draft-fielding-url-syntax-01

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Network Working Group T. Berners-Lee
INTERNET-DRAFT MIT/LCS
<draft-fielding-url-syntax-01> R. Fielding
Expires six months after publication date. U.C. Irvine
 L. Masinter
 Xerox Corporation
 26 November 1996
 Uniform Resource Locators (URL)
Status of this Memo
 This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working
 documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its
 areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also
 distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
 Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six
 months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other
 documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts
 as reference material or to cite them other than as
 ``work in progress.''
 To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check
 the ``1id-abstracts.txt'' listing contained in the Internet-Drafts
 Shadow Directories on ftp.is.co.za (Africa), nic.nordu.net (Europe),
 munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ds.internic.net (US East Coast),
 or ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast).
 Issues:
 1. We need to define a mechanism for using IPv6 addresses in the
 URL hostname which will not break existing systems too badly.
 2. Section 7 (New URL Schemes) needs input from the Applications
 Area A.D.'s.
 3. Removal of the parameters component allows for a simplification
 of the URL parsing description, since they can now be parsed
 by scanning from left-to-right. This is not yet in the text.
Abstract
 A Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is a compact string representation
 of a location for use in identifying an abstract or physical
 resource. This document defines the general syntax and semantics of
 URLs, including both absolute and relative locators, and guidelines
 for their use and for the definition of new URL schemes. It revises
 and replaces the generic definitions in RFC 1738 and RFC 1808.
1. Introduction
 Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) provide a simple and extensible
 means for identifying a resource by its location. This specification
 of URL syntax and semantics is derived from concepts introduced by
 the World Wide Web global information initiative, whose use of such
 objects dates from 1990 and is described in "Universal Resource
 Identifiers in WWW", RFC 1630 [1]. The specification of URLs is
 designed to meet the recommendations laid out in "Functional
 Recommendations for Internet Resource Locators", RFC 1736 [8].
 This document updates and merges RFC 1738 "Uniform Resource Locators"
 [2] and RFC 1808 "Relative Uniform Resource Locators" [7] in order to
 define a single, general syntax for all URLs. It excludes those
 portions of RFC 1738 that defined the specific syntax of individual
 URL schemes; those portions will be updated as separate documents.
 URLs are characterized by the following definitions:
 Uniform
 Uniformity of syntax and semantics allows the mechanism for
 referencing resources to be independent of the mechanism used
 to locate those resources and the operations applied to those
 resources once they have been located. New types of resources,
 access mechanisms, and operations can be introduced without
 changing the protocols and data formats that use URLs.
 Resource
 A resource can be anything that has identity. Familiar
 examples include an electronic document, an image, a service
 (e.g., "today's weather report for Los Angeles"), and a
 collection of other resources. Not all resources are network
 "retrievable", such as human beings, corporations, and actual
 books in a library.
 The resource is the conceptual mapping to an entity or set of
 entities, not necessarily the entity which corresponds to that
 mapping at any particular instance in time. Thus, a resource
 can remain constant even when its content---the entities to
 which it currently corresponds---changes over time, provided
 that the conceptual mapping is not changed in the process.
 Locator
 A locator is an object that identifies a resource by its
 location. In the case of URLs, the object is a sequence of
 characters with a restricted syntax. An absolute locator
 identifies a location independent of any context, whereas a
 relative locator identifies a location relative to the
 context in which it is found.
 URLs are used to `locate' resources by providing an abstract
 identification of the resource location. Having located a resource,
 a system may perform a variety of operations on the resource, as
 might be characterized by such words as `access', `update',
 `replace', or `find attributes'. This specification is only
 concerned with the issue of identifying a resource by its location.
1.1. Example URLs
 The following examples illustrate URLs which are in common use.
 ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1808.txt
 -- ftp scheme for File Transfer Protocol services
 gopher://spinaltap.micro.umn.edu/00/Weather/California/Los%20Angeles
 -- gopher scheme for Gopher and Gopher+ Protocol services
 http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/uri/
 -- http scheme for Hypertext Transfer Protocol services
 mailto:masinter@parc.xerox.com
 -- mailto scheme for electronic mail addresses
 news:comp.infosystems.www.servers.unix
 -- news scheme for USENET news groups and articles
 telnet://melvyl.ucop.edu/
 -- telnet scheme for interactive services via the TELNET Protocol
 Many other URL schemes have been defined. Section 7 describes how
 new schemes are defined and registered. The scheme defines the
 namespace of the URL. Although many URL schemes are named after
 protocols, this does not imply that the only way to access the URL's
 resource is via the named protocol. Gateways, proxies, caches, and
 name resolution services might be used to access some resources,
 independent of the protocol of their origin, and the resolution of
 some URLs may require the use of more than one protocol (e.g., both
 DNS and HTTP are typically used to access an "http" URL's resource
 when it can't be found in a local cache).
1.2. URL Transcribability
 The URL syntax has been designed to promote transcribability over all
 other concerns. A URL is a sequence of characters, i.e., letters,
 digits, and special characters. A URL may be represented in a
 variety of ways: e.g., ink on paper, pixels on a screen, or a
 sequence of octets in a coded character set. The interpretation of a
 URL depends only on the characters used and not how those characters
 are represented on the wire.
 The goal of transcribability can be described by a simple scenario.
 Imagine two colleagues, Sam and Kim, sitting in a pub at an
 international conference and exchanging research ideas. Sam asks Kim
 for a location to get more information, so Kim writes the URL for the
 research site on a napkin. Upon returning home, Sam takes out the
 napkin and types the URL into a computer, which then retrieves the
 information to which Kim referred.
 There are several design concerns revealed by the scenario:
 o A URL is a sequence of characters, which is not always
 represented as a sequence of octets.
 o A URL may be transcribed from a non-network source, and thus
 should consist of characters which are most likely to be able
 to be typed into a computer, within the constraints imposed by
 keyboards (and related input devices) across nationalities and
 languages.
 o A URL often needs to be remembered by people, and it is easier
 for people to remember a URL when it consists of meaningful
 components.
 These design concerns are not always in alignment. For example, it
 is often the case that the most meaningful name for a URL component
 would require characters which cannot be typed on most keyboards.
 In such cases, the ability to access a resource is considered more
 important than having its URL consist of the most meaningful of
 components.
1.3. Syntax Notation and Common Elements
 This document uses two conventions to describe and define the syntax
 for Uniform Resource Locators. The first, called the layout form, is
 a general description of the order of components and component
 separators, as in
 <first>/<second>;<third>?<fourth>
 The component names are enclosed in angle-brackets and any characters
 outside angle-brackets are literal separators. Whitespace should be
 ignored. These descriptions are used informally and do not define
 the syntax requirements.
 The second convention is a BNF-like grammar, used to define the
 formal URL syntax. The grammar is that of RFC 822 [6], except that
 "|" is used to designate alternatives. Briefly, rules are separated
 from definitions by an equal "=", indentation is used to continue a
 rule definition over more than one line, literals are quoted with "",
 parentheses "(" and ")" are used to group elements, optional elements
 are enclosed in "[" and "]" brackets, and elements may be preceded
 with <n>* to designate n or more repetitions of the following
 element; n defaults to 0.
 Unlike many specifications which use a BNF-like grammar to define the
 bytes (octets) allowed by a protocol, the URL grammar is defined in
 terms of characters. Each literal in the grammar corresponds to the
 character it represents, rather than to the octet encoding of that
 character in any particular coded character set. How a URL is
 represented in terms of bits and bytes on the wire is dependent upon
 the character encoding of the protocol used to transport it, or the
 charset of the document which contains it.
 The following definitions are common to many elements:
 alpha = lowalpha | hialpha
 lowalpha = "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f" | "g" | "h" | "i" |
 "j" | "k" | "l" | "m" | "n" | "o" | "p" | "q" | "r" |
 "s" | "t" | "u" | "v" | "w" | "x" | "y" | "z"
 hialpha = "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F" | "G" | "H" | "I" |
 "J" | "K" | "L" | "M" | "N" | "O" | "P" | "Q" | "R" |
 "S" | "T" | "U" | "V" | "W" | "X" | "Y" | "Z"
 digit = "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" |
 "8" | "9"
 alphanum = alpha | digit
 The complete URL syntax is collected in Appendix A.
2. URL Characters and Character Escaping
 All URLs consist of a restricted set of characters, chosen to
 maximize their transcribability and usability across varying computer
 systems, natural languages, and nationalities. This restricted set
 corresponds to a subset of the graphic printable characters of the
 US-ASCII coded character set [10].
 The set of characters allowed for use within URLs can be described in
 three categories: reserved, unreserved, and escaped.
 urlchar = reserved | unreserved | escaped
2.1. Reserved Characters
 Many URLs include components consisting of, or delimited by, certain
 special characters. These characters are called "reserved", since
 their usage within the URL component is limited to their reserved
 purpose. If the data characters for a URL component would conflict
 with the reserved purpose, then the conflicting characters must be
 escaped before forming the URL.
 reserved = ";" | "/" | "?" | ":" | "@" | "&" | "=" | "+"
 This specification uses the "reserved" set to refer to those
 characters which are allowed within a URL, but which may not be
 allowed within a particular component of the generic URL syntax; they
 are used as delimiters of the components described in Section 4.
 Characters in the "reserved" set are not always reserved. The set of
 characters actually reserved within any given URL component is
 defined by that component. In general, a character is reserved if
 escaping that character would change the semantics of the URL.
2.2. Unreserved Characters
 Data characters which are allowed in a URL but do not have a reserved
 purpose are called unreserved. These include upper and lower case
 letters, decimal digits, and a subset of the punctuation marks and
 symbols found in US-ASCII.
 unreserved = alpha | digit | mark
 mark = "$" | "-" | "_" | "." | "!" | "~" |
 "*" | "'" | "(" | ")" | ","
 Unreserved characters can be escaped without changing the semantics
 of the URL, but this should not be done unless the URL is being used
 in a context which does not allow the unescaped character to appear.
2.3. Escaped Characters
 A character needs to be escaped if it is non-printable, if it is
 often used to delimit a URL from its context, if it is not found in
 the US-ASCII coded character set, if it is known to cause problems
 when passed through some e-mail gateways, or if it is being used as
 normal data within a component in which it is reserved.
2.3.1. Escaped Encoding
 An escaped character is encoded as a character triplet, consisting of
 the percent character "%" followed by the two hexadecimal digits
 representing the character's octet code in an 8-bit coded character
 set. For example, "%20" is the escaped encoding for the space
 character.
 escaped = "%" hex hex
 hex = digit | "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F" |
 "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f"
 The 8-bit coded character set of the octet must be a superset of the
 US-ASCII coded character set, such that the US-ASCII characters have
 the same escaped encoding regardless of the larger octet character
 set. The coded character set chosen must correspond to the character
 set of the mechanism that will interpret the URL component in which
 the escaped character is used. A sequence of escape triplets are
 used if the character is coded as a sequence of octets.
 Any character, from any character set, can be included in a URL via
 the escaped encoding, provided that the mechanism which will
 interpret the URL has an octet encoding for that character. However,
 only that mechanism (the originator of the URL) can determine which
 character is represented by the octet. A client without knowledge of
 the origination mechanism cannot unescape the character for display.
2.3.2. When to Escape and Unescape
 A URL is always in an escaped form, since escaping or unescaping a
 completed URL might change its semantics. The only time that
 characters within a URL can be safely escaped is when the URL is
 being created from its component parts. Each component may have its
 own set of characters which are reserved, so only the mechanism
 responsible for generating or interpreting that component can
 determine whether or not escaping a character will change its
 semantics. Likewise, a URL must be separated into its components
 before the escaped characters within those components can be
 safely unescaped.
 Because the percent "%" character always has the reserved purpose of
 being the escape indicator, it must be escaped as "%25" in order to
 be used as data within a URL. Implementers should be careful not to
 escape or unescape the same string more than once, since unescaping
 an already unescaped string might lead to misinterpreting a percent
 data character as another escaped character, or vice versa in the
 case of escaping an already escaped string.
2.3.3. Excluded Characters
 Although they are not used within the URL syntax, we include here a
 description of those characters which have been excluded and the
 reasons for their exclusion.
 excluded = control | space | delims | unwise | national
 All characters corresponding to the control characters in the
 US-ASCII coded character set are unsafe to use within a URL, both
 because they are non-printable and because they are likely to be
 misinterpreted by some control mechanisms.
 control = <US-ASCII coded characters 00-1F and 7F hexadecimal>
 The space character is excluded because significant spaces may
 disappear and insignificant spaces may be introduced when URLs are
 transcribed or typeset or subjected to the treatment of
 word-processing programs. Whitespace is also used to delimit URLs in
 many contexts.
 space = <US-ASCII coded character 20 hexadecimal>
 The angle-bracket "<" and ">" and double-quote (`"') characters are
 excluded because they are often used as the delimiters around URLs in
 text documents and protocol fields. The character "#" is excluded
 because it is used to delimit a URL from a fragment identifier in URL
 references. The percent character "%" is excluded because it is used
 for the encoding of escaped characters.
 delims = "<" | ">" | "#" | "%" | <">
 Other characters are excluded because gateways and other transport
 agents are known to sometimes modify such characters.
 unwise = "{" | "}" | "|" | "\" | "^" | "[" | "]" | "`"
 Finally, all other characters besides those mentioned in the above
 sections are excluded because they are often difficult or impossible
 to transcribe using traditional computer keyboards and software.
 national = <Any character not in the reserved, unreserved,
 control, space, delims, or unwise sets>
 Excluded characters must be escaped in order to be properly
 represented within a URL. However, there do exist some systems that
 allow characters from the "unwise" and "national" sets to be used in
 URL references; a robust implementation should be prepared to handle
 those characters when it is possible to do so.
3. URL References
 A common source of confusion in the use and interpretation of Uniform
 Resource Locators is the distinction between a reference to a URL and
 the URL itself. A URL reference may be absolute or relative, and may
 be attached to additional information in the form of a fragment
 identifier. However, "the URL" which results from such a reference
 includes only the absolute URL after the fragment identifier (if any)
 is removed and after any relative URL is resolved to its absolute
 form. Although it is possible to limit the discussion of URL syntax
 and semantics to that of the absolute result, most usage of URLs
 is within general URL references, and it is impossible to obtain the
 URL from such a reference without also parsing the fragment and
 resolving the relative form.
 URL-reference = [ absoluteURL | relativeURL ] [ "#" fragment ]
 The syntax for relative URLs is a shortened form of that for absolute
 URLs, where some prefix of the URL is missing and certain path
 components ("." and "..") have a special meaning when interpreting a
 relative path.
 When a URL reference is used to perform a retrieval action on the
 identified resource, the optional fragment identifier, separated from
 the URL by a crosshatch ("#") character, consists of additional
 reference information to be interpreted by the user agent after the
 retrieval action has been successfully completed. As such, it is not
 part of a URL, but is often used in conjunction with a URL. The
 format and interpretation of fragment identifiers is dependent on the
 media type of the retrieved resource.
 fragment = *urlchar
 A URL reference which does not contain a URL is a reference to the
 current document. In other words, an empty URL reference within a
 document is interpreted as a reference to the start of that document,
 and a reference containing only a fragment identifier is a reference
 to the identified fragment of that document. Traversal of such a
 reference should not result in an additional retrieval action.
 When parsing a URL reference, the fragment identifier (if any) is
 extracted first. If the reference contains a crosshatch "#"
 character, then the substring after the first (left-most) crosshatch
 and up to the end of the reference is the fragment identifier. If
 the crosshatch is the last character, or no crosshatch is present,
 then the fragment identifier is empty. The crosshatch separator is
 discarded.
4. Generic URL Syntax
4.1. Scheme
 Just as there are many different methods of access to resources,
 there are a variety of schemes for describing the location of such
 resources. The URL syntax consists of a sequence of components
 separated by reserved characters, with the first component defining
 the semantics for the remainder of the URL string.
 In general, absolute URLs are written as follows:
 <scheme>:<scheme-specific-part>
 An absolute URL contains the name of the scheme being used (<scheme>)
 followed by a colon (":") and then a string (the <scheme-specific-
 part>) whose interpretation depends on the scheme.
 Scheme names consist of a sequence of characters. The lower case
 letters "a"--"z", digits, and the characters plus ("+"), period
 ("."), and hyphen ("-") are allowed. For resiliency, programs
 interpreting URLs should treat upper case letters as equivalent to
 lower case in scheme names (e.g., allow "HTTP" as well as "http").
 scheme = 1*( alpha | digit | "+" | "-" | "." )
 When parsing a URL reference, the scheme (if any) is extracted after
 the fragment. If the reference contains a colon ":" after the first
 character and before any characters not allowed as part of a scheme
 name, the scheme of the URL is the substring of characters up to, but
 not including, the first colon. The colon separator is discarded.
 Relative URL references are distinguished from absolute URLs in that
 they do not begin with a scheme name. Instead, the scheme is
 inherited from the base URL, as described in Section 7.
4.2. Opaque and Hierarchical URLs
 The URL syntax does not require that the scheme-specific-part have
 any general structure or set of semantics which is common among all
 URLs. However, a subset of URLs do share a common syntax for
 representing hierarchical relationships within the locator namespace.
 This generic-URL syntax is used in interpreting relative URLs.
 absoluteURL = generic-URL | opaque-URL
 opaque-URL = scheme ":" *urlchar
 generic-URL = scheme ":" relativeURL
 It is often the case that a group or "tree" of documents has been
 constructed to serve a common purpose; the vast majority of URLs in
 these documents point to locations within the tree rather than
 outside of it. Similarly, documents located at a particular server
 are much more likely to refer to other resources on that server than
 to resources at remote sites.
 Relative addressing of URLs allows document trees to be partially
 independent of their location and access scheme. For instance, it is
 possible for a single set of hypertext documents to be simultaneously
 accessible and traversable via each of the "file", "http", and "ftp"
 schemes if the documents refer to each other using relative URLs.
 Furthermore, such document trees can be moved, as a whole, without
 changing any of the relative references. Experience within the WWW
 has demonstrated that the ability to perform relative referencing
 is necessary for the long-term usability of embedded URLs.
 relativeURL = net_path | abs_path | rel_path
 net_path = "//" server [ abs_path ]
 abs_path = "/" rel_path
 rel_path = [ path ] [ "?" query ]
 It is not necessary for all URLs within a given scheme to be
 restricted to the generic-URL syntax, since the hierarchical
 properties of that syntax are only necessary when relative URLs are
 used within a particular document. Documents can only make use of
 relative URLs when their base URL fits within the generic-URL syntax.
 It is assumed that any document which contains a relative reference
 will also have a base URL that obeys the syntax. In other words,
 relative URLs cannot be used within documents that have unsuitable
 base URLs.
 URLs which are hierarchical in nature use the slash "/" character for
 separating hierarchical components. For some file systems, the "/"
 used to denote the hierarchical structure of a URL corresponds to the
 delimiter used to construct a file name hierarchy, and thus the URL
 path will look similar to a file pathname. This does NOT imply that
 the URL is a Unix pathname.
4.3. URL Syntactic Components
 The URL syntax is dependent upon the scheme. Some schemes use
 reserved characters like "?" and ";" to indicate special components,
 while others just consider them to be part of the path. However,
 most URL schemes use a common sequence of four main components to
 define the location of a resource
 <scheme>://<server>/<path>?<query>
 each of which, except <scheme>, may be absent from a particular URL.
 For example, some URL schemes do not allow a server component, and
 others do not use a query component.
 The order of the components is important. A URL reference is parsed
 into its components from the outside-in: fragment, scheme, server,
 query, and then path.
4.3.1. Server Component
 URL schemes that involve the direct use of an IP-based protocol to a
 specified host on the Internet use a common syntax for the server
 component of the URL's scheme-specific data:
 <user>:<password>@<host>:<port>
 Some or all of the parts "<user>:<password>@", ":<password>", and
 ":<port>" may be excluded. The server component is preceded by a
 double slash "//" and is terminated by the next slash "/" or by the
 end of the URL.
 server = [ [ user [ ":" password ] "@" ] hostport ]
 The user name and password, if present, are followed by a commercial
 at-sign "@". Within the user and password fields, the characters
 ":", "@", and "/" are reserved.
 user = *[ unreserved | escaped |
 ";" | "?" | "&" | "=" | "+" ]
 password = *[ unreserved | escaped |
 ";" | "?" | "&" | "=" | "+" ]
 Note that an empty user name or password is different than no user
 name or password; there is no way to specify a password without
 specifying a user name. E.g., <ftp://@host.com/> has an empty
 user name and no password, <ftp://host.com/> has no user name,
 while <ftp://foo:@host.com/> has a user name of "foo" and an
 empty password.
 The host is a domain name of a network host, or its IPv4 address as a
 set of four decimal digit groups separated by ".". A suitable
 representation for IPv6 addresses has not yet been determined.
 hostport = host [ ":" port ]
 host = hostname | hostnumber
 hostname = *( domainlabel "." ) toplabel
 domainlabel = alphanum | alphanum *( alphanum | "-" ) alphanum
 toplabel = alpha | alpha *( alphanum | "-" ) alphanum
 hostnumber = 1*digit "." 1*digit "." 1*digit "." 1*digit
 port = *digit
 Domain names take the form as described in Section 3.5 of RFC 1034
 [9] and Section 2.1 of RFC 1123 [5]: a sequence of domain labels
 separated by ".", each domain label starting and ending with an
 alphanumerical character and possibly also containing "-" characters.
 The rightmost domain label will never start with a digit, though,
 which syntactically distinguishes all domain names from the IP
 addresses.
 The port is the network port number for the server. Most schemes
 designate protocols that have a default port number. Another port
 number may optionally be supplied, in decimal, separated from the
 host by a colon. If the port is omitted, the default port number is
 assumed.
 When parsing a URL reference, the server component (if any) is
 extracted after the scheme. If the remaining reference begins with a
 double-slash "//", then the substring of characters after the
 double-slash and up to, but not including, the next slash "/"
 character is the server component of the URL. If no trailing slash
 is present, the entire remaining reference is the server component.
 The double-slash separator is discarded.
 A server component is not required for a URL scheme to make use of
 relative references. A base URL without a server component implies
 that any relative reference will also be without a server component.
4.3.2. Path Component
 The path component contains data, specific to the scheme or server,
 regarding the details of how the resource can be accessed. Note that
 the "/" separator between the server component and the path component
 is NOT part of the path.
 path = segment *( "/" segment )
 segment = *pchar *( ";" param )
 param = *pchar
 pchar = unreserved | escaped | ":" | "@" | "&" | "=" | "+"
 The path may consist of a sequence of path segments separated by a
 single slash "/" character. Within a path segment, the characters
 "/", ";", and "?" are reserved. Each path segment may include a
 sequence of parameters, indicated by the semicolon ";" character.
 The parameters are not significant to the parsing of relative
 references.
 When parsing a URL reference, the path is extracted after all other
 components. The remaining reference is the URL path and the slash
 "/" that might precede it. Although the initial slash is not part of
 the URL path, the parser must remember whether or not it was present
 so that later processes can differentiate between relative and
 absolute paths, as described in Section 7.
 A relative reference beginning with a single slash character is
 termed an absolute-path reference.
 A relative reference which does not begin with a scheme name or a
 slash character is termed a relative-path reference. Within a
 relative-path reference, the complete path segments "." and ".." have
 special meanings: "the current hierarchy level" and "the level above
 this hierarchy level", respectively. Although this is very similar
 to their use within Unix-based filesystems to indicate directory
 levels, these path components are only active when resolving
 relative-path references to their absolute form (Section 6).
 Authors should be aware that path segments which contain a colon ":"
 character cannot be used as the first component of a relative URL
 path (e.g., "this:that") because they will likely be mistaken for a
 scheme name. It is therefore necessary to precede such cases with
 other components (e.g., "./this:that") in order for them to be
 referenced as a relative path.
4.3.3. Query Component
 The query component is a string of information to be interpreted by
 the resource.
 query = *urlchar
 Within a query component, the characters "/", "&", "=", and "+" are
 reserved.
 When parsing a URL reference, the query component (if any) is
 extracted after the server component. If the remaining reference
 contains a question mark "?" character, then the substring after the
 first (left-most) question mark and up to the end of the reference is
 the query component. If the question mark is the last character, or
 no question mark is present, then the query component is empty. The
 question mark separator is discarded.
5. Establishing a Base URL
 The term "relative URL" implies that there exists some absolute "base
 URL" against which the relative reference is applied. Indeed, the
 base URL is necessary to define the semantics of any relative URL
 reference; without it, a relative reference is meaningless. In order
 for relative URLs to be usable within a document, the base URL of
 that document must be known to the parser.
 The base URL of a document can be established in one of four ways,
 listed below in order of precedence. The order of precedence can be
 thought of in terms of layers, where the innermost defined base URL
 has the highest precedence. This can be visualized graphically as:
 .----------------------------------------------------------.
 | .----------------------------------------------------. |
 | | .----------------------------------------------. | |
 | | | .----------------------------------------. | | |
 | | | | (5.1) Base URL embedded in the | | | |
 | | | | document's content | | | |
 | | | `----------------------------------------' | | |
 | | | (5.2) Base URL of the encapsulating entity | | |
 | | | (message, document, or none). | | |
 | | `----------------------------------------------' | |
 | | (5.3) URL used to retrieve the entity | |
 | `----------------------------------------------------' |
 | (5.4) Base URL = "" (undefined) |
 `----------------------------------------------------------'
5.1. Base URL within Document Content
 Within certain document media types, the base URL of the document can
 be embedded within the content itself such that it can be readily
 obtained by a parser. This can be useful for descriptive documents,
 such as tables of content, which may be transmitted to others through
 protocols other than their usual retrieval context (e.g., E-Mail or
 USENET news).
 It is beyond the scope of this document to specify how, for each
 media type, the base URL can be embedded. It is assumed that user
 agents manipulating such media types will be able to obtain the
 appropriate syntax from that media type's specification. An example
 of how the base URL can be embedded in the Hypertext Markup Language
 (HTML) [3] is provided in Appendix B.
 Messages are considered to be composite documents. The base URL of a
 message can be specified within the message headers (or equivalent
 tagged metainformation) of the message. For protocols that make use
 of message headers like those described in MIME [4], the base URL
 can be specified by the Content-Base or Content-Location header
 fields.
 Content-Base = "Content-Base" ":" absoluteURL
 Content-Location = "Content-Location" ":"
 ( absoluteURL | relativeURL )
 The field names are case-insensitive and any whitespace inside
 the field value (including that used for line folding) is ignored.
 Content-Base takes precedence over any Content-Location. If the
 latter is relative, it must be resolved to its absolute form (like
 any relative URL) before it can be used as the base URL for other
 references.
 For example, the header field
 Content-Base: http://www.ics.uci.edu/Test/a/b/c
 would indicate that the base URL for that message is the string
 "http://www.ics.uci.edu/Test/a/b/c". The base URL for a message
 serves as both the base for any relative URLs within the message
 headers and the default base URL for documents enclosed within the
 message, as described in the next section.
 Protocols which do not use the RFC 822 message header syntax, but
 which do allow some form of tagged metainformation to be included
 within messages, may define their own syntax for defining the base
 URL as part of a message.
5.2. Base URL from the Encapsulating Entity
 If no base URL is embedded, the base URL of a document is defined by
 the document's retrieval context. For a document that is enclosed
 within another entity (such as a message or another document), the
 retrieval context is that entity; thus, the default base URL of the
 document is the base URL of the entity in which the document is
 encapsulated.
 Composite media types, such as the "multipart/*" and "message/*"
 media types defined by MIME (RFC 1521, [4]), define a hierarchy of
 retrieval context for their enclosed documents. In other words, the
 retrieval context of a component part is the base URL of the
 composite entity of which it is a part. Thus, a composite entity can
 redefine the retrieval context of its component parts via the
 inclusion of a Content-Base or Content-Location header, and this
 redefinition applies recursively for a hierarchy of composite parts.
 Note that this might not change the base URL of the components, since
 each component may include an embedded base URL or base-header that
 takes precedence over the retrieval context.
5.3. Base URL from the Retrieval URL
 If no base URL is embedded and the document is not encapsulated
 within some other entity (e.g., the top level of a composite entity),
 then, if a URL was used to retrieve the base document, that URL shall
 be considered the base URL. Note that if the retrieval was the
 result of a redirected request, the last URL used (i.e., that which
 resulted in the actual retrieval of the document) is the base URL.
5.4. Default Base URL
 If none of the conditions described in Sections 5.1 -- 5.3 apply,
 then the base URL is considered to be the empty string and all
 URL references within that document are assumed to be absolute URLs.
 It is the responsibility of the distributor(s) of a document
 containing relative URLs to ensure that the base URL for that
 document can be established. It must be emphasized that relative
 URLs cannot be used reliably in situations where the document's base
 URL is not well-defined.
6. Resolving Relative URLs
 This section describes an example algorithm for resolving URL
 references within a context in which the URLs may be relative, such
 that the result is always a URL in absolute form. Although this
 algorithm cannot guarantee that the resulting URL will equal that
 intended by the original author, it does guarantee that any valid URL
 (relative or absolute) can be consistently transformed to an absolute
 form given a valid base URL.
 The following steps are performed in order:
 Step 1: The base URL is established according to the rules of
 Section 5. If the base URL is the empty string (unknown),
 the URL reference is interpreted as an absolute URL and
 we are done.
 Step 2: Both the base and URL reference are parsed into their
 component parts as described in Section 4.
 a) If the URL reference is entirely empty, or consists only
 of a fragment identifier, it is interpreted as a reference
 to the current document and we are done.
 b) If the URL reference starts with a scheme name, it is
 interpreted as an absolute URL and we are done.
 c) Otherwise, the URL reference inherits the scheme of
 the base URL.
 Step 3: If the URL reference's <server> is non-empty, we skip to
 Step 7. Otherwise, the URL reference inherits the <server>
 (if any) of the base URL. If the base URL's has no <server>
 component, then neither does the relative reference.
 Step 4: If the URL reference path is preceded by a slash "/", the
 path is not relative and we skip to Step 7.
 Step 5: If the URL reference path is empty (and not preceded by a
 slash), then the URL reference inherits the base URL path.
 If the URL reference's <query> is non-empty, we skip to
 step 7; otherwise, it inherits the <query> of the base
 URL (if any) and we skip to step 7.
 Step 6: The last segment of the base URL's path (anything
 following the rightmost slash "/", or the entire path if no
 slash is present) is removed and the URL reference's path is
 appended in its place. The following operations are
 then applied, in order, to the new path:
 a) All occurrences of "./", where "." is a complete path
 segment, are removed.
 b) If the path ends with "." as a complete path segment,
 that "." is removed.
 c) All occurrences of "<segment>/../", where <segment> is a
 complete path segment not equal to "..", are removed.
 Removal of these path segments is performed iteratively,
 removing the leftmost matching pattern on each iteration,
 until no matching pattern remains.
 d) If the path ends with "<segment>/..", where <segment> is a
 complete path segment not equal to "..", that
 "<segment>/.." is removed.
 Step 7: The resulting URL components, including any inherited from
 the base URL, are recombined to give the absolute form of
 the URL reference.
 The above algorithm is intended to provide an example by which the
 output of implementations can be tested -- implementation of the
 algorithm itself is not required. For example, some systems may find
 it more efficient to implement Step 6 as a pair of segment stacks
 being merged, rather than as a series of string pattern matches.
 Further examples are provided in Appendix C.
7. Adding New Schemes
 The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) maintains a registry
 of URL schemes.
 The current process for defining URL schemes is via the Internet
 standards process: new URL schemes should be described in
 standards-track RFCs. Over time, other methods of registering URL
 schemes may be added.
 URL schemes must have demonstrable utility and operability. One way
 to provide such a demonstration is via a gateway which provides
 objects in the new scheme for clients using an existing protocol. If
 the new scheme does not locate resources that are data objects, the
 properties of names in the new space must be clearly defined.
 URL schemes should follow the same syntactic conventions of existing
 schemes when appropriate. URL schemes should use the generic-URL
 syntax if they are intended to be used with relative URLs. A
 description of the allowed relative forms should be included in the
 scheme's definition.
8. Security Considerations
 The URL scheme does not in itself pose a security threat. Users
 should beware that there is no general guarantee that a URL which at
 one time points to a given object continues to do so, and does not
 even at some later time point to a different object due to the
 movement of objects on servers.
 A URL-related security threat is that it is sometimes possible to
 construct a URL such that an attempt to perform a harmless idempotent
 operation such as the retrieval of the object will in fact cause a
 possibly damaging remote operation to occur. The unsafe URL is
 typically constructed by specifying a port number other than that
 reserved for the network protocol in question. The client
 unwittingly contacts a server which is in fact running a different
 protocol. The content of the URL contains instructions which, when
 interpreted according to this other protocol, cause an unexpected
 operation. An example has been the use of gopher URLs to cause a rude
 message to be sent via a SMTP server. Caution should be used when
 using any URL which specifies a port number other than the default
 for the protocol, especially when it is a number within the reserved
 space.
 Care should be taken when URLs contain escaped delimiters for a given
 protocol (for example, CR and LF characters for telnet protocols)
 that these are not unencoded before transmission. This would violate
 the protocol but could be used to simulate an extra operation or
 parameter, again causing an unexpected and possible harmful remote
 operation to be performed.
 The use of URLs containing passwords that should be secret is clearly
 unwise.
9. Acknowledgements
 Most of this document was derived from RFC 1738 [2] and RFC 1808 [7];
 the acknowledgements in those specifications still apply. In
 addition, this draft has benefitted from comments by Lauren Wood.
10. References
 [1] Berners-Lee, T., "Universal Resource Identifiers in WWW: A
 Unifying Syntax for the Expression of Names and Addresses of
 Objects on the Network as used in the World-Wide Web", RFC 1630,
 CERN, June 1994.
 [2] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., and M. McCahill, Editors, "Uniform
 Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, CERN, Xerox Corporation,
 University of Minnesota, December 1994.
 [3] Berners-Lee T., and D. Connolly, "HyperText Markup Language
 Specification -- 2.0", RFC 1866, MIT/W3C, November 1995.
 [4] Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
 Extensions): Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing the Format
 of Internet Message Bodies", RFC 1521, Bellcore, Innosoft,
 September 1993.
 [5] Braden, R., Editor, "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
 Application and Support", STD 3, RFC 1123, IETF, October 1989.
 [6] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text
 Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, UDEL, August 1982.
 [7] Fielding, R., "Relative Uniform Resource Locators", RFC 1808,
 UC Irvine, June 1995.
 [8] Kunze, J., "Functional Recommendations for Internet Resource
 Locators", RFC 1736, IS&T, UC Berkeley, February 1995.
 [9] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities",
 STD 13, RFC 1034, USC/Information Sciences Institute,
 November 1987.
 [10] US-ASCII. "Coded Character Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code
 for Information Interchange", ANSI X3.4-1986.
11. Authors' Addresses
 Tim Berners-Lee
 World Wide Web Consortium
 MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, NE43-356
 545 Technology Square
 Cambridge, MA 02139
 Fax: +1(617)258-8682
 EMail: timbl@w3.org
 Roy T. Fielding
 Department of Information and Computer Science
 University of California
 Irvine, CA 92717-3425
 U.S.A.
 Fax: +1(714)824-4056
 EMail: fielding@ics.uci.edu
 Larry Masinter
 Xerox PARC
 3333 Coyote Hill Road
 Palo Alto, CA 94034
 Fax: +1(415)812-4333
 EMail: masinter@parc.xerox.com
Appendices
A. Collected BNF for URLs
 # To be inserted when it is completed.
B. Recommendations for Delimiting URLs in Context
 URIs, including URLs, are intended to be transmitted through
 protocols which provide a context for their interpretation.
 In some cases, it will be necessary to distinguish URLs from other
 possible data structures in a syntactic structure. In this case, it
 is recommended that URLs be preceded with a prefix consisting of the
 characters "URL:". For example, this prefix may be used to
 distinguish URLs from other kinds of URIs.
 In addition, there are many occasions when URLs are included in other
 kinds of text; examples include simple plain text sent in electronic
 mail, USENET news messages, or, most importantly, printed on paper.
 In such cases, it is important to be able to delimit the URL from the
 rest of the text, and in particular from punctuation marks that might
 be mistaken for part of the URL.
 In practice, URLs are delimited in a variety of ways, using brackets
 [http://test.com/] or angle brackets <http://www.w3.org> or even
 paired braces {http://test.com}, with or (usually) without the "URL:"
 prefix. This wrapper does not form part of the URL. In the case
 where a fragment/anchor identifier is associated with a URL
 (following a "#"), the identifier would be placed within the brackets
 as well.
 In some cases, extra whitespace (spaces, linebreaks, tabs, etc.) may
 need to be added to break long URLs across lines. The whitespace
 should be ignored when extracting the URL.
 No whitespace should be introduced after a hyphen ("-") character.
 Because some typesetters and printers may (erroneously) introduce a
 hyphen at the end of line when breaking a line, the interpreter of a
 URL containing a line break immediately after a hyphen should ignore
 all unencoded whitespace around the line break, and should be aware
 that the hyphen may or may not actually be part of the URL.
 Examples:
 Yes, Jim, I found it under <ftp://info.cern.ch/pub/www/doc;
 type=d> but you can probably pick it up from <ftp://ds.in
 ternic.net/rfc>. Note the warning in <http://ds.internic.
 net/instructions/overview.html#WARNING>.
C. Examples of Resolving Relative URLs
 Within an object with a well-defined base URL of
 Content-Base: http://a/b/c/d;p?q
 the relative URLs would be resolved as follows:
C.1. Normal Examples
 g:h = g:h
 g = http://a/b/c/g
 ./g = http://a/b/c/g
 g/ = http://a/b/c/g/
 /g = http://a/g
 //g = http://g
 ?y = http://a/b/c/?y
 g?y = http://a/b/c/g?y
 #s = (current document)#s
 g#s = http://a/b/c/g#s
 g?y#s = http://a/b/c/g?y#s
 ;x = http://a/b/c/;x
 g;x = http://a/b/c/g;x
 g;x?y#s = http://a/b/c/g;x?y#s
 . = http://a/b/c/
 ./ = http://a/b/c/
 .. = http://a/b/
 ../ = http://a/b/
 ../g = http://a/b/g
 ../.. = http://a/
 ../../ = http://a/
 ../../g = http://a/g
C.2. Abnormal Examples
 Although the following abnormal examples are unlikely to occur in
 normal practice, all URL parsers should be capable of resolving them
 consistently. Each example uses the same base as above.
 An empty reference refers to the start of the current document.
 <> = http://a/b/c/d;p?q
 Parsers must be careful in handling the case where there are more
 relative path ".." segments than there are hierarchical levels in the
 base URL's path. Note that the ".." syntax cannot be used to change
 the <server> of a URL.
 ../../../g = http://a/../g
 ../../../../g = http://a/../../g
 Similarly, parsers must avoid treating "." and ".." as special when
 they are not complete components of a relative path.
 /./g = http://a/./g
 /../g = http://a/../g
 g. = http://a/b/c/g.
 .g = http://a/b/c/.g
 g.. = http://a/b/c/g..
 ..g = http://a/b/c/..g
 Less likely are cases where the relative URL uses unnecessary or
 nonsensical forms of the "." and ".." complete path segments.
 ./../g = http://a/b/g
 ./g/. = http://a/b/c/g/
 g/./h = http://a/b/c/g/h
 g/../h = http://a/b/c/h
 g;x=1/./y = http://a/b/c/g;x=1/y
 g;x=1/../y = http://a/b/c/y
 g?y/./x = http://a/b/c/g?y/x
 g?y/../x = http://a/b/c/x
 g#s/./x = http://a/b/c/g#s/./x
 g#s/../x = http://a/b/c/g#s/../x
 Finally, some older parsers allow the scheme name to be present in a
 relative URL if it is the same as the base URL scheme. This is
 considered to be a loophole in prior specifications of partial URLs
 [1] and should be avoided by future parsers.
 http:g = http:g
 http: = http:
D. Embedding the Base URL in HTML documents
 It is useful to consider an example of how the base URL of a document
 can be embedded within the document's content. In this appendix, we
 describe how documents written in the Hypertext Markup Language
 (HTML) [3] can include an embedded base URL. This appendix does not
 form a part of the relative URL specification and should not be
 considered as anything more than a descriptive example.
 HTML defines a special element "BASE" which, when present in the
 "HEAD" portion of a document, signals that the parser should use the
 BASE element's "HREF" attribute as the base URL for resolving any
 relative URLs. The "HREF" attribute must be an absolute URL. Note
 that, in HTML, element and attribute names are case-insensitive. For
 example:
 <!doctype html public "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
 <HTML><HEAD>
 <TITLE>An example HTML document</TITLE>
 <BASE href="http://www.ics.uci.edu/Test/a/b/c">
 </HEAD><BODY>
 ... <A href="../x">a hypertext anchor</A> ...
 </BODY></HTML>
 A parser reading the example document should interpret the given
 relative URL "../x" as representing the absolute URL
 <http://www.ics.uci.edu/Test/a/x>
 regardless of the context in which the example document was obtained.
E. Summary of Non-editorial Changes
E.1. Additions
 Section 1 (Introduction) is entirely new. Design rationale for the
 scope of URLs and the chosen URL character set has been added in
 order to address common misconceptions about what would and would not
 be appropriate for additional URL schemes, and why the allowed
 character set is limited to US-ASCII characters.
 Section 3 (URL References) was added to stem the confusion regarding
 "what is a URL" and how to describe fragment identifiers given that
 they are not part of the URL, but are part of the URL syntax and
 parsing concerns. In addition, it provides a reference definition
 for use by other IETF specifications (HTML, HTTP, etc.) which have
 previously attempted to redefine the URL syntax in order to account
 for the presence of fragment identifiers in URL references.
 Section 2.3.2 (When to Escape and Unescape) was added in response to
 many (mis)implementation questions on the subject.
E.2. Modifications from both RFC 1738 and RFC 1808 
 Confusion regarding the terms "character encoding", the URL
 "character set", and the escaping of characters with %<hex><hex>
 equivalents has (hopefully) been reduced. Many of the BNF rule names
 regarding the character sets have been changed to more accurately
 describe their purpose and to encompass all "characters" rather than
 just US-ASCII octets. Unless otherwise noted here, these
 modifications do not affect the URL syntax.
 Both RFC 1738 and RFC 1808 refer to the "reserved" set of characters
 as if URL-interpreting servers were limited to a single set of
 characters with a reserved purpose (i.e., as meaning something other
 than the data to which the characters correspond), and that this set
 was fixed by the URL scheme. However, this has not been true in
 practice; any character which is interpreted differently when it is
 escaped is, in effect, reserved. Furthermore, the interpreting
 engine on a server is often dependent on the resource, not just the
 URL scheme. The description of reserved characters has been changed
 accordingly.
 The plus "+" character was added to those in the "reserved" set,
 since it is treated as reserved within some URL components.
 The tilde "~" character was added to those in the "unreserved" set,
 since it is extensively used on the Internet in spite of the
 difficulty to transcribe it with some keyboards.
E.3. Modifications from RFC 1738 
 The definition of specific URL schemes and their scheme-specific
 syntax and semantics has been moved to separate documents.
 The URL host was defined as a fully-qualified domain name. However,
 many URLs are used without fully-qualified domain names (in contexts
 for which the full qualification is not necessary), without any host
 (as in some file URLs), or with a host of "localhost".
 The URL port is now *digit instead of 1*digit, since systems are
 expected to handle the case where the ":" separator between host and
 port is supplied without a port.
E.4. Modifications from RFC 1808 
 RFC 1808 (Section 4) defined an empty URL reference (a reference
 containing nothing aside from the fragment identifier) as being a
 reference to the base URL. Unfortunately, that definition could be
 interpreted, upon selection of such a reference, as a new retrieval
 action on that resource. Since the normal intent of such references
 is for the user agent to change its view of the current document to
 the beginning of the specified fragment within that document, not to
 make an additional request of the resource, a description of how to
 correctly interpret an empty reference has been added in Section 3.
 The description of the mythical Base header field has been replaced
 with the Content-Base and Content-Location header fields defined by
 HTTP/1.1 and MHTML.
 RFC 1808 described various schemes as either having or not having the
 properties of the generic-URL syntax. However, the only requirement
 is that the particular document containing the relative references
 have a base URL which abides by the generic-URL syntax, regardless of
 the URL scheme, so the associated description has been updated to
 reflect that.
 The BNF term <net_loc> has been replaced with <server>, since the
 latter more accurately describes its use and purpose.
 Extensive testing of current client applications demonstrated that
 the majority of deployed systems do not use the ";" character to
 indicate trailing parameter information, and that the presence of a
 semicolon in a path segment does not affect the relative parsing of
 that segment. Therefore, parameters have been removed as a separate
 component and are now allowed in any path segment. Their influence
 has been removed from the algorithm for resolving a relative URL
 reference. The resolution examples in Appendix C have been modified
 to reflect this change.

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