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Status: Verified (2)

RFC 9114, "HTTP/3", June 2022

Source of RFC: quic (wit)

Errata ID: 7014
Status: Verified
Type: Technical
Publication Format(s) : TEXT, PDF, HTML

Reported By: David Schinazi
Date Reported: 2022-07-06
Verifier Name: Zaheduzzaman Sarker
Date Verified: 2022-09-27

Section 4.3.1 says:

   ":path":  Contains the path and query parts of the target URI (the
      "path-absolute" production and optionally a ? character (ASCII
      0x3f) followed by the "query" production; see Sections 3.3 and 3.4
      of [URI].

It should say:

   ":path":  Contains the path and query parts of the target URI (the
      "absolute-path" production and optionally a ? character (ASCII
      0x3f) followed by the "query" production; see Section 4.1 of
      [HTTP] and Section 3.4 of [URI].

Notes:

There is a conflict between RFC 9114 and RFCs 9110,9112,9113. RFC 9114 disallows paths that start with "//" whereas the others allow them. Research seems to indicate that this was not intentional. More details on the mailing list discussion: https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/ietf-http-wg/2022JulSep/0014.html

Errata ID: 7780
Status: Verified
Type: Technical
Publication Format(s) : TEXT, HTML

Reported By: Lucas Pardue
Date Reported: 2024-01-24
Verifier Name: Francesca Palombini
Date Verified: 2024-01-29

Section 7.2.6 says:

The GOAWAY frame applies to the entire connection,
not a specific stream. A client MUST treat a
GOAWAY frame on a stream other than the control
stream as a connection error of type
H3_FRAME_UNEXPECTED.

It should say:

The GOAWAY frame applies to the entire connection,
not a specific stream. An endpoint MUST treat a
GOAWAY frame on a stream other than the control
stream as a connection error of type
H3_FRAME_UNEXPECTED.

Notes:

HTTP/3 originally only supported GOAWAY from server to client. In this PR we added the ability to also send GOAWAY from client to server https://github.com/quicwg/base-drafts/pull/3129/files. Unfortunately we didn't update the highlighted text to cover the situation where a server receives a GOAWAY on a different stream.

FWIW the implementation I am responsible for already applies the rule to request streams.

Status: Reported (2)

RFC 9114, "HTTP/3", June 2022

Source of RFC: quic (wit)

Errata ID: 7238
Status: Reported
Type: Technical
Publication Format(s) : TEXT, PDF, HTML

Reported By: Jaikiran Pai
Date Reported: 2022-11-04

Section 4.2.2 says:

Because this limit is applied separately by each implementation that
processes the message, messages below this limit are not guaranteed
to be accepted.

It should say:

Because this limit is applied separately by each implementation that
processes the message, messages above this limit are not guaranteed
to be accepted.

Notes:

The section 4.2.2 specifies header size constraints and notes that implementations can send a SETTINGS frame with a SETTINGS_MAX_FIELD_SECTION_SIZE identifier to set a limit on the maximum size of the message header. Since this a maximum size, the sentence that states that intermediaries aren't guaranteed to accept a message below this limit seems odd and I think it should instead say "above this limit".

Errata ID: 7702
Status: Reported
Type: Technical
Publication Format(s) : HTML

Reported By: Lucas Pardue
Date Reported: 2023-11-15

Section 10.7 says:

   Where HTTP/2 employs PADDING frames and Padding fields in other
   frames to make a connection more resistant to traffic analysis,
   HTTP/3 can either rely on transport-layer padding or employ the
   reserved frame and stream types discussed in Sections 7.2.8 and
   6.2.3.  

It should say:

   Where HTTP/2 employs Padding fields in some
   frames to make a connection more resistant to traffic analysis,
   HTTP/3 can either rely on transport-layer padding or employ the
   reserved frame and stream types discussed in Sections 7.2.8 and
   6.2.3.  

Notes:

HTTP/2 doesn't define PADDING frames

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