Network Working GroupJ. Reschke
Internet-Draftgreenbytes
Obsoletes: 2629 (if approved)September 16, 2015
Intended status: Informational
Expires: March 19, 2016

The 'XML2RFC' version 2 Vocabulary

Abstract

This document defines the 'XML2RFC' version 2 vocabulary; an XML-based language used for writing RFCs and Internet-Drafts.

Version 2 represents the current state of the vocabulary (as implemented by several tools and as used by the RFC Editor) around 2014.

Editorial Note (To be removed by RFC Editor)

Discussion of this draft takes place on the XML2RFC mailing list (xml2rfc@ietf.org), which has its home page at <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/xml2rfc>.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as “work in progress”.

This Internet-Draft will expire on March 19, 2016.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2015 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 (http://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.


1. Introduction

This document describes version 2 ("v2") of the 'XML2RFC' vocabulary; an XML-based language ('Extensible Markup Language', [XML]) used for writing RFCs ([RFC7322]) and Internet-Drafts ([IDGUIDE]).

Version 2 represents the current state of the vocabulary (as implemented by several tools and as used by the RFC Editor) around 2014.

It obsoletes the original version ("v1") [RFC2629], which contained the original language definition, and which was subsequently extended. Many of the changes leading to version 2 have been described in "Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML (revised)" ([V1rev]), but that document has not been updated since 2008.

Processing Instructions (Section 2.6 of [XML]) generally are specific to a given processor, and thus are not considered to be part of the vocabulary. See Section 4.1 of [TCLReadme] for a list of the processing instructions supported by the first implementation of an xml2rfc processor.

Note that the vocabulary contains certain constructs that might not be used when generating the final text; however, they can provide useful data for other uses (such index generation, populating a keyword database, or syntax checks).

1.1. Syntax Notation

The XML vocabulary here is defined in prose, based on the Relax NG schema ([RNC]) contained in Appendix C (specified in Relax NG Compact Notation, "RNC").

Note that the schema can be used for automated validity checks, but certain constraints are only described in prose (example: the conditionally required presence of the "abbrev" attribute).

2. Elements

The sections below describe all elements and their attributes.

Note that attributes not labeled "mandatory" are optional.

Except inside <artwork>, horizontal whitespace and linebreaks are collapsed into a single whitespace, and leading and trailing whitespace are trimmed off.

2.1. <abstract>

Contains the abstract of the document. The abstract ought to be self-contained and thus should not contain references or unexpanded abbreviations. See Section 4.3 of [RFC7322] for more information.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

One or more <t> elements (Section 2.38)

2.2. <address>

Provides address information for the author.

This element appears as a child element of: <author> (Section 2.6).

In this order:

  1. One optional <postal> element (Section 2.27)
  2. One optional <phone> element (Section 2.26)
  3. One optional <facsimile> element (Section 2.16)
  4. One optional <email> element (Section 2.14)
  5. One optional <uri> element (Section 2.42)

2.3. <annotation>

Provides additional prose augmenting a bibliographical reference.

This element appears as a child element of: <reference> (Section 2.30).

In any order:

2.4. <area>

Provides information about the IETF area to which this document relates (currently not used when generating documents).

The value ought to be either the full name or the abbreviation of one of the IETF areas as listed on <https://www.ietf.org/iesg/area.html>. The list at the time that this document is being published is: "Applications and Real-Time" ("art"), "General" ("gen"), "Internet" ("int"), "Operations and Management ("ops"), "Routing" ("rtg"), "Security" ("sec"), "Transport" ("tsv").

Note that the set of IETF areas can change over time; for instance, "Application and Real-Time" ("art") replaced "Applications" ("app") and "Real-time Applications and Infrastructure" ("rai") in 2015.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

Content model: only text content.

2.5. <artwork>

This element allows the inclusion of "artwork" into the document.

<artwork> is the only element in the vocabulary that provides full control of horizontal whitespace and line breaks, and thus is used for a variety of things, such as:

  • diagrams ("line art"),
  • source code,
  • formal languages (such as ABNF or the RNC notation used in this document),
  • message flow diagrams,
  • complex tables, or
  • protocol unit diagrams.

Note that processors differ in the handling of horizontal TAB characters (some expand them, some treat them as single space) and thus these ought to be avoided.

Alternatively, the "src" attribute allows referencing an external graphics file, such as a bitmap or a vector drawing, using a URI ("Uniform Resource Identifier", [RFC3986]). In this case, the textual content acts as fallback for output formats that do not support graphics, and thus ought to contain either a "line art" variant of the graphics, or otherwise prose that describes the included image in sufficient detail. Note that RFCs occasionally are published with enhanced diagrams; a recent example is [RFC5598].

This element appears as a child element of: <figure> (Section 2.17).

Text

2.5.1. 'align' attribute

Controls whether the artwork appears left justified (default), centered, or right justified.

Allowed values:

  • "left" (default)
  • "center"
  • "right"

2.5.2. 'alt' attribute

Alternative text description of the artwork (not just the caption).

2.5.3. 'height' attribute

The suggested height of the graphics included using the "src" attribute.

This attribute is format-dependent and ought to be avoided.

When generating HTML output ([HTML]), current implementations copy the attribute "as is", thus effectively treat it as CSS pixels (see Section 4.3.2 of [CSS]). For other output formats it is usually ignored.

2.5.4. 'name' attribute

A filename suitable for the contents (such as for extraction to a local file).

This attribute generally isn't used for document generation, but it can be helpful for other kinds of tools (such as automated syntax checkers which work by extracting the source code).

2.5.5. 'src' attribute

The URI reference of a graphics file ([RFC3986], Section 4.1).

Note that this can be a "data" URI ([RFC2397]) as well; in which case the graphics file is wholly part of the XML file.

2.5.6. 'type' attribute

Specifies the type of the artwork.

The value either is an Internet Media Type (see [RFC2046]) or a keyword (such as "abnf"). The set of recognized keywords varies across implementations.

How it is used depends on context and application. For instance, a formatter can attempt to syntax-highlight code in certain known languages.

2.5.7. 'width' attribute

The suggested width of the graphics included using the "src" attribute.

This attribute is format-dependent and ought to be avoided.

When generating HTML output ([HTML]), current implementations copy the attribute "as is", thus effectively treat it as CSS pixels (see Section 4.3.2 of [CSS]). For other output formats it is usually ignored.

2.5.8. 'xml:space' attribute

Determines whitespace handling.

"preserve" is both the default value and the only meaningful setting anyway (because that's what the <artwork> element is for).

See also Section 2.10 of [XML].

Allowed values:

  • "default"
  • "preserve" (default)

2.6. <author>

Provides information about a document's author. This is used both for the document itself (at the beginning of the document) and for referenced documents (inside of <reference>).

The <author> elements contained within the document's <front> element are used to fill the boilerplate, and also to generate the "Author's Address" section (see Section 4.12 of [RFC7322]).

Note that an "author" can also be just an organization (by not specifying any of the name attributes, but adding the <organization> child element).

Furthermore, the "role" attribute can be used to mark an author as "editor". This is reflected both on the front page and in bibliographical references. Note that this specification does not define a precise meaning for the term "editor".

See Section "Authors vs. Contributors" of [RFCPOLICY] for more information.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

In this order:

  1. One optional <organization> element (Section 2.25)
  2. One optional <address> element (Section 2.2)

2.6.1. 'fullname' attribute

The full name (used in the automatically generated "Author's Address" section).

2.6.2. 'initials' attribute

An abbreviated variant of the given name(s), to be used in conjunction with the separately specified surname. It usually appears on the front page, in footers, and in references.

Some processors will post-process the value, for instance when it only contains a single letter (in which case they might add a trailing dot). Relying on this kind of post-processing can lead to results varying across formatters and thus ought to be avoided.

2.6.3. 'role' attribute

Specifies the role the author had in creating the document.

Allowed values:

  • "editor"

2.6.4. 'surname' attribute

The author's surname, to be used in conjunction with the separately specified initials. It usually appears on the front page, in footers, and in references.

2.7. <back>

Contains the "back" part of the document: the references and appendices. In <back>, <section> elements indicate appendices.

This element appears as a child element of: <rfc> (Section 2.33).

In this order:

  1. Optional <references> elements (Section 2.31)
  2. Optional <section> elements (Section 2.34)

2.8. <c>

Provides the content of a cell in a table.

This element appears as a child element of: <texttable> (Section 2.39).

In any order:

2.9. <city>

Gives the city name in a postal address.

This element appears as a child element of: <postal> (Section 2.27).

Content model: only text content.

2.10. <code>

Gives the postal region code.

This element appears as a child element of: <postal> (Section 2.27).

Content model: only text content.

2.11. <country>

Gives the country in a postal address.

This element appears as a child element of: <postal> (Section 2.27).

Content model: only text content.

2.12. <cref>

Represents a comment.

Comments can be used in a document while it is work-in-progress. They usually appear either inline and visually highlighted, at the end of the document (depending on file format and settings of the formatter), or not at all (when generating an RFC).

This element appears as a child element of: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <postamble> (Section 2.28), <preamble> (Section 2.29), and <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: only text content.

2.12.1. 'anchor' attribute

Document-wide unique identifier for this comment. The processor will auto-generate an identifier when none is given.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]), additionally constrained to US-ASCII characters ([USASCII]).

2.12.2. 'source' attribute

Holds the "source" of a comment, such as the name or the initials of the person who made the comment.

2.13. <date>

Provides information about the publication date.

Note that this element is used both for the boilerplate of the document being produced, and also inside bibliographic references.

In the boilerplate case, it defines the publication date, which, when producing Internet-Drafts, will be used for computing the expiration date (see Section 8 of [IDGUIDE]). When one or more of "year", "month", or "day" are left out, the processor will attempt to use the current system date if the attributes that are present are consistent with that date.

Note that in this case, month names need to match the full (English) month name ("January", "February", "March", "April", "May, "June", "July", "August", "September", "October", "November", or "December") in order for expiration calculations to work (some implementations might support additional formats, though).

In the case of bibliographic references, the date information can have prose text for the month or year. For example, vague dates (year="ca. 2000"), date ranges (year="2012-2013"), non-specific months (month="Second quarter") and so on, are allowed.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

Content model: this element does not have any contents.

2.13.1. 'day' attribute

In the "boilerplate" case: the day of publication; this is a number. Otherwise: an indication of the publication day, with the format not being restricted.

2.13.2. 'month' attribute

In the "boilerplate" case: the month of publication; this is the English name of the month. Otherwise: an indication of the publication month, with the format not being restricted.

2.13.3. 'year' attribute

In the "boilerplate" case: the year of publication; this is a number (usually four-digit). Otherwise: an indication of the publication year, with the format not being restricted.

2.14. <email>

Provides an email address.

The value is expected to be an email address conforming to the addr-spec definition in Section 2 of [RFC6068] (so does not include the prefix "mailto:").

This element appears as a child element of: <address> (Section 2.2).

Content model: only text content.

2.15. <eref>

Represents an "external" link (as specified in the "target" attribute).

If the element has no text content, the value of the target attribute will be inserted in angle brackets (as described in [RFC3986], Appendix C) and, depending on the capabilities of the output format, hyperlinked.

Otherwise, the text content will be used (and potentially hyperlinked). Depending on output format and formatter, additional text might be inserted (such as a "URI" counter, and a "URIs" section in the back of the document). Avoid this variant when consistent rendering across formats and formatters is desired.

This element appears as a child element of: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <postamble> (Section 2.28), <preamble> (Section 2.29), and <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: only text content.

2.15.1. 'target' attribute (mandatory)

URI of the link target (see Section 3 of [RFC3986]).

2.16. <facsimile>

Represents the phone number of a fax machine.

The value is expected to be the scheme-specific part of a "tel" URI (so does not include the prefix "tel:"), using the "global numbers" syntax. See Section 3 of [RFC3966] for details.

This element appears as a child element of: <address> (Section 2.2).

Content model: only text content.

2.17. <figure>

This element is used to represent a figure, consisting of an optional preamble, the actual figure, an optional postamble, and an optional title.

This element appears as a child element of: <section> (Section 2.34), and <t> (Section 2.38).

In this order:

  1. Optional <iref> elements (Section 2.20)
  2. One optional <preamble> element (Section 2.29)
  3. One <artwork> element (Section 2.5)
  4. One optional <postamble> element (Section 2.28)

2.17.1. 'align' attribute

Used to change the alignment of <preamble> and <postamble>.

Note: does not affect title or <artwork> alignment.

Allowed values:

  • "left" (default)
  • "center"
  • "right"

2.17.2. 'alt' attribute

Duplicates functionality available on <artwork>; avoid it.

2.17.3. 'anchor' attribute

Document-wide unique identifier for this figure.

Furthermore, the presence of this attribute causes the figure to be numbered.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]).

2.17.4. 'height' attribute

Duplicates functionality available on <artwork>; avoid it.

2.17.5. 'src' attribute

Duplicates functionality available on <artwork>; avoid it.

2.17.6. 'suppress-title' attribute

Figures that have an "anchor" attribute will automatically get an autogenerated title (such as "Figure 1"), even if the "title" attribute is absent. Setting this attribute to "true" will prevent this.

Allowed values:

  • "true"
  • "false" (default)

2.17.7. 'title' attribute

The title for the figure; this usually appears on a line after the figure.

2.17.8. 'width' attribute

Duplicates functionality available on <artwork>; avoid it.

2.18. <format>

Provides a link to an additional format variant for a reference.

Note that these additional links are neither used in published RFCs, nor supported by all tools. If the goal is to provide a single URI for a reference, the "target" attribute on <reference> can be used instead.

This element appears as a child element of: <reference> (Section 2.30).

Content model: this element does not have any contents.

2.18.1. 'octets' attribute

Octet length of linked-to document.

2.18.2. 'target' attribute

URI of document.

2.18.3. 'type' attribute (mandatory)

The type of the linked-to document, such as "TXT", "HTML", or "PDF".

2.19. <front>

Represent the "front matter": metadata (such as author information), abstract, and additional notes.

This element appears as a child element of: <reference> (Section 2.30), and <rfc> (Section 2.33).

In this order:

  1. One <title> element (Section 2.40)
  2. One or more <author> elements (Section 2.6)
  3. One <date> element (Section 2.13)
  4. Optional <area> elements (Section 2.4)
  5. Optional <workgroup> elements (Section 2.44)
  6. Optional <keyword> elements (Section 2.21)
  7. One optional <abstract> element (Section 2.1)
  8. Optional <note> elements (Section 2.24)

2.20. <iref>

Provides terms for the document's index.

Index entries can be either be regular entries (when just the "item" attribute is given) or nested entries (by specifying "subitem" as well), grouped under a regular entry.

In this document, for instance, every element definition appears as a regular index entry ("iref element 2.20"). In addition, for each use of that element inside another parent element, a nested entry was added ("iref element 2.20, ... inside annotation 2.3").

Index entries generally refer to the exact place where the <iref> element occurred. An exception is the occurrence as a child element of <section>, in which case the whole section is considered to be relevant for that index entry. In some formats, index entries of this type might be displayed as range.

This element appears as a child element of: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <figure> (Section 2.17), <postamble> (Section 2.28), <preamble> (Section 2.29), <section> (Section 2.34), and <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: this element does not have any contents.

2.20.1. 'item' attribute (mandatory)

The item to include.

2.20.2. 'primary' attribute

Setting this to "true" declares the occurrence as "primary", which might cause it to be highlighted in the index.

Allowed values:

  • "true"
  • "false" (default)

2.20.3. 'subitem' attribute

The subitem to include.

2.21. <keyword>

Specifies a keyword applicable to the document.

Note that each element should only contain a single keyword; for multiple keywords, the element can simply be repeated.

Keywords are used both in the RFC Index and in the metadata of generated documents.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

Content model: only text content.

2.22. <list>

Delineates a text list.

Each list item is represented by a <t> element. The vocabulary currently does not directly support list items consisting of multiple paragraphs; if this is needed, <vspace> (Section 2.43) can be used as a workaround.

This element appears as a child element of: <t> (Section 2.38).

One or more <t> elements (Section 2.38)

2.22.1. 'counter' attribute

This attribute holds a token that serves as an identifier for a counter. The intended use is continuation of lists, where the counter will be incremented for every list item, and there is no way to reset the counter.

Note that this attribute functions only when the style attribute is using the "format..." syntax (Section 2.22.3); otherwise, it is ignored.

2.22.2. 'hangIndent' attribute

For list styles with potentially wide labels, this attribute can override the default indentation level, measured in number of characters.

Note that it only affects style with variable-width labels ("format..." and "hanging", see below), and it may not affect formats in which the list item text appears below the label.

2.22.3. 'style' attribute

This attribute is used to control the display of a list.

The value of this attribute is inherited by any nested lists that do not have this attribute set. It may be set to:

"empty"
For unlabeled list items; it can also be used for indentation purposes (this is the default value when there is an enclosing list where the style is specified).
"hanging"
For lists where the items are labeled with a piece of text.
The label text is specified in the 'hangText' attribute of the <t> element (Section 2.38.2).
"letters"
For ordered lists using letters as labels (lowercase letters followed by a period; after "z", it rolls over to a two-letter format). For nested lists, processors usually flip between uppercase and lowercase.
"numbers"
For ordered lists using numbers as labels.
"symbols"
For unordered (bulleted) lists.
The style of the bullets is chosen automatically be the processor (some implementations allow overriding the default using a processing instruction).

And, finally:

"format ..."
For lists with customized labels, consisting of fixed text and an item counter in various formats.
The value is a free-form text that allows counter values to be inserted using a "percent-letter" format. For instance, "[REQ%d]" generates labels of the form "[REQ1]", where "%d" inserts the item number as decimal number.
The following formats are supported:
%c
lowercase letters (a, b, c, etc.)
%C
uppercase letters (A, B, C, etc.)
%d
decimal numbers (1, 2, 3, etc.)
%i
lowercase Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, etc.)
%I
uppercase Roman numerals (I, II, III, etc.)
%%
represents a percent sign
Other formats are reserved for future use.

2.23. <middle>

Represents the main content of the document.

This element appears as a child element of: <rfc> (Section 2.33).

One or more <section> elements (Section 2.34)

2.24. <note>

Creates an unnumbered section that appears after the abstract.

It is usually used for additional information to reviewers (working group information, mailing list, ...), or for additional publication information such as "IESG Notes".

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

One or more <t> elements (Section 2.38)

2.24.1. 'title' attribute (mandatory)

The title of the note.

2.25. <organization>

Specifies the affiliation of an author.

This information appears in both the "Author's Address" section and on the front page (see [RFC7322], Section 4.1.1 for more information). If the value is long, an abbreviated variant can be specified in the "abbrev" attribute.

This element appears as a child element of: <author> (Section 2.6).

Content model: only text content.

2.25.1. 'abbrev' attribute

Abbreviated variant.

2.26. <phone>

Represents a phone number.

The value is expected to be the scheme-specific part of a "tel" URI (so does not include the prefix "tel:"), using the "global numbers" syntax. See Section 3 of [RFC3966] for details.

This element appears as a child element of: <address> (Section 2.2).

Content model: only text content.

2.27. <postal>

Contains child elements providing postal information.

Note that at least one <street> element needs to be present; however formatters will handle empty values just fine.

This element appears as a child element of: <address> (Section 2.2).

In this order:

  1. One or more <street> elements (Section 2.37)
  2. In any order:

2.28. <postamble>

Gives text that appears at the bottom of a figure or table.

This element appears as a child element of: <figure> (Section 2.17), and <texttable> (Section 2.39).

In any order:

2.29. <preamble>

Gives text that appears at the top of a figure or table.

This element appears as a child element of: <figure> (Section 2.17), and <texttable> (Section 2.39).

In any order:

2.30. <reference>

Represents a bibliographical reference.

This element appears as a child element of: <references> (Section 2.31).

In this order:

  1. One <front> element (Section 2.19)
  2. Optional <seriesInfo> elements (Section 2.35)
  3. Optional <format> elements (Section 2.18)
  4. Optional <annotation> elements (Section 2.3)

2.30.1. 'anchor' attribute (mandatory)

Document-wide unique identifier for this reference. Usually, this will be used both to "label" the reference in the references section, and as an identifier in links to this reference entry.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]), additionally constrained to US-ASCII characters ([USASCII]). Thus, the character repertoire consists of "A-Z", "a-z", "0-9", "_", "-", ".", and ":", where "0-9", ".", and "-" are disallowed as start character.

2.30.2. 'target' attribute

Holds the URI for the reference.

Note that depending on the <seriesInfo> element, a URI might not be needed, nor desirable, as it can be automatically generated (for instance, for RFCs).

2.31. <references>

Contains a set of bibliographical references.

In the early days of the RFC series, there was only one "References" section per RFC. This convention was later changed to group references into two sets, "Normative" and "Informative" as described in Section 4.8.6 of [RFC7322]). This vocabulary supports the split with the "title" attribute.

By default, the order of references is significant. Processors however can be instructed to sort them based on their anchor names.

This element appears as a child element of: <back> (Section 2.7).

One or more <reference> elements (Section 2.30)

2.31.1. 'title' attribute

Provides the title for the References section (defaulting to "References").

In general, the title should be either "Normative References" or "Informative References".

2.32. <region>

Provides the region name in a postal address.

This element appears as a child element of: <postal> (Section 2.27).

Content model: only text content.

2.33. <rfc>

This is the root element of the xml2rfc vocabulary.

Processors distinguish between RFC mode ("number" attribute being present) and Internet-Draft mode ("docName" attribute being present): it is invalid to specify both. Setting neither "number" nor "docName" can be useful for producing other types of document but is out-of-scope for this specification.

In this order:

  1. One <front> element (Section 2.19)
  2. One <middle> element (Section 2.23)
  3. One optional <back> element (Section 2.7)

2.33.1. 'category' attribute

Document category (see Appendix A.1).

Allowed values:

  • "std"
  • "bcp"
  • "info"
  • "exp"
  • "historic"

2.33.2. 'consensus' attribute

Affects the generated boilerplate.

See [RFC5741] for more information.

Allowed values:

  • "no"
  • "yes"

2.33.3. 'docName' attribute

For Internet-Drafts, this specifies the draft name (which appears below the title).

A processor should give an error if both the "docName" and "number" attributes are given in the <rfc> element.

Note that the file extension is not part of the draft, so in general it should end with the current draft number ("-", plus two digits).

Furthermore, it is good practice to disambiguate current editor copies from submitted drafts (for instance, by replacing the draft number with the string "latest").

See Section 7 of [IDGUIDE] for further information.

2.33.4. 'ipr' attribute

Represents the Intellectual Property status of the document. See Appendix A.2 for details.

Allowed values:

  • "full2026"
  • "noDerivativeWorks2026"
  • "none"
  • "full3667"
  • "noModification3667"
  • "noDerivatives3667"
  • "full3978"
  • "noModification3978"
  • "noDerivatives3978"
  • "trust200811"
  • "noModificationTrust200811"
  • "noDerivativesTrust200811"
  • "trust200902"
  • "noModificationTrust200902"
  • "noDerivativesTrust200902"
  • "pre5378Trust200902"

2.33.5. 'iprExtract' attribute

Identifies a single section within the document (by its 'anchor' attribute) for which extraction "as-is" is explicitly allowed (this is only relevant for historic values of the "ipr" attribute).

2.33.6. 'number' attribute

The number of the RFC to be produced.

A processor should give an error if both the "docName" and "number" attributes are given in the <rfc> element.

2.33.7. 'obsoletes' attribute

A comma-separated list of RFC numbers or Internet-Draft names.

Processors ought to parse the attribute value, so that incorrect references can be detected and, depending on output format, hyperlinks can be generated. Also, the value ought to be reformatted to insert whitespace after each comma if not already present.

2.33.8. 'seriesNo' attribute

Number within a document series.

The document series is defined by the "category" attribute; "seriesNo" is only applicable to the values "info" ("FYI" series), "std" ("STD" series), and "bcp" ("BCP" series).

2.33.9. 'submissionType' attribute

The document stream.

See Section 2 of [RFC5741] for details.

Allowed values:

  • "IETF" (default)
  • "IAB"
  • "IRTF"
  • "independent"

2.33.10. 'updates' attribute

A comma-separated list of RFC numbers or Internet-Draft names.

Processors ought to parse the attribute value, so that incorrect references can be detected and, depending on output format, hyperlinks can be generated. Also, the value ought to be reformatted to insert whitespace after each comma if not already present.

2.33.11. 'xml:lang' attribute

The natural language used in the document (defaults to "en").

See Section 2.12 of [XML] for more information.

2.34. <section>

Represents a section (when inside a <middle> element) or an appendix (when inside a <back> element).

Sub-sections are created by nesting <section> elements inside <section> elements.

This element appears as a child element of: <back> (Section 2.7), <middle> (Section 2.23), and <section> (Section 2.34).

In this order:

  1. In any order:

  2. Optional <section> elements (Section 2.34)

2.34.1. 'anchor' attribute

Document-wide unique identifier for this section.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]).

2.34.2. 'title' attribute (mandatory)

The title of the section.

2.34.3. 'toc' attribute

Determines whether the section is included in the Table of Contents.

The processor usually has defaults for whether a Table of Contents will be produced at all, and sections of which maximal depth will be included (frequently: 3). "include" and "exclude" allow overriding the processor's default behavior for the element they are specified on (they do not affect either nested or parent elements).

Allowed values:

  • "include"
  • "exclude"
  • "default" (default)

2.35. <seriesInfo>

Specifies the document series in which this document appears, and also specifies an identifier within that series.

This element appears as a child element of: <reference> (Section 2.30).

Content model: this element does not have any contents.

2.35.1. 'name' attribute (mandatory)

The name of the series.

Some series names might trigger specific processing (such as for auto-generating links, inserting descriptions such as "work in progress", or additional functionality like reference diagnostics). Examples for IETF-related series names are: "BCP", "FYI", "Internet-Draft", "RFC", and "STD".

2.35.2. 'value' attribute (mandatory)

The identifier within the series specified by the "name" attribute.

For BCPs, FYIs, RFCs, and STDs this is the number within the series.

For Internet-Drafts, it is the full draft name (ending with the two-digit version number).

2.36. <spanx>

Wraps a piece of text, indicating special formatting styles.

When generating plain text, processors usually emulate font changes using characters such as "*" and "_".

The following styles are defined:

emph
Simple emphasis (this is the default).
strong
Strong emphasis.
verb
"Verbatim" text (usually displayed using a monospaced font face).

This element appears as a child element of: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <postamble> (Section 2.28), <preamble> (Section 2.29), and <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: only text content.

2.36.1. 'style' attribute

The style to be used (defaults to "emph").

2.36.2. 'xml:space' attribute

Determines whitespace handling.

According to the DTD, the default value is "preserve". Tests however show that it doesn't have any effect on processing; thus this attribute will be removed in future versions of the vocabulary.

See also Section 2.10 of [XML].

Allowed values:

  • "default"
  • "preserve" (default)

2.37. <street>

Provides a street address.

This element appears as a child element of: <postal> (Section 2.27).

Content model: only text content.

2.38. <t>

Contains a paragraph of text.

This element appears as a child element of: <abstract> (Section 2.1), <list> (Section 2.22), <note> (Section 2.24), and <section> (Section 2.34).

In any order:

2.38.1. 'anchor' attribute

Document-wide unique identifier for this paragraph.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]).

2.38.2. 'hangText' attribute

Holds the label ("hanging text") for items in lists using the "hanging" style (see Section 2.22.3).

2.39. <texttable>

Contains a table, consisting of an optional preamble, a header line, rows, an optional postamble, and an optional title.

The number of columns in the table is determined by the number of <ttcol> elements. The number of rows in the table is determined by the number of <c> elements divided by the number of columns. There is no requirement that the number of <c> elements be evenly divisible by the number of columns.

This element appears as a child element of: <section> (Section 2.34).

In this order:

  1. One optional <preamble> element (Section 2.29)
  2. One or more <ttcol> elements (Section 2.41)
  3. Optional <c> elements (Section 2.8)
  4. One optional <postamble> element (Section 2.28)

2.39.1. 'align' attribute

Determines the horizontal alignment of the table.

Allowed values:

  • "left"
  • "center" (default)
  • "right"

2.39.2. 'anchor' attribute

Document-wide unique identifier for this table.

Furthermore, the presence of this attribute causes the table to be numbered.

The value needs to be a valid XML "Name" (Section 2.3 of [XML]).

2.39.3. 'style' attribute

Selects which borders should be drawn, where

  • "all" means borders around all table cells,
  • "full" is like "all" except no horizontal lines between table rows (except below the column titles),
  • "headers" adds just a separator between column titles and rows, and
  • "none" means no borders at all.

Allowed values:

  • "all"
  • "none"
  • "headers"
  • "full" (default)

2.39.4. 'suppress-title' attribute

Tables that have an "anchor" attribute will automatically get an autogenerated title (such as "Table 1"), even if the "title" attribute is absent. Setting this attribute to "true" will prevent this.

Allowed values:

  • "true"
  • "false" (default)

2.39.5. 'title' attribute

The title for the table; this usually appears on a line below the table body.

2.40. <title>

Represents the document title.

When this element appears in the <front> element of the current document, the title might also appear in page headers or footers. If it's long (~40 characters), the "abbrev" attribute is used to specify an abbreviated variant.

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

Content model: only text content.

2.40.1. 'abbrev' attribute

Specifies an abbreviated variant of the document title.

2.41. <ttcol>

Contains a column heading in a table.

This element appears as a child element of: <texttable> (Section 2.39).

Content model: only text content.

2.41.1. 'align' attribute

Determines the horizontal alignment within the table column.

Allowed values:

  • "left" (default)
  • "center"
  • "right"

2.41.2. 'width' attribute

The desired column width (as integer 0..100 followed by "%").

2.42. <uri>

Contains a web address associated with the author.

The contents should be a valid URI (see Section 3 of [RFC3986]).

This element appears as a child element of: <address> (Section 2.2).

Content model: only text content.

2.43. <vspace>

This element can be used to force the inclusion of a single line break or multiple blank lines.

Note that this is a purely presentational element and thus its use ought to be avoided, except within a <list> as discussed in Section 2.22.

This element appears as a child element of: <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: this element does not have any contents.

2.43.1. 'blankLines' attribute

Number of blank lines to be inserted, where "0" indicates a single line break (defaults to "0").

For paged output formats, no additional blank lines should be generated after a page break.

2.44. <workgroup>

This element is used to specify the Working Group (IETF) or Research Group (IRTF) from which the document originates, if any. The recommended format is the official name of the Working Group (with some capitalization).

In Internet-Drafts, this is used in the upper left corner of the boilerplate, replacing the "Network Working Group" string. Formatting software can append the words "Working Group" or "Research Group", depending on the "submissionType" property on the <rfc> element (Section 2.33.9).

This element appears as a child element of: <front> (Section 2.19).

Content model: only text content.

2.45. <xref>

Inserts a cross reference to a different part of a document.

The generated text depends on whether the <xref> is empty (in which case the processor will try to generate a meaningful text fragment), the "format" attribute, and the nature (XML element type) of the referenced document part.

Any element that allows the "anchor" attribute can be referenced; however there are restrictions with respect to the text content being generated. For instance, a <t> can be a reference target, however, because paragraphs are not (visibly) numbered, the author will have to make sure that the combination of prose and contained text content is sufficient for a reader to understand what is being referred to.

This element appears as a child element of: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <postamble> (Section 2.28), <preamble> (Section 2.29), and <t> (Section 2.38).

Content model: only text content.

2.45.1. 'format' attribute

This attribute is used to control the format of the generated reference text.

"counter"
Inserts a counter, such as the number of a section, figure, table, or list item.
For targets that are not inherently numbered, such as references or comments, it uses the anchor name instead.
"default"
Inserts a text fragment that describes the referenced part completely, such as "Section 2", "Table 4", or "[XML]".
"none"
There will be no auto-generated text.
"title"
Inserts a title for the referenced element (usually obtained from the referenced element's "title" attribute; some processors also use the <title> child element or a <reference> target).

Not all combinations of text content, format attribute, and type of referenced part lead to predictable results across different formatters. In case this matters, the following combinations need to be avoided:

  • Non-empty text content with any format other than "none".
  • Empty text content with format "counter" for any target that isn't inherently numbered.
  • Empty text content with format "title" for any target that doesn't have a title.

Allowed values:

  • "counter"
  • "title"
  • "none"
  • "default" (default)

2.45.2. 'pageno' attribute

Unused.

It's unclear what the purpose of this attribute is; processors seem to ignore it and it never was documented.

Allowed values:

  • "true"
  • "false" (default)

2.45.3. 'target' attribute (mandatory)

Identifies the document component being referenced.

The value needs to match the value of the "anchor" attribute of another element in the document.

3. Escaping for Use in XML

Text in XML cannot use the literal characters "<" and "&", as they have special meaning to the XML processor (starting entities, elements, etc.). Usually, these characters will need to be substituted by "&lt;" and "&amp;" (see Section 4.6 of [XML]).

">" does not require escaping, unless it appears in the sequence "]]>" (which indicates the end of a CDATA section, see below).

Escaping the individual characters can be a lot of work (when done manually), and also messes up alignment in artwork. Another approach to escaping is to use CDATA sections ([XML], Section 2.7). Within these, no further escaping is needed, except when the "end-of-CDATA" marker needs to be used (in that case, the CDATA section needs to be closed, and a new one needs to be started).

4. Special Unicode Code Points

Although the current RFC format does not allow non-ASCII Unicode characters ([UNICODE]), some of them can be used to enforce certain behaviors of formatters.

For instance:

non-breaking space (U+00A0)
Represents a space character where no line break should happen. This is frequently used in titles (by excluding certain space characters from the line breaking algorithm, the processor will use the remaining whitespace occurrences for line breaks).
non-breaking hyphen (U+2011)
Similarly, this represents a hyphen character where nevertheless no line breaking ought to occur.
word joiner (U+2060)
Also called "zero width non-breaking space" — can be used to disallow line breaking between two non-whitespace characters.

Note that in order to use these characters by name, they need to be declared either in the Document Type Definition (DTD, [XML], Section 2.9), or in the "internal subset" ([XML], Section 2.8), like this:

<?xml version="1.0"?>

<!DOCTYPE rfc [

  <!-- declare nbsp and friends -->
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#xa0;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy    "&#x2011;">
  <!ENTITY wj      "&#x2060;">
]>

5. Including Files

This version of the vocabulary does not support an inclusion mechanism on its own — thus, a document always needs to be self-contained.

That being said, some processors do support file inclusion using processing instructions (Section 2.6 of [XML] and Section 4.1.2 of [TCLReadme]).

Furthermore, XML itself allows inclusion of external content using the "internal subset" (Section 2.8 of [XML]). Unfortunately, this requires declaring the external data in the DTD upfront.

For instance:

<?xml version="1.0"?>

<!DOCTYPE rfc [

  <!-- allow later RFC2616 reference using "&rfc2616;" -->
  <!-- the data will be fetched from xml.resource.org -->
  <!ENTITY rfc2616 PUBLIC
  "http://xml.resource.org/public/rfc/bibxml/reference.RFC.2616.xml">
]>

...declares the entity "rfc2616", which then can be used in the "references" section:

  <references>
    &rfc2616;
  </references>

Note that this mechanism only works for well-formed XML fragments; thus any plain text that would need to be escaped in XML can't be included as-is.

6. Internationalization Considerations

This format is based on [XML], thus does not have any issues representing arbitrary Unicode [UNICODE] characters in text content.

However, the current canonical RFC format is restricted to US-ASCII characters ([USASCII] and Section 3 of [RFC2223]). It is possible that this rule will be relaxed in future revisions of the RFC format (for instance, to allow non-ASCII characters in examples and contact information). In that case, it is expected that the vocabulary will be extended accordingly.

7. Security Considerations

The "name" attribute on the <artwork> element (Section 2.5.4) can be used to derive a filename for saving to a local file system. Trusting this kind of information without pre-processing is a known security risk; see Section 4.3 of [RFC6266] for more information.

Furthermore, the nature of XML, plus vocabulary features such as typed artwork, make it attractive to extract content from documents for further processing, such for the purpose of checking syntax, or computing/verifying examples. In the latter case, care needs to be taken that only trusted content is processed.

All security considerations related to XML processing are relevant as well (see Section 7 of [RFC3470]).

8. IANA Considerations

8.1. Internet Media Type Registration

IANA maintains the registry of Internet media types [BCP13] at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types>.

This document serves as the specification for the Internet media type "application/rfc+xml". The following is to be registered with IANA.

Type name:
application
Subtype name:
rfc+xml
Required parameters:
There are no required parameters.
Optional parameters:
"charset": This parameter has identical semantics as the charset parameter of the "application/xml" media type specified in Section 9.1 of [RFC7303].
Encoding considerations:
Identical to those of "application/xml" as described in Section 9.1 of [RFC7303].
Security considerations:
As defined in Section 7. In addition, as this media type uses the "+xml" convention, it inherits the security considerations described in Section 10 of [RFC7303].
Interoperability considerations:
Some aspects of this vocabulary currently cannot be used interoperably; among the reasons for this are that they weren't precisely defined in the first place, that they have been added in an ad-hoc fashion later on, or that they are specific to certain output formats. This specification attempts to identify these cases in the description of the individual elements/attributes.
Published specification:
This specification.
Applications that use this media type:
Applications that transform xml2rfc to output formats such as plain text or HTML, plus additional analysis tools.
Fragment identifier considerations:
The "anchor" attribute is used for assigning document-wide unique identifiers that can be used as shorthand pointers, as described in Section 2.8 of [XPOINTER].
Additional information:
Deprecated alias names for this type:
None.
Magic number(s):
As specified for "application/xml" in Section 9.1 of [RFC7303].
File extension(s):
.xml or .rfcxml when disambiguation from other XML files is needed
Macintosh file type code(s):
TEXT
Person & email address to contact for further information:
See Authors Section.
Intended usage:
COMMON
Restrictions on usage:
None
Author:
See Authors Section.
Change controller:
RFC Series Editor (rse@rfc-editor.org)

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC2046]
Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, “Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types”, RFC 2046, DOI 10.17487/RFC2046, November 1996, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2046>.
[RFC3966]
Schulzrinne, H., “The tel URI for Telephone Numbers”, RFC 3966, DOI 10.17487/RFC3966, December 2004, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3966>.
[RFC6068]
Duerst, M., Masinter, L., and J. Zawinski, “The 'mailto' URI Scheme”, RFC 6068, DOI 10.17487/RFC6068, October 2010, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6068>.
[RFC7303]
Thompson, H. and C. Lilley, “XML Media Types”, RFC 7303, DOI 10.17487/RFC7303, July 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7303>.
[XML]
Maler, E., Yergeau, F., Paoli, J., Sperberg-McQueen, M., and T. Bray, “Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)”, W3C Recommendation REC-xml-20081126, November 2008, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126/>.
Latest version available at <http://www.w3.org/TR/xml>.

9.2. Informative References

[BCP13]
Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, “Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures”, BCP 13, RFC 6838, January 2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp13>.
[CSS]
Bos, B., Celic, T., Hickson, I., and H. Lie, “Cascading Style Sheets Level 2 Revision 1 (CSS 2.1) Specification”, W3C Recommendation REC-CSS2-20110607, June 2011, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2011/REC-CSS2-20110607/>.
Latest version available at <http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2>.
[HTML]
Hickson, I., Berjon, R., Faulkner, S., Leithead, T., Doyle Navara, E., O'Connor, E., and S. Pfeiffer, “HTML5”, W3C Recommendation REC-html5-20141028, October 2014, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2014/REC-html5-20141028/>.
Latest version available at <http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/>.
[IDGUIDE]
Housley, R., “Guidelines to Authors of Internet-Drafts”, December 2010, <http://www.ietf.org/id-info/guidelines.html>.
[JING]
Thai Open Source Software Center Ltd, “Jing - A RELAX NG validator in Java”, 2008, <http://www.thaiopensource.com/relaxng/jing.html>.
Downloads: <https://code.google.com/p/jing-trang/downloads/list>.
[RFC2026]
Bradner, S., “The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3”, BCP 9, RFC 2026, DOI 10.17487/RFC2026, October 1996, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2026>.
[RFC2223]
Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, “Instructions to RFC Authors”, RFC 2223, DOI 10.17487/RFC2223, October 1997, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2223>.
[RFC2397]
Masinter, L., “The "data" URL scheme”, RFC 2397, DOI 10.17487/RFC2397, August 1998, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2397>.
[RFC2629]
Rose, M., “Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML”, RFC 2629, DOI 10.17487/RFC2629, June 1999, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2629>.
[RFC3470]
Hollenbeck, S., Rose, M., and L. Masinter, “Guidelines for the Use of Extensible Markup Language (XML) within IETF Protocols”, BCP 70, RFC 3470, DOI 10.17487/RFC3470, January 2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3470>.
[RFC3667]
Bradner, S., “IETF Rights in Contributions”, RFC 3667, DOI 10.17487/RFC3667, February 2004, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3667>.
[RFC3978]
Bradner, S., “IETF Rights in Contributions”, RFC 3978, DOI 10.17487/RFC3978, March 2005, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3978>.
[RFC3986]
Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, “Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax”, STD 66, RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3986>.
[RFC5598]
Crocker, D., “Internet Mail Architecture”, RFC 5598, DOI 10.17487/RFC5598, July 2009, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5598>.
PDF version: <http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc5598.pdf>
[RFC5741]
Daigle, L. and O. Kolkman, “RFC Streams, Headers, and Boilerplates”, RFC 5741, DOI 10.17487/RFC5741, December 2009, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5741>.
[RFC6266]
Reschke, J., “Use of the Content-Disposition Header Field in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)”, RFC 6266, DOI 10.17487/RFC6266, June 2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6266>.
[RFC7322]
Heather, H. and S. Ginoza, “RFC Style Guide”, RFC 7322, DOI 10.17487/RFC7322, September 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7322>.
[RFCPOLICY]
RFC Editor, “RFC Editorial Guidelines and Procedures”, February 2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/policy.html>.
[RNC]
Clark, J., “RELAX NG Compact Syntax”, OASIS, November 2002, <http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/relax-ng/compact-20021121.html>.
[TCLReadme]
Rose, M., Fenner, B., and C. Levert, “xml2rfc v1.35pre1”, October 2009, <http://svn.tools.ietf.org/svn/tools/xml2rfc/archive/README.html>.
[TLP2.0]
IETF Trust, “Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents”, February 2009, <http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/IETF-TLP-2.htm>.
[TLP3.0]
IETF Trust, “Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents”, September 2009, <http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/IETF-TLP-3.htm>.
[TLP4.0]
IETF Trust, “Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents”, December 2009, <http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/IETF-TLP-4.htm>.
[UNICODE]
The Unicode Consortium, “The Unicode Standard, Version 6.3.0”, September 2013, <http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.3.0/>.
[USASCII]
American National Standards Institute, “Coded Character Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code for Information Interchange”, ANSI X3.4, 1986.
[V1rev]
Rose, M., “Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML (revised)”, February 2008, <http://svn.tools.ietf.org/svn/tools/xml2rfc/archive/draft-mrose-writing-rfcs.html>.
[XPOINTER]
Grosso, P., Maler, E., Marsh, J., and N. Walsh, “XPointer Framework”, W3C Recommendation REC-xptr-framework-20030325, March 2003, <http://www.w3.org/TR/2003/REC-xptr-framework-20030325/>.
Latest version available at <http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr-framework/>.

Appendix A. Front Page ('Boilerplate') Generation

A.1. The /rfc/@category Attribute

For RFCs, the category attribute (Section 2.33.1) determines the "maturity level" (see Section 4 of [RFC2026]). The allowed values are "std" for "Standards Track", "bcp" for "BCP", "info" for "Informational", "exp" for "Experimental", and "historic" for "Historic".

For Internet-Drafts, the category attribute is not needed, but will appear on the front page as "Intended Status". Supplying this information can be useful to reviewers.

A.2. The /rfc/@ipr Attribute

This attribute value can take a long list of values, each of which describes an IPR policy for the document (Section 2.33.4). The values are not the result of a grand design, but remain simply for historic reasons. Of these values, only a few are currently in use; all others are supported by various tools for backwards compatibility with old source files.

Disclaimer: THIS ONLY PROVIDES IMPLEMENTATION INFORMATION. IF YOU NEED LEGAL ADVICE, PLEASE CONTACT A LAWYER. For further information, refer to <http://trustee.ietf.org/docs/IETF-Copyright-FAQ.pdf>.

For the current "Status of This Memo" text, the submissionType attribute (Section 2.33.9) determines whether a statement about "Code Components" is inserted (which is the case for the value "IETF", which is the default). Other values, such as "independent", suppress this part of the text.

A.2.1. Current Values: '*trust200902'

The name for these values refers to the "IETF TRUST Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents", sometimes simply called the "TLP", which went into effect on February 15, 2009 ([TLP2.0]). Updates to this document were published on September 12, 2009 ([TLP3.0]) and on December 28, 2009 ([TLP4.0]), modifying the license for code components (see <http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/> for further information). The actual text is located in Section 6 ("Text To Be Included in IETF Documents") of these documents.

Formatters will automatically produce the "correct" text depending on the document's date information (see above):

TLPstarting with publication date
[TLP3.0]2009-11-01
[TLP4.0]2010-04-01
A.2.1.1. trust200902

This value should be used unless one of the more specific '*trust200902' values is a better fit. It produces the text in Sections 6.a and 6.b of the TLP.

A.2.1.2. noModificationTrust200902

This produces additional text from Section 6.c.i of the TLP:

This document may not be modified, and derivative works of it may not be created, except to format it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other than English.

A.2.1.3. noDerivativesTrust200902

This produces the additional text from Section 6.c.ii of the TLP:

This document may not be modified, and derivative works of it may not be created, and it may not be published except as an Internet-Draft.

A.2.1.4. pre5378Trust200902

This produces the additional text from Section 6.c.iii of the TLP, frequently called the "pre-5378 escape clause":

This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF Contributions published or made publicly available before November 10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process. Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other than English.

See Section 4 of <http://trustee.ietf.org/docs/IETF-Copyright-FAQ.pdf> for further information about when to use this value.

A.2.2. Historic Values

A.2.2.1. Historic Values: '*trust200811'

The attribute values "trust200811", "noModificationTrust200811" and "noDerivativesTrust200811" are similar to their "trust200902" counterparts, except that they use text specified in <http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/archive/IETF-Trust-License-Policy_11-10-08.pdf>.

A.2.2.2. Historic Values: '*3978'

The attribute values "full3978", "noModification3978" and "noDerivatives3978" are similar to their counterparts above, except that they use text specified in Section 5 of [RFC3978].

A.2.2.3. Historic Values: '*3667'

The attribute values "full3667", "noModification3667" and "noDerivatives3667" are similar to their counterparts above, except that they use text specified in Section 5 of [RFC3667].

A.2.2.4. Historic Values: '*2026'

The attribute values "full2026" and "noDerivativeWorks2026" are similar to their counterparts above, except that they use text specified in Section 10 of [RFC2026].

The special value "none" was also used back then, and denied the IETF any rights beyond publication as Internet-Draft.

A.3. The /rfc/@submissionType Attribute

The RFC Editor publishes documents from different "document streams", of which the "IETF stream" is the most prominent one. Other streams are the "independent stream" (used for things such as administrative information or April 1st RFCs), the "IAB stream" (Internet Architecture Board) and the "IRTF stream" (Internet Research Task Force).

The values for the attribute are "IETF" (the default value), "independent", "IAB", and "IRTF".

Historically, this attribute did not affect the final appearance of RFCs, except for subtle differences in Copyright notices. Nowadays (as of [RFC5741]), the stream name appears in the first line of the front page, and it also affects the text in the "Status Of This Memo" section.

For current documents, setting submissionType attribute will have the following effect:

  • For RFCs, the stream name appears in the upper left corner of the first page (in Internet Drafts, this is either "Network Working Group", or the value of the <workgroup> element).
  • For RFCs, if affects the whole "Status Of This Memo" section (see Section 3.2.2 of [RFC5741]).
  • For all RFCs and Internet Drafts, it determines whether the "Copyright Notice" mentions the Copyright on Code Components (see TLP, Section "Text To Be Included in IETF Documents").

A.4. The /rfc/@consensus Attribute

For some of the publication streams (see Appendix A.3), the "Status Of This Memo" section depends on whether there was a consensus to publish (again, see Section 3.2.2 of [RFC5741]).

The consensus attribute ("yes"/"no", defaulting to "yes") can be used to supply this information. The effect for the various streams is:

  • "independent" and "IAB": none.
  • "IETF": mention that there was an IETF consensus.
  • "IRTF": mention that there was a research group consensus (where the name of the research group is extracted from the <workgroup> element).

Appendix B. Changes from RFC 2629 ('v1')

B.1. RNC Schema Differences

B.2. Removed Elements

The <appendix> element has been removed; to generate an appendix, place a <section> inside <back>.

B.3. Changed Defaults

Many attributes have lost their "default" value; this is to avoid having document semantics differ based on whether a DTD was specified and evaluated. Processors will handle absent values the way the default value was specified before.

B.4. Changed Elements

<artwork>: Has a set of new attributes: "name", "type", "src", "align", "alt", "width", and "height". (Section 2.5)

<author>: The <organization> element is now optional. The "role" attribute was added. (Section 2.6)

<country>: The requirement to use ISO 3166 codes was removed. (Section 2.11)

<date>: All attributes are now optional. (Section 2.13)

<figure>: Has a set of new attributes: "suppress-title", "src", "align", "alt", "width", and "height". (Section 2.17)

<iref>: Has a new "primary" attribute. (Section 2.20)

<list>: The "style" attribute isn't restricted to a set of enumerated values anymore. The "hangIndent" and "counter" attributes have been added. (Section 2.22)

<reference>: <annotation> allows adding prose to a reference. The "anchor" attribute has been made mandatory. (Section 2.30)

<references>: Can now appear multiple times, and carry a "title" attribute (so that normative and informative references can be split). (Section 2.31)

<rfc>: The "ipr" attribute has gained additional values. The attributes "consensus", "iprExtract", "submissionType", and "xml:lang" have been added. (Section 2.33)

<section>: The new "toc" attribute controls whether it will appear in the Table Of Contents. <iref> can now appear as direct child element. (Section 2.34)

<t>: The "anchor" attribute can now be used as well, however there are restrictions on how they can be referred to. (Section 2.38)

B.5. New Elements

The following elements have been added: <annotation> (Section 2.3), <c> (Section 2.8), <cref> (Section 2.12), <format> (Section 2.18), <spanx> (Section 2.36), <texttable> (Section 2.39), <ttcol> (Section 2.41).

Appendix C. Relax NG Schema

namespace a = "http://relaxng.org/ns/compatibility/annotations/1.0"


rfc =
  element rfc {
    attribute number { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute obsoletes { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute updates { text }?,
    attribute category {
      "std" | "bcp" | "info" | "exp" | "historic"
    }?,
    attribute consensus { "no" | "yes" }?,
    attribute seriesNo { text }?,
    attribute ipr {
      "full2026"
      | "noDerivativeWorks2026"
      | "none"
      | "full3667"
      | "noModification3667"
      | "noDerivatives3667"
      | "full3978"
      | "noModification3978"
      | "noDerivatives3978"
      | "trust200811"
      | "noModificationTrust200811"
      | "noDerivativesTrust200811"
      | "trust200902"
      | "noModificationTrust200902"
      | "noDerivativesTrust200902"
      | "pre5378Trust200902"
    }?,
    attribute iprExtract { xsd:IDREF }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "IETF" ]
    attribute submissionType {
      "IETF" | "IAB" | "IRTF" | "independent"
    }?,
    attribute docName { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "en" ] attribute xml:lang { text }?,
    front,
    middle,
    back?
  }

front =
  element front {
    title,
    author+,
    date,
    area*,
    workgroup*,
    keyword*,
    abstract?,
    note*
  }

title =
  element title {
    attribute abbrev { text }?,
    text
  }

author =
  element author {
    attribute initials { text }?,
    attribute surname { text }?,
    attribute fullname { text }?,
    attribute role { "editor" }?,
    organization?,
    address?
  }

organization =
  element organization {
    attribute abbrev { text }?,
    text
  }

address =
  element address { postal?, phone?, facsimile?, email?, uri? }

postal =
  element postal { street+, (city | region | code | country)* }

street = element street { text }

city = element city { text }

region = element region { text }

code = element code { text }

country = element country { text }

phone = element phone { text }

facsimile = element facsimile { text }

email = element email { text }

uri = element uri { text }

date =
  element date {
    attribute day { text }?,
    attribute month { text }?,
    attribute year { text }?,
    empty
  }

area = element area { text }

workgroup = element workgroup { text }

keyword = element keyword { text }

abstract = element abstract { t+ }

note =
  element note {
    attribute title { text },
    t+
  }

middle = element middle { section+ }

section =
  element section {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
    attribute title { text },
    [ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
    attribute toc { "include" | "exclude" | "default" }?,
    (t | figure | texttable | iref)*,
    section*
  }

t =
  element t {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
    attribute hangText { text }?,
    (text
     | \list
     | figure
     | xref
     | eref
     | iref
     | cref
     | spanx
     | vspace)*
  }

\list =
  element list {
    attribute style { text }?,
    attribute hangIndent { text }?,
    attribute counter { text }?,
    t+
  }

xref =
  element xref {
    attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
    [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
    attribute pageno { "true" | "false" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
    attribute format { "counter" | "title" | "none" | "default" }?,
    text
  }

eref =
  element eref {
    attribute target { text },
    text
  }

iref =
  element iref {
    attribute item { text },
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute subitem { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
    attribute primary { "true" | "false" }?,
    empty
  }

cref =
  element cref {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
    attribute source { text }?,
    text
  }

spanx =
  element spanx {
    [ a:defaultValue = "preserve" ]
    attribute xml:space { "default" | "preserve" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "emph" ] attribute style { text }?,
    text
  }

vspace =
  element vspace {
    [ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute blankLines { text }?,
    empty
  }

figure =
  element figure {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute title { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
    attribute suppress-title { "true" | "false" }?,
    attribute src { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
    attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute alt { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute width { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute height { text }?,
    iref*,
    preamble?,
    artwork,
    postamble?
  }

preamble =
  element preamble { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }

artwork =
  element artwork {
    [ a:defaultValue = "preserve" ]
    attribute xml:space { "default" | "preserve" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute name { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute type { text }?,
    attribute src { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
    attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute alt { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute width { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute height { text }?,
    text*
  }

postamble =
  element postamble { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }

texttable =
  element texttable {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute title { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
    attribute suppress-title { "true" | "false" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "center" ]
    attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "full" ]
    attribute style { "all" | "none" | "headers" | "full" }?,
    preamble?,
    ttcol+,
    c*,
    postamble?
  }

ttcol =
  element ttcol {
    attribute width { text }?,
    [ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
    attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
    text
  }

c = element c { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }

back = element back { references*, section* }

references =
  element references {
    [ a:defaultValue = "References" ] attribute title { text }?,
    reference+
  }

reference =
  element reference {
    attribute anchor { xsd:ID },
    attribute target { text }?,
    front,
    seriesInfo*,
    format*,
    annotation*
  }

seriesInfo =
  element seriesInfo {
    attribute name { text },
    attribute value { text },
    empty
  }

format =
  element format {
    attribute target { text }?,
    attribute type { text },
    attribute octets { text }?,
    empty
  }

annotation =
  element annotation { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }

start = rfc

(This schema was derived from version 1.3.6 of the xml2rfc DTD ('Document Type Definition', [XML], Section 2.8), available from <http://svn.tools.ietf.org/svn/tools/xml2rfc/vocabulary/v2/03/xml2rfcv2.dtd>).

C.1. Checking Validity

The validity of XML files can be checked with any tool that supports Relax NG ([RNC]). The reference implementation is the Java-based, open sourced "JING" ([JING]).

To use JING, download the latest ZIP file from the "downloads" page (currently <https://code.google.com/p/jing-trang/downloads/detail?name=jing-20091111.zip>), extract the archive, copy "jing.jar" from the "bin" folder, and make sure Java is installed).

To check a file "test.xml" using the RNC file "schema.rnc", run (from a command line prompt):

java -jar jing.jar -c schema.rnc test.xml

In good Unix tradition, no output means the file is valid.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to everybody who reviewed this document and provided feedback and/or specification text, in particular Brian Carpenter, Elwyn Davies, Tony Hansen, Joe Hildebrand, Paul Hoffman, Henrik Levkowetz, Alice Russo, Tom Taylor, Dave Thaler, Jim Schaad, and Nico Williams.

We also thank Marshall T. Rose for both the original design and the reference implementation of the "xml2rfc" formatter.

Index

A B C D E F H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W X Y

Author's Address

Julian F. Reschke
greenbytes GmbH
Hafenweg 16
Muenster, NW 48155
Germany
Email: julian.reschke@greenbytes.de
URI: http://greenbytes.de/tech/webdav/