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rfc:rfc1874

Network Working Group E. Levinson Request for Comments: 1874 Accurate Information Systems, Inc. Category: Experimental December 1995

                          SGML Media Types

Status of this Memo

 This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
 community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any
 kind.  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
 Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

 This document proposes new media sub-types of Text/SGML and
 Application/SGML.  These media types can be used in the exchange of
 SGML documents and their entities.  Specific details for the exchange
 or encapsulation of groups of related SGML entities using MIME are
 currently being considered by the mimesgml Working Group <sgml-
 internet@ebt.com>.

1. Introduction

 A need exists for the transfer the elements of documents constructed
 using the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) [ISO-8879].
 While the specific details of such transfers are being considered
 general agreement exists on the need to register basic media types
 for the SGML entities not covered by existing types.
 The Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) is used to encode
 document structure and a rigorous description of it is left to [ISO-
 8879].  The terms used in the present document attempt to be
 consistent with SGML terminology and usage.

2. The SGML Media-Types

 There are two media-types for SGML parsable entities, Text/SGML and
 Application/SGML.  Both have the same optional parameters.  Text/SGML
 provides a fallback to Text/Plain for those without SGML capability.
 Senders should base the choice between text and application media-
 types on the entity's content.  Text is suggested for entities that
 would be meaningful to a human being without SGML processing.
 Application/SGML is recommended for all others.

Levinson Experimental [Page 1] RFC 1874 SGML Media Types December 1995

2.1. Text/SGML

       MIME type name:          Text
       MIME subtype name:       SGML
       Required parameters:     none
       Optional parameters:     charset, SGML-bctf, SGML-boot
       Encoding considerations: may be encoded
       Security considerations: see section 4 below
       Published specification: ISO 8879:1986
       Person and email address to contact for further information:
                                E. Levinson <ELevinson@Accurate.com>
 The Text/SGML media-type can be employed when the contents of the
 SGML entity is intended to be read by a human and is in a readily
 comprehensible form.  That is the content can be easily discerned by
 someone without SGML display software.  Each record in the SGML
 entity, delimited by record start (RS) and record end (RE) codes,
 must correspond to a line in the Text/SGML body part.
 SGML entities that do not meet the above requirements should use the
 Application/SGML media-type.
 See section 2.3 for a description of the parameters.

2.2. Application/SGML

       MIME type name:          Application
       MIME subtype name:       SGML
       Required parameters:     none
       Optional parameters:     SGML-bctf, SGML-boot
       Encoding considerations: may be encoded
       Security considerations: see section 4 below
       Published specification: ISO-8879
       Person and email address to contact for further information:
                                E. Levinson <ELevinson@Accurate.com>
 Use the Application/SGML media-type for SGML text entities that are
 not appropriate for Text/SGML.  When used, each record start (RS) and
 record end (RE) character shall be explicitly represented by the bit
 combination specified in the SGML declaration.
 The parameters are described in the next section.

Levinson Experimental [Page 2] RFC 1874 SGML Media Types December 1995

2.3. SGML Sub-type Parameters

 The parameters for the Text/ and Application/SGML subtypes are
 defined below.
     charset     The charset parameter for Text/SGML is defined in
                 [RFC-1521], the valid values and their meaning are
                 registered by the Internet Assigned Numbers
                 Authority (IANA) [RFC-1590].  The default charset
                 value for all Text content-types is "us-ascii"
                 [RFC-1521].
                 The charset parameter is provided to permit non-
                 SGML capable systems to provide reasonable
                 behavior when Text/SGML defaults to Text/Plain.
                 SGML capable systems will use the SGML-bctf param-
                 eter.
     SGML-bctf   The SGML-bctf (SGML bit combination transformation
                 format) parameter describes the method used to
                 transform the entity's sequence of constant width
                 binary numbers (called "bit combinations" in [ISO
                 8879, 4.24]) into the octet stream contained in
                 the MIME body part.
                 Valid values for SGML-bctf are the BCTF notation
                 names defined in Annex C of [ISO-10744] and are
                 reproduced for convenience in the Appendix.  The
                 default value is "identity", i.e. perform no
                 transformation.
     SGML-boot   The SGML-boot parameter value is the content-ID of
                 a MIME body part (Application/Octet-stream) that
                 satisfies the requirements of the boot attribute
                 in [ISO-10744].  The Appendix contains a summary
                 of those requirements.  The SGML-boot parameter is
                 only applicable if the SGML entity is a document
                 entity.

3. Security Considerations

 SGML entities contain information to be parsed and processed by the
 recipient's SGML system.  Those entities may contain and such systems
 may permit explicit system level commands to be execute while
 processing the data.  To the extent that an SGML system will execute
 arbitrary command strings recipients of SGML entities may be at risk.

Levinson Experimental [Page 3] RFC 1874 SGML Media Types December 1995

 Parsable SGML entities may also contain explicit processing
 instructions for a presentation or composition system; use of such
 instructions present concerns similar to those of
 Application/PostScript.

4. References

     [ISO-8879]
          Information processing -- 8-bit Single-Byte Coded Graphic
          Character Sets -- Part 1: Latin Alphabet No. 1, ISO
          8859-1:1987.
     [ISO-8879]
          ISO 8879:1986, Information processing -- Text and office
          systems -- Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML).
     [ISO-10744]
          ISO/IEC 10744:1992, Information technology --
          Hypermedia/Time-based Structuring Language (HyTime) (as
          modified by First Proposed Technical Corrigendum, ISO/IEC
          JTC1/SC18 N5027)
     [RFC-1521]
          Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose Internet
          Mail Extensions) Part One:  Mechanisms for Specifying and
          Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC
          1521, Bellcore, Innosoft, September 1993.
     [RFC-1590]
          Postel, J., "Media Type Registration Procedure", RFC 1590,
          USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1994.
     [RFC-1642]
          Goldsmith, D., and M. Davis, "UTF-7, A Mail-Safe
          Transformation Format of UNICODE", RFC 1642, Taligent,
          Inc., July 1994.

5. Author's Address

 Ed Levinson
 Accurate Information Systems, Inc.
 2 Industrial Way
 Eatontown, NJ  07724
 EMail: ELevinson@Accurate.com

Levinson Experimental [Page 4] RFC 1874 SGML Media Types December 1995

APPENDIX

ISO-10744 BCTF Values and Boot Attribute

A.1. Bit Combination Transformation Format (BCTF) Values

 The following list of Bit Combination Transformation Format (BCTF)
 values is provided as a convenience.  The authoritative source is
 [ISO-10744].
     identity  Each bit combination is represented by a single
               octet; this BCTF can be used only for entities all
               of whose bit combinations have a value not exceeding
               255.
     fixed-2   Each bit combination is represented by exactly 2
               octets, with the more significant octet first; this
               BCTF can be used only for entities all of whose bit
               combinations have a value not exceeding 65535.
     fixed-3   Each bit combination is represented by exactly 3
               octets, with a more significant octet preceding any
               less significant octets; this BCTF can be used only
               for entities all of whose bit combinations have a
               value not exceeding 16777215.
     fixed-4   Each bit combination is represented by exactly 4
               octets, with a more significant octet preceding any
               less significant octets.
     utf-8     Each bit combination is represented by a variable
               number of octets according to UCS Transformation
               Format 8 defined in Annex P to be added by the first
               proposed drafted amendment (PDAM 1) to ISO/IEC
               10646-1:1993.
     utf-7     Each bit combination is represented by a variable
               number of octets in the range 0 through 127 as
               described in [RFC-1642]; this BCTF can be used only
               for entities all of whose bit combinations have a
               value not exceeding 65535.
     euc-jp    Each bit combination is treated as a pair of octets,
               most significant octet first, encoding a character
               using the
               Extended_UNIX_Code_Fixed_Width_for_Japanese charset,
               and is transformed into the variable length sequence
               of octets that would encode that character using the

Levinson Experimental [Page 5] RFC 1874 SGML Media Types December 1995

               Extended_UNIX_Code_Packed_Format_for_Japanese char-
               set.
     sjis      Each bit combination is treated as a pair of octets,
               most significant octet first, encoding a character
               using the
               Extended_UNIX_Code_Fixed_Width_for_Japanese charset,
               and is transformed into the variable length sequence
               of octets that would encode that character using the
               Shift_JIS charset.

A.2. The Boot Attribute

 The body part specified by the SGML-boot parameter contains a
 sequence of triplets of positive integers separated by white space.
 The triplets correspond to the described character set portion [IS0-
 8879, 13.1.1.2] of the SGML declaration.  SGML-boot provides the
 capability to identify the character set of the document's SGML
 declaration when it uses significant SGML characters [ibid., 4.298]
 in the SGML reference concrete syntax [ibid., 13.4] that have a
 character number [ibid., 4.44] in the document's character set that
 differs from us-ascii.  The default value is "0 128 0", all
 characters are us-ascii.
 Notes: (1) The triplet, <dscn noc bscn> has the following meaning.
 Starting with character number dscn in the us-ascii character set,
 renumber noc characters starting at bscn and incrementing by one.
 Thus, 0 128 0, represents the identity mapping.  (2) The document's
 declaration itself may also redefine the significant SGML characters;
 the boot attribute is intended to bootstrap the SGML system's parse
 of the declaration.

Levinson Experimental [Page 6]

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