- Source: Client-side persistent data
Client-side persistent data or CSPD is a term used in computing for storing data required by web applications to complete internet tasks on the client-side as needed rather than exclusively on the server. As a framework it is one solution to the needs of Occasionally connected computing or OCC.
A major challenge for HTTP as a stateless protocol has been asynchronous tasks. The AJAX pattern using XMLHttpRequest was first introduced by Microsoft in the context of the Outlook e-mail product.
The first CSPD were the 'cookies' introduced by the Netscape Navigator. ActiveX components which have entries in the Windows registry can also be viewed as a form of client-side persistence.
See also
Occasionally connected computing
Curl (programming_language)
AJAX
HTTP
Web storage
External links
CSPD
Safari preview
Netscape Archived 2007-08-05 at the Wayback Machine on persistent client state
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Transgender
- Client-side persistent data
- Cross-site scripting
- HTTP cookie
- Dynamic web page
- CSPD
- Web storage
- AT Protocol
- Diskless node
- HTTP
- Occasionally connected computing