Title :
Dynamic argument embedding: preserving state on the World Wide Web
Author_Institution :
IBM Thomas J. Watson Res. Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Abstract :
At the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center we implemented a way of preserving state during HTTP sessions by modifying hypertext links to encode state information. We call the method dynamic argument embedding, and it was developed in response to problems we encountered implementing the Coyote Virtual Store, a transaction-processing system prototype. Virtual store applications, such as IBM´s NetCommerce and Netscape´s Merchant System, typically need to maintain information such as the contents of shopping baskets while customers are shopping. We wanted our application to be flexible enough to maintain such state information without restricting the sorts of HTML pages a customer might view. We also wanted a system that did not require extensions to the hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) and so could be implemented on any standard Web server and client browser. Finally, we wanted to permit customers to access several accounts at once by using the browser´s cache to concurrently store pages corresponding to multiple invocations of the virtual store application
Keywords :
Internet; cache storage; client-server systems; hypermedia; page description languages; protocols; transaction processing; Coyote Virtual Store; HTTP; IBM TJ Watson Research Center; Internet; Merchant System; NetCommerce; Netscape; Web server; World Wide Web; cache; client browser; dynamic argument embedding; hypertext links; hypertext transfer protocol; page storage; state preservation; transaction-processing system prototype; Access protocols; HTML; Helium; Information filtering; Information filters; Internet; Markup languages; Virtual prototyping; Web server; Web sites;
Journal_Title :
Internet Computing, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/4236.601098