I've read through RFC 2617 and can't find there or anywhere else what the delimiter is if multiple schemes are supported. For example, suppose both Basic and Digest are supported. I understand that it may appear this way:
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: Basic
WWW-Authenticate: Digest
But I've also read that both can be listed as one line, but no one ever shows an example or describes what delimiter to use. I've seen cautions that commas can be used within a single scheme:
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: Digest param1="foo", param2="bar"
I've also read that if commas are used within a scheme, that other schemes must be placed on separate lines. So I imagine in the above case if we added Basic it would appear like this:
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: Digest param1="foo", param2="bar"
WWW-Authenticate: Basic
That's simple enough. But now suppose you just have one line
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: Scheme stuff, morestuff, more stuff
Which is that? Is that a comma-delimited list of schemes, or is that one scheme, with a few parameters?