HTTP is an acronym for Hypertext Transfer Protocol. It is a standard networking protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia systems which has been used in the World Wide Web since 1990.[1] The specifications for HTTP was developed by Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of World Wide Web.[2] The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and the W3C coordinate the development and publications of HTTP standards through RFCs.

Background edit

Original HTTP Document edit

The first document regarding the HTTP protocol was written by Tim Berners-Lee in 1991 and it was implemented on a prototype release by W3C initiative software as HTTP 0.9. In the original document HTTP 0.9 was defined by Berners-Lee as a simple search and retrieve protocol which runs through a TCP/IP connection.[3] [4]

Basic HTTP Specification edit

In 1992, Berners-Lee submitted the Basic HTTP specification to the IETF as an Internet Draft. In detail, he defined HTTP as a "protocol with the lightness and speed necessary for a distributed collaborative hypermedia information system. It is a generic stateless object-oriented protocol, which may be used for many similar tasks such as name servers, and distributed object-oriented systems, by extending the commands or methods used". In addition, he added that HTTP's characteristics is the negotiation of data representation which allows systems to be built independently for the development of new advanced representations. [5]

HTTP Standardization edit

IETF initiated the standardization of HTTP standards on the latter part of 1994 which was strongly supported by W3C.[6] In 1996, Tim Berners-Lee together with Roy Fielding and Henrik Frystyk Nielsen published the RFC 1945, the first IETF Informational Document for HTTP/1.0.[7] Experimental implementations on HTTP 1.1 was conducted by a group of computer scientists within Libwww, the W3C protocol library and Jigsaw, W3C's Web server. The scientists discovered errors as well as the full potential of the protocol.[8] A proposed IETF standard, RFC 2068 was subsequently published in 1997. [9]

RFC 2616 is the current IETF draft standard for HTTP.[10]

References edit