Magic number(s):  N/A

                           File extension(s):  N/A

                           Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

  Person and email address to contact for further information:  See Aut
     hors' Addresses section.

  Intended usage:  COMMON

  Restrictions on usage:  N/A

  Author:  See Authors' Addresses section.

  Change controller:  IESG

11.  Security Considerations

  This section is meant to inform developers, information providers,
  and users about known security considerations relevant to HTTP
  message syntax and parsing.  Security considerations about HTTP
  semantics, content, and routing are addressed in [HTTP].

11.1.  Response Splitting

  Response splitting (a.k.a. CRLF injection) is a common technique,
  used in various attacks on Web usage, that exploits the line-based
  nature of HTTP message framing and the ordered association of
  requests to responses on persistent connections [Klein].  This
  technique can be particularly damaging when the requests pass through
  a shared cache.

  Response splitting exploits a vulnerability in servers (usually
  within an application server) where an attacker can send encoded data
  within some parameter of the request that is later decoded and echoed
  within any of the response header fields of the response.  If the
  decoded data is crafted to look like the response has ended and a
  subsequent response has begun, the response has been split, and the
  content within the apparent second response is controlled by the
  attacker.  The attacker can then make any other request on the same
  persistent connection and trick the recipients (including
  intermediaries) into believing that the second half of the split is
  an authoritative answer to the second request.

  For example, a parameter within the request-target might be read by
  an application server and reused within a redirect, resulting in the
  same parameter being echoed in the Location header field of the
  response.  If the parameter is decoded by the application and not
  properly encoded when placed in the response field, the attacker can
  send encoded CRLF octets and other content that will make the
  application's single response look like two or more responses.

  A common defense against response splitting is to filter requests for
  data that looks like encoded CR and LF (e.g., "%0D" and "%0A").
  However, that assumes the application server is only performing URI
  decoding rather than more obscure data transformations like charset
  transcoding, XML entity translation, base64 decoding, sprintf
  reformatting, etc.  A more effective mitigation is to prevent
  anything other than the server's core protocol libraries from sending
  a CR or LF within the header section, which means restricting the
  output of header fields to APIs that filter for bad octets and not
  allowing application servers to write directly to the protocol
  stream.

11.2.  Request Smuggling

  Request smuggling ([Linhart]) is a technique that exploits
  differences in protocol parsing among various recipients to hide
  additional requests (which might otherwise be blocked or disabled by
  policy) within an apparently harmless request.  Like response
  splitting, request smuggling can lead to a variety of attacks on HTTP
  usage.

  This specification has introduced new requirements on request
  parsing, particularly with regard to message framing in Section 6.3,
  to reduce the effectiveness of request smuggling.

11.3.  Message Integrity

  HTTP does not define a specific mechanism for ensuring message
  integrity, instead relying on the error-detection ability of
  underlying transport protocols and the use of length or chunk-
  delimited framing to detect completeness.  Historically, the lack of
  a single integrity mechanism has been justified by the informal
  nature of most HTTP communication.  However, the prevalence of HTTP
  as an information access mechanism has resulted in its increasing use
  within environments where verification of message integrity is
  crucial.

  The mechanisms provided with the "https" scheme, such as
  authenticated encryption, provide protection against modification of
  messages.  Care is needed, however, to ensure that connection closure
  cannot be used to truncate messages (see Section 9.8).  User agents
  might refuse to accept incomplete messages or treat them specially.
  For example, a browser being used to view medical history or drug
  interaction information needs to indicate to the user when such
  information is detected by the protocol to be incomplete, expired, or
  corrupted during transfer.  Such mechanisms might be selectively
  enabled via user agent extensions or the presence of message
  integrity metadata in a response.

  The "http" scheme provides no protection against accidental or
  malicious modification of messages.

  Extensions to the protocol might be used to mitigate the risk of
  unwanted modification of messages by intermediaries, even when the
  "https" scheme is used.  Integrity might be assured by using message
  authentication codes or digital signatures that are selectively added
  to messages via extensible metadata fields.

11.4.  Message Confidentiality

  HTTP relies on underlying transport protocols to provide message
  confidentiality when that is desired.  HTTP has been specifically
  designed to be independent of the transport protocol, such that it
  can be used over many forms of encrypted connection, with the
  selection of such transports being identified by the choice of URI
  scheme or within user agent configuration.

  The "https" scheme can be used to identify resources that require a
  confidential connection, as described in Section 4.2.2 of [HTTP].

12.  IANA Considerations

  The change controller for the following registrations is: "IETF
  ([email protected]) - Internet Engineering Task Force".

12.1.  Field Name Registration

  IANA has added the following field names to the "Hypertext Transfer
  Protocol (HTTP) Field Name Registry" at
  <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-fields>, as described in
  Section 18.4 of [HTTP].

  +===================+===========+=========+============+
  | Field Name        | Status    | Section | Comments   |
  +===================+===========+=========+============+
  | Close             | permanent | 9.6     | (reserved) |
  +-------------------+-----------+---------+------------+
  | MIME-Version      | permanent | B.1     |            |
  +-------------------+-----------+---------+------------+
  | Transfer-Encoding | permanent | 6.1     |            |
  +-------------------+-----------+---------+------------+

                          Table 1

12.2.  Media Type Registration

  IANA has updated the "Media Types" registry at
  <https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types> with the registration
  information in Sections 10.1 and 10.2 for the media types "message/
  http" and "application/http", respectively.

12.3.  Transfer Coding Registration

  IANA has updated the "HTTP Transfer Coding Registry" at
  <https://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters/> with the
  registration procedure of Section 7.3 and the content coding names
  summarized in the table below.

  +============+===========================================+=========+
  | Name       | Description                               | Section |
  +============+===========================================+=========+
  | chunked    | Transfer in a series of chunks            | 7.1     |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | compress   | UNIX "compress" data format [Welch]       | 7.2     |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | deflate    | "deflate" compressed data ([RFC1951])     | 7.2     |
  |            | inside the "zlib" data format ([RFC1950]) |         |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | gzip       | GZIP file format [RFC1952]                | 7.2     |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | trailers   | (reserved)                                | 12.3    |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | x-compress | Deprecated (alias for compress)           | 7.2     |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+
  | x-gzip     | Deprecated (alias for gzip)               | 7.2     |
  +------------+-------------------------------------------+---------+

                                Table 2

     |  *Note:* the coding name "trailers" is reserved because its use
     |  would conflict with the keyword "trailers" in the TE header
     |  field (Section 10.1.4 of [HTTP]).

12.4.  ALPN Protocol ID Registration

  IANA has updated the "TLS Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation
  (ALPN) Protocol IDs" registry at <https://www.iana.org/assignments/
  tls-extensiontype-values/> with the registration below:

         +==========+=============================+===========+
         | Protocol | Identification Sequence     | Reference |
         +==========+=============================+===========+
         | HTTP/1.1 | 0x68 0x74 0x74 0x70 0x2f    | RFC 9112  |
         |          | 0x31 0x2e 0x31 ("http/1.1") |           |
         +----------+-----------------------------+-----------+

                                Table 3

13.  References

13.1.  Normative References

  [CACHING]  Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke,
             Ed., "HTTP Caching", STD 98, RFC 9111,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC9111, June 2022,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9111>.

  [HTTP]     Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke,
             Ed., "HTTP Semantics", STD 97, RFC 9110,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC9110, June 2022,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9110>.

  [RFC1950]  Deutsch, P. and J-L. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data Format
             Specification version 3.3", RFC 1950,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC1950, May 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1950>.

  [RFC1951]  Deutsch, P., "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification
             version 1.3", RFC 1951, DOI 10.17487/RFC1951, May 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1951>.

  [RFC1952]  Deutsch, P., "GZIP file format specification version 4.3",
             RFC 1952, DOI 10.17487/RFC1952, May 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1952>.

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

  [RFC5234]  Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
             Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.

  [RFC7405]  Kyzivat, P., "Case-Sensitive String Support in ABNF",
             RFC 7405, DOI 10.17487/RFC7405, December 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7405>.

  [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
             2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
             May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

  [TLS13]    Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol
             Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8446>.

  [URI]      Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
             Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
             RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.

  [USASCII]  American National Standards Institute, "Coded Character
             Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code for Information
             Interchange", ANSI X3.4, 1986.

  [Welch]    Welch, T., "A Technique for High-Performance Data
             Compression", IEEE Computer 17(6),
             DOI 10.1109/MC.1984.1659158, June 1984,
             <https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1659158/>.

13.2.  Informative References

  [HTTP/1.0] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and H. Frystyk, "Hypertext
             Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.0", RFC 1945,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC1945, May 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1945>.

  [Klein]    Klein, A., "Divide and Conquer - HTTP Response Splitting,
             Web Cache Poisoning Attacks, and Related Topics", March
             2004, <https://packetstormsecurity.com/papers/general/
             whitepaper_httpresponse.pdf>.

  [Linhart]  Linhart, C., Klein, A., Heled, R., and S. Orrin, "HTTP
             Request Smuggling", June 2005,
             <https://www.cgisecurity.com/lib/HTTP-Request-
             Smuggling.pdf>.

  [RFC2045]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
             Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
             Bodies", RFC 2045, DOI 10.17487/RFC2045, November 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2045>.

  [RFC2046]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
             Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2046, November 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2046>.

  [RFC2049]  Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
             Extensions (MIME) Part Five: Conformance Criteria and
             Examples", RFC 2049, DOI 10.17487/RFC2049, November 1996,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2049>.

  [RFC2068]  Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., and T.
             Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1",
             RFC 2068, DOI 10.17487/RFC2068, January 1997,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2068>.

  [RFC2557]  Palme, J., Hopmann, A., and N. Shelness, "MIME
             Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML
             (MHTML)", RFC 2557, DOI 10.17487/RFC2557, March 1999,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2557>.

  [RFC5322]  Resnick, P., Ed., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC5322, October 2008,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5322>.

  [RFC7230]  Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer
             Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing",
             RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7230>.

  [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
             Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
             RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.

Appendix A.  Collected ABNF

  In the collected ABNF below, list rules are expanded per
  Section 5.6.1 of [HTTP].

  BWS = <BWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>

  HTTP-message = start-line CRLF *( field-line CRLF ) CRLF [
   message-body ]
  HTTP-name = %x48.54.54.50 ; HTTP
  HTTP-version = HTTP-name "/" DIGIT "." DIGIT

  OWS = <OWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>

  RWS = <RWS, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.3>

  Transfer-Encoding = [ transfer-coding *( OWS "," OWS transfer-coding
   ) ]

  absolute-URI = <absolute-URI, see [URI], Section 4.3>
  absolute-form = absolute-URI
  absolute-path = <absolute-path, see [HTTP], Section 4.1>
  asterisk-form = "*"
  authority = <authority, see [URI], Section 3.2>
  authority-form = uri-host ":" port

  chunk = chunk-size [ chunk-ext ] CRLF chunk-data CRLF
  chunk-data = 1*OCTET
  chunk-ext = *( BWS ";" BWS chunk-ext-name [ BWS "=" BWS chunk-ext-val
   ] )
  chunk-ext-name = token
  chunk-ext-val = token / quoted-string
  chunk-size = 1*HEXDIG
  chunked-body = *chunk last-chunk trailer-section CRLF

  field-line = field-name ":" OWS field-value OWS
  field-name = <field-name, see [HTTP], Section 5.1>
  field-value = <field-value, see [HTTP], Section 5.5>

  last-chunk = 1*"0" [ chunk-ext ] CRLF

  message-body = *OCTET
  method = token

  obs-fold = OWS CRLF RWS
  obs-text = <obs-text, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.4>
  origin-form = absolute-path [ "?" query ]

  port = <port, see [URI], Section 3.2.3>

  query = <query, see [URI], Section 3.4>
  quoted-string = <quoted-string, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.4>

  reason-phrase = 1*( HTAB / SP / VCHAR / obs-text )
  request-line = method SP request-target SP HTTP-version
  request-target = origin-form / absolute-form / authority-form /
   asterisk-form

  start-line = request-line / status-line
  status-code = 3DIGIT
  status-line = HTTP-version SP status-code SP [ reason-phrase ]

  token = <token, see [HTTP], Section 5.6.2>
  trailer-section = *( field-line CRLF )
  transfer-coding = <transfer-coding, see [HTTP], Section 10.1.4>

  uri-host = <host, see [URI], Section 3.2.2>

Appendix B.  Differences between HTTP and MIME

  HTTP/1.1 uses many of the constructs defined for the Internet Message
  Format [RFC5322] and Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME)
  [RFC2045] to allow a message body to be transmitted in an open
  variety of representations and with extensible fields.  However, some
  of these constructs have been reinterpreted to better fit the needs
  of interactive communication, leading to some differences in how MIME
  constructs are used within HTTP.  These differences were carefully
  chosen to optimize performance over binary connections, allow greater
  freedom in the use of new media types, ease date comparisons, and
  accommodate common implementations.

  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.

B.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.

B.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], and that content with a type of "text" represents line
  breaks as CRLF, forbidding the use of CR or LF outside of line break
  sequences [RFC2046].  In contrast, HTTP does not care whether CRLF,
  bare CR, or bare LF are used to indicate a line break within content.

  A proxy or gateway from HTTP to a strict MIME environment ought to
  translate all line breaks within text media types 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.

  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.

B.3.  Conversion of Date Formats

  HTTP/1.1 uses a restricted set of date formats (Section 5.6.7 of
  [HTTP]) 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.

B.4.  Conversion of Content-Encoding

  MIME does not include any concept equivalent to HTTP'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.)

B.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.

B.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 without
  modification and, aside from the "multipart/byteranges" type
  (Section 14.6 of [HTTP]), does not interpret the content or any MIME
  header lines that might be contained therein.

Appendix C.  Changes from Previous RFCs

C.1.  Changes from HTTP/0.9

  Since HTTP/0.9 did not support header fields in a request, there is
  no mechanism for it to support name-based virtual hosts (selection of
  resource by inspection of the Host header field).  Any server that
  implements name-based virtual hosts ought to disable support for
  HTTP/0.9.  Most requests that appear to be HTTP/0.9 are, in fact,
  badly constructed HTTP/1.x requests caused by a client failing to
  properly encode the request-target.

C.2.  Changes from HTTP/1.0

C.2.1.  Multihomed Web Servers

  The requirements that clients and servers support the Host header
  field (Section 7.2 of [HTTP]), report an error if it is missing from
  an HTTP/1.1 request, and accept absolute URIs (Section 3.2) are among
  the most important changes defined by HTTP/1.1.

  Older HTTP/1.0 clients assumed a one-to-one relationship of IP
  addresses and servers; there was no established mechanism for
  distinguishing the intended server of a request other than the IP
  address to which that request was directed.  The Host header field
  was introduced during the development of HTTP/1.1 and, though it was
  quickly implemented by most HTTP/1.0 browsers, additional
  requirements were placed on all HTTP/1.1 requests in order to ensure
  complete adoption.  At the time of this writing, most HTTP-based
  services are dependent upon the Host header field for targeting
  requests.

C.2.2.  Keep-Alive Connections

  In HTTP/1.0, each connection is established by the client prior to
  the request and closed by the server after sending the response.
  However, some implementations implement the explicitly negotiated
  ("Keep-Alive") version of persistent connections described in
  Section 19.7.1 of [RFC2068].

  Some clients and servers might wish to be compatible with these
  previous approaches to persistent connections, by explicitly
  negotiating for them with a "Connection: keep-alive" request header
  field.  However, some experimental implementations of HTTP/1.0
  persistent connections are faulty; for example, if an HTTP/1.0 proxy
  server doesn't understand Connection, it will erroneously forward
  that header field to the next inbound server, which would result in a
  hung connection.

  One attempted solution was the introduction of a Proxy-Connection
  header field, targeted specifically at proxies.  In practice, this
  was also unworkable, because proxies are often deployed in multiple
  layers, bringing about the same problem discussed above.

  As a result, clients are encouraged not to send the Proxy-Connection
  header field in any requests.

  Clients are also encouraged to consider the use of "Connection: keep-
  alive" in requests carefully; while they can enable persistent
  connections with HTTP/1.0 servers, clients using them will need to
  monitor the connection for "hung" requests (which indicate that the
  client ought to stop sending the header field), and this mechanism
  ought not be used by clients at all when a proxy is being used.

C.2.3.  Introduction of Transfer-Encoding

  HTTP/1.1 introduces the Transfer-Encoding header field (Section 6.1).
  Transfer codings need to be decoded prior to forwarding an HTTP
  message over a MIME-compliant protocol.

C.3.  Changes from RFC 7230

  Most of the sections introducing HTTP's design goals, history,
  architecture, conformance criteria, protocol versioning, URIs,
  message routing, and header fields have been moved to [HTTP].  This
  document has been reduced to just the messaging syntax and connection
  management requirements specific to HTTP/1.1.

  Bare CRs have been prohibited outside of content.  (Section 2.2)

  The ABNF definition of authority-form has changed from the more
  general authority component of a URI (in which port is optional) to
  the specific host:port format that is required by CONNECT.
  (Section 3.2.3)

  Recipients are required to avoid smuggling/splitting attacks when
  processing an ambiguous message framing.  (Section 6.1)

  In the ABNF for chunked extensions, (bad) whitespace around ";" and
  "=" has been reintroduced.  Whitespace was removed in [RFC7230], but
  that change was found to break existing implementations.
  (Section 7.1.1)

  Trailer field semantics now transcend the specifics of chunked
  transfer coding.  The decoding algorithm for chunked (Section 7.1.3)
  has been updated to encourage storage/forwarding of trailer fields
  separately from the header section, to only allow merging into the
  header section if the recipient knows the corresponding field
  definition permits and defines how to merge, and otherwise to discard
  the trailer fields instead of merging.  The trailer part is now
  called the trailer section to be more consistent with the header
  section and more distinct from a body part.  (Section 7.1.2)

  Transfer coding parameters called "q" are disallowed in order to
  avoid conflicts with the use of ranks in the TE header field.
  (Section 7.3)

Acknowledgements

  See Appendix "Acknowledgements" of [HTTP], which applies to this
  document as well.

Index

  A C D F G H M O R T X

     A

        absolute-form (of request-target)  Section 3.2.2
        application/http Media Type  *_Section 10.2_*
        asterisk-form (of request-target)  Section 3.2.4
        authority-form (of request-target)  Section 3.2.3

     C

        chunked (Coding Format)  Section 6.1; Section 6.3
        chunked (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.1_*
        close  Section 9.3; *_Section 9.6_*
        compress (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.2_*
        Connection header field  Section 9.6
        Content-Length header field  Section 6.2
        Content-Transfer-Encoding header field  Appendix B.5

     D

        deflate (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.2_*

     F

        Fields
           Close  *_Section 9.6, Paragraph 4_*
           MIME-Version  *_Appendix B.1_*
           Transfer-Encoding  *_Section 6.1_*

     G

        Grammar
           ALPHA  *_Section 1.2_*
           CR  *_Section 1.2_*
           CRLF  *_Section 1.2_*
           CTL  *_Section 1.2_*
           DIGIT  *_Section 1.2_*
           DQUOTE  *_Section 1.2_*
           HEXDIG  *_Section 1.2_*
           HTAB  *_Section 1.2_*
           HTTP-message  *_Section 2.1_*
           HTTP-name  *_Section 2.3_*
           HTTP-version  *_Section 2.3_*
           LF  *_Section 1.2_*
           OCTET  *_Section 1.2_*
           SP  *_Section 1.2_*
           Transfer-Encoding  *_Section 6.1_*
           VCHAR  *_Section 1.2_*
           absolute-form  Section 3.2; *_Section 3.2.2_*
           asterisk-form  Section 3.2; *_Section 3.2.4_*
           authority-form  Section 3.2; *_Section 3.2.3_*
           chunk  *_Section 7.1_*
           chunk-data  *_Section 7.1_*
           chunk-ext  Section 7.1; *_Section 7.1.1_*
           chunk-ext-name  *_Section 7.1.1_*
           chunk-ext-val  *_Section 7.1.1_*
           chunk-size  *_Section 7.1_*
           chunked-body  *_Section 7.1_*
           field-line  *_Section 5_*; Section 7.1.2
           field-name  Section 5
           field-value  Section 5
           last-chunk  *_Section 7.1_*
           message-body  *_Section 6_*
           method  *_Section 3.1_*
           obs-fold  *_Section 5.2_*
           origin-form  Section 3.2; *_Section 3.2.1_*
           reason-phrase  *_Section 4_*
           request-line  *_Section 3_*
           request-target  *_Section 3.2_*
           start-line  *_Section 2.1_*
           status-code  *_Section 4_*
           status-line  *_Section 4_*
           trailer-section  Section 7.1; *_Section 7.1.2_*
        gzip (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.2_*

     H

        Header Fields
           MIME-Version  *_Appendix B.1_*
           Transfer-Encoding  *_Section 6.1_*
        header line  Section 2.1
        header section  Section 2.1
        headers  Section 2.1

     M

        Media Type
           application/http  *_Section 10.2_*
           message/http  *_Section 10.1_*
        message/http Media Type  *_Section 10.1_*
        method  *_Section 3.1_*
        MIME-Version header field  *_Appendix B.1_*

     O

        origin-form (of request-target)  Section 3.2.1

     R

        request-target  *_Section 3.2_*

     T

        Transfer-Encoding header field  *_Section 6.1_*

     X

        x-compress (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.2_*
        x-gzip (transfer coding)  *_Section 7.2_*

Authors' Addresses

  Roy T. Fielding (editor)
  Adobe
  345 Park Ave
  San Jose, CA 95110
  United States of America
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   https://roy.gbiv.com/


  Mark Nottingham (editor)
  Fastly
  Prahran
  Australia
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   https://www.mnot.net/


  Julian Reschke (editor)
  greenbytes GmbH
  Hafenweg 16
  48155 Münster
  Germany
  Email: [email protected]
  URI:   https://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/