RFC2534

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Network Working Group L. Masinter Request for Comments: 2534 Xerox Corporation Category: Standards Track D. Wing

                                               Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                           A. Mutz
                                             Jutvision Corporation
                                                        K. Holtman
                                                               TUE
                                                        March 1999
           Media Features for Display, Print, and Fax

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This specification defines some common media features for describing image resolution, size, color, and image representation methods that are common to web browsing, printing, and facsimile applications. These features are registered for use within the framework of [REG].

Introduction

This work was originally motivated by the requirements from web browsers to send the browser's display characteristics to the web server to allow the server to choose an appropriate representation.

This specification defines some common media features [REG] by which a recipient may inform a sender as to the characteristics of its message handling. The sender may then provide the variant of the message that is most suitable for the recipient.

Different variants would typically be higher or lower resolution images (for example) as appropriate. In the case of a sending to a printer, the result would be higher quality output. In the case of a small screen device (cellphone, portable digital assistant), the result would be faster transmission.

Media features may be used in many different protocol situations. Those defined in this specification can indicate the display or printer dimensions, resolution, color capability. The physical dimensions of a display may be inferred from the display size and display resolution. In the case of paper output, the paper size may be expressed as a token from a list of standard paper sizes. These are presented formally in the Notation section.

Media Feature Registrations

This section defines several media features, using the form specified in [REG].

Image Size

- Media Feature tag name(s):

 pix-x
 pix-y

- ASN.1 identifier associated with this feature tag:

 1.3.6.1.8.1.1
 1.3.6.1.8.1.2

- Summary of the media features indicated by this feature tag:

 These features indicate the display size of the recipient for
 display or print, measured in pixels; they indicate horizontal
 (pix-x) and vertical (pix-y) dimensions.

- Values appropriate for use with this feature tag:

 Signed Integer

- The feature tag is intended primarily for use in the following

 applications, protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Display and print applications where different media choices will
 be made depending on the size of the recipient device. For
 example, a web application for use on a 240x480 display might use
 different HTML pages than one intended for use on a 1024x768
 display.

Resolution

- Media Feature tag name:

 dpi

- ASN.1 identifier associated with this feature tag:

 1.3.6.1.8.1.3

- Summary of the media features indicated by this feature tag:

 This feature indicates the resolution that the recipient can
 display or print without loss, measured in pixels per inch.
 Typically resolution capability is represented as dots-per-inch
 rather than in SI units [SI]. Values for dpi may be expressed as a
 rational to accomodate resolution of SI-based devices; for example
 dpi=19558/100 can be used to represent a resolution of 77 dots per
 centimeter.

- Values appropriate for use with this feature tag:

 Rational

- The feature tag is intended primarily for use in the following

 applications, protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Printing and fax applications typically choose representations of
 a transmitted document depending on the resolution of the
 recipient rather than pixel size.

- Examples of typical use:

 Choosing a version of a printable document to send to a printer.

- Considerations particular to use in individual applications,

 protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Software applications are typically unaware of the resolution of
 the display. Note that there exist devices with different
 resolution in different directions, i.e., individual pixels are
 not square. However, this feature only encompasses the
 uniform resolution.

Registration of 'ua-media'

- Media Feature tag name(s):

 ua-media

- ASN.1 identifier associated with this feature tag:

 1.3.6.1.8.1.4
 - Summary of the media features indicated by this feature tag:
 This feature indicates the recipients device media, indicated with
 an simple token.

- Values appropriate for use with this feature tag:

 Token with an equality relationship. Values include:
 screen           A refreshable display
 screen-paged     a refreshable display which cannot scroll
 stationery       Separately cut sheets of an opaque material
 transparency     Separately cut sheets of a transparent material
 envelope         Envelopes that can be used for conventional
                  mailing purposes
 envelope-plain   Envelopes that are not preprinted and have no
                  windows
 continuous       Continuously connected sheets of an opaque
                  material

- The feature tag is intended primarily for use in the following

 applications, protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Most of the feature values are useful for printing applications, or
 to distinguish printing from display.

- Examples of typical use:

 This might typically be used for selecting between a rendition that
 is intended to be printed and one that is intended to be displayed.

- Considerations particular to use in individual applications,

 protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Other media values were not included because their utility seemed
 relative.

- Interoperability considerations:

 Interoperability with the Internet Print Protocol means that some
 additional feature values may need to be registered.

Paper Size

- Media Feature tag name(s):

 paper-size

- ASN.1 identifier associated with this feature tag:

 1.3.6.1.8.1.5

- Summary of the media features indicated by this feature tag:

 For stationery, it is often useful to have information about the
 size of display used.  While it is more precise and predictable to
 use absolute resolution and pixel sizes, some applications find it
 useful to provide paper size in addition to this information. Note
 that not all of the paper may have a printable area.

- Values appropriate for use with this feature tag:

 Token with an equality relationship. Typical values include:
  letter        8.5x11.0 inches
  a4            210x297 mm
  b4            250x353 mm
  a3            297x420 mm
  legal         8.5x14 inches

- The feature tag is intended primarily for use in the following

 applications, protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 This feature tag seems most useful for the printing application.

- Examples of typical use:

 Choosing between a4 and letter size renditions of the same
 printable document.

Color and greyscale

- Media Feature tag name(s):

color

- ASN.1 identifier associated with this feature tag:

 1.3.6.1.8.1.6

- Summary of the media features indicated by this feature tag:

 This feature indicates a gross level of capability to represent (or
 need for) for handling of color, out of a limited set of choices.

- Values appropriate for use with this feature tag:

 Token with an equality relationship. Values include:
 binary      black-and-white, or other bi-level capability.
 grey        more than two levels of intensity; for example,
             at least two bits of grey-scale data
 limited     availability of a small number of colors, such as
             might be provided by a highlight printer, pen plotter,
             or limited color display. Such capability is useful
             for business graphics. At the lowest level of
             capability, this implies at least one color other than
             black ("highlight color"). At the high end, a small
             number (less than 32) colors. No implication is made
             that any particular color is available.
 mapped      pixel color values are mapped in some specifable way
             to a multi-component color space. Sufficient levels of
             display are available to represent a continuous tone
             photographic image, but the result will be mapped into
             a more limited space.
 full        ability (or at least willingness) to represent a full
             color image and present it. Full continuous tone color
             capability.

- The feature tag is intended primarily for use in the following

 applications, protocols, services, or negotiation mechanisms:
 Web applications may choose between color, grey, or binary
 representations. Fax or printing applications might choose between
 color and non-color renditions, for example.

- Examples of typical use:

 Someone preparing a map of directions to a restaurant might prepare
 different maps for each kind of value.

- Intended usage:

 COMMON

Examples of use of features

The following examples of feature comparison show how these features can be used to describe various capabilities. The syntax used to express combinations of features is purely illustrative and not normative:

pix-x<=1024, pix-y<=768

  might be used for a 1024x768 display.

dpi=300

  might be used for a 300 dpi printer.

paper-size=a4

  indicates the display size is 210x297mm.

IANA considerations

This document calls for registration of the following feature tags, as per [REG]: pix-x, pix-y, dpi, ua-media, paper-size, color. ASN.1 identifiers should be assigned to each of these and replaced in the body of the registration.

Security Considerations

Inaccurate media feature information ascribed to a recipient might cause a sender to subsequently send content that the recipient is not actually able to process, thus causing a denial of service.

Acknowledgments

This document is based on a previous memo co-authored with Lou Montoulli. It had benefited from the comments of Graham Klyne, Ho John Lee, Brian Behlendorf, Jeff Mogul, Ted Hardie, and Dan Wing.

References

[REG] Holtman, K., Mutz, A. and T. Hardie. "Feature Tag Registration

     Procedures", BCP 31, RFC 2506, March 1999.

[SI] ISO 1000:1992 "SI units and recommendations for the use of

     their multiples and of certain other units", International
     Organization for Standardization, 1992.

Authors' Addresses

Larry Masinter Xerox Corporation Palo Alto Research Center 3333 Coyote Hill Road Palo Alto CA 94304

Fax +1 650 812 4333 EMail: [email protected]

Dan Wing Cisco Systems, Inc. 101 Cooper Street Santa Cruz, CA 95060 USA

Phone: +1 831 457 5200 Fax: +1 831 457 5208 EMail: [email protected]

Andrew H. Mutz Jutvision Corporation 124 University Avenue Suite 202 Palo Alto CA 94301

Phone: +1 650 325 6787 Fax: +1 650 325 9337 Email: [email protected]

Koen Holtman Technische Universiteit Eindhoven Postbus 513 Kamer HG 6.57 5600 MB Eindhoven (The Netherlands)

EMail: [email protected]

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