RFC3121

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Network Working Group K. Best Request for Comments: 3121 OASIS, Inc. Category: Informational N. Walsh

                                              Sun Microsystems, Inc.
                                                           June 2001
                   A URN Namespace for OASIS

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.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This document describes a URN (Uniform Resource Name) namespace that is engineered by the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) for naming persistent resources published by OASIS (such as OASIS Standards, XML (Extensible Markup Language) Document Type Definitions, XML Schemas, Namespaces, Stylesheets, and other documents).

Introduction

The Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) produces many kinds of documents: specifications, working drafts, technical resolutions, schemas, stylesheets, etc.

OASIS wishes to provide global, distributed, persistent, location- independent names for these resources.

The Extensible Markup Language (XML) requires that all resources provide a system identifier, which must be a URI, in addition to an optional public identifier (which provides an alternate mechanism for constructing identifiers) and many evolving specifications require authors to identify documents by URI alone (XML Namespaces, XML Schema, XSLT, etc.).

Motivated by these observations, OASIS would like to assign URNs to some resources in order to retain unique, permanent location- independent names for them.

This namespace specification is for a formal namespace.

Specification Template

Namespace ID:

  "oasis" requested.

Registration Information:

  Registration Version Number: 3
  Registration Date: 2001-02-05

Declared registrant of the namespace:

  Karl Best
  OASIS - Organization for the Advancement of Structured
  Information Standards
  Post Office Box 455
  Billerica, MA USA 01821
  Phone: +1 (978) 667 5115

Declaration of structure:

  The Namespace Specific String (NSS) of all URNs assigned by OASIS
  will have the following hierarchical structure:
  There are two branches at the top of the hierarchy: "names" and
  "member".

The Names Hierarchy

  The NSS in the names hierarchy begins with a document class
  identifier.  There are three classes of identifiers:
  "specification", "tc", and "technical".
  Specifications
     The "specification" hierarchy is for OASIS Specifications.  The
     general structure of the NSS in the specification hierarchy has
     the form:
        urn:oasis:names:specification:{specification-id}
                       :{type}{:subtype}?:{document-id}
     where "specification-id" is a unique identifier for the
     specification, "type" identifies the document type (document,
     schema, stylesheet, entity, xmlns, etc.), the optional
     "subtype" provides additional information about the document
     type (for example, stylesheet or schema language), and
     "document-id" is a unique identifier for the document.
     The Director of Technical Operations at OASIS assigns document
     types, subtypes, and all unique identifiers.
  Technical Committee Work Products
     The "tc" hierarchy is for work products of OASIS Technical
     Committees.  The general structure of the NSS in the tc
     hierarchy has the form:
        urn:oasis:names:tc:{tc-id}:{type}{:subtype}?:{document-id}
     where "tc-id" is a unique identifier for the Technical
     Committee, and the remaining fields are assigned as per the
     specification hierarchy.
  Technical Papers
     The "technical" hierarchy identifies legacy documents
     (Technical Notes, Resolutions, Memoranda, and Research Papers).
     The general structure of the NSS in the "technical" hierarchies
     has the form:
        urn:oasis:names:technical:{document-type}
                       :{document-id}:{amendment-id}
     The document type is one of the following: "note",
     "resolution", "memorandum", or "researchpaper".
     The document and amendment identifiers are derived from the
     legacy system for naming these documents.  The document
     identifier consists of a two digit year and a sequential
     number, the amendment identifier is the year of the amendment.
  The Members Hierarchy
     The NSS in the members hierarchy begins with a unique member
     identifier assigned by OASIS.  The string following the member
     identifier is opaque.  For example:
        urn:oasis:member:A00024:x
     The member identifiers will be assigned by The Director of
     Technical Operations at OASIS.  The opaque string is defined by
     the owner of the branch that begins with
     "urn:oasis:member:{member-id}:".

Relevant ancillary documentation:

  None

Identifier uniqueness considerations:

  Identifier uniqueness will be enforced by the Director of
  Technical Operations who assigns unique identifiers to all
  documents identified by URN.

Identifier persistence considerations:

  OASIS is committed to maintaining the accessibility and
  persistence of all the resources that are assigned URNs.

Process of identifier assignment:

  Assignment is limited to the owner and those authorities that are
  specifically designated by the owner.  OASIS will assign portions
  of its namespace (specifically, those under the members hierarchy)
  for assignment by other parties.

Process of identifier resolution:

  The owner will distribute catalogs (OASIS TR9401 Catalogs) that
  map the assigned URNs to resource identifiers (e.g., URLs).  A
  more interactive, online resolution system will also be deployed
  in the near future.
  The owner will authorize additional resolution services as
  appropriate.

Rules for Lexical Equivalence:

  URNs are lexically equivalent if they are lexically identical.

Conformance with URN Syntax:

  No special considerations.

Validation mechanism:

  None specified.  The owner will publish OASIS TR9401 Catalogs.
  The presence of a URN in a catalog indicates that it is valid.

Scope:

  Global

Examples

The following examples are not guaranteed to be real. They are listed for pedagogical reasons only.

  urn:oasis:names:specification:docbook:dtd:xml:4.1.2
  urn:oasis:names:tc:docbook:dtd:xml:docbook:5.0b1
  urn:oasis:names:technical:memo:9502:1995
  urn:oasis:member:A00024:x

Security Considerations

There are no additional security considerations other than those normally associated with the use and resolution of URNs in general.

References

[1] Goldfarb, C. F., "ISO (International Organization for

   Standardization) ISO 8879:1986(E) Information Processing -- Text
   and Office Systems -- Standard Generalized Markup Language
   (SGML)", 1986.

[2] W3C, XML WG, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0", February

   1998, <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml>.

[3] W3C, Namespaces WG, "Namespaces in XML", January 1999,

   <http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names>.

[4] OASIS, Entity Mgmt. TC, "Entity Management: OASIS Technical

   Resolution 9401:1997 (Amendment 2 to TR 9401)", January 1994,
   <http://www.oasis-open.org/html/a401.htm>.

[5] Moats, R., "URN Syntax", RFC 2141, May 1997.

[6] Mealling, M. and R. Daniel, "URI Resolution Services Necessary

   for URN Resolution", RFC 2483, January 1999.

Authors' Addresses

Karl Best OASIS, Inc. P.O. Box 455 Billerica, MA 01821 US

EMail: [email protected]

Norman Walsh Sun Microsystems, Inc. One Network Drive MS UBUR02-201 Burlington, MA 01803-0902 US

EMail: [email protected]

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

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Acknowledgement

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