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HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol)

  • HTTP is an application-layer protocol for transmitting hypermedia documents, such as HTML.
  • It is designed for communication between web browsers and web servers
  • It follows a client-server model, with a client opening a connection to make a request, then waiting until it gets a response
  • It is a stateless protocol

HTTP request

Each HTTP request carries with it a series of encoded data that carries different types of information. A typical HTTP request contains:

  1. HTTP version type: HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2.0, HTTP/3.0
  2. URL: Uniform Resource Locator, address of a given unique resource on the web
  3. HTTP method: it indicates the action that the HTTP request expects from the queried server. For ex, GET, POST, PUT etc.
  4. HTTP headers: It contains text information stored in key-value pairs. These can be grouped according to their contexts:
    • Request Headers: information about the resource to be fetched, or about the client requesting the resource
    • Response Headers: information about the response, like its location or about the server providing it
    • Representation Headers: contain information about the body of the resource, like its MIME type, or encoding/compression type
    • Payload Headers: representation-independent information about payload data, including content-length and the encoding used for transport
  5. HTTP Request body: it contains any information being submitted to the web server, such as username and password, or any other data entered into a form
  6. HTTP Response: it is the response that web clients receive from an Internet server in answer to an HTTP request. It contains:
    • HTTP status code: 3-digit status codes most often used to indicate whether an HTTP request has been successfully completed
    • HTTP response headers: a response comes with headers that convey important information such as the language and format of the data being sent
    • optional HTTP body: 'GET' requests generally have a body that contains the requested information. In most requests, this is HTML data