Keyed-MD5, ITAR, and HTTP-NG

Simon Spero ses at tipper.oit.unc.edu
Tue Oct 31 18:03:15 PST 1995


[Short response, because I'm at home. More details tommorow ]

On Tue, 31 Oct 1995 hallam at w3.org wrote:

> 
> >How are you going to handle mechanism negotiation?
> This is a must do item, Simon is haviung to do >lots< of this.

Just to clarify: one of the most important parts of the design is the 
negotation mechanism, so a lot of effort has gone into these mechanisms. 
The aim is to _not_ have to do lots of RTT negotations through the use of 
caching and dynamic profiling. The negotation facilities in HTTP 1.0 are not 
used, not because there isn't a need for them, but because they don't 
offer sufficient power, and are much too inefficient. 

Oh, and when I say dynamic profiling, I'm referring to semi-standard 
profiles that can be obtained over the network, not to OSI style 
dead-trees. Deriving negotiated feature sets from a profile works really 
well for applications like the WEB, as a vast amount of this information 
remains the same for all copies of a particular version of a Browser. For 
example, all copies of hotjava support html 1.0, some netscape 
extensions, and can handle inline gifs, but not inline jpegs; alpha 
hotjava supports the alpha applet API. 

Simon
---
(defun modexpt (x y n)  "computes (x^y) mod n"
  (cond ((= y 0) 1) 	((= y 1) (mod x n))
	((evenp y) (mod (expt (modexpt x (/ y 2) n) 2) n))
	(t (mod (* x (modexpt x (1- y) n)) n))))







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