RFC 1630 - Universal Resource Identifiers in WWW: A Unifying Syntax for the Expression of Names and Addresses of Objects on the Network as used in the World-Wide Web

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Network Working Group T. Berners-Lee
Request for Comments: 1630 CERN
Category: Informational June 1994
 Universal Resource Identifiers in WWW
 A Unifying Syntax for the Expression of
 Names and Addresses of Objects on the Network
 as used in the World-Wide Web
Status of this Memo
 This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
 does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
 this memo is unlimited.
IESG Note:
 Note that the work contained in this memo does not describe an
 Internet standard. An Internet standard for general Resource
 Identifiers is under development within the IETF.
Introduction
 This document defines the syntax used by the World-Wide Web
 initiative to encode the names and addresses of objects on the
 Internet. The web is considered to include objects accessed using an
 extendable number of protocols, existing, invented for the web
 itself, or to be invented in the future. Access instructions for an
 individual object under a given protocol are encoded into forms of
 address string. Other protocols allow the use of object names of
 various forms. In order to abstract the idea of a generic object,
 the web needs the concepts of the universal set of objects, and of
 the universal set of names or addresses of objects.
 A Universal Resource Identifier (URI) is a member of this universal
 set of names in registered name spaces and addresses referring to
 registered protocols or name spaces. A Uniform Resource Locator
 (URL), defined elsewhere, is a form of URI which expresses an address
 which maps onto an access algorithm using network protocols. Existing
 URI schemes which correspond to the (still mutating) concept of IETF
 URLs are listed here. The Uniform Resource Name (URN) debate attempts
 to define a name space (and presumably resolution protocols) for
 persistent object names. This area is not addressed by this document,
 which is written in order to document existing practice and provide a
 reference point for URL and URN discussions.
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 The world-wide web protocols are discussed on the mailing list www-
 talk-request@info.cern.ch and the newsgroup comp.infosystems.www is
 preferable for beginner's questions. The mailing list uri-
 request@bunyip.com has discussion related particularly to the URI
 issue. The author may be contacted as timbl@info.cern.ch.
 This document is available in hypertext form at:
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Addressing/URL/URI_Overview.html
The Need For a Universal Syntax
 This section describes the concept of the URI and does not form part
 of the specification.
 Many protocols and systems for document search and retrieval are
 currently in use, and many more protocols or refinements of existing
 protocols are to be expected in a field whose expansion is explosive.
 These systems are aiming to achieve global search and readership of
 documents across differing computing platforms, and despite a
 plethora of protocols and data formats. As protocols evolve,
 gateways can allow global access to remain possible. As data formats
 evolve, format conversion programs can preserve global access. There
 is one area, however, in which it is impractical to make conversions,
 and that is in the names and addresses used to identify objects.
 This is because names and addresses of objects are passed on in so
 many ways, from the backs of envelopes to hypertext objects, and may
 have a long life.
 A common feature of almost all the data models of past and proposed
 systems is something which can be mapped onto a concept of "object"
 and some kind of name, address, or identifier for that object. One
 can therefore define a set of name spaces in which these objects can
 be said to exist.
 Practical systems need to access and mix objects which are part of
 different existing and proposed systems. Therefore, the concept of
 the universal set of all objects, and hence the universal set of
 names and addresses, in all name spaces, becomes important. This
 allows names in different spaces to be treated in a common way, even
 though names in different spaces have differing characteristics, as
 do the objects to which they refer.
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 URIs
 This document defines a way to encapsulate a name in any
 registered name space, and label it with the the name space,
 producing a member of the universal set. Such an encoded and
 labelled member of this set is known as a Universal Resource
 Identifier, or URI.
 The universal syntax allows access of objects available using
 existing protocols, and may be extended with technology.
 The specification of the URI syntax does not imply anything about
 the properties of names and addresses in the various name spaces
 which are mapped onto the set of URI strings. The properties
 follow from the specifications of the protocols and the associated
 usage conventions for each scheme.
 URLs
 For existing Internet access protocols, it is necessary in most
 cases to define the encoding of the access algorithm into
 something concise enough to be termed address. URIs which refer
 to objects accessed with existing protocols are known as "Uniform
 Resource Locators" (URLs) and are listed here as used in WWW, but
 to be formally defined in a separate document.
 URNs
 There is currently a drive to define a space of more persistent
 names than any URLs. These "Uniform Resource Names" are the
 subject of an IETF working group's discussions. (See Sollins and
 Masinter, Functional Specifications for URNs, circulated
 informally.)
 The URI syntax and URL forms have been in widespread use by
 World-Wide Web software since 1990.
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Design Criteria and Choices
 This section is not part of the specification: it is simply an
 explanation of the way in which the specification was derived.
 Design criteria
 The syntax was designed to be:
 Extensible New naming schemes may be added later.
 Complete It is possible to encode any naming
 scheme.
 Printable It is possible to express any URI using
 7-bit ASCII characters so that URIs may,
 if necessary, be passed using pen and ink.
 Choices for a universal syntax
 For the syntax itself there is little choice except for the order
 and punctuation of the elements, and the acceptable characters and
 escaping rules.
 The extensibility requirement is met by allowing an arbitrary (but
 registered) string to be used as a prefix. A prefix is chosen as
 left to right parsing is more common than right to left. The
 choice of a colon as separator of the prefix from the rest of the
 URI was arbitrary.
 The decoding of the rest of the string is defined as a function of
 the prefix. New prefixed are introduced for new schemes as
 necessary, in agreement with the registration authority. The
 registration of a new scheme clearly requires the definition of
 the decoding of the URI into a given name space, and a definition
 of the properties and, where applicable, resolution protocols, for
 the name space.
 The completeness requirement is easily met by allowing
 particularly strange or plain binary names to be encoded in base
 16 or 64 using the acceptable characters.
 The printability requirement could have been met by requiring all
 schemes to encode characters not part of a basic set. This led to
 many discussions of what the basic set should be. A difficult
 case, for example, is when an ISO latin 1 string appears in a URL,
 and within an application with ISO Latin-1 capability, it can be
 handled intact. However, for transport in general, the non-ASCII
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 characters need to be escaped.
 The solution to this was to specify a safe set of characters, and
 a general escaping scheme which may be used for encoding "unsafe"
 characters. This "safe" set is suitable, for example, for use in
 electronic mail. This is the canonical form of a URI.
 The choice of escape character for introducing representations of
 non-allowed characters also tends to be a matter of taste. An
 ANSI standard exists in the C language, using the back-slash
 character "\". The use of this character on unix command lines,
 however, can be a problem as it is interpreted by many shell
 programs, and would have itself to be escaped. It is also a
 character which is not available on certain keyboards. The equals
 sign is commonly used in the encoding of names having
 attribute=value pairs. The percent sign was eventually chosen as
 a suitable escape character.
 There is a conflict between the need to be able to represent many
 characters including spaces within a URI directly, and the need to
 be able to use a URI in environments which have limited character
 sets or in which certain characters are prone to corruption. This
 conflict has been resolved by use of an hexadecimal escaping
 method which may be applied to any characters forbidden in a given
 context. When URLs are moved between contexts, the set of
 characters escaped may be enlarged or reduced unambiguously.
 The use of white space characters is risky in URIs to be printed
 or sent by electronic mail, and the use of multiple white space
 characters is very risky. This is because of the frequent
 introduction of extraneous white space when lines are wrapped by
 systems such as mail, or sheer necessity of narrow column width,
 and because of the inter-conversion of various forms of white
 space which occurs during character code conversion and the
 transfer of text between applications. This is why the canonical
 form for URIs has all white spaces encoded.
Reommendations
 This section describes the syntax for URIs as used in the WorldWide
 Web initiative. The generic syntax provides a framework for new
 schemes for names to be resolved using as yet undefined protocols.
URI syntax
 A complete URI consists of a naming scheme specifier followed by a
 string whose format is a function of the naming scheme. For locators
 of information on the Internet, a common syntax is used for the IP
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 address part. A BNF description of the URL syntax is given in an a
 later section. The components are as follows. Fragment identifiers
 and relative URIs are not involved in the basic URL definition.
 SCHEME
 Within the URI of a object, the first element is the name of the
 scheme, separated from the rest of the object by a colon.
 PATH
 The rest of the URI follows the colon in a format depending on the
 scheme. The path is interpreted in a manner dependent on the
 protocol being used. However, when it contains slashes, these
 must imply a hierarchical structure.
Reserved characters
 The path in the URI has a significance defined by the particular
 scheme. Typically, it is used to encode a name in a given name
 space, or an algorithm for accessing an object. In either case, the
 encoding may use those characters allowed by the BNF syntax, or
 hexadecimal encoding of other characters.
 Some of the reserved characters have special uses as defined here.
 THE PERCENT SIGN
 The percent sign ("%", ASCII 25 hex) is used as the escape
 character in the encoding scheme and is never allowed for anything
 else.
 HIERARCHICAL FORMS
 The slash ("/", ASCII 2F hex) character is reserved for the
 delimiting of substrings whose relationship is hierarchical. This
 enables partial forms of the URI. Substrings consisting of single
 or double dots ("." or "..") are similarly reserved.
 The significance of the slash between two segments is that the
 segment of the path to the left is more significant than the
 segment of the path to the right. ("Significance" in this case
 refers solely to closeness to the root of the hierarchical
 structure and makes no value judgement!)
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 Note
 The similarity to unix and other disk operating system filename
 conventions should be taken as purely coincidental, and should
 not be taken to indicate that URIs should be interpreted as
 file names.
 HASH FOR FRAGMENT IDENTIFIERS
 The hash ("#", ASCII 23 hex) character is reserved as a delimiter
 to separate the URI of an object from a fragment identifier .
 QUERY STRINGS
 The question mark ("?", ASCII 3F hex) is used to delimit the
 boundary between the URI of a queryable object, and a set of words
 used to express a query on that object. When this form is used,
 the combined URI stands for the object which results from the
 query being applied to the original object.
 Within the query string, the plus sign is reserved as shorthand
 notation for a space. Therefore, real plus signs must be encoded.
 This method was used to make query URIs easier to pass in systems
 which did not allow spaces.
 The query string represents some operation applied to the object,
 but this specification gives no common syntax or semantics for it.
 In practice the syntax and sematics may depend on the scheme and
 may even on the base URI.
 OTHER RESERVED CHARACTERS
 The astersik ("*", ASCII 2A hex) and exclamation mark ("!" , ASCII
 21 hex) are reserved for use as having special signifiance within
 specific schemes.
Unsafe characters
 In canonical form, certain characters such as spaces, control
 characters, some characters whose ASCII code is used differently in
 different national character variant 7 bit sets, and all 8bit
 characters beyond DEL (7F hex) of the ISO Latin-1 set, shall not be
 used unencoded. This is a recommendation for trouble-free
 interchange, and as indicated below, the encoded set may be extended
 or reduced.
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Encoding reserved characters
 When a system uses a local addressing scheme, it is useful to provide
 a mapping from local addresses into URIs so that references to
 objects within the addressing scheme may be referred to globally, and
 possibly accessed through gateway servers.
 For a new naming scheme, any mapping scheme may be defined provided
 it is unambiguous, reversible, and provides valid URIs. It is
 recommended that where hierarchical aspects to the local naming
 scheme exist, they be mapped onto the hierarchical URL path syntax in
 order to allow the partial form to be used.
 It is also recommended that the conventional scheme below be used in
 all cases except for any scheme which encodes binary data as opposed
 to text, in which case a more compact encoding such as pure
 hexadecimal or base 64 might be more appropriate. For example, the
 conventional URI encoding method is used for mapping WAIS, FTP,
 Prospero and Gopher addresses in the URI specification.
 CONVENTIONAL URI ENCODING SCHEME
 Where the local naming scheme uses ASCII characters which are not
 allowed in the URI, these may be represented in the URL by a
 percent sign "%" immediately followed by two hexadecimal digits
 (0-9, A-F) giving the ISO Latin 1 code for that character.
 Character codes other than those allowed by the syntax shall not
 be used unencoded in a URI.
 REDUCED OR INCREASED SAFE CHARACTER SETS
 The same encoding method may be used for encoding characters whose
 use, although technically allowed in a URI, would be unwise due to
 problems of corruption by imperfect gateways or misrepresentation
 due to the use of variant character sets, or which would simply be
 awkward in a given environment. Because a % sign always indicates
 an encoded character, a URI may be made "safer" simply by encoding
 any characters considered unsafe, while leaving already encoded
 characters still encoded. Similarly, in cases where a larger set
 of characters is acceptable, % signs can be selectively and
 reversibly expanded.
 Before two URIs can be compared, it is therefore necessary to
 bring them to the same encoding level.
 However, the reserved characters mentioned above have a quite
 different significance when encoded, and so may NEVER be encoded
 and unencoded in this way.
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 The percent sign intended as such must always be encoded, as its
 presence otherwise always indicates an encoding. Sequences which
 start with a percent sign but are not followed by two hexadecimal
 characters are reserved for future extension. (See Example 3.)
 Example 1
 The URIs
 http://info.cern.ch/albert/bertram/marie-claude
 and
 http://info.cern.ch/albert/bertram/marie%2Dclaude
 are identical, as the %2D encodes a hyphen character.
 Example 2
 The URIs
 http://info.cern.ch/albert/bertram/marie-claude
 and
 http://info.cern.ch/albert/bertram%2Fmarie-claude
 are NOT identical, as in the second case the encoded slash does not
 have hierarchical significance.
 Example 3
 The URIs
 fxqn:/us/va/reston/cnri/ietf/24/asdf%*.fred
 and
 news:12345667123%asdghfh@info.cern.ch
 are illegal, as all % characters imply encodings, and there is no
 decoding defined for "%*" or "%as" in this recommendation.
Partial (relative) form
 Within a object whose URI is well defined, the URI of another object
 may be given in abbreviated form, where parts of the two URIs are the
 same. This allows objects within a group to refer to each other
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 without requiring the space for a complete reference, and it
 incidentally allows the group of objects to be moved without changing
 any references. It must be emphasized that when a reference is
 passed in anything other than a well controlled context, the full
 form must always be used.
 In the World-Wide Web applications, the context URI is that of the
 document or object containing a reference. In this case partial URIs
 can be generated in virtual objects or stored in real objects,
 without the need for dramatic change if the higher-order parts of a
 hierarchical naming system are modified. Apart from terseness, this
 gives greater robustness to practical systems, by enabling
 information hiding between system components.
 The partial form relies on a property of the URI syntax that certain
 characters ("/") and certain path elements ("..", ".") have a
 significance reserved for representing a hierarchical space, and must
 be recognized as such by both clients and servers.
 A partial form can be distinguished from an absolute form in that the
 latter must have a colon and that colon must occur before any slash
 characters. Systems not requiring partial forms should not use any
 unencoded slashes in their naming schemes. If they do, absolute URIs
 will still work, but confusion may result. (See note on Gopher
 below.)
 The rules for the use of a partial name relative to the URI of the
 context are:
 If the scheme parts are different, the whole absolute URI must
 be given. Otherwise, the scheme is omitted, and:
 If the partial URI starts with a non-zero number of consecutive
 slashes, then everything from the context URI up to (but not
 including) the first occurrence of exactly the same number of
 consecutive slashes which has no greater number of consecutive
 slashes anywhere to the right of it is taken to be the same and
 so prepended to the partial URL to form the full URL. Otherwise:
 The last part of the path of the context URI (anything following
 the rightmost slash) is removed, and the given partial URI
 appended in its place, and then:
 Within the result, all occurrences of "xxx/../" or "/." are
 recursively removed, where xxx, ".." and "." are complete path
 elements.
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 Note: Trailing slashes
 If a path of the context locator ends in slash, partial URIs are
 treated differently to the URI with the same path but without a
 trailing slash. The trailing slash indicates a void segment of the
 path.
 Note: Gopher
 The gopher system does not have the concept of relative URIs, and the
 gopher community currently allows / as data characters in gopher URIs
 without escaping them to %2F. Relative forms may not in general be
 used for documents served by gopher servers. If they are used, then
 WWW software assumes, normally correctly, that in fact they do have
 hierarchical significance despite the specifications. The use of HTTP
 rather than gopher protocol is however recommended.
 Examples
 In the context of URI
 magic://a/b/c//d/e/f
 the partial URIs would expand as follows:
 g magic://a/b/c//d/e/g
 /g magic://a/g
 //g magic://g
 ../g magic://a/b/c//d/g
 g:h g:h
 and in the context of the URI
 magic://a/b/c//d/e/
 the results would be exactly the same.
Fragment-id
 This represents a part of, fragment of, or a sub-function within, an
 object. Its syntax and semantics are defined by the application
 responsible for the object, or the specification of the content type
 of the object. The only definition here is of the allowed characters
 by which it may be represented in a URL.
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 Specific syntaxes for representing fragments in text documents by
 line and character range, or in graphics by coordinates, or in
 structured documents using ladders, are suitable for standardization
 but not defined here.
 The fragment-id follows the URL of the whole object from which it is
 separated by a hash sign (#). If the fragment-id is void, the hash
 sign may be omitted: A void fragment-id with or without the hash sign
 means that the URL refers to the whole object.
 While this hook is allowed for identification of fragments, the
 question of addressing of parts of objects, or of the grouping of
 objects and relationship between continued and containing objects, is
 not addressed by this document.
 Fragment identifiers do NOT address the question of objects which are
 different versions of a "living" object, nor of expressing the
 relationships between different versions and the living object.
 There is no implication that a fragment identifier refers to anything
 which can be extracted as an object in its own right. It may, for
 example, refer to an indivisible point within an object.
Specific Schemes
 The mapping for URIs onto some existing standard and experimental
 protocols is outlined in the BNF syntax definition. Notes on
 particular protocols follow. These URIs are frequently referred to
 as URLs, though the exact definition of the term URL is still under
 discussion (March 1993). The schemes covered are:
 http Hypertext Transfer Protocol (examples)
 ftp File Transfer protocol
 gopher Gopher protocol
 mailto Electronic mail address
 news Usenet news
 telnet, rlogin and tn3270
 Reference to interactive sessions
 wais Wide Area Information Servers
 file Local file access
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 The following schemes are proposed as essential to the unification of
 the web with electronic mail, but not currently (to the author's
 knowledge) implemented:
 mid Message identifiers for electronic mail
 cid Content identifiers for MIME body part
 The schemes for X.500, network management database, and Whois++ have
 not been specified and may be the subject of further study. Schemes
 for Prospero, and restricted NNTP use are not currently implemented
 as far as the author is aware.
 The "urn" prefix is reserved for use in encoding a Uniform Resource
 Name when that has been developed by the IETF working group.
 New schemes may be registered at a later time.
HTTP
 The HTTP protocol specifies that the path is handled transparently by
 those who handle URLs, except for the servers which de-reference
 them. The path is passed by the client to the server with any
 request, but is not otherwise understood by the client.
 The host details are not passed on to the client when the URL is an
 HTTP URL which refers to the server in question. In this case the
 string sent starts with the slash which follows the host details.
 However, when an HTTP server is being used as a gateway (or "proxy")
 then the entire URI, whether HTTP or some other scheme, is passed on
 the HTTP command line. The search part, if present, is sent as part
 of the HTTP command, and may in this respect be treated as part of
 the path. No fragmentid part of a WWW URI (the hash sign and
 following) is sent with the request. Spaces and control characters
 in URLs must be escaped for transmission in HTTP, as must other
 disallowed characters.
 EXAMPLES
 These examples are not part of the specification: they are
 provided as illustations only. The URI of the "welcome" page to a
 server is conventionally
 http://www.my.work.com/
 As the rest of the URL (after the hostname an port) is opaque
 to the client, it shows great variety but the following are all
 fairly typical.
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http://www.my.uni.edu/info/matriculation/enroling.html
http://info.my.org/AboutUs/Phonebook
http://www.library.my.town.va.us/Catalogue/76523471236%2Fwen44--4.98
http://www.my.org/462F4F2D4241522A314159265358979323846
 A URL for a server on a different port to 80 looks like
 http://info.cern.ch:8000/imaginary/test
 A reference to a particular part of a document may, including the
 fragment identifier, look like
 http://www.myu.edu/org/admin/people#andy
 in which case the string "#andy" is not sent to the server, but is
 retained by the client and used when the whole object had been
 retrieved.
 A search on a text database might look like
 http://info.my.org/AboutUs/Index/Phonebook?dobbins
 and on another database
 http://info.cern.ch/RDB/EMP?*%20where%20name%%3Ddobbins
 In all cases the client passes the path string to the server
 uninterpreted, and for the client to deduce anything from
FTP
 The ftp: prefix indicates that the FTP protocol is used, as defined
 in STD 9, RFC 959 or any successor. The port number, if present,
 gives the port of the FTP server if not the FTP default.
 User name and password
 The syntax allows for the inclusion of a user name and even a
 password for those systems which do not use the anonymous FTP
 convention. The default, however, if no user or password is
 supplied, will be to use that convention, viz. that the user name
 is "anonymous" and the password the user's Internet-style mail
 address.
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 Where possible, this mail address should correspond to a usable
 mail address for the user, and preferably give a DNS host name
 which resolves to the IP address of the client. Note that servers
 currently vary in their treatment of the anonymous password.
 Path
 The FTP protocol allows for a sequence of CWD commands (change
 working directory) and a TYPE command prior to service commands
 such as RETR (retrieve) or NLIST (etc.) which actually access a
 file.
 The arguments of any CWD commands are successive segment parts of
 the URL delimited by slash, and the final segment is suitable as
 the filename argument to the RETR command for retrieval or the
 directory argument to NLIST.
 For some file systems (Unix in particular), the "/" used to denote
 the hierarchical structure of the URL corresponds to the delimiter
 used to construct a file name hierarchy, and thus, the filename
 will look the same as the URL path. This does NOT mean that the
 URL is a Unix filename.
 Note: Retrieving subsequent URLs from the same host
 There is no common hierarchical model to the FTP protocol, so if a
 directory change command has been given, it is impossible in
 general to deduce what sequence should be given to navigate to
 another directory for a second retrieval, if the paths are
 different. The only reliable algorithm is to disconnect and
 reestablish the control connection.
 Data type
 The data content type of a file can only, in the general FTP case,
 be deduced from the name, normally the suffix of the name. This
 is not standardized. An alternative is for it to be transferred in
 information outside the URL. A suitable FTP transfer type (for
 example binary "I" or text "A") must in turn be deduced from the
 data content type. It is recommended that conventions for
 suffixes of public archives be established, but it is outside the
 scope of this standard.
 An FTP URL may optionally specify the FTP data transfer type by
 which an object is to be retrieved. Most of the methods correspond
 to the FTP "Data Types" ASCII and IMAGE for the retrieval of a
 document, as specified in FTP by the TYPE command. One method
 indicates directory access.
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 The data type is specified by a suffix to the URL. Possible
 suffixes are:
 ;type = <type-code> Use FTP type as given to perform data
 transfer.
 / Use FTP directory list commands to read
 directory
 The type code is in the format defined in RFC 959 except that THE
 SPACE IS OMITTED FROM THE URL.
 Transfer Mode
 Stream Mode is always used.
Gopher
 The gopher URL specifies the host and optionally the port to which
 the client should connect. This is followed by a slash and a single
 gopher type code. This type code is used by the client to determine
 how to interpret the server's reply and is is not for sending to
 server. The command string to be sent to the server immediately
 follows the gopher type character. It consists of the gopher
 selector string followed by any "Gopher plus" syntax, but always
 omitting the trainling CR LF pair.
 When the gopher command string contains characters (such a embedded
 CR LF and HT characters) not allowed in a URL, these are encoded
 using the conventional encoding.
 Note that some gopher selector strings begin with a copy of the
 gopher type character, in which case that character will occur twice
 consecutively. Also note that the gopher selector string may be an
 empty string since this is how gopher clients refer to the top-level
 directory on a gopher server.
 If the encoded command string (with trailing CR LF stripped) would be
 void then the gopher type character may be omiited and "1" (ASCII 31
 hex) is assumed.
 Note that slash "/" in gopher selector strings may not correspond to
 a level in a hierarchical structure.
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Mailto
 This allows a URL to specify an RFC822 addr-spec mail address. Note
 that use of % , for example as used in forming a gatewayed mail
 address, requires conversion to %25 in a URL.
News
 The news locators refer to either news group names or article message
 identifiers which must conform to the rules for a Message-Id of RFC
 1036 (Horton 1987). A message identifier may be distinguished from a
 news group name by the presence of the commercial at "@" character.
 These rules imply that within an article, a reference to a news group
 or to another article will be a valid URL (in the partial form).
 A news URL may be dereferenced using NNTP (RFC 977, Kantor 1986)
 (The ARTICLE by message-id command ) or using any other protocol for
 the conveyance of usenet news articles, or by reference to a body of
 news articles already received.
 Note 1:
 Among URLs the "news" URLs are anomalous in that they are
 location-independent. They are unsuitable as URN candidates
 because the NNTP architecture relies on the expiry of articles and
 therefore a small number of articles being available at any time.
 When a news: URL is quoted, the assumption is that the reader will
 fetch the article or group from his or her local news host. News
 host names are NOT part of news URLs.
 Note 2:
 An outstanding problem is that the message identifier is
 insufficient to allow the retrieval of an expired article, as no
 algorithm exists for deriving an archive site and file name. The
 addition of the date and news group set to the article's URL would
 allow this if a directory existed of archive sites by news group.
 Suggested subject of study in conjunction with NNTP working group.
 Further extension possible may be to allow the naming of subject
 threads as addressable objects.
Telnet, rlogin, tn3270
 The use of URLs to represent interactive sessions is a convenient
 extension to their uses for objects. This allows access to
 information systems which only provide an interactive service, and no
 information server. As information within the service cannot be
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 addressed individually or, in general, automatically retrieved, this
 is a less desirable, though currently common, solution.
URN
 The "Universal Resource Name" is currently (March 1993) under
 development in the IETF. A requirements specification is in
 preparation. It currently looks as though it will be a short string
 suitable for encoding in URI syntax, for which case the "urn:" prefix
 is reserved. The URN shall be encoded precisely as defined in the
 (future) URN standard, except in that:
 If the official description of the URN syntax includes any
 constant wrapper characters, then they shall not be omitted from
 the URI encoding of the URN;
 If the URN has a hierarchical nature, then the slash delimiter
 shall be used in the URI encoding;
 If the URN has a hierarchical nature, the most significant part
 shall be encoded on the left in the URI encoding;
 Any characters with reserved meanings in the URI syntax shall be
 escape encoded
 These rules of course apply to any URI scheme. It is of course
 possible that the URN syntax will be chosen such that the URI
 encoding will be a 1-1 transcription.
 An example might be a name such as
 urn:/iana/dns/ch/cern/cn/techdoc/94/1642-3
 but the reader should refer to the latest URN drafts or
 specifications.
WAIS
 The current WAIS implementation public domain requires that a client
 know the "type" of a object prior to retrieval. This value is
 returned along with the internal object identifier in the search
 response. It has been encoded into the path part of the URL in order
 to make the URL sufficient for the retrieval of the object.
 Within the WAIS world, names do not of course need to be prefixed by
 "wais:" (by the partial form rules).
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 The wpath of a WAIS URL consists of encoded fields of the WAIS
 identifier, in the same order as inthe WAIS identifier. For each
 field, the identifier field number is the digits before the equals
 sign, and the field contents follow, encoded in the conventional
 encoding, terminated by ";".
file
 The other URI schemes (except nntp) share the property that they are
 equally valid at any geographical place.
 There is however a real practical requirement to be able to generate
 a URL for an object in a machine's local file system.
 The syntax is similar to the ftp syntax, but in this case the slash
 is used to donate boundaries between directory levels of a
 hierarchical file system is used. The "client" software converts the
 file URL into a file name in the local file name conventions. This
 allows local files to be treated just as network objects without any
 necessity to use a network server for access. This may be used for
 example for defining a user's "home" document in WWW.
 There is clearly a danger of confusion that a link made to a local
 file should be followed by someone on a different system, with
 unexpected and possibly harmful results. Therefore, the convention
 is that even a "file" URL is provided with a host part. This allows
 a client on another system to know that it cannot access the file
 system, or perhaps to use some other local mecahnism to access the
 file.
 The special value "localhost" is used in the host field to indicate
 that the filename should really be used on whatever host one is.
 This for example allows links to be made to files which are
 distribted on many machines, or to "your unix local password file"
 subject of course to consistency across the users of the data.
 A void host field is equivalent to "localhost".
Message-Id
 For systems which include information transferred using mail
 protocols, there is a need to be able to make cross-references
 between different items of information, even though, by the nature of
 mail, those items are only available to a restricted set of people.
 Two schemes are defined. The first, "mid:", refers to the STD 11,
 RFC 822 Message-Id of a mail message. This Identifier is already
 used in RFC 822 in for example the References and In-Reply-to field.
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 The rest of the URL after the "mid:" is the RFC822 msg-id with the
 constant <> wrapper removed, leaving an identifier whose format in
 fact happens to be the same as addr-spec format for mailboxes (though
 the semantics are different).
 The use of a "mid" URL implies access to a body of mail already
 received. If a message has been distributed using NNTP or other
 usenet protocols over the news system, then the "news:" form should
 be used.
Content-Id
 The second scheme, "cid:", is similar to "mid:", but makes reference
 to a body part of a MIME message by the value of its content-id
 field. This allows, for example, a master document being the first
 part of a multipart/related MIME message to refer to component parts
 which are transferred in the same message.
 Note
 Beware however, that content identifiers are only required to be
 unique within the context of a given MIME message, and so the cid:
 URL is only meaningful with the context the same MIME message. For
 a reference outside the message, it would need to be appended to
 the message-id of the whole message. A syntax for this has not
 been defined.
Schemes for Further Study
 X500
 The mapping of x500 names onto URLs is not defined here. A
 decision is required as to whether "distinguished names" or "user
 friendly names" (ufn), or both, should be allowed. If any
 punctuation conversions are needed from the adopted x500
 representation (such as the use of slashes between parts of a ufn)
 they must be defined. This is a subject for study.
 WHOIS
 This prefix describes the access using the "whois++" scheme in the
 process of definition. The host name part is the same as for
 other IP based schemes. The path part can be either a whois
 handle for a whois object, or it can be a valid whois query
 string. This is a subject for further study.
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 NETWORK MANAGEMENT DATABASE
 This is a subject for study.
 NNTP
 This is an alternative form of reference for news articles,
 specifically to be used with NNTP servers, and particularly those
 incomplete server implementations which do not allow retrieval by
 message identifier. In all other cases the "news" scheme should
 be used.
 The news server name, newsgroup name, and index number of an
 article within the newsgroup on that particular server are given.
 The NNTP protocol must be used.
 Note 1.
 This form of URL is not of global accessability, as typically
 NNTP servers only allow access from local clients. Note that
 the article numbers within groups vary from server to server.
 This form or URL should not be quoted outside this local area.
 It should not be used within news articles for wider
 circulation than the one server. This is a local identifier
 for a resource which is often available globally, and so is not
 recommended except in the case in which incomplete NNTP
 implementations on the local server force its adoption.
Prospero
 The Prospero (Neuman, 1991) directory service is used to resolve the
 URL yielding an access method for the object (which can then itself
 be represented as a URL if translated). The host part contains a
 host name or internet address. The port part is optional.
 The path part contains a host specific object name and an optional
 version number. If present, the version number is separated from the
 host specific object name by the characters "%00" (percent zero
 zero), this being an escaped string terminator (null). External
 Prospero links are represented as URLs of the underlying access
 method and are not represented as Prospero URLs.
Registration of naming schemes
 A new naming scheme may be introduced by defining a mapping onto a
 conforming URL syntax, using a new prefix. Experimental prefixes may
 be used by mutual agreement between parties, and must start with the
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 characters "x-". The scheme name "urn:" is reserved for the work in
 progress on a scheme for more persistent names.
 It is proposed that the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
 perform the function of registration of new schemes. Any submission
 of a new URI scheme must include a definition of an algorithm for the
 retrieval of any object within that scheme. The algorithm must take
 the URI and produce either a set of URL(s) which will lead to the
 desired object, or the object itself, in a well-defined or
 determinable format.
 It is recommended that those proposing a new scheme demonstrate its
 utility and operability by the provision of a gateway which will
 provide images of objects in the new scheme for clients using an
 existing protocol. If the new scheme is not a locator scheme, then
 the properties of names in the new space should be clearly defined.
 It is likewise recommended that, where a protocol allows for
 retrieval by URL, that the client software have provision for being
 configured to use specific gateway locators for indirect access
 through new naming schemes.
BNF of Generic URI Syntax
 This is a BNF-like description of the URI syntax. at the level at
 which specific schemes are not considered.
 A vertical line "|" indicates alternatives, and [brackets] indicate
 optional parts. Spaces are represented by the word "space", and the
 vertical line character by "vline". Single letters stand for single
 letters. All words of more than one letter below are entities
 described somewhere in this description.
 The "generic" production gives a higher level parsing of the same
 URIs as the other productions. The "national" and "punctuation"
 characters do not appear in any productions and therefore may not
 appear in URIs.
 fragmentaddress uri [ # fragmentid ]
 uri scheme : path [ ? search ]
 scheme ialpha
 path void | xpalphas [ / path ]
 search xalphas [ + search ]
 fragmentid xalphas
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 xalpha alpha | digit | safe | extra | escape
 xalphas xalpha [ xalphas ]
 xpalpha xalpha | +
 xpalphas xpalpha [ xpalpha ]
 ialpha alpha [ xalphas ]
 alpha a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k |
 l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v |
 w | x | y | z | A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
 H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R |
 S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
 digit 0 |1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
 safe $ | - | _ | @ | . | &
 extra ! | * | " | ' | ( | ) | ,
 reserved = | ; | / | # | ? | : | space
 escape % hex hex
 hex digit | a | b | c | d | e | f | A | B | C |
 D | E | F
 national { | } | vline | [ | ] | \ | ^ | ~
 punctuation < | >
 void
 (end of URI BNF)
BNF for specific URL schemes
 This is a BNF-like description of the Uniform Resource Locator
 syntax. A vertical line "|" indicates alternatives, and [brackets]
 indicate optional parts. Spaces are represented by the word "space",
 and the vertical line character by "vline". Single letters stand for
 single letters. All words of more than one letter below are entities
 described somewhere in this description.
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 The current IETF URI Working Group preference is for the prefixedurl
 production. (Nov 1993. July 93: url).
 The "national" and "punctuation" characters do not appear in any
 productions and therefore may not appear in URLs.
 The "afsaddress" is left in as historical note, but is not a url
 production.
 prefixedurl u r l : url
 url httpaddress | ftpaddress | newsaddress |
 nntpaddress | prosperoaddress | telnetaddress
 | gopheraddress | waisaddress |
 mailtoaddress | midaddress | cidaddress
 scheme ialpha
 httpaddress h t t p : / / hostport [ / path ] [ ?
 search ]
 ftpaddress f t p : / / login / path [ ftptype ]
 afsaddress a f s : / / cellname / path
 newsaddress n e w s : groupart
 nntpaddress n n t p : group / digits
 midaddress m i d : addr-spec
 cidaddress c i d : content-identifier
 mailtoaddress m a i l t o : xalphas @ hostname
 waisaddress waisindex | waisdoc
 waisindex w a i s : / / hostport / database [ ? search
 ]
 waisdoc w a i s : / / hostport / database / wtype /
 wpath
 wpath digits = path ; [ wpath ]
 groupart * | group | article
 group ialpha [ . group ]
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 article xalphas @ host
 database xalphas
 wtype xalphas
 prosperoaddress prosperolink
 prosperolink p r o s p e r o : / / hostport / hsoname [ %
 0 0 version [ attributes ] ]
 hsoname path
 version digits
 attributes attribute [ attributes ]
 attribute alphanums
 telnetaddress t e l n e t : / / login
 gopheraddress g o p h e r : / / hostport [/ gtype [
 gcommand ] ]
 login [ user [ : password ] @ ] hostport
 hostport host [ : port ]
 host hostname | hostnumber
 ftptype A formcode | E formcode | I | L digits
 formcode N | T | C
 cellname hostname
 hostname ialpha [ . hostname ]
 hostnumber digits . digits . digits . digits
 port digits
 gcommand path
 path void | segment [ / path ]
 segment xpalphas
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 search xalphas [ + search ]
 user alphanum2 [ user ]
 password alphanum2 [ password ]
 fragmentid xalphas
 gtype xalpha
 alphanum2 alpha | digit | - | _ | . | +
 xalpha alpha | digit | safe | extra | escape
 xalphas xalpha [ xalphas ]
 xpalpha xalpha | +
 xpalphas xpalpha [ xpalphas ]
 ialpha alpha [ xalphas ]
 alpha a | b | c | d | e | f | g | h | i | j | k |
 l | m | n | o | p | q | r | s | t | u | v |
 w | x | y | z | A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
 H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R |
 S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
 digit 0 |1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9
 safe $ | - | _ | @ | . | & | + | -
 extra ! | * | " | ' | ( | ) | ,
 reserved = | ; | / | # | ? | : | space
 escape % hex hex
 hex digit | a | b | c | d | e | f | A | B | C |
 D | E | F
 national { | } | vline | [ | ] | \ | ^ | ~
 punctuation < | >
 digits digit [ digits ]
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 alphanum alpha | digit
 alphanums alphanum [ alphanums ]
 void
 (end of URL BNF)
References
 Alberti, R., et.al., "Notes on the Internet Gopher Protocol",
 University of Minnesota, December 1991,
 <ftp://boombox.micro.umn.edu/pub/gopher/ gopher_protocol>. See also
 <gopher://gopher.micro.umn.edu/00/Information About Gopher/About
 Gopher>
 Berners-Lee, T., "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)", CERN, December
 1991, as updated from time to time,
 <ftp://info.cern.ch/pub/www/doc/http-spec.txt>
 Crocker, D., "Standard for ARPA Internet Text Messages" STD 11, RFC
 822, UDel, August 1982.
 Davis, F, et al., "WAIS Interface Protocol: Prototype Functional
 Specification", Thinking Machines Corporation, April 23, 1990.
 <ftp://quake.think.com/pub/wa is/doc/protspec.txt>
 International Standards Organization, Information and Documentation -
 Search and Retrieve Application Protocol Specification for open
 Systems Interconnection, ISO-10163.
 Horton, M., and R. Adams, "Standard for Interchange of USENET
 messages", RFC 1036, AT&T Bell Laboratories, Center for Seismic
 Studies, December 1987.
 Huitema, C., "Naming: strategies and techniques", Computer Networks
 and ISDN Systems 23 (1991) 107-110.
 Kahle, B., "Document Identifiers, or International Standard Book
 Numbers for the Electronic Age", <ftp:
 //quake.think.com/pub/wais/doc/doc-ids.txt>
 Kantor, B., and P. Lapsley, Kantor, B., and P. Lapsley, "Network News
 Transfer Protocol", RFC 977, UC San Diego & UC Berkeley, February
 1986. <ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc977.txt>
 Kunze, J., "Requirements for URLs", Work in Progress.
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RFC 1630 URIs in WWW June 1994
 Lynch, C., Coalition for Networked Information: "Workshop on ID and
 Reference Structures for Networked Information", November 1991. See
 <wais://quake.think.com/wais-discussion-archives?lynch>
 Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities", STD 13, RFC
 1034, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November 1987,
 <ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1034.txt>
 Neuman, B. Clifford, "Prospero: A Tool for Organizing Internet
 Resources", Electronic Networking: Research, Applications and
 Policy, Vol 1 No 2, Meckler Westport CT USA, 1992. See also
 <ftp://prospero.isi.edu/pub/prospero/oir.ps>
 Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer Protocol (FTP)", STD 9,
 RFC 959, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1985.
 <ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc959.txt>
 Sollins, K., and L. Masinter, "Requiremnets for URNs", Work in
 Progress.
 Yeong, W., "Towards Networked Information Retrieval", Technical report
 91-06-25-01, June 1991, Performance Systems International, Inc.
 <ftp://uu.psi.com/wp/nir.txt>
 Yeong, W., "Representing Public Archives in the Directory", Work in
 Progress, November 1991, now expired.
Security Considerations
 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
Author's Address
 Tim Berners-Lee
 World-Wide Web project
 CERN
 1211 Geneva 23,
 Switzerland
 Phone: +41 (22)767 3755
 Fax: +41 (22)767 7155
 EMail: timbl@info.cern.ch
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