Network Working Group F. Ellermann
Internet-Draft
Request for Comments: 5538 xyzzy
Obsoletes: 1738 (if approved) April 2, 2008
Intended status: 2009
Category: Standards Track
Expires: October 4, 2008
The 'news' and 'nntp' URI Schemes
draft-ellermann-news-nntp-uri-11
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Abstract
This memo specifies the 'news' and 'nntp' Uniform Resource Identifier
(URI) schemes that were originally defined in RFC 1738. The purpose
of this document is to allow RFC 1738 to be made obsolete while
keeping the information about these schemes on standards track.
Editorial note
In the collected ABNF (Appendix A) the NEWS in RFC NEWS should be
replaced by the RFC number for [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor]. In
Section 8 RFCXXXX is a placeholder for this memo. This note and the
document history (Appendix C) should be removed before publication. Standards Track.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. 'nntp' URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.2. 'news' URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.3. Query parts, fragments, Parts, Fragments, and normalization Normalization . . . . . . . . 5 4
3. Syntax of 'nntp' URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Syntax of 'news' URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
5. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6. Internationalization Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
8.1. 'snews' URIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
8.2. 'news-message-ID' access type Access Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Appendix A. Collected ABNF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Appendix B. Detailed example Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Appendix C. Document History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 21
1. Introduction
The first definition for many URI schemes appeared appears in [RFC1738]. This
memo extracts the 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes from it to allow that
material to remain on standards track the Standards Track if [RFC1738] is moved to
"historic" status. It belongs to a series of similar documents like
[RFC4156], [RFC4157], [RFC4248], and [RFC4266] [RFC4266], which are discussed
on the <mailto:uri@w3.org> list.
The definitions for the 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes given here are
updates from [RFC1738] based on modern usage of these schemes. This
memo intentionally limits its description of the 'news' URI scheme to
essential features supposed to work with "any browser" and NNTP Network
News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) server.
[RFC3986] specifies how to define schemes for URIs, URIs; it also explains
the term "Uniform Resource Locator" (URL). The Network News Transfer
Protocol (NNTP) is specified in [RFC3977]. The Netnews Article
Format is defined in [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor]. [RFC5536].
The key word "MUST" in this memo is to be interpreted as described in
[RFC2119]. UTF-8 is specified in [RFC3629]. The syntax uses the
ABNF defined in [RFC5234].
2. Background
The 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes identify resources on an NNTP
server, individual articles, individual newsgroups, or sets of
newsgroups.
User agents like Web browsers supporting these schemes use the NNTP
protocol to access the corresponding resources. The details of how
they do this, e.g., employing a separate or integrated newsreader,
depend on the implementation. The default <port> associated with
NNTP in [RFC3977] is 119.
2.1. 'nntp' URIs
The 'nntp' URI scheme identifies articles in a newsgroup on a
specific NNTP server. In [RFC3986] terminology terminology, this means that
'nntp' URIs have a non-empty <authority> component, component; there is no
default <host> as for the 'file' or 'news' URI schemes.
Netnews is typically distributed among several news servers, using
the same newsgroup names, names but local article numbers. An article
available as number 10 in group "example" on server
"news.example.com" has most likely a different number on any other
server where the same article is still available. Users allowed to
read and post articles on "their" server may not be allowed to access
articles on an "arbitrary" server specified in an 'nntp' URI.
For these reasons reasons, the use of the 'nntp' URI scheme is limited, and
it is less widely supported by user agents than the similar 'news'
URI scheme.
2.2. 'news' URIs
The 'news' URI scheme identifies articles by their worldwide unique
"Message-ID", independent of the server and the newsgroup.
Newsreaders support access to articles by their "Message-ID", without
the overhead of an a URI scheme. In simple cases cases, they do this directly
as an NNTP client of a default or currently used server as configured
by the user. More general user agents use the 'news' URI scheme to
distinguish "Message-IDs" from similar constructs such as other URI
schemes in contexts such as a plain text message body.
The 'news' URI scheme also allows the identification of newsgroups or
sets of newsgroups independent of a specific server. For Netnews Netnews, a
group "example" has the same name on any server carrying this group,
exotic cases involving gateways not withstanding. To distinguish
"Message-IDs" and newsgroup names names, the 'news' URI scheme relies on
the "@" between local part (left hand (left-hand side) and domain part (right (right-
hand side) of "Message-IDs".
[RFC1738] offered only one wildcard for sets of newsgroups in 'news'
URIs, a "*" used to refer to "all available newsgroups". In common
practice
practice, this was extended to varying degrees by different user
agents, an
agents. An NNTP extension known as <wildmat> <wildmat>, specified in [RFC2980]
and now part of the base NNTP specification specification, allows pattern matching
in the style of the [POSIX] "find" command. For the purpose of this
memo
memo, this means that some additional special characters have to be
allowed in 'news' URIs, some of them percent-encoded as required by
the overall [RFC3986] URI syntax. User agents and NNTP servers not
yet compliant with [RFC3977] do not implement all parts of this new
feature.
Another commonly supported addition to the [RFC1738] syntax is the
optional specification of a server at the beginning of 'news' URIs.
This optional <authority> component follows the overall [RFC3986]
syntax
syntax, preceded by a double slash "//" and terminated by the next
slash "/", question mark "?", number sign "#", or the end of the URI.
2.3. Query parts, fragments, Parts, Fragments, and normalization Normalization
Fragments introduced by a number sign "#" are specified in [RFC3986], [RFC3986];
the semantics is independent of the URI scheme, and the resolution
depends on the media type.
This memo doesn't specify a query part introduced by a question mark
"?" for the 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes, but some implementations
are known to use query parts instead of fragments internally to
address parts of a composite media type [RFC2046] in Multipurpose
Internet Mail Extensions (MIME).
There are no special "." or ".." path segments in 'news' and 'nntp'
URLs. Please note that "." and ".." are not valid <newsgroup-name>s.
URI producers have to percent-encode some characters as specified
below (Section 4), otherwise 4); otherwise, they MUST treat a "Message-ID" without
angle brackets for 'news' URLs as is, i.e. i.e., case-sensitive,
preserving quoted pairs and quoted strings.
3. Syntax of 'nntp' URIs
An 'nntp' URI identifies an article by its number in a given
newsgroup on a specified server, or it identifies the newsgroup
without article number.
nntpURL = "nntp:" server "/" group [ "/" article-number ]
server = "//" authority ; see RFC 3986
group = 1*( group-char / pct-encoded )
article-number = 1*16DIGIT ; see RFC 3977
group-char = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "+" / "_" / "."
In the form with an <article-number> <article-number>, the URL corresponds roughly to
the content of an <xref> header field as specified in
[I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor], [RFC5536],
replacing its more general <article-locator> by the <article-number>
used with the NNTP.
A <newsgroup-name> as specified in [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] [RFC5536] consists of dot-separated dot-
separated components. Each component contains one or more letters,
digits, "-" (hyphen-minus), "+", or "_" (underscore). These
characters can be directly used in a segment of a path in a an
[RFC3986]
URI, URI; no percent-encoding is necessary. Example:
nntp://news.server.example/example.group.this/12345
A <wildmat-exact> newsgroup name as specified in [RFC3977] allows (in
theory) any <UTF8-non-ascii>, see <UTF8-non-ascii> (see Section 6, 6) and most printable
US-ASCII characters characters, excluding "!", "*", ",", "?", "[", "\", and "]".
However, [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] [RFC5536] does not (yet) permit characters outside of
<group-char> and so, to keep the syntax simple, the additional
characters are here covered by <pct-encoded> as defined in [RFC3986],
since most of them have to be percent-encoded anyway (with a few exceptions
exceptions, such as ":", ";", and "~"). For example: Example:
nntp://wild.server.example/example.group.n%2Fa/12345
In the form without <article-number> <article-number>, the URL identifies a single
group on the specified server. This is also possible with an
equivalent 'news' URL, and the latter is better supported by user
agents, example:
agents. Example:
nntp://news.server.example/example.group.this
news://news.server.example/example.group.this
4. Syntax of 'news' URIs
A 'news' URI identifies an article by its unique "Message-ID", or it
identifies a set of newsgroups. Additionally Additionally, it can specify a
server,
server; without it the 'news' URI, a configured default server for
Netnews access is used.
The syntax shown below explains how to transform a syntactically
valid <newsgroup-name> or <msg-id-core> as specified in
[I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] [RFC5536]
into the corresponding <newsgroups> or <article> part of a 'news'
URI. The transformation from a formally valid 'news' URI back to a
<newsgroup-name> or <msg-id-core> is not guaranteed to be
syntactically valid.
newsURL = "news:" [ server "/" ] ( article / newsgroups )
article = mid-left "@" mid-right
newsgroups = *( group-char / pct-encoded / "*" )
mid-left = 1*( mid-atext / "." ) / ; <dot-atom-text>
( "%22" mid-quote "%22" ) ; <no-fold-quote>
mid-quote = 1*( mid-atext / "." / ; <mqtext> incl.
mid-special / ; '\"' / "[" / "]"
"%5C%22" / "%5B" / "%5D" )
mid-right = 1*( mid-atext / "." ) / ; <dot-atom-text>
( "%5B" mid-literal "%5D" ) ; <no-fold-literal>
mid-literal = 1*( mid-atext / "." / ; <mdtext> incl.
mid-special / ; '"' / "\[" / "\]"
"%22" / "%5C%5B" / "%5C%5D" )
mid-special = "(" / ")" / "," / ":" / ";" /
"%3C" / "%40" / "%5C%5C" ; "<" / "@" / "\\"
mid-atext = ALPHA / DIGIT / ; RFC 2822 <atext>
"!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / ; allowed sub-delims
"*" / "+" / "=" / ; allowed sub-delims
"-" / "_" / "~" / ; allowed unreserved
"%23" / "%25" / "%2F" / ; "#" / "%" / "/"
"%3F" / "%5E" / "%60" / ; "?" / "^" / "`"
"%7B" / "%7C" / "%7D" ; "{" / "|" / "}"
The form identifying an <article> corresponds to the <msg-id-core>
construct in [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor], [RFC5536]; it is a "Message-ID" without angle brackets.
Characters not directly allowed in this part of an [RFC3986] URI have
to be percent-encoded, minimally anything that is not <unreserved>,
no ":" (colon), and doesn't belong to the <sub-delims>.
Several details of a canonical <msg-id-core> are omitted here, e.g.,
leading, adjacent, or trailing dots are not allowed in
<dot-atom-text>. The syntax mainly shows which characters MUST be
percent-encoded in a <mid-left> (local part) or <mid-right> (domain
part).
Please note that "%20" (space) and "%3E" (">") are not allowed. A
"%5C" (backslash (backslash, "\") can only occur in four combinations combinations, as shown
above. Examples:
news://server.example/ab.cd@example.com
news:%22do..ts%22@example.com
news:ab.cd@%5B2001:DB8::CD30%5D
The form identifying <newsgroups> corresponds to the [RFC3977]
<wildmat-pattern>, a newsgroup name with wildcards "*" and "?". Any
"?" has to be percent-encoded as "%3F" in this part of an a URI.
Examples, the
Examples (the first two are equivalent: equivalent):
news://news.server.example/*
news://news.server.example/
news://wild.server.example/example.group.th%3Fse
news:example.group.*
news:example.group.this
Without wildcards wildcards, this form of the URL identifies a single group if
it is not empty, and user empty. User agents would typically try to present an
overview of the articles available in this group, likely somehow
limiting this overview to the newest unread articles up to a
configured maximum.
With wildcards wildcards, user agents could try to list matching group names on
the specified or default server. Some user agents support only a
specific <group> without wildcards, or an optional single "*".
As noted above (Section 2.2) 2.2), the presence of an "@" in a 'news' URI
disambiguates <article> and <newsgroups> for URI consumers. The new
<message-id> construct specified in [RFC3977] does not require an
"@". Since [RFC0822] [RFC0822], the "Message-ID" syntax was has been closely
related to the syntax of mail addresses with an "@" separating left left-
hand side (local part of addresses, unique part of message
identifiers) and
right hand right-hand side (domain part), and this memo sticks
to the known [RFC1738] practice.
5. Acknowledgments
Henry Spencer was the driving force to adopt MIME in Netnews, Netnews; he
registered the MIME 'message/external-body' access type
'news-message-ID'
'news-message-ID', discussed below (Section 8.2) 8.2), in 1993 for
[son-of-1036].
The Internet Drafts [I-D.gilman-news-url]
[SON-OF-1036].
"The 'news' URL scheme" [GILMAN], by Alfred S. Gilman
published 1998 (March 1998),
introduced additions to the original [RFC1738] 'news' URI scheme.
Some of these ideas are now widely supported and reflected by the
revised 'news' URI scheme specified here.
Thanks to Alfred Hoenes, Charles Lindsey, Clive Feather, Chris
Newman, Ken Murchinson, Kjetil T. Homme, Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen,
Martin Duerst, Matt Seitz, Nicolas Krebs, Paul Hoffman, Pasi Eronen,
Roy T. Fielding, Russ Allbery, Stephane Bortzmeyer, and Tom Petch for
their feedback, contributions, or encouragement.
Bill Fenner's _xml2rfc validator_ and _ABNF checker_ were a great
help in the creation of (not only) this memo. The same goes for
various great _IETF tools_ written by Henrik Levkowetz.
6. Internationalization Considerations
The URI schemes were updated to support percent-encoded UTF-8
characters in NNTP newsgroup names as specified in [RFC3977] and
[RFC3987].
The Netnews Article Format in [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] [RFC5536] does not yet allow UTF-8 in <newsgroup-name>s, therefore
<newsgroup-name>s; therefore, well-known Unicode and UTF-8 security
considerations are not listed below. For an overview overview, see [UTR36]
and [RFC3629].
The work on E-mail Email Address Internationalization (EAI) (EAI), started in
[RFC4952]
[RFC4952], is not expected to change the syntax of a "Message-ID".
The work on a successor of [RFC2822] hopefully ends up with a
simplified syntax for both sides of a "Message-ID".
7. Security Considerations
There are many security considerations for URI schemes discussed in
[RFC3986]. The NNTP protocol may use passwords in the clear for
authentication,
authentication or offer no privacy, both of which are considered
extremely unsafe in current practice. Alternatives and further
security considerations with respect to the NNTP are discussed in
[RFC4642] and [RFC4643].
The syntax for the 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes contains the general
<authority> construct with an optional <userinfo> defined in
[RFC3986]. As noted in [RFC3986] [RFC3986], the "user:password" form of a
<userinfo> is deprecated.
Articles on NNTP servers typically expire after some time. After
that time time, corresponding 'news' and 'nntp' URLs won't may not work anymore
depending on the server. While a "Message-ID" is supposed to be
worldwide unique forever forever, the NNTP protocol does not guarantee this.
Under various conditions depending on the servers servers, the same
"Message-ID" could be used for different articles, and attackers
could try to distribute malicious content for known 'news' or 'nntp'
URLs.
If an a URI does not match the generic syntax in [RFC3986] [RFC3986], it is
invalid, and broken URIs can cause havoc. Compare [RFC5064] for
similar security considerations.
8. IANA Considerations
The IANA registry of URI schemes should be has been updated to point to this
memo instead of [RFC1738] for the 'news' and 'nntp' URI schemes.
8.1. 'snews' URIs
This section contains the [RFC4395] template for the registration of
the historical 'snews' scheme specified in [I-D.gilman-news-url]. [GILMAN].
URI scheme name: snews
Status: historical
URI scheme syntax: Same as for 'news' (Section 4)
URI scheme semantics:
Syntactically equivalent to 'news', but using NNTP
over SSL/TLS (SSL/TLS with security layer is
negotiated immediately after establishing the TCP
connection) with a default port of 563, registered
as "nntps"
Encoding considerations:
Same as for 'news' (Section 6)
Applications/protocols that use this URI scheme name:
For some user agents agents, 'snews' URLs trigger the use
of "nntps" instead of NNTP for their access on
Netnews
Interoperability considerations:
This URI scheme was not widely deployed, deployed; its
further use is deprecated in favour favor of ordinary
'news' URLs in conjunction with NNTP servers
supporting [RFC4642]
Security considerations:
See [RFC4642], [RFC4642]; the use of a dedicated port for
secure variants of a protocol was discouraged in
[RFC2595]
Contact: <mailto:uri@w3.org> (URI mailing list)
Change controller: IETF
References: RFCXXXX, RFC 5538, [RFC4642], [I-D.gilman-news-url] [GILMAN]
8.2. 'news-message-ID' access type Access Type
The MIME 'news-message-ID' access type was erroneously listed as
subtype. IANA should remove has removed 'news-message-ID' from the application
subtype registry, and add has added it to the access type types registry
defined in
[RFC4289]: <http://www.iana.org/assignments/access-types>. [RFC4289].
[RFC4289] requires an RFC for the access types registry. Because
[son-of-1036]
[SON-OF-1036] was never published as RFC an RFC, the following paragraph
quotes the relevant definition:
NOTE: In the specific case where it is desired to essentially make
another article PART of the current one, e.g. e.g., for annotation of
the other article, MIME's "message/external-body" convention can
be used to do so without actual inclusion. "news-message-ID" was
registered as a standard external-body access method, with a
mandatory NAME parameter giving the message ID and an optional
SITE parameter suggesting an NNTP site that might have the article
available (if it is not available locally), by IANA 22 June 1993.
Please note that 'news' URLs offer a very similar and (today) more
common way to access articles by their Message-ID, Message-ID; compare [RFC2017].
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3977] Feather, C., "Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)",
RFC 3977, October 2006.
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter,
"Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax",
STD 66, RFC 3986, January 2005.
[RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.
[I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor]
[RFC5536] Lindsey, C., "Netnews Article Format",
draft-ietf-usefor-usefor-12 (work in progress),
January 2007. RFC 5536,
April 2009.
9.2. Informative References
[GILMAN] Gilman, A., "The 'news' URL scheme", Work in Progress,
March 1998.
[POSIX] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
"The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6",
IEEE Standard 1003.1, 2004 edition.
[RFC0822] Crocker, D., "Standard for the format of ARPA Internet
text messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.
[son-of-1036]
Spencer, H., "News Article Format and Transmission",
June 1994, <ftp://ftp.zoo.toronto.edu/pub/news.txt.Z>.
[RFC1738] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., and M. McCahill,
"Uniform Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738,
December 1994.
[RFC2017] Freed, N. and K. Moore, "Definition of the URL MIME
External-Body Access-Type", RFC 2017, October 1996.
[RFC2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet
Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types",
RFC 2046, November 1996.
[I-D.gilman-news-url]
Gilman, A., "The 'news' URL scheme",
Internet draft-gilman-news-url-02, March 1998,
<http://esw.w3.org/topic/UriSchemes/snews>.
[RFC2595] Newman, C., "Using TLS with IMAP, POP3 and ACAP",
RFC 2595, June 1999.
[RFC2822] Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822,
April 2001.
[RFC2980] Barber, S., "Common NNTP Extensions", RFC 2980,
October 2000.
[RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
[POSIX] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "The
Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6", IEEE Standard
1003.1, 2004 edition,
<http://www.unix.org/single_unix_specification/>.
[RFC3987] Duerst, M. and M. Suignard, "Internationalized
Resource Identifiers (IRIs)", RFC 3987, January 2005.
[RFC4156] Hoffman, P., "The wais URI Scheme", RFC 4156,
August 2005.
[RFC4157] Hoffman, P., "The prospero URI Scheme", RFC 4157,
August 2005.
[RFC4248] Hoffman, P., "The telnet URI Scheme", RFC 4248,
October 2005.
[RFC4266] Hoffman, P., "The gopher URI Scheme", RFC 4266,
November 2005.
[RFC4289] Freed, N. and J. Klensin, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part Four: Registration Procedures",
BCP 13, RFC 4289, December 2005.
[RFC4395] Hansen, T., Hardie, T., and L. Masinter, "Guidelines
and Registration Procedures for New URI Schemes",
BCP 115, 35, RFC 4395, February 2006.
[UTR36] Davis, M. and M. Suignard, "Unicode Security
Considerations", Unicode Technical Reports #36,
August 2006, <http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr36>.
[RFC4642] Murchison, K., Vinocur, J., and C. Newman, "Using
Transport Layer Security (TLS) with Network News
Transfer Protocol (NNTP)", RFC 4642, October 2006.
[RFC4643] Vinocur, J. and K. Murchison, "Network News Transfer
Protocol (NNTP) Extension for Authentication",
RFC 4643, October 2006.
[RFC4952] Klensin, J. and Y. Ko, "Overview and Framework for
Internationalized Email", RFC 4952, July 2007.
[RFC5064] Duerst, M., "The Archived-At Message Header Field",
RFC 5064, December 2007.
Appendix A. Collected ABNF
In addition to the syntax given above this appendix also lists
[SON-OF-1036] Spencer, H., "Son of 1036: News Article Format and
Transmission", Work in Progress, May 2009.
[UTR36] Davis, M. and M. Suignard, "Unicode Security
Considerations", Unicode Technical Reports #36,
August 2006.
Appendix A. Collected ABNF
In addition to the syntax given above, this appendix also lists the
sources of terms used in comments and the prose:
nntpURL = "nntp:" server "/" group [ "/" article-number ]
server = "//" authority ; see RFC 3986
group = 1*( group-char / pct-encoded )
article-number = 1*16DIGIT ; see RFC 3977
group-char = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "+" / "_" / "."
newsURL = "news:" [ server "/" ] ( article / newsgroups )
article = mid-left "@" mid-right
newsgroups = *( group-char / pct-encoded / "*" )
mid-left = 1*( mid-atext / "." ) / ; <dot-atom-text>
( "%22" mid-quote "%22" ) ; <no-fold-quote>
mid-quote = 1*( mid-atext / "." / ; <mqtext> incl.
mid-special / ; '\"' / "[" / "]"
"%5C%22" / "%5B" / "%5D" )
mid-right = 1*( mid-atext / "." ) / ; <dot-atom-text>
( "%5B" mid-literal "%5D" ) ; <no-fold-literal>
mid-literal = 1*( mid-atext / "." / ; <mdtext> incl.
mid-special / ; '"' / "\[" / "\]"
"%22" / "%5C%5B" / "%5C%5D" )
mid-special = "(" / ")" / "," / ":" / ";" /
"%3C" / "%40" / "%5C%5C" ; "<" / "@" / "\\"
mid-atext = ALPHA / DIGIT / ; RFC 2822 <atext>
"!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / ; allowed sub-delims
"*" / "+" / "=" / ; allowed sub-delims
"-" / "_" / "~" / ; allowed unreserved
"%23" / "%25" / "%2F" / ; "#" / "%" / "/"
"%3F" / "%5E" / "%60" / ; "?" / "^" / "`"
"%7B" / "%7C" / "%7D" ; "{" / "|" / "}"
authority = <see RFC 3986 Section 3.2>
host = <see RFC 3986 Section 3.2.2>
pct-encoded = <see RFC 3986 Section 2.1>
port = <see RFC 3986 Section 3.2.3>
sub-delims = <see RFC 3986 Section 2.2>
unreserved = <see RFC 3986 Section 2.3>
userinfo = <see RFC 3986 Section 3.2.1>
message-id = <see RFC 3977 Section 9.8>
UTF8-non-ascii = <see RFC 3977 Section 9.8>
wildmat = <see RFC 3977 Section 4.1>
wildmat-exact = <see RFC 3977 Section 4.1>
wildmat-pattern = <see RFC 3977 Section 4.1>
ALPHA = <see RFC 5234 Appendix B.1>
DIGIT = <see RFC 5234 Appendix B.1>
atext = <see RFC 2822 Section 3.2.4>
dot-atom-text = <see RFC 2822 Section 3.2.4>
article-locator = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.2.14>
mdtext = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.3>
mqtext = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.3>
msg-id-core = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.3>
newsgroup-name = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.4>
no-fold-literal = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.3>
no-fold-quote = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.1.3>
xref = <see RFC NEWS 5536 Section 3.2.14>
Appendix B. Detailed example Example
Here is an example of a mail to the <mailto:tools.discuss@ietf.org>
list with "Message-ID" <p0624081dc30b8699bf9b@[10.20.30.108]>.
<http://dir.gmane.org/gmane.ietf.tools> is one of the various list
archives,
archives; it converts mails mail into Netnews articles. The header of this
article contains the following fields (among others):
Message-ID: <p0624081dc30b8699bf9b@[10.20.30.108]>
Xref: news.gmane.org gmane.ietf.tools:742
Archived-At: <http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.ietf.tools/742>
The "Xref" roughly indicates the 742nd article in newsgroup
<news://news.gmane.org/gmane.ietf.tools> on this server. An 'nntp'
URL might be <nntp://news.gmane.org/gmane.ietf.tools/742>. For
details about the "Archived-At" URL URL, see [RFC5064].
The list software and list subscribers reading the list elsewhere
can't predict a server specific server-specific article number 742 in this archive.
If they know this server server, they can however guess the corresponding
<news://news.gmane.org/p0624081dc30b8699bf9b@%5B10.20.30.108%5D> URL.
In theory theory, the list software could use the guessed 'news' URL in an
"Archived-At" header field, but if a list tries this this, it would likely
use <http://mid.gmane.org/p0624081dc30b8699bf9b@%5B10.20.30.108%5D>.
Using domain literals in a "Message-ID" could cause collisions. A
collision might force the mail2news gateway in this example to invent
a new "Message-ID", and an attempt to guess the future URL on this
server would then fail.
Appendix C. Document History
Changes in version 11:
o Clarified that the semantics of fragments is never defined by an
URI scheme, but depends on the media type. Minor tweaks to make
the point that using query parts for this purpose is not state of
the art.
o Replaced the remains of the four letter word introduced in version
08 by a proper [POSIX] reference.
o Added a forward pointer to Section 6 as explanation why
<group-char> does not exactly mirror the <newsgroup-name> syntax.
o Added a disclaimer to Section 4 that the shown 'news' URI syntax
is actually a superset of the corresponding <newsgroup-name> and
<msg-id-core> syntax, and in no way intended to redefine the
normative source.
o After some discussions about adding news.uri.arpa to the
nntp.uri.arpa registration for the Dynamic Delegation Discovery
System (DDDS) folks preferred to have no DDDS registration for
NNTP at all at this time. DDDS registrations for existing URI
schemes are possible when applications need them, proactive DDDS
registrations are unnecessary.
o Thanks to Lars for tolerating Appendix B as real example.
Changes in version 10:
o Fixed three editorial nits found in the Last Call, especially
changed "does not more require" via "does no more require" to
"does not require" based on Last Call feedback. Appendix D of
[RFC3977] does not mention this point.
Changes in version 09:
o Several modifications based on feedback from Tom Petch and
Stephane Bortzmeyer. Updated the references to [RFC5064] and
STD 68 [RFC5234].
o Obfuscated a four letter word introduced in version 08 after a
discussion on the IETF IPR WG list.
o The note (Section 6) about the successor of [RFC2822] now states
that hopefully *both* sides of the "Message-ID" syntax will be
simplified. Some details also affecting SMTP (Simple Mail
Transfer Protocol) are still under discussion.
o Clive Feather reported that [RFC3977] does not require an "@" in
its new <message-id> construct. As this is a major deviation from
among others STD 11 [RFC0822], [RFC1738], [son-of-1036],
[I-D.gilman-news-url], [RFC2822], [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor], and
what existing URI consumers based on these documents expect it
cannot be simply adopted in a memo describing common practice. An
additional note (Section 4) corresponding to an older note
(Section 2.2) explains this deviation.
o Various I-D nits are apparently false positives, but using two
different spell-checkers helped.
Changes in version 08:
o Many editorial and stylistic improvements proposed by Charles
Lindsey adopted wholesale.
o Added another URI security consideration. Added another note why
this memo does not try to cover more NNTP features. Refrained
from adding expectations what future NNTP servers will do. The
author hopes that Netnews will survive, and that this memo helps.
Adding features known to not work everywhere could be
counterproductive.
o Rejected a proposal to "undocument" 'snews'. In 2006 folks on the
URI list preferred "document and deprecate". At this time 'snews'
was supported by at least two servers and two user agents.
o Sticked to the DDDS registration of 'nntp' in the style of the
existing 'ftp', 'http', and 'mailto' DDDS records as a clerical
task.
o Rejected a proposal to deviate from the <msg-id-core> syntax in
the normative reference [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] reflecting a
consensus of the IETF USEFOR WG formed after lengthy discussions.
Changes in version 07:
o Fixed two bugs introduced in version 06, Kjetil T. Homme spotted
the worst error, thanks. Rearranged the credits adding Henrik's
IETF tools.
o I-D nit about a missing reference for
[I-D.hoffman-news-nntp-uri-04] ignored, this string will go away
together with the document history (Appendix C).
o The I-D submission tool added an editorial note following the
abstract to the meta data of version 06, manual override attempt
for version 07.
o Review request sent to register@uri.arpa, this mail didn't make it
yet to <http://www.iana.org/list-archives/register-uri/>.
Changes in version 06:
o Reference to [RFC5064] added. Added a security consideration
proposed by Chris Newman for the "Archived-At" header field also
here.
o Added an appendix with a detailed 'news', 'nntp', "Xref", and
"Archived-At" example.
o Use a more reliable e-mail address (and thanks for the feedback
from somebody who figured the new address out following obscure
contact or rev="made" links ;-)
o The USEFOR WG did not adopt this draft as work item, they are busy
to complete a document blocking the publication of
[I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor].
o IANA revived the <mailto:register@uri.arpa> list mentioned in the
DDDS BCP.
o Added a note about EAI [RFC4952] and its most likely unmodified
"Message-ID" concept.
Changes in version 05:
o Added an attempt to cleanup the erroneous MIME application subtype
'news-message-ID' registration. This was meant to be a MIME
'message/external-body' access type as published in
<http://www.iana.org/assignments/access-types>.
o The 'news-message-ID' review request was posted 2007-02-19.
Changes in version 04:
o Minor editorial fixes. Just in case waiting for the IESG approval
of [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor]. The 'snews' URI review request was
posted 2006-11-10.
o Two reviewers of the 'snews' registration template are now
apparently satisfied with the 'snews' URI scheme semantics.
Changes in version 03:
o The 'snews' semantics was improved after discussions with Chris
Newman and Ken Murchinson.
o Various editorial fixes proposed by Alfred Hoenes.
Changes in version 02:
o The referenced NNTP specifications got their RFC numbers, NNTP TLS
[RFC4642] added for info to the security considerations.
o The ABNF for an <article> was further simplified by extracting the
<mid-special> characters used on both sides of the "@",
i.e. within a quoted string <mid-quote> for the unique part (left
hand side) or within a literal in square brackets for the domain
part (right hand side). Now it is obvious that the differences
between both sides are limited to '"', "[", and "]" as expected.
o Removed the dubious _1_ at the begin of the <newsgroups> rule
based on an observation by Nicolas Krebs.
o Created a proper informative reference for the historical
[I-D.gilman-news-url]. The IETF archive offers only -01, a copy
of -02 covering 'snews' is now available below
<http://esw.w3.org/topic/UriSchemes/news>.
o Other minor changes include the addition of a reference to
[UTR36], and the collected ABNF (Appendix A).
o The IANA registration template for the historical 'snews' URI
scheme was added.
o The IANA registration template for an "nntp.uri.arpa" NAPTR record
was added. If that record is correct the existing "ftp.uri.arpa"
and "http.uri.arpa" records could be updated, apparently they
don't remove the optional <userinfo> at the moment.
Changes in version 01:
o References of RFC 977 and RFC 2980 replaced by the now approved
NNTP base document [RFC3977].
o Security considerations updated with a reference to the now
approved NNTP Auth document [RFC4643].
o References of RFC 1036 and [RFC2822] replaced by the last called
[I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor].
o References of RFC 2396 removed, the jumps from [RFC1738] to
[RFC3986] and from RFC 1036 to [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] are
interesting enough without talking about intermediate steps.
o [RFC1738] has no <range> for the 'nntp' URI scheme, and this memo
isn't the place to invent new tricks for a rarely used scheme.
Changes in version 00:
o Derived from [I-D.hoffman-news-nntp-uri-04] after discussions on
the URI list. At this time what is now known as the Netnews
Article Format [I-D.ietf-usefor-usefor] was still far from ready,
and RFC977bis [RFC3977] not yet finished.
Author's Address
Frank Ellermann
xyzzy
Hamburg, Germany
Email:
EMail: hmdmhdfmhdjmzdtjmzdtzktdkztdjz@gmail.com
URI: http://purl.net/xyzzy/
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