In HTTP you can specify in a request that your client can accept specific content in responses using the accept
header, with values such as application/xm
Read RFC 2616 Section 14.1 and 14.2. The Accept
header does not allow you to specify a charset
. You have
to use the Accept-Charset
header instead.
RFC 7231 section 5.3.2 (Accept) clearly states:
Each media-range might be followed by zero or more applicable media type parameters (e.g., charset)
So a charset parameter for each content-type is allowed. In theory a client could accept, for example, text/html
only in UTF-8
and text/plain
only in US-ASCII
.
But it would usually make more sense to state possible charsets in the Accept-Charset header as that applies to all types mentioned in the Accept
header.
If those headers’ charsets don’t overlap, the server could send status 406 Not Acceptable.
However, I wouldn’t expect fancy cross-matching from a server for various reasons. It would make the server code more complicated (and therefore more error-prone) while in practice a client would rarely send such requests. Also nowadays I would expect everything server-side is using UTF-8 and sent as-is so there’s nothing to negotiate.
I don't think it matters. The client is doing something dumb; there doesn't need to be interoperability for that :-)
Altough you can set media type in Accept
header, the charset
parameter definition for that media type is not defined anywhere in RFC 2616 (but it is not forbidden, though).
Therefore if you are going to implement a HTTP 1.1 compliant server, you shall first look for Accept-charset
header, and then search for your own parameters at Accept
header.
Firstly, Accept headers can accept parameters, see https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-5.3.2
All text/* mime-types can accept a charset parameter. http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml#text
The Accept-Charset header allows a user-agent to specify the charsets it supports.
If the Accept-Charset header did not exist, a user-agent would have to specify each charset parameter for each text/* media type it accepted, e.g.
Accept: text/html;charset=US-ASCII, text/html;charset=UTF-8, text/plain;charset=US-ASCII, text/plain;charset=UTF-8