Contents:
Homo Deus Yuval Noah Harari. Kingdom of Ash Sarah J.
Little Fires Everywhere Celeste Ng. The Clockmaker's Daughter Kate Morton. Lord of the Fleas Dav Pilkey. A Gentleman in Moscow Amor Towles. Why We Sleep Matthew Walker.
Normal People Sally Rooney. Start With Why Simon Sinek. Your Body Louie Stowell. Nine Perfect Strangers Liane Moriarty.
Thinking, Fast and Slow Daniel Kahneman. The Tattooist of Auschwitz Heather Morris. Nineteen Eighty-four George Orwell. Crazy Rich Asians Kevin Kwan.
Dear Zoo Rod Campbell. Ships from and sold by Amazon. High Performance Browser Networking: Customers who viewed this item also viewed. Page 1 of 1 Start over Page 1 of 1. What every web developer should know about networking and web performance. A Practical Guide for Beginners. Solutions for Improving Scalability and Simplicity. Even Faster Web Sites: Performance Best Practices for Web Developers. Protocols for Secure, Scaleable Web Sites. Sponsored products related to this item What's this? Learning Elastic Stack 6. A beginner's guide to distributed search, analytics, an Leverage the power of Elastic Stack 6.
Xamarin Cross Platform Development Cookbook. Developing Distributed Web Services t The new approach that uses technology to cut you Read a chapter, then do 20 interactive exercises to make the knowledge stick.
Home Contact Us Help Free delivery worldwide. Crazy Rich Asians Kevin Kwan. The Definitive Guide Definitive Guides. How does O'Reilly draw animal on the cover? There was a problem filtering reviews right now.
Instant feedback corrects your mistakes like a live 1-on-1 teacher. Learn the primary skills needed to code JavaScript. Take the first step towards mastering one of today's most lucrative skill sets in web development. Python and Hacking Guides.
Start learning the basics to becoming an awesome hacker today. Computer Hacking Beginners Guide: Review "I think this book is an extremely useful, very comprehensive and clearly-written reference to all aspects of the internals of the Web going well beyond just the bare mechanics of HTTP. O'Reilly Media; 1 edition October 7, Language: Related Video Shorts 0 Upload your video. Create enterprise-grade, scalable Python web Hot Receipes for Computer and Network Security. A well prepared cyber meal that will help remediate your appetite. Learn these hot recipes with the Vulnerability Management Cookbook!
Share your thoughts with other customers. Write a customer review. Read reviews that mention definitive guide well written easy to follow load balancing proxy servers great book brief overview anyone who wants years ago publishing systems web robots easy to read technical books bought this book book really book go into excellent book seems useful book like protocol authors. There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later. Kindle Edition Verified Purchase. Although this book is very in-depth, long, and quite possibly a good cure for insomnia, any decent web app pentester would be remiss without having this great reference book in their nerd library.
It is extensive and is a technical guide, however, the author does do a good job of keeping the information light, entertaining, interesting, and informative as best as anyone could on a topic such as this. In my opinion, this is a Must Have book in your arsenal of references.
This book was purchased as a refresher on the fundamentals of http. To that end, it is excellent, and recommended.
Some areas, however, clearly show their age. Telnet and Pearl, for example, are almost obsolete in web development these days. Http will dominate the web indefinitely, regardless of any fancy additions to the protocol. One person found this helpful. The official specification itself is less than pages - what else is there to say? As it turns out, quite a bit. This book traces the history of HTTP from 0. Part 1 covers the basics of HTTP: Part 2 talks about the components that make HTTP work: Part 4 was my favorite part: This is the stuff that will get you when you're trying to deal with HTTP at a low level, and they cover it in a lot of detail, but manage to keep it interesting.
Part 5, on the other hand, seemed like sort of an afterthought, which was a shame, because there was a lot of potentially great material in there. This is where they cover web publishing as it relates to HTTP. Unfortunately, there's not much information here that you can't get from official specifications - the 30 pages they devote to WebDAV, for example, are just a dry repetition of the mechanics of WebDAV with no discussion of how it's used, or what problems you might run into trying to get it running.
Still, for such a long book, it's amazing that they kept their focus on HTTP so well - there's a lot of good advice and information in there. I'd recommend it to anybody who deals with the web at a technical level, from programmers to website administrators. My work has mostly consisted of going up to only layer 4. That led me to my current position where load balancing is what my team does, but at a much deeper level than my previous experience.
I needed more knowledge on layer 7, now. One of my senior team mates recommended this book based on it's content. I have to say it's been great. The book is actually readable, as opposed to most tech books. I found the information translated exactly to what I needed to know for my job. Some chapters I read just to familiarize myself, although they didn't, at this moment, pertain to my job, but the majority of this book was exactly what I needed. It is a thick book, over pages with addendum. For those new to layer 7 and HTTP, I would suggest starting at the beginning as there are bits and pieces that help fill in the gaps.
Overall this book really fits my reading style and I liked it. This book is for you if you like to-the-point books without repetition. There is a good reference in the back for http headers, http codes, mime types, etc.