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RFC 3143: Known HTTP Proxy/Caching Problems

  • I. Cooper,  
  • J. Dilley
Informational
Network Working Group I. Cooper
Request for Comments: 3143 Equinix, Inc.
Category: Informational J. Dilley
 Akamai Technologies, Inc.
 June 2001


 Known HTTP Proxy/Caching Problems

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
 not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
 memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

 This document catalogs a number of known problems with World Wide Web
 (WWW) (caching) proxies and cache servers. The goal of the document
 is to provide a discussion of the problems and proposed workarounds,
 and ultimately to improve conditions by illustrating problems. The
 construction of this document is a joint effort of the Web caching
 community.

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 1.1 Problem Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 2. Known Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
 2.1 Known Specification Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 2.1.1 Vary header is underspecified and/or misleading . . . . . . 5
 2.1.2 Client Chaining Loses Valuable Length Meta-Data . . . . . . 9
 2.2 Known Architectural Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
 2.2.1 Interception proxies break client cache directives . . . . . 10
 2.2.2 Interception proxies prevent introduction of new HTTP
 methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
 2.2.3 Interception proxies break IP address-based authentication . 12
 2.2.4 Caching proxy peer selection in heterogeneous networks . . . 13
 2.2.5 ICP Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
 2.2.6 Caching proxy meshes can break HTTP serialization of content 16
 2.3 Known Implementation Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 2.3.1 User agent/proxy failover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 2.3.2 Some servers send bad Content-Length headers for files that
 contain CR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18



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 3. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
 A. Archived Known Problems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
 A.1 Architectural . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
 A.1.1 Cannot specify multiple URIs for replicated resources . . . 21
 A.1.2 Replica distance is unknown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 A.1.3 Proxy resource location . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 A.2 Implementation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 A.2.1 Use of Cache-Control headers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 A.2.2 Lack of HTTP/1.1 compliance for caching proxies . . . . . . 24
 A.2.3 ETag support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
 A.2.4 Servers and content should be optimized for caching . . . . 26
 A.3 Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
 A.3.1 Lack of fine-grained, standardized hierarchy controls . . . 27
 A.3.2 Proxy/Server exhaustive log format standard for analysis . . 27
 A.3.3 Trace log timestamps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
 A.3.4 Exchange format for log summaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
 Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

1. Introduction

 This memo discusses problems with proxies - which act as
 application-level intermediaries for Web requests - and more
 specifically with caching proxies, which retain copies of previously
 requested resources in the hope of improving overall quality of
 service by serving the content locally. Commonly used terminology in
 this memo can be found in the "Internet Web Replication and Caching
 Taxonomy"[2].

 No individual or organization has complete knowledge of the known
 problems in Web caching, and the editors are grateful to the
 contributors to this document.

1.1 Problem Template

 A common problem template is used within the following sections. We
 gratefully acknowledge RFC2525 [1] which helped define an initial
 format for this known problems list. The template format is
 summarized in the following table and described in more detail below.

 Name: short, descriptive name of the problem (3-5 words)
 Classification: classifies the problem: performance, security, etc
 Description: describes the problem succinctly
 Significance: magnitude of problem, environments where it exists
 Implications: the impact of the problem on systems and networks
 See Also: a reference to a related known problem
 Indications: states how to detect the presence of this problem



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 Solution(s): describe the solution(s) to this problem, if any
 Workaround: practical workaround for the problem
 References: information about the problem or solution
 Contact: contact name and email address for this section

 Name
 A short, descriptive, name (3-5 words) name associated with the
 problem.

 Classification
 Problems are grouped into categories of similar problems for ease
 of reading of this memo. Choose the category that best describes
 the problem. The suggested categories include three general
 categories and several more specific categories.

 * Architecture: the fundamental design is incomplete, or
 incorrect

 * Specification: the spec is ambiguous, incomplete, or incorrect.

 * Implementation: the implementation of the spec is incorrect.

 * Performance: perceived page response at the client is
 excessive; network bandwidth consumption is excessive; demand
 on origin or proxy servers exceed reasonable bounds.

 * Administration: care and feeding of caches is, or causes, a
 problem.

 * Security: privacy, integrity, or authentication concerns.

 Description
 A definition of the problem, succinct but including necessary
 background information.

 Significance (High, Medium, Low)
 May include a brief summary of the environments for which the
 problem is significant.

 Implications
 Why the problem is viewed as a problem. What inappropriate
 behavior results from it? This section should substantiate the
 magnitude of any problem indicated with High significance.

 See Also
 Optional. List of other known problems that are related to this
 one.




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 Indications
 How to detect the presence of the problem. This may include
 references to one or more substantiating documents that
 demonstrate the problem. This should include the network
 configuration that led to the problem such that it can be
 reproduced. Problems that are not reproducible will not appear in
 this memo.

 Solution(s)
 Solutions that permanently fix the problem, if such are known. For
 example, what version of the software does not exhibit the
 problem? Indicate if the solution is accepted by the community,
 one of several solutions pending agreement, or open possibly with
 experimental solutions.

 Workaround
 Practical workaround if no solution is available or usable. The
 workaround should have sufficient detail for someone experiencing
 the problem to get around it.

 References
 References to related information in technical publications or on
 the web. Where can someone interested in learning more go to find
 out more about this problem, its solution, or workarounds?

 Contact
 Contact name and email address of the person who supplied the
 information for this section. The editors are listed as contacts
 for anonymous submissions.

2. Known Problems

 The remaining sections of this document present the currently
 documented known problems. The problems are ordered by
 classification and significance. Issues with protocol specification
 or architecture are first, followed by implementation issues. Issues
 of high significance are first, followed by lower significance.

 Some of the problems initially identified in the previous versions of
 this document have been moved to Appendix A since they discuss issues
 where resolution primarily involves education rather than protocol
 work.

 A full list of the problems is available in the table of contents.







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2.1 Known Specification Problems

2.1.1 Vary header is underspecified and/or misleading

 Name
 The "Vary" header is underspecified and/or misleading

 Classification
 Specification

 Description
 The Vary header in HTTP/1.1 was designed to allow a caching proxy
 to safely cache responses even if the server's choice of variants
 is not entirely understood. As RFC 2616 says:

 The Vary header field can be used to express the parameters the
 server uses to select a representation that is subject to
 server-driven negotiation.

 One might expect that this mechanism is useful in general for
 extensions that change the response message based on some aspects
 of the request. However, that is not true.

 During the design of the HTTP delta encoding specification[9] it
 was realized that an HTTP/1.1 proxy that does not understand delta
 encoding might cache a delta-encoded response and then later
 deliver it to a non-delta-capable client, unless the extension
 included some mechanism to prevent this. Initially, it was
 thought that Vary would suffice, but the following scenario proves
 this wrong.

 NOTE: It is likely that other scenarios exhibiting the same basic
 problem with "Vary" could be devised, without reference to delta
 encoding. This is simply a concrete scenario used to explain the
 problem.

 A complete description of the IM and A-IM headers may be found in
 the "Delta encoding in HTTP" specification. For the purpose of
 this problem description, the relevant details are:

 1. The concept of an "instance manipulation" is introduced. In
 some ways, this is similar to a content-coding, but there are
 differences. One example of an instance manipulation name is
 "vcdiff".

 2. A client signals its willingness to accept one or more
 instance-manipulations using the A-IM header.




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 3. A server indicates which instance-manipulations are used to
 encode the body of a response using the IM header.

 4. Existing implementations will ignore the A-IM and IM headers,
 following the usual HTTP rules for handling unknown headers.

 5. Responses encoded with an instance-manipulation are sent using
 the (proposed) 226 status code, "IM Used".

 6. In response to a conditional request that carries an IM header,
 if the request-URI has been modified then a server may transmit
 a compact encoding of the modifications using a delta-encoding
 instead of a status-200 response. The encoded response cannot
 be understood by an implementation that does not support delta
 encodings.

 This summary omits many details.

 Suppose client A sends this request via proxy P:

 GET http://example.com/foo.html HTTP/1.1
 Host: example.com
 If-None-Match: "abc"
 A-IM: vcdiff

 and the origin server returns, via P, this response:

 HTTP/1.1 226 IM Used
 Etag: "def"
 Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 18:46:13 GMT
 IM: vcdiff
 Cache-Control: max-age-60
 Vary: A-IM, If-None-Match

 the body of which is a delta-encoded response (it encodes the
 difference between the Etag "abc" instance of foo.html, and the
 "def" instance). Assume that P stores this response in its cache,
 and that P does not understand the vcdiff encoding.

 Later, client B, also ignorant of delta-encoding, sends this
 request via P:

 GET http://example.com/foo.html HTTP/1.1
 Host: example.com

 What can P do now? According to the specification for the Vary
 header in RFC2616,




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 The Vary field value indicates the set of request-header fields
 that fully determines, while the response is fresh, whether a
 cache is permitted to use the response to reply to a subsequent
 request without revalidation.

 Implicitly, however, the cache would be allowed to use the stored
 response in response to client B WITH "revalidation". This is the
 potential bug.

 An obvious implementation of the proxy would send this request to
 test whether its cache entry is fresh (i.e., to revalidate the
 entry):

 GET /foo.html HTTP/1.1
 Host: example.com
 If-None-Match: "def"

 That is, the proxy simply forwards the new request, after doing
 the usual transformation on the URL and tacking on the "obvious"
 If-None-Match header.

 If the origin server's Etag for the current instance is still
 "def", it would naturally respond:

 HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified
 Etag: "def"
 Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2000 18:46:14 GMT

 thus telling the proxy P that it can use its stored response. But
 this cache response actually involves a delta-encoding that would
 not be sensible to client B, signaled by a header field that would
 be ignored by B, and so the client displays garbage.

 The problem here is that the original request (from client A)
 generated a response that is not sensible to client B, not merely
 one that is not "the appropriate representation" (as the result of
 server-driven negotiation).

 One might argue that the proxy P shouldn't be storing status-226
 responses in the first place. True in theory, perhaps, but
 unfortunately RFC2616, section 13.4, says:

 A response received with any [status code other than 200, 203,
 206, 300, 301 or 410] MUST NOT be returned in a reply to a
 subsequent request unless there are cache-control directives or
 another header(s) that explicitly allow it. For example, these





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 include the following: an Expires header (section 14.21); a
 "max-age", "s-maxage", "must-revalidate", "proxy-revalidate",
 "public" or "private" cache-control directive (section 14.9).

 In other words, the specification allows caching of responses with
 yet-to-be-defined status codes if the response carries a plausible
 Cache-Control directive. So unless we ban servers implementing
 this kind of extension from using these Cache-Control directives
 at all, the Vary header just won't work.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Certain plausible extensions to the HTTP/1.1 protocol might not
 interoperate correctly with older HTTP/1.1 caches, if the
 extensions depend on an interpretation of Vary that is not the
 same as is used by the cache implementer.

 This would have the effect either of causing hard-to-debug cache
 transparency failures, or of discouraging the deployment of such
 extensions, or of encouraging the implementers of such extensions
 to disable caching entirely.

 Indications
 The problem is visible when hand-simulating plausible message
 exchanges, especially when using the proposed delta encoding
 extension. It probably has not been visible in practice yet.

 Solution(s)

 1. Section 13.4 of the HTTP/1.1 specification should probably be
 changed to prohibit caching of responses with status codes that
 the cache doesn't understand, whether or not they include
 Expires headers and the like. (It might require some care to
 define what "understands" means, leaving room for future
 extensions with new status codes.) The behavior in this case
 needs to be defined as equivalent to "Cache-Control: no-store"
 rather than "no-cache", since the latter allows revalidation.

 Possibly the specification of Vary should require that it be
 treated as "Cache-Control: no-store" whenever the status code
 is unknown - that should solve the problem in the scenario
 given here.







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 2. Designers of HTTP/1.1 extensions should consider using
 mechanisms other than Vary to prevent false caching.

 It is not clear whether the Vary mechanism is widely
 implemented in caches; if not, this favors solution #1.

 Workaround
 A cache could treat the presence of a Vary header in a response as
 an implicit "Cache-control: no-store", except for "known" status
 codes, even though this is not required by RFC 2616. This would
 avoid any transparency failures. "Known status codes" for basic
 HTTP/1.1 caches probably include: 200, 203, 206, 300, 301, 410
 (although this list should be re-evaluated in light of the problem
 discussed here).

 References
 See [9] for the specification of the delta encoding extension, as
 well as for an example of the use of a Cache-Control extension
 instead of "Vary."

 Contact
 Jeff Mogul <mogul@pa.dec.com>

2.1.2 Client Chaining Loses Valuable Length Meta-Data

 Name
 Client Chaining Loses Valuable Length Meta-Data

 Classification
 Performance

 Description
 HTTP/1.1[3] implementations are prohibited from sending Content-
 Length headers with any message whose body has been Transfer-
 Encoded. Because 1.0 clients cannot accept chunked Transfer-
 Encodings, receiving 1.1 implementations must forward the body to
 1.0 clients must do so without the benefit of information that was
 discarded earlier in the chain.

 Significance
 Low

 Implications
 Lacking either a chunked transfer encoding or Content-Length
 indication creates negative performance implications for how the
 proxy must forward the message body.





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 In the case of response bodies, the server may either forward the
 response while closing the connection to indicate the end of the
 response or must utilize store and forward semantics to buffer the
 entire response in order to calculate a Content-Length. The
 former option defeats the performance benefits of persistent
 connections in HTTP/1.1 (and their Keep-Alive cousin in HTTP/1.0)
 as well as creating some ambiguously lengthed responses. The
 latter store and forward option may not even be feasible given the
 size of the resource and it will always introduce increased
 latency.

 Request bodies must undertake the store and forward process as 1.0
 request bodies must be delimited by Content-Length headers. As
 with response bodies this may place unacceptable resource
 constraints on the proxy and the request may not be able to be
 satisfied.

 Indications
 The lack of HTTP/1.0 style persistent connections between 1.0
 clients and 1.1 proxies, only when accessing 1.1 servers, is a
 strong indication of this problem.

 Solution(s)
 An HTTP specification clarification that would allow origin known
 identity document Content-Lengths to be carried end to end would
 alleviate this issue.

 Workaround
 None.

 Contact
 Patrick McManus <mcmanus@AppliedTheory.com>

2.2 Known Architectural Problems

2.2.1 Interception proxies break client cache directives

 Name
 Interception proxies break client cache directives

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 HTTP[3] is designed for the user agent to be aware if it is
 connected to an origin server or to a proxy. User agents
 believing they are transacting with an origin server but which are




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 really in a connection with an interception proxy may fail to send
 critical cache-control information they would have otherwise
 included in their request.

 Significance
 High

 Implications
 Clients may receive data that is not synchronized with the origin
 even when they request an end to end refresh, because of the lack
 of inclusion of either a "Cache-control: no-cache" or "must-
 revalidate" header. These headers have no impact on origin server
 behavior so may not be included by the browser if it believes it
 is connected to that resource. Other related data implications
 are possible as well. For instance, data security may be
 compromised by the lack of inclusion of "private" or "no-store"
 clauses of the Cache-control header under similar conditions.

 Indications
 Easily detected by placing fresh (un-expired) content on a caching
 proxy while changing the authoritative copy, then requesting an
 end-to-end reload of the data through a proxy in both interception
 and explicit modes.

 Solution(s)
 Eliminate the need for interception proxies and IP spoofing, which
 will return correct context awareness to the client.

 Workaround
 Include relevant Cache-Control directives in every request at the
 cost of increased bandwidth and CPU requirements.

 Contact
 Patrick McManus <mcmanus@AppliedTheory.com>

2.2.2 Interception proxies prevent introduction of new HTTP methods

 Name
 Interception proxies prevent introduction of new HTTP methods

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 A proxy that receives a request with a method unknown to it is
 required to generate an HTTP 501 Error as a response. HTTP
 methods are designed to be extensible so there may be applications
 deployed with initial support just for the user agent and origin



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 server. An interception proxy that hijacks requests which include
 new methods destined for servers that have implemented those
 methods creates a de-facto firewall where none may be intended.

 Significance
 Medium within interception proxy environments.

 Implications
 Renders new compliant applications useless unless modifications
 are made to proxy software. Because new methods are not required
 to be globally standardized it is impossible to keep up to date in
 the general case.

 Solution(s)
 Eliminate the need for interception proxies. A client receiving a
 501 in a traditional HTTP environment may either choose to repeat
 the request to the origin server directly, or perhaps be
 configured to use a different proxy.

 Workaround
 Level 5 switches (sometimes called Level 7 or application layer
 switches) can be used to keep HTTP traffic with unknown methods
 out of the proxy. However, these devices have heavy buffering
 responsibilities, still require TCP sequence number spoofing, and
 do not interact well with persistent connections.

 The HTTP/1.1 specification allows a proxy to switch over to tunnel
 mode when it receives a request with a method or HTTP version it
 does not understand how to handle.

 Contact
 Patrick McManus <mcmanus@AppliedTheory.com>
 Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se> (HTTP/1.1 clarification)

2.2.3 Interception proxies break IP address-based authentication

 Name
 Interception proxies break IP address-based authentication

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 Some web servers are not open for public access, but restrict
 themselves to accept only requests from certain IP address ranges
 for security reasons. Interception proxies alter the source
 (client) IP addresses to that of the proxy itself, without the




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 knowledge of the client/user. This breaks such authentication
 mechanisms and prohibits otherwise allowed clients access to the
 servers.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Creates end user confusion and frustration.

 Indications
 Users may start to see refused connections to servers after
 interception proxies are deployed.

 Solution(s)
 Use user-based authentication instead of (IP) address-based
 authentication.

 Workaround
 Using IP filters at the intercepting device (L4 switch) and bypass
 all requests to such servers concerned.

 Contact
 Keith K. Chau <keithc@unitechnetworks.com>

2.2.4 Caching proxy peer selection in heterogeneous networks

 Name
 Caching proxy peer selection in heterogeneous networks

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 ICP[4] based caching proxy peer selection in networks with large
 variance in latency and bandwidth between peers can lead to non-
 optimal peer selection. For example take Proxy C with two
 siblings, Sib1 and Sib2, and the following network topology
 (summarized).

 * Cache C's link to Sib1, 2 Mbit/sec with 300 msec latency

 * Cache C's link to Sib2, 64 Kbit/sec with 10 msec latency.

 ICP[4] does not work well in this context. If a user submits a
 request to Proxy C for page P that results in a miss, C will send
 an ICP request to Sib1 and Sib2. Assume both siblings have the




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 requested object P. The ICP_HIT reply will always come from Sib2
 before Sib1. However, it is clear that the retrieval of large
 objects will be faster from Sib1, rather than Sib2.

 The problem is more complex because Sib1 and Sib2 can't have a
 100% hit ratio. With a hit rate of 10%, it is more efficient to
 use Sib1 with resources larger than 48K. The best choice depends
 on at least the hit rate and link characteristics; maybe other
 parameters as well.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 By using the first peer to respond, peer selection algorithms are
 not optimizing retrieval latency to end users. Furthermore they
 are causing more work for the high-latency peer since it must
 respond to such requests but will never be chosen to serve content
 if the lower latency peer has a copy.

 Indications
 Inherent in design of ICP v1, ICP v2, and any cache mesh protocol
 that selects peers based upon first response.

 This problem is not exhibited by cache digest or other protocols
 which (attempt to) maintain knowledge of peer contents and only
 hit peers that are believed to have a copy of the requested page.

 Solution(s)
 This problem is architectural with the peer selection protocols.

 Workaround
 Cache mesh design when using such a protocol should be done in
 such a way that there is not a high latency variance among peers.
 In the example presented in the above description the high latency
 high bandwidth peer could be used as a parent, but should not be
 used as a sibling.

 Contact
 Ivan Lovric <ivan.lovric@cnet.francetelecom.fr>
 John Dilley <jad@akamai.com>










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2.2.5 ICP Performance

 Name
 ICP performance

 Classification
 Architecture(ICP), Performance

 Description
 ICP[4] exhibits O(n^2) scaling properties, where n is the number
 of participating peer proxies. This can lead ICP traffic to
 dominate HTTP traffic within a network.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 If a proxy has many ICP peers the bandwidth demand of ICP can be
 excessive. System managers must carefully regulate ICP peering.
 ICP also leads proxies to become homogeneous in what they serve;
 if your proxy does not have a document it is unlikely your peers
 will have it either. Therefore, ICP traffic requests are largely
 unable to locate a local copy of an object (see [6]).

 Indications
 Inherent in design of ICP v1, ICP v2.

 Solution(s)
 This problem is architectural - protocol redesign or replacement
 is required to solve it if ICP is to continue to be used.

 Workaround
 Implementation workarounds exist, for example to turn off use of
 ICP, to carefully regulate peering, or to use another mechanism if
 available, such as cache digests. A cache digest protocol shares
 a summary of cache contents using a Bloom Filter technique. This
 allows a cache to estimate whether a peer has a document. Filters
 are updated regularly but are not always up-to-date so cannot help
 when a spike in popularity occurs. They also increase traffic but
 not as much as ICP.

 Proxy clustering protocols organize proxies into a mesh provide
 another alternative solution. There is ongoing research on this
 topic.

 Contact
 John Dilley <jad@akamai.com>




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2.2.6 Caching proxy meshes can break HTTP serialization of content

 Name
 Caching proxy meshes can break HTTP serialization of content

 Classification
 Architecture (HTTP protocol)

 Description
 A caching proxy mesh where a request may travel different paths,
 depending on the state of the mesh and associated caches, can
 break HTTP content serialization, possibly causing the end user to
 receive older content than seen on an earlier request, where the
 request traversed another path in the mesh.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Can cause end user confusion. May in some situations (sibling
 cache hit, object has changed state from cacheable to uncacheable)
 be close to impossible to get the caches properly updated with the
 new content.

 Indications
 Older content is unexpectedly returned from a caching proxy mesh
 after some time.

 Solutions(s)
 Work with caching proxy vendors and researchers to find a suitable
 protocol for maintaining proxy relations and object state in a
 mesh.

 Workaround
 When designing a hierarchy/mesh, make sure that for each end-
 user/URL combination there is only one single path in the mesh
 during normal operation.

 Contact
 Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se>











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2.3 Known Implementation Problems

2.3.1 User agent/proxy failover

 Name
 User agent/proxy failover

 Classification
 Implementation

 Description
 Failover between proxies at the user agent (using a proxy.pac[8]
 file) is erratic and no standard behavior is defined.
 Additionally, behavior is hard-coded into the browser, so that
 proxy administrators cannot use failover at the user agent
 effectively.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Architects are forced to implement failover at the proxy itself,
 when it may be more appropriate and economical to do it within the
 user agent.

 Indications
 If a browser detects that its primary proxy is down, it will wait
 n minutes before trying the next one it is configured to use. It
 will then wait y minutes before asking the user if they'd like to
 try the original proxy again. This is very confusing for end
 users.

 Solution(s)
 Work with browser vendors to establish standard extensions to
 JavaScript proxy.pac libraries that will allow configuration of
 these timeouts.

 Workaround
 User education; redundancy at the proxy level.

 Contact
 Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>









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2.3.2 Some servers send bad Content-Length headers for files that
 contain CR

 Name
 Some servers send bad Content-Length headers for files that
 contain CR

 Classification
 Implementation

 Description
 Certain web servers send a Content-length value that is larger
 than number of bytes in the HTTP message body. This happens when
 the server strips off CR characters from text files with lines
 terminated with CRLF as the file is written to the client. The
 server probably uses the stat() system call to get the file size
 for the Content-Length header. Servers that exhibit this behavior
 include the GN Web server (version 2.14 at least).

 Significance
 Low. Surveys indicate only a small number of sites run faulty
 servers.

 Implications
 In this case, an HTTP client (e.g., user agent or proxy) may
 believe it received a partial response. HTTP/1.1 [3] advises that
 caches MAY store partial responses.

 Indications
 Count the number of bytes in the message body and compare to the
 Content-length value. If they differ the server exhibits this
 problem.

 Solutions
 Upgrade or replace the buggy server.

 Workaround
 Some browsers and proxies use one TCP connection per object and
 ignore the Content-Length. The document end of file is identified
 by the close of the TCP socket.

 Contact
 Duane Wessels <wessels@measurement-factory.com>

3. Security Considerations

 This memo does not raise security considerations in itself. See the
 individual submissions for details of security concerns and issues.



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References

 [] Paxson, V., Allman, M., Dawson, S., Fenner, W., Griner, J.,
 Heavens, I., Lahey, K., Semke, J. and B. Volz, "Known TCP
 Implementation Problems", RFC 2525, March 1999.

 [] Cooper, I., Melve, I. and G. Tomlinson, "Internet Web
 Replication and Caching Taxonomy", RFC 3040, January 2001.

 [] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., Masinter, L.,
 Leach, P. and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --
 HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.

 [] Wessels, D. and K. Claffy, "Internet Cache Protocol (ICP),
 Version 2", RFC 2186, September 1997.

 [] Davison, B., "Web Traffic Logs: An Imperfect Resource for
 Evaluation", in Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference of
 the Internet Society (INET'99), July 1999.

 [] Melve, I., "Relation Analysis, Cache Meshes", in Proceedings of
 the 3rd International WWW Caching Workshop, June 1998,
 <http://wwwcache.ja.net/events/workshop/29/magicnumber.html>.

 [] Krishnamurthy, B. and M. Arlett, "PRO-COW: Protocol Compliance
 on the Web", AT&T Labs Technical Report #990803-05-TM, August
 1999, <http://www.research.att.com/~bala/papers/procow-1.ps.gz>.

 [] Netscape, Inc., "Navigator Proxy Auto-Config File Format", March
 1996,
 http://home.netscape.com/eng/mozilla/2.0/relnotes/demo/proxy-
 live.html

 [] Mogul, J., Krishnamurthy, B., Douglis, F., Feldmann, A., Goland,
 Y., van Hoff, A. and D. Hellerstein, "HTTP Delta in HTTP", Work
 in Progress.















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Authors' Addresses

 Ian Cooper
 Equinix, Inc.
 2450 Bayshore Parkway
 Mountain View, CA 94043
 USA

 Phone: +1 650 316 6065
 EMail: icooper@equinix.com


 John Dilley
 Akamai Technologies, Inc.
 1400 Fashion Island Blvd
 Suite 703
 San Mateo, CA 94404
 USA

 Phone: +1 650 627 5244
 EMail: jad@akamai.com






























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Appendix A. Archived Known Problems

 The following sub-sections are an archive of problems identified in
 the initial production of this memo. These are typically problems
 requiring further work/research, or user education. They are
 included here for reference purposes only.

A.1 Architectural

A.1.1 Cannot specify multiple URIs for replicated resources

 Name
 Cannot specify multiple URIs for replicated resources

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 There is no way to specify that multiple URIs may be used for a
 single resource, one for each replica of the resource. Similarly,
 there is no way to say that some set of proxies (each identified
 by a URI) may be used to resolve a URI.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Forces users to understand the replication model and mechanism.
 Makes it difficult to create a replication framework without
 protocol support for replication and naming.

 Indications
 Inherent in HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1.

 Solution(s)
 Architectural - protocol design is necessary.

 Workaround
 Replication mechanisms force users to locate a replica or mirror
 site for replicated content.

 Contact
 Daniel LaLiberte <liberte@w3.org>








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A.1.2 Replica distance is unknown

 Name
 Replica distance is unknown

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 There is no recommended way to find out which of several servers
 or proxies is closer either to the requesting client or to another
 machine, either geographically or in the network topology.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Clients must guess which replica is closer to them when requesting
 a copy of a document that may be served from multiple locations.
 Users must know the set of servers that can serve a particular
 object. This in general is hard to determine and maintain. Users
 must understand network topology in order to choose the closest
 copy. Note that the closest copy is not always the one that will
 result in quickest service. A nearby but heavily loaded server
 may be slower than a more distant but lightly loaded server.

 Indications
 Inherent in HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1.

 Solution(s)
 Architectural - protocol work is necessary. This is a specific
 instance of a general problem in widely distributed systems. A
 general solution is unlikely, however a specific solution in the
 web context is possible.

 Workaround
 Servers can (many do) provide location hints in a replica
 selection web page. Users choose one based upon their location.
 Users can learn which replica server gives them best performance.
 Note that the closest replica geographically is not necessarily
 the closest in terms of network topology. Expecting users to
 understand network topology is unreasonable.

 Contact
 Daniel LaLiberte <liberte@w3.org>






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A.1.3 Proxy resource location

 Name
 Proxy resource location

 Classification
 Architecture

 Description
 There is no way for a client or server (including another proxy)
 to inform a proxy of an alternate address (perhaps including the
 proxy to use to reach that address) to use to fetch a resource.
 If the client does not trust where the redirected resource came
 from, it may need to validate it or validate where it came from.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Proxies have no systematic way to locate resources within other
 proxies or origin servers. This makes it more difficult to share
 information among proxies. Information sharing would improve
 global efficiency.

 Indications
 Inherent in HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1.

 Solution(s)
 Architectural - protocol design is necessary.

 Workaround
 Certain proxies share location hints in the form of summary
 digests of their contents (e.g., Squid). Certain proxy protocols
 enable a proxy query another for its contents (e.g., ICP). (See
 however "ICP Performance" issue (Section 2.2.5).)

 Contact
 Daniel LaLiberte <liberte@w3.org>

A.2 Implementation

A.2.1 Use of Cache-Control headers

 Name
 Use of Cache-Control headers

 Classification
 Implementation



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 Description
 Many (if not most) implementations incorrectly interpret Cache-
 Control response headers.

 Significance
 High

 Implications
 Cache-Control headers will be spurned by end users if there are
 conflicting or non-standard implementations.

 Indications
 -

 Solution(s)
 Work with vendors and others to assure proper application

 Workaround
 None.

 Contact
 Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>

A.2.2 Lack of HTTP/1.1 compliance for caching proxies

 Name
 Lack of HTTP/1.1 compliance for caching proxies

 Classification
 Implementation

 Description
 Although performance benchmarking of caches is starting to be
 explored, protocol compliance is just as important.

 Significance
 High

 Implications
 Caching proxy vendors implement their interpretation of the
 specification; because the specification is very large, sometimes
 vague and ambiguous, this can lead to inconsistent behavior
 between caching proxies.

 Caching proxies need to comply to the specification (or the
 specification needs to change).





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 Indications
 There is no currently known compliance test being used.

 There is work underway to quantify how closely servers comply with
 the current specification. A joint technical report between AT&T
 and HP Labs [7] describes the compliance testing. This report
 examines how well each of a set of top traffic-producing sites
 support certain HTTP/1.1 features.

 The Measurement Factory (formerly IRCache) is working to develop
 protocol compliance testing software. Running such a conformance
 test suite against caching proxy products would measure compliance
 and ultimately would help assure they comply to the specification.

 Solution(s)
 Testing should commence and be reported in an open industry forum.
 Proxy implementations should conform to the specification.

 Workaround
 There is no workaround for non-compliance.

 Contact
 Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>
 Duane Wessels <wessels@measurement-factory.com>

A.2.3 ETag support

 Name
 ETag support

 Classification
 Implementation

 Description
 Available caching proxies appear not to support ETag (strong)
 validation.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Last-Modified/If-Modified-Since validation is inappropriate for
 many requirements, both because of its weakness and its use of
 dates. Lack of a usable, strong coherency protocol leads
 developers and end users not to trust caches.

 Indications
 -



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 Solution(s)
 Work with vendors to implement ETags; work for better validation
 protocols.

 Workaround
 Use Last-Modified/If-Modified-Since validation.

 Contact
 Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>

A.2.4 Servers and content should be optimized for caching

 Name
 Servers and content should be optimized for caching

 Classification
 Implementation (Performance)

 Description
 Many web servers and much web content could be implemented to be
 more conducive to caching, reducing bandwidth demand and page load
 delay.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 By making poor use of caches, origin servers encourage longer load
 times, greater load on caching proxies, and increased network
 demand.

 Indications
 The problem is most apparent for pages that have low or zero
 expires time, yet do not change.

 Solution(s)
 -

 Workaround
 Servers could start using unique object identifiers for write-only
 content: if an object changes it gets a new name, otherwise it is
 considered to be immutable and therefore have an infinite expire
 age. Certain hosting providers do this already.

 Contact
 Peter Danzig





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A.3 Administration

A.3.1 Lack of fine-grained, standardized hierarchy controls

 Name
 Lack of fine-grained, standardized hierarchy controls

 Classification
 Administration

 Description
 There is no standard for instructing a proxy as to how it should
 resolve the parent to fetch a given object from. Implementations
 therefore vary greatly, and it can be difficult to make them
 interoperate correctly in a complex environment.

 Significance
 Medium

 Implications
 Complications in deployment of caches in a complex network
 (especially corporate networks)

 Indications
 Inability of some proxies to be configured to direct traffic based
 on domain name, reverse lookup IP address, raw IP address, in
 normal operation and in failover mode. Inability in some proxies
 to set a preferred parent / backup parent configuration.

 Solution(s)
 -

 Workaround
 Work with vendors to establish an acceptable configuration within
 the limits of their product; standardize on one product.

 Contact
 Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>

A.3.2 Proxy/Server exhaustive log format standard for analysis

 Name
 Proxy/Server exhaustive log format standard for analysis

 Classification
 Administration





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 Description
 Most proxy or origin server logs used for characterization or
 evaluation do not provide sufficient detail to determine
 cacheability of responses.

 Significance
 Low (for operationality; high significance for research efforts)

 Implications
 Characterizations and simulations are based on non-representative
 workloads.

 See Also
 W3C Web Characterization Activity, since they are also concerned
 with collecting high quality logs and building characterizations
 from them.

 Indications
 -

 Solution(s)
 To properly clean and to accurately determine cacheability of
 responses, a complete log is required (including all request
 headers as well as all response headers such as "User-agent" [for
 removal of spiders] and "Expires", "max-age", "Set-cookie", "no-
 cache", etc.)

 Workaround
 -

 References
 See "Web Traffic Logs: An Imperfect Resource for Evaluation"[5]
 for some discussion of this.

 Contact
 Brian D. Davison <davison@acm.org>
 Terence Kelly <tpkelly@eecs.umich.edu>

A.3.3 Trace log timestamps

 Name
 Trace log timestamps

 Classification
 Administration






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 Description
 Some proxies/servers log requests without sufficient timing
 detail. Millisecond resolution is often too small to preserve
 request ordering and either the servers should record request
 reception time in addition to completion time, or elapsed time
 plus either one.

 Significance
 Low (for operationality; medium significance for research efforts)

 Implications
 Characterization and simulation fidelity is improved with accurate
 timing and ordering information. Since logs are generally written
 in order of request completion, these logs cannot be re-played
 without knowing request generation times and reordering
 accordingly.

 See Also
 -

 Indications
 Timestamps can be identical for multiple entries (when only
 millisecond resolution is used). Request orderings can be jumbled
 when clients open additional connections for embedded objects
 while still receiving the container object.

 Solution(s)
 Since request completion time is common (e.g., Squid), recommend
 continuing to use it (with microsecond resolution if possible)
 plus recording elapsed time since request reception.

 Workaround
 -

 References
 See "Web Traffic Logs: An Imperfect Resource for Evaluation"[5]
 for some discussion of this.

 Contact
 Brian D. Davison <davison@acm.org>

A.3.4 Exchange format for log summaries

 Name
 Exchange format for log summaries

 Classification
 Administration/Analysis?



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 Description
 Although we have (more or less) a standard log file format for
 proxies (plain vanilla Common Logfile and Squid), there isn't a
 commonly accepted format for summaries of those log files.
 Summaries could be generated by the cache itself, or by post-
 processing existing log file formats such as Squid's.

 Significance
 High, since it means that each log file summarizing/analysis tool
 is essentially reinventing the wheel (un-necessary repetition of
 code), and the cost of processing a large number of large log
 files through a variety of analysis tools is (again for no good
 reason) excessive.

 Implications
 In order to perform a meaningful analysis (e.g., to measure
 performance in relation to loading/configuration over time) the
 access logs from multiple busy caches, it's often necessary to run
 first one tool then another, each against the entire log file (or
 a significantly large subset of the log). With log files running
 into hundreds of MB even after compression (for a cache dealing
 with millions of transactions per day) this is a non-trivial task.

 See Also
 IP packet/header sniffing - it may be that individual transactions
 are at a level of granularity which simply isn't sensible to be
 attempting on extremely busy caches. There may also be legal
 implications in some countries, e.g., if this analysis identifies
 individuals.

 Indications
 Disks/memory full(!) Stats (using multiple programs) take too long
 to run. Stats crunching must be distributed out to multiple
 machines because of its high computational cost.

 Solution(s)
 Have the proxy produce a standardized summary of its activity
 either automatically or via an external (e.g., third party) tool,
 in a commonly agreed format. The format could be something like
 XML or the Extended Common Logfile, but the format and contents
 are subjects for discussion. Ideally this approach would permit
 individual cache server products to supply subsets of the possible
 summary info, since it may not be feasible for all servers to
 provide all of the information which people would like to see.







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 Workaround
 Devise a private summary format for your own personal use - but
 this complicates or even precludes the exchange of summary info
 with other interested parties.

 References
 See the web pages for the commonly used cache stats analysis
 programs, e.g., Calamaris, squidtimes, squidclients, etc.

 Contact
 Martin Hamilton <martin@wwwcache.ja.net>








































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Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

 This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
 others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
 or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
 and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
 kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
 included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
 document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
 the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
 Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
 developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
 copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
 followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
 English.

 The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
 revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

 This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
 TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
 BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
 HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
 MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

 Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
 Internet Society.



















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Informational