RFC1685

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Network Working Group H. Alvestrand Request for Comments: 1685 UNINETT RARE Technical Report: 12 August 1994 Category: Informational

                    Writing X.400 O/R Names

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet Community. It does not specify an Internet Standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Introduction

There is a need for human beings who use X.400 systems to be able to write down O/R names in a uniform way.

There has been a preexisting recommendation on how to write O/R names for human consumption in the RARE community. Now that the ISO/ITU has adopted a recommendation on how to do this [1], RARE needs to update its recommendation on writing O/R names to take this standard into account.

Recommendations on writing O/R names

RARE recommends that the ISO standard be followed when writing O/R names. The ISO/ITU standard contains a number of options. RARE makes the following recommendations:

  -    The "main" abbreviations, G, I, S, O, OU1, OU2, P, A and C
       are used. They should be written using UPPER CASE.
  -    The separation character should be semicolon (;).
  -    The ADMD value "blank" is expressed by omitting the
       attribute. No other interpretation of a missing ADMD
       attribute is allowed.
  -    The recommended sequence is G=;I=;S=;O=;OU1=;OU2=;P=;A=;C=;

This means that the O, OU1 and so on will be in opposite order to the fields of an Internet domain name; the reason for choosing the ISO/ITU order is that this will be more common among users of X.400 services.

Copy of the recommmendation

This is a COPY of a DRAFT of the relevant appendix. For the authoritative text, consult the ITU standard itself.

Final text for AMENDMENT, 7 February 1993

Annex to CCITT Rec. F.401 and ISO/IEC 10021-2/Am.1

Annex F

  Representation of O/R addresses for human usage (This annex does
  not form an integral part of this Recommendation|International
  Standard)

F.1 Purpose

  An O/R address (specified in clause 18) consists of a set of
  values of attributes taken from the list shown in Table F.1. In
  order to represent visually an address to a human user, and to
  enable the user to enter the address into a user interface, each
  attribute value needs to be associated with the correct attribute
  type. Many of the names of the attribute types shown in Table F.1
  are too long for convenient usage on paper or a screen. There is a
  need for a format which allows attributes to be represented
  concisely, e.g., on a business card.
  This annex specifies how addresses can be expressed concisely
  using labels to represent the attribute types. There are three
  categories of attributes: those standard mnemonic attributes which
  are most likely to be found in O/R addresses represented for human
  usage (e.g., on business cards), those used in physical delivery
  addresses, and other specialised attributes (including domain
  defined attributes). In order to provide a format which is as
  concise as possible, many of the labels are single characters.
  This also makes them less language dependent.
  Clause F.3 specifies the format for the representation of
  addresses, and clause F.4 specifies the characteristics necessary
  for user interfaces which are intended to be used in conjunction
  with this format.

F.2 Scope

  A labelled format for the communication of O/R addresses to human
  users is specified. The format consists of a set of pairs of
  labels and attribute-values. The characteristics of a user
  interface which are necessary to accept addresses given in this
  format are also specified.
  In addition a self-explanatory format suitable for use where there
  is more space, e.g., in printed material and in the user
  interface, is specified.

F.3 Format

F.3.1 General

  The objective of the labelled format is to enable O/R addresses to
  be represented in a format which is concise and which can be
  accurately transcribed by human users. This can be facilitated by
  careful consideration of which attributes and values are used to
  form an O/R address.
  If the attributes of an O/R address include characters from an
  extended character set, human users who do not normally use the
  same extended character set may have difficulty representing the
  O/R address or entering it into their messaging system. In this
  situation, an alias of the O/R address should be provided which is
  composed entirely of printable string characters.

NOTES

  1.   The policy for structuring O/R addresses needs to be
       carefully considered. Individual O/R addresses should be
       allocated within an appropriate division of the address
       space to reduce to an acceptable level the probability that
       2 users might expect to have the same O/R address. Use of
       given name or initials is usually sufficient to distinguish
       between users. It may be inappropriate to reflect too much
       granularity in OUs particularly if the organizational
       structure is subject to frequent change, or users move
       between OUs.
  2.   There may be a conflict between the benefits of using long
       values for attributes which are self explanatory (such as
       the full name of an organisation) and the benefits of
       shorter values (e.g., to concisely fit on a business card).
       One solution to this problem is to provide an alternative
       short attribute value (such as the initials of the
       organisation) as an alias for the long value.
  3.   If a human user might be uncertain about the existence of a
       space in an attribute value (particularly when it is
       typeset), aliases could be provided with and without the
       space (e.g., "SNOMAIL400" as an alias for "SNOMAIL 400" and
       "Mac Donald" as an alias for MacDonald).
  4.   If an alias is provided for an O/R address, it is desirable
       that this is implemented in such a way that a consistent
       (preferred) form of O/R address is generated for all
       messages originated by the user.
  Where national usage permits a single space value for the ADMD in
  an address, this is represented in the address either by omitting
  the ADMD attribute, or showing the ADMD attribute with no value or
  the value of a space.

F.3.2 Labelled format

F.3.2.1 Syntax

  O/R addresses in labelled format consist of delimited pairs of
  labels and values in the syntax <label>"="<value>. The labels for
  each attribute are specified in Tables F.1, F.2 and F.3. (The
  physical delivery attributes in Table F.2 are included for
  completeness.) The label and its value are either separated by the
  character "=", or by the space between two columns in a table.
  Labels may be represented in upper or lower case, but the use of
  uppercase is recommended as it is likely to be more visually
  distinctive.
  If label/value pairs appear in sequence on a line, they are
  separated by delimiters. Delimiters may optionally be followed by
  one or more spaces. The delimiter character may be either ";" or
  "/", but only one of these can be used in one O/R address. When
  the delimiter is "/" the first label is prefixed by "/". The use
  of a delimiter at the end of a line is optional. If the value of
  any attribute contains the delimiter character, this is
  represented by a pair of delimiter characters.
  If an identifier is required to preface a labelled address, it is
  recommended that "X.400" is used.
  If an address is entirely composed of attributes contained in
  Table F.1, it is recommended that the sequence of attributes in
  the address is that given in Table F.1. If this sequence is
  incompatible with normal cultural conventions, an alternative
  sequence may be adopted for representations of addresses which are
  primarily intended for use within that culture.

EXAMPLE

X.400: G=john; S=smith; O=a bank ltd; P=abl; A=snomail; C=aq
This address may also be layed out as a table:
G     John
S     Smith
O     A Bank Ltd
P     ABL
A     Snomail
C     AQ
Table F.1. Standard Attributes of the Mnemonic Address Form
Attribute Type                         Abbreviation      Label
                                       (where necessary)
Given Name                             Given name        G
Initial                                Initials          I
Surname                                Surname           S
Generation Qualifier                   Generation        Q
Common Name                            Common Name       CN
Organization                           Organization      O
Organizational Unit 1                  Org.Unit.1        OU1
Organizational Unit 2                  Org.Unit.2        OU2
Organizational Unit 3                  Org.Unit.3        OU3
Organizational Unit 4                  Org.Unit.4        OU4
Private Management Domain Name         PRMD              P
Administration Management Domain Name  ADMD              A
Country                                Country           C
Table F.2. Physical Delivery Attributes
Physical Delivery Personal Name        PD-person         PD-PN
Extension of Postal O/R Address
Components                             PD-ext.address    PD-EA
Extension of Physical Delivery Address
Components                             PD-ext.delivery   PD-ED
Physical Delivery Office Number        PD-office number  PD-OFN
Physical Delivery Office Name          PD-office         PD-OF
Physical Delivery Organization Name    PD-organization   PD-O
Street Address                         PD-street         PD-S
Unformatted Postal Address             PD-address        PD-A1
                                                         PD-A2
(there are individual labels for                         PD-A3
each line of the address)                                PD-A4
                                                         PD-A5
                                                         PD-A6
Unique Postal Name                     PD-unique         PD-U
Local Postal Attributes                PD-local          PD-L
Postal Restante Address                PD-restante       PD-R
Post Office Box Address                PD-box            PD-B
Postal Code                            PD-code           PD-PC
Physical Delivery Service Name         PD-service        PD-SN
Physical Delivery Country Name         PD-country        PD-C
Table F.3. Other Attributes
X.121 Network Address                  X.121             X.121
E.163/E.164 Network Address            ISDN              ISDN
PSAP Network Address                   PSAP              PSAP
User Agent Numeric ID                  N-ID              N-ID
Terminal Identifier                    T-ID              T-ID
Terminal Type                          T-TY              T-TY
Domain Defined Attribute               DDA:<type>
DDA:<type>
where the notation <type> identifies the type of domain defined
attribute.

F.3.2.2 Terminal Type

  There are currently six terminal types, and if international
  consistency is required the following specific abbreviations
  should be used to represent the values for these types: tlx, ttx,
  g3fax, g4fax, ia5 and vtx.

F.3.2.3 Domain Defined Attribute

  The label for a DDA consists of "DDA:" followed by the DDA type.
  If an address includes more than one DDA of the same type, it is
  assumed that the DDAs are intended to be processed in the sequence
  in which they are represented.
  EXAMPLE - DDA:RFC-822=fred(a)widget.co.uk; O=gateway; P=abc; C=gb
  If the <type> of a DDA type includes the character "=", it is
  represented by "==".

F.3.3 Self-explanatory format

  The self-explanatory format may be used when space is available.
  It consists of a list of the attribute types, either in full or
  abbreviated. The attribute types or abbreviations may be in any
  language, but each attribute type or abbreviation in Table F.1 is
  followed by the specified label. If English language abbreviations
  are used, they should be those given in Tables F.1, F.2 and F.3.
  If an address is entirely composed of attributes contained in
  Table F.1, it is recommended that the sequence of attributes in
  the address is that given in Table F.1. If this sequence is
  incompatible with normal cultural conventions, an alternative
  sequence may be adopted for representations of addresses which are
  primarily intended for use within that culture.
EXAMPLE 1 - Using attribute types in the Norwegian language
Fornavn (G)                            Per
Etternavn (S)                          Hansen
Organisasjon (O)                       Teledir
Organisasjonsenhet (OU1)               Forskning
Privat domene (P)                      Tele
Administrasjonsdomene (A)              Telemax
Land (C)                               NO
EXAMPLE 2 - Using attribute types and abbreviations in the English
            language
Given name (G)                         John
Surname (S)                            Smith
Organization (O)                       A Bank Ltd
Org. Unit (OU1)                        IT Dept
Org. Unit (OU2)                        MSG Group
PRMD (P)                               ABL
ADMD (A)                               Snomail
Country (C)                            AQ

F.4 User interface

  This clause specifies the characteristics of a user interface
  which are necessary to enable a user to input O/R addresses
  represented in either of the formats specified in clause F.3.
  It is necessary for the user interface to be able to accept any
  valid combination of attributes from Tables F.1, F.2 and F.3.
  If the user interface lists the attributes given in Table F.1, it
  is recommended that either the sequence used in Table F.1 should
  be used, or if this sequence is incompatible with normal cultural
  conventions, the alternative sequence adopted within a particular
  culture.
  If the user supplies a value for the PRMD attribute but omits the
  ADMD attribute, or omits the value for the ADMD attribute, the
  ADMD value to be used is a single space.
  Where an interface accepts an O/R address as a single string
  (e.g., in a command line interface), it is necessary to accept any
  valid labelled format address allowing the user to enter either
  delimiter. The interface should not require the attributes to be
  specified in any particular order. The interface should accept
  labels in upper or lower case.
  NOTE - For some existing command line interfaces it may be
  necessary to enclose the whole labelled format address in quotes.
  If any other type of interface is provided (e.g., a prompting or
  form-fill interface), it is necessary to provide a means which
  enables the user to easily associate the identity of each
  attribute with the labels specified in Tables F.1, F.2 and F.3.

NOTES

  1.   One way to associate the identity of each attribute with the
       labels is to follow the attribute type (or abbreviation) for
       each attribute with the label in brackets, for example:
       Given name (G)
       Initials (I)
       Surname (S)
       Generation Qualifier (Q)
       Common Name (CN)
       Organization (O)
       Organizational Unit 1 (OU1)
       Organizational Unit 2 (OU2)
       Organizational Unit 3 (OU3)
       Organizational Unit 4 (OU4)
       Private Management Domain Name (P)
       Administration Management Domain Name (A)
       Country (C)
  2.   Many users may have difficulty copying an address presented
       as a table (either in labelled or self-explanatory format)
       into a command line interface which uses delimiters.
  3.   For form-fill style interfaces, user performance will be
       optimised when the interface most closely resembles the
       format of the supplied address with the same sequence of
       attributes using the same attribute types or labels.
Examples of application
  1.   The Norwegian user of a command line interface receives a
       business card containing the following O/R address:
       G=john; S=smith; O=a bank ltd; P=abl; A=snomail; C=aq
       The command line interface enables the user to type in the
       address exactly as presented on the card.
  2.   The Norwegian user of a form fill interface receives the
       same business card. The form on the screen includes the
       following field names:
       Fornavn (G)
       Etternavn (S)
       Organisasjon (O)
       Privat domene (P)
       Administrasjonsdomene (A)
       Land (C)
       The user is able to fill in the form by associating the
       single letter labels on the business card with the same
       labels in brackets after the Norwegian names of the
       attributes on the screen. (For form fill input the
       delimiters are not used.)
  3.   The English speaking user of a command line interface
       receives a document quoting the following O/R address:
       Fornavn (G)               Per
       Etternavn (S)             Hansen
       Organisasjon (O)          Teledir
       Organisasjonsenhet (OU1)  Forskning
       Privat domene (P)         Tele
       Administrasjonsdomene (A) Telemax
       Land (C)                  NO
       The user knows how to transform the address from self-
       explanatory to labelled format. The user can choose to enter
       the address with either delimiter, e.g.,:
      g=per;s=hansen;o=teledir;ou1=forskning;p=tele;a=telemax;c=no
       or:
     /g=per/s=hansen/o=teledir/ou1=forskning/p=tele/a=telemax/c=no

References

[1] F.401 - CCITT Message Handling Services - Operations

    and Definitions of Service - Naming and Addressing
    for Public Message Handling Services, Annex B
    (08/92).
    Available (at the time of writing) as the GOPHER URL:
    gopher://info.itu.ch/9/.1/ITUdoc/.dirtree/.1/.itu-
    t/.rec/.f/.23068/.7724.zip

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Author's Address

Harald Tveit Alvestrand UNINETT A/S P.O.Box 6883 ELGESETER N-7002 TRONDHEIM NORWAY

RFC822: [email protected] X.400: C=no; ADMD=; PRMD=uninett; O=uninett; S=alvestrand; G=harald