RFC 6350 - vCard Format Specification

[フレーム]

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) S. Perreault
Request for Comments: 6350 Viagenie
Obsoletes: 2425, 2426, 4770 August 2011
Updates: 2739
Category: Standards Track
ISSN: 2070-1721
 vCard Format Specification
Abstract
 This document defines the vCard data format for representing and
 exchanging a variety of information about individuals and other
 entities (e.g., formatted and structured name and delivery addresses,
 email address, multiple telephone numbers, photograph, logo, audio
 clips, etc.). This document obsoletes RFCs 2425, 2426, and 4770, and
 updates RFC 2739.
Status of This Memo
 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 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/rfc6350.
Copyright Notice
 Copyright (c) 2011 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. Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 1]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 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.
Table of Contents
 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 2. Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3. vCard Format Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3.1. Charset . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3.2. Line Delimiting and Folding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
 3.3. ABNF Format Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 3.4. Property Value Escaping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
 4. Property Value Data Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
 4.1. TEXT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
 4.2. URI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
 4.3. DATE, TIME, DATE-TIME, DATE-AND-OR-TIME, and TIMESTAMP . . 12
 4.3.1. DATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
 4.3.2. TIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 4.3.3. DATE-TIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 4.3.4. DATE-AND-OR-TIME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
 4.3.5. TIMESTAMP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
 4.4. BOOLEAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
 4.5. INTEGER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
 4.6. FLOAT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
 4.7. UTC-OFFSET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
 4.8. LANGUAGE-TAG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
 5. Property Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
 5.1. LANGUAGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
 5.2. VALUE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
 5.3. PREF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
 5.4. ALTID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 5.5. PID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
 5.6. TYPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
 5.7. MEDIATYPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
 5.8. CALSCALE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
 5.9. SORT-AS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
 5.10. GEO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
 5.11. TZ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Perreault Standards Track [Page 2]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 6. vCard Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 6.1. General Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 6.1.1. BEGIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 6.1.2. END . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
 6.1.3. SOURCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
 6.1.4. KIND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
 6.1.5. XML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
 6.2. Identification Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
 6.2.1. FN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
 6.2.2. N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
 6.2.3. NICKNAME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
 6.2.4. PHOTO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
 6.2.5. BDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
 6.2.6. ANNIVERSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
 6.2.7. GENDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 6.3. Delivery Addressing Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 6.3.1. ADR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
 6.4. Communications Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
 6.4.1. TEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
 6.4.2. EMAIL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 6.4.3. IMPP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 6.4.4. LANG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 6.5. Geographical Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 6.5.1. TZ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 6.5.2. GEO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
 6.6. Organizational Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
 6.6.1. TITLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
 6.6.2. ROLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
 6.6.3. LOGO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
 6.6.4. ORG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
 6.6.5. MEMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
 6.6.6. RELATED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
 6.7. Explanatory Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
 6.7.1. CATEGORIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
 6.7.2. NOTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 6.7.3. PRODID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 6.7.4. REV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
 6.7.5. SOUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
 6.7.6. UID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
 6.7.7. CLIENTPIDMAP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
 6.7.8. URL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
 6.7.9. VERSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
 6.8. Security Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
 6.8.1. KEY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
 6.9. Calendar Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
 6.9.1. FBURL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
 6.9.2. CALADRURI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
 6.9.3. CALURI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Perreault Standards Track [Page 3]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 6.10. Extended Properties and Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 7. Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 7.1. Mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 7.1.1. Matching vCard Instances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 7.1.2. Matching Property Instances . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
 7.1.3. PID Matching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
 7.2. Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
 7.2.1. Creation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
 7.2.2. Initial Sharing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
 7.2.3. Adding and Sharing a Property . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
 7.2.4. Simultaneous Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
 7.2.5. Global Context Simplification . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
 8. Example: Author's vCard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
 9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 10. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 10.1. Media Type Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 10.2. Registering New vCard Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
 10.2.1. Registration Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
 10.2.2. Vendor Namespace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
 10.2.3. Registration Template for Properties . . . . . . . . . 61
 10.2.4. Registration Template for Parameters . . . . . . . . . 61
 10.2.5. Registration Template for Value Data Types . . . . . . 62
 10.2.6. Registration Template for Values . . . . . . . . . . . 62
 10.3. Initial vCard Elements Registries . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
 10.3.1. Properties Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
 10.3.2. Parameters Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
 10.3.3. Value Data Types Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
 10.3.4. Values Registries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
 11. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
 12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
 12.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
 12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
 Appendix A. Differences from RFCs 2425 and 2426 . . . . . . . . . 73
 A.1. New Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
 A.2. Removed Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
 A.3. New Properties and Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Perreault Standards Track [Page 4]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
1. Introduction
 Electronic address books have become ubiquitous. Their increased
 presence on portable, connected devices as well as the diversity of
 platforms that exchange contact data call for a standard. This memo
 defines the vCard format, which allows the capture and exchange of
 information normally stored within an address book or directory
 application.
 A high-level overview of the differences from RFCs 2425 and 2426 can
 be found in Appendix A.
2. Conventions
 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 [RFC2119].
3. vCard Format Specification
 The text/vcard MIME content type (hereafter known as "vCard"; see
 Section 10.1) contains contact information, typically pertaining to a
 single contact or group of contacts. The content consists of one or
 more lines in the format given below.
3.1. Charset
 The charset (see [RFC3536] for internationalization terminology) for
 vCard is UTF-8 as defined in [RFC3629]. There is no way to override
 this. It is invalid to specify a value other than "UTF-8" in the
 "charset" MIME parameter (see Section 10.1).
3.2. Line Delimiting and Folding
 Individual lines within vCard are delimited by the [RFC5322] line
 break, which is a CRLF sequence (U+000D followed by U+000A). Long
 logical lines of text can be split into a multiple-physical-line
 representation using the following folding technique. Content lines
 SHOULD be folded to a maximum width of 75 octets, excluding the line
 break. Multi-octet characters MUST remain contiguous. The rationale
 for this folding process can be found in [RFC5322], Section 2.1.1.
 A logical line MAY be continued on the next physical line anywhere
 between two characters by inserting a CRLF immediately followed by a
 single white space character (space (U+0020) or horizontal tab
 (U+0009)). The folded line MUST contain at least one character. Any
 sequence of CRLF followed immediately by a single white space
Perreault Standards Track [Page 5]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 character is ignored (removed) when processing the content type. For
 example, the line:
 NOTE:This is a long description that exists on a long line.
 can be represented as:
 NOTE:This is a long description
 that exists on a long line.
 It could also be represented as:
 NOTE:This is a long descrip
 tion that exists o
 n a long line.
 The process of moving from this folded multiple-line representation
 of a property definition to its single-line representation is called
 unfolding. Unfolding is accomplished by regarding CRLF immediately
 followed by a white space character (namely, HTAB (U+0009) or SPACE
 (U+0020)) as equivalent to no characters at all (i.e., the CRLF and
 single white space character are removed).
 Note: It is possible for very simple implementations to generate
 improperly folded lines in the middle of a UTF-8 multi-octet
 sequence. For this reason, implementations SHOULD unfold lines in
 such a way as to properly restore the original sequence.
 Note: Unfolding is done differently than in [RFC5322]. Unfolding
 in [RFC5322] only removes the CRLF, not the space following it.
 Folding is done after any content encoding of a type value.
 Unfolding is done before any decoding of a type value in a content
 line.
3.3. ABNF Format Definition
 The following ABNF uses the notation of [RFC5234], which also defines
 CRLF, WSP, DQUOTE, VCHAR, ALPHA, and DIGIT.
 vcard-entity = 1*vcard
 vcard = "BEGIN:VCARD" CRLF
 "VERSION:4.0" CRLF
 1*contentline
 "END:VCARD" CRLF
 ; A vCard object MUST include the VERSION and FN properties.
 ; VERSION MUST come immediately after BEGIN:VCARD.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 6]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 contentline = [group "."] name *(";" param) ":" value CRLF
 ; When parsing a content line, folded lines must first
 ; be unfolded according to the unfolding procedure
 ; described in Section 3.2.
 ; When generating a content line, lines longer than 75
 ; characters SHOULD be folded according to the folding
 ; procedure described in Section 3.2.
 group = 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
 name = "SOURCE" / "KIND" / "FN" / "N" / "NICKNAME"
 / "PHOTO" / "BDAY" / "ANNIVERSARY" / "GENDER" / "ADR" / "TEL"
 / "EMAIL" / "IMPP" / "LANG" / "TZ" / "GEO" / "TITLE" / "ROLE"
 / "LOGO" / "ORG" / "MEMBER" / "RELATED" / "CATEGORIES"
 / "NOTE" / "PRODID" / "REV" / "SOUND" / "UID" / "CLIENTPIDMAP"
 / "URL" / "KEY" / "FBURL" / "CALADRURI" / "CALURI" / "XML"
 / iana-token / x-name
 ; Parsing of the param and value is based on the "name" as
 ; defined in ABNF sections below.
 ; Group and name are case-insensitive.
 iana-token = 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
 ; identifier registered with IANA
 x-name = "x-" 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-")
 ; Names that begin with "x-" or "X-" are
 ; reserved for experimental use, not intended for released
 ; products, or for use in bilateral agreements.
 param = language-param / value-param / pref-param / pid-param
 / type-param / geo-parameter / tz-parameter / sort-as-param
 / calscale-param / any-param
 ; Allowed parameters depend on property name.
 param-value = *SAFE-CHAR / DQUOTE *QSAFE-CHAR DQUOTE
 any-param = (iana-token / x-name) "=" param-value *("," param-value)
 NON-ASCII = UTF8-2 / UTF8-3 / UTF8-4
 ; UTF8-{2,3,4} are defined in [RFC3629]
 QSAFE-CHAR = WSP / "!" / %x23-7E / NON-ASCII
 ; Any character except CTLs, DQUOTE
 SAFE-CHAR = WSP / "!" / %x23-39 / %x3C-7E / NON-ASCII
 ; Any character except CTLs, DQUOTE, ";", ":"
 VALUE-CHAR = WSP / VCHAR / NON-ASCII
 ; Any textual character
Perreault Standards Track [Page 7]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 A line that begins with a white space character is a continuation of
 the previous line, as described in Section 3.2. The white space
 character and immediately preceeding CRLF should be discarded when
 reconstructing the original line. Note that this line-folding
 convention differs from that found in [RFC5322], in that the sequence
 <CRLF><WSP> found anywhere in the content indicates a continued line
 and should be removed.
 Property names and parameter names are case-insensitive (e.g., the
 property name "fn" is the same as "FN" and "Fn"). Parameter values
 MAY be case-sensitive or case-insensitive, depending on their
 definition. Parameter values that are not explicitly defined as
 being case-sensitive are case-insensitive. Based on experience with
 vCard 3 interoperability, it is RECOMMENDED that property and
 parameter names be upper-case on output.
 The group construct is used to group related properties together.
 The group name is a syntactic convention used to indicate that all
 property names prefaced with the same group name SHOULD be grouped
 together when displayed by an application. It has no other
 significance. Implementations that do not understand or support
 grouping MAY simply strip off any text before a "." to the left of
 the type name and present the types and values as normal.
 Property cardinalities are indicated using the following notation,
 which is based on ABNF (see [RFC5234], Section 3.6):
 +-------------+--------------------------------------------------+
 | Cardinality | Meaning |
 +-------------+--------------------------------------------------+
 | 1 | Exactly one instance per vCard MUST be present. |
 | *1 | Exactly one instance per vCard MAY be present. |
 | 1* | One or more instances per vCard MUST be present. |
 | * | One or more instances per vCard MAY be present. |
 +-------------+--------------------------------------------------+
 Properties defined in a vCard instance may have multiple values
 depending on the property cardinality. The general rule for encoding
 multi-valued properties is to simply create a new content line for
 each value (including the property name). However, it should be
 noted that some value types support encoding multiple values in a
 single content line by separating the values with a comma ",". This
 approach has been taken for several of the content types defined
 below (date, time, integer, float).
Perreault Standards Track [Page 8]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
3.4. Property Value Escaping
 Some properties may contain one or more values delimited by a COMMA
 character (U+002C). Therefore, a COMMA character in a value MUST be
 escaped with a BACKSLASH character (U+005C), even for properties that
 don't allow multiple instances (for consistency).
 Some properties (e.g., N and ADR) comprise multiple fields delimited
 by a SEMICOLON character (U+003B). Therefore, a SEMICOLON in a field
 of such a "compound" property MUST be escaped with a BACKSLASH
 character. SEMICOLON characters in non-compound properties MAY be
 escaped. On input, an escaped SEMICOLON character is never a field
 separator. An unescaped SEMICOLON character may be a field
 separator, depending on the property in which it appears.
 Furthermore, some fields of compound properties may contain a list of
 values delimited by a COMMA character. Therefore, a COMMA character
 in one of a field's values MUST be escaped with a BACKSLASH
 character, even for fields that don't allow multiple values (for
 consistency). Compound properties allowing multiple instances MUST
 NOT be encoded in a single content line.
 Finally, BACKSLASH characters in values MUST be escaped with a
 BACKSLASH character. NEWLINE (U+000A) characters in values MUST be
 encoded by two characters: a BACKSLASH followed by either an 'n'
 (U+006E) or an 'N' (U+004E).
 In all other cases, escaping MUST NOT be used.
4. Property Value Data Types
 Standard value types are defined below.
 value = text
 / text-list
 / date-list
 / time-list
 / date-time-list
 / date-and-or-time-list
 / timestamp-list
 / boolean
 / integer-list
 / float-list
 / URI ; from Section 3 of [RFC3986]
 / utc-offset
 / Language-Tag
 / iana-valuespec
 ; Actual value type depends on property name and VALUE parameter.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 9]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 text = *TEXT-CHAR
 TEXT-CHAR = "\\" / ",円" / "\n" / WSP / NON-ASCII
 / %x21-2B / %x2D-5B / %x5D-7E
 ; Backslashes, commas, and newlines must be encoded.
 component = "\\" / ",円" / "\;" / "\n" / WSP / NON-ASCII
 / %x21-2B / %x2D-3A / %x3C-5B / %x5D-7E
 list-component = component *("," component)
 text-list = text *("," text)
 date-list = date *("," date)
 time-list = time *("," time)
 date-time-list = date-time *("," date-time)
 date-and-or-time-list = date-and-or-time *("," date-and-or-time)
 timestamp-list = timestamp *("," timestamp)
 integer-list = integer *("," integer)
 float-list = float *("," float)
 boolean = "TRUE" / "FALSE"
 integer = [sign] 1*DIGIT
 float = [sign] 1*DIGIT ["." 1*DIGIT]
 sign = "+" / "-"
 year = 4DIGIT ; 0000-9999
 month = 2DIGIT ; 01-12
 day = 2DIGIT ; 01-28/29/30/31 depending on month and leap year
 hour = 2DIGIT ; 00-23
 minute = 2DIGIT ; 00-59
 second = 2DIGIT ; 00-58/59/60 depending on leap second
 zone = utc-designator / utc-offset
 utc-designator = %x5A ; uppercase "Z"
 date = year [month day]
 / year "-" month
 / "--" month [day]
 / "--" "-" day
 date-noreduc = year month day
 / "--" month day
 / "--" "-" day
 date-complete = year month day
 time = hour [minute [second]] [zone]
 / "-" minute [second] [zone]
 / "-" "-" second [zone]
 time-notrunc = hour [minute [second]] [zone]
 time-complete = hour minute second [zone]
Perreault Standards Track [Page 10]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 time-designator = %x54 ; uppercase "T"
 date-time = date-noreduc time-designator time-notrunc
 timestamp = date-complete time-designator time-complete
 date-and-or-time = date-time / date / time-designator time
 utc-offset = sign hour [minute]
 Language-Tag = <Language-Tag, defined in [RFC5646], Section 2.1>
 iana-valuespec = <value-spec, see Section 12>
 ; a publicly defined valuetype format, registered
 ; with IANA, as defined in Section 12 of this
 ; document.
4.1. TEXT
 "text": The "text" value type should be used to identify values that
 contain human-readable text. As for the language, it is controlled
 by the LANGUAGE property parameter defined in Section 5.1.
 Examples for "text":
 this is a text value
 this is one value,this is another
 this is a single value,円 with a comma encoded
 A formatted text line break in a text value type MUST be represented
 as the character sequence backslash (U+005C) followed by a Latin
 small letter n (U+006E) or a Latin capital letter N (U+004E), that
 is, "\n" or "\N".
 For example, a multiple line NOTE value of:
 Mythical Manager
 Hyjinx Software Division
 BabsCo, Inc.
 could be represented as:
 NOTE:Mythical Manager\nHyjinx Software Division\n
 BabsCo,円 Inc.\n
 demonstrating the \n literal formatted line break technique, the
 CRLF-followed-by-space line folding technique, and the backslash
 escape technique.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 11]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
4.2. URI
 "uri": The "uri" value type should be used to identify values that
 are referenced by a Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) instead of
 encoded in-line. These value references might be used if the value
 is too large, or otherwise undesirable to include directly. The
 format for the URI is as defined in Section 3 of [RFC3986]. Note
 that the value of a property of type "uri" is what the URI points to,
 not the URI itself.
 Examples for "uri":
 http://www.example.com/my/picture.jpg
 ldap://ldap.example.com/cn=babs%20jensen
4.3. DATE, TIME, DATE-TIME, DATE-AND-OR-TIME, and TIMESTAMP
 "date", "time", "date-time", "date-and-or-time", and "timestamp":
 Each of these value types is based on the definitions in
 [ISO.8601.2004]. Multiple such values can be specified using the
 comma-separated notation.
 Only the basic format is supported.
4.3.1. DATE
 A calendar date as specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.1.2.
 Reduced accuracy, as specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Sections 4.1.2.3
 a) and b), but not c), is permitted.
 Expanded representation, as specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Section
 4.1.4, is forbidden.
 Truncated representation, as specified in [ISO.8601.2000], Sections
 5.2.1.3 d), e), and f), is permitted.
 Examples for "date":
 19850412
 1985-04
 1985
 --0412
 ---12
Perreault Standards Track [Page 12]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Note the use of YYYY-MM in the second example above. YYYYMM is
 disallowed to prevent confusion with YYMMDD. Note also that
 YYYY-MM-DD is disallowed since we are using the basic format instead
 of the extended format.
4.3.2. TIME
 A time of day as specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.2.
 Reduced accuracy, as specified in [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.2.2.3,
 is permitted.
 Representation with decimal fraction, as specified in
 [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.2.2.4, is forbidden.
 The midnight hour is always represented by 00, never 24 (see
 [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.2.3).
 Truncated representation, as specified in [ISO.8601.2000], Sections
 5.3.1.4 a), b), and c), is permitted.
 Examples for "time":
 102200
 1022
 10
 -2200
 --00
 102200Z
 102200-0800
4.3.3. DATE-TIME
 A date and time of day combination as specified in [ISO.8601.2004],
 Section 4.3.
 Truncation of the date part, as specified in [ISO.8601.2000], Section
 5.4.2 c), is permitted.
 Examples for "date-time":
 19961022T140000
 --1022T1400
 ---22T14
Perreault Standards Track [Page 13]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
4.3.4. DATE-AND-OR-TIME
 Either a DATE-TIME, a DATE, or a TIME value. To allow unambiguous
 interpretation, a stand-alone TIME value is always preceded by a "T".
 Examples for "date-and-or-time":
 19961022T140000
 --1022T1400
 ---22T14
 19850412
 1985-04
 1985
 --0412
 ---12
 T102200
 T1022
 T10
 T-2200
 T--00
 T102200Z
 T102200-0800
4.3.5. TIMESTAMP
 A complete date and time of day combination as specified in
 [ISO.8601.2004], Section 4.3.2.
 Examples for "timestamp":
 19961022T140000
 19961022T140000Z
 19961022T140000-05
 19961022T140000-0500
4.4. BOOLEAN
 "boolean": The "boolean" value type is used to express boolean
 values. These values are case-insensitive.
 Examples:
 TRUE
 false
 True
Perreault Standards Track [Page 14]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
4.5. INTEGER
 "integer": The "integer" value type is used to express signed
 integers in decimal format. If sign is not specified, the value is
 assumed positive "+". Multiple "integer" values can be specified
 using the comma-separated notation. The maximum value is
 9223372036854775807, and the minimum value is -9223372036854775808.
 These limits correspond to a signed 64-bit integer using two's-
 complement arithmetic.
 Examples:
 1234567890
 -1234556790
 +1234556790,432109876
4.6. FLOAT
 "float": The "float" value type is used to express real numbers. If
 sign is not specified, the value is assumed positive "+". Multiple
 "float" values can be specified using the comma-separated notation.
 Implementations MUST support a precision equal or better than that of
 the IEEE "binary64" format [IEEE.754.2008].
 Note: Scientific notation is disallowed. Implementers wishing to
 use their favorite language's %f formatting should be careful.
 Examples:
 20.30
 1000000.0000001
 1.333,3.14
4.7. UTC-OFFSET
 "utc-offset": The "utc-offset" value type specifies that the property
 value is a signed offset from UTC. This value type can be specified
 in the TZ property.
 The value type is an offset from Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
 It is specified as a positive or negative difference in units of
 hours and minutes (e.g., +hhmm). The time is specified as a 24-hour
 clock. Hour values are from 00 to 23, and minute values are from 00
 to 59. Hour and minutes are 2 digits with high-order zeroes required
 to maintain digit count. The basic format for ISO 8601 UTC offsets
 MUST be used.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 15]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
4.8. LANGUAGE-TAG
 "language-tag": A single language tag, as defined in [RFC5646].
5. Property Parameters
 A property can have attributes associated with it. These "property
 parameters" contain meta-information about the property or the
 property value. In some cases, the property parameter can be multi-
 valued in which case the property parameter value elements are
 separated by a COMMA (U+002C).
 Property parameter value elements that contain the COLON (U+003A),
 SEMICOLON (U+003B), or COMMA (U+002C) character separators MUST be
 specified as quoted-string text values. Property parameter values
 MUST NOT contain the DQUOTE (U+0022) character. The DQUOTE character
 is used as a delimiter for parameter values that contain restricted
 characters or URI text.
 Applications MUST ignore x-param and iana-param values they don't
 recognize.
5.1. LANGUAGE
 The LANGUAGE property parameter is used to identify data in multiple
 languages. There is no concept of "default" language, except as
 specified by any "Content-Language" MIME header parameter that is
 present [RFC3282]. The value of the LANGUAGE property parameter is a
 language tag as defined in Section 2 of [RFC5646].
 Examples:
 ROLE;LANGUAGE=tr:hoca
 ABNF:
 language-param = "LANGUAGE=" Language-Tag
 ; Language-Tag is defined in section 2.1 of RFC 5646
5.2. VALUE
 The VALUE parameter is OPTIONAL, used to identify the value type
 (data type) and format of the value. The use of these predefined
 formats is encouraged even if the value parameter is not explicitly
 used. By defining a standard set of value types and their formats,
 existing parsing and processing code can be leveraged. The
Perreault Standards Track [Page 16]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 predefined data type values MUST NOT be repeated in COMMA-separated
 value lists except within the N, NICKNAME, ADR, and CATEGORIES
 properties.
 ABNF:
 value-param = "VALUE=" value-type
 value-type = "text"
 / "uri"
 / "date"
 / "time"
 / "date-time"
 / "date-and-or-time"
 / "timestamp"
 / "boolean"
 / "integer"
 / "float"
 / "utc-offset"
 / "language-tag"
 / iana-token ; registered as described in section 12
 / x-name
5.3. PREF
 The PREF parameter is OPTIONAL and is used to indicate that the
 corresponding instance of a property is preferred by the vCard
 author. Its value MUST be an integer between 1 and 100 that
 quantifies the level of preference. Lower values correspond to a
 higher level of preference, with 1 being most preferred.
 When the parameter is absent, the default MUST be to interpret the
 property instance as being least preferred.
 Note that the value of this parameter is to be interpreted only in
 relation to values assigned to other instances of the same property
 in the same vCard. A given value, or the absence of a value, MUST
 NOT be interpreted on its own.
 This parameter MAY be applied to any property that allows multiple
 instances.
 ABNF:
 pref-param = "PREF=" (1*2DIGIT / "100")
 ; An integer between 1 and 100.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 17]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
5.4. ALTID
 The ALTID parameter is used to "tag" property instances as being
 alternative representations of the same logical property. For
 example, translations of a property in multiple languages generates
 multiple property instances having different LANGUAGE (Section 5.1)
 parameter that are tagged with the same ALTID value.
 This parameter's value is treated as an opaque string. Its sole
 purpose is to be compared for equality against other ALTID parameter
 values.
 Two property instances are considered alternative representations of
 the same logical property if and only if their names as well as the
 value of their ALTID parameters are identical. Property instances
 without the ALTID parameter MUST NOT be considered an alternative
 representation of any other property instance. Values for the ALTID
 parameter are not globally unique: they MAY be reused for different
 property names.
 Property instances having the same ALTID parameter value count as 1
 toward cardinality. Therefore, since N (Section 6.2.2) has
 cardinality *1 and TITLE (Section 6.6.1) has cardinality *, these
 three examples would be legal:
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=jp:<U+5C71><U+7530>;<U+592A><U+90CE>;;;
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=en:Yamada;Taro;;;
 (<U+XXXX> denotes a UTF8-encoded Unicode character.)
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=fr:Patron
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=en:Boss
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=fr:Patron
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=en:Boss
 TITLE;ALTID=2;LANGUAGE=en:Chief vCard Evangelist
 while this one would not:
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=jp:<U+5C71><U+7530>;<U+592A><U+90CE>;;;
 N:Yamada;Taro;;;
 (Two instances of the N property.)
 and these three would be legal but questionable:
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=fr:Patron
 TITLE;ALTID=2;LANGUAGE=en:Boss
 (Should probably have the same ALTID value.)
Perreault Standards Track [Page 18]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 TITLE;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=fr:Patron
 TITLE:LANGUAGE=en:Boss
 (Second line should probably have ALTID=1.)
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=jp:<U+5C71><U+7530>;<U+592A><U+90CE>;;;
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=en:Yamada;Taro;;;
 N;ALTID=1;LANGUAGE=en:Smith;John;;;
 (The last line should probably have ALTID=2. But that would be
 illegal because N has cardinality *1.)
 The ALTID property MAY also be used in may contexts other than with
 the LANGUAGE parameter. Here's an example with two representations
 of the same photo in different file formats:
 PHOTO;ALTID=1:data:image/jpeg;base64,...
 PHOTO;ALTID=1;data:image/jp2;base64,...
 ABNF:
 altid-param = "ALTID=" param-value
5.5. PID
 The PID parameter is used to identify a specific property among
 multiple instances. It plays a role analogous to the UID property
 (Section 6.7.6) on a per-property instead of per-vCard basis. It MAY
 appear more than once in a given property. It MUST NOT appear on
 properties that may have only one instance per vCard. Its value is
 either a single small positive integer or a pair of small positive
 integers separated by a dot. Multiple values may be encoded in a
 single PID parameter by separating the values with a comma ",". See
 Section 7 for more details on its usage.
 ABNF:
 pid-param = "PID=" pid-value *("," pid-value)
 pid-value = 1*DIGIT ["." 1*DIGIT]
5.6. TYPE
 The TYPE parameter has multiple, different uses. In general, it is a
 way of specifying class characteristics of the associated property.
 Most of the time, its value is a comma-separated subset of a
 predefined enumeration. In this document, the following properties
 make use of this parameter: FN, NICKNAME, PHOTO, ADR, TEL, EMAIL,
 IMPP, LANG, TZ, GEO, TITLE, ROLE, LOGO, ORG, RELATED, CATEGORIES,
Perreault Standards Track [Page 19]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 NOTE, SOUND, URL, KEY, FBURL, CALADRURI, and CALURI. The TYPE
 parameter MUST NOT be applied on other properties defined in this
 document.
 The "work" and "home" values act like tags. The "work" value implies
 that the property is related to an individual's work place, while the
 "home" value implies that the property is related to an individual's
 personal life. When neither "work" nor "home" is present, it is
 implied that the property is related to both an individual's work
 place and personal life in the case that the KIND property's value is
 "individual", or to none in other cases.
 ABNF:
 type-param = "TYPE=" type-value *("," type-value)
 type-value = "work" / "home" / type-param-tel
 / type-param-related / iana-token / x-name
 ; This is further defined in individual property sections.
5.7. MEDIATYPE
 The MEDIATYPE parameter is used with properties whose value is a URI.
 Its use is OPTIONAL. It provides a hint to the vCard consumer
 application about the media type [RFC2046] of the resource identified
 by the URI. Some URI schemes do not need this parameter. For
 example, the "data" scheme allows the media type to be explicitly
 indicated as part of the URI [RFC2397]. Another scheme, "http",
 provides the media type as part of the URI resolution process, with
 the Content-Type HTTP header [RFC2616]. The MEDIATYPE parameter is
 intended to be used with URI schemes that do not provide such
 functionality (e.g., "ftp" [RFC1738]).
 ABNF:
 mediatype-param = "MEDIATYPE=" mediatype
 mediatype = type-name "/" subtype-name *( ";" attribute "=" value )
 ; "attribute" and "value" are from [RFC2045]
 ; "type-name" and "subtype-name" are from [RFC4288]
5.8. CALSCALE
 The CALSCALE parameter is identical to the CALSCALE property in
 iCalendar (see [RFC5545], Section 3.7.1). It is used to define the
 calendar system in which a date or date-time value is expressed. The
 only value specified by iCalendar is "gregorian", which stands for
 the Gregorian system. It is the default when the parameter is
 absent. Additional values may be defined in extension documents and
Perreault Standards Track [Page 20]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 registered with IANA (see Section 10.3.4). A vCard implementation
 MUST ignore properties with a CALSCALE parameter value that it does
 not understand.
 ABNF:
 calscale-param = "CALSCALE=" calscale-value
 calscale-value = "gregorian" / iana-token / x-name
5.9. SORT-AS
 The "sort-as" parameter is used to specify the string to be used for
 national-language-specific sorting. Without this information,
 sorting algorithms could incorrectly sort this vCard within a
 sequence of sorted vCards. When this property is present in a vCard,
 then the given strings are used for sorting the vCard.
 This parameter's value is a comma-separated list that MUST have as
 many or fewer elements as the corresponding property value has
 components. This parameter's value is case-sensitive.
 ABNF:
 sort-as-param = "SORT-AS=" sort-as-value
 sort-as-value = param-value *("," param-value)
 Examples: For the case of surname and given name sorting, the
 following examples define common sort string usage with the N
 property.
 FN:Rene van der Harten
 N;SORT-AS="Harten,Rene":van der Harten;Rene,J.;Sir;R.D.O.N.
 FN:Robert Pau Shou Chang
 N;SORT-AS="Pau Shou Chang,Robert":Shou Chang;Robert,Pau;;
 FN:Osamu Koura
 N;SORT-AS="Koura,Osamu":Koura;Osamu;;
 FN:Oscar del Pozo
 N;SORT-AS="Pozo,Oscar":del Pozo Triscon;Oscar;;
 FN:Chistine d'Aboville
 N;SORT-AS="Aboville,Christine":d'Aboville;Christine;;
Perreault Standards Track [Page 21]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 FN:H. James de Mann
 N;SORT-AS="Mann,James":de Mann;Henry,James;;
 If sorted by surname, the results would be:
 Christine d'Aboville
 Rene van der Harten
 Osamu Koura
 H. James de Mann
 Robert Pau Shou Chang
 Oscar del Pozo
 If sorted by given name, the results would be:
 Christine d'Aboville
 H. James de Mann
 Osamu Koura
 Oscar del Pozo
 Rene van der Harten
 Robert Pau Shou Chang
5.10. GEO
 The GEO parameter can be used to indicate global positioning
 information that is specific to an address. Its value is the same as
 that of the GEO property (see Section 6.5.2).
 ABNF:
 geo-parameter = "GEO=" DQUOTE URI DQUOTE
5.11. TZ
 The TZ parameter can be used to indicate time zone information that
 is specific to an address. Its value is the same as that of the TZ
 property.
 ABNF:
 tz-parameter = "TZ=" (param-value / DQUOTE URI DQUOTE)
Perreault Standards Track [Page 22]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
6. vCard Properties
 What follows is an enumeration of the standard vCard properties.
6.1. General Properties
6.1.1. BEGIN
 Purpose: To denote the beginning of a syntactic entity within a
 text/vcard content-type.
 Value type: text
 Cardinality: 1
 Special notes: The content entity MUST begin with the BEGIN property
 with a value of "VCARD". The value is case-insensitive.
 The BEGIN property is used in conjunction with the END property to
 delimit an entity containing a related set of properties within a
 text/vcard content-type. This construct can be used instead of
 including multiple vCards as body parts inside of a multipart/
 alternative MIME message. It is provided for applications that
 wish to define content that can contain multiple entities within
 the same text/vcard content-type or to define content that can be
 identifiable outside of a MIME environment.
 ABNF:
 BEGIN-param = 0" " ; no parameter allowed
 BEGIN-value = "VCARD"
 Example:
 BEGIN:VCARD
6.1.2. END
 Purpose: To denote the end of a syntactic entity within a text/vcard
 content-type.
 Value type: text
 Cardinality: 1
 Special notes: The content entity MUST end with the END type with a
 value of "VCARD". The value is case-insensitive.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 23]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 The END property is used in conjunction with the BEGIN property to
 delimit an entity containing a related set of properties within a
 text/vcard content-type. This construct can be used instead of or
 in addition to wrapping separate sets of information inside
 additional MIME headers. It is provided for applications that
 wish to define content that can contain multiple entities within
 the same text/vcard content-type or to define content that can be
 identifiable outside of a MIME environment.
 ABNF:
 END-param = 0" " ; no parameter allowed
 END-value = "VCARD"
 Example:
 END:VCARD
6.1.3. SOURCE
 Purpose: To identify the source of directory information contained
 in the content type.
 Value type: uri
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The SOURCE property is used to provide the means by
 which applications knowledgable in the given directory service
 protocol can obtain additional or more up-to-date information from
 the directory service. It contains a URI as defined in [RFC3986]
 and/or other information referencing the vCard to which the
 information pertains. When directory information is available
 from more than one source, the sending entity can pick what it
 considers to be the best source, or multiple SOURCE properties can
 be included.
 ABNF:
 SOURCE-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / altid-param
 / mediatype-param / any-param
 SOURCE-value = URI
 Examples:
 SOURCE:ldap://ldap.example.com/cn=Babs%20Jensen,%20o=Babsco,%20c=US
Perreault Standards Track [Page 24]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 SOURCE:http://directory.example.com/addressbooks/jdoe/
 Jean%20Dupont.vcf
6.1.4. KIND
 Purpose: To specify the kind of object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special notes: The value may be one of the following:
 "individual" for a vCard representing a single person or entity.
 This is the default kind of vCard.
 "group" for a vCard representing a group of persons or entities.
 The group's member entities can be other vCards or other types
 of entities, such as email addresses or web sites. A group
 vCard will usually contain MEMBER properties to specify the
 members of the group, but it is not required to. A group vCard
 without MEMBER properties can be considered an abstract
 grouping, or one whose members are known empirically (perhaps
 "IETF Participants" or "Republican U.S. Senators").
 All properties in a group vCard apply to the group as a whole,
 and not to any particular MEMBER. For example, an EMAIL
 property might specify the address of a mailing list associated
 with the group, and an IMPP property might refer to a group
 chat room.
 "org" for a vCard representing an organization. An organization
 vCard will not (in fact, MUST NOT) contain MEMBER properties,
 and so these are something of a cross between "individual" and
 "group". An organization is a single entity, but not a person.
 It might represent a business or government, a department or
 division within a business or government, a club, an
 association, or the like.
 All properties in an organization vCard apply to the
 organization as a whole, as is the case with a group vCard.
 For example, an EMAIL property might specify the address of a
 contact point for the organization.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 25]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 "location" for a named geographical place. A location vCard will
 usually contain a GEO property, but it is not required to. A
 location vCard without a GEO property can be considered an
 abstract location, or one whose definition is known empirically
 (perhaps "New England" or "The Seashore").
 All properties in a location vCard apply to the location
 itself, and not with any entity that might exist at that
 location. For example, in a vCard for an office building, an
 ADR property might give the mailing address for the building,
 and a TEL property might specify the telephone number of the
 receptionist.
 An x-name. vCards MAY include private or experimental values for
 KIND. Remember that x-name values are not intended for general
 use and are unlikely to interoperate.
 An iana-token. Additional values may be registered with IANA (see
 Section 10.3.4). A new value's specification document MUST
 specify which properties make sense for that new kind of vCard
 and which do not.
 Implementations MUST support the specific string values defined
 above. If this property is absent, "individual" MUST be assumed
 as the default. If this property is present but the
 implementation does not understand its value (the value is an
 x-name or iana-token that the implementation does not support),
 the implementation SHOULD act in a neutral way, which usually
 means treating the vCard as though its kind were "individual".
 The presence of MEMBER properties MAY, however, be taken as an
 indication that the unknown kind is an extension of "group".
 Clients often need to visually distinguish contacts based on what
 they represent, and the KIND property provides a direct way for
 them to do so. For example, when displaying contacts in a list,
 an icon could be displayed next to each one, using distinctive
 icons for the different kinds; a client might use an outline of a
 single person to represent an "individual", an outline of multiple
 people to represent a "group", and so on. Alternatively, or in
 addition, a client might choose to segregate different kinds of
 vCards to different panes, tabs, or selections in the user
 interface.
 Some clients might also make functional distinctions among the
 kinds, ignoring "location" vCards for some purposes and
 considering only "location" vCards for others.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 26]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 When designing those sorts of visual and functional distinctions,
 client implementations have to decide how to fit unsupported kinds
 into the scheme. What icon is used for them? The one for
 "individual"? A unique one, such as an icon of a question mark?
 Which tab do they go into? It is beyond the scope of this
 specification to answer these questions, but these are things
 implementers need to consider.
 ABNF:
 KIND-param = "VALUE=text" / any-param
 KIND-value = "individual" / "group" / "org" / "location"
 / iana-token / x-name
 Example:
 This represents someone named Jane Doe working in the marketing
 department of the North American division of ABC Inc.
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 KIND:individual
 FN:Jane Doe
 ORG:ABC,円 Inc.;North American Division;Marketing
 END:VCARD
 This represents the department itself, commonly known as ABC
 Marketing.
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 KIND:org
 FN:ABC Marketing
 ORG:ABC,円 Inc.;North American Division;Marketing
 END:VCARD
6.1.5. XML
 Purpose: To include extended XML-encoded vCard data in a plain
 vCard.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The content of this property is a single XML 1.0
 [W3C.REC-xml-20081126] element whose namespace MUST be explicitly
 specified using the xmlns attribute and MUST NOT be the vCard 4
Perreault Standards Track [Page 27]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 namespace ("urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:vcard-4.0"). (This implies
 that it cannot duplicate a standard vCard property.) The element
 is to be interpreted as if it was contained in a <vcard> element,
 as defined in [RFC6351].
 The fragment is subject to normal line folding and escaping, i.e.,
 replace all backslashes with "\\", then replace all newlines with
 "\n", then fold long lines.
 Support for this property is OPTIONAL, but implementations of this
 specification MUST preserve instances of this property when
 propagating vCards.
 See [RFC6351] for more information on the intended use of this
 property.
 ABNF:
 XML-param = "VALUE=text" / altid-param
 XML-value = text
6.2. Identification Properties
 These types are used to capture information associated with the
 identification and naming of the entity associated with the vCard.
6.2.1. FN
 Purpose: To specify the formatted text corresponding to the name of
 the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: 1*
 Special notes: This property is based on the semantics of the X.520
 Common Name attribute [CCITT.X520.1988]. The property MUST be
 present in the vCard object.
 ABNF:
 FN-param = "VALUE=text" / type-param / language-param / altid-param
 / pid-param / pref-param / any-param
 FN-value = text
 Example:
 FN:Mr. John Q. Public,円 Esq.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 28]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
6.2.2. N
 Purpose: To specify the components of the name of the object the
 vCard represents.
 Value type: A single structured text value. Each component can have
 multiple values.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special note: The structured property value corresponds, in
 sequence, to the Family Names (also known as surnames), Given
 Names, Additional Names, Honorific Prefixes, and Honorific
 Suffixes. The text components are separated by the SEMICOLON
 character (U+003B). Individual text components can include
 multiple text values separated by the COMMA character (U+002C).
 This property is based on the semantics of the X.520 individual
 name attributes [CCITT.X520.1988]. The property SHOULD be present
 in the vCard object when the name of the object the vCard
 represents follows the X.520 model.
 The SORT-AS parameter MAY be applied to this property.
 ABNF:
 N-param = "VALUE=text" / sort-as-param / language-param
 / altid-param / any-param
 N-value = list-component 4(";" list-component)
 Examples:
 N:Public;John;Quinlan;Mr.;Esq.
 N:Stevenson;John;Philip,Paul;Dr.;Jr.,M.D.,A.C.P.
6.2.3. NICKNAME
 Purpose: To specify the text corresponding to the nickname of the
 object the vCard represents.
 Value type: One or more text values separated by a COMMA character
 (U+002C).
 Cardinality: *
Perreault Standards Track [Page 29]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Special note: The nickname is the descriptive name given instead of
 or in addition to the one belonging to the object the vCard
 represents. It can also be used to specify a familiar form of a
 proper name specified by the FN or N properties.
 ABNF:
 NICKNAME-param = "VALUE=text" / type-param / language-param
 / altid-param / pid-param / pref-param / any-param
 NICKNAME-value = text-list
 Examples:
 NICKNAME:Robbie
 NICKNAME:Jim,Jimmie
 NICKNAME;TYPE=work:Boss
6.2.4. PHOTO
 Purpose: To specify an image or photograph information that
 annotates some aspect of the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI.
 Cardinality: *
 ABNF:
 PHOTO-param = "VALUE=uri" / altid-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / pref-param / pid-param / any-param
 PHOTO-value = URI
 Examples:
 PHOTO:http://www.example.com/pub/photos/jqpublic.gif
 PHOTO:data:image/jpeg;base64,MIICajCCAdOgAwIBAgICBEUwDQYJKoZIhv
 AQEEBQAwdzELMAkGA1UEBhMCVVMxLDAqBgNVBAoTI05ldHNjYXBlIENvbW11bm
 ljYXRpb25zIENvcnBvcmF0aW9uMRwwGgYDVQQLExNJbmZvcm1hdGlvbiBTeXN0
 <...remainder of base64-encoded data...>
6.2.5. BDAY
 Purpose: To specify the birth date of the object the vCard
 represents.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 30]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Value type: The default is a single date-and-or-time value. It can
 also be reset to a single text value.
 Cardinality: *1
 ABNF:
 BDAY-param = BDAY-param-date / BDAY-param-text
 BDAY-value = date-and-or-time / text
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 BDAY-param-date = "VALUE=date-and-or-time"
 BDAY-param-text = "VALUE=text" / language-param
 BDAY-param =/ altid-param / calscale-param / any-param
 ; calscale-param can only be present when BDAY-value is
 ; date-and-or-time and actually contains a date or date-time.
 Examples:
 BDAY:19960415
 BDAY:--0415
 BDAY;19531015T231000Z
 BDAY;VALUE=text:circa 1800
6.2.6. ANNIVERSARY
 Purpose: The date of marriage, or equivalent, of the object the
 vCard represents.
 Value type: The default is a single date-and-or-time value. It can
 also be reset to a single text value.
 Cardinality: *1
 ABNF:
 ANNIVERSARY-param = "VALUE=" ("date-and-or-time" / "text")
 ANNIVERSARY-value = date-and-or-time / text
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 ANNIVERSARY-param =/ altid-param / calscale-param / any-param
 ; calscale-param can only be present when ANNIVERSARY-value is
 ; date-and-or-time and actually contains a date or date-time.
 Examples:
 ANNIVERSARY:19960415
Perreault Standards Track [Page 31]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
6.2.7. GENDER
 Purpose: To specify the components of the sex and gender identity of
 the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single structured value with two components. Each
 component has a single text value.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special notes: The components correspond, in sequence, to the sex
 (biological), and gender identity. Each component is optional.
 Sex component: A single letter. M stands for "male", F stands
 for "female", O stands for "other", N stands for "none or not
 applicable", U stands for "unknown".
 Gender identity component: Free-form text.
 ABNF:
 GENDER-param = "VALUE=text" / any-param
 GENDER-value = sex [";" text]
 sex = "" / "M" / "F" / "O" / "N" / "U"
 Examples:
 GENDER:M
 GENDER:F
 GENDER:M;Fellow
 GENDER:F;grrrl
 GENDER:O;intersex
 GENDER:;it's complicated
6.3. Delivery Addressing Properties
 These types are concerned with information related to the delivery
 addressing or label for the vCard object.
6.3.1. ADR
 Purpose: To specify the components of the delivery address for the
 vCard object.
 Value type: A single structured text value, separated by the
 SEMICOLON character (U+003B).
Perreault Standards Track [Page 32]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The structured type value consists of a sequence of
 address components. The component values MUST be specified in
 their corresponding position. The structured type value
 corresponds, in sequence, to
 the post office box;
 the extended address (e.g., apartment or suite number);
 the street address;
 the locality (e.g., city);
 the region (e.g., state or province);
 the postal code;
 the country name (full name in the language specified in
 Section 5.1).
 When a component value is missing, the associated component
 separator MUST still be specified.
 Experience with vCard 3 has shown that the first two components
 (post office box and extended address) are plagued with many
 interoperability issues. To ensure maximal interoperability,
 their values SHOULD be empty.
 The text components are separated by the SEMICOLON character
 (U+003B). Where it makes semantic sense, individual text
 components can include multiple text values (e.g., a "street"
 component with multiple lines) separated by the COMMA character
 (U+002C).
 The property can include the "PREF" parameter to indicate the
 preferred delivery address when more than one address is
 specified.
 The GEO and TZ parameters MAY be used with this property.
 The property can also include a "LABEL" parameter to present a
 delivery address label for the address. Its value is a plain-text
 string representing the formatted address. Newlines are encoded
 as \n, as they are for property values.
 ABNF:
 label-param = "LABEL=" param-value
 ADR-param = "VALUE=text" / label-param / language-param
 / geo-parameter / tz-parameter / altid-param / pid-param
 / pref-param / type-param / any-param
Perreault Standards Track [Page 33]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ADR-value = ADR-component-pobox ";" ADR-component-ext ";"
 ADR-component-street ";" ADR-component-locality ";"
 ADR-component-region ";" ADR-component-code ";"
 ADR-component-country
 ADR-component-pobox = list-component
 ADR-component-ext = list-component
 ADR-component-street = list-component
 ADR-component-locality = list-component
 ADR-component-region = list-component
 ADR-component-code = list-component
 ADR-component-country = list-component
 Example: In this example, the post office box and the extended
 address are absent.
 ADR;GEO="geo:12.3457,78.910";LABEL="Mr. John Q. Public, Esq.\n
 Mail Drop: TNE QB\n123 Main Street\nAny Town, CA 91921-1234\n
 U.S.A.":;;123 Main Street;Any Town;CA;91921-1234;U.S.A.
6.4. Communications Properties
 These properties describe information about how to communicate with
 the object the vCard represents.
6.4.1. TEL
 Purpose: To specify the telephone number for telephony communication
 with the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: By default, it is a single free-form text value (for
 backward compatibility with vCard 3), but it SHOULD be reset to a
 URI value. It is expected that the URI scheme will be "tel", as
 specified in [RFC3966], but other schemes MAY be used.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: This property is based on the X.520 Telephone Number
 attribute [CCITT.X520.1988].
 The property can include the "PREF" parameter to indicate a
 preferred-use telephone number.
 The property can include the parameter "TYPE" to specify intended
 use for the telephone number. The predefined values for the TYPE
 parameter are:
Perreault Standards Track [Page 34]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
 | Value | Description |
 +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
 | text | Indicates that the telephone number supports text |
 | | messages (SMS). |
 | voice | Indicates a voice telephone number. |
 | fax | Indicates a facsimile telephone number. |
 | cell | Indicates a cellular or mobile telephone number. |
 | video | Indicates a video conferencing telephone number. |
 | pager | Indicates a paging device telephone number. |
 | textphone | Indicates a telecommunication device for people with |
 | | hearing or speech difficulties. |
 +-----------+-------------------------------------------------------+
 The default type is "voice". These type parameter values can be
 specified as a parameter list (e.g., TYPE=text;TYPE=voice) or as a
 value list (e.g., TYPE="text,voice"). The default can be
 overridden to another set of values by specifying one or more
 alternate values. For example, the default TYPE of "voice" can be
 reset to a VOICE and FAX telephone number by the value list
 TYPE="voice,fax".
 If this property's value is a URI that can also be used for
 instant messaging, the IMPP (Section 6.4.3) property SHOULD be
 used in addition to this property.
 ABNF:
 TEL-param = TEL-text-param / TEL-uri-param
 TEL-value = TEL-text-value / TEL-uri-value
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 TEL-text-param = "VALUE=text"
 TEL-text-value = text
 TEL-uri-param = "VALUE=uri" / mediatype-param
 TEL-uri-value = URI
 TEL-param =/ type-param / pid-param / pref-param / altid-param
 / any-param
 type-param-tel = "text" / "voice" / "fax" / "cell" / "video"
 / "pager" / "textphone" / iana-token / x-name
 ; type-param-tel MUST NOT be used with a property other than TEL.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 35]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Example:
 TEL;VALUE=uri;PREF=1;TYPE="voice,home":tel:+1-555-555-5555;ext=5555
 TEL;VALUE=uri;TYPE=home:tel:+33-01-23-45-67
6.4.2. EMAIL
 Purpose: To specify the electronic mail address for communication
 with the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The property can include tye "PREF" parameter to
 indicate a preferred-use email address when more than one is
 specified.
 Even though the value is free-form UTF-8 text, it is likely to be
 interpreted by a Mail User Agent (MUA) as an "addr-spec", as
 defined in [RFC5322], Section 3.4.1. Readers should also be aware
 of the current work toward internationalized email addresses
 [RFC5335bis].
 ABNF:
 EMAIL-param = "VALUE=text" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / altid-param / any-param
 EMAIL-value = text
 Example:
 EMAIL;TYPE=work:jqpublic@xyz.example.com
 EMAIL;PREF=1:jane_doe@example.com
6.4.3. IMPP
 Purpose: To specify the URI for instant messaging and presence
 protocol communications with the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The property may include the "PREF" parameter to
 indicate that this is a preferred address and has the same
 semantics as the "PREF" parameter in a TEL property.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 36]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 If this property's value is a URI that can be used for voice
 and/or video, the TEL property (Section 6.4.1) SHOULD be used in
 addition to this property.
 This property is adapted from [RFC4770], which is made obsolete by
 this document.
 ABNF:
 IMPP-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 IMPP-value = URI
 Example:
 IMPP;PREF=1:xmpp:alice@example.com
6.4.4. LANG
 Purpose: To specify the language(s) that may be used for contacting
 the entity associated with the vCard.
 Value type: A single language-tag value.
 Cardinality: *
 ABNF:
 LANG-param = "VALUE=language-tag" / pid-param / pref-param
 / altid-param / type-param / any-param
 LANG-value = Language-Tag
 Example:
 LANG;TYPE=work;PREF=1:en
 LANG;TYPE=work;PREF=2:fr
 LANG;TYPE=home:fr
6.5. Geographical Properties
 These properties are concerned with information associated with
 geographical positions or regions associated with the object the
 vCard represents.
6.5.1. TZ
 Purpose: To specify information related to the time zone of the
 object the vCard represents.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 37]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Value type: The default is a single text value. It can also be
 reset to a single URI or utc-offset value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: It is expected that names from the public-domain
 Olson database [TZ-DB] will be used, but this is not a
 restriction. See also [IANA-TZ].
 Efforts are currently being directed at creating a standard URI
 scheme for expressing time zone information. Usage of such a
 scheme would ensure a high level of interoperability between
 implementations that support it.
 Note that utc-offset values SHOULD NOT be used because the UTC
 offset varies with time -- not just because of the usual daylight
 saving time shifts that occur in may regions, but often entire
 regions will "re-base" their overall offset. The actual offset
 may be +/- 1 hour (or perhaps a little more) than the one given.
 ABNF:
 TZ-param = "VALUE=" ("text" / "uri" / "utc-offset")
 TZ-value = text / URI / utc-offset
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 TZ-param =/ altid-param / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / any-param
 Examples:
 TZ:Raleigh/North America
 TZ;VALUE=utc-offset:-0500
 ; Note: utc-offset format is NOT RECOMMENDED.
6.5.2. GEO
 Purpose: To specify information related to the global positioning of
 the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The "geo" URI scheme [RFC5870] is particularly well
 suited for this property, but other schemes MAY be used.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 38]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 GEO-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 GEO-value = URI
 Example:
 GEO:geo:37.386013,-122.082932
6.6. Organizational Properties
 These properties are concerned with information associated with
 characteristics of the organization or organizational units of the
 object that the vCard represents.
6.6.1. TITLE
 Purpose: To specify the position or job of the object the vCard
 represents.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: This property is based on the X.520 Title attribute
 [CCITT.X520.1988].
 ABNF:
 TITLE-param = "VALUE=text" / language-param / pid-param
 / pref-param / altid-param / type-param / any-param
 TITLE-value = text
 Example:
 TITLE:Research Scientist
6.6.2. ROLE
 Purpose: To specify the function or part played in a particular
 situation by the object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *
Perreault Standards Track [Page 39]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Special notes: This property is based on the X.520 Business Category
 explanatory attribute [CCITT.X520.1988]. This property is
 included as an organizational type to avoid confusion with the
 semantics of the TITLE property and incorrect usage of that
 property when the semantics of this property is intended.
 ABNF:
 ROLE-param = "VALUE=text" / language-param / pid-param / pref-param
 / type-param / altid-param / any-param
 ROLE-value = text
 Example:
 ROLE:Project Leader
6.6.3. LOGO
 Purpose: To specify a graphic image of a logo associated with the
 object the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI.
 Cardinality: *
 ABNF:
 LOGO-param = "VALUE=uri" / language-param / pid-param / pref-param
 / type-param / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 LOGO-value = URI
 Examples:
 LOGO:http://www.example.com/pub/logos/abccorp.jpg
 LOGO:data:image/jpeg;base64,MIICajCCAdOgAwIBAgICBEUwDQYJKoZIhvc
 AQEEBQAwdzELMAkGA1UEBhMCVVMxLDAqBgNVBAoTI05ldHNjYXBlIENvbW11bm
 ljYXRpb25zIENvcnBvcmF0aW9uMRwwGgYDVQQLExNJbmZvcm1hdGlvbiBTeXN0
 <...the remainder of base64-encoded data...>
6.6.4. ORG
 Purpose: To specify the organizational name and units associated
 with the vCard.
 Value type: A single structured text value consisting of components
 separated by the SEMICOLON character (U+003B).
Perreault Standards Track [Page 40]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The property is based on the X.520 Organization Name
 and Organization Unit attributes [CCITT.X520.1988]. The property
 value is a structured type consisting of the organization name,
 followed by zero or more levels of organizational unit names.
 The SORT-AS parameter MAY be applied to this property.
 ABNF:
 ORG-param = "VALUE=text" / sort-as-param / language-param
 / pid-param / pref-param / altid-param / type-param
 / any-param
 ORG-value = component *(";" component)
 Example: A property value consisting of an organizational name,
 organizational unit #1 name, and organizational unit #2 name.
 ORG:ABC,円 Inc.;North American Division;Marketing
6.6.5. MEMBER
 Purpose: To include a member in the group this vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI. It MAY refer to something other than a
 vCard object. For example, an email distribution list could
 employ the "mailto" URI scheme [RFC6068] for efficiency.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: This property MUST NOT be present unless the value of
 the KIND property is "group".
 ABNF:
 MEMBER-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / altid-param
 / mediatype-param / any-param
 MEMBER-value = URI
Perreault Standards Track [Page 41]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Examples:
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 KIND:group
 FN:The Doe family
 MEMBER:urn:uuid:03a0e51f-d1aa-4385-8a53-e29025acd8af
 MEMBER:urn:uuid:b8767877-b4a1-4c70-9acc-505d3819e519
 END:VCARD
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 FN:John Doe
 UID:urn:uuid:03a0e51f-d1aa-4385-8a53-e29025acd8af
 END:VCARD
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 FN:Jane Doe
 UID:urn:uuid:b8767877-b4a1-4c70-9acc-505d3819e519
 END:VCARD
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 KIND:group
 FN:Funky distribution list
 MEMBER:mailto:subscriber1@example.com
 MEMBER:xmpp:subscriber2@example.com
 MEMBER:sip:subscriber3@example.com
 MEMBER:tel:+1-418-555-5555
 END:VCARD
6.6.6. RELATED
 Purpose: To specify a relationship between another entity and the
 entity represented by this vCard.
 Value type: A single URI. It can also be reset to a single text
 value. The text value can be used to specify textual information.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The TYPE parameter MAY be used to characterize the
 related entity. It contains a comma-separated list of values that
 are registered with IANA as described in Section 10.2. The
 registry is pre-populated with the values defined in [xfn]. This
 document also specifies two additional values:
 agent: an entity who may sometimes act on behalf of the entity
 associated with the vCard.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 42]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 emergency: indicates an emergency contact
 ABNF:
 RELATED-param = RELATED-param-uri / RELATED-param-text
 RELATED-value = URI / text
 ; Parameter and value MUST match.
 RELATED-param-uri = "VALUE=uri" / mediatype-param
 RELATED-param-text = "VALUE=text" / language-param
 RELATED-param =/ pid-param / pref-param / altid-param / type-param
 / any-param
 type-param-related = related-type-value *("," related-type-value)
 ; type-param-related MUST NOT be used with a property other than
 ; RELATED.
 related-type-value = "contact" / "acquaintance" / "friend" / "met"
 / "co-worker" / "colleague" / "co-resident"
 / "neighbor" / "child" / "parent"
 / "sibling" / "spouse" / "kin" / "muse"
 / "crush" / "date" / "sweetheart" / "me"
 / "agent" / "emergency"
 Examples:
 RELATED;TYPE=friend:urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6
 RELATED;TYPE=contact:http://example.com/directory/jdoe.vcf
 RELATED;TYPE=co-worker;VALUE=text:Please contact my assistant Jane
 Doe for any inquiries.
6.7. Explanatory Properties
 These properties are concerned with additional explanations, such as
 that related to informational notes or revisions specific to the
 vCard.
6.7.1. CATEGORIES
 Purpose: To specify application category information about the
 vCard, also known as "tags".
 Value type: One or more text values separated by a COMMA character
 (U+002C).
 Cardinality: *
Perreault Standards Track [Page 43]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 CATEGORIES-param = "VALUE=text" / pid-param / pref-param
 / type-param / altid-param / any-param
 CATEGORIES-value = text-list
 Example:
 CATEGORIES:TRAVEL AGENT
 CATEGORIES:INTERNET,IETF,INDUSTRY,INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
6.7.2. NOTE
 Purpose: To specify supplemental information or a comment that is
 associated with the vCard.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: The property is based on the X.520 Description
 attribute [CCITT.X520.1988].
 ABNF:
 NOTE-param = "VALUE=text" / language-param / pid-param / pref-param
 / type-param / altid-param / any-param
 NOTE-value = text
 Example:
 NOTE:This fax number is operational 0800 to 1715
 EST,円 Mon-Fri.
6.7.3. PRODID
 Purpose: To specify the identifier for the product that created the
 vCard object.
 Type value: A single text value.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special notes: Implementations SHOULD use a method such as that
 specified for Formal Public Identifiers in [ISO9070] or for
 Universal Resource Names in [RFC3406] to ensure that the text
 value is unique.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 44]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 PRODID-param = "VALUE=text" / any-param
 PRODID-value = text
 Example:
 PRODID:-//ONLINE DIRECTORY//NONSGML Version 1//EN
6.7.4. REV
 Purpose: To specify revision information about the current vCard.
 Value type: A single timestamp value.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special notes: The value distinguishes the current revision of the
 information in this vCard for other renditions of the information.
 ABNF:
 REV-param = "VALUE=timestamp" / any-param
 REV-value = timestamp
 Example:
 REV:19951031T222710Z
6.7.5. SOUND
 Purpose: To specify a digital sound content information that
 annotates some aspect of the vCard. This property is often used
 to specify the proper pronunciation of the name property value of
 the vCard.
 Value type: A single URI.
 Cardinality: *
 ABNF:
 SOUND-param = "VALUE=uri" / language-param / pid-param / pref-param
 / type-param / mediatype-param / altid-param
 / any-param
 SOUND-value = URI
Perreault Standards Track [Page 45]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Example:
 SOUND:CID:JOHNQPUBLIC.part8.19960229T080000.xyzMail@example.com
 SOUND:data:audio/basic;base64,MIICajCCAdOgAwIBAgICBEUwDQYJKoZIh
 AQEEBQAwdzELMAkGA1UEBhMCVVMxLDAqBgNVBAoTI05ldHNjYXBlIENvbW11bm
 ljYXRpb25zIENvcnBvcmF0aW9uMRwwGgYDVQQLExNJbmZvcm1hdGlvbiBTeXN0
 <...the remainder of base64-encoded data...>
6.7.6. UID
 Purpose: To specify a value that represents a globally unique
 identifier corresponding to the entity associated with the vCard.
 Value type: A single URI value. It MAY also be reset to free-form
 text.
 Cardinality: *1
 Special notes: This property is used to uniquely identify the object
 that the vCard represents. The "uuid" URN namespace defined in
 [RFC4122] is particularly well suited to this task, but other URI
 schemes MAY be used. Free-form text MAY also be used.
 ABNF:
 UID-param = UID-uri-param / UID-text-param
 UID-value = UID-uri-value / UID-text-value
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 UID-uri-param = "VALUE=uri"
 UID-uri-value = URI
 UID-text-param = "VALUE=text"
 UID-text-value = text
 UID-param =/ any-param
 Example:
 UID:urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6
Perreault Standards Track [Page 46]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
6.7.7. CLIENTPIDMAP
 Purpose: To give a global meaning to a local PID source identifier.
 Value type: A semicolon-separated pair of values. The first field
 is a small integer corresponding to the second field of a PID
 parameter instance. The second field is a URI. The "uuid" URN
 namespace defined in [RFC4122] is particularly well suited to this
 task, but other URI schemes MAY be used.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: PID source identifiers (the source identifier is the
 second field in a PID parameter instance) are small integers that
 only have significance within the scope of a single vCard
 instance. Each distinct source identifier present in a vCard MUST
 have an associated CLIENTPIDMAP. See Section 7 for more details
 on the usage of CLIENTPIDMAP.
 PID source identifiers MUST be strictly positive. Zero is not
 allowed.
 As a special exception, the PID parameter MUST NOT be applied to
 this property.
 ABNF:
 CLIENTPIDMAP-param = any-param
 CLIENTPIDMAP-value = 1*DIGIT ";" URI
 Example:
 TEL;PID=3.1,4.2;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 EMAIL;PID=4.1,5.2:jdoe@example.com
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:3df403f4-5924-4bb7-b077-3c711d9eb34b
 CLIENTPIDMAP:2;urn:uuid:d89c9c7a-2e1b-4832-82de-7e992d95faa5
6.7.8. URL
 Purpose: To specify a uniform resource locator associated with the
 object to which the vCard refers. Examples for individuals
 include personal web sites, blogs, and social networking site
 identifiers.
 Cardinality: *
 Value type: A single uri value.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 47]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 URL-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 URL-value = URI
 Example:
 URL:http://example.org/restaurant.french/~chezchic.html
6.7.9. VERSION
 Purpose: To specify the version of the vCard specification used to
 format this vCard.
 Value type: A single text value.
 Cardinality: 1
 Special notes: This property MUST be present in the vCard object,
 and it must appear immediately after BEGIN:VCARD. The value MUST
 be "4.0" if the vCard corresponds to this specification. Note
 that earlier versions of vCard allowed this property to be placed
 anywhere in the vCard object, or even to be absent.
 ABNF:
 VERSION-param = "VALUE=text" / any-param
 VERSION-value = "4.0"
 Example:
 VERSION:4.0
6.8. Security Properties
 These properties are concerned with the security of communication
 pathways or access to the vCard.
6.8.1. KEY
 Purpose: To specify a public key or authentication certificate
 associated with the object that the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI. It can also be reset to a text value.
 Cardinality: *
Perreault Standards Track [Page 48]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 KEY-param = KEY-uri-param / KEY-text-param
 KEY-value = KEY-uri-value / KEY-text-value
 ; Value and parameter MUST match.
 KEY-uri-param = "VALUE=uri" / mediatype-param
 KEY-uri-value = URI
 KEY-text-param = "VALUE=text"
 KEY-text-value = text
 KEY-param =/ altid-param / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / any-param
 Examples:
 KEY:http://www.example.com/keys/jdoe.cer
 KEY;MEDIATYPE=application/pgp-keys:ftp://example.com/keys/jdoe
 KEY:data:application/pgp-keys;base64,MIICajCCAdOgAwIBAgICBE
 UwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEEBQAwdzELMAkGA1UEBhMCVVMxLDAqBgNVBAoTI05l
 <... remainder of base64-encoded data ...>
6.9. Calendar Properties
 These properties are further specified in [RFC2739].
6.9.1. FBURL
 Purpose: To specify the URI for the busy time associated with the
 object that the vCard represents.
 Value type: A single URI value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: Where multiple FBURL properties are specified, the
 default FBURL property is indicated with the PREF parameter. The
 FTP [RFC1738] or HTTP [RFC2616] type of URI points to an iCalendar
 [RFC5545] object associated with a snapshot of the next few weeks
 or months of busy time data. If the iCalendar object is
 represented as a file or document, its file extension should be
 ".ifb".
Perreault Standards Track [Page 49]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 ABNF:
 FBURL-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 FBURL-value = URI
 Examples:
 FBURL;PREF=1:http://www.example.com/busy/janedoe
 FBURL;MEDIATYPE=text/calendar:ftp://example.com/busy/project-a.ifb
6.9.2. CALADRURI
 Purpose: To specify the calendar user address [RFC5545] to which a
 scheduling request [RFC5546] should be sent for the object
 represented by the vCard.
 Value type: A single URI value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: Where multiple CALADRURI properties are specified,
 the default CALADRURI property is indicated with the PREF
 parameter.
 ABNF:
 CALADRURI-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 CALADRURI-value = URI
 Example:
 CALADRURI;PREF=1:mailto:janedoe@example.com
 CALADRURI:http://example.com/calendar/jdoe
6.9.3. CALURI
 Purpose: To specify the URI for a calendar associated with the
 object represented by the vCard.
 Value type: A single URI value.
 Cardinality: *
 Special notes: Where multiple CALURI properties are specified, the
 default CALURI property is indicated with the PREF parameter. The
 property should contain a URI pointing to an iCalendar [RFC5545]
Perreault Standards Track [Page 50]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 object associated with a snapshot of the user's calendar store.
 If the iCalendar object is represented as a file or document, its
 file extension should be ".ics".
 ABNF:
 CALURI-param = "VALUE=uri" / pid-param / pref-param / type-param
 / mediatype-param / altid-param / any-param
 CALURI-value = URI
 Examples:
 CALURI;PREF=1:http://cal.example.com/calA
 CALURI;MEDIATYPE=text/calendar:ftp://ftp.example.com/calA.ics
6.10. Extended Properties and Parameters
 The properties and parameters defined by this document can be
 extended. Non-standard, private properties and parameters with a
 name starting with "X-" may be defined bilaterally between two
 cooperating agents without outside registration or standardization.
7. Synchronization
 vCard data often needs to be synchronized between devices. In this
 context, synchronization is defined as the intelligent merging of two
 representations of the same object. vCard 4.0 includes mechanisms to
 aid this process.
7.1. Mechanisms
 Two mechanisms are available: the UID property is used to match
 multiple instances of the same vCard, while the PID parameter is used
 to match multiple instances of the same property.
 The term "matching" is used here to mean recognizing that two
 instances are in fact representations of the same object. For
 example, a single vCard that is shared with someone results in two
 vCard instances. After they have evolved separately, they still
 represent the same object, and therefore may be matched by a
 synchronization engine.
7.1.1. Matching vCard Instances
 vCard instances for which the UID properties (Section 6.7.6) are
 equivalent MUST be matched. Equivalence is determined as specified
 in [RFC3986], Section 6.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 51]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 In all other cases, vCard instances MAY be matched at the discretion
 of the synchronization engine.
7.1.2. Matching Property Instances
 Property instances belonging to unmatched vCards MUST NOT be matched.
 Property instances whose name (e.g., EMAIL, TEL, etc.) is not the
 same MUST NOT be matched.
 Property instances whose name is CLIENTPIDMAP are handled separately
 and MUST NOT be matched. The synchronization MUST ensure that there
 is consistency of CLIENTPIDMAPs among matched vCard instances.
 Property instances belonging to matched vCards, whose name is the
 same, and whose maximum cardinality is 1, MUST be matched.
 Property instances belonging to matched vCards, whose name is the
 same, and whose PID parameters match, MUST be matched. See
 Section 7.1.3 for details on PID matching.
 In all other cases, property instances MAY be matched at the
 discretion of the synchronization engine.
7.1.3. PID Matching
 Two PID values for which the first fields are equivalent represent
 the same local value.
 Two PID values representing the same local value and for which the
 second fields point to CLIENTPIDMAP properties whose second field
 URIs are equivalent (as specified in [RFC3986], Section 6) also
 represent the same global value.
 PID parameters for which at least one pair of their values represent
 the same global value MUST be matched.
 In all other cases, PID parameters MAY be matched at the discretion
 of the synchronization engine.
 For example, PID value "5.1", in the first vCard below, and PID value
 "5.2", in the second vCard below, represent the same global value.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 52]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 EMAIL;PID=4.2,5.1:jdoe@example.com
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:3eef374e-7179-4196-a914-27358c3e6527
 CLIENTPIDMAP:2;urn:uuid:42bcd5a7-1699-4514-87b4-056edf68e9cc
 END:VCARD
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 EMAIL;PID=5.1,5.2:john@example.com
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:0c75c629-6a8d-4d5e-a07f-1bb35846854d
 CLIENTPIDMAP:2;urn:uuid:3eef374e-7179-4196-a914-27358c3e6527
 END:VCARD
7.2. Example
7.2.1. Creation
 The following simple vCard is first created on a given device.
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN;PID=1.1:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 END:VCARD
 This new vCard is assigned the UID
 "urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1" by the creating
 device. The FN and EMAIL properties are assigned the same local
 value of 1, and this value is given global context by associating it
 with "urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556", which
 represents the creating device. We are at liberty to reuse the same
 local value since instances of different properties will never be
 matched. The N property has no PID because it is forbidden by its
 maximum cardinality of 1.
7.2.2. Initial Sharing
 This vCard is shared with a second device. Upon inspecting the UID
 property, the second device understands that this is a new vCard
 (i.e., unmatched) and thus the synchronization results in a simple
 copy.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 53]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
7.2.3. Adding and Sharing a Property
 A new phone number is created on the first device, then the vCard is
 shared with the second device. This is what the second device
 receives:
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN;PID=1.1:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 TEL;PID=1.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 END:VCARD
 Upon inspecting the UID property, the second device matches the vCard
 it received to the vCard that it already has stored. It then starts
 comparing the properties of the two vCards in same-named pairs.
 The FN properties are matched because the PID parameters have the
 same global value. Since the property value is the same, no update
 takes place.
 The N properties are matched automatically because their maximum
 cardinality is 1. Since the property value is the same, no update
 takes place.
 The EMAIL properties are matched because the PID parameters have the
 same global value. Since the property value is the same, no update
 takes place.
 The TEL property in the new vCard is not matched to any in the stored
 vCard because no property in the stored vCard has the same name.
 Therefore, this property is copied from the new vCard to the stored
 vCard.
 The CLIENTPIDMAP property is handled separately by the
 synchronization engine. It ensures that it is consistent with the
 stored one. If it was not, the results would be up to the
 synchronization engine, and thus undefined by this document.
7.2.4. Simultaneous Editing
 A new email address and a new phone number are added to the vCard on
 each of the two devices, and then a new synchronization event
 happens. Here are the vCards that are communicated to each other:
Perreault Standards Track [Page 54]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN;PID=1.1:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=2.1:boss@example.com
 TEL;PID=1.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 TEL;PID=2.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-666-666-6666
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 END:VCARD
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN;PID=1.1:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=2.2:ceo@example.com
 TEL;PID=1.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 TEL;PID=2.2;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-666-666-6666
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 CLIENTPIDMAP:2;urn:uuid:1f762d2b-03c4-4a83-9a03-75ff658a6eee
 END:VCARD
 On the first device, the same PID source identifier (1) is reused for
 the new EMAIL and TEL properties. On the second device, a new source
 identifier (2) is generated, and a corresponding CLIENTPIDMAP
 property is created. It contains the second device's identifier,
 "urn:uuid:1f762d2b-03c4-4a83-9a03-75ff658a6eee".
 The new EMAIL properties are unmatched on both sides since the PID
 global value is new in both cases. The sync thus results in a copy
 on both sides.
 Although the situation appears to be the same for the TEL properties,
 in this case, the synchronization engine is particularly smart and
 matches the two new TEL properties even though their PID global
 values are different. Note that in this case, the rules of
 Section 7.1.2 state that two properties MAY be matched at the
 discretion of the synchronization engine. Therefore, the two
 properties are merged.
 All this results in the following vCard, which is stored on both
 devices:
Perreault Standards Track [Page 55]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=2.1:boss@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=2.2:ceo@example.com
 TEL;PID=1.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 TEL;PID=2.1,2.2;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-666-666-6666
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 CLIENTPIDMAP:2;urn:uuid:1f762d2b-03c4-4a83-9a03-75ff658a6eee
 END:VCARD
7.2.5. Global Context Simplification
 The two devices finish their synchronization procedure by simplifying
 their global contexts. Since they haven't talked to any other
 device, the following vCard is for all purposes equivalent to the
 above. It is also shorter.
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 UID:urn:uuid:4fbe8971-0bc3-424c-9c26-36c3e1eff6b1
 FN:J. Doe
 N:Doe;J.;;;
 EMAIL;PID=1.1:jdoe@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=2.1:boss@example.com
 EMAIL;PID=3.1:ceo@example.com
 TEL;PID=1.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-555-555-5555
 TEL;PID=2.1;VALUE=uri:tel:+1-666-666-6666
 CLIENTPIDMAP:1;urn:uuid:53e374d9-337e-4727-8803-a1e9c14e0556
 END:VCARD
 The details of global context simplification are unspecified by this
 document. They are left up to the synchronization engine. This
 example is merely intended to illustrate the possibility, which
 investigating would be, in the author's opinion, worthwhile.
8. Example: Author's vCard
 BEGIN:VCARD
 VERSION:4.0
 FN:Simon Perreault
 N:Perreault;Simon;;;ing. jr,M.Sc.
 BDAY:--0203
 ANNIVERSARY:20090808T1430-0500
 GENDER:M
Perreault Standards Track [Page 56]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 LANG;PREF=1:fr
 LANG;PREF=2:en
 ORG;TYPE=work:Viagenie
 ADR;TYPE=work:;Suite D2-630;2875 Laurier;
 Quebec;QC;G1V 2M2;Canada
 TEL;VALUE=uri;TYPE="work,voice";PREF=1:tel:+1-418-656-9254;ext=102
 TEL;VALUE=uri;TYPE="work,cell,voice,video,text":tel:+1-418-262-6501
 EMAIL;TYPE=work:simon.perreault@viagenie.ca
 GEO;TYPE=work:geo:46.772673,-71.282945
 KEY;TYPE=work;VALUE=uri:
 http://www.viagenie.ca/simon.perreault/simon.asc
 TZ:-0500
 URL;TYPE=home:http://nomis80.org
 END:VCARD
9. Security Considerations
 o Internet mail is often used to transport vCards and is subject to
 many well-known security attacks, including monitoring, replay,
 and forgery. Care should be taken by any directory service in
 allowing information to leave the scope of the service itself,
 where any access controls or confidentiality can no longer be
 guaranteed. Applications should also take care to display
 directory data in a "safe" environment.
 o vCards can carry cryptographic keys or certificates, as described
 in Section 6.8.1.
 o vCards often carry information that can be sensitive (e.g.,
 birthday, address, and phone information). Although vCards have
 no inherent authentication or confidentiality provisions, they can
 easily be carried by any security mechanism that transfers MIME
 objects to address authentication or confidentiality (e.g., S/MIME
 [RFC5751], OpenPGP [RFC4880]). In cases where the confidentiality
 or authenticity of information contained in vCard is a concern,
 the vCard SHOULD be transported using one of these secure
 mechanisms. The KEY property (Section 6.8.1) can be used to
 transport the public key used by these mechanisms.
 o The information in a vCard may become out of date. In cases where
 the vitality of data is important to an originator of a vCard, the
 SOURCE property (Section 6.1.3) SHOULD be specified. In addition,
 the "REV" type described in Section 6.7.4 can be specified to
 indicate the last time that the vCard data was updated.
 o Many vCard properties may be used to transport URIs. Please refer
 to [RFC3986], Section 7, for considerations related to URIs.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 57]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
10. IANA Considerations
10.1. Media Type Registration
 IANA has registered the following Media Type (in
 <http://www.iana.org/>) and marked the text/directory Media Type as
 DEPRECATED.
 To: ietf-types@iana.org
 Subject: Registration of media type text/vcard
 Type name: text
 Subtype name: vcard
 Required parameters: none
 Optional parameters: version
 The "version" parameter is to be interpreted identically as the
 VERSION vCard property. If this parameter is present, all vCards
 in a text/vcard body part MUST have a VERSION property with value
 identical to that of this MIME parameter.
 "charset": as defined for text/plain [RFC2046]; encodings other
 than UTF-8 [RFC3629] MUST NOT be used.
 Encoding considerations: 8bit
 Security considerations: See Section 9.
 Interoperability considerations: The text/vcard media type is
 intended to identify vCard data of any version. There are older
 specifications of vCard [RFC2426][vCard21] still in common use.
 While these formats are similar, they are not strictly compatible.
 In general, it is necessary to inspect the value of the VERSION
 property (see Section 6.7.9) for identifying the standard to which
 a given vCard object conforms.
 In addition, the following media types are known to have been used
 to refer to vCard data. They should be considered deprecated in
 favor of text/vcard.
 * text/directory
 * text/directory; profile=vcard
 * text/x-vcard
Perreault Standards Track [Page 58]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Published specification: RFC 6350
 Applications that use this media type: They are numerous, diverse,
 and include mail user agents, instant messaging clients, address
 book applications, directory servers, and customer relationship
 management software.
 Additional information:
 Magic number(s):
 File extension(s): .vcf .vcard
 Macintosh file type code(s):
 Person & email address to contact for further information: vCard
 discussion mailing list <vcarddav@ietf.org>
 Intended usage: COMMON
 Restrictions on usage: none
 Author: Simon Perreault
 Change controller: IETF
10.2. Registering New vCard Elements
 This section defines the process for registering new or modified
 vCard elements (i.e., properties, parameters, value data types, and
 values) with IANA.
10.2.1. Registration Procedure
 The IETF has created a mailing list, vcarddav@ietf.org, which can be
 used for public discussion of vCard element proposals prior to
 registration. Use of the mailing list is strongly encouraged. The
 IESG has appointed a designated expert who will monitor the
 vcarddav@ietf.org mailing list and review registrations.
 Registration of new vCard elements MUST be reviewed by the designated
 expert and published in an RFC. A Standards Track RFC is REQUIRED
 for the registration of new value data types that modify existing
 properties. A Standards Track RFC is also REQUIRED for registration
 of vCard elements that modify vCard elements previously documented in
 a Standards Track RFC.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 59]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 The registration procedure begins when a completed registration
 template, defined in the sections below, is sent to vcarddav@ietf.org
 and iana@iana.org. Within two weeks, the designated expert is
 expected to tell IANA and the submitter of the registration whether
 the registration is approved, approved with minor changes, or
 rejected with cause. When a registration is rejected with cause, it
 can be re-submitted if the concerns listed in the cause are
 addressed. Decisions made by the designated expert can be appealed
 to the IESG Applications Area Director, then to the IESG. They
 follow the normal appeals procedure for IESG decisions.
 Once the registration procedure concludes successfully, IANA creates
 or modifies the corresponding record in the vCard registry. The
 completed registration template is discarded.
 An RFC specifying new vCard elements MUST include the completed
 registration templates, which MAY be expanded with additional
 information. These completed templates are intended to go in the
 body of the document, not in the IANA Considerations section.
 Finally, note that there is an XML representation for vCard defined
 in [RFC6351]. An XML representation SHOULD be defined for new vCard
 elements.
10.2.2. Vendor Namespace
 The vendor namespace is used for vCard elements associated with
 commercially available products. "Vendor" or "producer" are
 construed as equivalent and very broadly in this context.
 A registration may be placed in the vendor namespace by anyone who
 needs to interchange files associated with the particular product.
 However, the registration formally belongs to the vendor or
 organization handling the vCard elements in the namespace being
 registered. Changes to the specification will be made at their
 request, as discussed in subsequent sections.
 vCard elements belonging to the vendor namespace will be
 distinguished by the "VND-" prefix. This is followed by an IANA-
 registered Private Enterprise Number (PEN), a dash, and a vCard
 element designation of the vendor's choosing (e.g., "VND-123456-
 MUDPIE").
 While public exposure and review of vCard elements to be registered
 in the vendor namespace are not required, using the vcarddav@ietf.org
 mailing list for review is strongly encouraged to improve the quality
 of those specifications. Registrations in the vendor namespace may
 be submitted directly to the IANA.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 60]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
10.2.3. Registration Template for Properties
 A property is defined by completing the following template.
 Namespace: Empty for the global namespace, "VND-NNNN-" for a vendor-
 specific property (where NNNN is replaced by the vendor's PEN).
 Property name: The name of the property.
 Purpose: The purpose of the property. Give a short but clear
 description.
 Value type: Any of the valid value types for the property value
 needs to be specified. The default value type also needs to be
 specified.
 Cardinality: See Section 6.
 Property parameters: Any of the valid property parameters for the
 property MUST be specified.
 Description: Any special notes about the property, how it is to be
 used, etc.
 Format definition: The ABNF for the property definition needs to be
 specified.
 Example(s): One or more examples of instances of the property need
 to be specified.
10.2.4. Registration Template for Parameters
 A parameter is defined by completing the following template.
 Namespace: Empty for the global namespace, "VND-NNNN-" for a vendor-
 specific property (where NNNN is replaced by the vendor's PEN).
 Parameter name: The name of the parameter.
 Purpose: The purpose of the parameter. Give a short but clear
 description.
 Description: Any special notes about the parameter, how it is to be
 used, etc.
 Format definition: The ABNF for the parameter definition needs to be
 specified.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 61]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Example(s): One or more examples of instances of the parameter need
 to be specified.
10.2.5. Registration Template for Value Data Types
 A value data type is defined by completing the following template.
 Value name: The name of the value type.
 Purpose: The purpose of the value type. Give a short but clear
 description.
 Description: Any special notes about the value type, how it is to be
 used, etc.
 Format definition: The ABNF for the value type definition needs to
 be specified.
 Example(s): One or more examples of instances of the value type need
 to be specified.
10.2.6. Registration Template for Values
 A value is defined by completing the following template.
 Value: The value literal.
 Purpose: The purpose of the value. Give a short but clear
 description.
 Conformance: The vCard properties and/or parameters that can take
 this value needs to be specified.
 Example(s): One or more examples of instances of the value need to
 be specified.
 The following is a fictitious example of a registration of a vCard
 value:
 Value: supervisor
 Purpose: It means that the related entity is the direct hierarchical
 superior (i.e., supervisor or manager) of the entity this vCard
 represents.
 Conformance: This value can be used with the "TYPE" parameter
 applied on the "RELATED" property.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 62]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 Example(s):
 RELATED;TYPE=supervisor:urn:uuid:f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6
10.3. Initial vCard Elements Registries
 The IANA has created and will maintain the following registries for
 vCard elements with pointers to appropriate reference documents. The
 registries are grouped together under the heading "vCard Elements".
Perreault Standards Track [Page 63]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
10.3.1. Properties Registry
 The following table has been used to initialize the properties
 registry.
 +-----------+--------------+-------------------------+
 | Namespace | Property | Reference |
 +-----------+--------------+-------------------------+
 | | SOURCE | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.3 |
 | | KIND | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.4 |
 | | XML | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.5 |
 | | FN | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.1 |
 | | N | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.2 |
 | | NICKNAME | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.3 |
 | | PHOTO | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.4 |
 | | BDAY | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.5 |
 | | ANNIVERSARY | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.6 |
 | | GENDER | RFC 6350, Section 6.2.7 |
 | | ADR | RFC 6350, Section 6.3.1 |
 | | TEL | RFC 6350, Section 6.4.1 |
 | | EMAIL | RFC 6350, Section 6.4.2 |
 | | IMPP | RFC 6350, Section 6.4.3 |
 | | LANG | RFC 6350, Section 6.4.4 |
 | | TZ | RFC 6350, Section 6.5.1 |
 | | GEO | RFC 6350, Section 6.5.2 |
 | | TITLE | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.1 |
 | | ROLE | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.2 |
 | | LOGO | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.3 |
 | | ORG | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.4 |
 | | MEMBER | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.5 |
 | | RELATED | RFC 6350, Section 6.6.6 |
 | | CATEGORIES | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.1 |
 | | NOTE | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.2 |
 | | PRODID | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.3 |
 | | REV | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.4 |
 | | SOUND | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.5 |
 | | UID | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.6 |
 | | CLIENTPIDMAP | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.7 |
 | | URL | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.8 |
 | | VERSION | RFC 6350, Section 6.7.9 |
 | | KEY | RFC 6350, Section 6.8.1 |
 | | FBURL | RFC 6350, Section 6.9.1 |
 | | CALADRURI | RFC 6350, Section 6.9.2 |
 | | CALURI | RFC 6350, Section 6.9.3 |
 +-----------+--------------+-------------------------+
Perreault Standards Track [Page 64]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
10.3.2. Parameters Registry
 The following table has been used to initialize the parameters
 registry.
 +-----------+-----------+------------------------+
 | Namespace | Parameter | Reference |
 +-----------+-----------+------------------------+
 | | LANGUAGE | RFC 6350, Section 5.1 |
 | | VALUE | RFC 6350, Section 5.2 |
 | | PREF | RFC 6350, Section 5.3 |
 | | ALTID | RFC 6350, Section 5.4 |
 | | PID | RFC 6350, Section 5.5 |
 | | TYPE | RFC 6350, Section 5.6 |
 | | MEDIATYPE | RFC 6350, Section 5.7 |
 | | CALSCALE | RFC 6350, Section 5.8 |
 | | SORT-AS | RFC 6350, Section 5.9 |
 | | GEO | RFC 6350, Section 5.10 |
 | | TZ | RFC 6350, Section 5.11 |
 +-----------+-----------+------------------------+
10.3.3. Value Data Types Registry
 The following table has been used to initialize the parameters
 registry.
 +------------------+-------------------------+
 | Value Data Type | Reference |
 +------------------+-------------------------+
 | BOOLEAN | RFC 6350, Section 4.4 |
 | DATE | RFC 6350, Section 4.3.1 |
 | DATE-AND-OR-TIME | RFC 6350, Section 4.3.4 |
 | DATE-TIME | RFC 6350, Section 4.3.3 |
 | FLOAT | RFC 6350, Section 4.6 |
 | INTEGER | RFC 6350, Section 4.5 |
 | LANGUAGE-TAG | RFC 6350, Section 4.8 |
 | TEXT | RFC 6350, Section 4.1 |
 | TIME | RFC 6350, Section 4.3.2 |
 | TIMESTAMP | RFC 6350, Section 4.3.5 |
 | URI | RFC 6350, Section 4.2 |
 | UTC-OFFSET | RFC 6350, Section 4.7 |
 +------------------+-------------------------+
Perreault Standards Track [Page 65]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
10.3.4. Values Registries
 Separate tables are used for property and parameter values.
 The following table is to be used to initialize the property values
 registry.
 +----------+------------+-------------------------+
 | Property | Value | Reference |
 +----------+------------+-------------------------+
 | BEGIN | VCARD | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.1 |
 | END | VCARD | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.2 |
 | KIND | individual | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.4 |
 | KIND | group | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.4 |
 | KIND | org | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.4 |
 | KIND | location | RFC 6350, Section 6.1.4 |
 +----------+------------+-------------------------+
 The following table has been used to initialize the parameter values
 registry.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 66]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 +------------------------+-----------+--------------+---------------+
 | Property | Parameter | Value | Reference |
 +------------------------+-----------+--------------+---------------+
 | FN, NICKNAME, PHOTO, | TYPE | work | RFC 6350, |
 | ADR, TEL, EMAIL, IMPP, | | | Section 5.6 |
 | LANG, TZ, GEO, TITLE, | | | |
 | ROLE, LOGO, ORG, | | | |
 | RELATED, CATEGORIES, | | | |
 | NOTE, SOUND, URL, KEY, | | | |
 | FBURL, CALADRURI, and | | | |
 | CALURI | | | |
 | FN, NICKNAME, PHOTO, | TYPE | home | RFC 6350, |
 | ADR, TEL, EMAIL, IMPP, | | | Section 5.6 |
 | LANG, TZ, GEO, TITLE, | | | |
 | ROLE, LOGO, ORG, | | | |
 | RELATED, CATEGORIES, | | | |
 | NOTE, SOUND, URL, KEY, | | | |
 | FBURL, CALADRURI, and | | | |
 | CALURI | | | |
 | TEL | TYPE | text | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | voice | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | fax | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | cell | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | video | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | pager | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | TEL | TYPE | textphone | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.4.1 |
 | BDAY, ANNIVERSARY | CALSCALE | gregorian | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 5.8 |
 | RELATED | TYPE | contact | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | acquaintance | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | friend | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | met | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
Perreault Standards Track [Page 67]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 | RELATED | TYPE | co-worker | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | colleague | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | co-resident | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | neighbor | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | child | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | parent | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | sibling | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | spouse | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | kin | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | muse | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | crush | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | date | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | sweetheart | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | me | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | | | | and [xfn] |
 | RELATED | TYPE | agent | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 | RELATED | TYPE | emergency | RFC 6350, |
 | | | | Section 6.6.6 |
 +------------------------+-----------+--------------+---------------+
Perreault Standards Track [Page 68]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
11. Acknowledgments
 The authors would like to thank Tim Howes, Mark Smith, and Frank
 Dawson, the original authors of [RFC2425] and [RFC2426], Pete
 Resnick, who got this effort started and provided help along the way,
 as well as the following individuals who have participated in the
 drafting, review, and discussion of this memo:
 Aki Niemi, Andy Mabbett, Alexander Mayrhofer, Alexey Melnikov, Anil
 Srivastava, Barry Leiba, Ben Fortuna, Bernard Desruisseaux, Bernie
 Hoeneisen, Bjoern Hoehrmann, Caleb Richardson, Chris Bryant, Chris
 Newman, Cyrus Daboo, Daisuke Miyakawa, Dan Brickley, Dan Mosedale,
 Dany Cauchie, Darryl Champagne, Dave Thewlis, Filip Navara, Florian
 Zeitz, Helge Hess, Jari Urpalainen, Javier Godoy, Jean-Luc Schellens,
 Joe Hildebrand, Jose Luis Gayosso, Joseph Smarr, Julian Reschke,
 Kepeng Li, Kevin Marks, Kevin Wu Won, Kurt Zeilenga, Lisa Dusseault,
 Marc Blanchet, Mark Paterson, Markus Lorenz, Michael Haardt, Mike
 Douglass, Nick Levinson, Peter K. Sheerin, Peter Mogensen, Peter
 Saint-Andre, Renato Iannella, Rohit Khare, Sly Gryphon, Stephane
 Bortzmeyer, Tantek Celik, and Zoltan Ordogh.
12. References
12.1. Normative References
 [CCITT.X520.1988]
 International Telephone and Telegraph Consultative
 Committee, "Information Technology - Open Systems
 Interconnection - The Directory: Selected Attribute
 Types", CCITT Recommendation X.520, November 1988.
 [IEEE.754.2008]
 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
 "Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic",
 IEEE Standard 754, August 2008.
 [ISO.8601.2000]
 International Organization for Standardization, "Data
 elements and interchange formats - Information interchange
 - Representation of dates and times", ISO Standard 8601,
 December 2000.
 [ISO.8601.2004]
 International Organization for Standardization, "Data
 elements and interchange formats - Information interchange
 - Representation of dates and times", ISO Standard 8601,
 December 2004.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 69]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 [RFC2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
 Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
 Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.
 [RFC2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
 Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
 November 1996.
 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC2739] Small, T., Hennessy, D., and F. Dawson, "Calendar
 Attributes for vCard and LDAP", RFC 2739, January 2000.
 [RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
 [RFC3966] Schulzrinne, H., "The tel URI for Telephone Numbers",
 RFC 3966, December 2004.
 [RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform
 Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,
 RFC 3986, January 2005.
 [RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
 Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
 July 2005.
 [RFC4288] Freed, N. and J. Klensin, "Media Type Specifications and
 Registration Procedures", BCP 13, RFC 4288, December 2005.
 [RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
 Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.
 [RFC5322] Resnick, P., Ed., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
 October 2008.
 [RFC5545] Desruisseaux, B., "Internet Calendaring and Scheduling
 Core Object Specification (iCalendar)", RFC 5545,
 September 2009.
 [RFC5546] Daboo, C., "iCalendar Transport-Independent
 Interoperability Protocol (iTIP)", RFC 5546,
 December 2009.
 [RFC5646] Phillips, A. and M. Davis, "Tags for Identifying
 Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646, September 2009.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 70]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 [RFC5870] Mayrhofer, A. and C. Spanring, "A Uniform Resource
 Identifier for Geographic Locations ('geo' URI)",
 RFC 5870, June 2010.
 [RFC6351] Perreault, S., "xCard: vCard XML Representation",
 RFC 6351, August 2011.
 [W3C.REC-xml-20081126]
 Maler, E., Yergeau, F., Sperberg-McQueen, C., Paoli, J.,
 and T. Bray, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth
 Edition)", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-
 xml-20081126, November 2008,
 <http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xml-20081126>.
 [xfn] Celik, T., Mullenweg, M., and E. Meyer, "XFN 1.1 profile",
 <http://gmpg.org/xfn/11>.
12.2. Informative References
 [IANA-TZ] Lear, E. and P. Eggert, "IANA Procedures for Maintaining
 the Timezone Database", Work in Progress, May 2011.
 [ISO9070] International Organization for Standardization,
 "Information Processing - SGML support facilities -
 Registration Procedures for Public Text Owner
 Identifiers", ISO 9070, April 1991.
 [RFC1738] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., and M. McCahill, "Uniform
 Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, December 1994.
 [RFC2397] Masinter, L., "The "data" URL scheme", RFC 2397,
 August 1998.
 [RFC2425] Howes, T., Smith, M., and F. Dawson, "A MIME Content-Type
 for Directory Information", RFC 2425, September 1998.
 [RFC2426] Dawson, F. and T. Howes, "vCard MIME Directory Profile",
 RFC 2426, September 1998.
 [RFC2616] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
 Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
 Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.
 [RFC3282] Alvestrand, H., "Content Language Headers", RFC 3282,
 May 2002.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 71]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 [RFC3406] Daigle, L., van Gulik, D., Iannella, R., and P. Faltstrom,
 "Uniform Resource Names (URN) Namespace Definition
 Mechanisms", BCP 66, RFC 3406, October 2002.
 [RFC3536] Hoffman, P., "Terminology Used in Internationalization in
 the IETF", RFC 3536, May 2003.
 [RFC4770] Jennings, C. and J. Reschke, Ed., "vCard Extensions for
 Instant Messaging (IM)", RFC 4770, January 2007.
 [RFC4880] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H., Shaw, D., and R.
 Thayer, "OpenPGP Message Format", RFC 4880, November 2007.
 [RFC5335bis]
 Yang, A. and S. Steele, "Internationalized Email Headers",
 Work in Progress, July 2011.
 [RFC5751] Ramsdell, B. and S. Turner, "Secure/Multipurpose Internet
 Mail Extensions (S/MIME) Version 3.2 Message
 Specification", RFC 5751, January 2010.
 [RFC6068] Duerst, M., Masinter, L., and J. Zawinski, "The 'mailto'
 URI Scheme", RFC 6068, October 2010.
 [TZ-DB] Olson, A., "Time zone code and data",
 <ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/>.
 [vCard21] Internet Mail Consortium, "vCard - The Electronic Business
 Card Version 2.1", September 1996.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 72]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
Appendix A. Differences from RFCs 2425 and 2426
 This appendix contains a high-level overview of the major changes
 that have been made in the vCard specification from RFCs 2425 and
 2426. It is incomplete, as it only lists the most important changes.
A.1. New Structure
 o [RFC2425] and [RFC2426] have been merged.
 o vCard is now not only a MIME type but a stand-alone format.
 o A proper MIME type registration form has been included.
 o UTF-8 is now the only possible character set.
 o New vCard elements can be registered from IANA.
A.2. Removed Features
 o The CONTEXT and CHARSET parameters are no more.
 o The NAME, MAILER, LABEL, and CLASS properties are no more.
 o The "intl", "dom", "postal", and "parcel" TYPE parameter values
 for the ADR property have been removed.
 o In-line vCards (such as the value of the AGENT property) are no
 longer supported.
A.3. New Properties and Parameters
 o The KIND, GENDER, LANG, ANNIVERSARY, XML, and CLIENTPIDMAP
 properties have been added.
 o [RFC2739], which defines the FBURL, CALADRURI, CAPURI, and CALURI
 properties, has been merged in.
 o [RFC4770], which defines the IMPP property, has been merged in.
 o The "work" and "home" TYPE parameter values are now applicable to
 many more properties.
 o The "pref" value of the TYPE parameter is now a parameter of its
 own, with a positive integer value indicating the level of
 preference.
 o The ALTID and PID parameters have been added.
Perreault Standards Track [Page 73]

RFC 6350 vCard August 2011
 o The MEDIATYPE parameter has been added and replaces the TYPE
 parameter when it was used for indicating the media type of the
 property's content.
Author's Address
 Simon Perreault
 Viagenie
 2875 Laurier, suite D2-630
 Quebec, QC G1V 2M2
 Canada
 Phone: +1 418 656 9254
 EMail: simon.perreault@viagenie.ca
 URI: http://www.viagenie.ca
Perreault Standards Track [Page 74]

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /