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Summary Of: HTTP

HTTP development was coordinated by the... the version of HTTP in common use... HTTP is a request... HTTP is not constrained to using... HTTP only presumes a reliable transport... an HTTP client initiates a request... An HTTP server listening on that port waits for the client to send a request message... to be accessed by HTTP are identified using... is accepted by servers to maintain compatibility with HTTP clients before the HTTP... A HTTP request made using telnet... A HTTP request made using telnet... A HTTP request made using telnet... HTTP defines eight methods... Returns the HTTP methods that the server supports for specified... HTTP servers are required to implement at least the GET and HEAD methods... HTTP has evolved into multiple... the first line of the HTTP response is called the... SSL is especially suited for HTTP since it can provide some protection even if only one side of the communication is... This is the case with HTTP transactions over the Internet... this method is that the requirement for secure HTTP cannot be specified in the URI... Below is a sample conversation between an HTTP client and an HTTP server running on... HTTP proxy default configurations allow arbitrary TCP connections...

Encyclodia Page On: HTTP

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communications protocol | Internet | hypertext | World Wide Web | World Wide Web Consortium | Internet Engineering Task Force | Request for Comments | June 1999 | client | server | web site | web browser | spider | user agent | HTML | proxies | gateways | tunnels | TCP/IP | Transmission Control Protocol | port | List of TCP and UDP port numbers | TCP | UDP | difference between TCP and UDP | Resources | Uniform Resource Identifiers | Uniform Resource Locators | https | URI schemes | TCP/IP model | Application Layer | DHCP | DNS | FTP | Gopher | IMAP4 | IRC | NNTP | XMPP | POP3 | RTP | SIP | SMTP | SNMP | SSH | Telnet | RPC | RTCP | RTSP | TLS | SSL | SDP | SOAP | GTP | STUN | NTP | BGP | RIP | (more) | Transport Layer | TCP | UDP | DCCP | SCTP | RSVP | ECN | (more) | Internet Layer | IP | IPv4 | IPv6 | ICMP | ICMPv6 | IGMP | IPsec | (more) | Link Layer | ARP | RARP | NDP | OSPF | Tunnels | Media Access Control | Device Drivers | (more) | view | talk | Headers | carriage return | line feed | whitespace | A HTTP request made using telnet. The request, response headers and response body are highlighted. | | web applications | HTML form | URI | TCP/IP tunnel | SSL | proxy | citation needed | side effects | Web caching | search engines | idempotent | request pipelining | World Wide Web Consortium | Internet Engineering Task Force | Persistence | Compression | SSL | Headers | ETag | Cookie | Referer | Status codes | 200 OK | 301 Moved permanently | 302 Found | 403 Forbidden | 404 Not Found | view | List of HTTP status codes | 404 | user agent | web developer | HTTP persistent connections | lag | chunked transfer encoding | HTTP pipelining | byte serving | stateless | web developers | website | web application | cookies | form | URL | https | URI | https | URI | HTTPS | SSL | TLS | authenticated | server | certificate | TLS | List of HTTP status codes | Server Name Indication | www.example.com | newline | carriage return | line feed | DNS | IP address | virtual hosting | ETag | URI | Internet media type | webserver | byte serving | web server | TCP | Basic access authentication | Content negotiation | Digest access authentication | HTTP compression | List of file transfer protocols | List of HTTP status codes | List of HTTP headers | WebDAV | Web cache | 2002 | 05-17 | 2007 | 05-10 | Categories | HTTP | Internet | Network protocols | Web browsers | Internet protocols | Application layer protocols | World Wide Web | Open formats | World Wide Web Consortium standards | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2008 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "HTTP".