Talk:Certified HTTP

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X-Message-ID

How about replacing the $random_uuid with an MD5 (or stronger) digest of the message body? That would eliminate the undefined result of sending a message with the same message id but a a different body. (Undefined results can be opportunities for exploits.) --Omei Turnbull 20:21, 10 July 2007 (PDT)

That wouldn't solve the problem, you would still be sending a message with the same message id if you sent two identical messages bodies. You would be guarantying a collision. It is really only an issue if two messages of the same ID are being processed at the same time. I think using $random_uuid is reasonable and in the event of a Message-ID collision or malformed Message-ID have the server return a 400. -- Strife Onizuka 00:01, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
Heh, looks like Strife and I saw this at the same moment.  :-) I guess if you digested the entire state of the message, including headers, receiving url, and sending url/host, then you're only ruling out the case where you do actually want to send two of the exact same message between the same two hosts at the exact same time and have both be processed as independent message. Thanks for the idea! Which Linden 00:06, 11 July 2007 (PDT)

X-Message-URL

"If the client performs a GET to the message url prior to DELETE, the server must return the same body as the original response, including the X-Message-URL."

I think this may be an attack point, since it would require the server to cache the response body. There should also be a short timeout on the caching. This requirement makes it look like this protocol isn't something you want use with unauthorized clients. -- Strife Onizuka 00:18, 11 July 2007 (PDT)

How does this differ from the explicit requirement that "the server must persist the response body or have a mechanism to idempotent generate the same response to the same request"? But yes, it seems like the need to persist un-acknowledged response bodies for 15 days creates a big opportunity for a DDOS-type attack if reliable messages from unauthenticated clients are allowed. - Omei Turnbull
That would be a problem if it only statically persisted a complete response. If it has a way to generate the idempotent response at any later time, there is no need to statically persist the complete response. Dzonatas Sol 10:22, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
The entire response body has to be stored so that if the connection was terminated before the response was received it can be requested by sending a GET to X-Message-URL (instead of a DELETE). -- Strife Onizuka 15:27, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
That would be one way. There are other ways to generate a response that is idempotent. Dzonatas Sol 15:49, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
True, but it really depends on what is being requested and whether what is wanted is the old status or the current status. -- Strife Onizuka 16:11, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
The issue I see (which I think is the same issue Strife was referring to) is that when the server gets a request, it has to check to see whether it is a duplicate of any outstanding request (i.e. a request for which the response hasn't been acknowledged) issued within the last 15 days, so that if it is, it will repeat its previous response. If these requests can come from untrusted clients, the server could purposely be subjected to requests that are not acknowledged, until the server is no longer able to respond to any requests in a timely manner.--Omei Turnbull 12:59, 11 July 2007 (PDT)
Thats what I was thinking. -- Strife Onizuka 15:27, 11 July 2007 (PDT)

Thoughts

For a simple setup X-Message-URL could be the original request URL. The DELETE command should send the same X-Message-ID as the orig request to better facilitate this. This would have the added benefit that a client could possibly cancel a request by sending a DELETE before getting a response. This doesn't have to be all that complicated to implement. Once a request comes in, check to see if there is a DB entry for it, if it does not exist in the DB, execute the command and write the body to file and return the body. If it does exist in the DB already, check the status of the request, if there is a body, return it and wait for the timeout or DELETE command before removing the DB entry. -- Strife Onizuka 15:34, 11 July 2007 (PDT)