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rfc:rfc8792



Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) K. Watsen Request for Comments: 8792 Watsen Networks Category: Informational E. Auerswald ISSN: 2070-1721 Individual Contributor

                                                             A. Farrel
                                                    Old Dog Consulting
                                                                 Q. Wu
                                                   Huawei Technologies
                                                             June 2020
     Handling Long Lines in Content of Internet-Drafts and RFCs

Abstract

 This document defines two strategies for handling long lines in
 width-bounded text content.  One strategy, called the "single
 backslash" strategy, is based on the historical use of a single
 backslash ('\') character to indicate where line-folding has
 occurred, with the continuation occurring with the first character
 that is not a space character (' ') on the next line.  The second
 strategy, called the "double backslash" strategy, extends the first
 strategy by adding a second backslash character to identify where the
 continuation begins and is thereby able to handle cases not supported
 by the first strategy.  Both strategies use a self-describing header
 enabling automated reconstitution of the original content.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are candidates for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8792.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction
 2.  Applicability Statement
 3.  Requirements Language
 4.  Goals
   4.1.  Automated Folding of Long Lines in Text Content
   4.2.  Automated Reconstitution of the Original Text Content
 5.  Limitations
   5.1.  Not Recommended for Graphical Artwork
   5.2.  Doesn't Work as Well as Format-Specific Options
 6.  Two Folding Strategies
   6.1.  Comparison
   6.2.  Recommendation
 7.  The Single Backslash Strategy ('\')
   7.1.  Folded Structure
     7.1.1.  Header
     7.1.2.  Body
   7.2.  Algorithm
     7.2.1.  Folding
     7.2.2.  Unfolding
 8.  The Double Backslash Strategy ('\\')
   8.1.  Folded Structure
     8.1.1.  Header
     8.1.2.  Body
   8.2.  Algorithm
     8.2.1.  Folding
     8.2.2.  Unfolding
 9.  Examples
   9.1.  Example Showing Boundary Conditions
     9.1.1.  Using '\'
     9.1.2.  Using '\\'
   9.2.  Example Showing Multiple Wraps of a Single Line
     9.2.1.  Using '\'
     9.2.2.  Using '\\'
   9.3.  Example Showing "Smart" Folding
     9.3.1.  Using '\'
     9.3.2.  Using '\\'
   9.4.  Example Showing "Forced" Folding
     9.4.1.  Using '\'
     9.4.2.  Using '\\'
 10. Security Considerations
 11. IANA Considerations
 12. References
   12.1.  Normative References
   12.2.  Informative References
 Appendix A.  Bash Shell Script: rfcfold
 Acknowledgements
 Authors' Addresses

1. Introduction

 [RFC7994] sets out the requirements for plain-text RFCs and states
 that each line of an RFC (and hence of an Internet-Draft) must be
 limited to 72 characters followed by the character sequence that
 denotes an end-of-line (EOL).
 Internet-Drafts and RFCs often include example text or code
 fragments.  Many times, the example text or code exceeds the
 72-character line-length limit.  The 'xml2rfc' utility [xml2rfc], at
 the time of this document's publication, does not attempt to wrap the
 content of such inclusions, simply issuing a warning whenever lines
 exceed 69 characters.  Historically, there has been no convention
 recommended by the RFC Editor in place for how to handle long lines
 in such inclusions, other than advising authors to clearly indicate
 what manipulation has occurred.
 This document defines two strategies for handling long lines in
 width-bounded text content.  One strategy, called the "single
 backslash" strategy, is based on the historical use of a single
 backslash ('\') character to indicate where line-folding has
 occurred, with the continuation occurring with the first character
 that is not a space character (' ') on the next line.  The second
 strategy, called the "double backslash" strategy, extends the first
 strategy by adding a second backslash character to identify where the
 continuation begins and is thereby able to handle cases not supported
 by the first strategy.  Both strategies use a self-describing header
 enabling automated reconstitution of the original content.
 The strategies defined in this document work on any text content but
 are primarily intended for a structured sequence of lines, such as
 would be referenced by the <sourcecode> element defined in
 Section 2.48 of [RFC7991], rather than for two-dimensional imagery,
 such as would be referenced by the <artwork> element defined in
 Section 2.5 of [RFC7991].
 Note that text files are represented as lines having their first
 character in column 1, and a line length of N where the last
 character is in the Nth column and is immediately followed by an end-
 of-line character sequence.

2. Applicability Statement

 The formats and algorithms defined in this document may be used in
 any context, whether for IETF documents or in other situations where
 structured folding is desired.
 Within the IETF, this work primarily targets the xml2rfc v3
 <sourcecode> element (Section 2.48 of [RFC7991]) and the xml2rfc v2
 <artwork> element (Section 2.5 of [RFC7749]), which, for lack of a
 better option, is used in xml2rfc v2 for both source code and
 artwork.  This work may also be used for the xml2rfc v3 <artwork>
 element (Section 2.5 of [RFC7991]), but as described in Section 5.1,
 it is generally not recommended.

3. Requirements Language

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.

4. Goals

4.1. Automated Folding of Long Lines in Text Content

 Automated folding of long lines is needed in order to support
 documents that are dynamically compiled to include content with
 potentially unconstrained line lengths.  For instance, the build
 process may wish to include content from other local files or content
 that is dynamically generated by some external process.  Both of
 these cases are discussed next.
 Many documents need to include the content from local files (e.g.,
 XML, JSON, ABNF, ASN.1).  Prior to including a file's content, the
 build process SHOULD first validate these source files using format-
 specific validators.  In order for such tooling to be able to process
 the files, the files must be in their original/natural state, which
 may entail them having some long lines.  Thus, these source files
 need to be folded before inclusion into the XML document, in order to
 satisfy 'xml2rfc' line-length limits.
 Similarly, documents sometimes contain dynamically generated output,
 typically from an external process operating on the same source files
 discussed in the previous paragraph.  For instance, such processes
 may translate the input format to another format, or they may render
 a report on, or a view of, the input file.  In some cases, the
 dynamically generated output may contain lines exceeding the
 'xml2rfc' line-length limits.
 In both cases, folding is required and SHOULD be automated to reduce
 effort and errors resulting from manual processing.

4.2. Automated Reconstitution of the Original Text Content

 Automated reconstitution of the exact original text content is needed
 to support validation of text-based content extracted from documents.
 For instance, YANG modules [RFC7950] are already extracted from
 Internet-Drafts and validated as part of the submission process.
 Additionally, the desire to validate instance examples (i.e., XML/
 JSON documents) contained within Internet-Drafts has been discussed
 [yang-doctors-thread].

5. Limitations

5.1. Not Recommended for Graphical Artwork

 While the solution presented in this document works on any kind of
 text-based content, it is most useful on content that represents
 source code (XML, JSON, etc.) or, more generally, on content that has
 not been laid out in two dimensions (e.g., diagrams).
 Fundamentally, the issue is whether the text content remains readable
 once folded.  Text content that is unpredictable is especially
 susceptible to looking bad when folded; falling into this category
 are most Unified Modeling Language (UML) diagrams, YANG tree
 diagrams, and ASCII art in general.
 It is NOT RECOMMENDED to use the solution presented in this document
 on graphical artwork.

5.2. Doesn't Work as Well as Format-Specific Options

 The solution presented in this document works generically for all
 text-based content, as it only views content as plain text.  However,
 various formats sometimes have built-in mechanisms that are better
 suited to prevent long lines.
 For instance, both the 'pyang' and 'yanglint' utilities [pyang]
 [yanglint] have the command-line option "tree-line-length", which can
 be used to indicate a desired maximum line length when generating
 YANG tree diagrams [RFC8340].
 In another example, some source formats (e.g., YANG [RFC7950]) allow
 any quoted string to be broken up into substrings separated by a
 concatenation character (e.g., '+'), any of which can be on a
 different line.
 It is RECOMMENDED that authors do as much as possible within the
 selected format to avoid long lines.

6. Two Folding Strategies

 This document defines two nearly identical strategies for folding
 text-based content.
 The Single Backslash Strategy ('\'):
    Uses a backslash ('\') character at the end of the line where
    folding occurs, and assumes that the continuation begins at the
    first character that is not a space character (' ') on the
    following line.
 The Double Backslash Strategy ('\\'):
    Uses a backslash ('\') character at the end of the line where
    folding occurs, and assumes that the continuation begins after a
    second backslash ('\') character on the following line.

6.1. Comparison

 The first strategy produces output that is more readable.  However,
 (1) it is significantly more likely to encounter unfoldable input
 (e.g., a long line containing only space characters), and (2) for
 long lines that can be folded, automation implementations may
 encounter scenarios that, without special care, will produce errors.
 The second strategy produces output that is less readable, but it is
 unlikely to encounter unfoldable input, there are no long lines that
 cannot be folded, and no special care is required when folding a long
 line.

6.2. Recommendation

 It is RECOMMENDED that implementations first attempt to fold content
 using the single backslash strategy and, only in the unlikely event
 that it cannot fold the input or the folding logic is unable to cope
 with a contingency occurring on the desired folding column, then fall
 back to the double backslash strategy.

7. The Single Backslash Strategy ('\')

7.1. Folded Structure

 Text content that has been folded as specified by this strategy MUST
 adhere to the following structure.

7.1.1. Header

 The header is two lines long.
 The first line is the following 36-character string; this string MAY
 be surrounded by any number of printable characters.  This first line
 cannot itself be folded.
 NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792
 The second line is an empty line, containing only the end-of-line
 character sequence.  This line provides visual separation for
 readability.

7.1.2. Body

 The character encoding is the same as the encoding described in
 Section 2 of [RFC7994], except that, per [RFC7991], tab characters
 are prohibited.
 Lines that have a backslash ('\') occurring as the last character in
 a line are considered "folded".
 Exceptionally long lines MAY be folded multiple times.

7.2. Algorithm

 This section describes a process for folding and unfolding long lines
 when they are encountered in text content.
 The steps are complete, but implementations MAY achieve the same
 result in other ways.
 When a larger document contains multiple instances of text content
 that may need to be folded or unfolded, another process must
 insert/extract the individual text content instances to/from the
 larger document prior to utilizing the algorithms described in this
 section.  For example, the 'xiax' utility [xiax] does this.

7.2.1. Folding

 Determine the desired maximum line length from input to the line-
 wrapping process, such as from a command-line parameter.  If no value
 is explicitly specified, the value "69" SHOULD be used.
 Ensure that the desired maximum line length is not less than the
 minimum header, which is 36 characters.  If the desired maximum line
 length is less than this minimum, exit (this text-based content
 cannot be folded).
 Scan the text content for horizontal tab characters.  If any
 horizontal tab characters appear, either resolve them to space
 characters or exit, forcing the input provider to convert them to
 space characters themselves first.
 Scan the text content to ensure that at least one line exceeds the
 desired maximum.  If no line exceeds the desired maximum, exit (this
 text content does not need to be folded).
 Scan the text content to ensure that no existing lines already end
 with a backslash ('\') character, as this could lead to an ambiguous
 result.  If such a line is found, and its width is less than the
 desired maximum, then it SHOULD be flagged for "forced" folding
 (folding even though unnecessary).  If the folding implementation
 doesn't support forced foldings, it MUST exit.
 If this text content needs to, and can, be folded, insert the header
 described in Section 7.1.1, ensuring that any additional printable
 characters surrounding the header do not result in a line exceeding
 the desired maximum.
 For each line in the text content, from top to bottom, if the line
 exceeds the desired maximum or requires a forced folding, then fold
 the line by performing the following steps:
 1.  Determine where the fold will occur.  This location MUST be
     before or at the desired maximum column and MUST NOT be chosen
     such that the character immediately after the fold is a space
     (' ') character.  For forced foldings, the location is between
     the '\' and the end-of-line sequence.  If no such location can be
     found, then exit (this text content cannot be folded).
 2.  At the location where the fold is to occur, insert a backslash
     ('\') character followed by the end-of-line character sequence.
 3.  On the following line, insert any number of space (' ')
     characters, provided that the resulting line does not exceed the
     desired maximum.
 The result of the previous operation is that the next line starts
 with an arbitrary number of space (' ') characters, followed by the
 character that was previously occupying the position where the fold
 occurred.
 Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the text content.
 Note that this algorithm naturally addresses the case where the
 remainder of a folded line is still longer than the desired maximum
 and, hence, needs to be folded again, ad infinitum.
 The process described in this section is illustrated by the
 "fold_it_1()" function in Appendix A.

7.2.2. Unfolding

 Scan the beginning of the text content for the header described in
 Section 7.1.1.  If the header is not present, exit (this text content
 does not need to be unfolded).
 Remove the two-line header from the text content.
 For each line in the text content, from top to bottom, if the line
 has a backslash ('\') character immediately followed by the end-of-
 line character sequence, then the line can be unfolded.  Remove the
 backslash ('\') character, the end-of-line character sequence, and
 any leading space (' ') characters, which will bring up the next
 line.  Then continue to scan each line in the text content starting
 with the current line (in case it was multiply folded).
 Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the text content.
 The process described in this section is illustrated by the
 "unfold_it_1()" function in Appendix A.

8. The Double Backslash Strategy ('\\')

8.1. Folded Structure

 Text content that has been folded as specified by this strategy MUST
 adhere to the following structure.

8.1.1. Header

 The header is two lines long.
 The first line is the following 37-character string; this string MAY
 be surrounded by any number of printable characters.  This first line
 cannot itself be folded.
 NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792
 The second line is an empty line, containing only the end-of-line
 character sequence.  This line provides visual separation for
 readability.

8.1.2. Body

 The character encoding is the same as the encoding described in
 Section 2 of [RFC7994], except that, per [RFC7991], tab characters
 are prohibited.
 Lines that have a backslash ('\') occurring as the last character in
 a line immediately followed by the end-of-line character sequence,
 when the subsequent line starts with a backslash ('\') as the first
 character that is not a space character (' '), are considered
 "folded".
 Exceptionally long lines MAY be folded multiple times.

8.2. Algorithm

 This section describes a process for folding and unfolding long lines
 when they are encountered in text content.
 The steps are complete, but implementations MAY achieve the same
 result in other ways.
 When a larger document contains multiple instances of text content
 that may need to be folded or unfolded, another process must
 insert/extract the individual text content instances to/from the
 larger document prior to utilizing the algorithms described in this
 section.  For example, the 'xiax' utility [xiax] does this.

8.2.1. Folding

 Determine the desired maximum line length from input to the line-
 wrapping process, such as from a command-line parameter.  If no value
 is explicitly specified, the value "69" SHOULD be used.
 Ensure that the desired maximum line length is not less than the
 minimum header, which is 37 characters.  If the desired maximum line
 length is less than this minimum, exit (this text-based content
 cannot be folded).
 Scan the text content for horizontal tab characters.  If any
 horizontal tab characters appear, either resolve them to space
 characters or exit, forcing the input provider to convert them to
 space characters themselves first.
 Scan the text content to see if any line exceeds the desired maximum.
 If no line exceeds the desired maximum, exit (this text content does
 not need to be folded).
 Scan the text content to ensure that no existing lines already end
 with a backslash ('\') character while the subsequent line starts
 with a backslash ('\') character as the first character that is not a
 space character (' '), as this could lead to an ambiguous result.  If
 such a line is found and its width is less than the desired maximum,
 then it SHOULD be flagged for forced folding (folding even though
 unnecessary).  If the folding implementation doesn't support forced
 foldings, it MUST exit.
 If this text content needs to, and can, be folded, insert the header
 described in Section 8.1.1, ensuring that any additional printable
 characters surrounding the header do not result in a line exceeding
 the desired maximum.
 For each line in the text content, from top to bottom, if the line
 exceeds the desired maximum or requires a forced folding, then fold
 the line by performing the following steps:
 1.  Determine where the fold will occur.  This location MUST be
     before or at the desired maximum column.  For forced foldings,
     the location is between the '\' and the end-of-line sequence on
     the first line.
 2.  At the location where the fold is to occur, insert a first
     backslash ('\') character followed by the end-of-line character
     sequence.
 3.  On the following line, insert any number of space (' ')
     characters, provided that the resulting line does not exceed the
     desired maximum, followed by a second backslash ('\') character.
 The result of the previous operation is that the next line starts
 with an arbitrary number of space (' ') characters, followed by a
 backslash ('\') character, immediately followed by the character that
 was previously occupying the position where the fold occurred.
 Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the text content.
 Note that this algorithm naturally addresses the case where the
 remainder of a folded line is still longer than the desired maximum
 and, hence, needs to be folded again, ad infinitum.
 The process described in this section is illustrated by the
 "fold_it_2()" function in Appendix A.

8.2.2. Unfolding

 Scan the beginning of the text content for the header described in
 Section 8.1.1.  If the header is not present, exit (this text content
 does not need to be unfolded).
 Remove the two-line header from the text content.
 For each line in the text content, from top to bottom, if the line
 has a backslash ('\') character immediately followed by the end-of-
 line character sequence and if the next line has a backslash ('\')
 character as the first character that is not a space character (' '),
 then the lines can be unfolded.  Remove the first backslash ('\')
 character, the end-of-line character sequence, any leading space
 (' ') characters, and the second backslash ('\') character, which
 will bring up the next line.  Then, continue to scan each line in the
 text content starting with the current line (in case it was multiply
 folded).
 Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the text content.
 The process described in this section is illustrated by the
 "unfold_it_2()" function in Appendix A.

9. Examples

 The following self-documenting examples illustrate folded text-based
 content.
 The source text content cannot be presented here, as it would again
 be folded.  Alas, only the results can be provided.

9.1. Example Showing Boundary Conditions

 This example illustrates boundary conditions.  The input contains
 seven lines, each line one character longer than the previous line.
 Numbers are used for counting purposes.  The default desired maximum
 column value "69" is used.

9.1.1. Using '\'

 ========== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ===========
 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456
 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678
 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 90
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 901
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 9012

9.1.2. Using '\\'

 ========== NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ==========
 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456
 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678
 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 \90
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 \901
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 \9012

9.2. Example Showing Multiple Wraps of a Single Line

 This example illustrates what happens when a very long line needs to
 be folded multiple times.  The input contains one line containing 280
 characters.  Numbers are used for counting purposes.  The default
 desired maximum column value "69" is used.

9.2.1. Using '\'

 ========== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ===========
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 90123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456\
 78901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234\
 56789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012\
 34567890

9.2.2. Using '\\'

 ========== NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ==========
 12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
 \9012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345\
 \6789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012\
 \3456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789\
 \01234567890

9.3. Example Showing "Smart" Folding

 This example illustrates how readability can be improved via "smart"
 folding, whereby folding occurs at format-specific locations and
 format-specific indentations are used.
 The text content was manually folded, since the script in Appendix A
 does not implement smart folding.
 Note that the headers are surrounded by different printable
 characters than those shown in the script-generated examples.

9.3.1. Using '\'

 [NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792]
 <yang-library
     xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-yang-library"
     xmlns:ds="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-datastores">
   <module-set>
     <name>config-modules</name>
     <module>
       <name>ietf-interfaces</name>
       <revision>2018-02-20</revision>
       <namespace>\
         urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-interfaces\
       </namespace>
     </module>
     ...
   </module-set>
   ...
 </yang-library>
 Below is the equivalent of the above, but it was folded using the
 script in Appendix A.
 ========== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ===========
 <yang-library
     xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-yang-library"
     xmlns:ds="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-datastores">
   <module-set>
     <name>config-modules</name>
     <module>
       <name>ietf-interfaces</name>
       <revision>2018-02-20</revision>
       <namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-interfaces</namesp\
 ace>
     </module>
     ...
   </module-set>
   ...
 </yang-library>

9.3.2. Using '\\'

 [NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792]
 <yang-library
     xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-yang-library"
     xmlns:ds="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-datastores">
   <module-set>
     <name>config-modules</name>
     <module>
       <name>ietf-interfaces</name>
       <revision>2018-02-20</revision>
       <namespace>\
         \urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-interfaces\
       \</namespace>
     </module>
     ...
   </module-set>
   ...
 </yang-library>
 Below is the equivalent of the above, but it was folded using the
 script in Appendix A.
 ========== NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ==========
 <yang-library
     xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-yang-library"
     xmlns:ds="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-datastores">
   <module-set>
     <name>config-modules</name>
     <module>
       <name>ietf-interfaces</name>
       <revision>2018-02-20</revision>
       <namespace>urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-interfaces</namesp\
 \ace>
     </module>
     ...
   </module-set>
   ...
 </yang-library>

9.4. Example Showing "Forced" Folding

 This example illustrates how invalid sequences in lines that do not
 have to be folded can be handled via forced folding, whereby the
 folding occurs even though unnecessary.
 The following line exceeds a 68-char max and, thus, demands folding:
 123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
 This line ends with a backslash \
 This line ends with a backslash \
 \ This line begins with a backslash
 The following is an indented 3x3 block of backslashes:
    \\\
    \\\
    \\\
 The samples below were manually folded, since the script in the
 appendix does not implement forced folding.
 Note that the headers are prefixed by a pound ('#') character, rather
 than surrounded by 'equals' ('=') characters as shown in the script-
 generated examples.

9.4.1. Using '\'

 # NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792
 The following line exceeds a 68-char max and, thus, demands folding:
 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567\
 89
 This line ends with a backslash \\
 This line ends with a backslash \\
 \ This line begins with a backslash
 The following is an indented 3x3 block of backslashes:
    \\\\
    \\\\
    \\\

9.4.2. Using '\\'

 # NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792
 The following line exceeds a 68-char max and, thus, demands folding:
 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567\
 \89
 This line ends with a backslash \
 This line ends with a backslash \\
 \
 \ This line begins with a backslash
 The following is an indented 3x3 block of backslashes:
    \\\\
    \
    \\\\
    \
    \\\

10. Security Considerations

 This document has no security considerations.

11. IANA Considerations

 This document has no IANA actions.

12. References

12.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC7991]  Hoffman, P., "The "xml2rfc" Version 3 Vocabulary",
            RFC 7991, DOI 10.17487/RFC7991, December 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7991>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

12.2. Informative References

 [bash]     "GNU Bash Manual",
            <https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual>.
 [pyang]    "pyang", <https://pypi.org/project/pyang/>.
 [RFC7749]  Reschke, J., "The "xml2rfc" Version 2 Vocabulary",
            RFC 7749, DOI 10.17487/RFC7749, February 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7749>.
 [RFC7950]  Bjorklund, M., Ed., "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language",
            RFC 7950, DOI 10.17487/RFC7950, August 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7950>.
 [RFC7994]  Flanagan, H., "Requirements for Plain-Text RFCs",
            RFC 7994, DOI 10.17487/RFC7994, December 2016,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7994>.
 [RFC8340]  Bjorklund, M. and L. Berger, Ed., "YANG Tree Diagrams",
            BCP 215, RFC 8340, DOI 10.17487/RFC8340, March 2018,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8340>.
 [xiax]     "The 'xiax' Python Package",
            <https://pypi.org/project/xiax/>.
 [xml2rfc]  "xml2rfc", <https://pypi.org/project/xml2rfc/>.
 [yang-doctors-thread]
            Watsen, K., "[yang-doctors] automating yang doctor
            reviews", message to the yang-doctors mailing list, 18
            April 2018, <https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/yang-
            doctors/DCfBqgfZPAD7afzeDFlQ1Xm2X3g>.
 [yanglint] "yanglint", commit 1b7d73d, February 2020,
            <https://github.com/CESNET/libyang#yanglint>.

Appendix A. Bash Shell Script: rfcfold

 This non-normative appendix includes a Bash shell script [bash] that
 can both fold and unfold text content using both the single and
 double backslash strategies described in Sections 7 and 8,
 respectively.  This shell script, called 'rfcfold', is maintained at
 <https://github.com/ietf-tools/rfcfold>.
 This script is intended to be applied to a single text content
 instance.  If it is desired to fold or unfold text content instances
 within a larger document (e.g., an Internet-Draft or RFC), then
 another tool must be used to extract the content from the larger
 document before utilizing this script.
 For readability purposes, this script forces the minimum supported
 line length to be eight characters longer than the raw header text
 defined in Sections 7.1.1 and 8.1.1 so as to ensure that the header
 can be wrapped by a space (' ') character and three 'equals' ('=')
 characters on each side of the raw header text.
 When a tab character is detected in the input file, this script exits
 with the following error message:
    Error: infile contains a tab character, which is not allowed.
 This script tests for the availability of GNU awk (gawk), in order to
 test for ASCII-based control characters and non-ASCII characters in
 the input file (see below).  Note that testing revealed flaws in the
 default version of 'awk' on some platforms.  As this script uses
 'gawk' only to issue warning messages, if 'gawk' is not found, this
 script issues the following debug message:
    Debug: no GNU awk; skipping checks for special characters.
 When 'gawk' is available (see above) and ASCII-based control
 characters are detected in the input file, this script issues the
 following warning message:
    Warning: infile contains ASCII control characters (unsupported).
 When 'gawk' is available (see above) and non-ASCII characters are
 detected in the input file, this script issues the following warning
 message:
    Warning: infile contains non-ASCII characters (unsupported).
 This script does not implement the whitespace-avoidance logic
 described in Section 7.2.1.  In such a case, the script will exit
 with the following error message:
    Error: infile has a space character occurring on the folding
    column.  This file cannot be folded using the '\' strategy.
 While this script can unfold input that contains forced foldings, it
 is unable to fold files that would require forced foldings.  Forced
 folding is described in Sections 7.2.1 and 8.2.1.  When being asked
 to fold a file that would require forced folding, the script will
 instead exit with one of the following error messages:
 For '\':
    Error: infile has a line ending with a '\' character.  This file
    cannot be folded using the '\' strategy without there being false
    positives produced in the unfolding (i.e., this script does not
    force-fold such lines, as described in RFC 8792).
 For '\\':
    Error: infile has a line ending with a '\' character followed by a
    '\' character as the first non-space character on the next line.
    This script cannot fold this file using the '\\' strategy without
    there being false positives produced in the unfolding (i.e., this
    script does not force-fold such lines, as described in RFC 8792).
 Shell-level end-of-line backslash ('\') characters have been
 purposely added to the script so as to ensure that the script is
 itself not folded in this document, thus simplifying the ability to
 copy/paste the script for local use.  As should be evident by the
 lack of the mandatory header described in Section 7.1.1, these
 backslashes do not designate a folded line (e.g., as described in
 Section 7).
 <CODE BEGINS> file "rfcfold"
 #!/bin/bash --posix
 # This script may need some adjustments to work on a given system.
 # For instance, the utility 'gsed' may need to be installed.
 # Also, please be advised that 'bash' (not 'sh') must be used.
 # Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust, Kent Watsen, and Erik Auerswald.
 # All rights reserved.
 #
 # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
 # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
 # are met:
 #
 #   * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
 #     notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
 #
 #   * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
 #     copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
 #     disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
 #     provided with the distribution.
 #
 #   * Neither the name of Internet Society, IETF or IETF Trust, nor
 #     the names of specific contributors, may be used to endorse or
 #     promote products derived from this software without specific
 #     prior written permission.
 #
 # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
 # "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
 # LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
 # FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
 # COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
 # INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
 # (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
 # SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
 # HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
 # STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
 # ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
 # ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
 print_usage() {
   printf "\n"
   printf "Folds or unfolds the input text file according to"
   printf " RFC 8792.\n"
   printf "\n"
   printf "Usage: rfcfold [-h] [-d] [-q] [-s <strategy>] [-c <col>]"
   printf " [-r] -i <infile> -o <outfile>\n"
   printf "\n"
   printf "  -s: strategy to use, '1' or '2' (default: try 1,"
   printf " else 2)\n"
   printf "  -c: column to fold on (default: 69)\n"
   printf "  -r: reverses the operation\n"
   printf "  -i: the input filename\n"
   printf "  -o: the output filename\n"
   printf "  -d: show debug messages (unless -q is given)\n"
   printf "  -q: quiet (suppress error and debug messages)\n"
   printf "  -h: show this message\n"
   printf "\n"
   printf "Exit status code: 1 on error, 0 on success, 255 on no-op."
   printf "\n\n"
 }
 # global vars, do not edit
 strategy=0 # auto
 debug=0
 quiet=0
 reversed=0
 infile=""
 outfile=""
 maxcol=69  # default, may be overridden by param
 col_gvn=0  # maxcol overridden?
 hdr_txt_1="NOTE: '\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792"
 hdr_txt_2="NOTE: '\\\\' line wrapping per RFC 8792"
 equal_chars="======================================================="
 space_chars="                                                       "
 temp_dir=""
 prog_name='rfcfold'
 # functions for diagnostic messages
 prog_msg() {
   if [[ "$quiet" -eq 0 ]]; then
     format_string="${prog_name}: $1: %s\n"
     shift
     printf -- "$format_string" "$*" >&2
   fi
 }
 err() {
   prog_msg 'Error' "$@"
 }
 warn() {
   prog_msg 'Warning' "$@"
 }
 dbg() {
   if [[ "$debug" -eq 1 ]]; then
     prog_msg 'Debug' "$@"
   fi
 }
 # determine name of [g]sed binary
 type gsed > /dev/null 2>&1 && SED=gsed || SED=sed
 # warn if a non-GNU sed utility is used
 "$SED" --version < /dev/null 2> /dev/null | grep -q GNU || \
 warn 'not using GNU `sed` (likely cause if an error occurs).'
 cleanup() {
   rm -rf "$temp_dir"
 }
 trap 'cleanup' EXIT
 fold_it_1() {
   # ensure input file doesn't contain the fold-sequence already
   if [[ -n "$("$SED" -n '/\\$/p' "$infile")" ]]; then
     err "infile '$infile' has a line ending with a '\\' character."\
         "This script cannot fold this file using the '\\' strategy"\
         "without there being false positives produced in the"\
         "unfolding."
     return 1
   fi
   # where to fold
   foldcol=$(expr "$maxcol" - 1) # for the inserted '\' char
   # ensure input file doesn't contain whitespace on the fold column
   grep -q "^\(.\{$foldcol\}\)\{1,\} " "$infile"
   if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
     err "infile '$infile' has a space character occurring on the"\
         "folding column.  This file cannot be folded using the"\
         "'\\' strategy."
     return 1
   fi
   # center header text
   length=$(expr ${#hdr_txt_1} + 2)
   left_sp=$(expr \( "$maxcol" - "$length" \) / 2)
   right_sp=$(expr "$maxcol" - "$length" - "$left_sp")
   header=$(printf "%.*s %s %.*s" "$left_sp" "$equal_chars"\
                    "$hdr_txt_1" "$right_sp" "$equal_chars")
   # generate outfile
   echo "$header" > "$outfile"
   echo "" >> "$outfile"
   "$SED" 's/\(.\{'"$foldcol"'\}\)\(..\)/\1\\\n\2/;t M;b;:M;P;D;'\
     < "$infile" >> "$outfile" 2> /dev/null
   if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
     return 1
   fi
   return 0
 }
 fold_it_2() {
   # where to fold
   foldcol=$(expr "$maxcol" - 1) # for the inserted '\' char
   # ensure input file doesn't contain the fold-sequence already
   if [[ -n "$("$SED" -n '/\\$/{N;s/\\\n[ ]*\\/&/p;D}' "$infile")" ]]
   then
     err "infile '$infile' has a line ending with a '\\' character"\
         "followed by a '\\' character as the first non-space"\
         "character on the next line.  This script cannot fold"\
         "this file using the '\\\\' strategy without there being"\
         "false positives produced in the unfolding."
     return 1
   fi
   # center header text
   length=$(expr ${#hdr_txt_2} + 2)
   left_sp=$(expr \( "$maxcol" - "$length" \) / 2)
   right_sp=$(expr "$maxcol" - "$length" - "$left_sp")
   header=$(printf "%.*s %s %.*s" "$left_sp" "$equal_chars"\
                    "$hdr_txt_2" "$right_sp" "$equal_chars")
   # generate outfile
   echo "$header" > "$outfile"
   echo "" >> "$outfile"
   "$SED" 's/\(.\{'"$foldcol"'\}\)\(..\)/\1\\\n\\\2/;t M;b;:M;P;D;'\
     < "$infile" >> "$outfile" 2> /dev/null
   if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
     return 1
   fi
   return 0
 }
 fold_it() {
   # ensure input file doesn't contain a tab
   grep -q $'\t' "$infile"
   if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
     err "infile '$infile' contains a tab character, which is not"\
         "allowed."
     return 1
   fi
   # folding of input containing ASCII control or non-ASCII characters
   # may result in a wrong folding column and is not supported
   if type gawk > /dev/null 2>&1; then
     env LC_ALL=C gawk '/[\000-\014\016-\037\177]/{exit 1}' "$infile"\
     || warn "infile '$infile' contains ASCII control characters"\
             "(unsupported)."
     env LC_ALL=C gawk '/[^\000-\177]/{exit 1}' "$infile"\
     || warn "infile '$infile' contains non-ASCII characters"\
             "(unsupported)."
   else
     dbg "no GNU awk; skipping checks for special characters."
   fi
   # check if file needs folding
   testcol=$(expr "$maxcol" + 1)
   grep -q ".\{$testcol\}" "$infile"
   if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
     dbg "nothing to do; copying infile to outfile."
     cp "$infile" "$outfile"
     return 255
   fi
   if [[ "$strategy" -eq 1 ]]; then
     fold_it_1
     return $?
   fi
   if [[ "$strategy" -eq 2 ]]; then
     fold_it_2
     return $?
   fi
   quiet_sav="$quiet"
   quiet=1
   fold_it_1
   result=$?
   quiet="$quiet_sav"
   if [[ "$result" -ne 0 ]]; then
     dbg "Folding strategy '1' didn't succeed; trying strategy '2'..."
     fold_it_2
     return $?
   fi
   return 0
 }
 unfold_it_1() {
   temp_dir=$(mktemp -d)
   # output all but the first two lines (the header) to wip file
   awk "NR>2" "$infile" > "$temp_dir/wip"
   # unfold wip file
   "$SED" '{H;$!d};x;s/^\n//;s/\\\n *//g' "$temp_dir/wip" > "$outfile"
   return 0
 }
 unfold_it_2() {
   temp_dir=$(mktemp -d)
   # output all but the first two lines (the header) to wip file
   awk "NR>2" "$infile" > "$temp_dir/wip"
   # unfold wip file
   "$SED" '{H;$!d};x;s/^\n//;s/\\\n *\\//g' "$temp_dir/wip"\
     > "$outfile"
   return 0
 }
 unfold_it() {
   # check if file needs unfolding
   line=$(head -n 1 "$infile")
   line2=$("$SED" -n '2p' "$infile")
   result=$(echo "$line" | fgrep "$hdr_txt_1")
   if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
     if [[ -n "$line2" ]]; then
       err "the second line in '$infile' is not empty."
       return 1
     fi
     unfold_it_1
     return $?
   fi
   result=$(echo "$line" | fgrep "$hdr_txt_2")
   if [[ $? -eq 0 ]]; then
     if [[ -n "$line2" ]]; then
       err "the second line in '$infile' is not empty."
       return 1
     fi
     unfold_it_2
     return $?
   fi
   dbg "nothing to do; copying infile to outfile."
   cp "$infile" "$outfile"
   return 255
 }
 process_input() {
   while [[ "$1" != "" ]]; do
     if [[ "$1" == "-h" ]] || [[ "$1" == "--help" ]]; then
       print_usage
       exit 0
     elif [[ "$1" == "-d" ]]; then
       debug=1
     elif [[ "$1" == "-q" ]]; then
       quiet=1
     elif [[ "$1" == "-s" ]]; then
       if [[ "$#" -eq "1" ]]; then
         err "option '-s' needs an argument (use -h for help)."
         exit 1
       fi
       strategy="$2"
       shift
     elif [[ "$1" == "-c" ]]; then
       if [[ "$#" -eq "1" ]]; then
         err "option '-c' needs an argument (use -h for help)."
         exit 1
       fi
       col_gvn=1
       maxcol="$2"
       shift
     elif [[ "$1" == "-r" ]]; then
       reversed=1
     elif [[ "$1" == "-i" ]]; then
       if [[ "$#" -eq "1" ]]; then
         err "option '-i' needs an argument (use -h for help)."
         exit 1
       fi
       infile="$2"
       shift
     elif [[ "$1" == "-o" ]]; then
       if [[ "$#" -eq "1" ]]; then
         err "option '-o' needs an argument (use -h for help)."
         exit 1
       fi
       outfile="$2"
       shift
     else
       warn "ignoring unknown option '$1'."
     fi
     shift
   done
   if [[ -z "$infile" ]]; then
     err "infile parameter missing (use -h for help)."
     exit 1
   fi
   if [[ -z "$outfile" ]]; then
     err "outfile parameter missing (use -h for help)."
     exit 1
   fi
   if [[ ! -f "$infile" ]]; then
     err "specified file '$infile' does not exist."
     exit 1
   fi
   if [[ "$col_gvn" -eq 1 ]] && [[ "$reversed" -eq 1 ]]; then
     warn "'-c' option ignored when unfolding (option '-r')."
   fi
   if [[ "$strategy" -eq 0 ]] || [[ "$strategy" -eq 2 ]]; then
     min_supported=$(expr ${#hdr_txt_2} + 8)
   else
     min_supported=$(expr ${#hdr_txt_1} + 8)
   fi
   if [[ "$maxcol" -lt "$min_supported" ]]; then
     err "the folding column cannot be less than $min_supported."
     exit 1
   fi
   # this is only because the code otherwise runs out of equal_chars
   max_supported=$(expr ${#equal_chars} + 1 + ${#hdr_txt_1} + 1\
        + ${#equal_chars})
   if [[ "$maxcol" -gt "$max_supported" ]]; then
     err "the folding column cannot be more than $max_supported."
     exit 1
   fi
 }
 main() {
   if [[ "$#" -eq "0" ]]; then
      print_usage
      exit 1
   fi
   process_input "$@"
   if [[ "$reversed" -eq 0 ]]; then
     fold_it
     code=$?
   else
     unfold_it
     code=$?
   fi
   exit "$code"
 }
 main "$@"
 <CODE ENDS>

Acknowledgements

 The authors thank the RFC Editor for confirming that there was
 previously no set convention, at the time of this document's
 publication, for handling long lines in source code inclusions, thus
 instigating this work.
 The authors thank the following folks for their various contributions
 while producing this document (sorted by first name): Ben Kaduk,
 Benoit Claise, Gianmarco Bruno, Italo Busi, Joel Jaeggli, Jonathan
 Hansford, Lou Berger, Martin Bjorklund, and Rob Wilton.

Authors' Addresses

 Kent Watsen
 Watsen Networks
 Email: kent+ietf@watsen.net
 Erik Auerswald
 Individual Contributor
 Email: auerswal@unix-ag.uni-kl.de
 Adrian Farrel
 Old Dog Consulting
 Email: adrian@olddog.co.uk
 Qin Wu
 Huawei Technologies
 Email: bill.wu@huawei.com
/home/gen.uk/domains/wiki.gen.uk/public_html/data/pages/rfc/rfc8792.txt · Last modified: 2020/06/29 17:02 by 127.0.0.1

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