The information exchanged over an HTTP/2.0 session is composed of frames. A frame starts with a 9 bytes-long header that carries several types of information. The HTTP/2.0 frames have a variable length. The `Length` field of the header contains the length of the frame payload in bytes. As this field is encoded as a 24 bits field, an HTTP/2.0 frame cannot be longer than :math:`2^{24} -1` bytes. It should be noted that :rfc:`7540` assumes a maximum size of :math:`2^{14}` bytes, i.e. 16,384 bytes for the HTTP/2.0 frame payload unless a longer maximum frame length has been negotiated at the beginning of the session using the HTTP/2.0 `Settings` frame that will be described later. The next field of the frames header indicates the frame type. The first frame types are `Data` which contains data from web objects and `Headers` containing HTTP/2.0 headers. When a client retrieves a web object from a server, it always receives an HTTP/2.0 `Headers` frame followed by an HTTP/2.0 `Data` frame. The `Headers` frame information contains essentially the same HTTP headers as the ones supported by HTTP/1.1, but those are encoded by leveraging a data compression technique that minimizes the number of bytes required to transmit them.