EMC Corporation
March 2013
The 'profile' Link Relation Type
Abstract
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This specification defines the 'profile' link relation type that allows resource representations to indicate that they are following one or more profiles. A profile is defined not to alter the semantics of the resource representation itself, but to allow clients to learn about additional semantics (constraints, conventions, extensions) that are associated with the resource representation, in addition to those defined by the media type and possibly other mechanisms.
Status of This Memo
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This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.
This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other RFC stream. The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at its discretion and makes no statement about its value for implementation or deployment. Documents approved for publication by the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6906.
Copyright Notice
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Copyright © 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document.
Table of Contents
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1. Introduction ....................................................2 2. Terminology .....................................................3 3. Profiles ........................................................3 3.1. Profiles and Media Types ...................................4 3.2. Profile Context ............................................5 4. IANA Considerations .............................................5 5. Examples ........................................................6 5.1. hCard ......................................................6 5.2. Dublin Core ................................................6 5.3. Podcasts ...................................................7 6. Security Considerations .........................................7 7. Acknowledgements ................................................7 8. References ......................................................7 8.1. Normative References .......................................7 8.2. Informative References .....................................7
1. Introduction
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One of the foundations of the Internet and web architecture is the fact that resource representations communicated through protocols, such as SMTP or HTTP, are labeled with a 'media type', which allows a client to understand at run time what 'type' of resource representation it is handling. Sometimes, it would be useful for servers and clients to include additional information about the nature of the resource. This would allow a client understanding this additional information to react in a way specific to that specialization of the resource, where the specialization can be about constraints, conventions, extensions, or any other aspects that do not alter the basic media type semantics. HTML 4 [HTML401] has such a mechanism built into the language, which is the 'profile' attribute of the 'head' element. However, this mechanism is specific to HTML alone; at the time of writing, it seems as if HTML 5 will drop support for this mechanism entirely.
RFC 5988 [RFC5988] "defines a framework for typed links that isn't specific to a particular serialisation or application. It does so by redefining the link relation registry established by Atom to have a broader domain, and adding to it the relations that are defined by HTML."
This specification registers a 'profile' link relation type according to the rules of RFC 5988 [RFC5988]. Links with this relation type can be used in representations that support typed links as well as in HTTP Link headers. The profile link relation type is independent of the context in which it is used and does not constrain, in any way, the target of the linked URI. In fact, for the purpose of this specification, the target URI does not necessarily have to identify a dereferencable resource (or even use a dereferencable URI scheme). Clients can treat the occurrence of a specific URI in the same way as an XML namespace URI and invoke specific behavior based on the assumption that a specific profile target URI signals that a resource representation follows a specific profile. Note that, at the same time, it is possible for profile target URIs to use dereferencable URIs and to use a representation (which is outside the scope of this specification) that represents the information about the profile in a human- or machine-readable way.
As one example, consider the case of podcasts, where a specific kind of feed uses additional fields for media-related metadata. Using a 'profile' link, it would be easily possible for clients to understand that a specific feed is supposed to be a podcast feed, and that it may contain entries using podcast-specific fields. This may allow a client to behave differently when handling such a feed (such as rendering a podcast-specific UI), even when the current set of entries in the feed may not contain any podcast entries. (Section 5.3 gives more details for this example.)
2. Terminology
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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 [RFC2119].
3. Profiles
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The concept of a profile has no strict definition on the Internet or on the web. For the purpose of this specification, a profile can be described as additional semantics that can be used to process a resource representation, such as constraints, conventions, extensions, or any other aspects that do not alter the basic media type semantics. A profile MUST NOT change the semantics of the resource representation when processed without profile knowledge, so that clients both with and without knowledge of a profiled resource can safely use the same representation. While this specification associates profiles with resource representations, creators and users of profiles MAY define and manage them in a way that allows them to be used across media types; thus, they could be associated with a resource, independent of their representations (i.e., using the same profile URI for different media types). However, such a design is outside of the scope of this specification, and clients SHOULD treat profiles as being associated with a resource representation.
Profiles can be combined, meaning that a single resource representation can conform to zero or any number of profiles. Depending on the profile support of clients, it is possible that the same resource representation, when linked to a number of profiles, can be processed with different sets of processing rules, based on the profile support of the clients.
Profiles are identified by URI. However, as is the case with, for example, XML namespace URIs, the URI in this case only serves as an identifier, meaning that the presence of a specific URI has to be sufficient for a client to assert that a resource representation conforms to a profile. Thus, clients SHOULD treat profile URIs as identifiers and not as links, but profiles MAY be defined in a way that the URIs do identify retrievable profile description and thus can be accessed by clients by dereferencing the profile URI. For profiles intended for use in environments where clients may encounter unknown profile URIs, profile maintainers SHOULD consider to make the profile URI dereferencable and provide useful documentation at that URI. The design and representation of such profile descriptions, however, is outside the scope of this specification.
3.1. Profiles and Media Types
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A media type defines both the semantics and the serialization of a specific type of content. In many cases, media types have some built-in extensibility or openness, so that specific instances of the media type can layer additional semantics on top of the media type's foundation. In this case, a profile is the appropriate mechanism to signal that the original semantics and processing model of the media type still apply, but that an additional processing model can be used to extract additional semantics. This is in contrast to a new media type that, instead of just adding processing rules and semantics defines a complete set of processing rules and semantics in most cases. As an example, XHTML is not a profile of XML but a new media type because it introduces a complete new perspective of the underlying XML structures, and from the XHTML point of view, exposing the raw XML is not all that useful for clients. However, hCard (see Section 5.1) is a profile of (X)HTML because it adds processing rules that allow a client to extract additional semantics from a representation, without changing any of the processing rules and semantics of (X)HTML itself. While the line between a media type and a profile might not always be easy to draw, the intention of profiles is not to replace media types, but to add a more lightweight and runtime-capable mechanism that allows servers and clients to be more explicit in how a specific instance of a media type represents concepts that are not defined by the media type itself, but by additional conventions (the profile processing rules and semantics).
The objective of profiles is that they allow instances to clearly identify what kind of mechanism they are using for expressing additional semantics, should they follow a well-defined framework for doing so (see Section 5 for examples). While this allows servers and clients to represent the use of profiles, it does not make the profile information visible outside of the representation itself, if the representation is using embedded typed links. For newly defined media types that may be used with profiles, it is therefore recommended that they SHOULD define a media type parameter called 'profile' and specify that this media type parameter follows the semantics of a profile as laid out in this document. This way, clients can use this media type parameter to request a certain profile when interacting, for example, with an HTTP server and setting the Accept header. Representations using a 'profile' media type parameter still SHOULD include that value in the representation using the 'profile' link relation, since the media type label of a representation can easily get lost when it is taken out of its conversational context.
Since a representation can link to more than one profile, the same has to be possible for the corresponding media type parameter (if a media type defines such a parameter). Media types defining a 'profile' parameter SHOULD define it as a whitespace-separated list of profile URIs.
3.2. Profile Context
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Profile links convey information about the use of profiles for a media type. If they are used within a media type, they apply to the context specified by that media type. This means, for example, that profile links in the head element of an HTML document apply to the document as a whole. The context of a profile extends to the scope of where it is being used, which means that profiles used in profile media type parameters (as described in Section 3.1) or used in HTTP Link headers extend to the scope of the protocol in which they are being used.
4. IANA Considerations
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The link relation type below has been registered by IANA per Section 6.2.1 of RFC 5988 [RFC5988]:
Relation Name: profile
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Description: Identifying that a resource representation conforms to a certain profile, without affecting the non-profile semantics of the resource representation.
Reference:
[RFC6906]
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Notes: Profile URIs are primarily intended to be used as identifiers, and thus clients SHOULD NOT indiscriminately access profile URIs.
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5. Examples
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This section lists some examples of profiles that are already defined (and thus could be readily used with a 'profile' link) and of some potential additional profiles. So far, profiles have been mostly limited to HTML (because of the support of profiles in HTML). The two examples of existing profiles are HTML profiles, and the one hypothetical example is a non-HTML example that is based on feeds.
5.1. hCard
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The hCard profile uses http://microformats.org/profile/hcard as its defining URI and is essentially a mechanism on how vCard [RFC6350] information can be embedded in an HTML page using the mechanisms provided by microformats. It is thus a good example for how profiles might, on the one hand, define a model-based extension of the original media type (in this case, adding vCard fields), and how they also have to define specific ways of how that model extension is then represented in the media type (in this case, using microformats). Alternatively, it would be possible to represent vCard information through the mechanisms of RDF in Attributes (RDFa) or microdata, but since these would be different conventions that a client would need to follow to extract the vCard data, they would be identified by different profiles.
5.2. Dublin Core
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Dublin Core metadata identified by the profile http://dublincore.org/documents/2008/08/04/dc-html/ can be used to embed Dublin Core metadata in an HTML page. In contrast to hCard, which uses microformats as its foundation, the Dublin Core profile defines its own way of embedding metadata into HTML, and it does so using HTML <link> elements. The interesting difference to hCard is that Dublin Core not only defines metadata to be embedded in HTML, it also allows links to be added as metadata. In which case, the profile not only describes additional data to be found within the representation, but also allows the representation to be linked to additional resources.
5.3. Podcasts
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Podcasts are an extension of feed formats and define a substantial set of additional attributes to reflect the fact that the resources in podcast feeds are time-based media formats, such as audio and video. While there is no profile URI for podcasts, the current definition (maintained by Apple) at http://www.apple.com/itunes/podcasts/specs.html could serve as such a URI, or it could by updated to include such a URI. Podcasts are feeds with special behavior; and while it is possible to follow a podcast feed using a generic feed reader, a podcast-aware feed reader will be able to extract additional information from the feed, and thus can implement more sophisticated services or present a more sophisticated UI for podcast feeds. The Apple page referenced above describes the implementation of one such specialized podcast feed reader, Apple iTunes.
6. Security Considerations
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The 'profile' relation type is not known to introduce any new security issues not already discussed in RFC 5988 [RFC5988] for generic use of Web linking mechanisms.
7. Acknowledgements
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Thanks for comments and suggestions provided by Erlend Hamnaberg, Markus Lanthaler, Simon Mayer, Mark Nottingham, Julian Reschke, James Snell, Herbert Van de Sompel, and Tim Williams.
8. References
8.1. Normative References
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[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC5988] Nottingham, M., "Web Linking", RFC 5988, October 2010.
8.2. Informative References
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[HTML401] Le Hors, A., Raggett, D., and I. Jacobs, "HTML 4.01 Specification", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-html401-19991224, December 1999, <http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224>. [RFC6350] Perreault, S., "vCard Format Specification", RFC 6350, August 2011.
Author's Address
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Erik Wilde
EMC Corporation
6801 Koll Center Parkway
Pleasanton, CA 94566
U.S.A.Phone: +1-925-6006244 EMail: erik.wilde@emc.com URI: http://dret.net/netdret/