“data-streamdown=” looks like a parameter name or configuration setting rather than a standard protocol term. Without context it’s ambiguous, but common interpretations:
- In web/HTTP contexts: it could be a query-string or header-like parameter used by an application to request or control “stream down” behavior (e.g., instructing a server to send a continuous data stream to the client).
- In media/streaming systems: might indicate enabling or configuring downward streaming (server → client) with options following the equals sign (e.g., data-streamdown=on or data-streamdown=chunked).
- In logging/telemetry: could be a flag to turn on/off streaming telemetry output to a downstream consumer.
- In proprietary configs (IoT, CDN, proxy): likely a vendor-specific switch that controls whether a device pulls a data stream from upstream and forwards (“streams down”) to attached clients.
How to proceed:
- Provide the exact context (file, header, URL, product, or sample line) where you saw it so I can interpret precisely.
- If you want a generic example, here’s a plausible usage pattern:
- data-streamdown=on — enable continuous downstream streaming
- data-streamdown=off — disable it
- data-streamdown=chunked — use chunked transfer encoding
- data-streamdown=rate=500kbps — limit downstream rate
If you give the snippet or the system (web server, media server, device), I’ll explain exact meaning and options.
Leave a Reply