Network Working Group                                        A. Rousskov
Request for Comments: 4236                       The Measurement Factory
Category: Standards Track                                     M. Stecher
                                                 CyberGuard Corporation
                                                          November 2005


       HTTP Adaptation with Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES)

Status of This Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

  Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) framework documents several
  application-agnostic mechanisms such as OPES tracing, OPES bypass,
  and OPES callout protocol.  This document extends those generic
  mechanisms for Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) adaptation.
  Together, application-agnostic OPES documents and this HTTP profile
  constitute a complete specification for HTTP adaptation with OPES.






















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Table of Contents

  1. Scope ...........................................................3
  2. OPES Document Map ...............................................3
  3. Callout Protocol ................................................4
     3.1. Application Message Parts ..................................5
     3.2. Application Profile Features ...............................6
          3.2.1. Profile Parts .......................................6
          3.2.2. Profile Structure ...................................8
          3.2.3. Aux-Parts ...........................................8
          3.2.4. Pause-At-Body .......................................9
          3.2.5. Stop-Receiving-Body ................................10
          3.2.6. Preservation-Interest-Body .........................10
          3.2.7. Content-Encodings ..................................11
          3.2.8. Profile Negotiation Example ........................12
     3.3. Application Message Start Message .........................13
     3.4. DUM Message ...............................................13
     3.5. Selective Adaptation ......................................14
     3.6. Hop-by-hop Headers ........................................15
     3.7. Transfer Encodings ........................................15
     3.8. HTTP Header Correctness ...................................16
          3.8.1. Message Size Recalculation .........................16
          3.8.2. Content-MD5 Header .................................17
     3.9. Examples ..................................................18
  4. Tracing ........................................................22
  5. Bypass .........................................................24
  6. IAB Considerations .............................................24
  7. Security Considerations ........................................24
  8. IANA Considerations ............................................24
  9. Compliance .....................................................25
  10. References ....................................................25
     10.1. Normative References .....................................25
     10.2. Informative References ...................................25


















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1.  Scope

  The Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) framework documents several
  application-agnostic mechanisms such as OPES processor and endpoints
  communications [RFC3897] or OPES callout protocol [RFC4037].  This
  document extends those generic mechanisms for adaptation of a
  specific application protocol, HTTP [RFC2616].  Together,
  application-agnostic OPES documents and this HTTP profile constitute
  a complete specification for HTTP adaptation with OPES.

  The primary sections of this document specify HTTP-specific
  extensions for the corresponding application-agnostic mechanisms
  documented elsewhere.

2.  OPES Document Map

  This document belongs to a large set of OPES specifications produced
  by the IETF OPES Working Group.  Familiarity with the overall OPES
  approach and typical scenarios is often essential when trying to
  comprehend isolated OPES documents.  This section provides an index
  of OPES documents to assist the reader with finding "missing"
  information.

  o  The document on "OPES Use Cases and Deployment Scenarios"
     [RFC3752] describes a set of services and applications that are
     considered in scope for OPES and have been used as a motivation
     and guidance in designing the OPES architecture.

  o  The OPES architecture and common terminology are described in "An
     Architecture for Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES)" [RFC3835].

  o  "Policy, Authorization and Enforcement Requirements of OPES"
     [RFC3838] outlines requirements and assumptions on the policy
     framework, without specifying concrete authorization and
     enforcement methods.

  o  "Security Threats and Risks for OPES" [RFC3837] provides OPES risk
     analysis, without recommending specific solutions.

  o  "OPES Treatment of IAB Considerations" [RFC3914] addresses all
     architecture-level considerations expressed by the IETF Internet
     Architecture Board (IAB) when the OPES WG was chartered.

  o  At the core of the OPES architecture are the OPES processor and
     the callout server, two network elements that communicate with
     each other via an OPES Callout Protocol (OCP).  The requirements
     for such protocol are discussed in "Requirements for OPES Callout
     Protocols" [RFC3836].



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  o  "OPES Callout Protocol Core" [RFC4037] specifies an application
     agnostic protocol core to be used for the communication between
     OPES processor and callout server.

  o  "OPES entities and end points communications" [RFC3897] specifies
     generic tracing and bypass mechanisms for OPES.

  o  The OCP Core and Communications documents are independent from the
     application protocol being adapted by OPES entities.  Their

     generic mechanisms have to be complemented by application-specific
     profiles.  This document, HTTP adaptation with OPES, is such an
     application profile for HTTP.  It specifies how application-
     agnostic OPES mechanisms are to be used and augmented in order to
     support adaptation of HTTP messages.

  o  Finally, "P: Message Processing Language" [rules-p] defines a
     language for specifying what OPES adaptations (e.g., translation)
     must be applied to what application messages (e.g., e-mail from
     [email protected]).  P language is meant for configuring application
     proxies (OPES processors).

3.  Callout Protocol

  This section documents the HTTP profile for the OPES Callout Protocol
  (OCP) Core [RFC4037].  Familiarity with OCP Core is required to
  understand the HTTP profile.  This section uses OCP Core conventions,
  terminology, and mechanisms.

  OPES processor communicates its desire to adapt HTTP messages via a
  Negotiation Offer (NO) message with HTTP-specific feature identifiers
  documented in Section 3.2.  HTTP-specific OCP optimization mechanisms
  can be negotiated at the same time.  A callout server that supports
  adaptation of HTTP messages has a chance to negotiate what HTTP
  message parts will participate in adaptation, including negotiation
  of HTTP request parts as metadata for HTTP response adaptation.
  Negotiable HTTP message parts are documented in Section 3.1.

  HTTP profile introduces a new parameter for the Application Message
  Start (AMS) message to communicate known HTTP message length (HTTP
  headers often do not convey length information reliably or at all).
  This parameter is documented in Section 3.3.  Section 3.4 documents a
  mechanism to report HTTP message parts with Data Use Mine (DUM)
  messages.

  The remaining OCP sections document various OCP marshaling corner
  cases such as handling of HTTP transfer encodings and 100 Continue
  responses.



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3.1.  Application Message Parts

  An HTTP message may have several well-known parts: headers, body, and
  trailers.  HTTP OPES processors are likely to have information about
  HTTP message parts because they have to isolate and interpret HTTP
  headers and find HTTP message boundaries.  Callout servers may either
  not care about certain parts or may benefit from reusing HTTP OPES
  processor work on isolating and categorizing interesting parts.

  The following is the declaration of am-part (application message
  part) type using OCP Core Protocol Element Type Declaration Mnemonic
  (PETDM):

  am-part:  extends atom;
  am-parts: extends list of am-part;

                                Figure 1

  The following six "am-part" atoms are valid values:

  request-header: The start-line of an HTTP request message, all
     request message headers, and the CRLF separator at the end of HTTP
     headers (compare with section 4.1 of [RFC2616]).

  request-body: The message body of an HTTP request message as defined
     in section 4.3 of [RFC2616] but not including the trailer.

  request-trailer: The entity headers of the trailer of an HTTP request
     message in chunked transfer encoding.  This part follows the same
     syntax as the trailer defined in section 3.6.1 of [RFC2616].

  response-header: The start-line of an HTTP response message, all
     response message headers, and the CRLF separator at the end of
     HTTP headers (compare with section 4.1 of [RFC2616]).

  response-body: The message body of an HTTP response message as
     defined in section 4.3 of [RFC2616] but not including the trailer.

  response-trailer: The entity headers of the trailer of an HTTP
     response message in chunked transfer encoding.  This part follows
     the same syntax as the trailer defined in section 3.6.1 of
     [RFC2616].









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3.2.  Application Profile Features

  This document defines two HTTP profiles for OCP: request and response
  profiles.  These two profiles are described below.  Each profile has
  a unique feature identifier, a list of original application message
  parts, and a list of adapted application message parts:

  profile ID: http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/request

     original request parts: request-header, request-body, request-
        trailer

     adapted request parts: request-header, request-body, request-
        trailer

     adapted response parts: response-header, response-body, response-
        trailer

  profile ID: http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response

     original transaction parts: request-header (aux), request-body
        (aux), request-trailer (aux), response-header, response-body,
        response-trailer

     adapted response parts: response-header, response-body, response-
        trailer

  The request profile contains two variants of adapted part lists: HTTP
  request parts and HTTP response parts.  Parts marked with an "(aux)"
  suffix are auxiliary parts that can only be used if explicitly
  negotiated for a profile.  See Section 3.2.1 for specific rules
  governing negotiation and use of am-parts.

  The scope of a negotiated profile is the OCP connection (default) or
  the service group specified via the SG parameter.

3.2.1.  Profile Parts

  An OCP agent MUST send application message parts in the order implied
  by the profile parts lists above.  An OCP agent receiving an out-of-
  order part MAY terminate the transaction with an error.

  An OPES processor MUST NOT send parts that are not listed as
  "original" in the negotiated profile.  A callout server MUST NOT send
  parts that are not listed as "adapted" in the negotiated profile.  An
  OCP agent receiving an not-listed part MUST terminate the transaction
  with an error.  The informal rationale for the last requirement is to
  reduce the number of subtle interoperability problems where an agent



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  thinks that the parts it is sending are understood/used by the other
  agent when, in fact, they are being ignored or skipped because they
  are not expected.

  Some HTTP messages lack certain parts.  For example, many HTTP
  requests do not have bodies, and most HTTP messages do not have
  trailers.  An OCP agent MUST NOT send (i.e., must skip) absent
  application message parts.

  An OCP agent MUST send present non-auxiliary parts and it MUST send
  those present auxiliary parts that were negotiated via the Aux-Parts
  (Section 3.2.3) parameter.  OCP agents MUST NOT send auxiliary parts
  that were not negotiated via the Aux-Parts (Section 3.2.3) parameter.

  An OCP agent receiving a message part in violation of the above
  requirements MAY terminate the corresponding transaction with an
  error.

  By design, original parts not included in the adapted parts list
  cannot be adapted.  In other words, a callout service can only adapt
  parts in the adapted parts list even though it may have access to
  other parts.

  In the request profile, the callout server MUST send either adapted

  request parts or adapted response parts.  An OPES processor receiving
  adapted flow with application message parts from both lists (in
  violation of the previous rule) MUST terminate the OCP transaction
  with an error.  Informally, the callout server sends adapted response
  parts to "short-circuit" the HTTP transaction, forcing the OPES
  processor to return an HTTP response without forwarding an adapted
  HTTP request.  This short-circuiting is useful for responding, for
  example, to an HTTP request that the callout service defines as
  forbidden.

  Unless explicitly configured to do otherwise, an OPES processor MUST
  offer all non-auxiliary original parts in Negotiation Offer (NO)
  messages.  See Section 3.5 for this rule rationale and examples of
  harmful side-effects from selective adaptation.












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3.2.2.  Profile Structure

  An HTTP application profile feature extends semantics of the feature
  type of OCP Core while adding the following named parameters to that
  type:

  o  Aux-Parts (Section 3.2.3)

  o  Pause-At-Body (Section 3.2.4)

  o  Stop-Receiving-Body (Section 3.2.5)

  o  Preservation-Interest-Body (Section 3.2.6)

  o  Content-Encodings (Section 3.2.7)

  The definition of the HTTP profile feature structure using PETDM
  follows:

  HTTP-Profile: extends Feature with {
      [Aux-Parts: am-parts];
      [Pause-At-Body: size];
      [Stop-Receiving-Body: size];
      [Preservation-Interest-Body: size];
      [Content-Encodings: codings];
  };

                                Figure 2

  An HTTP profile structure can be used in feature lists of Negotiation
  Offer (NO) messages and as an anonymous parameter of a Negotiation
  Response (NR) message.  All profile parameters apply to any OCP
  transaction within profile scope.

3.2.3.  Aux-Parts

  The Aux-Parts parameter of an HTTP response profile can be used to
  negotiate the inclusion of auxiliary application message parts into
  the original data flow.  The parameter is a possibly empty list of
  am-part tokens.  An OPES processor MAY send an Aux-Parts parameter to
  advertise availability of auxiliary application message parts.  A
  callout server MAY respond with a possibly empty subset of the parts
  it needs.  The callout server response defines the subset of
  successfully negotiated auxiliary message parts.

  When receiving a Negotiation Offer (NO) message, the callout server
  MUST ignore any non-auxiliary part listed in the Aux-Parts parameter.
  When sending a Negotiation Response (NR) message, the callout server



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  MUST NOT select any application message part that was not explicitly
  listed in the negotiation offer.  In case of a violation of the last
  rule, the OPES processor MUST terminate the transaction.

  An OPES processor MUST send each negotiated auxiliary part to the
  callout server, unless the part is absent.

  Example:
       Aux-Parts: (request-header,request-body)

                                Figure 3

3.2.4.  Pause-At-Body

  A callout server MAY use the Pause-At-Body parameter to request a
  pause in original application message body transmission before
  original dataflow starts.  The parameter's value is of type "offset".
  The parameter specifies the start of the non-auxiliary application
  message body suffix that the sender is temporarily not interested in
  seeing.

  [headers][ body prefix | body suffix ][trailer]
  <-- ? --><-- offset  --><-- ? ---------------->
  <-- equiv. DWP offset ->

                                Figure 4

  When an OPES processor receives a Pause-At-Body parameter, it MUST
  behave as if it has received a Want Data Paused (DWP) message with
  the corresponding org-offset.  Note that the latter offset is
  different from the Pause-At-Body offset and is unknown until the size
  of the HTTP message headers is known.

  For example, if the Pause-At-Body value is zero, the OPES processor
  should send a Paused My Data (DPM) message just before it sends the
  first Data Use Mine (DUM) message with the response-body part in the
  HTTP response profile.  If the Pause-At-Body value is 300, the OPES
  processor should send a DPM message after transmitting 300 OCTETs for
  that application message part.

  Example:
       Pause-At-Body: 0

                                Figure 5







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3.2.5.  Stop-Receiving-Body

  A callout server MAY use the Stop-Receiving-Body parameter to imply a
  Want Stop Receiving Data (DWSR) message behavior before the original
  dataflow starts.  The parameter's value is of type "offset".  The
  parameter specifies an offset into the original, non-auxiliary
  message body part (request-body in request profile and response-body
  in response profile).

  A callout service MAY send a Stop-Receiving-Body parameter with its
  negotiation response if there is a fixed offset into the message body
  for all transactions of a profile for which a Want Stop Receiving
  Data (DWSR) message would be sent.  An OPES processor MUST behave as
  if it has received a DWSR message with the corresponding offset.
  Note that the latter offset is different from the Stop-Receiving-Body
  offset and is unknown until the size of the HTTP message headers is
  known.

  For example, if the Stop-Receiving-Body value is zero in an HTTP
  response profile, the OPES processor should send an Application
  Message End (AME) message with result code 206 immediately after
  sending the response-header message part and before starting with the
  response-body message part.

  Example:
      Stop-Receiving-Body: 0

                                Figure 6

3.2.6.  Preservation-Interest-Body

  The Preservation-Interest-Body parameter can be used to optimize data
  preservation at the OPES processor.  The parameter's value is of type
  "size" and denominates a prefix size of the original, non-auxiliary
  message body part (request-body in HTTP request profile and
  response-body in response profile).

  A callout service MAY send a Preservation-Interest-Body parameter
  with its negotiation response if there is a fixed-size prefix of the
  application message body for which a Data Preservation Interest (DPI)
  message would be sent.  An OPES processor MUST behave as if it
  receives a DPI message with org-offset zero and org-size equal to the
  value of the Preservation-Interest-Body parameter.








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  For example, if the Preservation-Interest-Body value is zero in an
  HTTP response profile, the callout server must not send any Data Use
  Yours (DUY) message for the response-body part; the OPES processor
  may use this information to optimize its data preservation behavior
  even before it makes the decision to preserve data.

  Example:
       Preservation-Interest-Body: 0

                                Figure 7

3.2.7.  Content-Encodings

  A callout server MAY send a Content-Encodings list to indicate its
  preferences in content encodings.  Encodings listed first are
  preferred to other encodings.  An OPES processor MAY use any content
  encoding when sending application messages to a callout server.

  The list of preferred content encodings does not imply lack of
  support for other encodings.  The OPES processor MUST NOT bypass a
  service just because the actual content encoding does not match the
  service's preferences.

  If an OCP agent receives an application message that it cannot handle
  due to specific content encoding, the usual transaction termination
  rules apply.

  content-coding: extends atom;
  content-codings: extends list of content-coding;

  Example:
      Content-Encodings: (gzip)

                                Figure 8

  The semantics of content-coding is defined in section 3.5 of
  [RFC2616].














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3.2.8.  Profile Negotiation Example

  Example:
    P: NO ({"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"
       Aux-Parts: (request-header,request-body)
       })
       SG: 5
       ;
    S: NR {"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"
       Aux-Parts: (request-header)
       Pause-At-Body: 30
       Preservation-Interest-Body: 0
       Content-Encodings: (gzip)
       }
       SG: 5
       ;

                                Figure 9

  This example shows a negotiation offer made by an OPES processor for
  a service group (id 5) that has already been created; the callout
  server sends an adequate negotiation response.

  The OPES processor offers one profile feature for HTTP response
  messages.  Besides the standard message parts, the OPES processor is
  able to add the header and body of the original HTTP request as
  auxiliary message parts.

  The callout server requests the auxiliary request-header part, but is
  not interested in receiving the request-body part.

  The OPES processor sends at most the following message parts, in the
  specified order, for all transactions in service group 5: request-
  header, response-header, response-body, response-trailer.  Note that
  the request-body part is not included (because it is an auxiliary
  part that was not explicitly requested).  Some of the response parts
  may not be sent if the original message lacks them.

  The callout server indicates through the Preservation-Interest-Body
  parameter with size zero that it will not send any DUY messages.  The
  OPES processor may therefore preserve no preservation for any
  transaction of this profile.

  By sending a Pause-At-Body value of 30, the callout server requests a
  data pause.  The OPES processor sends a Paused My Data (DPM) message
  immediately after sending at least 30 OCTETs of the response-body
  part.  Thereafter, the OPES processor waits for a Want More Data
  (DWM) message from the callout service.



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3.3.  Application Message Start Message

  A new named parameter for Application Message Start (AMS) messages is
  introduced.

  AM-EL: size

                                Figure 10

  AM-EL value is the size of the request-body part in the HTTP request
  profile, and is the size of the response-body part in the HTTP
  response profile, before any transfer codings have been applied (or
  after all transfer codings have been removed).  This definition is
  consistent with the HTTP entity length definition.

  An OCP agent that knows the exact length of the HTTP message entity
  (see Section 7.2.2 "Entity Length" in [RFC2616]) at the time it sends
  the AMS message, SHOULD announce this length using the AM-EL named
  parameter of an AMS message.  If the exact entity length is not
  known, an OCP agent MUST NOT send an AM-EL parameter.  Relaying
  correct entity length can have significant performance advantages for
  the recipient, and implementations are strongly encouraged to relay
  known entity lengths.  Similarly, relaying incorrect entity length
  can have drastic correctness consequences for the recipient, and
  implementations are urged to exercise great care when relaying entity
  length.

  An OPES processor receiving an AM-EL parameter SHOULD use the
  parameter's value in a Content-Length HTTP entity header when
  constructing an HTTP message, provided a Content-Length HTTP entity
  header is allowed for the given application message by HTTP (see
  Section 3.8.1).

3.4.  DUM Message

  A new named parameter for Data Use Mine (DUM) messages is introduced.

  AM-Part: am-part

                                Figure 11

  An OCP agent MUST send an AM-Part parameter with every DUM message
  that is a part of an OCP transaction with an HTTP profile.  The AM-
  Part parameter value is a single am-part token.  As implied by the
  syntax, a DUM message can only contain data of a single application
  message part.  One message part can be fragmented into any number of
  DUM messages with the same AM-Part parameter.




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  The following example shows three DUM messages containing an abridged
  HTTP response message.  The response-body part is fragmented and sent
  within two DUM messages.

  Example:
      P: DUM 88 1 0
         Kept: 0
         AM-Part: response-header

         64:HTTP/1.1 200 OK
         Content-Type: text/html
         Content-Length: 51

         ;
      P: DUM 88 1 64
         Kept: 64
         AM-Part: response-body

         19:<html><body>This is
         ;
      P: DUM 88 1 83
         Kept: 83
         AM-Part: response-body

         32: a simple message.</body></html>
         ;

                                   Figure 12

3.5.  Selective Adaptation

  The HTTP profile for OCP applies to all HTTP messages.  That scope
  includes HTTP messages such as 1xx (Informational) responses, POST,
  CONNECT, and OPTIONS requests, as well as responses with extension
  status codes and requests with extension methods.  Unless
  specifically configured to do otherwise, an OPES processor MUST
  forward all HTTP messages for adaptation at callout servers.  OPES
  bypass instructions, configured HTTP message handling rules, and
  OCP-negotiation with a callout server are all examples of an
  acceptable "specific configuration" that provides an exception to
  this rule.

  While it may seem useless to attempt to adapt "control" messages such
  as a 100 (Continue) response, skipping such messages by default may
  lead to serious security flaws and interoperability problems.  For
  example, sensitive company information might be relayed via a





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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


  carefully crafted 100 Continue response; or a malicious CONNECT
  request may not get logged if OPES processor does not forward these
  messages to a callout service that is supposed to handle them.

  By design, OPES processor implementation cannot unilaterally decide
  that an HTTP message is not worth adapting.  It needs a callout
  server opinion, a configuration setting, or another external
  information to make the decision.

3.6.  Hop-by-hop Headers

  HTTP defines several hop-by-hop headers (e.g., Connection) and allows
  for extension headers to be specified as hop-by-hop ones (via the
  Connection header mechanism).  Depending on the environment and
  configuration, an OPES processor MAY forward hop-by-hop headers to
  callout servers and MAY use hop-by-hop headers returned by callout
  servers to build an HTTP message for the next application hop.
  However, see Section 3.7 for requirements specific to the Transfer-
  Encoding header.

  For example, a logging or statistics collection service may want to
  see hop-by-hop headers sent by the previous application hop to the
  OPES processor and/or hop-by-hop headers sent by the OPES processor
  to the next application hop.  Another service may actually handle
  HTTP logic of removing and adding hop-by-hop headers.  Many services
  will ignore hop-by-hop headers.  This specification does not define a
  mechanism for distinguishing these use cases.

3.7.  Transfer Encodings

  HTTP messages may use transfer encodings, a hop-by-hop encoding
  feature of HTTP.  Adaptations that use HTTP transfer encodings have
  to be explicitly negotiated.  This specification does not document
  such negotiations.  In the absence of explicit transfer-encoding
  negotiations, an OCP agent MUST NOT send transfer-encoded application
  message bodies.

  Informally, the above rule means that the agent or its environment
  have to make sure that all transfer encodings are stripped from an
  HTTP message body before it enters OCP scope.  An agent MUST
  terminate the OCP transaction if it has to send an application
  message body but cannot remove all transfer encodings.  Violations of
  these rules lead to interoperability problems.

  If an OCP agent receives transfer-encoded application data in
  violation of the above requirement, the agent MAY terminate the
  corresponding OCP transaction.




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  An OPES processor removing transfer encodings MUST remove the
  Transfer-Encoding header before sending the header part to the
  callout service.  A callout server receiving a Transfer-Encoding
  header MAY assume that original application data is still transfer-
  encoded (and terminate the transaction).  The OPES processor MUST
  send a correct Transfer-Encoding header to the next HTTP recipient,
  independent of what header (if any) the callout server returned.

  Logging and wiretapping are the examples where negotiating acceptable
  transfer encodings may be worthwhile.  While a callout server may not
  be able to strip an encoding, it may still want to log the entire
  message "as is".  In most cases, however, the callout server would
  not be able to meaningfully handle unknown transfer encodings.

3.8.  HTTP Header Correctness

  When communicating with HTTP applications, OPES processors MUST
  ensure correctness of all computable HTTP headers documented in
  specifications that the processors intend to be compliant with.  A
  computable header is defined as a header whose value can be computed
  based on the message body alone.  For example, the correctness of
  Content-Length and Content-MD5 headers has to be ensured by
  processors claiming compliance with HTTP/1.1 ([RFC2616]).

  Informally and by default, the OPES processor has to validate and
  eventually recalculate, add, or remove computable HTTP headers in
  order to build a compliant HTTP message from an adapted application
  message returned by the callout server.  If a particular OPES
  processor trusts certain HTTP headers that a callout service sends,
  it can use those headers "as is".

  An OPES processor MAY forward a partially adapted HTTP message from a
  callout server to the next callout server, without verifying HTTP
  header correctness.  Consequently, a callout service cannot assume
  that the HTTP headers it receives are correct or final from an HTTP
  point of view.

  The following subsections present guidelines for the recalculation of
  some HTTP headers.

3.8.1.  Message Size Recalculation

  By default, an OCP agent MUST NOT trust the Content-Length header
  that is sent within an HTTP header message part.  The message length
  could be modified by a callout service without adaptation of the HTTP
  message headers.





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  Before sending the HTTP message to the HTTP peer, the OPES processor
  has to ensure correctness of the message length indication according
  to section 4.4 of [RFC2616].

  Besides ensuring HTTP message correctness, good OPES processors set
  up the message to optimize performance, including minimizing delivery
  latency.  Specifically, indicating the end of a message by closing
  the HTTP connection ought to be the last resort:

  o  If the callout server sends an AM-EL parameter with its AMS
     message, the OPES processor SHOULD use this value to create a
     Content-Length header to be able to keep a persistent HTTP
     connection.  Note that HTTP rules prohibit a Content-Length header
     to be used in transfer-encoded messages.

  o  If AM-EL parameter or equivalent entity length information is not
     available, and HTTP rules allow for chunked transfer encoding, the
     OPES processor SHOULD use chunked transfer encoding.  Note that
     any Content-Length header has to be removed in this case.

  o  If the message size is not known a priori and chunked transfer
     coding cannot be used, but the OPES processor can wait for the OCP
     transaction to finish before forwarding the adapted HTTP message
     on a persistent HTTP connection, then the processor SHOULD compute
     and add a Content-Length header.

  o  Finally, if all optimizations are not applicable, the OPES
     processor SHOULD delete any Content-Length header and forward
     adapted data immediately, while indicating the message end by
     closing the HTTP connection.

3.8.2.  Content-MD5 Header

  By default, the OPES processor MUST assume that the callout service
  modifies the content in a way that the MD5 checksum of the message
  body becomes invalid.

  According to section 14.15 of [RFC2616], HTTP intermediaries must not
  generate Content-MD5 headers.  A recalculation is therefore possible
  only if the OPES processor is considered authoritative for the entity
  being adapted.  An un-authoritative OPES processor MUST remove the
  Content-MD5 header unless it detects that the HTTP message was not
  modified; in this case, it MAY leave the Content-MD5 header in the
  message.  When such detection significantly increases message
  latency, deleting the Content-MD5 header may be a better option.






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3.9.  Examples

  This is a possible OCP message flow using an HTTP request profile.
  An end-user wants to access the home page of
  www.restricted.example.com, through the proxy, but access is denied
  by a URL blocking service running on the callout server used by the
  proxy.

  OCP messages from the OPES processor are marked with "P:" and OCP
  messages from the callout server are marked with "S:".  The OCP
  connection is not closed at the end but kept open for the next OCP
  transaction.

  Example:
   P: CS;
   S: CS;
   P: SGC 11 ({"31:ocp-test.example.com/url-filter"});
   P: NO ({"53:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/request"})
      SG: 11
      ;
   S: NR {"53:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/request"}
      SG: 11
      ;
   P: TS 55 11;
   P: AMS 55
      AM-EL: 0
      ;
   P: DUM 55 0
      Kept: 0
      AM-Part: request-header
      235:GET http://www.restricted.example.com/ HTTP/1.1
      Accept: */*
      Accept-Language: de
      Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
      User-Agent: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; Windows NT 5.0)
      Host: www.restricted.example.com
      Proxy-Connection: Keep-Alive


      ;
   P: AME 55;
   S: AMS 55;
   S: DUM 55 0
      AM-Part: response-header







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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


      76:HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
      Content-Type: text/html
      Proxy-Connection: close

      ;
   S: DUM 55 0
      AM-Part: response-body

      67:<html><body>You are not allowed to
      access this page.</body></html>
      ;
   S: AME 55;
   P: TE 55;
   S: TE 55;

                                Figure 13

  The next example is a language translation of a small plain text file
  that gets transferred in an HTTP response.  In this example, OCP
  agents negotiate a profile for the whole OCP connection.  The OCP
  connection remains open in the end of the OCP transaction.  (Note
  that NO and NR messages were rendered with an extra new line to
  satisfy RFC formatting requirements.)

  Example:
   P: CS;
   S: CS;
   P: NO
      ({"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"});
   S: NR
      {"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"};
   P: SGC 12 ({"44:ocp-test.example.com/translate?from=EN&to=DE"});
   P: TS 89 12;
   P: AMS 89
      AM-EL: 86
      ;
   P: DUM 89 0
      AM-Part: response-header

      65:HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Content-Type: text/plain
      Content-Length: 86


      ;
   P: DUM 89 65
      AM-Part: response-body




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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


      86:Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
      The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
      ;
   P: AME 89;
   S: AMS 89
      AM-EL: 78
      ;
   P: TE 89;
   S: DUM 89 0
      AM-Part: response-header

      65:HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Content-Type: text/plain
      Content-Length: 78

      ;
   S: DUM 89 63
      AM-Part: response-body

      80:Ob's edler im Gemuet, die Pfeil und Schleudern
      des wuetenden Geschicks erdulden
      ;
   S: AME 89;
   S: TE 89;

                                Figure 14

  The following example shows modification of an HTML resource and
  demonstrates data preservation optimization.  The callout server uses
  a DUY message to send back an unchanged response header part, but
  because it does not know the size of the altered HTML resource at the
  time it sends the AMS message, the callout server omits the AM-EL
  parameter; the OPES processor is responsible for adjusting the
  Content-Length header.

  Example:
   P: CS;
   S: CS;
   P: SGC 10 ({"30:ocp-test.example.com/ad-filter"});
   P: NO ({"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"
      Aux-Parts: (request-header,request-body)
      },{"45:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/MIME"})
      SG: 10
      ;
   S: NR {"54:http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response"
      Aux-Parts: (request-header)
      Content-Encodings: (gzip)
      }



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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


      SG: 10
      ;
   P: TS 88 10;
   P: AMS 88
      AM-EL: 95
      ;
   P: DUM 88 0
      AM-Part: request-header

      65:GET /opes/adsample.html HTTP/1.1
      Host: www.martin-stecher.de


      ;
   P: DUM 88 65

      Kept: 65 64
      AM-Part: response-header

      64:HTTP/1.1 200 OK
      Content-Type: text/html
      Content-Length: 95


      ;
   P: DUM 88 129
      Kept: 65 90
      AM-Part: response-body

      26:<html>
      <body>
      This is my
      ;
   S: AMS 88;
   P: DUM 88 155
      Kept: 65 158
      AM-Part: response-body

      68: new ad: <img src="my_ad.gif"
      width=88 height=31>
      </body>
      </html>
      ;
   S: DUY 88 65 64
   S: DPI 88 129 2147483647;
   P: AME 88;
   S: DUM 88 0
      AM-Part: response-body



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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


      52:<html>
      <body>
      This is my new ad:
      </body>
      </html>
      ;
   S: DPI 88 129 0;
   P: TE 88;
   S: AME 88;
   S: TE 88;

                                Figure 15

4.  Tracing

  [RFC3897] defines application-agnostic tracing facilities in OPES.
  Compliance with this specification requires compliance with
  [RFC3897].  When adapting HTTP, trace entries are supplied using HTTP
  message headers.  The following HTTP extension headers are defined to
  carry trace entries.  Their definitions are given using BNF notation
  and elements defined in [RFC2616].

       OPES-System = "OPES-System" ":" #trace-entry
       OPES-Via    = "OPES-Via" ":" #trace-entry

       trace-entry = opes-agent-id *( ";" parameter )
       opes-agent-id = absoluteURI

                                  Figure 16

  An OPES System MUST add its trace entry to the OPES-System header.
  Other OPES agents MUST use the OPES-Via header if they add their
  tracing entries.  All OPES agents MUST append their entries.
  Informally, OPES-System is the only required OPES tracing header
  while OPES-Via provides optional tracing details; both headers
  reflect the order of trace entry additions.

  If an OPES-Via header is used in the original application message, an
  OPES System MUST append its entry to the OPES-Via header.  Otherwise,
  an OPES System MAY append its entry to the OPES-Via header.  If an
  OPES System is using both headers, it MUST add identical trace
  entries except it MAY omit some or all trace-entry parameters from
  the OPES-Via header.  Informally, the OPES System entries in the
  OPES-Via header are used to delimit and group OPES-Via entries from
  different OPES Systems without having a priory knowledge about OPES
  System identifiers.





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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


  Note that all of these headers are defined using #list constructs
  and, hence, a valid HTTP message may contain multiple trace entries
  per header.  OPES agents SHOULD use a single header-field rather than
  using multiple equally-named fields to record a long trace.  Using
  multiple equally-named extension header-fields is illegal from HTTP's
  point of view and may not work with some of the OPES-unaware HTTP
  proxies.

  For example, here is an HTTP response message header after OPES
  adaptations have been applied by a single OPES processor executing 10
  OPES services:

  Example:
   HTTP/1.1 200 OK
   Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2003 06:25:24 GMT
   Last-Modified: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 18:24:25 GMT
   Content-type: application/octet-stream
   OPES-System: http://www.cdn.example.com/opes?session=ac79a749f56
   OPES-Via: http://www.cdn.example.com/opes?session=ac79a749f56,
       http://www.srvcs-4u.example.com/cat/?sid=123,
       http://www.srvcs-4u.example.com/cat/?sid=124,
       http://www.srvcs-4u.example.com/cat/?sid=125 ; mode=A

                                Figure 17

  In the above example, the OPES processor has not included its trace
  entry or its trace entry was replaced by an OPES system trace entry.
  Only 3 out of 10 services are traced.  The remaining services did not
  include their entries or their entries were removed by OPES system or
  processor.  The last traced service included a "mode" parameter.
  Various identifiers in trace entries will probably have no meaning to
  the recipient of the message, but may be decoded by OPES System
  software.

  OPES entities MAY place optional tracing entries in a message trailer
  (i.e., entity-headers at the end of a Chunked-Body of a chunked-
  encoded message), provided trailer presence does not violate HTTP
  protocol.  See [RFC3897] for a definition of what tracing entries are
  optional.  OPES entities MUST NOT place required tracing entries in a
  message trailer.











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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


5.  Bypass

  An HTTP extension header is introduced to allow for OPES system
  bypass as defined in [RFC3897].

   OPES-Bypass  = "OPES-Bypass" ":" ( "*" | 1#bypass-entry )
   bypass-entry = opes-agent-id

                                Figure 18

  This header can be added to HTTP requests to request OPES system
  bypass for the listed OPES agents.  The asterisk "*" character is
  used to represent all possible OPES agents.

  See [RFC3897] for what can be bypassed and for bypass requirements.

6.  IAB Considerations

  OPES treatment of IETF Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
  considerations [RFC3238] are documented in "OPES Treatment of IAB
  Considerations" [RFC3914].

7.  Security Considerations

  Application-independent security considerations are documented in
  application-agnostic OPES specifications.  HTTP profiles do not
  introduce any HTTP-specific security considerations.  However, that
  does not imply that HTTP adaptations are immune from security
  threats.

  Specific threat examples include such adaptations as rewriting the
  Request-URI of an HTTP CONNECT request or removing an HTTP hop-by-hop
  Upgrade header before the HTTP proxy can act on it.  As with any
  adaptation, the OPES agents MUST NOT perform such actions without
  HTTP client or server consent.

8.  IANA Considerations

  The IANA registers request and response profile features (Section
  3.2) using the registration procedure outlined in the "IANA
  Considerations" Section of OCP Core [RFC4037].  The corresponding
  "uri" parameters for the two features are:

  o  http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/request

  o  http://www.iana.org/assignments/opes/ocp/http/response





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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


9.  Compliance

  Compliance with OPES mechanisms is defined in corresponding
  application-agnostic specifications.  HTTP profiles for these
  mechanisms use corresponding compliance definitions from these
  specifications, as if each profile were incorporated into the
  application-agnostic specification it profiles.

10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2616]  Fielding,  R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
             Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
             Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.

  [RFC3897]  Barbir, A., "Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) Entities
             and End Points Communication", RFC 3897, September 2004.

  [RFC4037]  Rousskov, A., "Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) Callout
             Protocol (OCP) Core", RFC 4037, March 2005.

10.2.  Informative References

  [RFC3835]  Barbir, A., Penno, R., Chen, R., Hofmann, M., and H.
             Orman, "An Architecture for Open Pluggable Edge Services
             (OPES)", RFC 3835, August 2004.

  [RFC3836]  Beck, A., Hofmann, M., Orman, H., Penno, R., and A.
             Terzis, "Requirements for Open Pluggable Edge Services
             (OPES) Callout Protocols", RFC 3836, August 2004.

  [RFC3837]  Barbir, A., Batuner, O., Srinivas, B., Hofmann, M., and H.
             Orman, "Security Threats and Risks for Open Pluggable Edge
             Services (OPES)", RFC 3837, August 2004.

  [RFC3752]  Barbir, A., Burger, E., Chen, R., McHenry, S., Orman, H.,
             and R. Penno, "Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) Use
             Cases and Deployment Scenarios", RFC 3752, April 2004.

  [RFC3838]  Barbir, A., Batuner, O., Beck, A., Chan, T., and H. Orman,
             "Policy, Authorization, and Enforcement Requirements of
             the Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES)", RFC 3838, August
             2004.

  [rules-p]  Beck, A. and A. Rousskov, "P: Message Processing
             Language", work in progress, October 2003.




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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


  [RFC3914]  Barbir, A. and A. Rousskov, "Open Pluggable Edge Services
             (OPES) Treatment of IAB Considerations", RFC 3914, October
             2004.

  [RFC3238]  Floyd, S. and L. Daigle, "IAB Architectural and Policy
             Considerations for Open Pluggable Edge Services", RFC
             3238, January 2002.

Acknowledgements

  The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Robert
  Collins (Syncretize) and Larry Masinter (Adobe).  Larry Masinter
  provided an early review of this document.

Authors' Addresses

  Alex Rousskov
  The Measurement Factory

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.measurement-factory.com/


  Martin Stecher
  CyberGuard Corporation
  Vattmannstr. 3
  Paderborn  33100
  DE

  EMail: [email protected]
  URI:   http://www.webwasher.com/




















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RFC 4236               HTTP Adaptation with OPES           November 2005


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

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

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

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  this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-
  [email protected].

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.







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