Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) SEARCHgreenbytes GmbHHafenweg 16MuensterNW48155Germany+49 251 2807760[email protected]http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/Mitrix, Inc.303 Twin Dolphin Drive, Suite 600-37Redwood CityCA94065U.S.A.+1 408 500 1135[email protected]27 Borden StreetTorontoOntarioM5S 2M8Canada+1 416 929 5854[email protected]http://www.econetwork.net/~jdavisIBM Corporation3565 Harbor Blvd.Costa MesaCA92626U.S.A.+1 714 327 3403[email protected]HTTPQueryProperties
This document specifies a set of methods, headers, and properties
composing Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) SEARCH, an application of the HTTP/1.1 protocol to efficiently search for DAV
resources based upon a set of client-supplied criteria.
This document defines Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) SEARCH, an application
of HTTP/1.1 forming a lightweight search protocol to transport queries
and result sets that allows clients to make use of server-side search facilities.
It is based on earlier work done in the IETF DASL Working Group (see ).
In this specification, the terms "WebDAV SEARCH" and "DASL" are used interchangeably.
DASL minimizes the complexity of clients so as to facilitate widespread
deployment of applications capable of utilizing the DASL search mechanisms.
DASL consists of:
the SEARCH method and the request/response formats defined for it (),feature discovery through the "DASL" response header and
the optional DAV:supported-grammar-set property (),optional grammar schema discovery (), andone mandatory grammar: DAV:basicsearch ().
DASL relies on the resource and property model defined by .
DASL does not alter this model. Instead, DASL allows clients to access DAV-modeled
resources through server-side search.
This document uses the terms defined in ,
, , and in this section.
Criteria
An expression against which each resource in the search scope is evaluated.
Query
A query is a combination of a search scope, search criteria, result record
definition, sort specification, and a search modifier.
Query Grammar
A set of definitions of XML elements, attributes, and constraints on their
relations and values that defines a set of queries and the intended semantics.
Query Schema
A listing, for any given grammar and scope, of the properties and operators
that may be used in a query with that grammar and scope.
Result
A result is a result set, optionally augmented with other information describing the search as a whole.
Result Record
A description of a resource. A result record is a set of properties, and possibly other descriptive information.
Result Record Definition
A specification of the set of properties to be returned in the result record.
Result Set
A set of records, one for each resource for which the search criteria evaluated to True.
Scope
A set of resources to be searched.
Search Arbiter
A resource that supports the SEARCH method.
Search Modifier
An instruction that governs the execution of the query but is not part of
the search scope, result record definition, the search criteria, or the sort
specification. An example of a search modifier is one that controls how
much time the server can spend on the query before giving a response.
Sort Specification
A specification of an ordering on the result records in the result set.
This specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation of ,
unless explicitly stated otherwise.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document
are to be interpreted as described in .
This document uses XML DTD fragments
() as a purely notational convention. WebDAV
request and response bodies cannot be validated by a DTD due to the specific
extensibility rules defined in and
due to the fact that all XML elements defined by this specification use the
XML namespace name "DAV:". In particular:
element names use the "DAV:" namespace,element ordering is irrelevant unless explicitly stated,extension elements (elements not already defined as valid child
elements) may be added anywhere, except when explicitly stated otherwise,extension attributes (attributes not already defined as valid for this
element) may be added anywhere, except when explicitly stated otherwise.
When an XML element type in the "DAV:" namespace is referenced in this document
outside of the context of an XML fragment, the string "DAV:" will be prefixed to
the element type.
Similarly, when an XML element type in the namespace "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
is referenced in this document outside of the context of an XML fragment, the
string "xs:" will be prefixed to the element type.
This document inherits, and sometimes extends, DTD productions from .
This specification defines elements, properties, and condition names in the
XML namespace "DAV:". In general, only specifications authored by IETF
working groups are supposed to do this. In this case an exception was made,
because WebDAV SEARCH started its life in the IETF DASL working group
(, and at the time the working
group closed down there was already significant deployment of this specification.
One can express the basic usage of DASL in the following steps:
The client constructs a query using the DAV:basicsearch grammar.The client invokes the SEARCH method on a resource that will perform the
search (the search arbiter) and includes a text/xml or application/xml request entity that
contains the query.The search arbiter performs the query.The search arbiter sends the results of the query back to the client in
the response. The server MUST send an entity
that matches the
WebDAV multistatus format ().
The client invokes the SEARCH method to initiate a server-side search.
The body of the request defines the query. The server MUST emit
an entity matching the WebDAV multistatus format
().
The SEARCH method plays the role of transport mechanism for the query
and the result set. It does not define the semantics of the query. The
type of the query defines the semantics.
SEARCH is a safe method; it does not have any significance other than
executing a query and returning a query result (see
).
The client invokes the SEARCH method on the resource named by the Request-URI.
The Request-URI identifies the search arbiter.
Any HTTP resource may function as search arbiter. It is not a new type of
resource (in the sense of DAV:resourcetype as defined in
),
nor does it have to be a WebDAV-compliant resource.
The SEARCH method defines no relationship between the arbiter and the
scope of the search; rather, the particular query grammar used in the query
defines the relationship. For example, a query grammar may force
the Request-URI to correspond exactly to the search scope.
The server MUST process a text/xml or application/xml request body, and
MAY process request bodies in other formats. See for guidance
on packaging XML in requests.
Marshalling:
If a request body with content type text/xml or application/xml is included,
it MUST be either a DAV:searchrequest or a DAV:query-schema-discovery XML
element. Its single child element identifies the query grammar.
For DAV:searchrequest, the definition of search criteria, the result record,
and any other details needed to perform the search depend on the individual
search grammar.
For DAV:query-schema-discovery, the semantics is defined in
.
Preconditions:
(DAV:search-grammar-discovery-supported): when an XML request body is present
and has a DAV:query-schema-discovery document element, the server MUST
support the query schema discovery mechanism described in .
(DAV:search-grammar-supported): when an XML request body is present,
the search grammar identified by the document element's child element
must be a supported search grammar.
(DAV:search-multiple-scope-supported): if the SEARCH request specified
multiple scopes, the server MUST support this optional feature.
(DAV:search-scope-valid): the supplied search scope must be valid. There
can be various reasons for a search scope to be invalid, including
unsupported URI schemes and communication problems. Servers MAY add
compliant DAV:response elements as content to the
condition element indicating the precise reason for the failure.
If the server returns 207 (Multistatus), then the search proceeded
successfully, and the response MUST
use the WebDAV multistatus format ().
The results of this method SHOULD NOT be cached.
There MUST be one DAV:response for each resource that matched
the search criteria. For each such response, the DAV:href element
contains the URI of the resource, and the response MUST include a DAV:propstat
element.
Note: the WebDAV multistatus format requires at least one
DAV:response child element. This specification relaxes that restriction
so that empty results can be represented.
Note that for each matching resource found, there may be multiple URIs
within the search scope mapped to it. In this case, a server SHOULD report
only one of these URIs. Clients can use the live property DAV:resource-id, defined
in to identify possible duplicates.
A server MAY limit the number of resources in a reply, for example, to limit
the amount of resources expended in processing a query. If it does so,
the reply MUST use status code 207, return a DAV:multistatus response
body, and indicate a status of 507 (Insufficient Storage) for the search
arbiter URI. It SHOULD include the partial results.
When a result set is truncated, there may be many more resources that
satisfy the search criteria but that were not examined.
If partial results are included and the client requested an ordered
result set in the original request, then any partial results that are returned
MUST be ordered as the client directed.
Note that the partial results returned MAY be any subset of the result
set that would have satisfied the original query.
A response MAY include more information than PROPFIND defines, so long as
the extra information does not invalidate the PROPFIND response. Query
grammars SHOULD define how the response matches the PROPFIND response.
This example demonstrates the request and response framework. The following
XML document shows a simple (hypothetical) natural language query.
The name of the query element is natural-language-query in the XML namespace
"http://example.com/foo". The actual query is "Find the
locations of good Thai restaurants in Los Angeles". For this hypothetical
query, the arbiter returns two properties for each selected resource.
In the example below, the server returns just two results, and then
indicates that the result is truncated by adding a DAV:response element
for the search arbiter resource with 507 (Insufficient Storage) status.
If a SEARCH request could not be executed or the attempt to execute it
resulted in an error, the server MUST indicate the failure with an
appropriate status code and SHOULD add a response body as defined in
. Unless otherwise stated, condition
elements are empty; however, specific condition elements MAY include
additional child elements that describe the error condition in more detail.
In the example below, a request failed because the scope identifies a
HTTP resource that was not found.
Servers MUST support discovery of the query grammars supported by a search
arbiter resource.
Clients can determine which query grammars are supported by an arbiter
by invoking OPTIONS on the search arbiter. If the resource supports SEARCH,
then the DASL response header will appear in the response. The DASL response
header lists the supported grammars.
Servers supporting the WebDAV extensions and/or
MUST also:
report SEARCH in the live property DAV:supported-method-set for all search arbiter resources, andsupport the live property DAV:supported-query-grammar-set as defined in .
The OPTIONS method allows the client to discover if a resource supports
the SEARCH method and to determine the list of search grammars supported
for that resource.
The client issues the OPTIONS method against a resource named by the
Request-URI. This is a normal invocation of OPTIONS as defined in .
If a resource supports the SEARCH method, then the server MUST list
SEARCH in the Allow header
defined in .
DASL servers MUST include the DASL header in the OPTIONS response. This
header identifies the search grammars supported by that resource.
The DASL response header indicates server support for query grammars in
the OPTIONS method. The value is a
list of URIs that indicate the types of supported grammars.
Note that although the URIs can be used to identify each supported search
grammar, there is not necessarily a direct relationship between the URI and the
XML element name that can be used in XML based SEARCH requests (the element
name itself is identified by its namespace name (a URI reference) and
the element's local name).
Note: this header field value is defined as a comma-separated list
(); thus, grammar URIs can
appear in multiple header instances, separated by commas, or both.
This WebDAV property is required for any server supporting either
and/or and
identifies the XML-based query grammars that are supported by the search arbiter resource.
This example shows that the server supports search on the /somefolder
resource with the query grammars: DAV:basicsearch, http://foobar.example/syntax1
and http://akuma.example/syntax2. Note that servers supporting WebDAV SEARCH MUST support
DAV:basicsearch.
This example shows the equivalent taking advantage of a server's support for
DAV:supported-method-set and DAV:supported-query-grammar-set.
Note that the query grammar element names marshalled as part of the
DAV:supported-query-grammar-set can be directly used as element names in
an XML-based query.
Servers MAY support the discovery of the schema for a query grammar.
The DASL response header and the DAV:supported-query-grammar-set property
provide means for clients to discover the
set of query grammars supported by a resource. This alone is not sufficient
information for a client to generate a query. For example, the DAV:basicsearch
grammar defines a set of queries consisting of a set of operators applied
to a set of properties and values, but the grammar itself does not specify
which properties may be used in the query. QSD for the DAV:basicsearch
grammar allows a client to discover the set of properties that are searchable,
selectable, and sortable. Moreover, although the DAV:basicsearch
grammar defines a minimal set of operators, it is possible that a resource
might support additional operators in a query. For example, a resource
might support an optional operator that can be used to express content-based
queries in a proprietary syntax. QSD allows a client to discover these
operators and their syntax. The set of discoverable quantities will differ
from grammar to grammar, but each grammar can define a means for a client
to discover what can be discovered.
In general, the schema for a given query grammar depends on both the
resource (the arbiter) and the scope. A given resource might have access
to one set of properties for one potential scope, and another set for a
different scope. For example, consider a server able to search two distinct
collections: one holding cooking recipes, the other design documents for
nuclear weapons. While both collections might support properties such as
author, title, and date, the first might also define properties such as
calories and preparation time, while the second defined properties such
as yield and applicable patents. Two distinct arbiters indexing the same
collection might also have access to different properties. For example,
the recipe collection mentioned above might also be indexed by a value-added
server that also stored the names of chefs who had tested the recipe. Note
also that the available query schema might also depend on other factors,
such as the identity of the principal conducting the search, but these
factors are not exposed in this protocol.
Each query grammar supported by DASL defines its own syntax for expressing
the possible query schema. A client retrieves the schema for a given query
grammar on an arbiter resource with a given scope by invoking the SEARCH
method on that arbiter with that grammar and scope and with a root element
of DAV:query-schema-discovery rather than DAV:searchrequest.
Marshalling:
The request body MUST be a DAV:query-schema-discovery element.
The response body takes the form of a DAV:multistatus element (),
where DAV:response is extended to hold the returned query grammar
inside a DAV:query-schema container element.
The content of this container is an XML element whose name and syntax depend upon the grammar,
and whose value may (and likely will) vary depending upon the grammar,
arbiter, and scope.
In this example, the arbiter is recipes.example, the grammar is DAV:basicsearch,
the scope is also recipes.example.
The query schema for DAV:basicsearch is defined in .
DAV:basicsearch uses an extensible XML syntax that allows clients
to express search requests that are generally useful for WebDAV scenarios.
DASL-extended servers MUST accept this grammar, and MAY accept other grammars.
DAV:basicsearch has several components:
DAV:select provides the result record definition.DAV:from defines the scope.DAV:where defines the criteria.DAV:orderby defines the sort order of the result set.DAV:limit provides constraints on the query as a whole.
This query retrieves the content length values for all resources located
under the server's "/container1/" URI namespace whose length exceeds 10000 sorted ascending by size.
DAV:select defines the result record, which is a set of properties
and values. This document defines two possible values: DAV:allprop
and DAV:prop, both defined in .
DAV:from defines the query scope.
This contains one or more DAV:scope elements. Support for multiple scope
elements is optional, however servers MUST fail a request specifying
multiple DAV:scope elements if they can't support it (see ,
precondition DAV:search-multiple-scope-supported).
The scope element contains mandatory DAV:href and DAV:depth elements.
DAV:href indicates the URI reference () to use as a scope.
When the scope is a collection, if DAV:depth is "0", the search
includes only the collection.
When it is "1", the search includes the collection and its immediate
children. When it is "infinity", it includes the collection and all its progeny.
When the scope is not a collection, the
depth is ignored and the search applies just to the resource itself.
If the server supports WebDAV Redirect Reference Resources ()
and the search scope contains a redirect reference resource, then
it applies only to that resource, not to its target.
When the child element DAV:include-versions is present, the search scope
will include all versions (see ) of all
version-controlled resources in scope. Servers that do support versioning
but do not support the DAV:include-versions feature MUST signal an
error if it is used in a query (see , precondition DAV:search-scope-valid).
If the DAV:scope element is a URI (), the scope is exactly
that URI.
If the DAV:scope element is a relative reference (), the scope is taken
to be relative to the Request-URI.
A Scope can be an arbitrary URI reference.
Servers, of course, may support only particular scopes. This may include
limitations for particular schemes such as "http:" or "ftp:" or certain
URI namespaces.
However, WebDAV-compliant search arbiters minimally SHOULD support
scopes that match their own URI.
The DAV:where element defines the search condition for inclusion of
resources in the result set. The value of this element is an XML element
that defines a search operator that evaluates to one of the Boolean truth
values TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN. The search operator contained by DAV:where
may itself contain and evaluate additional search operators as operands,
which in turn may contain and evaluate additional search operators as operands,
etc., recursively.
Each operator defined for use in the where clause that returns a Boolean
value MUST evaluate to TRUE, FALSE, or UNKNOWN. The resource under scan
is included as a member of the result set if and only if the search condition
evaluates to TRUE.
Consult for details on the application of three-valued logic
in query expressions.
If a query contains an operator that is not supported by the server, then
the server MUST respond with a 422 (Unprocessable Entity) status code.
If a PROPFIND for a property value would yield a
non-2xx (see )
response for that property, then that property is considered NULL.
NULL values are "less than" all other values in comparisons.
Empty strings (zero length strings) are not NULL values. An empty string
is "less than" a string with length greater than zero.
The DAV:is-defined operator is defined to test if the value
of a property is not NULL.
Comparisons of properties that do not have simple types (text-only content) is
out of scope for the standard operators defined for DAV:basicsearch and therefore is defined
to be UNKNOWN (as per ).
For querying the DAV:resourcetype property, see .
The example shows a single operator (DAV:eq) applied in the criteria.
The example shows a more complex operation involving several operators
(DAV:and, DAV:eq, DAV:gt) applied in the criteria.
This DAV:where expression matches those resources of type "image/gif"
over 4K in size.
The DAV:orderby element specifies the ordering of the result set. It contains
one or more DAV:order elements, each of which specifies a comparison between
two items in the result set. Informally, a comparison specifies a test that
determines whether one resource appears before another in the result set.
Comparisons are applied in the order they occur in the DAV:orderby element,
earlier comparisons being more significant.
The comparisons defined here use only a single property from each resource,
compared using the same ordering as the DAV:lt operator
(ascending) or DAV:gt operator
(descending).
If neither direction is specified, the default is DAV:ascending.
In the context of the DAV:orderby element, null values are
considered to collate before any actual (i.e., non-null) value, including
strings of zero length (this is compatible with ).
The "caseless" attribute may be used to indicate case-sensitivity
for comparisons ().
This sort orders first by last name of the author and then by size, in
descending order, so that for each author, the largest works appear first.
The DAV:and operator performs a logical AND operation on the expressions
it contains.
The DAV:or operator performs a logical OR operation on the values it contains.
The DAV:not operator performs a logical NOT operation on the
values it contains.
The DAV:eq operator provides simple equality matching on property values.
The "caseless" attribute may be used with this element ().
The DAV:lt, DAV:lte, DAV:gt, and DAV:gte
operators provide comparisons on property values, using less-than, less-than
or equal, greater-than, and greater-than or equal, respectively. The "caseless"
attribute may be used with these elements ().
DAV:literal allows literal values to be placed in an expression.
White space in literal values is significant in comparisons. For consistency
with , clients SHOULD NOT specify the attribute "xml:space"
() to override this behavior.
In comparisons, the contents of DAV:literal SHOULD be treated as string, with
the following exceptions:
when operand for a comparison with a DAV:getcontentlength property,
it SHOULD be treated as an unsigned integer value (the behavior for values not in this format
is undefined),
when operand for a comparison with a DAV:creationdate or DAV:getlastmodified property,
it SHOULD be treated as a date value in the ISO-8601 subset defined for
the DAV:creationdate property (see ;
the behavior of values not in this format is undefined),
when operand for a comparison with a property for which the type is known and when compatible with that type,
it MAY be treated according to this type.
There are situations in which a client may want to force a comparison not to
be string-based (as defined for DAV:literal). In these cases, a typed
comparison can be enforced by using DAV:typed-literal instead.
The data type is specified using the xsi:type attribute defined in
. If the type is not specified, it
defaults to "xs:string".
A server MUST reject a request using an unknown type with a status of 422 (Unprocessable Entity).
It SHOULD reject a request if the value provided in DAV:typed-literal cannot be cast to the specified type.
The comparison evaluates to UNKNOWN if the property value cannot be
cast to the specified datatype (see ).
Consider a set of resources with the dead property "edits" in the namespace
"http://ns.example.org":
URIproperty value/a"-1"/b"01"/c"3"/d"test"/e(undefined)
The expression
will evaluate to TRUE for the resources "/a" and "/b" (their property values
can be parsed as type xs:integer, and the numerical comparison evaluates to
true), to FALSE for "/c" (property value is compatible, but numerical comparison
evaluates to false), and UNKNOWN for "/d" and "/e" (the property either is
undefined, or its value cannot be parsed as xs:integer).
The following two optional operators can be used to express conditions
on the language of a property value (as expressed using the xml:lang
attribute).
This operator evaluates to TRUE if the language for the value of
the given property is known, FALSE if it isn't, and UNKNOWN if the property itself
is not defined.
This operator evaluates to TRUE if the language for the value of the
given property is known and matches the language name given in the
<literal> element, FALSE if it doesn't match, and UNKNOWN
if the property itself is not defined.
Languages are considered to match if they are the same, or if the
language of the property value is a sublanguage of the language
specified in the <literal> element (see ,
"lang function").
The expression below will evaluate to TRUE if the property "foobar" exists
and its language is either unknown, English, or a sublanguage of English.
The DAV:is-collection operator allows clients to determine whether a resource is
a collection (that is, whether its DAV:resourcetype element contains the
element DAV:collection).
Rationale: This operator is provided in lieu of defining generic
structure queries, which would suffice for this and for many more powerful
queries, but seems inappropriate to standardize at this time.
This example shows a search criterion that picks out all, and only, the resources
in the scope that are collections.
The DAV:is-defined operator allows clients to determine whether
a property is defined on a resource. The meaning of "defined on a resource"
is found in .
The DAV:like is an optional operator intended to give simple wildcard-based
pattern matching ability to clients.
The operator takes two arguments.
The first argument is a DAV:prop element identifying a single
property to evaluate.
The second argument is a DAV:literal element that gives the
pattern matching string.
The value for the literal is composed of wildcards separated by segments
of text. Wildcards may begin or end the literal.
The "_" wildcard matches exactly one character.
The "%" wildcard matches zero or more characters.
The "\" character is an escape sequence so that the literal can include
"_" and "%". To include the "\" character in the pattern, the escape sequence
"\\" is used.
This example shows how a client might use DAV:like to identify
those resources whose content type was a subtype of image.
The DAV:contains operator is an optional operator that provides
content-based search capability. This operator implicitly searches against
the text content of a resource, not against the content of properties. The
DAV:contains operator is intentionally not overly constrained, in order to allow the
server to do the best job it can in performing the search.
The DAV:contains operator evaluates to a Boolean value. It
evaluates to TRUE if the content of the resource satisfies the search.
Otherwise, it evaluates to FALSE.
Within the DAV:contains XML element, the client provides a
phrase: a single word or whitespace delimited sequence of words. Servers
MAY ignore punctuation in a phrase. Case-sensitivity is at the
discretion of the server implementation.
The following non-exhaustive list enumerates things that may or may not be done
as part of the search: Phonetic
methods such as "soundex" may or may not be used. Word stemming may or
may not be performed. Thesaurus expansion of words may or may not be done.
Right or left truncation may or may not be performed. The search may be
case insensitive or case sensitive. The word or words may or may not be
interpreted as names. Multiple words may or may not be required to be adjacent
or "near" each other. Multiple words may or may not be required to occur
in the same order. Multiple words may or may not be treated as a phrase.
The search may or may not be interpreted as a request to find documents
"similar" to the string operand.
Character canonicalization such as that done by the Unicode collation
algorithm may or may not be applied.
Servers SHOULD indicate scores for the DAV:contains condition by adding a
DAV:score XML element to the DAV:response element. Its value is defined only
in the context of a particular query result. The value is a string representing
the score, an integer from zero to 10000 inclusive, where a higher value
indicates a higher score (e.g., more relevant).
Clients should note that, in general, it is not meaningful to compare
the numeric values of scores from two different query results unless both were
executed by the same underlying search system on the same collection of
resources.
To order search results by their score, the DAV:score element may be added
as child to the DAV:orderby element (in place of a DAV:prop element).
The example below shows a search for the phrase "Peter Forsberg".
Depending on its support for content-based searching, a server MAY treat
this as a search for documents that contain the words "Peter" and "Forsberg".
The example below shows a search for resources that contain "Peter" and
"Forsberg".
The DAV:limit XML element contains requested limits from the client
to limit the size of the reply or amount of effort expended by the server.
The DAV:nresults XML element contains a requested maximum number
of DAV:response elements to be returned in the response body.
The server MAY disregard this limit. The value of this element is an
unsigned integer.
If the result set is both limited by DAV:limit and ordered according to
DAV:orderby, the results that are included in the response document SHOULD be
those that order highest.
The "caseless" attribute allows clients to specify caseless matching behavior
instead of character-by-character matching for DAV:basicsearch operators.
The possible values for "caseless" are "yes" or "no". The default value is
server-specified. Caseless matching SHOULD be implemented as defined in
Section 5.18
of the Unicode Standard ().
Support for the "caseless" attribute is optional. A server should
respond with a status of 422 if it is used but cannot be supported.
The DAV:basicsearch grammar defines a search criteria that is
a Boolean-valued expression, and allows for an arbitrary set of properties
to be included in the result record. The result set may be sorted on a
set of property values. Accordingly, the DTD for schema discovery for this
grammar allows the server to express:
the set of properties that may be either searched, returned, or used
to sort, and a hint about the data type of such properties.the set of optional operators defined by the resource.
The DAV:properties element holds a list of descriptions of properties.
The DAV:operators element describes the optional operators
that may be used in a DAV:where element.
Each instance of a DAV:propdesc element describes the property
or properties in the DAV:prop element it contains. All subsequent
elements are descriptions that apply to those properties. All descriptions
are optional and may appear in any order. Servers SHOULD support all the
descriptions defined here, and MAY define others.
DASL defines five descriptions. The first, DAV:datatype, provides
a hint about the type of the property value, and may be useful to a user
interface prompting for a value. The remaining four (DAV:searchable,
DAV:selectable, DAV:sortable, and DAV:caseless)
identify portions of the query (DAV:where, DAV:select,
and DAV:orderby, respectively). If a property has a description
for a section, then the server MUST allow the property to be used in that
section. These descriptions are optional. If a property does not have such
a description, or is not described at all, then the server MAY still allow
the property to be used in the corresponding section.
This element can be used in place of DAV:prop to describe properties of
WebDAV properties not mentioned in any other DAV:prop element. For instance,
this can be used to indicate that all other properties are searchable and selectable
without giving details about their types (a typical scenario for dead properties).
The DAV:datatype element contains a single XML element that provides
a hint about the domain of the property, which may be useful to a user
interface prompting for a value to be used in a query.
Data types are identified by an element name. Where appropriate, a server SHOULD
use the simple data types defined in .
Examples from :
Qualified nameExamplexs:booleantrue, false, 1, 0xs:stringFoobarxs:dateTime1994-11-05T08:15:5Zxs:float.314159265358979E+1xs:integer-259, 23
If the data type of a property is not given, then the data type defaults
to xs:string.
If this element is present, then the server MUST allow this property to
appear within a DAV:where element where an operator allows a property.
Allowing a search does not mean that the property is guaranteed to be defined
on every resource in the scope, it only indicates the server's willingness
to check.
This element indicates that the property may appear in the DAV:select
element.
This element indicates that the property may appear in the DAV:orderby
element.
This element only applies to properties whose data type is "xs:string"
and derived data types as per the DAV:datatype property description. Its presence indicates
that comparisons performed for searches, and the comparisons for ordering
results on the string property will be caseless (the default is
character by character).
The DAV:operators element describes every optional operator supported
in a query. (Mandatory operators are not listed since they are mandatory
and permit no variation in syntax.) All optional operators that are supported
MUST be listed in the DAV:operators element.
The listing for an operator, contained in an DAV:opdesc element,
consists of the operator (as an empty element), followed by one
element for each operand. The operand MUST be either DAV:operand-property,
DAV:operand-literal, or DAV:operand-typed-literal, which indicate that the
operand in the corresponding position is a property, a literal value, or
a typed literal value, respectively.
If an operator is polymorphic (allows more than one operand syntax) then
each permitted syntax MUST be listed separately.
The DAV:opdesc element MAY have a "allow-pcdata" attribute (defaulting to
"no"). A value of "yes" indicates that the operator can contain character
data, as it is the case with DAV:contains (see ).
Definition of additional operators using this format is NOT RECOMMENDED.
This response lists four properties. The data type of the last three properties
is not given, so it defaults to xs:string. All are selectable, and the first
three may be searched. All but the last may be used in a sort. Of the optional
DAV operators, DAV:contains and DAV:like are supported.
Note: The schema discovery defined here does not provide for discovery of
supported values of the "caseless" attribute. This may require that the reply
also list the mandatory operators.
Properties may be language-tagged using the xml:lang attribute (see
). The optional operators
DAV:language-defined ()
and DAV:language-matches ()
allow the expression of conditions on the language tagging information.
This section is provided to detail issues concerning security implications
of which DASL applications need to be aware. All of the security considerations
of HTTP/1.1 (
and WebDAV () also apply to DASL. In addition, this section will include
security risks inherent in the search and retrieval of resource properties
and content.
A query MUST NOT allow clients to retrieve information that wouldn't have
been available through the GET or PROPFIND methods in the first place. In
particular:
Query constraints on WebDAV properties for which the client does not
have read access need to be evaluated as if the property did not
exist (see ).
Query constraints on content (as with DAV:contains, defined in )
for which the client does not have read access need to be evaluated as
if a GET would return a 4xx status code.
A server should prepare for denial-of-service attacks. For example a
client may issue a query for which the result set is expensive to calculate
or transmit because many resources match or must be evaluated.
XML supports a facility known as "external entities", defined in
, which instruct an XML processor to retrieve and perform
an inline include of XML located at a particular URI. An external XML entity
can be used to append or modify the document type declaration (DTD) associated
with an XML document. An external XML entity can also be used to include
XML within the content of an XML document. For non-validating XML, such
as the XML used in this specification, including an external XML entity
is not required by . However, does state that an XML
processor may, at its discretion, include the external XML entity.
External XML entities have no inherent trustworthiness and are subject
to all the attacks that are endemic to any HTTP GET request. Furthermore,
it is possible for an external XML entity to modify the DTD, and hence
affect the final form of an XML document, in the worst case significantly
modifying its semantics, or exposing the XML processor to the security
risks discussed in . Therefore, implementers must be aware that
external XML entities should be treated as untrustworthy.
There is also the scalability risk that would accompany a widely deployed
application that made use of external XML entities. In this situation,
it is possible that there would be significant numbers of requests for
one external XML entity, potentially overloading any server that fields
requests for the resource containing the external XML entity.
Query grammars are identified by URIs. Applications SHOULD NOT attempt
to retrieve these URIs even if they appear to be retrievable (for example,
those that begin with "http://").
This document uses the namespace defined in for XML
elements.
This document specifies the HTTP header listed below, which has been added to the
permanent HTTP header registry defined in .
DASLhttpstandardIETFthis specification ()
This document is based on prior work on the DASL protocol done by the WebDAV
DASL working group until the year 2000 -- namely by Alan Babich, Jim Davis,
Rick Henderson, Dale Lowry, Saveen Reddy, Surendra Reddy,
and Judith Slein (see for the
working group's web site,
for a requirements document, and
for an early version of the specification).
This document has benefited from thoughtful discussion by Lisa Dusseault,
Javier Godoy,
Sung Kim, Chris Newman, Elias Sinderson, Martin Wallmer, Keith Wannamaker, Jim Whitehead,
and Kevin Wiggen.
Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1University of California, Irvine[email protected]W3C[email protected]Compaq Computer Corporation[email protected]MIT Laboratory for Computer Science[email protected]Xerox Corporation[email protected]Microsoft Corporation[email protected]W3C[email protected]Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement LevelsHarvard University[email protected]
General
keywordAugmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNFBrandenburg InternetWorking675 Spruce Dr.SunnyvaleCA94086US+1.408.246.8253[email protected]THUS plc.1/2 Berkeley Square99 Berkely StreetGlasgowG3 7HRUK[email protected]Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fourth Edition)Textuality and Netscape[email protected]Microsoft[email protected]University of Illinois at Chicago and Text Encoding Initiative[email protected]Sun Microsystems[email protected][email protected]XML Schema Part 1: StructuresUniversity of Edinburgh[email protected]Oracle[email protected](for) Commerce One[email protected]Lotus Development Corporation[email protected]World Wide Web ConsortiumMIT Laboratory for Computer Science545 Technology SquareCambridgeMA02139US+ 1 617 253 2613+ 1 617 258 5999[email protected]http://www.w3c.orgXML Schema Part 2: Datatypes Second EditionKaiser Permanente, for Health Level Seven[email protected]Microsoft, formerly of IBM[email protected]World Wide Web ConsortiumMIT Laboratory for Computer Science545 Technology SquareCambridgeMA02139US+ 1 617 253 2613+ 1 617 258 5999[email protected]http://www.w3c.orgHTTP Extensions for Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)CommerceNet2064 Edgewood Dr.Palo AltoCA94303US[email protected]Versioning Extensions to WebDAV (Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning)Rational Software[email protected]IBM[email protected]IBM[email protected]Microsoft[email protected]UC Santa Cruz, Dept. of Computer Science[email protected]XML Media TypesIBM Tokyo Research Laboratory[email protected]simonstl.com[email protected]Skymoon Ventures[email protected]Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) Access Control ProtocolIBM20 Maguire RoadLexingtonMA02421[email protected]greenbytes GmbHSalzmannstrasse 152MuensterNW48159Germany[email protected]Oracle Corporation500 Oracle ParkwayRedwood ShoresCA94065[email protected]U.C. Santa Cruz, Dept. of Computer Science1156 High StreetSanta CruzCA95064[email protected]XML Path Language (XPath) Version 1.0[email protected]Inso Corp. and Brown University[email protected]XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Functions and OperatorsOracle Corporation[email protected]Oracle Corporation[email protected]Sun Microsystems[email protected]Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic SyntaxWorld Wide Web ConsortiumMassachusetts Institute of Technology77 Massachusetts AvenueCambridgeMA02139USA+1-617-253-5702+1-617-258-5999[email protected]http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Day Software5251 California Ave., Suite 110IrvineCA92617USA+1-949-679-2960+1-949-679-2972[email protected]http://roy.gbiv.com/Adobe Systems Incorporated345 Park AveSan JoseCA95110USA+1-408-536-3024[email protected]http://larry.masinter.net/Database Language SQL Part 2: Foundation (SQL/Foundation)International Organization for StandardizationThe Unicode Standard - Version 5.0The Unicode ConsortiumISBN 0321480910Binding Extensions to Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV)IBM[email protected]IBM Research[email protected]greenbytes GmbH[email protected]UC Santa Cruz, Dept. of Computer Science[email protected]Registration Procedures for Message Header FieldsInternet Application Protocol Collation RegistrySun Microsystems[email protected]Aoyama Gakuin University[email protected]Oryx Mail Systems GmbH[email protected]Matching of Language TagsYahoo! Inc.GoogleWeb Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) Redirect Reference ResourcesUC Santa Cruz, Dept. of Computer Science1156 High StreetSanta CruzCA95064US[email protected]IBM20 Maguire RoadLexingtonMA02421US[email protected]greenbytes GmbHHafenweg 16MuensterNW48155Germany+49 251 2807760+49 251 2807761[email protected]http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/
ANSI standard three-valued logic is used when evaluating the search condition
(as defined in the ANSI standard SQL specifications, for example, in ANSI
X3.135-1992, Section 8.12, pp. 188-189, Section 8.2, p. 169, General Rule
1)a), etc.).
ANSI standard three-valued logic is undoubtedly the most widely practiced
method of dealing with the issues of properties in the search condition
not having a value (e.g., being null or not defined) for the resource under
scan, and with undefined expressions in the search condition (e.g., division
by zero, etc.). Three valued logic works as follows.
Undefined expressions are expressions for which the value of the expression
is not defined. Undefined expressions are a completely separate concept
from the truth value UNKNOWN, which is, in fact, well defined. Property
names and literal constants are considered expressions for purposes of
this section. If a property in the current resource under scan has not
been set to a value, then
the value of that property is undefined for the resource under scan. DASL
1.0 has no arithmetic division operator, but if it did, division by zero
would be an undefined arithmetic expression.
If any subpart of an arithmetic, string, or datetime subexpression is
undefined, the whole arithmetic, string, or datetime subexpression is undefined.
There are no manifest constants to explicitly represent undefined number,
string, or datetime values.
Since a Boolean value is ultimately returned by the search condition,
arithmetic, string, and datetime expressions are always arguments to other
operators. Examples of operators that convert arithmetic, string, and datetime
expressions to Boolean values are the six relational operators ("greater
than", "less than", "equals", etc.). If either or both operands of a relational
operator have undefined values, then the relational operator evaluates
to UNKNOWN. Otherwise, the relational operator evaluates to TRUE or FALSE,
depending upon the outcome of the comparison.
The Boolean operators DAV:and, DAV:or, and DAV:not
are evaluated according to the following rules:
not UNKNOWN = UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN and TRUE = UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN and FALSE = FALSE
UNKNOWN and UNKNOWN = UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN or TRUE = TRUE
UNKNOWN or FALSE = UNKNOWN
UNKNOWN or UNKNOWN = UNKNOWN
This section summarizes issues that have been raised during the development
of this specification, but for which no resolution could be found with the
constraints in place. Future revisions of this specification should revisit
these issues, though.
Matching and sorting of textual data relies on collations. With respect
to WebDAV SEARCH, a combination of various design approaches could be used:
Require server support for specific collations.
Require that the server can advertise which collations it supports.
Allow a client to select the collation to be used.
In practice, the current implementations of WebDAV SEARCH usually rely
on backends they do not control, and for which collation information may
not be available. To make things worse, implementations of the DAV:basicsearch grammar
frequently need to combine data from multiple underlying stores (such as
properties and full text content), and thus collation support may vary based
on the operator or property.
Another open issue is what collation formalism to support. At the time of
this writing, the two specifications below seem to provide the
necessary framework and thus may be the base for future work on collation
support in WebDAV SEARCH:
"Internet Application Protocol Collation Registry" ().
"XQuery 1.0 and XPath 2.0 Functions and Operators" ().
DAV:basicsearch does not allow a request that returns the count of matching
resources.
A protocol extension would need to extend DAV:select, and also modify the
DAV:multistatus response format.
There are many reasons why a given query may not be supported by a server.
Query Schema Discovery () can be used to discover some
constraints, but not all.
Future revisions should consider the introduction of specific condition
codes () to these situations.
defines language matching in
terms of the XPath "lang" function ().
Future revisions should consider building on instead.
Matching media types using the DAV:getcontenttype property and the DAV:like
operator is hard due to DAV:getcontenttype also allowing parameters.
A new operator specifically designed for the purpose of matching media types
probably would simplify things a lot. See
for a specific proposal.
DAV:basicsearch operates on the properties (and optionally the contents)
of resources, and thus doesn't really allow matching on parts of the
resource's URI. See
for a proposed extension covering this use case.
A frequently discussed feature is the ability to specifically request
the "next" set of results, when either the server decided to truncate
the result, or the client explicitly asked for a limited set (for
instance, using the DAV:limit element defined in ).
In this case, it would be desirable if the server could keep the full
query result, and provide a new URI identifying a separate result resource,
allowing the client to retrieve additional data through GET requests,
and remove the result through a DELETE request.
Given a Search Arbiter resource, there's currently no way to discover
programmatically the supported sets of search scopes. Future revisions
of this specification could specify a scope discovery mechanism, similar
to the Query Schema Discovery defined in .