3.3 Date/Time Formats

3.3.1 Full Date

HTTP applications have historically allowed three different formats for the representation of date/time stamps:

Sun, 06 Nov 1994 08:49:37 GMT ; RFC 822, updated by RFC 1123

Sunday, 06-Nov-94 08:49:37 GMT ; RFC 850, obsoleted by RFC 1036

Sun Nov 6 08:49:37 1994 ; ANSI C's asctime() format

The first format is preferred as an Internet standard and represents a fixed-length subset of that defined by RFC 1123 [8] (an update to RFC 822 [9]). The second format is in common use, but is based on the obsolete RFC 850 [12] date format and lacks a four-digit year. HTTP/1.1 clients and servers that parse the date value MUST accept all three formats (for compatibility with HTTP/1.0), though they MUST only generate the RFC 1123 format for representing HTTP-date values in header fields. See Section 19.3 for further information.

Note: Recipients of date values are encouraged to be robust in accepting date values that may have been sent by non-HTTP applications, as is sometimes the case when retrieving or posting messages via proxies/gateways to SMTP or NNTP.

All HTTP date/time stamps MUST be represented in Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), without exception. For the purposes of HTTP, GMT is exactly equal to UTC (Coordinated Universal Time). This is indicated in the first two formats by the inclusion of "GMT" as the three-letter abbreviation for time zone, and MUST be assumed when reading the asctime format. HTTP-date is case sensitive and MUST NOT include additional LWS beyond that specifically included as SP in the grammar.

HTTP-date

= rfc1123-date | rfc850-date | asctime-date

rfc1123-date

= wkday "," SP date1 SP time SP "GMT"

rfc850-date

= wkday "," SP date1 SP time SP "GMT"

asctime-date

= wkday SP date3 SP time SP 4DIGIT

date1

= 2DIGIT SP month SP 4DIGIT ; day month year (e.g., 02 Jun 1982)

date2

=2DIGIT "-" month "-" 2DIGIT ; day-month-year (e.g., 02-Jun-82)

date3

=month SP ( 2DIGIT|( SP 1DIGIT )) ; month day (e.g., Jun 2)

time

=2DIGIT":"2DIGIT":"2DIGIT;00:00:00 - 23:59:59

wkday

="Monday"|"Tuesday"|"Wednesday"|"Thursday" |"Friday" |"Saturday" |"Sunday"

month

= "Jan" | "Feb" | "Mar" | "Apr" | "May" | "Jun" | "Jul" | "Aug" | "Sep" | "Oct" | "Nov" | "Dec"

Note: HTTP requirements for the date/time stamp format apply only to their usage within the protocol stream. Clients and servers are not required to use these formats for user presentation, request logging, etc.

3.3.2 Delta Seconds

Some HTTP header fields allow a time value to be specified as an integer number of seconds, represented in decimal, after the time that the message was received.

delta-seconds = 1*DIGIT