Internet-Draft | HTTP/3 qlog event definitions | March 2024 |
Marx, et al. | Expires 5 September 2024 | [Page] |
This document describes concrete qlog event definitions and their metadata for HTTP/3-related events. These events can then be embedded in the higher level schema defined in [QLOG-MAIN].¶
Note to RFC editor: Please remove this section before publication.¶
Feedback and discussion are welcome at https://github.com/quicwg/qlog. Readers are advised to refer to the "editor's draft" at that URL for an up-to-date version of this document.¶
Concrete examples of integrations of this schema in various programming languages can be found at https://github.com/quiclog/qlog/.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.¶
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."¶
This Internet-Draft will expire on 5 September 2024.¶
Copyright (c) 2024 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
This document describes the values of the qlog name ("category" + "event") and "data" fields and their semantics for the HTTP/3 protocol [HTTP/3] and some of extensions (see [EXTENDED-CONNECT], [H3_PRIORITIZATION] and [H3-DATAGRAM]).¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
The event and data structure definitions in ths document are expressed in the Concise Data Definition Language [CDDL] and its extensions described in [QLOG-MAIN].¶
The following fields from [QLOG-MAIN] are imported and used: name, category, type, data, group_id, protocol_type, importance, RawInfo, and time-related fields.¶
As is the case for [QLOG-MAIN], the qlog schema definitions in this document are intentionally agnostic to serialization formats. The choice of format is an implementation decision.¶
This document describes how HTTP/3 can be expressed in qlog using the schema defined in [QLOG-MAIN]. HTTP/3 events are defined with a category, a name (the concatenation of "category" and "event"), an "importance", an optional "trigger", and "data" fields.¶
Some data fields use complex datastructures. These are represented as enums or re-usable definitions, which are grouped together on the bottom of this document for clarity.¶
When any event from this document is included in a qlog trace, the "protocol_type" qlog array field MUST contain an entry with the value "HTTP3".¶
The events described in this document can be used with or without logging the related QUIC events defined in [QLOG-QUIC]. If used with QUIC events, the QUIC document takes precedence in terms of recommended filenames and trace separation setups.¶
If used without QUIC events, it is recommended that the implementation assign a globally unique identifier to each HTTP/3 connection. This ID can then be used as the value of the qlog "group_id" field, as well as the qlog filename or file identifier, potentially suffixed by the vantagepoint type (For example, abcd1234_server.qlog would contain the server-side trace of the connection with GUID abcd1234).¶
This document defines events in two categories, written as lowercase to follow convention: h3 (Section 4).¶
As described in Section 3.4.2 of [QLOG-MAIN], the qlog "name" field is the concatenation of category and type.¶
Table 1 summarizes the name value of each event type that is defined in this specification.¶
Name value | Importance | Definition |
---|---|---|
h3:parameters_set | Base | Section 4.1 |
h3:parameters_restored | Base | Section 4.2 |
h3:stream_type_set | Base | Section 4.3 |
h3:priority_updated | Base | Section 4.4 |
h3:frame_created | Core | Section 4.5 |
h3:frame_parsed | Core | Section 4.6 |
h3:datagram_created | Base | Section 4.7 |
h3:datagram_parsed | Base | Section 4.8 |
h3:push_resolved | Extra | Section 4.9 |
HTTP/3 events extend the $ProtocolEventData
extension point defined in [QLOG-MAIN].¶
HTTP events are logged when a certain condition happens at the application layer, and there isn't always a one to one mapping between HTTP and QUIC events. The exchange of data between the HTTP and QUIC layer is logged via the "stream_data_moved" and "datagram_data_moved" events in [QLOG-QUIC].¶
The parameters_set
event contains HTTP/3 and QPACK-level settings, mostly
those received from the HTTP/3 SETTINGS frame. It has Base importance level; see
Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
All these parameters are typically set once and never change. However, they
might be set at different times during the connection, therefore a qlog can have
multiple instances of parameters_set
with different fields set.¶
The "owner" field reflects how Settings are exchanged on a connection. Sent settings have the value "local" and received settings have the value "received".¶
As a reminder the CDDL unwrap operator (~), see [RFC8610]), copies the fields from the referenced type (H3Parameters) into the target type directly, extending the target with the unwrapped fields.¶
The parameters_set
event can contain any number of unspecified fields. This
allows for representation of reserved settings (aka GREASE) or ad-hoc support
for extension settings that do not have a related qlog schema definition.¶
When using QUIC 0-RTT, HTTP/3 clients are expected to remember and reuse the
server's SETTINGs from the previous connection. The parameters_restored
event
is used to indicate which HTTP/3 settings were restored and to which values when
utilizing 0-RTT. It has Base importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
The parameters_restored
event can contain any number of unspecified fields. This
allows for representation of reserved settings (aka GREASE) or ad-hoc support
for extension settings that do not have a related qlog schema definition.¶
The stream_type_set
event conveys when a HTTP/3 stream type becomes known; see
Sections 6.1 and 6.2 of [HTTP/3]. It has Base importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
Client bidirectional streams always have a stream_type value of "request". Server bidirectional streams have no defined use, although extensions could change that.¶
Unidirectional streams in either direction begin with with a variable-length integer type. Where the type is not known, the stream_type value of "unknown" type can be used and the value captured in the stream_type_value field; a numerical value without variable-length integer encoding.¶
Emitted when the priority of a request stream or push stream is initialized or updated through mechanisms defined in [RFC9218]. For example, the priority can be updated through signals received from client and/or server (e.g., in HTTP/3 HEADERS or PRIORITY_UPDATE frames) or it can be changed or overridden due to local policies. The event has Base importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
The frame_created
event is emitted when the HTTP/3 framing actually happens.
It has Core importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
This event does not necessarily coincide with HTTP/3 data getting passed to the
QUIC layer. For that, see the stream_data_moved
event in [QLOG-QUIC].¶
The frame_parsed
event is emitted when the HTTP/3 frame is parsed. It has Core
importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
This event is not necessarily the same as when the HTTP/3 data is actually
received on the QUIC layer. For that, see the stream_data_moved
event in
[QLOG-QUIC].¶
HTTP/3 DATA frames can have arbitrarily large lengths to reduce frame header overhead. As such, DATA frames can span multiple QUIC packets. In this case, the frame_parsed event is emitted once for the frame header, and further streamed data is indicated using the stream_data_moved event.¶
The datagram_created
event is emitted when an HTTP/3 Datagram is created (see
[RFC9297]). It has Base importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
This event does not necessarily coincide with the HTTP/3 Datagram getting passed
to the QUIC layer. For that, see the datagram_data_moved
event in
[QLOG-QUIC].¶
The datagram_parsed
event is emitted when the HTTP/3 Datagram is parsed (see
[RFC9297]). It has Base importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
This event is not necessarily the same as when the HTTP/3 Datagram is actually
received on the QUIC layer. For that, see the datagram_data_moved
event in
[QLOG-QUIC].¶
The push_resolved
event is emitted when a pushed resource (Section 4.6 of [HTTP/3]) is successfully claimed (used) or, conversely, abandoned (rejected)
by the application on top of HTTP/3 (e.g., the web browser). This event provides
additional context that can is aid debugging issues related to server push. It
has Extra importance level; see Section 9.2 of [QLOG-MAIN].¶
The following data field definitions can be used in HTTP/3 events.¶
The generic $H3Frame
is defined here as a CDDL extension point (a "socket"
or "plug"). It can be extended to support additional HTTP/3 frame types.¶
The HTTP/3 frame types defined in this document are as follows:¶
The generic $H3Datagram
is defined here as a CDDL extension point (a "socket"
or "plug"). It can be extended to support additional HTTP/3 datagram types. This
document intentionally does not define any specific HTTP/3 Datagram types.¶
This represents an uncompressed, plaintext HTTP Headers frame (e.g., no QPACK compression is applied).¶
For example:¶
The PRIORITY_UPDATE frame is defined in [RFC9218].¶
The frame_type_value field is the numerical value without variable-length integer encoding.¶
The H3ApplicationError defines the general $ApplicationError definition in the qlog QUIC definition, see [QLOG-QUIC].¶
; ensure HTTP errors are properly validate in QUIC events as well ; e.g., QUIC's ConnectionClose Frame $ApplicationError /= H3ApplicationError¶
The security and privacy considerations discussed in [QLOG-MAIN] apply to this document as well.¶
There are no IANA considerations.¶
Much of the initial work by Robin Marx was done at the Hasselt and KU Leuven Universities.¶
Thanks to Jana Iyengar, Brian Trammell, Dmitri Tikhonov, Stephen Petrides, Jari Arkko, Marcus Ihlar, Victor Vasiliev, Mirja Kuehlewind, Jeremy Laine, Kazu Yamamoto, and Christian Huitema for their feedback and suggestions.¶
This section is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
Major changes:¶
Smaller changes:¶