This is a purely informative rendering of an RFC that includes verified errata. This rendering may not be used as a reference.
The following 'Verified' errata have been incorporated in this document:
EID 5052
Internet Architecture Board (IAB) P. Hoffman
Request for Comments: 7991 ICANN
Obsoletes: 7749 December 2016
Category: Informational
ISSN: 2070-1721
The "xml2rfc" Version 3 Vocabulary
Abstract
This document defines the "xml2rfc" version 3 vocabulary: an
XML-based language used for writing RFCs and Internet-Drafts. It is
heavily derived from the version 2 vocabulary that is also under
discussion. This document obsoletes the v2 grammar described in
RFC 7749.
Status of This Memo
This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
published for informational purposes.
This document is a product of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
and represents information that the IAB has deemed valuable to
provide for permanent record. It represents the consensus of the
Internet Architecture Board (IAB). Documents approved for
publication by the IAB are not a candidate for any level of Internet
Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7991.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2016 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.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................5
1.1. Expected Updates to the Specification ......................5
1.2. Design Criteria for the Changes in v3 ......................6
1.3. Differences from v2 to v3 ..................................6
1.3.1. New Elements in v3 ..................................6
1.3.2. New Attributes for Existing Elements ................7
1.3.3. Elements and Attributes Deprecated from v2 ..........8
1.3.4. Additional Changes from v2 ..........................9
1.4. Syntax Notation ...........................................10
2. Elements .......................................................10
2.1. <abstract> ................................................11
2.2. <address> .................................................12
2.3. <annotation> ..............................................12
2.4. <area> ....................................................13
2.5. <artwork> .................................................13
2.6. <aside> ...................................................17
2.7. <author> ..................................................18
2.8. <back> ....................................................19
2.9. <bcp14> ...................................................20
2.10. <blockquote> .............................................20
2.11. <boilerplate> ............................................22
2.12. <br> .....................................................22
2.13. <city> ...................................................22
2.14. <code> ...................................................22
2.15. <country> ................................................23
2.16. <cref> ...................................................23
2.17. <date> ...................................................24
2.18. <dd> .....................................................25
2.19. <displayreference> .......................................27
2.20. <dl> .....................................................27
2.21. <dt> .....................................................29
2.22. <em> .....................................................30
2.23. <email> ..................................................31
2.24. <eref> ...................................................31
2.25. <figure> .................................................32
2.26. <front> ..................................................34
2.27. <iref> ...................................................35
2.28. <keyword> ................................................36
2.29. <li> .....................................................36
2.30. <link> ...................................................38
2.31. <middle> .................................................39
2.32. <name> ...................................................39
2.33. <note> ...................................................39
2.34. <ol> .....................................................40
2.35. <organization> ...........................................42
2.36. <phone> ..................................................43
2.37. <postal> .................................................43
2.38. <postalLine> .............................................44
2.39. <refcontent> .............................................44
2.40. <reference> ..............................................45
2.41. <referencegroup> .........................................46
2.42. <references> .............................................46
2.43. <region> .................................................47
2.44. <relref> .................................................47
2.45. <rfc> ....................................................51
2.46. <section> ................................................54
2.47. <seriesInfo> .............................................57
2.48. <sourcecode> .............................................59
2.49. <street> .................................................61
2.50. <strong> .................................................61
2.51. <sub> ....................................................62
2.52. <sup> ....................................................63
2.53. <t> ......................................................64
2.54. <table> ..................................................66
2.55. <tbody> ..................................................67
2.56. <td> .....................................................67
2.57. <tfoot> ..................................................69
2.58. <th> .....................................................69
2.59. <thead> ..................................................71
2.60. <title> ..................................................72
2.61. <tr> .....................................................72
2.62. <tt> .....................................................73
2.63. <ul> .....................................................74
2.64. <uri> ....................................................75
2.65. <workgroup> ..............................................75
2.66. <xref> ...................................................75
3. Elements from v2 That Have Been Deprecated .....................78
3.1. <c> .......................................................78
3.2. <facsimile> ...............................................78
3.3. <format> ..................................................79
3.4. <list> ....................................................79
3.5. <postamble> ...............................................80
3.6. <preamble> ................................................81
3.7. <spanx> ...................................................81
3.8. <texttable> ...............................................82
3.9. <ttcol> ...................................................83
3.10. <vspace> .................................................84
4. SVG ............................................................84
5. Use of CDATA Structures and Escaping ...........................85
6. Internationalization Considerations ............................85
7. Security Considerations ........................................85
8. IANA Considerations ............................................86
8.1. Internet Media Type Registration ..........................86
8.2. Link Relation Registration ................................87
9. References .....................................................88
9.1. Normative References ......................................88
9.2. Informative References ....................................88
Appendix A. Front-Page ("Boilerplate") Generation .................93
A.1. The "ipr" Attribute ........................................93
A.1.1. Current Values: "*trust200902" .........................93
A.1.2. Historic Values ........................................95
A.2. The "submissionType" Attribute .............................96
A.3. The "consensus" Attribute ..................................97
Appendix B. The v3 Format and Processing Tools ....................98
B.1. Including External Text with XInclude ......................99
B.2. Anchors and IDs ...........................................100
B.2.1. Overlapping Values ....................................100
B.3. Attributes Controlled by the Prep Tool ....................102
Appendix C. RELAX NG Schema ......................................104
Appendix D. Schema Differences from v2 ...........................127
IAB Members at the Time of Approval ..............................151
Acknowledgements .................................................151
Author's Address .................................................151
1. Introduction
This document describes version 3 ("v3") of the "xml2rfc" vocabulary:
an XML-based language ("Extensible Markup Language" [XML]) used for
writing RFCs [RFC7322] and Internet-Drafts [IDGUIDE].
This document obsoletes the version 2 vocabulary ("v2") [RFC7749],
which contains the extended language definition. That document in
turn obsoletes the original version ("v1") [RFC2629]. This document
directly copies the material from [RFC7749] where possible.
The v3 format will be used as part of the new RFC Series format
described in [RFC6949]. The new format will be handled by one or
more new tools for preparing the XML and converting it to other
representations. Features of the expected tools are described in
Appendix B. That section defines some terms used throughout this
document, such as "prep tool" and "formatter".
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 as index generation, populating a
keyword database, or syntax checks).
In this document, the term "format" is used when describing types of
documents, primarily XML and HTML. The term "representation" is used
when talking about a specific instantiation of a format, such as an
XML document or an HTML document that was created by an XML document.
1.1. Expected Updates to the Specification
Non-interoperable changes in later versions of this specification are
likely based on experience gained in implementing the new publication
toolsets. Revised documents will be published capturing those
changes as the toolsets are completed. Other implementers must not
expect those changes to remain backwards-compatible with the details
described in this document.
1.2. Design Criteria for the Changes in v3
The design criteria of the changes from v2 to v3 are as follows:
o The intention is that starting and editing a v3 document will be
easier than for a v2 document.
o There will be good v2-to-v3 conversion tools for when an author
wants to change versions.
o There are no current plans to make v3 XML the required submission
format for drafts or RFCs. That might happen eventually, but it
is likely to be years away.
There is a desire to keep as much of the v2 grammar as makes sense
within the above design criteria and not to make gratuitous changes
to the v2 grammar. Another way to say this is "we would rather
encourage backwards compatibility but not be constrained by it."
Still, the goal of starting and editing a v3 document being easier
than for a v2 document is more important than backwards compatibility
with v2, given the latter two design criteria.
v3 is upwards compatible with v2, meaning that a v2 document is meant
to be a valid v3 document as well. However, some features of v2 are
deprecated in v3 in favor of new elements. Deprecated features are
listed in Section 1.3.3 and are described in [RFC7749].
1.3. Differences from v2 to v3
This is a (hopefully) complete list of all the technical changes
between [RFC7749] and this document.
1.3.1. New Elements in v3
o Add <dl>, <ul>, and <ol> as new ways to make lists. This is a
significant change from v2 in that the child under these elements
is <li>, not <t>. <li> has a model of either containing one or
more <t> elements, or containing the flowing text normally found
in <t>. These lists are children of <section>s and other lists
instead of <t>.
o Add <strong>, <em>, <tt>, <sub>, and <sup> for character
formatting.
o Add <aside> for incidental text that will be indented when
displayed.
o Add <sourcecode> to differentiate from <artwork>.
o Add <table>, <thead>, <tbody>, <tfoot>, <tr>, <td>, and <th> to
give table functionality like that in HTML.
o Add <boilerplate> to hold the automatically generated boilerplate
text.
o Add <blockquote> to indicate a quotation as in a paragraph-like
format.
o Add <name> to sections, notes, figures, and texttables to allow
character formatting (fixed-width font) in their titles and to
allow references in the names.
o Add <postalLine>, free text that represents one line of the
address.
o Add <displayreference> to allow display of more mnemonic anchor
names for automatically included references.
o Add <refcontent> to allow better control of text in a reference.
o Add <referencegroup> to allow referencing multi-RFC documents such
as STDs and BCPs.
o Add <relref> to allow referencing specific sections or anchors in
references.
o Add <link> to point to a resource related to the RFC.
o Add <br> to allow line breaks (but not blank lines) in the
generated output for table cells.
o Add <svg> to allow easy inclusion of SVG drawings in <artwork>.
1.3.2. New Attributes for Existing Elements
o Add "sortRefs", "symRefs", "tocDepth", and "tocInclude" attributes
to <rfc> to cover Processing Instructions (PIs) that were in v2
that are still needed in the grammar. Add "prepTime" to indicate
the time that the XML went through a preparation step. Add
"version" to indicate the version of xml2rfc vocabulary used in
the document. Add "scripts" to indicate which scripts are needed
to render the document. Add "expiresDate" when an Internet-Draft
expires.
o Add "ascii" attributes to <email>, <organization>, <street>,
<city>, <region>, <country>, and <code>. Also add
"asciiFullname", "asciiInitials", and "asciiSurname" to <author>.
This allows an author to specify their information in their native
scripts as the primary entry and still allow the ASCII-equivalent
values to appear in the processed documents.
o Add "anchor" attributes to many block elements to allow them to be
linked with <relref> and <xref>.
o Add the "section", "relative", and "sectionFormat" attributes to
<xref>.
o Add the "numbered" and "removeInRFC" attributes to <section>.
o Add the "removeInRFC" attribute to <note>.
o Add "pn" to <artwork>, <aside>, <blockquote>, <boilerplate>, <dt>,
<figure>, <iref>, <li>, <references>, <section>, <sourcecode>,
<t>, and <table> to hold automatically generated numbers for items
in a section that don't have their own numbering (namely figures
and tables).
o Add "display" to <cref> to indicate to tools whether or not to
display the comment.
o Add "keepWithNext" and "keepWithPrevious" to <t> as a hint to
tools that do pagination that they should try to keep the
paragraph with the next/previous element.
1.3.3. Elements and Attributes Deprecated from v2
Deprecated elements and attributes are legacy vocabulary from v2 that
are supported for input to v3 tools. They are likely to be removed
from those tools in the future. Deprecated attributes are still
listed in Section 2, and deprecated elements are listed in Section 3.
See Appendix B for more information on tools and how they will handle
deprecated features.
o Deprecate <list> in favor of <dl>, <ul>, and <ol>.
o Deprecate <spanx>; replace it with <strong>, <em>, and <tt>.
o Deprecate <vspace> because the major use for it, creating pseudo-
paragraph-breaks in lists, is now handled properly.
o Deprecate <texttable>, <ttcol>, and <c>; replace them with the new
table elements (<table> and the elements that can be contained
within it).
o Deprecate <facsimile> because it is rarely used.
o Deprecate <format> because it is not useful and has caused
surprise for authors in the past. If the goal is to provide a
single URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) for a reference, use the
"target" attribute in <reference> instead.
o Deprecate <preamble> and <postamble> in favor of simply using <t>
before or after the figure. This also deprecates the "align"
attribute in <figure>.
o Deprecate the "title" attribute in <section>, <note>, <figure>,
<references>, and <texttable> in favor of the new <name>.
o Deprecate the "alt" and "src" attributes in <figure> because they
overlap with the attributes in <artwork>.
o Deprecate the "xml:space" attribute in <artwork> because there was
only one useful value. Deprecate the "height" and "width"
attributes in both <artwork> and <figure> because they are not
needed for the new output formats.
o Deprecate the "pageno" attribute in <xref> because it was unused
in v2. Deprecate the "none" values for the "format" attribute in
<xref> because it makes no sense semantically.
1.3.4. Additional Changes from v2
o Allow non-ASCII characters in the format; the characters that are
actually allowed will be determined by the RFC Series Editor.
o Allow <artwork> and <sourcecode> to be used on their own in
<section> (no longer confine them to a figure).
o Give more specifics of handling the "type" attribute in <artwork>.
o Allow <strong>, <em>, <tt>, <eref>, and <xref> in <cref>.
o Allow the sub-elements inside a <reference> to be in any order.
o Turn off the autogeneration of anchors in <cref> because there is
no use case for them that cannot be achieved in other ways.
o Allow more than one <artwork>, or more than one <sourcecode>, in
<figure>.
o In <front>, make <date> optional.
o In <date>, add restrictions to the "date" and "year" attributes
when used in the <front> for the document's boilerplate text.
o In <postal>, allow the sub-elements to be in any order. Also
allow the inclusion of the new <postalLine> instead of the older
elements.
o In <section>, restrict the names of the anchors that can be used
on some types of sections.
o Make <seriesInfo> a child of <front>, and deprecated it as a child
of <reference>. This also deprecates some of the attributes from
<rfc> and moves them into <seriesInfo>.
o <t> now only contains non-block elements, so it no longer contains
<figure> elements.
o Do not generate the grammar from a DTD, but instead get it
directly from the RELAX Next Generation (RNG) grammar [RNG].
1.4. 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.
Many elements have an optional "anchor" attribute. In all cases, the
value of the "anchor" attribute 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 characters. Anchors are described in
more detail in Appendix B.2.
Tools interpreting the XML described here will collapse horizontal
whitespace and line breaks to a single whitespace (except inside
<artwork> and <sourcecode>) and will trim leading and trailing
whitespace. Tab characters (U+0009) inside <artwork> and
<sourcecode> are prohibited.
Some of the elements have attributes that are not described in this
section because those attributes are specific to the prep tool.
People writing tools to process this format should read all of the
appendices for a complete description of these attributes.
Every element in the v3 vocabulary can have an "xml:lang" attribute,
an "xml:base" attribute, or both. The xml:lang attribute specifies
the language used in the element. This is sometimes useful for
renderers that display different fonts for ideographic characters
used in China and Japan. The xml:base attribute is sometimes added
to an XML file when doing XML-to-XML conversion where the base file
has XInclude attributes (see Appendix B.1).
2.1. <abstract>
Contains the Abstract of the document. See [RFC7322] for more
information on restrictions for the Abstract.
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model:
In any order, but at least one of:
o <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
o <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
o <t> elements (Section 2.53)
o <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
2.1.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the Abstract.
2.2. <address>
Provides address information for the author.
This element appears as a child element of <author> (Section 2.7).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <postal> element (Section 2.37)
2. One optional <phone> element (Section 2.36)
3. One optional <facsimile> element (Section 3.2)
4. One optional <email> element (Section 2.23)
5. One optional <uri> element (Section 2.64)
2.3. <annotation>
Provides additional prose augmenting a bibliographic reference. This
text is intended to be shown after the rest of the generated
reference text.
This element appears as a child element of <reference>
(Section 2.40).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <spanx> elements (Section 3.7)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
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 <http://www.ietf.org/iesg/area.html>.
A list of full names and abbreviations will be kept by the RFC Series
Editor.
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model: only text content.
2.5. <artwork>
This element allows the inclusion of "artwork" in the document.
<artwork> provides full control of horizontal whitespace and line
breaks; thus, it is used for a variety of things, such as diagrams
("line art") and protocol unit diagrams. Tab characters (U+0009)
inside of this element are prohibited.
Alternatively, the "src" attribute allows referencing an external
graphics file, such as a vector drawing in SVG or a bitmap graphic
file, using a URI. In this case, the textual content acts as a
fallback for output representations that do not support graphics;
thus, it ought to contain either (1) a "line art" variant of the
graphics or (2) prose that describes the included image in sufficient
detail.
In [RFC7749], the <artwork> element was also used for source code and
formal languages; in v3, this is now done with <sourcecode>.
There are at least five ways to include SVG in artwork in
Internet-Drafts:
o Inline, by including all of the SVG in the content of the element,
such as: <artwork type="svg"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/
svg...">
o Inline, but using XInclude (see Appendix B.1), such as: <artwork
type="svg"><xi:include href=...>
o As a data: URI, such as: <artwork type="svg" src="data:image/
svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3...">
o As a URI to an external entity, such as: <artwork type="svg"
src="http://www.example.com/...">
o As a local file, such as: <artwork type="svg" src="diagram12.svg">
The use of SVG in Internet-Drafts and RFCs is covered in much more
detail in [RFC7996].
The above methods for inclusion of SVG art can also be used for
including text artwork, but using a data: URI is probably confusing
for text artwork.
Formatters that do pagination should attempt to keep artwork on a
single page. This is to prevent artwork that is split across pages
from looking like two separate pieces of artwork.
See Section 5 for a description of how to deal with issues of using
"&" and "<" characters in artwork.
This element appears as a child element of <aside> (Section 2.6),
<blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd> (Section 2.18), <figure>
(Section 2.25), <li> (Section 2.29), <section> (Section 2.46), <td>
(Section 2.56), and <th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
Either:
Text
Or:
<svg> elements (Section 4)
2.5.1. "align" Attribute
Controls whether the artwork appears left justified (default),
centered, or right justified. Artwork is aligned relative to the
left margin of the document.
Allowed values:
o "left" (default)
o "center"
o "right"
2.5.2. "alt" Attribute
Alternative text description of the artwork (which is more than just
a summary or caption). When the art comes from the "src" attribute
and the format of that artwork supports alternate text, the
alternative text comes from the text of the artwork itself, not from
this attribute. The contents of this attribute are important to
readers who are visually impaired, as well as those reading on
devices that cannot show the artwork well, or at all.
2.5.3. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this artwork.
2.5.4. "height" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.5.5. "name" Attribute
A filename suitable for the contents (such as for extraction to a
local file). This attribute can be helpful for other kinds of tools
(such as automated syntax checkers, which work by extracting the
artwork). Note that the "name" attribute does not need to be unique
for <artwork> elements in a document. If multiple <artwork> elements
have the same "name" attribute, a processing tool might assume that
the elements are all fragments of a single file, and the tool can
collect those fragments for later processing. See Section 7 for a
discussion of possible problems with the value of this attribute.
2.5.6. "src" Attribute
The URI reference of a graphics file [RFC3986], or the name of a file
on the local disk. This can be a "data" URI [RFC2397] that contains
the contents of the graphics file. Note that the inclusion of art
with the "src" attribute depends on the capabilities of the
processing tool reading the XML document. Tools need to be able to
handle the file: URI, and they should be able to handle http: and
https: URIs as well. The prep tool will be able to handle reading
the "src" attribute.
If no URI scheme is given in the attribute, the attribute is
considered to be a local filename relative to the current directory.
Processing tools must be careful to not accept dangerous values for
the filename, particularly those that contain absolute references
outside the current directory. Document creators should think hard
before using relative URIs due to possible later problems if files
move around on the disk. Also, documents should most likely use
explicit URI schemes wherever possible.
In some cases, the prep tool may remove the "src" attribute after
processing its value. See [RFC7998] for a description of this.
It is an error to have both a "src" attribute and content in the
<artwork> element.
2.5.7. "type" Attribute
Specifies the type of the artwork. The value of this attribute is
free text with certain values designated as preferred.
The preferred values for <artwork> types are:
o ascii-art
o binary-art
o call-flow
o hex-dump
o svg
The RFC Series Editor will maintain a complete list of the preferred
values on the RFC Editor web site, and that list is expected to be
updated over time. Thus, a consumer of v3 XML should not cause a
failure when it encounters an unexpected type or no type is
specified. The table will also indicate which type of art can appear
in plain-text output (for example, type="svg" cannot).
2.5.8. "width" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.5.9. "xml:space" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.6. <aside>
This element is a container for content that is semantically less
important or tangential to the content that surrounds it.
This element appears as a child element of <section> (Section 2.46).
Content model:
In any order:
o <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
o <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
o <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <list> elements (Section 3.4)
o <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
o <t> elements (Section 2.53)
o <table> elements (Section 2.54)
o <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
2.6.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this aside.
2.7. <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.
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 [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 the
"Author's Address" section, as well as in bibliographic references.
Note that this specification does not define a precise meaning for
the term "editor".
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <organization> element (Section 2.35)
2. One optional <address> element (Section 2.2)
2.7.1. "asciiFullname" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the author's full name.
2.7.2. "asciiInitials" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the author's initials, to be used in
conjunction with the separately specified asciiSurname.
2.7.3. "asciiSurname" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the author's surname, to be used in
conjunction with the separately specified asciiInitials.
2.7.4. "fullname" Attribute
The full name (used in the automatically generated "Author's Address"
section). Although this attribute is optional, if one or more of the
"asciiFullname", "asciiInitials", or "asciiSurname" attributes have
values, the "fullname" attribute is required.
2.7.5. "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.
2.7.6. "role" Attribute
Specifies the role the author had in creating the document.
Allowed value:
o "editor"
2.7.7. "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.
2.8. <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 2.45).
Content model:
In this order:
1. Optional <displayreference> elements (Section 2.19)
2. Optional <references> elements (Section 2.42)
3. Optional <section> elements (Section 2.46)
2.9. <bcp14>
Marks text that are phrases defined in [BCP14] such as "MUST",
"SHOULD NOT", and so on. When shown in some of the output
representations, the text in this element might be highlighted. The
use of this element is optional.
This element is only to be used around the actual phrase from BCP 14,
not the full definition of a requirement. For example, it is correct
to say "The packet <bcp14>MUST</bcp14> be dropped.", but it is not
correct to say "<bcp14>The packet MUST be dropped.</bcp14>".
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd> (Section 2.18), <dt>
(Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li> (Section 2.29), <preamble>
(Section 3.6), <refcontent> (Section 2.39), <strong> (Section 2.50),
<sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t> (Section 2.53), <td>
(Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and <tt> (Section 2.62).
Content model: only text content.
2.10. <blockquote>
Specifies that a block of text is a quotation.
This element appears as a child element of <section> (Section 2.46).
Content model:
Either:
In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
Or:
In any order, but at least one of:
* Text
* <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
* <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
* <em> elements (Section 2.22)
* <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
* <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
* <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
* <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
* <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
* <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.10.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this quotation.
2.10.2. "cite" Attribute
The source of the citation. This must be a URI. If the "quotedFrom"
attribute is given, this URI will be used by processing tools as the
link for the text of that attribute.
2.10.3. "quotedFrom" Attribute
Name of person or document the text in this element is quoted from.
A formatter should render this as visible text at the end of the
quotation.
2.11. <boilerplate>
Holds the boilerplate text for the document. This element is filled
in by the prep tool.
This element contains <section> elements. Every <section> element in
this element must have the "numbered" attribute set to "false".
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model:
One or more <section> elements (Section 2.46)
2.12. <br>
Indicates that a line break should be inserted in the generated
output by a formatting tool. Multiple successive instances of this
element are ignored.
This element appears as a child element of <td> (Section 2.56) and
<th> (Section 2.58).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.13. <city>
Gives the city name in a postal address.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.13.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the city name.
2.14. <code>
Gives the postal region code.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.14.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the postal code.
2.15. <country>
Gives the country name or code in a postal address.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.15.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the country name.
2.16. <cref>
Represents a comment.
Comments can be used in a document while it is work in progress.
They might appear either inline and visually highlighted, at the end
of the document, or not at all, depending on the formatting tool.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <c> (Section 3.1), <dd>
(Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <name> (Section 2.32), <postamble> (Section 3.5),
<preamble> (Section 3.6), <strong> (Section 2.50), <sub>
(Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t> (Section 2.53), <td>
(Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), <tt> (Section 2.62), and <ttcol>
(Section 3.9).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.16.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this comment.
2.16.2. "display" Attribute
Suggests whether or not the comment should be displayed by formatting
tools. This might be set to "false" if you want to keep a comment in
a document after the contents of the comment have already been dealt
with.
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.16.3. "source" Attribute
Holds the "source" of a comment, such as the name or the initials of
the person who made the comment.
2.17. <date>
Provides information about the publication date. This element is
used for two cases: the boilerplate of the document being produced,
and inside bibliographic references that use the <front> element.
Boilerplate for Internet-Drafts and RFCs: This element defines the
date of publication for the current document (Internet-Draft or
RFC). When producing Internet-Drafts, the prep tool uses this
date to compute the expiration date (see [IDGUIDE]). When one or
more of "year", "month", or "day" are left out, the prep tool will
attempt to use the current system date if the attributes that are
present are consistent with that date.
In dates in <rfc> elements, the month must be a number or a month
in English. The prep tool will silently change text month names
to numbers. Similarly, the year must be a four-digit number.
When the prep tool is used to create Internet-Drafts, it will
reject a submitted Internet-Draft that has a <date> element in the
boilerplate for itself that is anything other than today. That
is, the tool will not allow a submitter to specify a date other
than the day of submission. To avoid this problem, authors might
simply not include a <date> element in the boilerplate.
Bibliographic references: In dates in <reference> elements, 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 2.26).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.17.1. "day" Attribute
The day of publication.
2.17.2. "month" Attribute
The month or months of publication.
2.17.3. "year" Attribute
The year or years of publication.
2.18. <dd>
The definition part of an entry in a definition list.
This element appears as a child element of <dl> (Section 2.20).
Content model:
Either:
In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
Or:
In any order, but at least one of:
* Text
* <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
* <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
* <em> elements (Section 2.22)
* <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
* <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
* <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
* <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
* <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
* <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.18.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this definition.
2.19. <displayreference>
This element gives a mapping between the anchor of a reference and a
name that will be displayed instead. This allows authors to display
more mnemonic anchor names for automatically included references.
The mapping in this element only applies to <xref> elements whose
format is "default". For example, if the reference uses the anchor
"RFC6949", the following would cause that anchor in the body of
displayed documents to be "RFC-dev":
<displayreference target="RFC6949" to="RFC-dev"/>
If a reference section is sorted, this element changes the sort
order.
It is expected that this element will only be valid in input
documents. It will likely be removed by prep tools when preparing a
final version after those tools have replaced all of the associated
anchors, targets, and "derivedContent" attributes.
This element appears as a child element of <back> (Section 2.8).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.19.1. "target" Attribute (Mandatory)
This attribute must be the name of an anchor in a <reference> or
<referencegroup> element.
2.19.2. "to" Attribute (Mandatory)
This attribute is a name that will be displayed as the anchor instead
of the anchor that is given in the <reference> element. The string
given must start with one of the following characters: 0-9, a-z, or
A-Z. The other characters in the string must be 0-9, a-z, A-Z, "-",
".", or "_".
2.20. <dl>
A definition list. Each entry has a pair of elements: a term (<dt>)
and a definition (<dd>). (This is slightly different and simpler
than the model used in HTML, which allows for multiple terms for a
single definition.)
This element appears as a child element of <abstract> (Section 2.1),
<aside> (Section 2.6), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd>
(Section 2.18), <li> (Section 2.29), <note> (Section 2.33), <section>
(Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and <th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
One or more sequences of:
1. One <dt> element
2. One <dd> element
2.20.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the list.
2.20.2. "hanging" Attribute
The "hanging" attribute defines whether or not the term appears on
the same line as the definition. hanging="true" indicates that the
term is to the left of the definition, while hanging="false"
indicates that the term will be on a separate line.
Allowed values:
o "false"
o "true" (default)
2.20.3. "spacing" Attribute
Defines whether or not there is a blank line between entries.
spacing="normal" indicates a single blank line, while
spacing="compact" indicates no space between.
Allowed values:
o "normal" (default)
o "compact"
2.21. <dt>
The term being defined in a definition list.
This element appears as a child element of <dl> (Section 2.20).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.21.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this term.
2.22. <em>
Indicates text that is semantically emphasized. Text enclosed within
this element will be displayed as italic after processing. This
element can be combined with other character formatting elements, and
the formatting will be additive.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <li> (Section 2.29),
<preamble> (Section 3.6), <refcontent> (Section 2.39), <strong>
(Section 2.50), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t>
(Section 2.53), <td> (Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and <tt>
(Section 2.62).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.23. <email>
Provides an email address.
The value is expected to be the addr-spec defined in Section 2 of
[RFC6068].
This element appears as a child element of <address> (Section 2.2).
Content model: only text content.
2.23.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the author's email address. This is only
used if the email address has any internationalized components.
2.24. <eref>
Represents an "external" link (as specified in the "target"
attribute). This is useful for embedding URIs in the body of a
document.
If the <eref> element has non-empty text content, formatters should
use the content as the displayed text that is linked. Otherwise, the
formatter should use the value of the "target" attribute as the
displayed text. Formatters will link the displayed text to the value
of the "target" attribute in a manner appropriate for the output
format.
For example, with an input of:
This is described at
<eref target="http://www.example.com/reports/r12.html"/>.
An HTML formatter might generate:
This is described at
<a href="http://www.example.com/reports/r12.html">
http://www.example.com/reports/r12.html</a>.
With an input of:
This is described
<eref target="http://www.example.com/reports/r12.html">
in this interesting report</eref>.
An HTML formatter might generate:
This is described
<a href="http://www.example.com/reports/r12.html">
in this interesting report</a>.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <c> (Section 3.1), <cref>
(Section 2.16), <dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em>
(Section 2.22), <li> (Section 2.29), <name> (Section 2.32),
<postamble> (Section 3.5), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <strong>
(Section 2.50), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t>
(Section 2.53), <td> (Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), <tt>
(Section 2.62), and <ttcol> (Section 3.9).
Content model: only text content.
2.24.1. "target" Attribute (Mandatory)
URI of the link target [RFC3986]. This must begin with a scheme name
(such as "https://") and thus not be relative to the URL of the
current document.
2.25. <figure>
Contains a figure with a caption with the figure number. If the
element contains a <name> element, the caption will also show that
name.
This element appears as a child element of <aside> (Section 2.6),
<blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd> (Section 2.18), <li>
(Section 2.29), <section> (Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and
<th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. Optional <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
3. One optional <preamble> element (Section 3.6)
4. In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
5. One optional <postamble> element (Section 3.5)
2.25.1. "align" Attribute
Deprecated.
Note: does not affect title or <artwork> alignment.
Allowed values:
o "left" (default)
o "center"
o "right"
2.25.2. "alt" Attribute
Deprecated. If the goal is to provide a single URI for a reference,
use the "target" attribute in <reference> instead.
2.25.3. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this figure.
2.25.4. "height" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.25.5. "src" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.25.6. "suppress-title" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.25.7. "title" Attribute
Deprecated. Use <name> instead.
2.25.8. "width" Attribute
Deprecated.
2.26. <front>
Represents the "front matter": metadata (such as author information),
the Abstract, and additional notes.
A <front> element may have more than one <seriesInfo> element. A
<seriesInfo> element determines the document number (for RFCs) or
name (for Internet-Drafts). Another <seriesInfo> element determines
the "maturity level" (defined in [RFC2026]), using values of "std"
for "Standards Track", "bcp" for "BCP", "info" for "Informational",
"exp" for "Experimental", and "historic" for "Historic". The "name"
attributes of those multiple <seriesInfo> elements interact as
described in Section 2.47.
This element appears as a child element of <reference> (Section 2.40)
and <rfc> (Section 2.45).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One <title> element (Section 2.60)
2. Optional <seriesInfo> elements (Section 2.47)
3. One or more <author> elements (Section 2.7)
4. One optional <date> element (Section 2.17)
5. Optional <area> elements (Section 2.4)
6. Optional <workgroup> elements (Section 2.65)
7. Optional <keyword> elements (Section 2.28)
8. One optional <abstract> element (Section 2.1)
9. Optional <note> elements (Section 2.33)
10. One optional <boilerplate> element (Section 2.11)
2.27. <iref>
Provides terms for the document's index.
Index entries can be either regular entries (when just the "item"
attribute is given) or nested entries (by specifying "subitem" as
well), grouped under a regular entry.
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 ranges.
When the prep tool is creating index content, it collects the items
in a case-sensitive fashion for both the item and subitem level.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <aside> (Section 2.6), <blockquote> (Section 2.10),
<c> (Section 3.1), <dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em>
(Section 2.22), <figure> (Section 2.25), <li> (Section 2.29),
<postamble> (Section 3.5), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <section>
(Section 2.46), <strong> (Section 2.50), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup>
(Section 2.52), <t> (Section 2.53), <table> (Section 2.54), <td>
(Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), <tt> (Section 2.62), and <ttcol>
(Section 3.9).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.27.1. "item" Attribute (Mandatory)
The item to include.
2.27.2. "primary" Attribute
Setting this to "true" declares the occurrence as "primary", which
might cause it to be highlighted in the index. There is no
restriction on the number of occurrences that can be "primary".
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.27.3. "subitem" Attribute
The subitem to include.
2.28. <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 document representations.
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model: only text content.
2.29. <li>
A list element, used in <ol> and <ul>.
This element appears as a child element of <ol> (Section 2.34) and
<ul> (Section 2.63).
Content model:
Either:
In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
Or:
In any order, but at least one of:
* Text
* <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
* <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
* <em> elements (Section 2.22)
* <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
* <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
* <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
* <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
* <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
* <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.29.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this list item.
2.30. <link>
A link to an external document that is related to the RFC.
The following are the supported types of external documents that can
be pointed to in a <link> element:
o The current International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) for the
RFC Series. The value for the "rel" attribute is "item". The
link should use the form "urn:issn:".
o The Digital Object Identifier (DOI) for this document. The value
for the "rel" attribute is "describedBy". The link should use the
form specified in [RFC7669]; this is expected to change in the
future.
o The Internet-Draft that was submitted to the RFC Editor to become
the published RFC. The value for the "rel" attribute is
"convertedFrom". The link should be to an IETF-controlled web
site that retains copies of Internet-Drafts.
o A representation of the document offered by the document author.
The value for the "rel" attribute is "alternate". The link can be
to a personally run web site.
In RFC production mode, the prep tool needs to check the values for
<link> before an RFC is published. In draft production mode, the
prep tool might remove some <link> elements during the draft
submission process.
This element appears as a child element of <rfc> (Section 2.45).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.30.1. "href" Attribute (Mandatory)
The URI of the external document.
2.30.2. "rel" Attribute
The relationship of the external document to this one. The
relationships are taken from the "Link Relations" registry maintained
by IANA [LINKRELATIONS].
2.31. <middle>
Represents the main content of the document.
This element appears as a child element of <rfc> (Section 2.45).
Content model:
One or more <section> elements (Section 2.46)
2.32. <name>
The name of the section, note, figure, or texttable. This name can
indicate markup of flowing text (for example, including references or
making some characters use a fixed-width font).
This element appears as a child element of <figure> (Section 2.25),
<note> (Section 2.33), <references> (Section 2.42), <section>
(Section 2.46), <table> (Section 2.54), and <texttable>
(Section 3.8).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.33. <note>
Creates an unnumbered, titled block of text 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 2.26).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. In any order, but at least one of:
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
2.33.1. "removeInRFC" Attribute
If set to "true", this note is marked in the prep tool with text
indicating that it should be removed before the document is published
as an RFC. That text will be "This note is to be removed before
publishing as an RFC."
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.33.2. "title" Attribute
Deprecated. Use <name> instead.
2.34. <ol>
An ordered list. The labels on the items will be either a number or
a letter, depending on the value of the style attribute.
This element appears as a child element of <abstract> (Section 2.1),
<aside> (Section 2.6), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd>
(Section 2.18), <li> (Section 2.29), <note> (Section 2.33), <section>
(Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and <th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
One or more <li> elements (Section 2.29)
2.34.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the list.
2.34.2. "group" Attribute
When the prep tool sees an <ol> element with a "group" attribute that
has already been seen, it continues the numbering of the list from
where the previous list with the same group name left off. If an
<ol> element has both a "group" attribute and a "start" attribute,
the group's numbering is reset to the given start value.
2.34.3. "spacing" Attribute
Defines whether or not there is a blank line between entries.
spacing="normal" indicates a single blank line, while
spacing="compact" indicates no space between.
Allowed values:
o "normal" (default)
o "compact"
2.34.4. "start" Attribute
The ordinal value at which to start the list. This defaults to "1"
and must be an integer of 0 or greater.
2.34.5. "type" Attribute
The type of the labels on list items. If the length of the type
value is 1, the meaning is the same as it is for HTML:
a Lowercase letters (a, b, c, ...)
A Uppercase letters (A, B, C, ...)
1 Decimal numbers (1, 2, 3, ...)
i Lowercase Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, ...)
I Uppercase Roman numerals (I, II, III, ...)
For types "a" and "A", after the 26th entry, the numbering starts at
"aa"/"AA", then "ab"/"AB", and so on.
If the length of the type value is greater than 1, the value must
contain a percent-encoded indicator and other text. 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 a decimal
number.
The following formats are supported:
%c Lowercase letters (a, b, c, ...)
%C Uppercase letters (A, B, C, ...)
%d Decimal numbers (1, 2, 3, ...)
%i Lowercase Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, ...)
%I Uppercase Roman numerals (I, II, III, ...)
%% Represents a percent sign
Other formats are reserved for future use. Only one percent encoding
other than "%%" is allowed in a type string.
It is an error for the type string to be empty. For bulleted lists,
use the <ul> element. For lists that have neither bullets nor
numbers, use the <ul> element with the 'empty="true"' attribute.
If no type attribute is given, the default type is the same as
"type='%d.'".
2.35. <organization>
Specifies the affiliation [RFC7322] of an author.
This information appears both in the "Author's Address" section and
on the front page (see [RFC7322] 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 2.7).
Content model: only text content.
2.35.1. "abbrev" Attribute
Abbreviated variant.
2.35.2. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the organization's name.
2.36. <phone>
Represents a phone number.
The value is expected to be the scheme-specific part of a "tel" URI
(and so does not include the prefix "tel:"), using the
"global-number-digits" 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.
2.37. <postal>
Contains optional child elements providing postal information. These
elements will be displayed in an order that is specific to
formatters. A postal address can contain only a set of <street>,
<city>, <region>, <code>, and <country> elements, or only an ordered
set of <postalLine> elements, but not both.
This element appears as a child element of <address> (Section 2.2).
Content model:
Either:
In any order:
* <city> elements (Section 2.13)
* <code> elements (Section 2.14)
* <country> elements (Section 2.15)
* <region> elements (Section 2.43)
* <street> elements (Section 2.49)
Or:
One or more <postalLine> elements (Section 2.38)
2.38. <postalLine>
Represents one line of a postal address. When more than one
<postalLine> is given, the prep tool emits them in the order given.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.38.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the text in the address line.
2.39. <refcontent>
Text that should appear between the title and the date of a
reference. The purpose of this element is to prevent the need to
abuse <seriesInfo> to get such text in a reference.
For example:
<reference anchor="April1">
<front>
<title>On Being A Fool</title>
<author initials="K." surname="Phunny" fullname="Knot Phunny"/>
<date year="2000" month="April"/>
</front>
<refcontent>Self-published pamphlet</refcontent>
</reference>
would render as:
[April1] Phunny, K., "On Being A Fool", Self-published
pamphlet, April 2000.
This element appears as a child element of <reference>
(Section 2.40).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
2.40. <reference>
Represents a bibliographic reference.
This element appears as a child element of <referencegroup>
(Section 2.41) and <references> (Section 2.42).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One <front> element (Section 2.26)
2. In any order:
* <annotation> elements (Section 2.3)
* <format> elements (Section 3.3)
* <refcontent> elements (Section 2.39)
* <seriesInfo> elements (Section 2.47; deprecated in this
context)
2.40.1. "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.
2.40.2. "quoteTitle" Attribute
Specifies whether or not the title in the reference should be quoted.
This can be used to prevent quoting, such as on errata.
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.40.3. "target" Attribute
Holds the URI for the reference.
2.41. <referencegroup>
Represents a list of bibliographic references that will be
represented as a single reference. This is most often used to
reference STDs and BCPs, where a single reference (such as "BCP 9")
may encompass more than one RFC.
This element appears as a child element of <references>
(Section 2.42).
Content model:
One or more <reference> elements (Section 2.40)
2.41.1. "anchor" Attribute (Mandatory)
Document-wide unique identifier for this reference group. Usually,
this will be used both to "label" the reference group in the
"References" section and as an identifier in links to this reference
entry.
2.42. <references>
Contains a set of bibliographic 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 [RFC7322]. This vocabulary supports the split with the <name>
child element. In general, the title should be either "Normative
References" or "Informative References".
This element appears as a child element of <back> (Section 2.8).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. In any order:
* <reference> elements (Section 2.40)
* <referencegroup> elements (Section 2.41)
2.42.1. "anchor" Attribute
An optional user-supplied identifier for this set of references.
2.42.2. "title" Attribute
Deprecated. Use <name> instead.
2.43. <region>
Provides the region name in a postal address.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.43.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the region name.
2.44. <relref>
Represents a link to a specific part of a document that appears in a
<reference> element. Formatters that have links (such as HTML and
PDF) render <relref> elements as external hyperlinks to the specified
part of the reference, creating the link target by combining the base
URI from the <reference> element with the "relative" attribute from
this element. The "target" attribute is required, and it must be the
anchor of a <reference> element.
The "section" attribute is required, and the "relative" attribute is
optional. If the reference is not an RFC or Internet-Draft that is
in the v3 format, the element needs to have a "relative" attribute;
in this case, the value of the "section" attribute is ignored.
An example of the <relref> element with text content might be:
See
<relref section="2.3" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="bare">
the protocol overview</relref>
for more information.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9999.html#s-2.3">
the protocol overview</a>
for more information.
Note that the URL in the above example might be different when the
RFC Editor deploys the v3 format.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <name> (Section 2.32), <preamble> (Section 3.6),
<strong> (Section 2.50), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52),
<t> (Section 2.53), <td> (Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and
<tt> (Section 2.62).
Content model: only text content.
2.44.1. "displayFormat" Attribute
This attribute is used to signal formatters what the desired format
of the relative reference should be. Formatters for document types
that have linking capability should wrap each part of the displayed
text in hyperlinks. If there is content in the <relref> element,
formatters will ignore the value of this attribute.
"of"
A formatter should display the relative reference as the word
"Section" followed by a space, the contents of the "section"
attribute followed by a space, the word "of", another space, and
the value from the "target" attribute enclosed in square brackets.
For example, with an input of:
See
<relref section="2.3" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="of"/>
for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999#s-2.3">
Section 2.3</a> of
[<a href="#RFC9999">RFC9999</a>]
for an overview.
Note that "displayFormat='of'" is the default for <relref>, so it
does not need to be given in a <relref> element if that format is
desired.
"comma"
A formatter should display the relative reference as the value
from the "target" attribute enclosed in square brackets, a comma,
a space, the word "Section" followed by a space, and the "section"
attribute.
For example, with an input of:
See
<relref section="2.3" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="comma"/>,
for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See
[<a href="#RFC9999">RFC9999</a>],
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999#s-2.3">
Section 2.3</a>, for an overview.
"parens"
A formatter should display the relative reference as the value
from the "target" attribute enclosed in square brackets, a space,
a left parenthesis, the word "Section" followed by a space, the
"section" attribute, and a right parenthesis.
For example, with an input of:
See
<relref section="2.3" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="parens"/>
for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See
[<a href="#RFC9999">RFC9999</a>]
(<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999#s-2.3">
Section 2.3</a>)
for an overview.
"bare"
A formatter should display the relative reference as the contents
of the "section" attribute and nothing else. This is useful when
there are multiple relative references to a single base reference.
For example:
See Sections
<relref section="2.3" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="bare"/>
and
<relref section="2.4" target="RFC9999" displayFormat="of"/>
for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See Sections
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999#s-2.3">
2.3</a>
and
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999#s-2.4">
Section 2.4</a> of
[<a href="#RFC9999">RFC9999</a>]
for an overview.
Allowed values:
o "of" (default)
o "comma"
o "parens"
o "bare"
2.44.2. "relative" Attribute
Specifies a relative reference from the URI in the target reference.
This value must include whatever leading character is needed to
create the relative reference; typically, this is "#" for HTML
documents.
2.44.3. "section" Attribute (Mandatory)
Specifies a section of the target reference. If the reference is not
an RFC or Internet-Draft in the v3 format, it is an error.
2.44.4. "target" Attribute (Mandatory)
The anchor of the reference for this element. If this value is not
an anchor to a <reference> or <referencegroup> element, it is an
error. If the reference at the target has no URI, it is an error.
2.45. <rfc>
This is the root element of the xml2rfc vocabulary.
Content model:
In this order:
1. Optional <link> elements (Section 2.30)
2. One <front> element (Section 2.26)
3. One <middle> element (Section 2.31)
4. One optional <back> element (Section 2.8)
2.45.1. "category" Attribute
Deprecated; instead, use the "name" attribute in <seriesInfo>.
2.45.2. "consensus" Attribute
Affects the generated boilerplate. Note that the values of "no" and
"yes" are deprecated and are replaced by "false" (the default) and
"true".
See [RFC7841] for more information.
Allowed values:
o "no"
o "yes"
o "false" (default)
o "true"
2.45.3. "docName" Attribute
Deprecated; instead, use the "value" attribute in <seriesInfo>.
2.45.4. "indexInclude" Attribute
Specifies whether or not a formatter is requested to include an index
in generated files. If the source file has no <iref> elements, an
index is never generated. This option is useful for generating
documents where the source document has <iref> elements but the
author no longer wants an index.
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.45.5. "ipr" Attribute
Represents the Intellectual Property status of the document. See
Appendix A.1 for details.
2.45.6. "iprExtract" Attribute
Identifies a single section within the document for which extraction
"as is" is explicitly allowed (only relevant for historic values of
the "ipr" attribute).
2.45.7. "number" Attribute
Deprecated; instead, use the "value" attribute in <seriesInfo>.
2.45.8. "obsoletes" Attribute
A comma-separated list of RFC numbers or Internet-Draft names.
The prep tool will parse the attribute value so that incorrect
references can be detected.
2.45.9. "prepTime" Attribute
The date that the XML was processed by a prep tool. This is included
in the XML file just before it is saved to disk. The value is
formatted using the "date-time" format defined in Section 5.6 of
[RFC3339]. The "time-offset" should be "Z".
2.45.10. "seriesNo" Attribute
Deprecated; instead, use the "value" attribute in <seriesInfo>.
2.45.11. "sortRefs" Attribute
Specifies whether or not the prep tool will sort the references in
each reference section.
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.45.12. "submissionType" Attribute
The document stream, as described in [RFC7841]. (The RFC Series
Editor may change the list of allowed values in the future.)
Allowed values:
o "IETF" (default)
o "IAB"
o "IRTF"
o "independent"
2.45.13. "symRefs" Attribute
Specifies whether or not a formatter is requested to use symbolic
references (such as "[RFC2119]"). If the value for this is "false",
the references come out as numbers (such as "[3]").
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.45.14. "tocDepth" Attribute
Specifies the number of levels of headings that a formatter is
requested to include in the table of contents; the default is "3".
2.45.15. "tocInclude" Attribute
Specifies whether or not a formatter is requested to include a table
of contents in generated files.
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.45.16. "updates" Attribute
A comma-separated list of RFC numbers or Internet-Draft names.
The prep tool will parse the attribute value so that incorrect
references can be detected.
2.45.17. "version" Attribute
Specifies the version of xml2rfc syntax used in this document. The
only expected value (for now) is "3".
2.46. <section>
Represents a section (when inside a <middle> element) or an appendix
(when inside a <back> element).
Subsections are created by nesting <section> elements inside
<section> elements. Sections are allowed to be empty.
This element appears as a child element of <back> (Section 2.8),
<boilerplate> (Section 2.11), <middle> (Section 2.31), and <section>
(Section 2.46).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. In any order:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <aside> elements (Section 2.6)
* <blockquote> elements (Section 2.10)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <table> elements (Section 2.54)
* <texttable> elements (Section 3.8)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
3. Optional <section> elements (Section 2.46)
2.46.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this section.
2.46.2. "numbered" Attribute
If set to "false", the formatter is requested to not display a
section number. The prep tool will verify that such a section is not
followed by a numbered section in this part of the document and will
verify that the section is a top-level section.
Allowed values:
o "true" (default)
o "false"
2.46.3. "removeInRFC" Attribute
If set to "true", this note is marked in the prep tool with text
indicating that it should be removed before the document is published
as an RFC. That text will be "This note is to be removed before
publishing as an RFC."
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.46.4. "title" Attribute
Deprecated. Use <name> instead.
2.46.5. "toc" Attribute
Indicates to a formatter whether or not the section is to be included
in a table of contents, if such a table of contents is produced.
This only takes effect if the level of the section would have
appeared in the table of contents based on the "tocDepth" attribute
of the <rfc> element, and of course only if the table of contents is
being created based on the "tocInclude" attribute of the <rfc>
element. If this is set to "exclude", any section below this one
will be excluded as well. The "default" value indicates inclusion of
the section if it would be included by the tocDepth attribute of the
<rfc> element.
Allowed values:
o "include"
o "exclude"
o "default" (default)
2.47. <seriesInfo>
Specifies the document series in which this document appears, and
also specifies an identifier within that series.
A processing tool determines whether it is working on an RFC or an
Internet-Draft by inspecting the "name" attribute of a <seriesInfo>
element inside the <front> element inside the <rfc> element, looking
for "RFC" or "Internet-Draft". (Specifying neither value in any of
the <seriesInfo> elements can be useful for producing other types of
documents but is out of scope for this specification.)
It is invalid to have multiple <seriesInfo> elements inside the same
<front> element containing the same "name" value. Some combinations
of <seriesInfo> "name" attribute values make no sense, such as having
both <seriesInfo name="rfc"/> and <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft"/>
in the same <front> element.
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26) and
<reference> (Section 2.40; deprecated in this context).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
2.47.1. "asciiName" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the name field.
2.47.2. "asciiValue" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the value field.
2.47.3. "name" Attribute (Mandatory)
The name of the series. The currently known values are "RFC",
"Internet-Draft", and "DOI". The RFC Series Editor may change this
list in the future.
Some of the values for "name" interact as follows:
o If a <front> element contains a <seriesInfo> element with a name
of "Internet-Draft", it can also have at most one additional
<seriesInfo> element with a "status" attribute whose value is of
"standard", "full-standard", "bcp", "fyi", "informational",
"experimental", or "historic" to indicate the intended status of
this Internet-Draft, if it were to be later published as an RFC.
If such an additional <seriesInfo> element has one of those
statuses, the name needs to be "".
o If a <front> element contains a <seriesInfo> element with a name
of "RFC", it can also have at most one additional <seriesInfo>
element with a "status" attribute whose value is of
"full-standard", "bcp", or "fyi" to indicate the current status of
this RFC. If such an additional <seriesInfo> element has one of
those statuses, the "value" attribute for that name needs to be
the number within that series. That <front> element might also
contain an additional <seriesInfo> element with the status of
"info", "exp", or "historic" and a name of "" to indicate the
status of the RFC.
o A <front> element that has a <seriesInfo> element that has the
name "Internet-Draft" cannot also have a <seriesInfo> element that
has the name "RFC".
o The <seriesInfo> element can contain the DOI for the referenced
document. This cannot be used when the <seriesInfo> element is an
eventual child element of an <rfc> element -- only as an eventual
child of a <reference> element. The "value" attribute should use
the form specified in [RFC7669].
2.47.4. "status" Attribute
The status of this document. The currently known values are
"standard", "informational", "experimental", "bcp", "fyi", and
"full-standard". The RFC Series Editor may change this list in the
future.
2.47.5. "stream" Attribute
The stream (as described in [RFC7841]) that originated the document.
(The RFC Series Editor may change this list in the future.)
Allowed values:
o "IETF" (default)
o "IAB"
o "IRTF"
o "independent"
2.47.6. "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). For DOIs, the value is given, such as
"10.17487/rfc1149", as described in [RFC7669].
The name in the value should be the document name without any file
extension. For Internet-Drafts, the value for this attribute should
be "draft-ietf-somewg-someprotocol-07", not
"draft-ietf-somewg-someprotocol-07.txt".
2.48. <sourcecode>
This element allows the inclusion of source code into the document.
When rendered, source code is always shown in a monospace font. When
<sourcecode> is a child of <figure> or <section>, it provides full
control of horizontal whitespace and line breaks. When formatted, it
is indented relative to the left margin of the enclosing element. It
is thus useful for source code and formal languages (such as ABNF
[RFC5234] or the RNC notation used in this document). (When
<sourcecode> is a child of other elements, it flows with the text
that surrounds it.) Tab characters (U+0009) inside of this element
are prohibited.
For artwork such as character-based art, diagrams of message layouts,
and so on, use the <artwork> element instead.
Output formatters that do pagination should attempt to keep source
code on a single page. This is to prevent source code that is split
across pages from looking like two separate pieces of code.
See Section 5 for a description of how to deal with issues of using
"&" and "<" characters in source code.
This element appears as a child element of <blockquote>
(Section 2.10), <dd> (Section 2.18), <figure> (Section 2.25), <li>
(Section 2.29), <section> (Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and
<th> (Section 2.58).
Content model: only text content.
2.48.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this source code.
2.48.2. "name" Attribute
A filename suitable for the contents (such as for extraction to a
local file). This attribute can be helpful for other kinds of tools
(such as automated syntax checkers, which work by extracting the
source code). Note that the "name" attribute does not need to be
unique for <artwork> elements in a document. If multiple
<sourcecode> elements have the same "name" attribute, a formatter
might assume that the elements are all fragments of a single file,
and such a formatter can collect those fragments for later
processing.
2.48.3. "src" Attribute
The URI reference of a source file [RFC3986].
It is an error to have both a "src" attribute and content in the
<sourcecode> element.
2.48.4. "type" Attribute
Specifies the type of the source code. The value of this attribute
is free text with certain values designated as preferred.
The preferred values for <sourcecode> types are:
o abnf
o asn.1
o bash
o c++
o c
o cbor
o dtd
o java
o javascript
o json
o mib
o perl
o pseudocode
o python
o rnc
o xml
o yang
The RFC Series Editor will maintain a complete list of the preferred
values on the RFC Editor web site, and that list is expected to be
updated over time. Thus, a consumer of v3 XML should not cause a
failure when it encounters an unexpected type or no type is
specified.
2.49. <street>
Provides a street address.
This element appears as a child element of <postal> (Section 2.37).
Content model: only text content.
2.49.1. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the street address.
2.50. <strong>
Indicates text that is semantically strong. Text enclosed within
this element will be displayed as bold after processing. This
element can be combined with other character formatting elements, and
the formatting will be additive.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <refcontent>
(Section 2.39), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t>
(Section 2.53), <td> (Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and <tt>
(Section 2.62).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.51. <sub>
Causes the text to be displayed as subscript, approximately half a
letter-height lower than normal text. This element can be combined
with other character formatting elements, and the formatting will be
additive.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <refcontent>
(Section 2.39), <strong> (Section 2.50), <t> (Section 2.53), <td>
(Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and <tt> (Section 2.62).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.52. <sup>
Causes the text to be displayed as superscript, approximately half a
letter-height higher than normal text. This element can be combined
with other character formatting elements, and the formatting will be
additive.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <refcontent>
(Section 2.39), <strong> (Section 2.50), <t> (Section 2.53), <td>
(Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), and <tt> (Section 2.62).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.53. <t>
Contains a paragraph of text.
This element appears as a child element of <abstract> (Section 2.1),
<aside> (Section 2.6), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd>
(Section 2.18), <li> (Section 2.29), <list> (Section 3.4), <note>
(Section 2.33), <section> (Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and
<th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <list> elements (Section 3.4)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <spanx> elements (Section 3.7)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <vspace> elements (Section 3.10)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.53.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this paragraph.
2.53.2. "hangText" Attribute
Deprecated. Instead, use <dd> inside of a definition list (<dl>).
2.53.3. "keepWithNext" Attribute
Acts as a hint to the output formatters that do pagination to do a
best-effort attempt to keep the paragraph with the next element,
whatever that happens to be. For example, the HTML output @media
print CSS ("CSS" refers to Cascading Style Sheets) might translate
this to page-break-after: avoid. For PDF, the paginator could
attempt to keep the paragraph with the next element. Note: this
attribute is strictly a hint and not always actionable.
Allowed values:
o "false" (default)
o "true"
2.53.4. "keepWithPrevious" Attribute
Acts as a hint to the output formatters that do pagination to do a
best-effort attempt to keep the paragraph with the previous element,
whatever that happens to be. For example, the HTML output @media
print CSS might translate this to page-break-before: avoid. For PDF,
the paginator could attempt to keep the paragraph with the previous
element. Note: this attribute is strictly a hint and not always
actionable.
Allowed values:
o "false" (default)
o "true"
2.54. <table>
Contains a table with a caption with the table number. If the
element contains a <name> element, the caption will also show that
name.
Inside the <table> element is, optionally, a <thead> element to
contain the rows that will be the table's heading and, optionally, a
<tfoot> element to contain the rows of the table's footer. If the
XML is converted to a representation that has page breaks (such as
PDFs or printed HTML), the header and footer are meant to appear on
each page.
This element appears as a child element of <aside> (Section 2.6) and
<section> (Section 2.46).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. Optional <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
3. One optional <thead> element (Section 2.59)
4. One or more <tbody> elements (Section 2.55)
5. One optional <tfoot> element (Section 2.57)
2.54.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for this table.
2.55. <tbody>
A container for a set of body rows for a table.
This element appears as a child element of <table> (Section 2.54).
Content model:
One or more <tr> elements (Section 2.61)
2.55.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the tbody.
2.56. <td>
A cell in a table row.
This element appears as a child element of <tr> (Section 2.61).
Content model:
Either:
In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
Or:
In any order:
* Text
* <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
* <br> elements (Section 2.12)
* <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
* <em> elements (Section 2.22)
* <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
* <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
* <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
* <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
* <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
* <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.56.1. "align" Attribute
Controls whether the content of the cell appears left justified
(default), centered, or right justified. Note that "center" or
"right" will probably only work well in cells with plain text; any
other elements might make the contents render badly.
Allowed values:
o "left" (default)
o "center"
o "right"
2.56.2. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the cell.
2.56.3. "colspan" Attribute
The number of columns that the cell is to span. For example, setting
"colspan='3'" indicates that the cell occupies the same horizontal
space as three cells of a row without any "colspan" attributes.
2.56.4. "rowspan" Attribute
The number of rows that the cell is to span. For example, setting
"rowspan='3'" indicates that the cell occupies the same vertical
space as three rows.
2.57. <tfoot>
A container for a set of footer rows for a table.
This element appears as a child element of <table> (Section 2.54).
Content model:
One or more <tr> elements (Section 2.61)
2.57.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the tfoot.
2.58. <th>
A cell in a table row. When rendered, this will normally come out in
boldface; other than that, there is no difference between this and
the <td> element.
This element appears as a child element of <tr> (Section 2.61).
Content model:
Either:
In any order, but at least one of:
* <artwork> elements (Section 2.5)
* <dl> elements (Section 2.20)
* <figure> elements (Section 2.25)
* <ol> elements (Section 2.34)
* <sourcecode> elements (Section 2.48)
* <t> elements (Section 2.53)
* <ul> elements (Section 2.63)
Or:
In any order:
* Text
* <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
* <br> elements (Section 2.12)
* <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
* <em> elements (Section 2.22)
* <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
* <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
* <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
* <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
* <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
* <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
* <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
* <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.58.1. "align" Attribute
Controls whether the content of the cell appears left justified
(default), centered, or right justified. Note that "center" or
"right" will probably only work well in cells with plain text; any
other elements might make the contents render badly.
Allowed values:
o "left" (default)
o "center"
o "right"
2.58.2. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the row.
2.58.3. "colspan" Attribute
The number of columns that the cell is to span. For example, setting
"colspan='3'" indicates that the cell occupies the same horizontal
space as three cells of a row without any "colspan" attributes.
2.58.4. "rowspan" Attribute
The number of rows that the cell is to span. For example, setting
"rowspan='3'" indicates that the cell occupies the same vertical
space as three rows.
2.59. <thead>
A container for a set of header rows for a table.
This element appears as a child element of <table> (Section 2.54).
Content model:
One or more <tr> elements (Section 2.61)
2.59.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the thead.
2.60. <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 is long (~40 characters), the "abbrev" attribute can be used to
specify an abbreviated variant.
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model: only text content.
2.60.1. "abbrev" Attribute
Specifies an abbreviated variant of the document title.
2.60.2. "ascii" Attribute
The ASCII equivalent of the title.
2.61. <tr>
A row of a table.
This element appears as a child element of <tbody> (Section 2.55),
<tfoot> (Section 2.57), and <thead> (Section 2.59).
Content model:
In any order, but at least one of:
o <td> elements (Section 2.56)
o <th> elements (Section 2.58)
2.61.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the row.
2.62. <tt>
Causes the text to be displayed in a constant-width font. This
element can be combined with other character formatting elements, and
the formatting will be additive.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <cref> (Section 2.16),
<dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em> (Section 2.22), <li>
(Section 2.29), <name> (Section 2.32), <preamble> (Section 3.6),
<refcontent> (Section 2.39), <strong> (Section 2.50), <sub>
(Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t> (Section 2.53), <td>
(Section 2.56), and <th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <relref> elements (Section 2.44)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
2.63. <ul>
An unordered list. The labels on the items will be symbols picked by
the formatter.
This element appears as a child element of <abstract> (Section 2.1),
<aside> (Section 2.6), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <dd>
(Section 2.18), <li> (Section 2.29), <note> (Section 2.33), <section>
(Section 2.46), <td> (Section 2.56), and <th> (Section 2.58).
Content model:
One or more <li> elements (Section 2.29)
2.63.1. "anchor" Attribute
Document-wide unique identifier for the list.
2.63.2. "empty" Attribute
Defines whether or not the label is empty. empty="true" indicates
that no label will be shown.
Allowed values:
o "false" (default)
o "true"
2.63.3. "spacing" Attribute
Defines whether or not there is a blank line between entries.
spacing="normal" indicates a single blank line, while
spacing="compact" indicates no space between.
Allowed values:
o "normal" (default)
o "compact"
2.64. <uri>
Contains a web address associated with the author.
The contents should be a valid URI; this most likely will be an
"http:" or "https:" URI.
This element appears as a child element of <address> (Section 2.2).
Content model: only text content.
2.65. <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 of the <rfc>
element (Section 2.45.12).
This element appears as a child element of <front> (Section 2.26).
Content model: only text content.
2.66. <xref>
A reference to an anchor in this document. Formatters that have
links (such as HTML and PDF) are likely to render <xref> elements as
internal hyperlinks. This element is useful for referring to
references in the "References" section, to specific sections of this
document, to specific figures, and so on. The "target" attribute is
required.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <blockquote> (Section 2.10), <c> (Section 3.1), <cref>
(Section 2.16), <dd> (Section 2.18), <dt> (Section 2.21), <em>
(Section 2.22), <li> (Section 2.29), <name> (Section 2.32),
<postamble> (Section 3.5), <preamble> (Section 3.6), <strong>
(Section 2.50), <sub> (Section 2.51), <sup> (Section 2.52), <t>
(Section 2.53), <td> (Section 2.56), <th> (Section 2.58), <tt>
(Section 2.62), and <ttcol> (Section 3.9).
Content model: only text content.
2.66.1. "format" Attribute
This attribute signals to formatters what the desired format of the
reference should be. Formatters for document types that have linking
capability should wrap the displayed text in hyperlinks.
"counter"
The "derivedContent" attribute will contain just a counter. This
is used for targets that are <section>, <figure>, <table>, or
items in an ordered list. Using "format='counter'" where the
target is any other type of element is an error.
For example, with an input of:
<section anchor="overview">Protocol Overview</section>
. . .
See Section <xref target="overview" format="counter"/>
for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See Section <a href="#overview">1.7</a> for an overview.
"default"
If the element has no content, the "derivedContent" attribute will
contain a text fragment that describes the referenced part
completely, such as "XML" for a target that is a <reference>, or
"Section 2" or "Table 4" for a target to a non-reference. (If the
element has content, the "derivedContent" attribute is filled with
the content.)
For example, with an input of:
<section anchor="overview">Protocol Overview</section>
. . .
See <xref target="overview"/> for an overview.
An HTML formatter might generate:
See <a href="#overview">Section 1.7</a> for an overview.
"none"
Deprecated.
"title"
If the target is a <reference> element, the "derivedContent"
attribute will contain the name of the reference, extracted from
the <title> child of the <front> child of the reference. Or, if
the target element has a <name> child element, the
"derivedContent" attribute will contain the text content of that
<name> element concatenated with the text content of each
descendant node of <name> (that is, stripping out all of the XML
markup, leaving only the text). Or, if the target element does
not contain a <name> child element, the "derivedContent" attribute
will contain the name of the "anchor" attribute of that element
with no other adornment.
Allowed values:
o "default" (default)
o "title"
o "counter"
o "none"
2.66.2. "pageno" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
2.66.3. "target" Attribute (Mandatory)
Identifies the document component being referenced. The value needs
to match the value of the "anchor" attribute of an element in the
document; otherwise, it is an error.
3. Elements from v2 That Have Been Deprecated
This section lists the elements from v2 that have been deprecated.
Note that some elements in v3 have attributes from v2 that are
deprecated; those are not listed here.
3.1. <c>
Deprecated. Instead, use <tr>, <td>, and <th>.
This element appears as a child element of <texttable> (Section 3.8).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <spanx> elements (Section 3.7)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
3.2. <facsimile>
Deprecated. The <email> element is a much more useful way to get in
touch with authors.
This element appears as a child element of <address> (Section 2.2).
Content model: only text content.
3.3. <format>
Deprecated. If the goal is to provide a single URI for a reference,
use the "target" attribute in <reference> instead.
This element appears as a child element of <reference>
(Section 2.40).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
3.3.1. "octets" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.3.2. "target" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.3.3. "type" Attribute (Mandatory)
Deprecated.
3.4. <list>
Deprecated. Instead, use <dl> for list/@style "hanging"; <ul> for
list/@style "empty" or "symbols"; and <ol> for list/@style "letters",
"numbers", "counter", or "format".
This element appears as a child element of <t> (Section 2.53).
Content model:
One or more <t> elements (Section 2.53)
3.4.1. "counter" Attribute
Deprecated. The functionality of this attribute has been replaced
with <ol>/@start.
3.4.2. "hangIndent" Attribute
Deprecated. Use <dl> instead.
3.4.3. "style" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.5. <postamble>
Deprecated. Instead, use a regular paragraph after the figure or
table.
This element appears as a child element of <figure> (Section 2.25)
and <texttable> (Section 3.8).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <spanx> elements (Section 3.7)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
3.6. <preamble>
Deprecated. Instead, use a regular paragraph before the figure or
table.
This element appears as a child element of <figure> (Section 2.25)
and <texttable> (Section 3.8).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <bcp14> elements (Section 2.9)
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <em> elements (Section 2.22)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <spanx> elements (Section 3.7)
o <strong> elements (Section 2.50)
o <sub> elements (Section 2.51)
o <sup> elements (Section 2.52)
o <tt> elements (Section 2.62)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
3.7. <spanx>
Deprecated.
This element appears as a child element of <annotation>
(Section 2.3), <c> (Section 3.1), <postamble> (Section 3.5),
<preamble> (Section 3.6), and <t> (Section 2.53).
Content model: only text content.
3.7.1. "style" Attribute
Deprecated. Instead of <spanx style="emph">, use <em>; instead of
<spanx style="strong">, use <strong>; instead of <spanx
style="verb">, use <tt>.
3.7.2. "xml:space" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "default"
o "preserve" (default)
3.8. <texttable>
Deprecated. Use <table> instead.
This element appears as a child element of <aside> (Section 2.6) and
<section> (Section 2.46).
Content model:
In this order:
1. One optional <name> element (Section 2.32)
2. One optional <preamble> element (Section 3.6)
3. One or more <ttcol> elements (Section 3.9)
4. Optional <c> elements (Section 3.1)
5. One optional <postamble> element (Section 3.5)
3.8.1. "align" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "left"
o "center" (default)
o "right"
3.8.2. "anchor" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.8.3. "style" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.8.4. "suppress-title" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "true"
o "false" (default)
3.8.5. "title" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.9. <ttcol>
Deprecated. Instead, use <tr>, <td>, and <th>.
This element appears as a child element of <texttable> (Section 3.8).
Content model:
In any order:
o Text
o <cref> elements (Section 2.16)
o <eref> elements (Section 2.24)
o <iref> elements (Section 2.27)
o <xref> elements (Section 2.66)
3.9.1. "align" Attribute
Deprecated.
Allowed values:
o "left" (default)
o "center"
o "right"
3.9.2. "width" Attribute
Deprecated.
3.10. <vspace>
Deprecated. In earlier versions of this format, <vspace> was often
used to get an extra blank line in a list element; in the v3
vocabulary, that can be done instead by using multiple <t> elements
inside the <li> element. Other uses have no direct replacement.
This element appears as a child element of <t> (Section 2.53).
Content model: this element does not have any contents.
3.10.1. "blankLines" Attribute
Deprecated.
4. SVG
The discussion of the use of SVG can be found in [RFC7996]. This
element is part of the namespace "http://www.w3.org/2000/svg".
5. Use of CDATA Structures and Escaping
A common problem authors have with <artwork> and <sourcecode>
elements is that the XML processor returns errors if the text in the
artwork contains either the "&" or "<" character, or the string
"]]>". To avoid these problems, the "&" and "<" characters may be
escaped using the strings "&" and "<", respectively; the "]]>"
string can be represented as "]]>". Alternatively, they may be
surrounded in a CDATA structure: "<![CDATA[]]>". For example:
Desired output:
allowed-chars = "." | "," | "&" | "<" | ">" | "|"
Using escaping:
<sourcecode>
allowed-chars = "." | "," | "&" | "<" | ">" | "|"
</sourcecode>
Using CDATA:
<sourcecode>
<![CDATA[ allowed-chars = "." | "," | "&" | "<" | ">" | "|"]]>
</sourcecode>
Using CDATA is not a panacea, but it does help prevent having to use
escapes in places where using escapes can cause other problems, such
as difficulty of inclusion from other documents.
6. Internationalization Considerations
This format is based on [XML] and thus does not have any issues
representing arbitrary Unicode [UNICODE] characters in text content.
The RFC Series Editor may restrict some of the characters that can be
used in a particular RFC; the rules for such restrictions are covered
in [RFC7997].
7. Security Considerations
The "name" attribute of the <artwork> element (Section 2.5.5) 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.
The "src" attribute of the <artwork> element can be used to read
files from the local system. Processing tools must be careful to not
accept dangerous values for the filename, particularly those that
contain absolute references outside the current directory.
The "type" attribute of the <artwork> and <sourcecode> elements is
meant to encourage formatters to automatically extract known types of
content from an RFC or Internet-Draft. While extraction is probably
safe, those tools might also think that they could further process
the extracted content, such as by rendering artwork or executing
code. Doing so without first sanity-checking the extracted content
is clearly a terrible idea from a security perspective. More
generally, a tool that is reading XML input needs to be suspicious of
any content that it intends to post-process.
When there is an external reference to a URL, a processor or renderer
should fetch the content into a sandbox and should have only a
localized impact on the document processing and rendering.
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 [RFC6838] at
<https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types>.
This document updates the specification for the Internet Media Type
"application/rfc+xml" from the one in [RFC7749]. The following has
been 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 to 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: Different implementations of this
format have had interoperability issues. It is not expected that
publication of this application will cause those implementations
to be fixed.
Published specification: This specification.
Applications that use this Media Type: Applications that transform
xml2rfc to output representations 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 [XPOINTER].
Additional information:
Deprecated alias names for this type: None
Magic number(s): As specified for "application/xml" in [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 the
Author's Address section of RFC 7991.
Intended usage: COMMON
Restrictions on usage: None
Author: See the Author's Address section of RFC 7991.
Change controller: RFC Series Editor (rse@rfc-editor.org)
8.2. Link Relation Registration
IANA has registered "convertedFrom" in the "Link Relation Types"
registry [LINKRELATIONS].
Relation Name: convertedFrom
Description: The document linked to was later converted to the
document that contains this link relation. For example, an RFC can
have a link to the Internet-Draft that became the RFC; in that case,
the link relation would be "convertedFrom".
Reference: This document.
Notes: This relation is different than "predecessor-version" in that
"predecessor-version" is for items in a version control system. It
is also different than "previous" in that this relation is used for
converted resources, not those that are part of a sequence of
resources.
Application Data: None
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[BCP14] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp14>.
[XML] Bray, T., Paoli, J., Sperberg-McQueen, C., Maler, E.,
and F. Yergeau, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0
(Fifth Edition)", W3C Recommendation REC-xml-20081126,
November 2008,
<https://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126/>.
Latest version available at <http://www.w3.org/TR/xml>.
9.2. Informative References
[IDGUIDE] Housley, R., "Guidelines to Authors of Internet-Drafts",
December 2010, <https://www.ietf.org/id-info/
guidelines.html>.
[LINKRELATIONS]
IANA, "Link Relations", <https://www.iana.org/assignments/
link-relations/>.
[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>.
[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>.
[RFC3339] Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:
Timestamps", RFC 3339, DOI 10.17487/RFC3339, July 2002,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3339>.
[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>.
[RFC3966] Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",
RFC 3966, DOI 10.17487/RFC3966, December 2004,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3966>.
[RFC3978] Bradner, S., Ed., "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>.
[RFC5234] Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for
Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5234, January 2008,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5234>.
[RFC5378] Bradner, S., Ed., and J. Contreras, Ed., "Rights
Contributors Provide to the IETF Trust", BCP 78, RFC 5378,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5378, November 2008,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5378>.
[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>.
[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>.
[RFC6838] Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.
[RFC6949] Flanagan, H. and N. Brownlee, "RFC Series Format
Requirements and Future Development", RFC 6949,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6949, May 2013,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6949>.
[RFC7303] Thompson, H. and C. Lilley, "XML Media Types", RFC 7303,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7303, July 2014,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7303>.
[RFC7322] Flanagan, H. and S. Ginoza, "RFC Style Guide", RFC 7322,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7322, September 2014,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7322>.
[RFC7669] Levine, J., "Assigning Digital Object Identifiers to
RFCs", RFC 7669, DOI 10.17487/RFC7669, October 2015,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7669>.
[RFC7749] Reschke, J., "The "xml2rfc" Version 2 Vocabulary",
RFC 7749, DOI 10.17487/RFC7749, February 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7749>.
[RFC7841] Halpern, J., Ed., Daigle, L., Ed., and O. Kolkman, Ed.,
"RFC Streams, Headers, and Boilerplates", RFC 7841,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7841, May 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7841>.
[RFC7996] Brownlee, N., "SVG Drawings for RFCs: SVG 1.2 RFC",
RFC 7996, DOI 10.17487/RFC7996, December 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7996>.
[RFC7997] Flanagan, H., Ed., "The Use of Non-ASCII Characters in
RFCs", RFC 7997, DOI 10.17487/RFC7997, December 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7997>.
[RFC7998] Hoffman, P. and J. Hildebrand, ""xml2rfc" Version 3
Preparation Tool Description", RFC 7998,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7998, December 2016,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7998>.
[RNC] Clark, J., "RELAX NG Compact Syntax", The Organization
for the Advancement of Structured Information
Standards (OASIS), November 2002,
<https://www.oasis-open.org/committees/
relax-ng/compact-20021121.html>.
[RNG] ISO/IEC, "Information Technology - Document Schema
Definition Languages (DSDL) - Part 2: Regular-Grammar-
Based Validation - RELAX NG (Second Edition)",
ISO/IEC 19757-2:2008(E), December 2008.
A useful source of RNG-related information is
<http://relaxng.org/>.
[TLP1.0] IETF Trust, "Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents",
November 2008,
<http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/IETF-TLP-1.htm>.
[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>.
[TLP5.0] IETF Trust, "Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents",
March 2015,
<http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info/IETF-TLP-5.htm>.
[UAX24] The Unicode Consortium, "UAX #24: Unicode Script
Property", <http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr24/>.
[UNICODE] The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard",
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/latest/>.
[USASCII] American National Standards Institute, "Coded Character
Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code for Information
Interchange", ANSI X3.4, 1986.
[XInclude] Marsh, J., Orchard, D., and D. Veillard, "XML Inclusions
(XInclude) Version 1.0 (Second Edition)", W3C
Recommendation REC-xinclude-20061115, November 2006,
<https://www.w3.org/TR/2006/REC-xinclude-20061115/>.
Latest version available at
<http://www.w3.org/TR/xinclude/>.
[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
The values listed here will be defined by the RFC Series Editor.
Those listed here are believed to be the current values in use.
A.1. The "ipr" Attribute
This attribute value can take a long list of values, each of which
describes an IPR policy for the document (Section 2.45.5). The
values are not the result of a grand design, but they 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.
Note: Some variations of the boilerplate are selected based on the
document's date; therefore, it is important to specify the "year",
"month", and "day" attributes of the <date> element when archiving
the XML source of an Internet-Draft on the day of submission.
_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 "Copyright Notice" text, the submissionType attribute
of the <rfc> element (Section 2.45.12) 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.1.1. Current Values: "*trust200902"
The name for these values refers to version 2.0 of the IETF Trust's
"Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents", sometimes simply
called the "TLP", which went into effect on February 15, 2009
[TLP2.0]. Updates to the 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.
The prep tool automatically produces the "correct" text, depending on
the document's date information (see above):
+----------+--------------------------------+
| TLP | starting with publication date |
+----------+--------------------------------+
| [TLP3.0] | 2009-11-01 |
| [TLP4.0] | 2010-04-01 |
+----------+--------------------------------+
The TLP was again updated in March 2015 [TLP5.0], but the changes
made in that version do not affect the boilerplate text.
A.1.1.1. 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.1.1.2. noModificationTrust200902
This produces the 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.
Note: this clause is incompatible with RFCs that are published on
the Standards Track.
A.1.1.3. 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.
Note: this clause is incompatible with RFCs.
A.1.1.4. pre5378Trust200902
This produces the additional text from Section 6.c.iii of the TLP,
frequently called the "pre-5378 escape clause" referring to changes
introduced in [RFC5378]:
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.
Note: this text appears under "Copyright Notice", unless the
document was published before November 2009, in which case it
appears under "Status of This Memo".
A.1.2. Historic Values
A.1.2.1. Historic Values: "*trust200811"
The attribute values "trust200811", "noModificationTrust200811", and
"noDerivativesTrust200811" are similar to their "trust200902"
counterparts, except that they use text specified in [TLP1.0].
A.1.2.2. Historic Values: "*3978"
The attribute values "full3978", "noModification3978", and
"noDerivatives3978" are similar to their counterparts above, except
that they use text specified in [RFC3978].
A.1.2.3. Historic Values: "*3667"
The attribute values "full3667", "noModification3667", and
"noDerivatives3667" are similar to their counterparts above, except
that they use text specified in [RFC3667].
A.1.2.4. 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; it denied the IETF
any rights beyond publication as an Internet-Draft.
A.2. The "submissionType" Attribute
The RFC Editor publishes documents from different "document streams",
of which the "IETF stream" is the most prominent. Other streams are
the "Independent Submissions stream" (used for things such as
discussion of Internet-related technologies that are not part of the
IETF agenda), 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 [RFC7841]), 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 the "submissionType" attribute will
have the following effect:
o 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).
o For RFCs, it affects the whole "Status of This Memo" section (see
Section 3.2 of [RFC7841]).
o For all RFCs and Internet-Drafts, it determines whether the
"Copyright Notice" section mentions the Copyright on Code
Components (see Section 6 of the TLP ("Text to Be Included in IETF
Documents")).
A.3. The "consensus" Attribute
For some of the publication streams (see Appendix A.2), the "Status
of This Memo" section depends on whether there was a consensus to
publish (again, see Section 3.4 of [RFC7841]).
The consensus attribute can be used to supply this information. The
acceptable values are "true" (the default) and "false"; "yes" and
"no" from v2 are deprecated.
The effect of this value for the various streams is:
o "independent": none.
o "IAB": mention that there was an IAB consensus.
o "IETF": mention that there was an IETF consensus.
o "IRTF": mention that there was a research group consensus (where
the name of the research group is extracted from the <workgroup>
element).
Appendix B. The v3 Format and Processing Tools
This section describes topics that are specific to v3 processing
tools. Note that there is some discussion of tools in the main body
of the document as well. For example, some elements have
descriptions of how a processing tool might create output from the
element.
The expected design of the tools that will be used with v3 documents
includes:
o A "prep tool" that takes a v3 document, makes many checks, adds
and changes many attribute values, and creates a file that is a
"prepared document". The prepared document is a valid v3
document. The prep tool is described in [RFC7998].
The prep tool is expected to have many modes:
* RFC mode -- The mode used by the RFC Editor to process the
input from one of the RFC streams and to process XML produced
during the RFC editing process. The restrictions on the
canonical XML for RFCs, as well as how the non-canonical
formats will look, are described at
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/rse/wiki/
doku.php?id=design:format-and-content-rfcs>.
* Draft mode -- The mode used by the Internet-Draft submission
tool. The restrictions for the XML from this mode will be
described later.
* Diagnostic mode -- A mode that can be used by document authors
to look for errors or warnings before they submit their
documents for publication.
* Consolidation mode -- Produces output where no external
resources are required to render the file output. This
includes expanding the XInclude entities and DTD entities in
place, and changing all elements that have "src" attributes
with external links into either "data:" URI or content for the
element, as specified in [RFC7998].
o Formatting tools that will create HTML, PDF, plain text, and
possibly other output formats. These formatters will be created
by the IETF, but others can create such tools as well. The IETF
tools are expected to take prepared documents as input.
There may also be processing tools that are meant to run on the
computers of authors. These tools may be used to produce interim
versions of the non-canonical representations so that authors can see
how their XML might later be rendered, to create documents in
representations different than those supported by the RFC Editor, to
possibly create documents that are not meant to be Internet-Drafts or
RFCs, and to convert XML that has external information into XML that
has that external information included.
The prep tool is expected to have clear error reporting, giving more
context than just a line number. For example, the error messages
should differentiate between errors in XML and those from the v3
format.
In v2, the grammar was specified as a DTD. In v3, the grammar is
specified only as RELAX Next Generation (RNG). This means that tools
need to work from the RNG, not from a DTD. Some of the features of
the v3 grammar cannot be specified as a DTD.
B.1. Including External Text with XInclude
All tools for the v3 format are expected to support XInclude
[XInclude]. XInclude specifies a processing model and syntax for
general-purpose inclusion of information that is either on the
Internet or local to the user's computer.
In the v3 syntax, XInclude is expressed as the <xi:include> element.
To use this element, you need to include the "xi" namespace in the
<rfc> element; that is, you need to specify
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
as one of the attributes in the <rfc> element.
The most common way to use <xi:include> is to pull in references that
are already formed as XML. Currently, this can be done from
xml2rfc.tools.ietf.org, but later this is expected to be from the RFC
Editor. For example, if a document has three normative references,
all RFCs, the document might contain:
<references>
<xi:include href="http://xml2rfc.tools.ietf.org/public/rfc/
bibxml/reference.RFC.2119.xml"/>
<xi:include href="http://xml2rfc.tools.ietf.org/public/rfc/
bibxml/reference.RFC.4869.xml"/>
<xi:include href="http://xml2rfc.tools.ietf.org/public/rfc/
bibxml/reference.RFC.7169.xml"/>
</references>
<xi:include> can be used anywhere an XML element could be used (but
not where free text is used). For example, if three Internet-Drafts
are all including a particular paragraph or section verbatim, that
text can be kept either in a file or somewhere on the web and can be
included with <xi:include>. An example of pulling something from the
local disk would be:
<xi:include href="file://home/chris/ietf/drafts/commontext.xml"/>
EID 5052 (Verified) is as follows:Section: B.1
Original Text:
<x:include href="file://home/chris/ietf/drafts/commontext.xml"/>
Corrected Text:
<xi:include href="file://home/chris/ietf/drafts/commontext.xml"/>
Notes:
Section B.1. talks about using XInclude for inclusion of external materials, instead of using entity references or processing instructions to include materials. It shows an example namespace declaration:
xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"
and then continues with various examples using <xi:include/>, except that in one case, an 'i" has been dropped from the "xi:", giving <x:include...>.
In general, XInclude should be used instead of ENTITY references and
XML Processing Instructions (PIs) that allow external inclusions.
B.2. Anchors and IDs
People writing and reading Internet-Drafts and RFCs often want to
make reference to specific locations in those documents. In the case
of RFC authors, it is common to want to reference another part of
their document, such as "see Section 3.2 of this document." Readers,
on the other hand, want to reference parts of documents that they
didn't write, such as "see Section 3.2 of RFC 6949." The XML
vocabulary in this document attempts to support both sets of people.
Authors can leave anchors in a document that can later be used for
references with the "anchor" attribute. Anchors can be included in
the numerous elements. The author can then refer to that anchor in
the "target" attribute of the <xref> element.
Readers can refer to any element that has an "anchor" attribute by
that attribute. Note, however, that most of the time, elements won't
have anchors. In the common case, the reader wants to refer to an
element that does not have an "anchor" attribute, but that element
has a "pn" attribute.
Processing tools add the "pn" attribute to many elements during
processing. This attribute and its value are automatically generated
by the tool if the attribute is not there; if the attribute is
already there, the tool may replace the value.
B.2.1. Overlapping Values
In the HTML representation of this XML vocabulary, both anchors and
"pn" attributes will be used in the "id" attributes of elements.
Thus, there can be no overlap between the names entered in "anchor"
attributes, in "slugifiedName" attributes, and those that are
generated for the "pn" attributes. Also, there are some values for
the "anchor" values that are reserved for sections, and those
sections can only have those anchor values.
The following rules prevent this overlap:
o "pn" for regular sections always has the format "s-nnn", where
"nnn" is the section number, or the appendix identifier (which
starts with a letter). For example, this would be "s-2.1.3" for
Section 2.1.3 and "s-a" for Appendix A. For the <abstract>
element, it is always "s-abstract". For the <note> element, it is
always "s-note-nnn", where "nnn" is a sequential value. For
sections in the <boilerplate> element, it is always
"s-boilerplate-nnn", where "nnn" is a sequential value.
o "pn" for <references> elements has the format "s-nnn". It is
important to note that "nnn" is a number, not letters, even though
the <references> appear in the back. It is the number that is one
higher than the highest top-level section number in <middle>. If
there are two or more <references>, "nnn" will include a dot as if
the <references> are a subsection of a section that is numbered
one higher than the highest top-level section number in <middle>.
o "pn" for <figure> elements always has the format "f-nnn", where
"nnn" is the figure number. For example, this would be "f-5" for
Figure 5.
o "pn" for <iref> elements always has the format "i-ttt-nnn", where
"ttt" is the slugified item (plus a hyphen and the slugified
subitem if there is a subitem), and "nnn" is the instance of that
item/subitem pair. For example, this would be "i-foo-1" for
"<iref item='foo'>" and "i-foo-bar-1" for "<iref item='foo'
subitem='bar'>".
o "pn" for <table> elements always has the format "t-nnn", where
"nnn" is the table number. For example, this would be "t-5" for
Table 5.
o "pn" for all elements not listed above always has the format
"p-nnn-mmm", where "nnn" is the section number and "mmm" is the
relative position in the section. For example, this would be
"p-2.1.3-7" for the seventh part number in Section 2.1.3.
o "slugifiedName" always has the format "n-ttt", where "ttt" is the
text of the name after slugification. For example, this would be
"n-protocol-overview" for the name "Protocol Overview". The
actual conversions done in slugification will be specified at a
later time.
o Anchors must never overlap with any of the above. The easiest way
to assure that is to not pick an anchor name that starts with a
single letter followed by a hyphen. If an anchor does overlap
with one of the types of names above, the processing tool will
reject the document.
B.3. Attributes Controlled by the Prep Tool
Many elements in the v3 vocabulary have new attributes whose role is
to hold values generated by the prep tool. These attributes can
exist in documents that are input to the prep tool; however, any of
these attributes might be added, removed, or changed by the prep
tool. Thus, it is explicitly unsafe for a document author to include
these attributes and expect that their values will survive processing
by the prep tool.
The attributes that are controlled by the prep tool are:
o The "pn" attribute in any element -- The number for this item
within the section. The numbering is shared with other elements
of a section. The "pn" attribute is added to many block-level
elements inside sections.
o <artwork> originalSrc -- This attribute is filled with the
original value of the "src" attribute if that attribute is removed
by the prep tool.
o <figure> originalSrc -- This attribute is filled with the original
value of the "src" attribute if that attribute is removed by the
prep tool.
o <name> "slugifiedName" attribute -- This attribute is filled with
a "slugified" version of the text in the element. This attribute
can be used in the output formats for elements that have both
names and numbers.
o <relref> "derivedLink" attribute -- This attribute is filled with
the link that is derived from combining the URI from the reference
and the relative part that is either a copy of the "relative"
attribute or a section number derived from the "section"
attribute.
o <rfc> "expiresDate" attribute -- This attribute is filled with the
date that an Internet-Draft expires. The date is in the format
yyyy-mm-dd.
o <rfc> "mode" attribute -- This attribute is filled with a string
that indicates what mode the prep tool was in when it processed
the XML, such as whether it was processing a file to become an
Internet-Draft or an RFC.
o <rfc> "scripts" attribute -- This attribute is filled with a list
of scripts needed to render this document. The list is comma-
separated, with no spaces allowed. The order is unimportant. The
names come from [UAX24]. For example, if the document has Chinese
characters in it, the value might be "Common,Latin,Han".
o <sourcecode> "originalSrc" attribute -- This attribute is filled
with the original value of the "src" attribute if that attribute
is removed by the prep tool.
o <xref> "derivedContent" attribute -- This attribute is filled in
if there is no content in the <xref> element. The value for this
attribute is based on the value in the "displayFormat" attribute.
Examples of how this value is filled can be found in
Section 2.66.1.
In addition, note that the contents of the <boilerplate> element are
controlled by the prep tool.
Appendix C. RELAX NG Schema
The following is the RELAX NG schema for the v3 format.
namespace a = "http://relaxng.org/ns/compatibility/annotations/1.0"
# xml2rfc Version 3 grammar
rfc =
element rfc {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute number { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute obsoletes { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute updates { text }?,
attribute category { text }?,
attribute mode { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute consensus { "no" | "yes" | "false" | "true" }?,
attribute seriesNo { text }?,
attribute ipr { text }?,
attribute iprExtract { xsd:IDREF }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "IETF" ]
attribute submissionType {
"IETF" | "IAB" | "IRTF" | "independent"
}?,
attribute docName { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute sortRefs { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute symRefs { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute tocInclude { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "3" ] attribute tocDepth { text }?,
attribute prepTime { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute indexInclude { "true" | "false" }?,
attribute version { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "Common,Latin" ] attribute scripts { text }?,
attribute expiresDate { text }?,
link*,
front,
middle,
back?
}
link =
element link {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute href { text },
attribute rel { text }?
}
front =
element front {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
title,
seriesInfo*,
author+,
date?,
area*,
workgroup*,
keyword*,
abstract?,
note*,
boilerplate?
}
title =
element title {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute abbrev { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
author =
element author {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute initials { text }?,
attribute asciiInitials { text }?,
attribute surname { text }?,
attribute asciiSurname { text }?,
attribute fullname { text }?,
attribute role { "editor" }?,
attribute asciiFullname { text }?,
organization?,
address?
}
organization =
element organization {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute abbrev { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
address =
element address {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
postal?,
phone?,
facsimile?,
email?,
uri?
}
postal =
element postal {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
((city | code | country | region | street)* | postalLine+)
}
street =
element street {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
city =
element city {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
region =
element region {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
code =
element code {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
country =
element country {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
postalLine =
element postalLine {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
phone =
element phone {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
facsimile =
element facsimile {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
email =
element email {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
uri =
element uri {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
date =
element date {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute day { text }?,
attribute month { text }?,
attribute year { text }?,
empty
}
area =
element area {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
workgroup =
element workgroup {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
keyword =
element keyword {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
abstract =
element abstract {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
(dl | ol | t | ul)+
}
note =
element note {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute title { text }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute removeInRFC { "true" | "false" }?,
name?,
(dl | ol | t | ul)+
}
boilerplate =
element boilerplate {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
section+
}
middle =
element middle {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
section+
}
section =
element section {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
attribute title { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute numbered { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
attribute toc { "include" | "exclude" | "default" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute removeInRFC { "true" | "false" }?,
name?,
(artwork
| aside
| blockquote
| dl
| figure
| iref
| ol
| sourcecode
| t
| table
| texttable
| ul)*,
section*
}
name =
element name {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute slugifiedName { text }?,
(text | cref | eref | relref | tt | xref)*
}
t =
element t {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
attribute hangText { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute keepWithNext { "false" | "true" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute keepWithPrevious { "false" | "true" }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| \list
| relref
| spanx
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| vspace
| xref)*
}
aside =
element aside {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
(artwork | dl | figure | iref | \list | ol | t | table | ul)*
}
blockquote =
element blockquote {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
attribute cite { text }?,
attribute quotedFrom { text }?,
((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
| (text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)+)
}
\list =
element list {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "empty" ] attribute style { text }?,
attribute hangIndent { text }?,
attribute counter { text }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
t+
}
ol =
element ol {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "1" ] attribute type { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "1" ] attribute start { text }?,
attribute group { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
li+
}
ul =
element ul {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
([ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute empty { "false" | "true" },
attribute pn { text }?)?,
li+
}
li =
element li {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
| (text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)+)
}
dl =
element dl {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute hanging { "false" | "true" }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
(dt, dd)+
}
dt =
element dt {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*
}
dd =
element dd {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
| (text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)+)
}
xref =
element xref {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute pageno { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
attribute format { "default" | "title" | "counter" | "none" }?,
attribute derivedContent { text }?,
text
}
relref =
element relref {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
[ a:defaultValue = "of" ]
attribute displayFormat { "of" | "comma" | "parens" | "bare" }?,
attribute section { text },
attribute relative { text }?,
attribute derivedLink { text }?,
text
}
eref =
element eref {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { text },
text
}
iref =
element iref {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute item { text },
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute subitem { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute primary { "true" | "false" }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
empty
}
cref =
element cref {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute source { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute display { "true" | "false" }?,
(text | em | eref | relref | strong | sub | sup | tt | xref)*
}
tt =
element tt {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| xref)*
}
strong =
element strong {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*
}
em =
element em {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*
}
sub =
element sub {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| tt
| xref)*
}
sup =
element sup {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| tt
| xref)*
}
spanx =
element spanx {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "preserve" ]
attribute xml:space { "default" | "preserve" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "emph" ] attribute style { text }?,
text
}
vspace =
element vspace {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute blankLines { text }?,
empty
}
figure =
element figure {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute title { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute suppress-title { "true" | "false" }?,
attribute src { text }?,
attribute originalSrc { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute alt { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute width { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute height { text }?,
name?,
iref*,
preamble?,
(artwork | sourcecode)+,
postamble?
}
table =
element table {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
name?,
iref*,
thead?,
tbody+,
tfoot?
}
preamble =
element preamble {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| spanx
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*
}
artwork =
element artwork {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
attribute xml:space { text }?,
[ 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 }?,
attribute originalSrc { text }?,
(text* | svg)
}
# https://www.rfc-editor.org/materials/format/SVG-1.2-RFC.rnc
sourcecode =
element sourcecode {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute name { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute type { text }?,
attribute src { text }?,
attribute originalSrc { text }?,
text
}
thead =
element thead {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
tr+
}
tbody =
element tbody {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
tr+
}
tfoot =
element tfoot {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
tr+
}
tr =
element tr {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
(td | th)+
}
td =
element td {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute colspan { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute rowspan { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
| (text
| bcp14
| br
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*)
}
th =
element th {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute colspan { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute rowspan { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
| (text
| bcp14
| br
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*)
}
postamble =
element postamble {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text | cref | eref | iref | spanx | xref)*
}
texttable =
element texttable {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
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" }?,
name?,
preamble?,
ttcol+,
c*,
postamble?
}
ttcol =
element ttcol {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute width { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
(cref | eref | iref | xref | text)*
}
c =
element c {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text | cref | eref | iref | spanx | xref)*
}
bcp14 =
element bcp14 {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
br =
element br {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
empty
}
back =
element back {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
displayreference*,
references*,
section*
}
displayreference =
element displayreference {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
attribute to { text }
}
references =
element references {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute pn { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute title { text }?,
name?,
(reference | referencegroup)*
}
reference =
element reference {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID },
attribute target { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
attribute quoteTitle { "true" | "false" }?,
front,
(annotation | format | refcontent | seriesInfo)*
}
referencegroup =
element referencegroup {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID },
reference+
}
seriesInfo =
element seriesInfo {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute name { text },
attribute value { text },
attribute asciiName { text }?,
attribute asciiValue { text }?,
attribute status { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "IETF" ]
attribute stream { "IETF" | "IAB" | "IRTF" | "independent" }?,
empty
}
format =
element format {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { text }?,
attribute type { text },
attribute octets { text }?,
empty
}
annotation =
element annotation {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text
| bcp14
| cref
| em
| eref
| iref
| relref
| spanx
| strong
| sub
| sup
| tt
| xref)*
}
refcontent =
element refcontent {
attribute xml:base { text }?,
attribute xml:lang { text }?,
(text | bcp14 | em | strong | sub | sup | tt)*
}
start |= rfc
Appendix D. Schema Differences from v2
The following is a non-normative comparison of the v3 format to the
v2 format. A "-" indicates lines removed from the v2 schema, and a
"+" indicates lines added to the v3 schema.
namespace a =
"http://relaxng.org/ns/compatibility/annotations/1.0"
+ # xml2rfc Version 3 grammar
rfc =
element rfc {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
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 category { text }?,
+ attribute mode { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute consensus { "no" | "yes" | "false" | "true" }?,
attribute seriesNo { text }?,
- attribute ipr {
- "full2026"
- | "noDerivativeWorks2026"
- | "none"
- | "full3667"
- | "noModification3667"
- | "noDerivatives3667"
- | "full3978"
- | "noModification3978"
- | "noDerivatives3978"
- | "trust200811"
- | "noModificationTrust200811"
- | "noDerivativesTrust200811"
- | "trust200902"
- | "noModificationTrust200902"
- | "noDerivativesTrust200902"
- | "pre5378Trust200902"
- }?,
+ attribute ipr { text }?,
attribute iprExtract { xsd:IDREF }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "IETF" ]
attribute submissionType {
"IETF" | "IAB" | "IRTF" | "independent"
}?,
attribute docName { text }?,
- [ a:defaultValue = "en" ] attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute sortRefs { "true" | "false" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute symRefs { "true" | "false" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute tocInclude { "true" | "false" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "3" ] attribute tocDepth { text }?,
+ attribute prepTime { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute indexInclude { "true" | "false" }?,
+ attribute version { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "Common,Latin" ] attribute scripts { text
+ }?,
+ attribute expiresDate { text }?,
+ link*,
front,
middle,
back?
}
+ link =
+ element link {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute href { text },
+ attribute rel { text }?
+ }
front =
element front {
- title, author+, date, area*, workgroup*, keyword*, abstract?,
- note*
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ title,
+ seriesInfo*,
+ author+,
+ date?,
+ area*,
+ workgroup*,
+ keyword*,
+ abstract?,
+ note*,
+ boilerplate?
}
title =
element title {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute abbrev { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
text
}
author =
element author {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute initials { text }?,
+ attribute asciiInitials { text }?,
attribute surname { text }?,
+ attribute asciiSurname { text }?,
attribute fullname { text }?,
attribute role { "editor" }?,
+ attribute asciiFullname { text }?,
organization?,
address?
}
organization =
element organization {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute abbrev { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ address =
+ element address {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ postal?,
+ phone?,
+ facsimile?,
+ email?,
+ uri?
+ }
+ postal =
+ element postal {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ ((city | code | country | region | street)* | postalLine+)
+ }
+ street =
+ element street {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ city =
+ element city {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ region =
+ element region {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ code =
+ element code {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ country =
+ element country {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ postalLine =
+ element postalLine {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ phone =
+ element phone {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ facsimile =
+ element facsimile {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ email =
+ element email {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute ascii { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ uri =
+ element uri {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { 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 xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
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+ }
+ area =
+ element area {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ workgroup =
+ element workgroup {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ keyword =
+ element keyword {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ abstract =
+ element abstract {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ (dl | ol | t | ul)+
+ }
note =
element note {
- attribute title { text },
- t+
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute title { text }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute removeInRFC { "true" | "false" }?,
+ name?,
+ (dl | ol | t | ul)+
+ }
+ boilerplate =
+ element boilerplate {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ section+
+ }
+ middle =
+ element middle {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ section+
}
- middle = element middle { section+ }
section =
element section {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
- attribute title { text },
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ attribute title { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute numbered { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
attribute toc { "include" | "exclude" | "default" }?,
- (t | figure | texttable | iref)*,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute removeInRFC { "true" | "false" }?,
+ name?,
+ (artwork
+ | aside
+ | blockquote
+ | dl
+ | figure
+ | iref
+ | ol
+ | sourcecode
+ | t
+ | table
+ | texttable
+ | ul)*,
section*
}
+ name =
+ element name {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute slugifiedName { text }?,
+ (text | cref | eref | relref | tt | xref)*
+ }
t =
element t {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
attribute hangText { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute keepWithNext { "false" | "true" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute keepWithPrevious { "false" | "true" }?,
(text
- | \list
- | figure
- | xref
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
| eref
| iref
- | cref
+ | \list
+ | relref
| spanx
- | vspace)*
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | vspace
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ aside =
+ element aside {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ (artwork | dl | figure | iref | \list | ol | t | table | ul)*
+ }
+ blockquote =
+ element blockquote {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ attribute cite { text }?,
+ attribute quotedFrom { text }?,
+ ((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
+ | (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)+)
}
\list =
element list {
- attribute style { text }?,
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "empty" ] attribute style { text }?,
attribute hangIndent { text }?,
attribute counter { text }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
t+
}
+ ol =
+ element ol {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "1" ] attribute type { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "1" ] attribute start { text }?,
+ attribute group { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
+ attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ li+
+ }
+ ul =
+ element ul {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
+ attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
+ ([ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute empty { "false" | "true" },
+ attribute pn { text }?)?,
+ li+
+ }
+ li =
+ element li {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ ((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
+ | (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)+)
+ }
+ dl =
+ element dl {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "normal" ]
+ attribute spacing { "normal" | "compact" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute hanging { "false" | "true" }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ (dt, dd)+
+ }
+ dt =
+ element dt {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ dd =
+ element dd {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ ((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
+ | (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)+)
+ }
xref =
element xref {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
- [ a:defaultValue = "false" ] attribute pageno { "true" |
- "false" }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
+ attribute pageno { "true" | "false" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "default" ]
- attribute format { "counter" | "title" | "none" | "default"
+ attribute format { "default" | "title" | "counter" | "none"
+ }?,
+ attribute derivedContent { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ relref =
+ element relref {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
+ [ a:defaultValue = "of" ]
+ attribute displayFormat { "of" | "comma" | "parens" | "bare"
}?,
+ attribute section { text },
+ attribute relative { text }?,
+ attribute derivedLink { text }?,
text
}
eref =
element eref {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { text },
text
}
iref =
element iref {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute item { text },
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute subitem { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute primary { "true" | "false" }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
empty
}
cref =
element cref {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
attribute source { text }?,
- text
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute display { "true" | "false" }?,
+ (text | em | eref | relref | strong | sub | sup | tt | xref)*
+ }
+ tt =
+ element tt {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ strong =
+ element strong {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ em =
+ element em {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ sub =
+ element sub {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ sup =
+ element sup {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
}
spanx =
element spanx {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "preserve" ]
attribute xml:space { "default" | "preserve" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "emph" ] attribute style { text }?,
text
}
vspace =
element vspace {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute blankLines { text }?,
empty
}
figure =
element figure {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute title { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "false" ]
attribute suppress-title { "true" | "false" }?,
attribute src { text }?,
+ attribute originalSrc { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute alt { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute width { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute height { text }?,
+ name?,
iref*,
preamble?,
- artwork,
+ (artwork | sourcecode)+,
postamble?
}
+ table =
+ element table {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ name?,
+ iref*,
+ thead?,
+ tbody+,
+ tfoot?
+ }
preamble =
- element preamble { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }
+ element preamble {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | spanx
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
artwork =
element artwork {
- [ a:defaultValue = "preserve" ]
- attribute xml:space { "default" | "preserve" }?,
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ attribute xml:space { text }?,
[ 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*
+ attribute originalSrc { text }?,
+ (text* | svg)
+ }
+ # https://www.rfc-editor.org/materials/format/SVG-1.2-RFC.rnc
+ sourcecode =
+ element sourcecode {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute name { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "" ] attribute type { text }?,
+ attribute src { text }?,
+ attribute originalSrc { text }?,
+ text
+ }
+ thead =
+ element thead {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ tr+
+ }
+ tbody =
+ element tbody {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ tr+
+ }
+ tfoot =
+ element tfoot {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ tr+
+ }
+ tr =
+ element tr {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ (td | th)+
+ }
+ td =
+ element td {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute colspan { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute rowspan { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
+ attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
+ ((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
+ | (text
+ | bcp14
+ | br
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*)
+ }
+ th =
+ element th {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute colspan { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "0" ] attribute rowspan { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
+ attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
+ ((artwork | dl | figure | ol | sourcecode | t | ul)+
+ | (text
+ | bcp14
+ | br
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*)
}
postamble =
- element postamble { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)*
+ element postamble {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text | cref | eref | iref | spanx | xref)*
}
texttable =
element texttable {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
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" }?,
+ name?,
preamble?,
ttcol+,
c*,
postamble?
}
ttcol =
element ttcol {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute width { text }?,
[ a:defaultValue = "left" ]
attribute align { "left" | "center" | "right" }?,
+ (cref | eref | iref | xref | text)*
+ }
+ c =
+ element c {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text | cref | eref | iref | spanx | xref)*
+ }
+ bcp14 =
+ element bcp14 {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
text
}
- c = element c { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref | spanx)* }
- back = element back { references*, section* }
+ br =
+ element br {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ empty
+ }
+ back =
+ element back {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ displayreference*,
+ references*,
+ section*
+ }
+ displayreference =
+ element displayreference {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute target { xsd:IDREF },
+ attribute to { text }
+ }
references =
element references {
- [ a:defaultValue = "References" ] attribute title { text }?,
- reference+
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute pn { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID }?,
+ attribute title { text }?,
+ name?,
+ (reference | referencegroup)*
}
reference =
element reference {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute anchor { xsd:ID },
attribute target { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "true" ]
+ attribute quoteTitle { "true" | "false" }?,
front,
- seriesInfo*,
- format*,
- annotation*
+ (annotation | format | refcontent | seriesInfo)*
+ }
+ referencegroup =
+ element referencegroup {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ attribute anchor { xsd:ID },
+ reference+
}
seriesInfo =
element seriesInfo {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute name { text },
attribute value { text },
+ attribute asciiName { text }?,
+ attribute asciiValue { text }?,
+ attribute status { text }?,
+ [ a:defaultValue = "IETF" ]
+ attribute stream { "IETF" | "IAB" | "IRTF" | "independent" }?,
empty
}
format =
element format {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
attribute target { text }?,
attribute type { text },
attribute octets { text }?,
empty
}
annotation =
- element annotation { (text | xref | eref | iref | cref |
- spanx)* }
- start = rfc
+ element annotation {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text
+ | bcp14
+ | cref
+ | em
+ | eref
+ | iref
+ | relref
+ | spanx
+ | strong
+ | sub
+ | sup
+ | tt
+ | xref)*
+ }
+ refcontent =
+ element refcontent {
+ attribute xml:base { text }?,
+ attribute xml:lang { text }?,
+ (text | bcp14 | em | strong | sub | sup | tt)*
+ }
+ start |= rfc
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
The IAB members at the time this memo was approved were
(in alphabetical order):
Jari Arkko
Ralph Droms
Ted Hardie
Joe Hildebrand
Russ Housley
Lee Howard
Erik Nordmark
Robert Sparks
Andrew Sullivan
Dave Thaler
Martin Thomson
Brian Trammell
Suzanne Woolf
Acknowledgements
Thanks to everybody who reviewed this document and provided feedback
and/or specification text. Thanks especially go to Julian Reschke
for editing [RFC7749] and those who provided feedback on that
document.
We also thank Marshall T. Rose for both the original design and the
reference implementation of the "xml2rfc" processor.
Author's Address
Paul Hoffman
ICANN
Email: paul.hoffman@icann.org