mirror of
https://github.com/moparisthebest/xeps
synced 2024-11-21 16:55:07 -05:00
no Council objections to publication
This commit is contained in:
parent
3be586beb3
commit
26ce4b9a2d
@ -39,7 +39,7 @@
|
|||||||
<p>XMPP clients SHOULD also cache whatever information they can, especially the roster (see &xep0237;) and &xep0030; information. Servers SHOULD support &xep0237; and SHOULD include &xep0115; data in stream features to facilitate such caching. (Caching of service discovery data also applies to server-to-server connections.)</p>
|
<p>XMPP clients SHOULD also cache whatever information they can, especially the roster (see &xep0237;) and &xep0030; information. Servers SHOULD support &xep0237; and SHOULD include &xep0115; data in stream features to facilitate such caching. (Caching of service discovery data also applies to server-to-server connections.)</p>
|
||||||
</section1>
|
</section1>
|
||||||
<section1 topic='Pipelining' anchor='pipelining'>
|
<section1 topic='Pipelining' anchor='pipelining'>
|
||||||
<p>One method of speeding the connection process is pipelining of requests, as in the QUICKSTART extension proposed for SMTP &smtpquickstart;. The application of similar principles to XMPP was originally suggested by Tony Finch.</p>
|
<p>One method of speeding the connection process is pipelining of requests, as in &rfc2920; and the QUICKSTART extension proposed for SMTP &smtpquickstart;. The application of similar principles to XMPP was originally suggested by Tony Finch in February 2008 <<link url='http://mail.jabber.org/pipermail/standards/2008-February/017966.html'>http://mail.jabber.org/pipermail/standards/2008-February/017966.html</link>>..</p>
|
||||||
<p>In essence, pipelining lets an initiating entity assume that the receiving entity supports the same (or almost the same) features it did on the previous connection attempt. As a result, the initiating entity can proactively send multiple XMPP-related "commands" in a single TCP packet, thus reducing the number of round trips.</p>
|
<p>In essence, pipelining lets an initiating entity assume that the receiving entity supports the same (or almost the same) features it did on the previous connection attempt. As a result, the initiating entity can proactively send multiple XMPP-related "commands" in a single TCP packet, thus reducing the number of round trips.</p>
|
||||||
<p>If an XMPP server supports pipelining, then it MUST advertise a stream feature of <pipelining xmlns='urn:xmpp:pipelining:0'/>.</p>
|
<p>If an XMPP server supports pipelining, then it MUST advertise a stream feature of <pipelining xmlns='urn:xmpp:pipelining:0'/>.</p>
|
||||||
<p>If both parties support pipelining, they can proceed as follows (the examples use the XML from the client-server stream establishment section of <cite>RFC 6120</cite>, although the same principles apply to server-to-server streams).</p>
|
<p>If both parties support pipelining, they can proceed as follows (the examples use the XML from the client-server stream establishment section of <cite>RFC 6120</cite>, although the same principles apply to server-to-server streams).</p>
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user