Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        T. Yoshino
Request for Comments: 7692                                  Google, Inc.
Category: Standards Track                                  December 2015
ISSN: 2070-1721


                 Compression Extensions for WebSocket

Abstract

  This document defines a framework for creating WebSocket extensions
  that add compression functionality to the WebSocket Protocol.  An
  extension based on this framework compresses the payload data portion
  of WebSocket data messages on a per-message basis using parameters
  negotiated during the opening handshake.  This framework provides a
  general method for applying a compression algorithm to the contents
  of WebSocket messages.  Each compression algorithm has to be defined
  in a document defining the extension by specifying the parameter
  negotiation and the payload transformation algorithm in detail.  This
  document also specifies one specific compression extension using the
  DEFLATE algorithm.

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 5741.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7692.
















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Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
  include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................3
  2. Conformance Requirements and Terminology ........................3
  3. Complementary Terminology .......................................4
  4. WebSocket Per-Message Compression Extension .....................5
  5. Extension Negotiation ...........................................5
     5.1. General Negotiation Flow ...................................9
     5.2. Negotiation Examples .......................................9
  6. Framing ........................................................10
     6.1. Compression ...............................................10
     6.2. Decompression .............................................12
  7. The "permessage-deflate" Extension .............................12
     7.1. Extension Parameters ......................................14
          7.1.1. Context Takeover Control ...........................14
          7.1.2. Limiting the LZ77 Sliding Window Size ..............16
          7.1.3. Examples ...........................................18
     7.2. Message Payload Transformation ............................19
          7.2.1. Compression ........................................19
          7.2.2. Decompression ......................................21
          7.2.3. Examples ...........................................22
     7.3. Implementation Notes ......................................25
  8. Security Considerations ........................................25
  9. IANA Considerations ............................................26
     9.1. Registration of the "permessage-deflate" WebSocket
          Extension Name ............................................26
     9.2. Registration of the "Per-Message Compressed"
          WebSocket Framing Header Bit ..............................26
  10. References ....................................................27
     10.1. Normative References .....................................27
     10.2. Informative References ...................................27
  Acknowledgements ..................................................28
  Author's Address ..................................................28



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1.  Introduction

  This document specifies a framework for adding compression
  functionality to the WebSocket Protocol [RFC6455].  The framework
  specifies how to define WebSocket Per-Message Compression Extensions
  (PMCEs) for a compression algorithm based on the extension concept of
  the WebSocket Protocol specified in Section 9 of [RFC6455].  A
  WebSocket client and a peer WebSocket server negotiate the use of a
  PMCE and determine the parameters required to configure the
  compression algorithm during the WebSocket opening handshake.  The
  client and server can then exchange data messages whose frames
  contain compressed data in the payload data portion.

  This framework only specifies a general method for applying a
  compression algorithm to the contents of WebSocket messages.  Each
  individual PMCE has to be specified in a document describing in
  detail how to negotiate the configuration parameters for the specific
  compression algorithm used by that PMCE and how to transform
  (compress and decompress) data in the payload data portion.

  A WebSocket client may offer multiple PMCEs during the WebSocket
  opening handshake.  A peer WebSocket server receiving the offer may
  choose to accept the preferred PMCE or decline all of them.  PMCEs
  use the RSV1 bit of the WebSocket frame header to indicate whether a
  message is compressed or not so that an endpoint can choose not to
  compress messages with incompressible contents.

  This document also specifies one specific PMCE based on the DEFLATE
  [RFC1951] algorithm.  The DEFLATE algorithm is widely available on
  various platforms, and its overhead is small.  The extension name of
  this PMCE is "permessage-deflate".  To align the end of compressed
  data to an octet boundary, this extension uses the algorithm
  described in Section 2.1 of [RFC1979].  Endpoints can take over the
  LZ77 sliding window [LZ77] used to build frames for previous messages
  to achieve a better compression ratio.  For resource-limited devices,
  this extension provides parameters to limit memory usage for
  compression context.

2.  Conformance Requirements and Terminology

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

  Requirements phrased in the imperative as part of algorithms (such as
  "strip any leading space characters" or "return false and abort these
  steps") are to be interpreted with the meaning of the key word
  ("MUST", "SHOULD", "MAY", etc.) used in introducing the algorithm.



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  Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps can
  be implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is
  equivalent.  In particular, the algorithms defined in this
  specification are intended to be easy to understand and are not
  intended to be performant.

  This document references the procedure to _Fail the WebSocket
  Connection_.  This procedure is defined in Section 7.1.7 of
  [RFC6455].

  This document references the event that _The WebSocket Connection is
  Established_ and the event that _A WebSocket Message Has Been
  Received_.  These events are defined in Sections 4.1 and 6.2,
  respectively, of [RFC6455].

  This document uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation of
  [RFC5234].  The DIGIT (decimal 0-9) rule is included by reference, as
  defined in the Appendix B.1 of [RFC5234].

3.  Complementary Terminology

  This document defines some terms about WebSocket and WebSocket
  extension mechanisms that are underspecified or not defined at all in
  [RFC6455].

  data message - a message consisting of data frames as defined in
  Section 5.6 of [RFC6455].

  message payload (or payload of a message) - the concatenation of the
  payload data portion of all data frames (see Section 6.2 of
  [RFC6455]) representing a single message.

  next extension in use after extension X - the next extension listed
  after X in the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header in the server's
  opening handshake as defined in Section 9.1 of [RFC6455].  Such an
  extension is applied to outgoing data from the application right
  after X on the sender side but is applied right before X to incoming
  data from the underlying transport.

  extension in use preceding extension X - the extension listed right
  before X in the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header in the server's
  opening handshake.  Such an extension is applied to outgoing data
  from the application right before X on the sender side but is applied
  right after X to incoming data from the underlying transport.

  extension negotiation offer - each element in the "Sec-WebSocket-
  Extensions" header in the client's opening handshake.




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  extension negotiation response - each element in the "Sec-WebSocket-
  Extensions" header in the server's opening handshake.

  corresponding extension negotiation response for an extension
  negotiation offer - an extension negotiation response that a server
  sends back to the peer client containing the same extension name as
  the offer and meeting the requirements represented by the offer.

  Accepting an extension negotiation offer - including a corresponding
  extension negotiation response for the offer in the "Sec-WebSocket-
  Extensions" header in the server's opening handshake.

  Declining an extension negotiation offer - not including a
  corresponding extension negotiation response for the offer in the
  "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header in the server's opening handshake.

4.  WebSocket Per-Message Compression Extension

  WebSocket PMCEs are extensions to the WebSocket Protocol enabling
  compression functionality.  PMCEs are built based on the extension
  concept of the WebSocket Protocol specified in Section 9 of
  [RFC6455].  PMCEs are individually defined for each compression
  algorithm to be implemented and are registered in the "WebSocket
  Extension Name Registry" created in Section 11.4 of [RFC6455].  Each
  PMCE referring to this framework MUST define the following:

  o  The extension name of the PMCE and any applicable extension
     parameters that MUST be included in the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions"
     header during the extension negotiation offer/response.

  o  How to interpret the extension parameters exchanged during the
     opening handshake.

  o  How to transform the payload of a message.

  One PMCE is defined in Section 7 of this document and is registered
  in Section 9.  Other PMCEs may be defined in the future in other
  documents.

  Section 5 describes the basic extension negotiation process.
  Section 6 describes how to apply the compression algorithm with
  negotiated parameters to the contents of WebSocket messages.

5.  Extension Negotiation

  To offer use of a PMCE, a client MUST include the extension name of
  the PMCE in the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header field of its
  opening handshake of the WebSocket connection.  Extension parameters



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  are used to specify the PMCE offer in detail.  For example, a client
  lists its preferred configuration parameter values for the
  compression algorithm of the PMCE.  A client may also offer multiple
  PMCE choices to the server by including multiple elements in the
  "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header, one for each PMCE offered.  This
  set of elements MAY include multiple PMCEs with the same extension
  name to offer the possibility to use the same algorithm with
  different configuration parameters.  The order of elements is
  important as it specifies the client's preference.  An element
  preceding another element has higher preference.  It is recommended
  that a server accepts PMCEs with higher preference if the server
  supports them.

  A PMCE negotiation offer provides requests and/or hints to the
  server.

  A request in a PMCE negotiation offer indicates constraints on the
  server's behavior that must be satisfied if the server accepts the
  offer.  For example, suppose that a server sends data compressed with
  the DEFLATE algorithm to a client.  The server must keep the original
  bytes of data that it recently compressed and sent to the client.
  The client must keep the result of decompressing the bytes of data
  that it recently received from the server.  The amount of bytes of
  data kept is called the LZ77 window size.  The LZ77 window size of
  the client must not be less than the LZ77 window size of the server.
  In a PMCE negotiation offer, the client MUST inform the server of its
  LZ77 window size so that the server uses an LZ77 window size that is
  not greater than the LZ77 window size of the client.  This
  restriction on the LZ77 window size is an example of a request in a
  PMCE negotiation offer.

  A hint in a PMCE negotiation offer provides information about the
  client's behavior that the server may either safely ignore or refer
  to when the server decides its behavior.  For example, suppose that a
  client sends data compressed with the DEFLATE algorithm to a server.
  The client must keep the original bytes of data that it recently
  compressed and sent to the server.  The server must keep the result
  of decompressing the bytes of data that it recently received from the
  client.  The LZ77 window size of the server must not be less than the
  LZ77 window size of the client.  In a PMCE negotiation offer, the
  client MAY inform the server of the maximum LZ77 window size the
  client can afford so that the server can choose to use an LZ77 window
  size that is not greater than the maximum size of the client.  This
  information is an example of a hint in a PMCE negotiation offer.
  It's waste of memory to use an LZ77 window size greater than the LZ77
  window size the client actually uses.  Using the hint, the server can
  avoid the waste of memory.  Since the hint itself doesn't specify the




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  constraints on the endpoints, the server must use the "agreed
  parameters" (defined below) to explicitly ask the client not to use
  an LZ77 window size greater than the LZ77 window size of the server.

  To accept the use of an offered PMCE, a server MUST include the
  extension name of the PMCE in the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header
  field of its opening handshake of the WebSocket connection.
  Extension parameters represent the detailed configuration parameters
  for the PMCE to use.  These extension parameters and their values are
  called "agreed parameters".  The element MUST represent a PMCE that
  is fully supported by the server.  The contents of the element don't
  need to be exactly the same as those of the received extension
  negotiation offers.  For example, suppose that a server received a
  PMCE extension negotiation offer with an extension parameter "X"
  indicating that the client can enable an optional feature named X.
  The server may accept the PMCE offer with an element without the
  extension parameter "X", meaning that the server chose not to enable
  the feature X.  In this case, the offer contains the extension
  parameter "X", but the "agreed parameters" don't contain the
  extension parameter "X".

  "Agreed parameters" must represent how the requests and hints in the
  client's extension negotiation offer have been handled in addition to
  the server's requests and hints on the client's behavior, so that the
  client can configure its behavior without identifying exactly which
  PMCE extension negotiation offer has been accepted.

  For example, if a client sends an extension negotiation offer that
  includes a parameter "enable_compression" and another without this
  parameter, the server accepts the former and informs the client by
  sending back an element that includes parameter(s) acknowledging
  "enable_compression".  The name of the acknowledging parameter
  doesn't need to be exactly the same as the offer.  For example, two
  parameters, "enable_strong_compression" and
  "enable_weak_compression", may be defined as acknowledging parameters
  for "enable_compression".

  Compression features can be applied differently for each direction.
  For such features, the acknowledging parameter and the parameter in
  the reverse direction must be chosen to distinguish them.  For
  example, in order to make parameters distinguishable, a "server_"
  prefix can be added to parameters affecting data sent from a server,
  and a "client_" prefix can be added to parameters affecting data sent
  from a client.







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  A server MUST NOT accept a PMCE extension negotiation offer together
  with another extension if the PMCE will conflict with the extension
  on their use of the RSV1 bit.  A client that received a response
  accepting a PMCE extension negotiation offer together with such an
  extension MUST _Fail the WebSocket Connection_.

  A server MUST NOT accept a PMCE extension negotiation offer together
  with another extension if the PMCE will be applied to the output of
  the extension and any of the following conditions applies to the
  extension:

  o  The extension requires the boundary of frames to be preserved
     between the output from the extension at the sender and the input
     to the extension at the receiver.

  o  The extension uses the "Extension data" field or any of the
     reserved bits on the WebSocket header as a per-frame attribute.

  A client that receives a response accepting a PMCE extension
  negotiation offer together with such an extension MUST _Fail the
  WebSocket Connection_.

  A server declining all offered PMCEs MUST NOT include any element
  with PMCE names.  If a server responds with no PMCE element in the
  "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header, both endpoints proceed without
  per-message compression once _the WebSocket Connection is
  established_.

  If a server gives an invalid response, such as accepting a PMCE that
  the client did not offer, the client MUST _Fail the WebSocket
  Connection_.

  If a server responds with a valid PMCE element in the "Sec-WebSocket-
  Extensions" header and _the WebSocket Connection is established_,
  both endpoints MUST use the algorithm described in Section 6 and the
  message payload transformation (compressing and decompressing)
  procedure of the PMCE configured with the "agreed parameters"
  returned by the server to exchange messages.













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5.1.  General Negotiation Flow

  This section describes a general negotiation flow.  How to handle
  parameters in detail must be specified in the document specifying the
  PMCE.

  A client makes an offer including parameters identifying the
  following:

  o  Hints about how the client is planning to compress data

  o  Requests about how the server compresses data

  o  Limitations concerning the client's compression functionality

  The peer server makes a determination of its behavior based on these
  parameters.  If the server can and wants to proceed with this PMCE
  enabled, the server responds to the client with parameters
  identifying the following:

  o  Requests about how the client compresses data

  o  How the server will compress data

  Based on these parameters received from the server, the client
  determines its behavior and if it can and wants to proceed with this
  PMCE enabled.  Otherwise, the client starts the closing handshake
  with close code 1010.

5.2.  Negotiation Examples

  The following are example values for the "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions"
  header offering PMCEs; permessage-foo and permessage-bar in the
  examples are hypothetical extension names of PMCEs for the
  compression algorithm foo and bar.

  o  Offer the permessage-foo.

         permessage-foo

  o  Offer the permessage-foo with a parameter x with a value of 10.

         permessage-foo; x=10

     The value may be quoted.

         permessage-foo; x="10"




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  o  Offer the permessage-foo as first choice and the permessage-bar as
     a fallback plan.

         permessage-foo, permessage-bar

  o  Offer the permessage-foo with a parameter use_y, which enables a
     feature y as first choice, and the permessage-foo without the
     use_y parameter as a fallback plan.

         permessage-foo; use_y, permessage-foo

6.  Framing

  PMCEs operate only on data messages.

  This document allocates the RSV1 bit of the WebSocket header for
  PMCEs and calls the bit the "Per-Message Compressed" bit.  On a
  WebSocket connection where a PMCE is in use, this bit indicates
  whether a message is compressed or not.

  A message with the "Per-Message Compressed" bit set on the first
  fragment of the message is called a "compressed message".  Frames of
  a compressed message have compressed data in the payload data
  portion.  An endpoint receiving a compressed message decompresses the
  concatenation of the compressed data of the frames of the message by
  following the decompression procedure specified by the PMCE in use.
  The endpoint uses the bytes corresponding to the application data
  portion in this decompressed data for the _A WebSocket Message Has
  Been Received_ event instead of the received data as is.

  A message with the "Per-Message Compressed" bit unset on the first
  fragment of the message is called an "uncompressed message".  Frames
  of an uncompressed message have uncompressed original data as is in
  the payload data portion.  An endpoint receiving an uncompressed
  message uses the concatenation of the application data portion of the
  frames of the message as is for the _A WebSocket Message Has Been
  Received_ event.

6.1.  Compression

  An endpoint MUST use the following algorithm to send a message in the
  form of a compressed message.

  1.  Compress the message payload of the original message by following
      the compression procedure of the PMCE.  The original message may
      be input from the application layer or output of another
      WebSocket extension, depending on which extensions were
      negotiated.



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  2.  Process the compressed data as follows:

      *  If this PMCE is the last extension to process outgoing
         messages, build frame(s) using the compressed data instead of
         the original data for the message payload, set the "Per-
         Message Compressed" bit of the first frame, and then send the
         frame(s) as described in Section 6.1 of [RFC6455].

      *  Otherwise, pass the transformed message payload and modified
         header values, including the "Per-Message Compressed" bit
         value set to 1, to the next extension after the PMCE.  If the
         extension expects frames for input, build a frame for the
         message and pass it.

  An endpoint MUST use the following algorithm to send a message in the
  form of an uncompressed message.

  1.  Process the original data as follows:

      *  If this PMCE is the last extension to process outgoing
         messages, build frame(s) using the original data for the
         payload data portion as is, unset the "Per-Message Compressed"
         bit of the first frame, and then send the frame(s) as
         described in Section 6.1 of [RFC6455].

      *  Otherwise, pass the message payload and header values to the
         next extension after the PMCE as is.  If the extension expects
         frames for input, build a frame for the message and pass it.

  An endpoint MUST NOT set the "Per-Message Compressed" bit of control
  frames and non-first fragments of a data message.  An endpoint
  receiving such a frame MUST _Fail the WebSocket Connection_.

  PMCEs do not change the opcode field.  The opcode of the first frame
  of a compressed message indicates the opcode of the original message.

  The payload data portion in frames generated by a PMCE is not subject
  to the constraints for the original data type.  For example, the
  concatenation of the output data corresponding to the application
  data portion of frames of a compressed text message is not required
  to be valid UTF-8.  At the receiver, the payload data portion after
  decompression is subject to the constraints for the original data
  type again.








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6.2.  Decompression

  An endpoint MUST use the following algorithm to receive a message in
  the form of a compressed message.

  1.  Concatenate the payload data portion of the received frames of
      the compressed message.  The received frames may be direct input
      from the underlying transport or output of another WebSocket
      extension, depending on which extensions were negotiated.

  2.  Decompress the concatenation by following the decompression
      procedure of the PMCE.

  3.  Process the decompressed message as follows:

      *  If this is the last extension to process incoming messages,
         deliver the _A WebSocket Message Has Been Received_ event to
         the application layer with the decompressed message payload
         and header values, including the "Per-Message Compressed" bit
         unset to 0.

      *  Otherwise, pass the decompressed message payload and header
         values, including the "Per-Message Compressed" bit unset to 0,
         to the extension preceding the PMCE.  If the extension expects
         frames for input, build a frame for the message and pass it.

  An endpoint MUST use the following algorithm to receive a message in
  the form of an uncompressed message.

  1.  Process the received message as follows:

      *  If this PMCE is the last extension to process incoming
         messages, deliver the _A WebSocket Message Has Been Received_
         event to the application layer with the received message
         payload and header values as is.

      *  Otherwise, pass the message payload and header values to the
         extension preceding the PMCE as is.  If the extension expects
         frames for input, build a frame for the message and pass it.

7.  The "permessage-deflate" Extension

  This section defines a specific PMCE called "permessage-deflate".  It
  compresses the payload of a message using the DEFLATE algorithm
  [RFC1951] and uses the byte boundary alignment method introduced in
  [RFC1979].





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  This section uses the term "byte" with the same meaning as used in
  [RFC1951], i.e., 8 bits stored or transmitted as a unit (same as an
  octet).

  The registered extension name for this extension is "permessage-
  deflate".

  Four extension parameters are defined for "permessage-deflate" to
  help endpoints manage per-connection resource usage.

  o  "server_no_context_takeover"

  o  "client_no_context_takeover"

  o  "server_max_window_bits"

  o  "client_max_window_bits"

  These parameters enable two methods (no_context_takeover and
  max_window_bits) of constraining memory usage that may be applied
  independently to either direction of WebSocket traffic.  The
  extension parameters with the "client_" prefix are used by the client
  to configure its compressor and by the server to configure its
  decompressor.  The extension parameters with the "server_" prefix are
  used by the server to configure its compressor and by the client to
  configure its decompressor.  All four parameters are defined for both
  a client's extension negotiation offer and a server's extension
  negotiation response.

  A server MUST decline an extension negotiation offer for this
  extension if any of the following conditions are met:

  o  The negotiation offer contains an extension parameter not defined
     for use in an offer.

  o  The negotiation offer contains an extension parameter with an
     invalid value.

  o  The negotiation offer contains multiple extension parameters with
     the same name.

  o  The server doesn't support the offered configuration.

  A client MUST _Fail the WebSocket Connection_ if the peer server
  accepted an extension negotiation offer for this extension with an
  extension negotiation response meeting any of the following
  conditions:




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  o  The negotiation response contains an extension parameter not
     defined for use in a response.

  o  The negotiation response contains an extension parameter with an
     invalid value.

  o  The negotiation response contains multiple extension parameters
     with the same name.

  o  The client does not support the configuration that the response
     represents.

  The term "LZ77 sliding window" [LZ77] used in this section means the
  buffer used by the DEFLATE algorithm to store recently processed
  input.  The DEFLATE compression algorithm searches the buffer for a
  match with the following input.

  The term "use context takeover" used in this section means that the
  same LZ77 sliding window used by the endpoint to build frames of the
  previous sent message is reused to build frames of the next message
  to be sent.

7.1.  Extension Parameters

7.1.1.  Context Takeover Control

7.1.1.1.  The "server_no_context_takeover" Extension Parameter

  A client MAY include the "server_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in an extension negotiation offer.  This extension
  parameter has no value.  By including this extension parameter in an
  extension negotiation offer, a client prevents the peer server from
  using context takeover.  If the peer server doesn't use context
  takeover, the client doesn't need to reserve memory to retain the
  LZ77 sliding window between messages.

  Absence of this extension parameter in an extension negotiation offer
  indicates that the client can decompress a message that the server
  built using context takeover.

  A server accepts an extension negotiation offer that includes the
  "server_no_context_takeover" extension parameter by including the
  "server_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in the corresponding
  extension negotiation response to send back to the client.  The
  "server_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation response has no value.





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  It is RECOMMENDED that a server supports the
  "server_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation offer.

  A server MAY include the "server_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in an extension negotiation response even if the extension
  negotiation offer being accepted by the extension negotiation
  response didn't include the "server_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter.

7.1.1.2.  The "client_no_context_takeover" Extension Parameter

  A client MAY include the "client_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in an extension negotiation offer.  This extension
  parameter has no value.  By including this extension parameter in an
  extension negotiation offer, a client informs the peer server of a
  hint that even if the server doesn't include the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in the corresponding
  extension negotiation response to the offer, the client is not going
  to use context takeover.

  A server MAY include the "client_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in an extension negotiation response.  If the received
  extension negotiation offer includes the "client_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter, the server may either ignore the parameter or
  use the parameter to avoid taking over the LZ77 sliding window
  unnecessarily by including the "client_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in the corresponding extension negotiation response to the
  offer.  The "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in an
  extension negotiation response has no value.  By including the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation response, a server prevents the peer client from using
  context takeover.  This reduces the amount of memory that the server
  has to reserve for the connection.

  Absence of this extension parameter in an extension negotiation
  response indicates that the server can decompress messages built by
  the client using context takeover.

  A client MUST support the "client_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter in an extension negotiation response.










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7.1.2.  Limiting the LZ77 Sliding Window Size

7.1.2.1.  The "server_max_window_bits" Extension Parameter

  A client MAY include the "server_max_window_bits" extension parameter
  in an extension negotiation offer.  This parameter has a decimal
  integer value without leading zeroes between 8 to 15, inclusive,
  indicating the base-2 logarithm of the LZ77 sliding window size, and
  MUST conform to the ABNF below.

      server-max-window-bits = 1*DIGIT

  By including this parameter in an extension negotiation offer, a
  client limits the LZ77 sliding window size that the server will use
  to compress messages.  If the peer server uses a small LZ77 sliding
  window to compress messages, the client can reduce the memory needed
  for the LZ77 sliding window.

  A server declines an extension negotiation offer with this parameter
  if the server doesn't support it.

  Absence of this parameter in an extension negotiation offer indicates
  that the client can receive messages compressed using an LZ77 sliding
  window of up to 32,768 bytes.

  A server accepts an extension negotiation offer with this parameter
  by including the "server_max_window_bits" extension parameter in the
  extension negotiation response to send back to the client with the
  same or smaller value as the offer.  The "server_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter in an extension negotiation response has a
  decimal integer value without leading zeroes between 8 to 15,
  inclusive, indicating the base-2 logarithm of the LZ77 sliding window
  size, and MUST conform to the ABNF below.

      server-max-window-bits = 1*DIGIT

  A server MAY include the "server_max_window_bits" extension parameter
  in an extension negotiation response even if the extension
  negotiation offer being accepted by the response didn't include the
  "server_max_window_bits" extension parameter.

7.1.2.2.  The "client_max_window_bits" Extension Parameter

  A client MAY include the "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter
  in an extension negotiation offer.  This parameter has no value or a
  decimal integer value without leading zeroes between 8 to 15





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  inclusive indicating the base-2 logarithm of the LZ77 sliding window
  size.  If a value is specified for this parameter, the value MUST
  conform to the ABNF below.

      client-max-window-bits = 1*DIGIT

  By including this parameter in an offer, a client informs the peer
  server that the client supports the "client_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter in an extension negotiation response and,
  optionally, a hint by attaching a value to the parameter.  If the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation offer has a value, the parameter also informs the peer
  server of a hint that even if the server doesn't include the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in the corresponding
  extension negotiation response with a value greater than the one in
  the extension negotiation offer or if the server doesn't include the
  extension parameter at all, the client is not going to use an LZ77
  sliding window size greater than the size specified by the value in
  the extension negotiation offer to compress messages.

  If a received extension negotiation offer has the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter, the server MAY include
  the "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in the corresponding
  extension negotiation response to the offer.  If the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in a received extension
  negotiation offer has a value, the server may either ignore this
  value or use this value to avoid allocating an unnecessarily big LZ77
  sliding window by including the "client_max_window_bits" extension
  parameter in the corresponding extension negotiation response to the
  offer with a value equal to or smaller than the received value.  The
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation response has a decimal integer value without leading
  zeroes between 8 to 15 inclusive indicating the base-2 logarithm of
  the LZ77 sliding window size and MUST conform to the ABNF below.

      client-max-window-bits = 1*DIGIT

  By including this extension parameter in an extension negotiation
  response, a server limits the LZ77 sliding window size that the
  client uses to compress messages.  This reduces the amount of memory
  for the decompression context that the server has to reserve for the
  connection.

  If a received extension negotiation offer doesn't have the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter, the corresponding
  extension negotiation response to the offer MUST NOT include the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter.




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  Absence of this extension parameter in an extension negotiation
  response indicates that the server can receive messages compressed
  using an LZ77 sliding window of up to 32,768 bytes.

7.1.3.  Examples

  The simplest "Sec-WebSocket-Extensions" header in a client's opening
  handshake to offer use of the "permessage-deflate" extension looks
  like this:

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions: permessage-deflate

  Since the "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter is not
  included in this extension negotiation offer, the server must not
  accept the offer with an extension negotiation response that includes
  the "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter.  The simplest "Sec-
  WebSocket-Extensions" header in a server's opening handshake to
  accept use of the "permessage-deflate" extension is the same:

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions: permessage-deflate

  The following extension negotiation offer sent by a client is asking
  the server to use an LZ77 sliding window with a size of 1,024 bytes
  or less and declaring that the client supports the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter in an extension
  negotiation response.

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions:
          permessage-deflate;
          client_max_window_bits; server_max_window_bits=10

  This extension negotiation offer might be rejected by the server
  because the server doesn't support the "server_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter in an extension negotiation offer.  This is fine
  if the client cannot receive messages compressed using a larger
  sliding window size, but if the client just prefers using a small
  window but wants to fall back to the "permessage-deflate" without the
  "server_max_window_bits" extension parameter, the client can make an
  offer with the fallback option like this:

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions:
          permessage-deflate;
          client_max_window_bits; server_max_window_bits=10,
          permessage-deflate;
          client_max_window_bits






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  The server can accept "permessage-deflate" by picking any supported
  one from the listed offers.  To accept the first option, for example,
  the server may send back a response as follows:

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions:
          permessage-deflate; server_max_window_bits=10

  To accept the second option, for example, the server may send back a
  response as follows:

      Sec-WebSocket-Extensions: permessage-deflate

7.2.  Message Payload Transformation

7.2.1.  Compression

  An endpoint uses the following algorithm to compress a message.

  1.  Compress all the octets of the payload of the message using
      DEFLATE.

  2.  If the resulting data does not end with an empty DEFLATE block
      with no compression (the "BTYPE" bits are set to 00), append an
      empty DEFLATE block with no compression to the tail end.

  3.  Remove 4 octets (that are 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff) from the tail end.
      After this step, the last octet of the compressed data contains
      (possibly part of) the DEFLATE header bits with the "BTYPE" bits
      set to 00.

  When using DEFLATE in the first step above:

  o  An endpoint MAY use multiple DEFLATE blocks to compress one
     message.

  o  An endpoint MAY use DEFLATE blocks of any type.

  o  An endpoint MAY use both DEFLATE blocks with the "BFINAL" bit set
     to 0 and DEFLATE blocks with the "BFINAL" bit set to 1.

  o  When any DEFLATE block with the "BFINAL" bit set to 1 doesn't end
     at a byte boundary, an endpoint MUST add minimal padding bits of 0
     to make it end at a byte boundary.  The next DEFLATE block follows
     the padded data if any.

  An endpoint fragments a compressed message by splitting the result of
  running this algorithm.  Even when only part of the payload is
  available, a fragment can be built by compressing the available data



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  and choosing the block type appropriately so that the end of the
  resulting compressed data is aligned at a byte boundary.  Note that
  for non-final fragments, the removal of 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff MUST NOT
  be done.

  An endpoint MUST NOT use an LZ77 sliding window longer than 32,768
  bytes to compress messages to send.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "client_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter, the client MUST start compressing each new
  message with an empty LZ77 sliding window.  Otherwise, the client MAY
  take over the LZ77 sliding window used to build the last compressed
  message.  Note that even if the client has included the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in its offer, the
  client MAY take over the LZ77 sliding window used to build the last
  compressed message if the "agreed parameters" don't contain the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter.  The client-to-
  server "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter is just a
  hint for the server to build an extension negotiation response.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "server_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter, the server MUST start compressing each new
  message with an empty LZ77 sliding window.  Otherwise, the server MAY
  take over the LZ77 sliding window used to build the last compressed
  message.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "client_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter with a value of w, the client MUST NOT use an
  LZ77 sliding window longer than the w-th power of 2 bytes to compress
  messages to send.  Note that even if the client has included in its
  offer the "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter with a value
  smaller than one in the "agreed parameters", the client MAY use an
  LZ77 sliding window with any size to compress messages to send as
  long as the size conforms to the "agreed parameters".  The client-to-
  server "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter is just a hint
  for the server to build an extension negotiation response.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "server_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter with a value of w, the server MUST NOT use an
  LZ77 sliding window longer than the w-th power of 2 bytes to compress
  messages to send.










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7.2.2.  Decompression

  An endpoint uses the following algorithm to decompress a message.

  1.  Append 4 octets of 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff to the tail end of the
      payload of the message.

  2.  Decompress the resulting data using DEFLATE.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "server_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter, the client MAY decompress each new message with
  an empty LZ77 sliding window.  Otherwise, the client MUST decompress
  each new message using the LZ77 sliding window used to process the
  last compressed message.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "client_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter, the server MAY decompress each new message with
  an empty LZ77 sliding window.  Otherwise, the server MUST decompress
  each new message using the LZ77 sliding window used to process the
  last compressed message.  Note that even if the client has included
  the "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter in its offer,
  the server MUST decompress each new message using the LZ77 sliding
  window used to process the last compressed message if the "agreed
  parameters" don't contain the "client_no_context_takeover" extension
  parameter.  The client-to-server "client_no_context_takeover"
  extension parameter is just a hint for the server to build an
  extension negotiation response.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "server_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter with a value of w, the client MAY reduce the size
  of its LZ77 sliding window to decompress received messages down to
  the w-th power of 2 bytes.  Otherwise, the client MUST use a
  32,768-byte LZ77 sliding window to decompress received messages.

  If the "agreed parameters" contain the "client_max_window_bits"
  extension parameter with a value of w, the server MAY reduce the size
  of its LZ77 sliding window to decompress received messages down to
  the w-th power of 2 bytes.  Otherwise, the server MUST use a
  32,768-byte LZ77 sliding window to decompress received messages.
  Note that even if the client has included in its offer the
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter with a value smaller
  than one in the "agreed parameters", the client MUST use an LZ77
  sliding window of a size that conforms the "agreed parameters" to
  compress messages to send.  The client-to-server
  "client_max_window_bits" extension parameter is just a hint for the
  server to build an extension negotiation response.





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7.2.3.  Examples

  This section introduces examples of how the "permessage-deflate"
  extension transforms messages.

7.2.3.1.  A Message Compressed Using One Compressed DEFLATE Block

  Suppose that an endpoint sends a text message "Hello".  If the
  endpoint uses one compressed DEFLATE block (compressed with fixed
  Huffman code and the "BFINAL" bit not set) to compress the message,
  the endpoint obtains the compressed data to use for the message
  payload as follows.

  The endpoint compresses "Hello" into one compressed DEFLATE block and
  flushes the resulting data into a byte array using an empty DEFLATE
  block with no compression:

      0xf2 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff

  By stripping 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff from the tail end, the endpoint gets
  the data to use for the message payload:

      0xf2 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  Suppose that the endpoint sends this compressed message without
  fragmentation.  The endpoint builds one frame by putting all of the
  compressed data in the payload data portion of the frame:

      0xc1 0x07 0xf2 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  The first 2 octets (0xc1 0x07) are the WebSocket frame header (FIN=1,
  RSV1=1, RSV2=0, RSV3=0, opcode=text, MASK=0, Payload length=7).  The
  following figure shows what value is set in each field of the
  WebSocket frame header.

       0                   1
       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
      +-+-+-+-+-------+-+-------------+
      |F|R|R|R| opcode|M| Payload len |
      |I|S|S|S|       |A|             |
      |N|V|V|V|       |S|             |
      | |1|2|3|       |K|             |
      +-+-+-+-+-------+-+-------------+
      |1|1|0|0|   1   |0|      7      |
      +-+-+-+-+-------+-+-------------+






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  Suppose that the endpoint sends the compressed message with
  fragmentation.  The endpoint splits the compressed data into
  fragments and builds frames for each fragment.  For example, if the
  fragments are 3 and 4 octets, the first frame is:

      0x41 0x03 0xf2 0x48 0xcd

  and the second frame is:

      0x80 0x04 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  Note that the RSV1 bit is set only on the first frame.

7.2.3.2.  Sharing LZ77 Sliding Window

  Suppose that a client has sent a message "Hello" as a compressed
  message and will send the same message "Hello" again as a compressed
  message.

      0xf2 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  The above is the payload of the first message that the client has
  sent.  If the "agreed parameters" contain the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter, the client
  compresses the payload of the next message into the same bytes (if
  the client uses the same "BTYPE" value and "BFINAL" value).  So, the
  payload of the second message will be:

      0xf2 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  If the "agreed parameters" did not contain the
  "client_no_context_takeover" extension parameter, the client can
  compress the payload of the next message into fewer bytes by
  referencing the history in the LZ77 sliding window.  So, the payload
  of the second message will be:

      0xf2 0x00 0x11 0x00 0x00

  So, 2 bytes are saved in total.

  Note that even if some uncompressed messages (with the RSV1 bit
  unset) are inserted between the two "Hello" messages, they don't
  affect the LZ77 sliding window.








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7.2.3.3.  Using a DEFLATE Block with No Compression

  A DEFLATE block with no compression may be used.

      0xc1 0x0b 0x00 0x05 0x00 0xfa 0xff 0x48 0x65 0x6c 0x6c 0x6f 0x00

  This is a frame constituting a text message "Hello" built using a
  DEFLATE block with no compression.  The first 2 octets (0xc1 0x0b)
  are the WebSocket frame header (FIN=1, RSV1=1, RSV2=0, RSV3=0,
  opcode=text, MASK=0, Payload length=7).  Note that the RSV1 bit is
  set for this message (only on the first fragment if the message is
  fragmented) because the RSV1 bit is set when DEFLATE is applied to
  the message, including the case when only DEFLATE blocks with no
  compression are used.  The 3rd to 13th octets consist of the payload
  data containing "Hello" compressed using a DEFLATE block with no
  compression.

7.2.3.4.  Using a DEFLATE Block with "BFINAL" Set to 1

  On platforms on which the flush method using an empty DEFLATE block
  with no compression is not available, implementors can choose to
  flush data using DEFLATE blocks with "BFINAL" set to 1.

      0xf3 0x48 0xcd 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00 0x00

  This is the payload of a message containing "Hello" compressed using
  a DEFLATE block with "BFINAL" set to 1.  The first 7 octets
  constitute a DEFLATE block with "BFINAL" set to 1 and "BTYPE" set to
  01 containing "Hello".  The last 1 octet (0x00) contains the header
  bits with "BFINAL" set to 0 and "BTYPE" set to 00, and 5 padding bits
  of 0.  This octet is necessary to allow the payload to be
  decompressed in the same manner as messages flushed using DEFLATE
  blocks with "BFINAL" unset.

7.2.3.5.  Two DEFLATE Blocks in One Message

  Two or more DEFLATE blocks may be used in one message.

      0xf2 0x48 0x05 0x00 0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff 0xca 0xc9 0xc9 0x07 0x00

  The first 3 octets (0xf2 0x48 0x05) and the least significant two
  bits of the 4th octet (0x00) constitute one DEFLATE block with
  "BFINAL" set to 0 and "BTYPE" set to 01 containing "He".  The rest of
  the 4th octet contains the header bits with "BFINAL" set to 0 and
  "BTYPE" set to 00, and the 3 padding bits of 0.  Together with the
  following 4 octets (0x00 0x00 0xff 0xff), the header bits constitute
  an empty DEFLATE block with no compression.  A DEFLATE block
  containing "llo" follows the empty DEFLATE block.



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7.2.3.6.  Generating an Empty Fragment

  Suppose that an endpoint is sending data of unknown size.  The
  endpoint may encounter the end-of-data signal from the data source
  when its buffer for uncompressed data is empty.  In such a case, the
  endpoint just needs to send the last fragment with the FIN bit set to
  1 and the payload set to the DEFLATE block(s), which contains 0 bytes
  of data.  If the compression library being used doesn't generate any
  data when its buffer is empty, an empty uncompressed DEFLATE block
  can be built and used for this purpose as follows:

      0x00

  The single octet 0x00 contains the header bits with "BFINAL" set to 0
  and "BTYPE" set to 00, and 5 padding bits of 0.

7.3.  Implementation Notes

  On most common software development platforms, the DEFLATE
  compression library provides a method for aligning compressed data to
  byte boundaries using an empty DEFLATE block with no compression.
  For example, zlib [zlib] does this when "Z_SYNC_FLUSH" is passed to
  the deflate function.

  Some platforms may only provide methods to output and process
  compressed data with a zlib header and an Adler-32 checksum.  On such
  platforms, developers need to write stub code to remove and
  complement the zlib and Adler-32 checksum by themselves.

  To obtain a useful compression ratio, an LZ77 sliding window size of
  1,024 or more is RECOMMENDED.

  If a side disallows context takeover, its endpoint can easily figure
  out whether or not a certain message will be shorter if compressed.
  Otherwise, it's not easy to know whether future messages will benefit
  from having a certain message compressed.  Implementors may employ
  some heuristics to determine this.

8.  Security Considerations

  There is a known exploit when history-based compression is combined
  with a secure transport [CRIME].  Implementors should pay attention
  to this point when integrating this extension with other extensions
  or protocols.







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9.  IANA Considerations

9.1.  Registration of the "permessage-deflate" WebSocket Extension Name

  IANA has registered the following WebSocket extension name in the
  "WebSocket Extension Name Registry" defined in [RFC6455].

  Extension Identifier
     permessage-deflate

  Extension Common Name
     WebSocket Per-Message Deflate

  Extension Definition
     This document.

  Known Incompatible Extensions
     None

  The "permessage-deflate" extension name is used in the "Sec-
  WebSocket-Extensions" header in the WebSocket opening handshake to
  negotiate use of the "permessage-deflate" extension.

9.2.  Registration of the "Per-Message Compressed" WebSocket Framing
     Header Bit

  IANA has registered the following WebSocket framing header bit in the
  "WebSocket Framing Header Bits Registry" defined in [RFC6455].

  Value
     RSV1

  Description
     The "Per-Message Compressed" bit, which indicates whether or not
     the message is compressed.  RSV1 is set for compressed messages
     and unset for uncompressed messages.

  Reference
     Section 6 of this document.

  The "Per-Message Compressed" framing header bit is used on the first
  fragment of data messages to indicate whether the payload of the
  message is compressed by the PMCE or not.








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RFC 7692          Compression Extensions for WebSocket     December 2015


10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [CRIME]    Rizzo, J. and T. Duong, "The CRIME attack", EKOparty
             Security Conference, September 2012.

  [LZ77]     Ziv, J. and A. Lempel, "A Universal Algorithm for
             Sequential Data Compression", IEEE Transactions on
             Information Theory, Vol. 23, No. 3, pp. 337-343,
             DOI 10.1109/TIT.1977.1055714, May 1977,
             <https://www.cs.duke.edu/courses/spring03/cps296.5/papers/
             ziv_lempel_1977_universal_algorithm.pdf>.

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

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
             <http://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,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.

  [RFC6455]  Fette, I. and A. Melnikov, "The WebSocket Protocol",
             RFC 6455, DOI 10.17487/RFC6455, December 2011,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6455>.

10.2.  Informative References

  [RFC1979]  Woods, J., "PPP Deflate Protocol", RFC 1979,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC1979, August 1996,
             <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1979>.

  [zlib]     Gailly, J. and M. Adler, "zlib", <http://www.zlib.net/>.












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RFC 7692          Compression Extensions for WebSocket     December 2015


Acknowledgements

  Special thanks to Patrick McManus who wrote up the initial
  specification of a DEFLATE-based compression extension for the
  WebSocket Protocol, which I referred to when writing this
  specification.

  Thanks to the following people who participated in discussions on the
  HyBi WG and contributed ideas and/or provided detailed reviews (the
  list is likely incomplete): Adam Rice, Alexander Philippou, Alexey
  Melnikov, Arman Djusupov, Bjoern Hoehrmann, Brian McKelvey, Dario
  Crivelli, Greg Wilkins, Inaki Baz Castillo, Jamie Lokier, Joakim
  Erdfelt, John A. Tamplin, Julian Reschke, Kenichi Ishibashi, Mark
  Nottingham, Peter Thorson, Roberto Peon, Salvatore Loreto, Simone
  Bordet, Tobias Oberstein, and Yutaka Hirano.  Note that the people
  listed above didn't necessarily endorse the end result of this work.

Author's Address

  Takeshi Yoshino
  Google, Inc.

  Email: [email protected]




























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