Network Working Group P. McManus Internet-Draft Mozilla Intended status: Standards Track January 12, 2017 Expires: July 16, 2017 HTTP Immutable Responses draft-ietf-httpbis-immutable-00 Abstract The immutable HTTP response Cache-Control extension allows servers to identify resources that will not be updated during their freshness lifetime. This assures that a client never needs to revalidate a cached fresh resource to be certain it has not been modified. Status of This Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." This Internet-Draft will expire on July 16, 2017. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2017 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. McManus Expires July 16, 2017 [Page 1] Internet-Draft I-D January 2017 1. Introduction The HTTP freshness lifetime [RFC7234] caching attribute specifies that a client may safely reuse a response to satisfy future requests over a specific period of time. It does not specify that the resource will be not be modified during that period. For instance, a front page newspaper photo with a freshness lifetime of one hour would mean that no user should see a photo more than one hour old. However, the photo could be updated at any time resulting in different users seeing different photos depending on the contents of their caches for up to one hour. This is compliant with the caching mechanism defined in [RFC7234]. Users that need to confirm there have been no updates to their current cached resources typically invoke the reload (or refresh) mechanism in the user agent. This in turn generates a conditional request [RFC7232] and either a new representation or, if unmodified, a 304 response [RFC7231] is returned. A user agent that manages HTML and its dependent sub-resources may issue hundreds of conditional requests to refresh all portions of a common HTML page [REQPERPAGE]. Through the use of the versioned URL design pattern some content providers never create more than one variant of a sub-resource. When these resources need an update they are simply published under a new URL, typically embedding a variant identifier in the path, and references to the sub-resource are updated with the new path information. For example, https://www.example.com/101016/main.css might be updated and republished as https://www.example.com/102026/main.css and the html that references it is changed at the same time. This design pattern allows a very large freshness lifetime to be applied to the sub-resource without guessing when it will be updated in the future. Unfortunately, the user-agent is not aware of the versioned URL design pattern. User driven refresh events still translate into wasted conditional requests for each sub-resource as each will return 304 responses. The immutable HTTP response Cache-Control extension allows servers to identify resources that will not be updated during their freshness lifetime. This effectively instructs the client that any conditional request for a previously served variant of that resource may be safely skipped without worrying that it has been updated. McManus Expires July 16, 2017 [Page 2] Internet-Draft I-D January 2017 2. The immutable Cache-Control extension When present in an HTTP response, the immutable Cache-Control extension indicates that the origin server MUST NOT update the representation of that resource during the freshness lifetime of the response. The immutable extension only applies during the freshness lifetime of the response. Stale responses SHOULD be revalidated as they normally would be in the absence of immutable. The immutable extension takes no arguments and if any arguments are present they have no meaning. Multiple instances of the immutable extension are equivalent to one instance. The presence of an immutable Cache-Control extension in a request has no effect. 2.1. About Intermediaries An immutable response has the same semantic meaning for proxy clients as it does for User-Agent based clients and they therefore MAY also presume a conditional revalidation for a response marked immutable would return 304. A proxy client who uses immutable to anticipate a 304 response may choose whether to reply with a 304 or 200 to its requesting client. 2.2. Example Cache-Control: max-age=31536000, immutable 3. Security Considerations The immutable mechanism acts as form of soft pinning and, as with all pinning mechanisms, creates a vector for amplification of cache corruption incidents. These incidents include cache poisoning attacks. Three mechanisms are suggested for mitigation of this risk: o Clients should ignore immutable for resources that are not part of an authenticated context such as HTTPS. Authenticated resources are less vulnerable to cache poisoning. o User-Agents often provide two different refresh mechanismss: reload and some form of force-reload. The latter is used to rectify interrupted loads and other corruption. These reloads, typically indicated through no-cache request attributes, should ignore immutable as well. McManus Expires July 16, 2017 [Page 3] Internet-Draft I-D January 2017 o Clients should ignore immutable for resources that do not provide a strong indication that the stored response size is the correct response size such as responses delimited by connection close. 4. IANA Considerations [RFC7234] sections 7.1 and 7.1.2 require registration of the immutable extension in the "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Cache Directive Registry" with IETF Review. o Cache-Directive: immutable o Pointer to specification text: [this document] 5. Acknowledgments Thank you to Ben Maurer for partnership in developing and testing this idea. Thank you to Amos Jeffries for help with proxy interactions. 6. References 6.1. Normative References [RFC7231] Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content", RFC 7231, DOI 10.17487/RFC7231, June 2014, . [RFC7232] Fielding, R., Ed. and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Conditional Requests", RFC 7232, DOI 10.17487/RFC7232, June 2014, . [RFC7234] Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke, Ed., "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Caching", RFC 7234, DOI 10.17487/RFC7234, June 2014, . 6.2. Informative References [REQPERPAGE] "HTTP Archive", n.d., . McManus Expires July 16, 2017 [Page 4] Internet-Draft I-D January 2017 Author's Address Patrick McManus Mozilla Email: pmcmanus@mozilla.com McManus Expires July 16, 2017 [Page 5]