One document matched: draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-05.txt-38491.txt
Differences from 05.txt-04.txt
Internet Printing Protocol Working Group Robert Herriot
INTERNET DRAFT Consultant
<draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-05.txt> Ira McDonald
Updates: RFC 2910 High North Inc
[Target Category: Standards Track] 20 May 2002
Expires 20 November 2002
Internet Printing Protocol/1.1:
IPP URL Scheme
<draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-05.txt>
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working
documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas,
and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
To view the list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories, see
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
Abstract
This memo defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme.
This memo updates IPP/1.1: Encoding and Transport (RFC 2910), by
expanding and clarifying Section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' of RFC 2910. An
"ipp" URL is used to specify the network location of a print service
that supports the IPP Protocol (RFC 2910), or of a network resource
(for example, a print job) managed by such a print service.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction ............................................... 3
2. Terminology ................................................ 5
2.1. Conformance Terminology ................................ 5
2.2. Model Terminology ...................................... 5
3. IPP Model for Printers and Jobs ............................ 6
4. IPP URL Scheme ............................................. 7
4.1. IPP URL Scheme Applicability ........................... 7
4.2. IPP URL Scheme Associated Port ......................... 7
4.3. IPP URL Scheme Associated MIME Type .................... 7
4.4. IPP URL Scheme Character Encoding ...................... 8
4.5. IPP URL Scheme Syntax .................................. 8
4.6. IPP URL Examples ....................................... 8
4.6.1. IPP Printer URL Examples ........................... 9
4.6.2. IPP Job URL Examples ............................... 9
4.7. IPP URL Comparisons .................................... 10
5. Conformance Requirements ................................... 11
5.1. IPP Client Conformance Requirements .................... 11
5.2. IPP Printer Conformance Requirements ................... 11
6. IANA Considerations ........................................ 13
7. Internationalization Considerations ........................ 13
8. Security Considerations .................................... 13
9. Normative References ....................................... 15
10. Informative References .................................... 15
11. Acknowledgments ........................................... 16
12. Authors' Addresses ........................................ 16
13. Full Copyright Statement .................................. 17
14. Appendix A - Registration of "ipp" URL Scheme ............. 17
15. Appendix X - Change History ............................... 20
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1. Introduction
This memo conforms to all of the requirements in Registration
Procedures for URL Scheme Names [RFC2717]. This memo also follows
all of the recommendations in Guidelines for new URL Schemes
[RFC2718].
See section 1 'Introduction' of [RFC2911] and section 1
'Introduction' of [RFC3196] for overview information about IPP. See
section 10 'Description of the Base IPP Documents of [RFC3196] for a
full description of the IPP document set.
This memo updates IPP/1.1: Encoding and Transport (RFC 2910), by
expanding and clarifying Section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' of RFC 2910, but
does not define any new parameters or other new extensions to the
syntax of IPP URLs.
The IPP URL scheme defined in this document is based on the ABNF for
the HTTP URL scheme defined in HTTP [RFC2616], which in turn is
derived from the URI Generic Syntax [RFC2396] and further updated for
IPv6 by [RFC2732]. An IPP URL is transformed into an HTTP URL
according to the rules specified in section 5 of IPP Protocol
[RFC2910].
This document defines IPP URL scheme applicability, associated port
(631), associated MIME type ("application/ipp"), character encoding,
and syntax.
This document is laid out as follows:
- Section 2 defines the terminology used throughout the document.
- Section 3 supplies references to the IPP Printer and IPP Job object
model defined in IPP Model [RFC2911].
- Section 4 specifies the IPP URL scheme.
- Section 5 specifies the conformance requirements for IPP Clients
and IPP Printers that claim conformance to this document.
- Sections 6, 7, and 8 specify IANA, internationalization, and
security considerations.
- Sections 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13 specify normative references,
informative references, acknowledgements, authors' addresses, and
full IETF copyright statement.
- Section 14 (Appendix A) is a completed registration template for
the IPP URL Scheme (see section 6.0 of [RFC2717]).
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[Ed Note: Section 15, which should be removed before publication as
an RFC, contains a complete change history of this IPP URL document.]
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2. Terminology
This specification document uses the terminology defined in this
section.
2.1. Conformance Terminology
The uppercase terms "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT" "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in
this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. These
terms are used to specify conformance requirements for all
implementations (both print clients and print services) of this
specification.
2.2. Model Terminology
See section 12.2 'Model Terminology' in IPP Model [RFC2911].
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3. IPP Model for Printers and Jobs
See section 2 'IPP Objects', section 2.1 'Printer Object', and
section 2.2 'Job Object' in [RFC2911] for a full description of the
IPP object model and terminology.
In this document, "IPP Client" means the software (on some hardware
platform) that submits, monitors, and/or manages print jobs via the
IPP Protocol [RFC2910] to a print spooler, print gateway, or physical
printing device.
In this document, "IPP Printer object" means the software (on some
hardware platform) that receives print jobs and/or printer/job
operations via the IPP Protocol [RFC2910] from an "IPP Client".
In this document, "IPP Printer" is a synonym for "IPP Printer
object".
In this document, "IPP Job object" means the set of attributes and
documents for one print job instantiated on an "IPP Printer".
In this document, "IPP Job" is a synonym for "IPP Job object".
In this document, "IPP URL" means a URL with the "ipp" scheme.
Note: In this document, "IPP URL" is a synonym for "ipp-URL" (in
section 4 'IPP URL Scheme' of this document) and "ipp-URL" (in
section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' of [RFC2910]).
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4. IPP URL Scheme
4.1. IPP URL Scheme Applicability
The "ipp" URL scheme MUST only be used to specify absolute URLs
(relative IPP URLs are not allowed) for IPP print services and their
associated network resources. The "ipp" URL scheme MUST only be used
to specify the use of the abstract protocol defined in IPP Model
[RFC2911] over an HTTP [RFC2616] transport, as defined in IPP
Protocol [RFC2910]. Any other transport binding for the abstract
protocol defined in IPP Model [RFC2911] would require a different URL
scheme.
The "ipp" URL scheme allows an IPP client to choose an appropriate
IPP print service (for example, from a directory). The IPP client
can establish an HTTP connection to the specified IPP print service.
The IPP client can send IPP protocol requests (for example, a
'Print-Job' request) and receive IPP protocol responses over that
HTTP connection.
4.2. IPP URL Scheme Associated Port
All IPP URLs which do NOT explicitly specify a port MUST be resolved
to IANA-assigned well-known port 631, as registered in
[IANA-PORTREG].
See: IANA Port Numbers Registry [IANA-PORTREG].
See: IPP Protocol [RFC2910].
4.3. IPP URL Scheme Associated MIME Type
All IPP URLs MUST be used to specify network print services which
support the "application/ipp" MIME media type as registered in
[IANA-MIMEREG] for IPP protocol requests and responses.
See: IANA MIME Media Types Registry [IANA-MIMEREG].
See: IPP Protocol [RFC2910].
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4.4. IPP URL Scheme Character Encoding
IPP URLs MUST use [RFC2396] encoding, as do their equivalent HTTP
URLs. Characters other than those in the "reserved" and "unsafe"
sets [RFC2396] are equivalent to their ""%" HEX HEX" encoding.
4.5. IPP URL Scheme Syntax
The abstract protocol defined in IPP Model [RFC2911] places a limit
of 1023 octets (NOT characters) on the length of a URI (see section
4.1.5 'uri' in [RFC2911]).
Note: IPP Printers ought to be cautious about depending on URI
lengths above 255 bytes, because some older client implementations
might not properly support these lengths.
IPP URLs MUST be represented in absolute form. Absolute URLs MUST
always begin with a scheme name followed by a colon. For definitive
information on URL syntax and semantics, see "Uniform Resource
Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax and Semantics" [RFC2396]. This
specification adopts the definitions of "host", "port", "abs_path",
and "query" from [RFC2396], as updated for IPv6 by [RFC2732].
The IPP URL scheme syntax in ABNF is as follows:
ipp-URL = "ipp:" "//" host [ ":" port ] [ abs_path [ "?" query ]]
If the port is empty or not given, port 631 is assumed. The
semantics are that the identified resource (see section 5.1.2 of
[RFC2616]) is located at the IPP print service listening for HTTP
connections on that port of that host, and the Request-URI for the
identified resource is 'abs_path'.
If the 'abs_path' is not present in the URL, it MUST be given as "/"
when used as a Request-URI for a resource (see section 5.1.2 of
[RFC2616]).
4.6. IPP URL Examples
Note: Literal IPv4 or IPv6 addresses SHOULD NOT be used in IPP URLs.
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4.6.1. IPP Printer URL Examples
The following are examples of well-formed IPP URLs for IPP Printers
(for example, to be used as protocol elements in 'printer-uri'
operation attributes of 'Print-Job' request messages):
ipp://abc.com
ipp://abc.com/printer
ipp://abc.com/printer/tiger
ipp://abc.com/printer/fox
ipp://abc.com/printer/tiger/bob
ipp://abc.com/printer/tiger/ira
Each of the above URLs are well-formed URLs for IPP Printers and each
would reference a logically different IPP Printer, even though some
of those IPP Printers might share the same host system. The 'bob' or
'ira' last path components might represent two different physical
printer devices, while 'tiger' might represent some grouping of IPP
Printers (for example, a load-balancing spooler). Or the 'bob' and
'ira' last path components might represent separate human recipients
on the same physical printer device (for example, a physical printer
supporting two job queues). In either case, both 'bob' and 'ira'
would behave as different and independent IPP Printers.
The following are examples of well-formed IPP URLs for IPP Printers
with (optional) ports and paths:
ipp://abc.com
ipp://abc.com/~smith/printer
ipp://abc.com:631/~smith/printer
The first and second IPP URLs above MUST be resolved to port 631
(IANA assigned well-known port for IPP). The second and third IPP
URLs above are equivalent (see section 4.7 below).
4.6.2. IPP Job URL Examples
The following are examples of well-formed IPP URLs for IPP Jobs (for
example, to be used as protocol elements in 'job-uri' attributes of
'Print-Job' response messages):
ipp://abc.com/printer/123
ipp://abc.com/printer/tiger/job123
IPP Job URLs are valid and meaningful only until Job completion and
possibly an implementation defined optional period of persistence
after Job completion (see IPP Model [RFC2911]).
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Ambiguously, section 4.3.1 'job-uri' of IPP Model [RFC2911] states
that:
"the precise format of a Job URI is implementation dependent."
Thus, the relationship between the value of the "printer-uri"
operation attribute used in a 'Print-Job' request and the value of
the "job-uri" attribute returned in the corresponding 'Print-Job'
response is implementation dependent. Also, section 4.3.3
'job-printer-uri' of IPP Model [RFC2911] states that the
'job-printer-uri' attribute of a Job object:
"permits a client to identify the Printer object that created this
Job object when only the Job object's URI is available to the
client."
However, the above statement is false, because the transform from an
IPP Job URL to the corresponding IPP Printer URL is unspecified in
either IPP Model [RFC2911] or IPP Protocol [RFC2910].
IPP Printers that conform to this specification SHOULD only generate
IPP Job URLs (for example, in the "job-uri" attribute in a
'Print-Job' response) by appending exactly one path component to the
corresponding IPP Printer URL (for interoperability).
4.7. IPP URL Comparisons
When comparing two IPP URLs to decide if they match or not, an IPP
Client MUST use the same rules as those defined for HTTP URI
comparisons in [RFC2616], with the sole following exception:
- A port that is empty or not given MUST be treated as equivalent to
the well-known port for that IPP URL (port 631);
See: Section 3.2.3 'URI Comparison' in [RFC2616].
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5. Conformance Requirements
5.1. IPP Client Conformance Requirements
IPP Clients that conform to this specification:
a) MUST only send IPP protocol connections to the port specified in
each given IPP URL (if present) or otherwise to IANA assigned
well-known port 631;
b) MUST only send IPP URLs used as protocol elements in outgoing IPP
protocol request messages (for example, in the "printer-uri"
operation attribute in a 'Print-Job' request) that conform to the
ABNF specified in section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' of this
document;
c) MUST only convert IPP URLs to their corresponding HTTP URL forms
according to the rules in section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in [RFC2910].
5.2. IPP Printer Conformance Requirements
IPP Printers that conform to this specification:
a) MUST listen for incoming IPP protocol connections on IANA-assigned
well-known port 631, unless explicitly configured by system
administrators or site policies;
b) SHOULD NOT listen for incoming IPP protocol connections on any
other port, unless explicitly configured by system administrators
or site policies;
c) SHOULD only accept IPP URLs used as protocol elements in incoming
IPP protocol request messages (for example, in the "printer-uri"
operation attribute in a 'Print-Job' request) that conform to the
ABNF specified in section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' of this
document;
d) SHOULD only send IPP URLs used as protocol elements in outgoing
IPP protocol response messages (for example, in the "job-uri"
attribute in a 'Print-Job' response) that conform to the ABNF
specified in section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' of this document;
e) SHOULD only generate IPP Job URLs (for example, in the "job-uri"
attribute in a 'Print-Job' response) by appending exactly one path
component to the corresponding IPP Printer URL (for
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interoperability);
f) SHOULD NOT use literal IPv6 or IPv4 addresses in configured or
locally generated IPP URLs.
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6. IANA Considerations
This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional
IANA considerations, beyond those described in [RFC2910] and
[RFC2911].
See: Section 6 'IANA Considerations' in [RFC2910]
See: Section 6 'IANA Considerations' in [RFC2911].
7. Internationalization Considerations
This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional
internationalization considerations, beyond those described in
[RFC2910] and [RFC2911].
See: Section 7 'Internationalization Considerations' in [RFC2910].
See: Section 7 'Internationalization Considerations' in [RFC2911].
8. Security Considerations
This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional
security considerations, beyond those described in [RFC2910] and
[RFC2911], except the following:
a) An IPP URL might be faked to point to a rogue IPP print service,
thus collecting confidential document contents from IPP clients.
Server authentication mechanisms and security mechanisms specified
in the IPP Protocol [RFC2910] are sufficient to address this
threat.
b) An IPP URL might be used to access an IPP print service by an
unauthorized IPP client. Client authentication mechanisms and
security mechanisms specified in the IPP Protocol [RFC2910] are
sufficient to address this threat.
c) An IPP URL might be used to access an IPP print service at a print
protocol application layer gateway (for example, an IPP to LPD
gateway [RFC2569]) causing silent compromise of IPP security
mechanisms. There is no practical defense against this threat by
a client system. System administrators should avoid such
compromising configurations.
d) An IPP URL does not have parameters to specify the required client
authentication mechanism (for example, 'certificate' as defined in
section 4.4.2 'uri-authentication-supported' of IPP Model
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[RFC2911]) and required security mechanism (for example, 'tls' as
defined in section 4.4.3 'uri-security-supported' of IPP Model
[RFC2911]). Service discovery or directory protocols might be
used to discover the required client authentication and security
mechanisms associated with given IPP URLs.
Historical Note: During the development of this document,
consideration was given to the addition of standard IPP URL
parameters for the client authentication and security mechanisms.
However, based on a strong IETF IPP Working Group concensus, no
parameters were added to the "ipp" URL scheme as originally defined
in IPP Protocol [RFC2910] in September 2000, for reasons of backwards
compatibility with the many currently shipping implementations of
IPP/1.1.
See: Section 8 'Security Considerations' in [RFC2910].
See: Section 8 'Security Considerations' in [RFC2911].
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9. Normative References
[RFC2234] D. Crocker, P. Overell. Augmented BNF for Syntax
Specifications: ABNF, RFC 2234, November 1997.
[RFC2396] T. Berners-Lee, R. Fielding, L. Masinter. Uniform Resource
Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax, RFC 2396, August 1998.
[RFC2616] R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J. Mogul, H. Frystyk, L. Masinter,
P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee. Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1,
RFC 2616, June 1999.
[RFC2732] R. Hinden,B. Carpenter, L. Masinter. Format for Literal
IPv6 Addresses in URL's, RFC 2732, December 1999.
[RFC2910] R. Herriot, S. Butler, P. Moore, R. Turner, J. Wenn.
IPP/1.1 Encoding and Transport [IPP Protocol], RFC 2910, September
2000.
[RFC2911] T. Hastings, R. Herriot, R. deBry, S. Isaacson, P. Powell.
IPP/1.1 Model and Semantics [IPP Model], RFC 2911, September 2000.
[US-ASCII] Coded Character Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code for
Information Interchange, ANSI X3.4-1986.
10. Informative References
See: Section 10 'References' in [RFC2910].
[IANA-MIMEREG] IANA MIME Media Types Registry.
ftp://ftp.iana.org/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/...
[IANA-PORTREG] IANA Port Numbers Registry.
ftp://ftp.iana.org/in-notes/iana/assignments/port-numbers
[RFC2569] R. Herriot, T. Hastings, N. Jacobs, J. Martin. Mapping
between LPD and IPP Protocols, RFC 2569, April 1999.
[RFC2717] R. Petke, I. King. Registration Procedures for URL Scheme
Names, RFC 2717, November 1999.
[RFC2718] L. Masinter, H. Alvestrand, D. Zigmond, R. Petke.
Guidelines for new URL Schemes, RFC 2718, November 1999.
[RFC3196] T. Hastings, C. Manros, P. Zehler, C. Kugler, H. Holst.
Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementor's Guide, RFC 3196,
November 2001.
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11. Acknowledgments
This document is a product of the Internet Printing Protocol Working
Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
Thanks to Pat Fleming (IBM), Tom Hastings (Xerox), Harry Lewis (IBM),
Hugo Parra (Novell), Don Wright (Lexmark), and all the members of the
IETF IPP WG.
Section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in IPP Protocol [RFC2910] was the primary
input to this IPP URL Scheme specification.
12. Authors' Addresses
Robert Herriot
Consultant
706 Colorado Ave
Palo Alto, CA 94303
Phone: +1 650-327-4466
Fax: +1 650-327-4466
Email: bob@herriot.com
Ira McDonald
High North Inc
221 Ridge Ave
Grand Marais, MI 49839
Phone: +1 906-494-2434
Email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com
Usage questions and comments on this IPP URL Scheme should be sent
directly to the editors at their above addresses (and to the IPP
mailing list, if you are a subscriber - see below).
IPP Web Page: http://www.pwg.org/ipp/
IPP Mailing List: ipp@pwg.org
To subscribe to the IPP mailing list, send the following email:
1) send it to majordomo@pwg.org
2) leave the subject line blank
3) put the following two lines in the message body:
subscribe ipp
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end
Implementers of this specification are encouraged to join the IPP
Mailing List in order to participate in any discussions of
clarification issues and comments. In order to reduce spam the
mailing list rejects mail from non-subscribers, so you must subscribe
to the mailing list in order to send a question or comment to the IPP
mailing list.
13. Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002). All Rights Reserved.
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
14. Appendix A - Registration of "ipp" URL Scheme
Note: The following registration obsoletes section 5 'IPP URL
Scheme' of IPP Protocol [RFC2911].
URL Scheme Name: ipp
URL Scheme Syntax:
ipp-URL = "ipp:" "//" host [ ":" port ] [ abs_path [ "?" query ]]
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Character Encoding Considerations:
IPP URLs MUST use [RFC2396] encoding, as do their equivalent HTTP
URLs. Characters other than those in the "reserved" and "unsafe"
sets [RFC2396] are equivalent to their ""%" HEX HEX" encoding.
Intended Usage:
The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON.
An "ipp" URL is used to specify the network location of a print
service that supports the IPP Protocol [RFC2910], or of a network
resource (for example, a print job) managed by such a print
service. An IPP client can choose to establish an HTTP connection
to the specified print service for transmission of IPP protocol
requests (for example, IPP print job submission requests).
Applications or Protocols which use this URL scheme:
See: Section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in IPP Protocol [RFC2910].
Interoperability Considerations:
See: Section 9 'Interoperability with IPP/1.0 Implementations' in
IPP Protocol [RFC2910].
Security Considerations:
See: Section 8 'Security Considerations' in IPP Protocol
[RFC2910].
Relevant Publications:
[RFC2910] R. Herriot, S. Butler, P. Moore, R. Turner, J. Wenn.
IPP/1.1 Encoding and Transport [IPP Protocol], RFC 2910, September
2000.
[RFC2616] R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J. Mogul, H. Frystyk,
L. Masinter, P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee. Hypertext Transfer
Protocol -- HTTP/1.1, RFC 2616, June 1999.
[RFCnnnn] R. Herriot, I. McDonald. IPP/1.1: IPP URL Scheme, RFC
nnnn, mmmm yyyy.
[Ed Note: The above should be replaced with the correct RFC
number and date when this document is published as an RFC.]
Person & email address to contact for further information:
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Robert Herriot
Consultant
706 Colorado Ave
Palo Alto, CA 94303
Phone: +1 650-327-4466
Fax: +1 650-327-4466
Email: bob@herriot.com
or
Ira McDonald
High North Inc
221 Ridge Ave
Grand Marais, MI 49839
Phone: +1 906-494-2434
Email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com
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15. Appendix X - Change History
[To be deleted before RFC publication]
20 May 2002 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-05.txt
- expanded IPP in title of document, per RFC Editor;
- revised 'References' section, separating into 'Normative
References' and 'Informative References' sections, per RFC Editor;
- revised 'Abstract' section, to emphasize that this document updates
RFC 2910, per Ned Freed;
- revised several sections, deleting repeated paragraphs and
references to RFC 2373 "IPv6 Addressing Architecture", per Ned
Freed;
- revised 'IPP URL Examples' section, adding examples of IPP URLs
used to uniquely identify IPP Jobs, per Ned Freed;
- revised 'IPP URL Examples' section, deleting both IPv4 and IPv6
literal address examples, per Ned Freed;
- revised 'Conformance Requirements' section, to specify requirements
both for IPP URLs used for the network location of IPP print
services and for IPP URLs used as protocol elements in IPP protocol
requests and responses, per Ned Freed;
- revised 'Security Considerations' section, to discuss security
threats associated with the use of IPP URLs (see section 2.4 of
[RFC2718]), per Ned Freed;
- added 'Appendix A - Registration of "ipp" URL Scheme' with
completed form (see section 6.0 'Registration Template' of
[RFC2717]).
10 January 2002 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-04.txt
- final edits after IESG 'last call' comments;
- revised all titles in sections 4.x to remove redundant prefix of
'IPP URL Scheme', for readability;
- revised 'Abstract', section 1 'Introduction', section 4.1
'Applicability and Intended Usage', section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme
Syntax', and section 6 'IANA Considerations', to explicitly state
that the "ipp" URL scheme is intended for IANA registration in the
IETF URL scheme tree;
- revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax', to delete references
to unused ABNF components from [RFC2396];
- revised section 11 'Authors' Addresses', to update contact info for
both editors and to add the IPP Web page and mailing list
subscription info;
- moved 'Appendix X - Change History' to back of document, to
facilitate final edits for RFC publication (including deletion of
change history);
2 April 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-03.txt
- final edits after IETF IPP WG 'last call' comments;
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Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 20 May 2002
- revised 'Abstract' and section 1 'Introduction' to remove
references to ISSUE's and request for comments to the 'ipp@pwg.org'
mailing list, in preparation for publication as an RFC;
- revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' to delete all
references to HTTP proxy behavior (which IPP does NOT specify), per
request of Don Wright;
- revised section 4.6 'IPP URL Examples' to remove note discouraging
the use of literal IP addresses in URLs, to remove dependency on
Informational [RFC1900];
- revised section 4.7 'IPP URL Comparisons' to specify the use of
rules defined in section 3.2.3 'URI Comparison' in [RFC2616], with
the sole exception that an empty port MUST be treated as equivalent
to the IPP well-known port 631, per request of Don Wright;
- revised section 9 'References' to delete all unused references;
- revised section 11 'Authors' Addresses' to add the address of the
IPP WG mailing list for usage questions and comments;
13 February 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-02.txt
- revised section 3 'IPP Model for Printers and Jobs' and section 4.5
'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' to add notes stating that "IPP URL" (in
this document) is a synonym for "ipp-URL" in [RFC2910], per request
of Bob Herriot;
- revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' to correct typo that
showed "http:" rather than "ipp:" in the one-line ABNF, per request
of Tom Hastings;
- revised section 4.6 'IPP URL Examples' to add a note discouraging
the use of literal IP addresses in URLs, per [RFC2616] and
[RFC1900];
5 February 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-01.txt
- revised section 4.1 'IPP URL Applicability and Intended Usage' to
clarify that a given IPP URL MAY identify an IPP Printer object or
an IPP Job object, per request of Tom Hastings;
- revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' to define IPP URLs
consistently with section 3.2.2 'http URL' of HTTP [RFC2616], per
request of Tom Hastings;
- revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax' to clarify that IPP
URLs may reference IPP Printer objects, IPP Job objects, or
(possibly other future) IPP objects, per request of Bob Herriot;
- added section 4.6 'IPP URL Examples' to supply meaningful examples
of IPP URLs with host names, IPv4 addresses, and IPv6 addresses,
per request of Tom Hastings;
- added section 4.7 'IPP URL Comparisons' to define IPP URL
comparisons consistently with section 3.3 'URI Comparison' of HTTP
[RFC2616], per request of Tom Hastings;
- revised section 5.1 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients' to
clarify that an IPP Client MUST convert IPP URLs to their
corresponding HTTP URL forms according to section 5 'IPP URL
Scheme' in [RFC2910], per request of Tom Hastings and Bob Herriot;
- revised section 5.1 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients' and
section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to clarify
Herriot, McDonald Expires 20 November 2002 [Page 21]
Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 20 May 2002
that IPP Clients and IPP Printers SHOULD interoperate with IPP/1.0
systems according to section 9 'Interoperability with IPP/1.0
Implementations' in [RFC2910], per request of Carl Kugler;
- revised section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to
clarify that an IPP Printer MUST listen on (IANA assigned
well-known) port 631, unless explicitly configured otherwise, per
request of Michael Sweet;
- revised section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to
clarify that an IPP Printer SHOULD NOT listen on ports other than
(IANA assigned well-known) port 631, unless explicitly configured,
per request of Don Wright;
- revised section 6 'IANA Considerations' to clarify that the sole
purpose of the entire document is IANA registration of the "ipp"
URL scheme;
- deleted Appendix A 'Registration of IPP Port' as unnecessary (port
is already registered);
- deleted Appendix B 'Registration of MIME "application/ipp" as
unnecessary (MIME registry has recently caught up to RFC 2910);
11 January 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-00.txt
- initial version - simple "ipp" URL scheme without parameters or
query part (consistent with existing and IPP/1.1 implementations);
- added Appendix A 'Registration of IPP Port' (placeholder) for
updated IANA registration of port 631 with references to IPP/1.1;
- added Appendix B 'Registration of MIME "application/ipp"' with
updated IANA registration for IPP MIME type with references to both
IPP/1.0 and IPP/1.1;
Herriot, McDonald Expires 20 November 2002 [Page 22]
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-24 20:01:59 |