One document matched: draft-klyne-imxp-message-service-00.txt
Network working group G. Klyne, Content Technologies Ltd.
Internet draft D. H. Crocker, Brandenburg Consulting
M. T. Rose, Invisible Worlds, Inc.
12 October 2000
Expires: April 2001
Instant Messaging using IMXP
<draft-klyne-imxp-message-service-00.txt>
Status of this memo
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all provisions of Section 10 of RFC 2026.
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society 2000. All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
This document describes how to provision an instant text messaging
and presence service using IMXP.
Discussion of this document
Please send comments to: <IMXPwg@lists.invisibleworlds.com>.
To subscribe: send a message with the body 'subscribe' to
<IMXPwg-request@lists.invisibleworlds.com>.
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Table of contents
1. Introduction.............................................3
1.1 Structure of this document ...........................3
1.2 Document terminology and conventions .................3
2. Background and goals.....................................3
2.1 Overview of IMXP .....................................4
2.2 INSTANT INBOX addressing .............................5
2.3 Identifying PRESENTITIES .............................5
2.4 WATCHER addressing ...................................5
2.5 PRESENCE SERVICE addressing ..........................5
2.6 IMXP access provisioning .............................6
2.7 Service goals ........................................6
3. Instant Message service..................................6
3.1 Format of Instant Messages ...........................7
3.2 Content of an instant message ........................11
3.3 Sending an instant message ...........................11
4. Presence service.........................................11
4.1 Format of presence information .......................11
4.2 Subscribing to receive presence information ..........11
4.3 Polling presence information .........................12
4.4 Publishing presence information ......................12
4.5 Watcher operations ...................................12
5. Internationalization considerations......................12
6. Security considerations..................................13
6.1 Security provisioning ................................13
7. Acknowledgements.........................................14
8. References...............................................14
9. Authors' addresses.......................................17
Appendix A: Amendment history...............................18
Full copyright statement....................................19
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1. Introduction
This document describes how to provision an instant text messaging
and presence service using IMXP [4,5,6]. The service described
here conforms to CPIM, the common interoperability framework for
instant messaging [3].
1.1 Structure of this document
Section 2 provides background material, and sets out the goals of
this service specification.
Section 3 describes the IMXP-provisioned instant text messaging
service in terms of the basic CPIM Message operation.
Section 4 describes the IMXP-provisioned presence service in terms
of basic CPIM Subscribe/Unsubscribe/Notify operations.
1.2 Document terminology and conventions
Many special terms used in this document are described in RFC 2778
[2].
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in
this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [7].
NOTE: Comments like this provide additional nonessential
information about the rationale behind this document.
Such information is not needed for building a conformant
implementation, but may help those who wish to understand
the design in greater depth.
[[[Editorial comments and questions about outstanding issues are
provided in triple brackets like this. These working comments
should be resolved and removed prior to final publication.]]]
2. Background and goals
The requirements for an instant messaging and presence (IM/P)
service are set out in RFC 2779 [1]. This sets out facilities for
sending instant messages, real-time discovery information about the
status of other parties on the network (presence), and discovering
who is monitoring information about somebody's status (watchers).
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A framework for interoperability between different protocols
satisfying these requirements is set out in CPIM [2].
The service described by this document is a provisioning of an
instant text messaging and presence service using IMXP.
2.1 Overview of IMXP
The basic philosophy of IMXP is:
o The core mechanism is very simple: a range of services can be
built using the basic core mechanisms provided.
o Its design is based on familiar Internet mail architecture,
leveraging a wealth of related experience.
The IMXP relay mesh uses lightweight, near-real-time application
datagram transfer nodes, analogous to email MTAs:
o Relay processing is kept simple. Essential intelligence is kept
at or near the network edge to enhance scalability; relays are
not required to maintain state concerning message transfer.
o Addressing and routing follow the classic email model. This uses
hierarchical addresses (domain names) that can be understood by
the entire relay mesh.
o Hop-by-hop security framework. Authentication, privacy, and
authorization rely on domains "keeping their own houses in
order", in line with current Internet infrastructure. End-to-end
security (OpenPGP or S/MIME) may be added to provide greater
security.
o Transport independence. A convergence layer (BEEP [8]) carries
IMXP identically over variety of transports.
o Other applications may use the same relay mesh. Asynchronous
near-real-time message exchange with accessible, predictable
behaviour is applicable to a numnber of loosely-coupled
applications, or which instant text messaging is just one.
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2.2 INSTANT INBOX addressing
CPIM defines an address format for instant messaging based on a URI
containing a domain name and a local part.
IMXP uses a message address with the same form as an e-mail
address, also containing a domain name and a local part. Thus, a
perfect conversion between IMXP and CPIM addressing can be
achieved:
<local-part>@<domain> <==> im:<local-part>@<domain>
2.3 Identifying PRESENTITIES
CPIM defines an identifier format for a presentity that is a URI
containing a domain name and a local part.
The IMXP presence service [6] uses a presentity identifier format
with the same form as an e-mail address, also containing a domain
name and a local part.
Thus, a perfect conversion between IMXP and CPIM presentity
identifiers can be achieved:
<local-part>@<domain> <==> pres:<local-part>@<domain>
2.4 WATCHER addressing
CPIM and IMXP both use the same form for watcher addresses that
they use for presentity identifiers, so the same mapping applies.
2.5 PRESENCE SERVICE addressing
CPIM uses the presentity identifier or watcher address to locate
the corresponding service.
The IMXP presence service [6] uses a presence service address with
the same form as an e-mail address, containing a domain name and a
local part, but in which the local-part is fixed as
"imxp=presence".
When mapping IMXP to CPIM, the service address is not needed
(having the same domain address part as the corresponding presenity
identifier or watcher address).
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When mapping CPIM to IMXP, a service address is constructed using
the domain part of the corresponding CPIM presence URI:
pres:<local-part>@<domain> ==> imxp=presence@<domain>
2.6 IMXP access provisioning
RFC 2779 requires that there be mechanisms for authorizing who is
allowed to perform various operations, or access private
information. This requirement is not reflected in CPIM because it
is seen as being handled locally within a domain.
IMXP provides a flexible mechanism based on the IMXP access service
[5]. IMXP components operating within a domain are required to
check that the requested operation is allowed according to
permissions lodged with the domain's access service.
2.7 Service goals
The goals of the service defined here are:
(a) to satisfy the requirements set out in RFC 2779 [1].
(b) to allow interoperability with other IM/P protocols using the
common framework set out in CPIM [3].
(c) to allow simple text messages to be exchanged between instant
messaging user agents.
3. Instant Message service
IMXP message content is transfered as a MIME object [12] within a
multipart/related, or as an XML element in an IMXP Data operation.
The IMXP Data operation contains a URI-reference [14] to indicate
the message content: a cid: URI is used to indicate another body
part within an enclosing multipart/related, or a fragment
identifier to indicate an XML <data-content> element within the
IMXP Data element. See section 4.1 of the IMXP core specification
[4] for further details.
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3.1 Format of Instant Messages
An instant message consists of a message header, based on RFC822
[15] encoded in XML [16], and a message content.
The instant message header contains information about the message
that is conveyed between message user agents, and not used by the
message transfer mechanisms. This may include who the message is
from, who it is addressed to, other parties to whom it has been
copied, subject of the message, date the message was composed, etc.
The message header also contains a reference to the message
content, in the same fashion that an IMXP <Data> element references
the entire message. Thus, an instant message can be constructed as
a MIME multipart/related:
Content-type: Multipart/related
Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="boundary";
start="<1@example.com>";
type="message/rfc822|xml"
--boundary
Content-Type: message/rfc822|xml
Content-ID: <1@example.com>
<rfc822:message
xmlns:rfc822='URN:IANA:message:rfc822:'
content='cid:2@example.com>
<rfc822:from>im:fred@example.com</rfc822:from>
<rfc822:to>im:barney@anotherdomain.com</rfc822:to>
<rfc822:to>im:wilma@yetanotherdomain.com</rfc822:to>
<rfc822:cc>im:dino@example.com</rfc822:cc>
<rfc822:subject>Hello</rfc822:subject>
<rfc822:date>Tue, 10 Oct 2000 12:06:16 -0700</rfc822:date>
</rfc822:message>
--boundary
Content-Type: text/plain;charset=UTF-8
Content-ID: <2@example.com>
And this is the <message> text!
--boundary--
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Alternatively, if the content is expressed in pure text and/or XML
it can be contained within the message header:
Content-Type: message/rfc822|xml;charset=UTF-8
<message
xmlns='URN:IANA:message:rfc822:'
content='#message-text>
<from>im:fred@example.com</from>
<to>im:barney@anotherdomain.com</to>
<to>im:wilma@yetanotherdomain.com</to>
<cc>im:dino@example.com</cc>
<subject>Hello</subject>
<date>Tue, 10 Oct 2000 12:06:16 -0700</date>
<message-content name='message-text' type='text/plain'>
And this is the <message> text!
</message-content>
</message>
Notes:
o The RFC822 message in XML format is described more fully in a
separate document [18].
o The 'content=' attribute of the <message> element indicates a URI
or fragment identifier that names the message content.
o Headers are represented as XML elements, whose content is the
corresponding header value.
o Header field names are based on RFC822 header names, using all
lower-case characters [15]. (XML element names are case
sensitive [16].) The exception is element <message-content>.
o Header field names are associated with an XML namespace [17]
identified as 'URN:IANA:message:rfc822:'. (This namespace
identifier is based on a work-in-progress [19].)
o Individual message header elements in the message header may
appear in any order, except the <message-content> element, which,
if used, MUST be the last element in the message header.
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o Header contents are same syntax and meaning as corresponding
RFC822 header contents [15], except that:
- Characters are not limited to US-ASCII. UTF-8 charset
encoding is used.
- Address values are presented as URIs. Note that characters in
URIs are drawn from a limited repertoire; the URI '%' escape
sequence may be used to represent other characters that are
legal for the URI scheme used [14].
- Encoded words (=?...?=) are not needed, and SHOULD NOT be
used.
o The 1st example above uses RFC822 as an XML namespace prefix
[17]; any name may be used here.
o The 2nd example above uses default XML namespace [17], so no
namespace prefix needs to be used.
o The XML reserved characters in the 2nd example above are replaced
by their corresponding XML entity references ('<' and '>').
o When message content is included in the message header, its MIME
content-type is indicated by the 'type=' attribute of the
<message-content> element. The charset for <message-content>
data is UTF-8 (i.e. inherited from the surrounding XML header).
o [[[Inclusion of MIME headers with the RFC822 message headers is
an open issue. When content is included with a <message-content>
element, there may be some reason to allow this, but many MIME
headers just don't make sense in this environment.]]]
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=================================================================
[[[Should it be permitted for IMXP control info, message
header and message content to occupy body parts of a
single multipart/related? e.g... ]]]
Content-type: Multipart/related
Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="boundary";
start="<1@example.com>";
type="text/xml"
--boundary
Content-Type: text/xml
Content-ID: <1@example.com>
<data originator='fred@example.com'
content='cid:2@example.com'>
<recipient identity='barney@example.com' />
</data>
--boundary
Content-Type: message/rfc822|xml
Content-ID: <2@example.com>
<rfc822:message
xmlns:rfc822='URN:IANA:message:rfc822:'
content='cid:3@example.com>
<rfc822:from>im:graham@example.com</rfc822:from>
<rfc822:to>im:marshall@anotherdomain.com</rfc822:to>
<rfc822:to>im:dave@yetanotherdomain.com</rfc822:to>
<rfc822:cc>im:fred@example.com</rfc822:cc>
<rfc822:subject>Hello</rfc822:subject>
<rfc822:date>Tue, 10 Oct 2000 12:06:16 -0700</rfc822:date>
</rfc822:message>
--boundary
Content-Type: text/plain;charset=UTF-8
Content-ID: <3@example.com>
And this is the <message> text!
--boundary--
=================================================================
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3.2 Content of an instant message
The instant message format described above allows any kind of
message content.
Instant message service endpoints MUST be able to process message
content that is provided as "text/plain;charset=US-ASCII" or
"text/plain;charset=UTF-8" [13]. Endpoints SHOULD support the
"Format=flowed" parameter, per RFC 2646 [11].
3.3 Sending an instant message
An instant message is sent using the IMXP Data operation to the
desired recipient address [4].
CPIM does not provide for end-to-end confirmation of receipt, so if
a 'statusRequest' option is specified with "targetHop='final'" or
'targetHop=all', it SHOULD NOT also indicate "seeNoEvil='false'" or
the IMXP/CPIM gateway may fail the message.
4. Presence service
4.1 Format of presence information
Presence information is transferred in the form of a <publish>
element [6] in an IMXP Data operation [4].
4.2 Subscribing to receive presence information
Subscription to presence information is achieved by sending a
<Subscribe> element [6] in an IMXP Data operation [4].
The response is an IMXP Data operation with a <Publish> element [6]
containing the desired information, followed by further such
messages each time the indicated presence information changes.
Updates to the presence information continue to be provided until
the specified duration elapses, or a <terminate> element is send to
the presence service.
CPIM uses a 'subscribe' operation, and returns a confirmation
'response' operation and at least one separate 'notify' operation,
until the duration elapses or an 'Unsubscribe' operation is issued.
An IMXP/CPIM gateway should handle creation and correlation of the
separate IMXP 'response' operation.
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4.3 Polling presence information
Polling for presence information is achieved by issuing a zero-
duration subscription.
4.4 Publishing presence information
And endpoint publishes presence information by sending a <publish>
element in an IMXP Data operation to its presence service.
The presence service propagates presence information by sending
<publish> elements to endpoints that have requested them.
CPIM handles propagation of presence information by issuing
'Notify' operations. (Publication or updating of presence
information by an endpoint is not covered by CPIM.)
4.5 Watcher operations
IMXP watcher operations are performed by sending <watch>, <reply>,
<notify> and <terminate> elements [6] in IMXP Data operations [4].
(CPIM does not describe distribution of watcher information, as
this is regarded as local to an administrative domain.)
5. Internationalization considerations
IMXP uses the address format defined by RFC822, which limits
characters in address local parts to US-ASCII. This means that
many foreign language personal names cannot be represented.
Similarly, the characters that can be used in domain names are
currently severely constrained. Work is under way to define
internationalized forms for domain names.
Message content is tagged using standard MIME capabilities (charset
parameter for text data [13], and Content-language header for
language tagging [22]). IMXP instant messaging user agents are
required to be able to process UTF-8 coded character data, but that
does not necessarily mean that all characters received can be
displayed.
When message content is included in the XML message header,
language tagging can be achieved by including an 'xml:lang='
attribute [16] in the <message-content> element.
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Presence information is represented using XML. Support for UTF-8
character encoding is requiured for human readable parts of the
presence information.
6. Security considerations
The primary form of security provided by IMXP is hop-by-hop,
requiring that each IMXP relay must be trusted to handle the
messages it receives. The IMXP authorization framework is
described in section 4.5 of the IMXP core specification [4], and
its use for IMXP instant messaging is elaborated below.
Endpoints may choose to use additional end-to-end security, such as
S/MIME [23] or OpenPGP [24] by bilateral arrangement. Such usage
is not defined by this specification.
6.1 Security provisioning
IMXP security is based on BEEP session security profiles, coupled
with IMXP authorization policies that allow BEEP peers to act as
designated IMXP endpoints or relays for designated domains.
IMXP instant messaging endpoints MUST support the following:
o BEEP SASL security profile using the DIGEST-MD5 mechanism [25]
[26]. This allows the endpoint to authenticate itself to a
relay.
o If confidentiality is required: BEEP TLS security profile, using
the TLS_DHE_DSS_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA cipher suite[9]. (This is
the same mandatory-to-implement cipher suite as specified for use
with POP3, IMAP, etc. [10].)
o authenticate with BEEP peer identities that are the same as their
endpoint identifier. An endpoint thus authenticated should be
trusted to originate and receive messages and requests for the
indicated endpoint.
IMXP instant messaging relays MUST support the following:
o For communication with IMXP endpoints, support the BEEP security
profile noted above.
o For communication with IMXP endpoints or other IMXP relays: BEEP
TLS security profile, using the TLS_DHE_DSS_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA
cipher suite [9]. (This is the same mandatory-to-implement
cipher suite as specified for use with POP3, IMAP, etc. [10].)
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[[[I've picked the above out of another spec, without being sure
that it really makes sense -- review.]]]
o IMXP relays MUST authenticate themselves to IMXP endpoints and
other IMXP relays as "imxp=mesh@<domain>". A relay thus
authenticated should be trusted to originate and receive messages
and requests for the indicated domain.
NOTE: IMXP instant messaging endpoint support for
confidentiality is optional, but if confidentiality is
supported then the indicated TLS security profile MUST be
supported.
IMXP instant messaging relays are required to support
confidentiality when communicating with other relays,
using the TLS mechanism indicated.
Security mechanisms other than those noted above may be
used by bilateral agreement. Support for additional
security profiles can be discovered through BEEP Greeting
messages [8].
7. Acknowledgements
The authors thank the following for their contributions: [[[...]]]
8. References
[1] Day, M., Aggarwal, S. and J. Vincent,
"Instant Messaging / Presence Protocol Requirements",
RFC 2779,
February 2000.
[2] Day, M., Rosenberg, J. and H. Sugano,
"A Model for Presence and Instant Messaging",
RFC 2778,
February 2000.
[3] Crocker, D.H., Diacakis, A., Mazzoldi, F., Huitema, C., Klyne,
G., Rose, M.T., Rosenberg, J., Sparks, R. and H. Sugano,
"A Common Profile for Instant Messaging (CPIM)",
draft-thenine-im-common-00 (work in progress),
August 2000.
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[4] Rose, M.T., Klyne, G. and D.H. Crocker,
"The IMXP",
draft-mrose-imxp-core-01 (work in progress),
September 2000.
[5] Rose, M.T., Klyne, G. and D.H. Crocker,
"The IMXP Access Service"
draft-mrose-imxp-access-01 (work in progress),
September 2000.
[6] Rose, M.T., Klyne, G. and D.H. Crocker,
"The IMXP Presence Service"
draft-mrose-imxp-presence-01 (work in progress),
September 2000.
[7] Bradner, S.,
"Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels",
RFC 2119,
March 1997.
[8] Rose, M.T.,
"The Blocks Extensible Exchange Protocol Framework",
draft-ietf-beep-framework-02 (work in progress),
September 2000.
[9] Dierks, T. and C. Allen,
"The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",
RFC 2246,
January 1999.
[10] Newman, C.,
"Using TLS with IMAP, POP3 and ACAP",
RFC 2595,
June 1999.
[11] Gellens, R.,
"The Text/Plain Format Parameter",
RFC 2646,
August 1999.
[12] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein,
"Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of
Internet Message Bodies",
RFC 2045,
November 1996.
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[13] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein,
"Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media
Types",
RFC 2046
November 1996.
[14] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R.T. and L. Masinter,
"Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax",
RFC 2396,
August 1998.
[15] Crocker, D.,
"Standard for the format of ARPA Internet text messages",
RFC 822, STD 11,
August 1982.
[16] Tim Bray, Jean Paoli, and C. M. Sperberg-McQueen,
"Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0",
W3C recommendation: <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml>,
10 February 1998.
[17] Tim Bray, Dave Hollander, and Andrew Layman
"Namespaces in XML",
W3C recommendation: <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names>,
14 January 1999.
[18] Klyne, G., Crocker, D.H. and M.T. Rose,
"XML coding of RFC822 messages"
draft-klyne-message-rfc822-xml-00 (work in progress),
October 2000.
[19] Mealling, M.,
[[[URN namespace for IANA registries]]],
(work in progress),
2000
[20] Levinson, E.,
"The MIME Multipart/Related Content-type",
RFC 2387,
August 1998.
[21] Levinson, E.,
"Content-ID and Message-ID Uniform Resource Locators",
RFC 2392,
August 1998.
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[22] Alvestrand, H.,
"Tags for the Identification of Languages",
RFC 1766,
March 1995.
(Defines Content-language header.)
[23] Ramsdell, B.,
"S/MIME Version 3 Message Specification",
RFC 2633,
June 1999.
[24] Callas, J., Donnerhacke, L., Finney, H. and R. Thayer,
"OpenPGP Message Format",
RFC 2440,
November 1998.
[25] Myers, J.,
"Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)",
RFC 2222,
October 1997.
[26] Leach, P. and C. Newman,
"Using Digest Authentication as a SASL Mechanism",
RFC 2831,
May 2000.
9. Authors' addresses
Graham Klyne (editor)
Content Technologies Ltd.
1220 Parkview,
Arlington Business Park
Theale
Reading, RG7 4SA
United Kingdom
Telephone: +44 118 930 1300
Facsimile: +44 118 930 1301
E-mail: GK@ACM.ORG
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Marshall T. Rose
Invisible Worlds, Inc.
1179 North McDowell Boulevard
Petaluma, CA 94954-6559
US
Telephone: +1 707 789 3700
E-mail: mrose@invisible.net
URI: http://invisible.net/
David H. Crocker
Brandenburg Consulting
675 Spruce Drive
Sunnyvale, CA 94086
US
Telephone: +1 408 246 8253
E-mail: dcrocker@brandenburg.com
URI: http://www.brandenburg.com/
Appendix A: Amendment history
00a 05-Oct-2000 Memo initially created.
00b 10-Oct-2000 Filled in details of IMXP usage in relation to
CPIM. Clarified some presence addressing details.
Picked some security profiles.
00c 11-Oct-2000 Introduced message format based on RFC822 encoded
with XML. Cosmetic fixes.
00d 11-Oct-2000 Drafted internationalization and security
considerations sections. Completed CPIM/IMXP
mapping appendices. Revisit security
provisioning: moved to "Security considerations"
section as it applies to both messaging and
presence; specify only authentication is
mandatory to implement for endpoint-relay mode,
using SASL DIGEST-MD5.
00e 12-Oct-2000 More cosmetic fixes. Delete CPIM/IMXP mapping
appendices -- these are now in the IMXP core
documents.
Klyne, et al Internet draft [Page 18]
Instant Messaging using IMXP 12 October 2000
<draft-klyne-imxp-message-service-00.txt>
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Klyne, et al Internet draft [Page 19]
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