Is there any effective difference between
Content-Encoding: UTF-8
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
?
Is there any effective difference between
Content-Encoding: UTF-8
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
?
Optional parameter charset
makes sense only for text-based content (Content-Types
like text/plain
, text/html
, and such). Not all messages are text.
Content-Encoding
means that the whole body has been encoded in some way (usually compressed). Typical values for this header are gzip
and deflate
. The recipient of this message should decode (e.g. ungzip) the body to get the original message.
I'm not even sure if UTF-8
makes any sense as a value for the Content-Encoding
.
According to RFC 7231 - Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content, the Content-Encoding
header contains a list of content coding values. Quoting the RFC:
Content coding values indicate an encoding transformation that has been or can be applied to a representation. Content codings are primarily used to allow a representation to be compressed or otherwise usefully transformed without losing the identity of its underlying media type and without loss of information. Frequently, the representation is stored in coded form, transmitted directly, and only decoded by the final recipient.
content-coding = token
All content-coding values are case-insensitive and ought to be registered within the "HTTP Content Coding Registry", as defined in Section 8.4. They are used in the Accept-Encoding (Section 5.3.4) and Content-Encoding (Section 3.1.2.2) header fields.
Section 8.4 says:
The "HTTP Content Coding Registry" defines the namespace for content coding names (Section 4.2 of [RFC7230]). The content coding registry is maintained at http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-parameters.
The registry currently lists:
br Brotli Compressed Data Format [RFC7932]
compress UNIX "compress" data format [RFC7230] Section 4.2.1
deflate "deflate" compressed data ([RFC1951]) [RFC7230] Section 4.2.2
inside the "zlib" data format ([RFC1950])
exi W3C Efficient XML Interchange
gzip GZIP file format [RFC1952] [RFC7230] Section 4.2.3
identity Reserved (synonym for "no encoding" in [RFC7231] Section 5.3.4
Accept-Encoding)
pack200-gzip Network Transfer Format for Java Archives
x-compress Deprecated (alias for compress) [RFC7230] Section 4.2.1
x-gzip Deprecated (alias for gzip) [RFC7230] Section 4.2.3
UTF-8 is a character encoding scheme that can't be used to transform arbitrary binary data losslessly (at least not in a way that would make any sense). It's simply wrong to set Content-Encoding
to UTF-8
. User agents might simply ignore the unknown value or discard the message and report an error. The correct place to set the character encoding scheme is the Content-Type
header.