转载地址:http://dev.chromium.org/spdy/spdy-protocol/spdy-protocol-draft3#TOC-2.6.3-RST_STREAM
One of the bottlenecks of HTTP implementations is that HTTP relies on multiple connections for concurrency. This causes several problems, including additional round trips for connection setup, slow-start delays, and connection rationing by the client, where it tries to avoid opening too many connections to any single server. HTTP pipelining helps some, but only achieves partial multiplexing. In addition, pipelining has proven non-deployable in existing browsers due to intermediary interference.
SPDY adds a framing layer for multiplexing multiple, concurrent streams across a single TCP connection (or any reliable transport stream). The framing layer is optimized for HTTP-like request-response streams, such that applications which run over HTTP today can work over SPDY with little or no change on behalf of the web application writer.
The SPDY session offers four improvements over HTTP:
SPDY attempts to preserve the existing semantics of HTTP. All features such as cookies, ETags, Vary headers, Content-Encoding negotiations, etc work as they do with HTTP; SPDY only replaces the way the data is written to the network.
The SPDY Specification is split into two parts: a framing layer (Section2), which multiplexes a TCP connection into independent, length-prefixed frames, and an HTTP layer (Section3), which specifies the mechanism for overlaying HTTP request/response pairs on top of the framing layer. While some of the framing layer concepts are isolated from the HTTP layer, building a generic framing layer has not been a goal. The framing layer is tailored to the needs of the HTTP protocol and server push.
The SPDY framing layer (or "session") runs atop a reliable transport layer such as TCP. The client is the TCP connection initiator. SPDY connections are persistent connections.
For best performance, it is expected that clients will not close open connections until the user navigates away from all web pages referencing a connection, or until the server closes the connection. Servers are encouraged to leave connections open for as long as possible, but can terminate idle connections if necessary. When either endpoint closes the transport-level connection, it MUST first send a GOAWAY (Section2.6.6) frame so that the endpoints can reliably determine if requests finished before the close.
Once the connection is established, clients and servers exchange framed messages. There are two types of frames: control frames (Section2.2.1) and data frames (Section2.2.2). Frames always have a common header which is 8 bytes in length.
The first bit is a control bit indicating whether a frame is a control frame or data frame. Control frames carry a version number, a frame type, flags, and a length. Data frames contain the stream ID, flags, and the length for the payload carried after the common header. The simple header is designed to make reading and writing of frames easy.
All integer values, including length, version, and type, are in network byte order. SPDY does not enforce alignment of types in dynamically sized frames.
+----------------------------------+ |C| Version(15bits) | Type(16bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Data | +----------------------------------+
Control bit: The 'C' bit is a single bit indicating if this is a control message. For control frames this value is always 1.
Version: The version number of the SPDY protocol. This document describes SPDY version 3.
Type: The type of control frame. See Control Frames (Section2.6) for the complete list of control frames.
Flags: Flags related to this frame. Flags for control frames and data frames are different.
Length: An unsigned 24-bit value representing the number of bytes after the length field.
Data: data associated with this control frame. The format and length of this data is controlled by the control frame type.
Control frame processing requirements:
+----------------------------------+ |C| Stream-ID (31bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Data | +----------------------------------+
Control bit: For data frames this value is always 0.
Stream-ID: A 31-bit value identifying the stream.
Flags: Flags related to this frame. Valid flags are:
Length: An unsigned 24-bit value representing the number of bytes after the length field. The total size of a data frame is 8 bytes + length. It is valid to have a zero-length data frame.
Data: The variable-length data payload; the length was defined in the length field.
Data frame processing requirements:
Streams are independent sequences of bi-directional data divided into frames with several properties:
SPDY defines 3 control frames to manage the lifecycle of a stream:
A stream is created by sending a control frame with the type set to SYN_STREAM (Section2.6.1). If the server is initiating the stream, the Stream-ID must be even. If the client is initiating the stream, the Stream-ID must be odd. 0 is not a valid Stream-ID. Stream-IDs from each side of the connection must increase monotonically as new streams are created. E.g. Stream 2 may be created after stream 3, but stream 7 must not be created after stream 9. Stream IDs do not wrap: when a client or server cannot create a new stream id without exceeding a 31 bit value, it MUST NOT create a new stream.
The stream-id MUST increase with each new stream. If an endpoint receives a SYN_STREAM with a stream id which is less than any previously received SYN_STREAM, it MUST issue a session error (Section2.4.1) with the status PROTOCOL_ERROR.
It is a protocol error to send two SYN_STREAMs with the same stream-id. If a recipient receives a second SYN_STREAM for the same stream, it MUST issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the status code PROTOCOL_ERROR.
Upon receipt of a SYN_STREAM, the recipient can reject the stream by sending a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the error code REFUSED_STREAM. Note, however, that the creating endpoint may have already sent additional frames for that stream which cannot be immediately stopped.
Once the stream is created, the creator may immediately send HEADERS or DATA frames for that stream, without needing to wait for the recipient to acknowledge.
When an endpoint creates a stream with the FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL flag set, it creates a unidirectional stream which the creating endpoint can use to send frames, but the receiving endpoint cannot. The receiving endpoint is implicitly already in the half-closed (Section2.3.6) state.
SYN_STREAM frames which do not use the FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL flag are bidirectional streams. Both endpoints can send data on a bi-directional stream.
The creator of a stream assigns a priority for that stream. Priority is represented as an integer from 0 to 7. 0 represents the highest priority and 7 represents the lowest priority.
The sender and recipient SHOULD use best-effort to process streams in the order of highest priority to lowest priority.
Streams carry optional sets of name/value pair headers which carry metadata about the stream. After the stream has been created, and as long as the sender is not closed (Section2.3.7) or half-closed (Section2.3.6), each side may send HEADERS frame(s) containing the header data. Header data can be sent in multiple HEADERS frames, and HEADERS frames may be interleaved with data frames.
Once a stream is created, it can be used to send arbitrary amounts of data. Generally this means that a series of data frames will be sent on the stream until a frame containing the FLAG_FIN flag is set. The FLAG_FIN can be set on a SYN_STREAM (Section2.6.1), SYN_REPLY (Section2.6.2), HEADERS (Section2.6.7) or a DATA (Section2.2.2) frame. Once the FLAG_FIN has been sent, the stream is considered to be half-closed.
When one side of the stream sends a frame with the FLAG_FIN flag set, the stream is half-closed from that endpoint. The sender of the FLAG_FIN MUST NOT send further frames on that stream. When both sides have half-closed, the stream is closed.
If an endpoint receives a data frame after the stream is half-closed from the sender (e.g. the endpoint has already received a prior frame for the stream with the FIN flag set), it MUST send a RST_STREAM to the sender with the status STREAM_ALREADY_CLOSED.
There are 3 ways that streams can be terminated:
If an endpoint receives a data frame after the stream is closed, it must send a RST_STREAM to the sender with the status PROTOCOL_ERROR.
The SPDY framing layer has only two types of errors, and they are always handled consistently. Any reference in this specification to "issue a session error" refers toSection2.4.1. Any reference to "issue a stream error" refers toSection2.4.2.
A session error is any error which prevents further processing of the framing layer or which corrupts the session compression state. When a session error occurs, the endpoint encountering the error MUST first send a GOAWAY (Section2.6.6) frame with the stream id of most recently received stream from the remote endpoint, and the error code for why the session is terminating. After sending the GOAWAY frame, the endpoint MUST close the TCP connection.
Note that the session compression state is dependent upon both endpoints always processing all compressed data. If an endpoint partially processes a frame containing compressed data without updating compression state properly, future control frames which use compression will be always be errored. Implementations SHOULD always try to process compressed data so that errors which could be handled as stream errors do not become session errors.
Note that because this GOAWAY is sent during a session error case, it is possible that the GOAWAY will not be reliably received by the receiving endpoint. It is a best-effort attempt to communicate with the remote about why the session is going down.
A stream error is an error related to a specific stream-id which does not affect processing of other streams at the framing layer. Upon a stream error, the endpoint MUST send a RST_STREAM (Section2.6.3) frame which contains the stream id of the stream where the error occurred and the error status which caused the error. After sending the RST_STREAM, the stream is closed to the sending endpoint. After sending the RST_STREAM, if the sender receives any frames other than a RST_STREAM for that stream id, it will result in sending additional RST_STREAM frames. An endpoint MUST NOT send a RST_STREAM in response to an RST_STREAM, as doing so would lead to RST_STREAM loops. Sending a RST_STREAM does not cause the SPDY session to be closed.
If an endpoint has multiple RST_STREAM frames to send in succession for the same stream-id and the same error code, it MAY coalesce them into a single RST_STREAM frame. (This can happen if a stream is closed, but the remote sends multiple data frames. There is no reason to send a RST_STREAM for each frame in succession).
Because TCP provides a single stream of data on which SPDY multiplexes multiple logical streams, clients and servers must intelligently interleave data messages for concurrent sessions.
The SYN_STREAM control frame allows the sender to asynchronously create a stream between the endpoints. See Stream Creation (Section2.3.2)
+------------------------------------+ |1| version | 1 | +------------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +------------------------------------+ |X| Stream-ID (31bits) | +------------------------------------+ |X| Associated-To-Stream-ID (31bits) | +------------------------------------+ | Pri|Unused | Slot | | +-------------------+ | | Number of Name/Value pairs (int32) | <+ +------------------------------------+ | | Length of name (int32) | | This section is the "Name/Value +------------------------------------+ | Header Block", and is compressed. | Name (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Length of value (int32) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Value (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | (repeats) | <+
Flags: Flags related to this frame. Valid flags are:
Length: The length is the number of bytes which follow the length field in the frame. For SYN_STREAM frames, this is 10 bytes plus the length of the compressed Name/Value block.
Stream-ID: The 31-bit identifier for this stream. This stream-id will be used in frames which are part of this stream.
Associated-To-Stream-ID: The 31-bit identifier for a stream which this stream is associated to. If this stream is independent of all other streams, it should be 0.
Priority: A 3-bit priority (Section2.3.3) field.
Unused: 5 bits of unused space, reserved for future use.
Slot: An 8 bit unsigned integer specifying the index in the server's CREDENTIAL vector of the client certificate to be used for this request. see CREDENTIAL frame (Section2.6.9). The value 0 means no client certificate should be associated with this stream.
Name/Value Header Block: A set of name/value pairs carried as part of the SYN_STREAM. see Name/Value Header Block (Section2.6.10).
If an endpoint receives a SYN_STREAM which is larger than the implementation supports, it MAY send a RST_STREAM with error code FRAME_TOO_LARGE. All implementations MUST support the minimum size limits defined in the Control Frames section (Section2.2.1).
SYN_REPLY indicates the acceptance of a stream creation by the recipient of a SYN_STREAM frame.
+------------------------------------+ |1| version | 2 | +------------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +------------------------------------+ |X| Stream-ID (31bits) | +------------------------------------+ | Number of Name/Value pairs (int32) | <+ +------------------------------------+ | | Length of name (int32) | | This section is the "Name/Value +------------------------------------+ | Header Block", and is compressed. | Name (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Length of value (int32) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Value (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | (repeats) | <+
Flags: Flags related to this frame. Valid flags are:
Length: The length is the number of bytes which follow the length field in the frame. For SYN_REPLY frames, this is 4 bytes plus the length of the compressed Name/Value block.
Stream-ID: The 31-bit identifier for this stream.
If an endpoint receives multiple SYN_REPLY frames for the same active stream ID, it MUST issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the error code STREAM_IN_USE.
Name/Value Header Block: A set of name/value pairs carried as part of the SYN_STREAM. see Name/Value Header Block (Section2.6.10).
If an endpoint receives a SYN_REPLY which is larger than the implementation supports, it MAY send a RST_STREAM with error code FRAME_TOO_LARGE. All implementations MUST support the minimum size limits defined in the Control Frames section (Section2.2.1).
The RST_STREAM frame allows for abnormal termination of a stream. When sent by the creator of a stream, it indicates the creator wishes to cancel the stream. When sent by the recipient of a stream, it indicates an error or that the recipient did not want to accept the stream, so the stream should be closed.
+----------------------------------+ |1| version | 3 | +----------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | 8 | +----------------------------------+ |X| Stream-ID (31bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Status code | +----------------------------------+
Flags: Flags related to this frame. RST_STREAM does not define any flags. This value must be 0.
Length: An unsigned 24-bit value representing the number of bytes after the length field. For RST_STREAM control frames, this value is always 8.
Stream-ID: The 31-bit identifier for this stream.
Status code: (32 bits) An indicator for why the stream is being terminated.The following status codes are defined:
After receiving a RST_STREAM on a stream, the recipient must not send additional frames for that stream, and the stream moves into the closed state.
A SETTINGS frame contains a set of id/value pairs for communicating configuration data about how the two endpoints may communicate. SETTINGS frames can be sent at any time by either endpoint, are optionally sent, and are fully asynchronous. When the server is the sender, the sender can request that configuration data be persisted by the client across SPDY sessions and returned to the server in future communications.
Persistence of SETTINGS ID/Value pairs is done on a per origin/IP pair (the "origin" is the set of scheme, host, and port from the URI. See
+----------------------------------+ |1| version | 4 | +----------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Number of entries | +----------------------------------+ | ID/Value Pairs | | ... |
Control bit: The control bit is always 1 for this message.
Version: The SPDY version number.
Type: The message type for a SETTINGS message is 4.
Flags: FLAG_SETTINGS_CLEAR_SETTINGS (0x1): When set, the client should clear any previously persisted SETTINGS ID/Value pairs. If this frame contains ID/Value pairs with the FLAG_SETTINGS_PERSIST_VALUE set, then the client will first clear its existing, persisted settings, and then persist the values with the flag set which are contained within this frame. Because persistence is only implemented on the client, this flag can only be used when the sender is the server.
Length: An unsigned 24-bit value representing the number of bytes after the length field. The total size of a SETTINGS frame is 8 bytes + length.
Number of entries: A 32-bit value representing the number of ID/value pairs in this message.
Each ID/value pair is as follows:
+----------------------------------+ | Flags(8) | ID (24 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Value (32 bits) | +----------------------------------+
Flags: An 8 bit value. Defined Flags:
ID: 24-bits in network byte order. Defined IDs:
Value: A 32-bit value.
The message is intentionally extensible for future information which may improve client-server communications. The sender does not need to send every type of ID/value. It must only send those for which it has accurate values to convey. When multiple ID/value pairs are sent, they should be sent in order of lowest id to highest id. A single SETTINGS frame MUST not contain multiple values for the same ID. If the recipient of a SETTINGS frame discovers multiple values for the same ID, it MUST ignore all values except the first one.
A server may send multiple SETTINGS frames containing different ID/Value pairs. When the same ID/Value is sent twice, the most recent value overrides any previously sent values. If the server sends IDs 1, 2, and 3 with the FLAG_SETTINGS_PERSIST_VALUE in a first SETTINGS frame, and then sends IDs 4 and 5 with the FLAG_SETTINGS_PERSIST_VALUE, when the client returns the persisted state on its next SETTINGS frame, it SHOULD send all 5 settings (1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 in this example) to the server.
The PING control frame is a mechanism for measuring a minimal round-trip time from the sender. It can be sent from the client or the server. Recipients of a PING frame should send an identical frame to the sender as soon as possible (if there is other pending data waiting to be sent, PING should take highest priority). Each ping sent by a sender should use a unique ID.
+----------------------------------+ |1| version | 6 | +----------------------------------+ | 0 (flags) | 4 (length) | +----------------------------------| | 32-bit ID | +----------------------------------+
Control bit: The control bit is always 1 for this message.
Version: The SPDY version number.
Type: The message type for a PING message is 6.
Length: This frame is always 4 bytes long.
ID: A unique ID for this ping, represented as an unsigned 32 bit value. When the client initiates a ping, it must use an odd numbered ID. When the server initiates a ping, it must use an even numbered ping. Use of odd/even IDs is required in order to avoid accidental looping on PINGs (where each side initiates an identical PING at the same time).
Note: If a sender uses all possible PING ids (e.g. has sent all 2^31 possible IDs), it can wrap and start re-using IDs.
If a server receives an even numbered PING which it did not initiate, it must ignore the PING. If a client receives an odd numbered PING which it did not initiate, it must ignore the PING.
The GOAWAY control frame is a mechanism to tell the remote side of the connection to stop creating streams on this session. It can be sent from the client or the server. Once sent, the sender will not respond to any new SYN_STREAMs on this session. Recipients of a GOAWAY frame must not send additional streams on this session, although a new session can be established for new streams. The purpose of this message is to allow an endpoint to gracefully stop accepting new streams (perhaps for a reboot or maintenance), while still finishing processing of previously established streams.
There is an inherent race condition between an endpoint sending SYN_STREAMs and the remote sending a GOAWAY message. To deal with this case, the GOAWAY contains a last-stream-id indicating the stream-id of the last stream which was created on the sending endpoint in this session. If the receiver of the GOAWAY sent new SYN_STREAMs for sessions after this last-stream-id, they were not processed by the server and the receiver may treat the stream as though it had never been created at all (hence the receiver may want to re-create the stream later on a new session).
Endpoints should always send a GOAWAY message before closing a connection so that the remote can know whether a stream has been partially processed or not. (For example, if an HTTP client sends a POST at the same time that a server closes a connection, the client cannot know if the server started to process that POST request if the server does not send a GOAWAY frame to indicate where it stopped working).
After sending a GOAWAY message, the sender must ignore all SYN_STREAM frames for new streams.
+----------------------------------+ |1| version | 7 | +----------------------------------+ | 0 (flags) | 8 (length) | +----------------------------------| |X| Last-good-stream-ID (31 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Status code | +----------------------------------+
Control bit: The control bit is always 1 for this message.
Version: The SPDY version number.
Type: The message type for a GOAWAY message is 7.
Length: This frame is always 8 bytes long.
Last-good-stream-Id: The last stream id which was replied to (with either a SYN_REPLY or RST_STREAM) by the sender of the GOAWAY message. If no streams were replied to, this value MUST be 0.
Status: The reason for closing the session.
The HEADERS frame augments a stream with additional headers. It may be optionally sent on an existing stream at any time. Specific application of the headers in this frame is application-dependent. The name/value header block within this frame is compressed.
+------------------------------------+ |1| version | 8 | +------------------------------------+ | Flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +------------------------------------+ |X| Stream-ID (31bits) | +------------------------------------+ | Number of Name/Value pairs (int32) | <+ +------------------------------------+ | | Length of name (int32) | | This section is the "Name/Value +------------------------------------+ | Header Block", and is compressed. | Name (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Length of value (int32) | | +------------------------------------+ | | Value (string) | | +------------------------------------+ | | (repeats) | <+
Flags: Flags related to this frame. Valid flags are:
Length: An unsigned 24 bit value representing the number of bytes after the length field. The minimum length of the length field is 4 (when the number of name value pairs is 0).
Stream-ID: The stream this HEADERS block is associated with.
Name/Value Header Block: A set of name/value pairs carried as part of the SYN_STREAM. see Name/Value Header Block (Section2.6.10).
The WINDOW_UPDATE control frame is used to implement per stream flow control in SPDY. Flow control in SPDY is per hop, that is, only between the two endpoints of a SPDY connection. If there are one or more intermediaries between the client and the origin server, flow control signals are not explicitly forwarded by the intermediaries. (However, throttling of data transfer by any recipient may have the effect of indirectly propagating flow control information upstream back to the original sender.) Flow control only applies to the data portion of data frames. Recipients must buffer all control frames. If a recipient fails to buffer an entire control frame, it MUST issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the status code FLOW_CONTROL_ERROR for the stream.
Flow control in SPDY is implemented by a data transfer window kept by the sender of each stream. The data transfer window is a simple uint32 that indicates how many bytes of data the sender can transmit. After a stream is created, but before any data frames have been transmitted, the sender begins with the initial window size. This window size is a measure of the buffering capability of the recipient. The sender must not send a data frame with data length greater than the transfer window size. After sending each data frame, the sender decrements its transfer window size by the amount of data transmitted. When the window size becomes less than or equal to 0, the sender must pause transmitting data frames. At the other end of the stream, the recipient sends a WINDOW_UPDATE control back to notify the sender that it has consumed some data and freed up buffer space to receive more data.
+----------------------------------+ |1| version | 9 | +----------------------------------+ | 0 (flags) | 8 (length) | +----------------------------------+ |X| Stream-ID (31-bits) | +----------------------------------+ |X| Delta-Window-Size (31-bits) | +----------------------------------+
Control bit: The control bit is always 1 for this message.
Version: The SPDY version number.
Type: The message type for a WINDOW_UPDATE message is 9.
Length: The length field is always 8 for this frame (there are 8 bytes after the length field).
Stream-ID: The stream ID that this WINDOW_UPDATE control frame is for.
Delta-Window-Size: The additional number of bytes that the sender can transmit in addition to existing remaining window size. The legal range for this field is 1 to 2^31 - 1 (0x7fffffff) bytes.
The window size as kept by the sender must never exceed 2^31 (although it can become negative in one special case). If a sender receives a WINDOW_UPDATE that causes the its window size to exceed this limit, it must send RST_STREAM with status code FLOW_CONTROL_ERROR to terminate the stream.
When a SPDY connection is first established, the default initial window size for all streams is 64KB. An endpoint can use the SETTINGS control frame to adjust the initial window size for the connection. That is, its peer can start out using the 64KB default initial window size when sending data frames before receiving the SETTINGS. Because SETTINGS is asynchronous, there may be a race condition if the recipient wants to decrease the initial window size, but its peer immediately sends 64KB on the creation of a new connection, before waiting for the SETTINGS to arrive. This is one case where the window size kept by the sender will become negative. Once the sender detects this condition, it must stop sending data frames and wait for the recipient to catch up. The recipient has two choices:
In the case of option 2, both sides must compute the window size based on the initial window size in the SETTINGS. For example, if the recipient sets the initial window size to be 16KB, and the sender sends 64KB immediately on connection establishment, the sender will discover its window size is -48KB on receipt of the SETTINGS. As the recipient consumes the first 16KB, it must send a WINDOW_UPDATE of 16KB back to the sender. This interaction continues until the sender's window size becomes positive again, and it can resume transmitting data frames.
After the recipient reads in a data frame with FLAG_FIN that marks the end of the data stream, it should not send WINDOW_UPDATE frames as it consumes the last data frame. A sender should ignore all the WINDOW_UPDATE frames associated with the stream after it send the last frame for the stream.
The data frames from the sender and the WINDOW_UPDATE frames from the recipient are completely asynchronous with respect to each other. This property allows a recipient to aggressively update the window size kept by the sender to prevent the stream from stalling.
The CREDENTIAL control frame is used by the client to send additional client certificates to the server. A SPDY client may decide to send requests for resources from different origins on the same SPDY session if it decides that that server handles both origins. For example if the IP address associated with both hostnames matches and the SSL server certificate presented in the initial handshake is valid for both hostnames. However, because the SSL connection can contain at most one client certificate, the client needs a mechanism to send additional client certificates to the server.
The server is required to maintain a vector of client certificates associated with a SPDY session. When the client needs to send a client certificate to the server, it will send a CREDENTIAL frame that specifies the index of the slot in which to store the certificate as well as proof that the client posesses the corresponding private key. The initial size of this vector must be 8. If the client provides a client certificate during the first TLS handshake, the contents of this certificate must be copied into the first slot (index 1) in the CREDENTIAL vector, though it may be overwritten by subsequent CREDENTIAL frames. The server must exclusively use the CREDENTIAL vector when evaluating the client certificates associated with an origin. The server may change the size of this vector by sending a SETTINGS frame with the setting SETTINGS_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE_VECTOR_SIZE value specified. In the event that the new size is smaller than the current size, truncation occurs preserving lower-index slots as possible.
TLS renegotiation with client authentication is incompatible with SPDY given the multiplexed nature of SPDY. Specifically, imagine that the client has 2 requests outstanding to the server for two different pages (in different tabs). When the renegotiation + client certificate request comes in, the browser is unable to determine which resource triggered the client certificate request, in order to prompt the user accordingly.
+----------------------------------+ |1|000000000000001|0000000000001010| +----------------------------------+ | flags (8) | Length (24 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Slot (16 bits) | | +-----------------+ | | Proof Length (32 bits) | +----------------------------------+ | Proof | +----------------------------------+ <+ | Certificate Length (32 bits) | | +----------------------------------+ | Repeated until end of frame | Certificate | | +----------------------------------+ <+
Slot: The index in the server's client certificate vector where this certificate should be stored. If there is already a certificate stored at this index, it will be overwritten. The index is one based, not zero based; zero is an invalid slot index.
Proof: Cryptographic proof that the client has possession of the private key associated with the certificate. The format is a TLS digitally-signed element (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5246#section-4.7). The signature algorithm must be the same as that used in the CertificateVerify message. However, since the MD5+SHA1 signature type used in TLS 1.0 connections can not be correctly encoded in a digitally-signed element, SHA1 must be used when MD5+SHA1 was used in the SSL connection. The signature is calculated over a 32 byte TLS extractor value (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5705) with a label of "EXPORTER SPDY certificate proof" using the empty string as context. ForRSA certificates the signature would be a PKCS#1 v1.5 signature. For ECDSA, it would be an ECDSA-Sig-Value (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5480#appendix-A). For a 1024-bit RSA key, the CREDENTIAL message would be ~500 bytes.
Certificate: The certificate chain, starting with the leaf certificate. Each certificate must be encoded as a 32 bit length, followed by a DER encoded certificate. The certificate must be of the same type (RSA, ECDSA, etc) as the client certificate associated with the SSL connection.
If the server receives a request for a resource with unacceptable credential (either missing or invalid), it must reply with a RST_STREAM frame with the status code INVALID_CREDENTIALS. Upon receipt of a RST_STREAM frame with INVALID_CREDENTIALS, the client should initiate a new stream directly to the requested origin and resend the request. Note, SPDY does not allow the server to request different client authentication for different resources in the same origin.
If the server receives an invalid CREDENTIAL frame, it MUST respond with a GOAWAY frame and shutdown the session.
The Name/Value Header Block is found in the SYN_STREAM, SYN_REPLY and HEADERS control frames, and shares a common format:
+------------------------------------+ | Number of Name/Value pairs (int32) | +------------------------------------+ | Length of name (int32) | +------------------------------------+ | Name (string) | +------------------------------------+ | Length of value (int32) | +------------------------------------+ | Value (string) | +------------------------------------+ | (repeats) |
Number of Name/Value pairs: The number of repeating name/value pairs following this field.
List of Name/Value pairs:
Each header name must have at least one value. Header names are encoded using theUS-ASCII character set[ASCII]and must be all lower case. The length of each name must be greater than zero. A recipient of a zero-length name MUST issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the status code PROTOCOL_ERROR for the stream-id.
Duplicate header names are not allowed. To send two identically named headers, send a header with two values, where the values are separated by a single NUL (0) byte. A header value can either be empty (e.g. the length is zero) or it can contain multiple, NUL-separated values, each with length greater than zero. The value never starts nor ends with a NUL character. Recipients of illegal value fields MUST issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with the status code PROTOCOL_ERROR for the stream-id.
The Name/Value Header Block is a section of the SYN_STREAM, SYN_REPLY, and HEADERS frames used to carry header meta-data. This block is always compressed using zlib compression. Within this specification, any reference to 'zlib' is referring to theZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification Version 3.3 as part of RFC1950.
For each HEADERS compression instance, the initial state is initialized using the followingdictionary[UDELCOMPRESSION]:
const unsigned char SPDY_dictionary_txt[] = { 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x07, 0x6f, 0x70, 0x74, 0x69, \\ - - - - o p t i 0x6f, 0x6e, 0x73, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x04, 0x68, \\ o n s - - - - h 0x65, 0x61, 0x64, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x04, 0x70, \\ e a d - - - - p 0x6f, 0x73, 0x74, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x03, 0x70, \\ o s t - - - - p 0x75, 0x74, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x06, 0x64, 0x65, \\ u t - - - - d e 0x6c, 0x65, 0x74, 0x65, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x05, \\ l e t e - - - - 0x74, 0x72, 0x61, 0x63, 0x65, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, \\ t r a c e - - - 0x06, 0x61, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x00, \\ - a c c e p t - 0x00, 0x00, 0x0e, 0x61, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, \\ - - - a c c e p 0x74, 0x2d, 0x63, 0x68, 0x61, 0x72, 0x73, 0x65, \\ t - c h a r s e 0x74, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x0f, 0x61, 0x63, 0x63, \\ t - - - - a c c 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x2d, 0x65, 0x6e, 0x63, 0x6f, \\ e p t - e n c o 0x64, 0x69, 0x6e, 0x67, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x0f, \\ d i n g - - - - 0x61, 0x63, 0x63, 0x65, 0x70, 0x74, 0x2d, 0x6c, \\ a c c e p t - l 0x61, 0x6e, 0x67, 0x75, 0x61, 0x67, 0x65, 0x00, \\ a n g u a g e - 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The entire contents of the name/value header block is compressed using zlib. There is a single zlib stream for all name value pairs in one direction on a connection. SPDY uses a SYNC_FLUSH between each compressed frame.
Implementation notes: the compression engine can be tuned to favor speed or size. Optimizing for size increases memory use and CPU consumption. Because header blocks are generally small, implementors may want to reduce the window-size of the compression engine from the default 15bits (a 32KB window) to more like 11bits (a 2KB window). The exact setting is chosen by the compressor, the decompressor will work with any setting.
SPDY is intended to be as compatible as possible with current web-based applications. This means that, from the perspective of the server business logic or application API, the features of HTTP are unchanged. To achieve this, all of the application request and response header semantics are preserved, although the syntax of conveying those semantics has changed. Thus, the rules from theHTTP/1.1 specification in RFC2616apply with the changes in the sections below.
Clients SHOULD NOT open more than one SPDY session to a givenoriginconcurrently.
Note that it is possible for one SPDY session to be finishing (e.g. a GOAWAY message has been sent, but not all streams have finished), while another SPDY session is starting.
SPDY provides a GOAWAY message which can be used when closing a connection from either the client or server. Without a server GOAWAY message, HTTP has a race condition where the client sends a request (a new SYN_STREAM) just as the server is closing the connection, and the client cannot know if the server received the stream or not. By using the last-stream-id in the GOAWAY, servers can indicate to the client if a request was processed or not.
Note that some servers will choose to send the GOAWAY and immediately terminate the connection without waiting for active streams to finish. The client will be able to determine this because SPDY streams are determinstically closed. This abrupt termination will force the client to heuristically decide whether to retry the pending requests. Clients always need to be capable of dealing with this case because they must deal with accidental connection termination cases, which are the same as the server never having sent a GOAWAY.
More sophisticated servers will use GOAWAY to implement a graceful teardown. They will send the GOAWAY and provide some time for the active streams to finish before terminating the connection.
If a SPDY client closes the connection, it should also send a GOAWAY message. This allows the server to know if any server-push streams were received by the client.
If the endpoint closing the connection has not received any SYN_STREAMs from the remote, the GOAWAY will contain a last-stream-id of 0.
The client initiates a request by sending a SYN_STREAM frame. For requests which do not contain a body, the SYN_STREAM frame MUST set the FLAG_FIN, indicating that the client intends to send no further data on this stream. For requests which do contain a body, the SYN_STREAM will not contain the FLAG_FIN, and the body will follow the SYN_STREAM in a series of DATA frames. The last DATA frame will set the FLAG_FIN to indicate the end of the body.
The SYN_STREAM Name/Value section will contain all of the HTTP headers which are associated with an HTTP request. The header block in SPDY is mostly unchanged from today's HTTP header block, with the following differences:
The user-agent is free to prioritize requests as it sees fit. If the user-agent cannot make progress without receiving a resource, it should attempt to raise the priority of that resource. Resources such as images, SHOULD generally use the lowest priority.
If a client sends a SYN_STREAM without all of the method, host, path, scheme, and version headers, the server MUST reply with a HTTP 400 Bad Request reply.
The server responds to a client request with a SYN_REPLY frame. Symmetric to the client's upload stream, server will send data after the SYN_REPLY frame via a series of DATA frames, and the last data frame will contain the FLAG_FIN to indicate successful end-of-stream. If a response (like a 202 or 204 response) contains no body, the SYN_REPLY frame may contain the FLAG_FIN flag to indicate no further data will be sent on the stream.
If a client receives a SYN_REPLY without a status or without a version header, the client must reply with a RST_STREAM frame indicating a PROTOCOL ERROR.
When a client sends a request to an origin server that requires authentication, the server can reply with a "401 Unauthorized" response, and include a WWW-Authenticate challenge header that defines the authentication scheme to be used. The client then retries the request with an Authorization header appropriate to the specified authentication scheme.
There are four options for proxy authentication, Basic, Digest, NTLM and Negotiate (SPNEGO). The first two options were defined inRFC2617, and are stateless. The second two options were developed by Microsoft and specified inRFC4559, and are stateful; otherwise known as multi-round authentication, or connection authentication.
Stateless Authentication over SPDY is identical to how it is performed over HTTP. If multiple SPDY streams are concurrently sent to a single server, each will authenticate independently, similar to how two HTTP connections would independently authenticate to a proxy server.
Unfortunately, the stateful authentication mechanisms were implemented and defined in a such a way that directly violates RFC2617 - they do not include a "realm" as part of the request. This is problematic in SPDY because it makes it impossible for a client to disambiguate two concurrent server authentication challenges.
To deal with this case, SPDY servers using Stateful Authentication MUST implement one of two changes:
SPDY enables a server to send multiple replies to a client for a single request. The rationale for this feature is that sometimes a server knows that it will need to send multiple resources in response to a single request. Without server push features, the client must first download the primary resource, then discover the secondary resource(s), and request them. Pushing of resources avoids the round-trip delay, but also creates a potential race where a server can be pushing content which a user-agent is in the process of requesting. The following mechanics attempt to prevent the race condition while enabling the performance benefit.
Browsers receiving a pushed response MUST validate that the server is authorized to push the URL using thebrowser same-originpolicy. For example, a SPDY connection to www.foo.com is generally not permitted to push a response for www.evil.com.
If the browser accepts a pushed response (e.g. it does not send a RST_STREAM), the browser MUST attempt to cache the pushed response in same way that it would cache any other response. This means validating the response headers and inserting into the cache.
Because pushed responses have no request, they have no request headers associated with them. At the framing layer, SPDY pushed streams contain an "associated-stream-id" which indicates the requested stream for which the pushed stream is related. The pushed stream inherits all of the headers from the associated-stream-id with the exception of ":host", ":scheme", and ":path", which are provided as part of the pushed response stream headers. The browser MUST store these inherited and implied request headers with the cached resource.
Implementation note: With server push, it is theoretically possible for servers to push unreasonable amounts of content or resources to the user-agent. Browsers MUST implement throttles to protect against unreasonable push attacks.
When the server intends to push a resource to the user-agent, it opens a new stream by sending a unidirectional SYN_STREAM. The SYN_STREAM MUST include an Associated-To-Stream-ID, and MUST set the FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL flag. The SYN_STREAM MUST include headers for ":scheme", ":host", ":path", which represent the URL for the resource being pushed. Subsequent headers may follow in HEADERS frames. The purpose of the association is so that the user-agent can differentiate which request induced the pushed stream; without it, if the user-agent had two tabs open to the same page, each pushing unique content under a fixed URL, the user-agent would not be able to differentiate the requests.
The Associated-To-Stream-ID must be the ID of an existing, open stream. The reason for this restriction is to have a clear endpoint for pushed content. If the user-agent requested a resource on stream 11, the server replies on stream 11. It can push any number of additional streams to the client before sending a FLAG_FIN on stream 11. However, once the originating stream is closed no further push streams may be associated with it. The pushed streams do not need to be closed (FIN set) before the originating stream is closed, they only need to be created before the originating stream closes.
It is illegal for a server to push a resource with the Associated-To-Stream-ID of 0.
To minimize race conditions with the client, the SYN_STREAM for the pushed resources MUST be sent prior to sending any content which could allow the client to discover the pushed resource and request it.
The server MUST only push resources which would have been returned from a GET request.
Note: If the server does not have all of the Name/Value Response headers available at the time it issues the HEADERS frame for the pushed resource, it may later use an additional HEADERS frame to augment the name/value pairs to be associated with the pushed stream. The subsequent HEADERS frame(s) must not contain a header for ':host', ':scheme', or ':path' (e.g. the server can't change the identity of the resource to be pushed). The HEADERS frame must not contain duplicate headers with a previously sent HEADERS frame. The server must send a HEADERS frame including the scheme/host/port headers before sending any data frames on the stream.
When fetching a resource the client has 3 possibilities:
When a SYN_STREAM and HEADERS frame which contains an Associated-To-Stream-ID is received, the client must not issue GET requests for the resource in the pushed stream, and instead wait for the pushed stream to arrive.
If a client receives a server push stream with stream-id 0, it MUST issue a session error (Section2.4.1) with the status code PROTOCOL_ERROR.
When a client receives a SYN_STREAM from the server without a the ':host', ':scheme', and ':path' headers in the Name/Value section, it MUST reply with a RST_STREAM with error code HTTP_PROTOCOL_ERROR.
To cancel individual server push streams, the client can issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with error code CANCEL. Upon receipt, the server MUST stop sending on this stream immediately (this is an Abrupt termination).
To cancel all server push streams related to a request, the client may issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with error code CANCEL on the associated-stream-id. By cancelling that stream, the server MUST immediately stop sending frames for any streams with in-association-to for the original stream.
If the server sends a HEADER frame containing duplicate headers with a previous HEADERS frame for the same stream, the client must issue a stream error (Section2.4.2) with error code PROTOCOL ERROR.
If the server sends a HEADERS frame after sending a data frame for the same stream, the client MAY ignore the HEADERS frame. Ignoring the HEADERS frame after a data frame prevents handling of HTTP's trailing headers (http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.40).
Authors' notes: The notes in this section have no bearing on the SPDY protocol as specified within this document, and none of these notes should be considered authoritative about how the protocol works. However, these notes may prove useful in future debates about how to resolve protocol ambiguities or how to evolve the protocol going forward. They may be removed before the final draft.
Readers may note that this specification sometimes blends the framing layer (Section2) with requirements of a specific application - HTTP (Section3). This is reflected in the request/response nature of the streams, the definition of the HEADERS and compression contexts which are very similar to HTTP, and other areas as well.
This blending is intentional - the primary goal of this protocol is to create a low-latency protocol for use with HTTP. Isolating the two layers is convenient for description of the protocol and how it relates to existing HTTP implementations. However, the ability to reuse the SPDY framing layer is a non goal.
Error handling at the SPDY layer splits errors into two groups: Those that affect an individual SPDY stream, and those that do not.
When an error is confined to a single stream, but general framing is in tact, SPDY attempts to use the RST_STREAM as a mechanism to invalidate the stream but move forward without aborting the connection altogether.
For errors occuring outside of a single stream context, SPDY assumes the entire session is hosed. In this case, the endpoint detecting the error should initiate a connection close.
SPDY attempts to use fewer connections than other protocols have traditionally used. The rationale for this behavior is because it is very difficult to provide a consistent level of service (e.g. TCP slow-start), prioritization, or optimal compression when the client is connecting to the server through multiple channels.
Through lab measurements, we have seen consistent latency benefits by using fewer connections from the client. The overall number of packets sent by SPDY can be as much as 40% less than HTTP. Handling large numbers of concurrent connections on the server also does become a scalability problem, and SPDY reduces this load.
The use of multiple connections is not without benefit, however. Because SPDY multiplexes multiple, independent streams onto a single stream, it creates a potential for head-of-line blocking problems at the transport level. In tests so far, the negative effects of head-of-line blocking (especially in the presence of packet loss) is outweighed by the benefits of compression and prioritization.
SPDY favors use of fixed length 32bit fields in cases where smaller, variable length encodings could have been used. To some, this seems like a tragic waste of bandwidth. SPDY choses the simple encoding for speed and simplicity.
The goal of SPDY is to reduce latency on the network. The overhead of SPDY frames is generally quite low. Each data frame is only an 8 byte overhead for a 1452 byte payload (~0.6%). At the time of this writing, bandwidth is already plentiful, and there is a strong trend indicating that bandwidth will continue to increase. With an average worldwide bandwidth of 1Mbps, and assuming that a variable length encoding could reduce the overhead by 50%, the latency saved by using a variable length encoding would be less than 100 nanoseconds. More interesting are the effects when the larger encodings force a packet boundary, in which case a round-trip could be induced. However, by addressing other aspects of SPDY and TCP interactions, we believe this is completely mitigated.
When isolating the compression contexts used for communicating with multiple origins, we had a few choices to make. We could have maintained a map (or list) of compression contexts usable for each origin. The basic case is easy - each HEADERS frame would need to identify the context to use for that frame. However, compression contexts are not cheap, so the lifecycle of each context would need to be bounded. For proxy servers, where we could churn through many contexts, this would be a concern. We considered using a static set of contexts, say 16 of them, which would bound the memory use. We also considered dynamic contexts, which could be created on the fly, and would need to be subsequently destroyed. All of these are complicated, and ultimately we decided that such a mechanism creates too many problems to solve.
Alternatively, we've chosen the simple approach, which is to simply provide a flag for resetting the compression context. For the common case (no proxy), this fine because most requests are to the same origin and we never need to reset the context. For cases where we are using two different origins over a single SPDY session, we simply reset the compression state between each transition.
Many readers notice that unidirectional streams are both a bit confusing in concept and also somewhat redundant. If the recipient of a stream doesn't wish to send data on a stream, it could simply send a SYN_REPLY with the FLAG_FIN bit set. The FLAG_UNIDIRECTIONAL is, therefore, not necessary.
It is true that we don't need the UNIDIRECTIONAL markings. It is added because it avoids the recipient of pushed streams from needing to send a set of empty frames (e.g. the SYN_STREAM w/ FLAG_FIN) which otherwise serve no purpose.
Generic compression of data portion of the streams (as opposed to compression of the headers) without knowing the content of the stream is redundant. There is no value in compressing a stream which is already compressed. Because of this, SPDY initially allowed data compression to be optional. We included it because study of existing websites shows that many sites are not using compression as they should, and users suffer because of it. We wanted a mechanism where, at the SPDY layer, site administrators could simply force compression - it is better to compress twice than to not compress.
Overall, however, with this feature being optional and sometimes redundant, it was unclear if it was useful at all. We removed it from the specification.
A subtle but important point is that server push streams must be declared before the associated stream is closed. The reason for this is so that proxies have a lifetime for which they can discard information about previous streams. If a pushed stream could associate itself with an already-closed stream, then endpoints would not have a specific lifecycle for when they could disavow knowledge of the streams which went before.
This specification uses thesame-origin policyin all cases where verification of content is required.
At the application level, HTTP uses name/value pairs in its headers. Because SPDY merges the existing HTTP headers with SPDY headers, there is a possibility that some HTTP applications already use a particular header name. To avoid any conflicts, all headers introduced for layering HTTP over SPDY are prefixed with ":". ":" is not a valid sequence in HTTP header naming, preventing any possible conflict.
By utilizing TLS, we believe that SPDY introduces no new cross-protocol attacks. TLS encrypts the contents of all transmission (except the handshake itself), making it difficult for attackers to control the data which could be used in a cross-protocol attack.
Pushed resources do not have an associated request. In order for existing HTTP cache control validations (such as the Vary header) to work, however, all cached resources must have a set of request headers. For this reason, browsers MUST be careful to inherit request headers from the associated stream for the push. This includes the 'Cookie' header.
SPDY aims to keep connections open longer between clients and servers in order to reduce the latency when a user makes a request. The maintenance of these connections over time could be used to expose private information. For example, a user using a browser hours after the previous user stopped using that browser may be able to learn about what the previous user was doing. This is a problem with HTTP in its current form as well, however the short lived connections make it less of a risk.
The SPDY SETTINGS frame allows servers to store out-of-band transmitted information about the communication between client and server on the client. Although this is intended only to be used to reduce latency, renegade servers could use it as a mechanism to store identifying information about the client in future requests.
Clients implementing privacy modes, such as Google Chrome's "incognito mode", may wish to disable client-persisted SETTINGS storage.
Clients MUST clear persisted SETTINGS information when clearing the cookies.
TODO: Put range maximums on each type of setting to limit inappropriate uses.
Here is a list of the major changes between this draft and draft #2.
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 inRFC 2119.
Many individuals have contributed to the design and evolution of SPDY: Adam Langley, Wan-Teh Chang, Jim Morrison, Mark Nottingham, Alyssa Wilk, Costin Manolache, William Chan, Vitaliy Lvin, Joe Chan, Adam Barth, Ryan Hamilton, Gavin Peters, Kent Alstad, Kevin Lindsay, Paul Amer, Fan Yang, Jonathan Leighton
[TLSNPN] | Langley, A., “TLS Next Protocol Negotiation”, |
[ASCII] | “US-ASCII. Coded Character Set - 7-Bit American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Standard ANSI X3.4-1986, ANSI, 1986.”. |
[UDELCOMPRESSION] | Yang, F., Amer, P., and J. Leighton, “A Methodology to Derive SPDY’s Initial Dictionary for Zlib Compression”, |