I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. The General Area Review Team (Gen-ART) reviews all IETF documents being processed by the IESG for the IETF Chair. Please treat these comments just like any other last call comments. For more information, please see the FAQ at . Document: draft-ietf-httpbis-client-hints-13 Reviewer: Christer Holmberg Review Date: 2020-05-01 IETF LC End Date: 2020-05-08 IESG Telechat date: Not scheduled for a telechat Summary: The document is easy to read, and I understand the general concept of the mechansim. However, I have a number of questions, some related to the usage, which I think need to be clarified, and some more editorial. Q3: Section 2.1. describes sending of Client Hints, based on Accept-CH, and Section 3.1. defines the Accept-CH header field. But, there is no guidance on what a client does BEFORE it receives Accept-CH. I assume it does not include support of any features. Also, there is no guidance on what a client does if it does NOT receive Accept-CH (because the server does not support it). Will it then send another request and include supported features ? What if it is too late, and the server has already made choises? I think some client behavior guidance would be useful. --- Q4: Related to Q3, there is not server procedure on when Accept-CH is sent to the client. --- Q5: Related to Q4, what happens if a server receives hints that it does not understand, or does not support? --- Q6: Section 3.1 says: “It SHOULD be persisted and bound to the origin to enable delivery of Client Hints on subsequent requests to the server's origin.” …and the subsequent text then gives an example. First, what is the time scope of “subsequent requests”? A session? An hour? A day? For how long does the client need to remember the Accept-CH header field value for a given origin server? Second, the procedure does not seem to take into account that certain aspects, e.g., network characteristics, may change between when requests are sent to an origin server. ------- Major issues: MaQ1: Section 2.1. describes sending of Client Hints, based on Accept-CH, and Section 3.1. defines the Accept-CH header field. First, there is no guidance on what a client does BEFORE it receives Accept-CH. I assume it does not include support of any features. Second, there is no guidance on what a client does if it does NOT receive Accept-CH (because the server does not support it). Will it then send another request and include supported features ? What if it is too late, and the server has already made choises? I think some client behavior guidance would be useful. --- MaQ2: Related to Q3, there is not server procedure on when Accept-CH is sent to the client. Also, can an Accept-CH with updated information be sent? --- MaQ3: Related to MaQ2, what happens if a server receives hints that it does not understand, or does not support? --- MaQ4: Section 3.1 says: “It SHOULD be persisted and bound to the origin to enable delivery of Client Hints on subsequent requests to the server's origin.” …and the subsequent text then gives an example. First, what is the time scope of “subsequent requests”? A session? An hour? A day? For how long does the client need to remember the Accept-CH header field value for a given origin server? Second, the procedure does not seem to take into account that certain aspects, e.g., network characteristics, may change between when requests are sent to an origin server. -------- Minor issues: MiQ1: Section 1 described that proactive content negotiation allows servers to silently fingerprint the user agent. But, later in the Section it is described that Client Hints also allow a server the perform fingerprinting, and the Security Considerations also say that there is really no difference. So, does Section 1 need to talk about fingerprinting at all? --- MiQ2: The 4th last paragraph of Section 1 says: “It also defines guidelines for content negotiation mechanisms that use it, colloquially referred to as Client Hints.” The 2nd last paragraph of Section 1 says: “This document defines Client Hints, a framework that enables servers to opt-in to specific proactive content negotiation features, adapting their content accordingly.” The 2nd last pargraph also talks about “usage of infrastructure”, which I don’t really understand. I assume you mean the Client Hints framework? First, I think the text in the 4th last paragraph should be replaced by the text in the 2nd last paragraph. Second, I think the text introducing the framework should come BEFORE the text introducing the Accept-CH header field. Something like: "This document defines Client Hints, a framework that enables servers to opt-in to specific proactive content negotiation features, adapting their content accordingly. This document also defines a new response header, Accept-CH, that allows an origin server to explicitly ask that clients send these headers in requests. Client Hints mitigate performance concerns by assuring that clients will only send the request headers when they're actually going to be used, and privacy concerns of passive fingerprinting by requiring explicit opt-in and disclosure of required headers by the server through the use of the Accept-CH response header. The document does not define specific usages of Client Hints. Such usages Need to be defined in their respective specifications. One example of such usage is the User Agent Client Hints [UA-CH]." ------- Nits/editorial comments: EdQ1: The document uses both “client” and “user agent” terminology. Is there a reason for that, or could one be picked?