| Network Working Group | M. Nottingham, Editor |
| INTERNET DRAFT | |
| <draft-ietf-atompub-format-03> | R. Sayre, Editor |
| Category: Informational | Boswijck Memex Consulting |
| Expires: April 2005 | October 2004 |
The Atom Syndication Format
draft-ietf-atompub-format-03
By submitting this Internet-Draft, I certify that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which I am aware have been disclosed, and any of which I become aware will be disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress".
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at <http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt>.
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at <http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html>.
This Internet-Draft will expire in April 2005.
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). All Rights Reserved.
This document specifies Atom, an XML-based Web content and metadata syndication format.
1
Introduction
1.1
Editorial Notes
1.2
Example
1.3
Conformance
1.4
Notational Conventions
2
Atom Documents
3
Common Atom Constructs
3.1
Text Constructs
3.1.1
"type" Attribute
3.2
Person Constructs
3.2.1
"atom:name" Element
3.2.2
"atom:uri" Element
3.2.3
"atom:email" Element
3.3
Date Constructs
3.4
Service Constructs
3.4.1
"href" Attribute
3.5
Link Constructs
3.5.1
"rel" Attribute
3.5.2
"type" Attribute
3.5.3
"href" Attribute
3.5.4
"hreflang" Attribute
3.5.5
"title" Attribute
3.6
Identity Constructs
3.6.1
Dereferencing Identity Constructs
3.6.2
Comparing Identity Constructs
4
The "atom:feed" Element
4.1
"version" Attribute
4.2
The "atom:head" Element
4.2.1
"atom:title" Element
4.2.2
"atom:link" Element
4.2.3
"atom:introspection" Element
4.2.4
"atom:post" Element
4.2.5
"atom:author" Element
4.2.6
"atom:contributor" Element
4.2.7
"atom:tagline" Element
4.2.8
"atom:id" Element
4.2.9
"atom:generator" Element
4.2.10
"atom:copyright" Element
4.2.11
"atom:info" Element
4.2.12
"atom:updated" Element
5
The "atom:entry" Element
5.1
"atom:title" Element
5.2
"atom:link" Element
5.3
"atom:edit" Element
5.4
"atom:author" Element
5.5
"atom:contributor" Element
5.6
"atom:id" Element
5.7
"atom:updated" Element
5.8
"atom:published" Element
5.9
"atom:summary" Element
5.10
"atom:content" Element
5.10.1
"type" attribute
5.10.2
"src" attribute
5.10.3
Processing Model
5.11
"atom:copyright" Element
5.12
"atom:origin" Element
6
Managing Feed State
7
Securing Atom Documents
7.1
Digital Signatures
7.2
Encryption
8
Embedding Atom in Other Formats
9
Extending Atom
10
IANA Considerations
11
Security Considerations
12
Normative References
§
Author's Addresses
A
Contributors
B
Revision History
§
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements
Atom is an XML-based document format intended to allow lists of related information, known as "feeds", to be synchronised between publishers and consumers. Feeds are composed of a number of items, known as "entries", each with an extensible set of attached metadata. For example, each entry has a title.
The primary use case that Atom addresses is the syndication of Web content such as Weblogs and news headlines to Web sites as well as directly to user agents. However, nothing precludes it from being used for other purposes and kinds of content.
Details of communication protocols between software agents using Atom can be found in the Atom Protocol specification [Atom-protocol].
[[ more motivation / design principles ]]
The Atom format is a work-in-progress, and this draft is both incomplete and likely to change rapidly. As a result, THE FORMAT DESCRIBED BY THIS DRAFT SHOULD NOT BE DEPLOYED, either in production systems or in any non-experimental fashion on the Internet.
Discussion of this draft happens in two fora;
Active development takes place on the mailing list, while the Wiki is used for issue tracking and new proposals.
This document is an early draft and known to be incomplete. Topics marked [[like this]] indicate where additional text is likely to be added.
A minimal, single-entry Atom Feed Document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed version="draft-ietf-atompub-format-03: do not deploy"
xmlns="http://purl.org/atom/ns#draft-ietf-atompub-format-03">
<head>
<title>Example Feed</title>
<link href="http://example.org/"/>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
<author>
<name>John Doe</name>
</author>
</head>
<entry>
<title>Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok</title>
<link href="http://example.org/2003/12/13/atom03"/>
<id>vemmi://example.org/2003/32397</id>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
</entry>
</feed>
[[ talk about atom documents and atom consumers, and how requirements are placed on them ]]
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 BCP 14, [RFC2119].
This specification uses XML Namespaces [W3C.REC-xml-names-19990114] to uniquely identify XML elements and attribute names. It uses the following namespace prefixes for the indicated namespace URIs;
Note that the choice of any namespace prefix is arbitrary and not semantically significant.
Atom is specified using terms from the XML Infoset [W3C.REC-xml-infoset-20011024]. However, this specification uses a shorthand for two common terms; the phrase "Information Item" is omitted when naming Element Information Items and Attribute Information Items.
Therefore, when this specification uses the term "element," it is referring to an Element Information Item in Infoset terms. Likewise, when it uses the term "attribute," it is referring to an Attribute Information Item.
This specification describes two kinds of Atom Documents; Atom Feed Documents and Atom Entry Documents.
An Atom Feed Document is a representation of an Atom feed, including metadata about the feed, and some or all of the entries associated with it. Its document element is atom:feed.
An Atom Entry Document represents exactly one Atom Entry, outside of the context of an Atom Feed. Its document element is atom:entry.
Both kinds of Atom documents are specified in terms of the XML Information Set, serialised as XML 1.0 [W3C.REC-xml-20040204] and identified with the "application/atom+xml" media type. Atom Documents MUST be well-formed XML.
[[ Validity? ]]
Atom constrains the appearance and content of elements and attributes; unless otherwise stated, Atom Documents MAY contain other Information Items as appropriate. In particular, Comment Information Items and Processing Instruction Information Items SHOULD be ignored in the normal processing of an Atom Document.
Any element in an Atom Document MAY have an xml:base attribute. XML Base [W3C.REC-xmlbase-20010627] processing MUST be applied to any relative URI reference present in an Atom document. This includes such elements and attributes as specified by Atom itself, as well as those specified by extensions to Atom.
Any element in an Atom Document MAY have an xml:lang attribute, whose content indicates the default natural language of the element's content. Requirements regarding the content and interpretation of xml:lang are specified in XML 1.0 [W3C.REC-xml-20040204] Section 2.12.
[[ discussion of URI escaping and i18n ]]
[[ discussion of white space ]]
Atom is extensible. See the section titled 'Extending Atom' later in this document for a full description of how Atom Documents can be extended.
Many of Atom's elements share a few common structures. This section defines a few such structures and their requirements, for convenient reference by the appropriate element definitions.
When an element is identified as being a particular kind of construct, it inherits the corresponding requirements from that construct's definition in this section.
A Text construct contains human readable text, usually in fairly small quantities.
Text constructs MAY have a "type" attribute. When present, the value MUST be one of "TEXT", "HTML" or "XHTML". If the "type" attribute is not provided, software MUST behave as though it were present with a value of "TEXT".
Note that MIME media types [RFC2045] are not acceptable values for the "type" attribute.
If the value is "TEXT", the content of the Text construct MUST NOT contain child elements. Such text is intended to be presented to humans in a readable fashion. Thus, software MAY display it using normal text rendering techniques such as proportional fonts, white-space collapsing, and justification.
If the value of "type" is "HTML", the content of the Text construct MUST NOT contain child elements, and SHOULD be suitable for handling by software that knows HTML. The HTML markup must be encoded; for example, "<br>" as "<br>". The HTML markup SHOULD be such that it could validly appear directly within an HTML <DIV> element. Receiving software which displays the content MAY use the markup to aid in displaying it.
If the value of "type" is "XHTML", the content of the Text construct MAY contain child elements. The content SHOULD be XHTML text and markup that could validly appear directly within an xhtml:div element. Receiving software which displays the content MAY use the markup to aid in displaying it.
A Person construct is an element that describes a person, corporation, or similar entity.
Person constructs MAY be extended by namespace-qualified element children.
This specification assigns no significance to the order of appearance of the child elements of atom:entry.
The "atom:name" element's content conveys a human-readable name for the person. Person constructs MUST contain exactly one "atom:name" element.
The "atom:uri" element's content conveys a URI associated with the person. Person constructs MAY contain an atom:uri element, but MUST NOT contain more than one. The content of atom:uri in a Person construct MUST be a URI [RFC2396].
xml:base [W3C.REC-xmlbase-20010627] processing MUST be applied to the atom:uri element's content.
The "atom:email" element's content conveys an e-mail address associated with the persons. Person constructs MAY contain an atom:email element, but MUST NOT contain more than one. Its content MUST be an e-mail address [RFC2822].
A Date construct is an element whose content MUST conform to the date-time BNF rule in [RFC3339].
A Service construct is an empty element that conveys the URI of an Atom Publishing Protocol [Atom-protocol] service associated with an entry or feed.
A Service construct has the following attribute:
The "href" attribute contains the a URI pointing to the endpoint of the service named by the name attribute. atom:service elements MUST have a "href" attribute, whose value MUST be a URI.
xml:base processing MUST be applied to the "href" attribute.
A Link construct is an empty element that describes a connection from an Atom document to another Web resource.
The "rel" attribute indicates the type of relationship that the link represents. Link constructs MAY have a rel attribute, whose value MUST be a string, and MUST be one of the following values: "alternate", "related".
If the "rel" attribute is not present, the link element MUST be interpreted as if the value "alternate" had been supplied.
The "type" attribute indicates an advisory media type; it MAY be used as a hint to determine the type of the representation which should be returned when the URI in the href attribute is dereferenced. Note that the type attribute does not override the actual media type returned with the representation.
Link constructs MAY have a type attribute, whose value MUST be a registered media type [RFC2045].
The "href" attribute contains the link's URI. Link constructs MUST have a href attribute, whose value MUST be a URI [RFC2396].
xml:base [W3C.REC-xmlbase-20010627] processing MUST be applied to the href attribute's content.
The "hreflang" attribute's content describes the language of the resource pointed to by the href attribute. When used together with the rel="alternate", it implies a translated version of the entry. Link constructs MAY have an hreflang attribute, whose value MUST be a language tag [RFC3066].
The "title" attribute conveys human-readable information about the link. Link constructs MAY have a title attribute.
An Identity construct is an element whose content conveys a permanent, universally unique identifier for the construct's parent. Its content MUST be an absolute URI [RFC2396].
When an Atom document is relocated, migrated, syndicated, republished, exported or imported, the content of its Identity construct MUST NOT change. Put another way, an Identity construct pertains to all instantiations of a particular Atom entry or feed; revisions retain the same content in their Identity constructs.
The content of an Identity construct MAY be dereferencable (e.g. an HTTP URI). However, processors MUST NOT assume it to be dereferencable.
The content of an Identity construct MUST be created in a way that assures uniqueness, and it is suggested that the Identity construct be stored along with the associated resource.
Because of the risk of confusion between URIs that would be equivalent if dereferenced, the following normalization strategy is strongly encouraged when generating Identity constructs:
Instances of Identity constructs can be compared to determine whether an entry or feed is the same as one seen before. Processors MUST compare Identity constructs on a character-by-character basis in a case-sensitive fashion.
As a result, two URIs that resolve to the same resource but are not character-for-character identical will be considered different for the purposes of Identifier comparison.
For example, "http://www.example.org/thing", "http://www.example.org/Thing", "http://www.EXAMPLE.org/thing" and "HTTP://www.example.org/thing" will all be considered different identifiers, despite their differences in case.
Likewise, "http://www.example.com/~bob", "http://www.example.com/%7ebob" and "http://www.example.com/%7Ebob" will all be considered different identifiers, because URI %-escaping is significant for the purposes of comparison.
The "atom:feed" element is the document (i.e., top-level) element of an Atom Feed Document, acting as a container for metadata and data associated with the feed. Its first element child MUST be atom:head, which MAY be followed zero or more atom:entry child elements.
atom:feed elements MUST have a "version" attribute whose content indicates the version of the Atom specification that the feed conforms to. The content of this attribute is unstructured text.
The version identifier for this specification is "draft-ietf-atompub-format-03: do not deploy".
The atom:head element acts as a container for metadata about the feed itself.
The atom:head element MAY contain any namespace-qualified [W3C.REC-xml-names-19990114] elements as children. This specification assigns no significance to the order of appearance of the child elements of atom:head.
The following child elements are defined by this specification (note that the presence of some of these elements is required):
The "atom:title" element is a Text construct that conveys a human-readable title for the feed. atom:head elements MUST contain exactly one atom:title element.
The "atom:link" element is a Link construct that conveys a URI associated with the feed. The nature of the relationship is determined by the construct's rel attribute.
atom:head elements MUST contain at least one atom:link element with a rel attribute value of "alternate".
atom:head elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:link element with a rel attribute value of "alternate" that has the same type attribute value.
If a feed's atom:link element with type="alternate" resolves to an HTML document, then that document SHOULD have a autodiscovery link element [Atom-autodiscovery] that reflects back to the feed.
atom:head elements MAY contain additional atom:link elements beyond those described above.
The "atom:introspection" element is a Service construct that conveys the URI of an introspection file associated with the feed. atom:head elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:introspection element.
The "atom:post" element is a Service construct that conveys the URI used to add entries to the feed. atom:head elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:post element.
The "atom:author" element is a Person construct that indicates the default author of the feed. atom:head elements MUST contain exactly one atom:author element, UNLESS all of the atom:feed element's child atom:entry elements contain an atom:author element. atom:head elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:author element.
[[explain inheritance]]
The "atom:contributor" element is a Person construct that indicates a person or other entity who contributes to the feed. atom:head elements MAY contain one or more atom:contributor elements.
The "atom:tagline" element is a Text construct that conveys a human-readable description or tagline for the feed. atom:head elements MAY contain an atom:tagline element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The "atom:id" element is an Identity construct that conveys a permanent, universally unique identifier for a feed. atom:head elements MAY contain an atom:id element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The "atom:generator" element's content identifies the software agent used to generate the feed, for debugging and other purposes. atom:head elements MAY contain an atom:generator element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The content of this element, when present, MUST be a string that is a human-readable name for the generating agent.
The atom:generator element MAY have a "uri" attribute whose value MUST be a URI. When dereferenced, that URI SHOULD produce a representation that is relevant to that agent.
The atom:generator element MAY have a "version" attribute that indicates the version of the generating agent. When present, its value is unstructured text.
The "atom:copyright" element is Text construct that conveys a human-readable copyright statement for the feed. atom:head elements MAY contain an atom:copyright element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The atom:copyright element SHOULD NOT be used to convey machine-readable licensing information.
[[Is the following paragraph bogus amateur lawyering? The first paragraph seems sufficient.]]
The atom:copyright element may be assumed to apply to all entries contained by the feed except those entries which contain atom:copyright elements. The atom:copyright element MUST, if present, be considered to apply to the feed as a collection of entries.
The "atom:info" element is a Text construct that conveys a human-readable explanation of the feed format itself. atom:head elements MAY contain an atom:info element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The atom:info element SHOULD NOT considered meaningful by processors; it is a convenience to publishers in certain situations.
The "atom:updated" element is a Date construct indicating the most recent instant in time when a change to the feed was made that the publisher wishes to bring to the attention of subscribers. For example, such changes might not include minor adjustments like spelling and grammatical corrections.
atom:head elements MUST contain exactly one atom:updated element.
The "atom:entry" element represents an individual entry. This element can appear as a child of the atom:feed element, or it can appear as the document (i.e., top-level) element of a standalone Atom Entry Document.
When appearing in an Atom Entry Document, atom:entry elements MUST have a "version" attribute whose content indicates the version of the Atom specification that the entry conforms to.
The version identifier for this specification is "draft-ietf-atompub-format-03: do not deploy".
The atom:entry element MAY contain any namespace-qualified [W3C.REC-xml-names-19990114] elements as children. This specification assigns no significance to the order of appearance of the child elements of atom:entry.
The following child elements are defined by this specification (note that it requires the presence of some of these elements):
The "atom:title" element is a Text construct that conveys a human-readable title for the entry. atom:entry elements MUST have exactly one "atom:title" element.
The "atom:link" element is a Link construct that conveys a URI associated with the entry. The nature of the relationship as well as the link itself is determined by the element's content.
atom:entry elements MUST contain at least one atom:link element with a rel attribute value of "alternate".
atom:entry elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:link element with a rel attribute value of "alternate" that has the same type attribute value.
atom:entry elements MAY contain additional atom:link elements beyond those described above.
The "atom:edit" element is a Service construct that conveys the URI used to retrieve and edit the source representation of the entry. atom:entry elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:edit element.
The "atom:author" element is a Person construct that indicates the default author of the entry. atom:entry elements MUST contain exactly one atom:author element, unless, in an Atom Feed Document, the atom:head element contains an atom:author element itself. atom:entry elements MUST NOT contain more than one atom:author element.
The "atom:contributor" element is a Person construct that indicates a person or other entity who contributes to the entry. atom:entry elements MAY contain one or more atom:contributor elements.
The "atom:id" element is an Identity construct that conveys a permanent, universally unique identifier for an entry. atom:entry elements MUST contain exactly one atom:id element.
The "atom:updated" element is a Date construct indicating the most recent instant in time when a change to the entry was made that the publisher wishes to bring to the attention of subscribers. For example, such changes might not include minor adjustments like spelling and grammatical corrections.
atom:entry elements MUST contain exactly one atom:updated element.
Publishers MAY change the value of this element over time. Processors MAY present entries sorted using this value. Processors MAY choose not to present entries until the instant in time specified in the atom:updated element has passed.
The "atom:published" element is a Date construct indicating an instant in time associated with an event early in the life cycle of the entry. Typically, atom:published will be associated with the initial creation or first availability of the resource.
atom:entry elements MAY contain an atom:published element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
Processors MAY present entries sorted using this value. Processors MAY choose not to present entries until the instant in time specified in the atom:published element has passed.
The "atom:summary" element is a Text construct that conveys a short summary, abstract or excerpt of the entry. atom:entry elements MAY contain an atom:summary element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
atom:entry elements MUST contain an atom:summary element in any of the following cases:
The "atom:content" element either contains or links to the content of the entry. atom:entry elements MUST contain zero or one atom:content elements.
atom:content MAY have a "type" attribute, When present, the value MAY be one of "TEXT", "HTML", or "XHTML". Failing that, it MUST be a MIME media type [RFC2045] in which, to use the terminology of Section 5 of [RFC2045], the top level is a discrete type. If the type attribute is not provided, software MUST behave as though it were present with a value of "TEXT".
atom:content MAY have a "src" attribute, whose value MUST be a URI. If the "src" attribute is present, software MAY use the URI to retrieve the content. If the "src" attribute is present, atom:content MUST be empty. That is to say, the content may be retrievable using "src=" URI, or it may be contained within atom:content, but not both.
If the "src" attribute is present, the "type" attribute MUST be provided and MUST be a MIME media type [RFC2045], rather than "TEXT", "HTML", or "XHTML". The value is advisory; that is to say, upon dereferencing the URI to retrieve the content, if the server providing that content also provides a media type, the server-provided media type is authoritative.
If the value of type begins with "text/" or ends with "+xml", the content SHOULD be local; that is to say, no "src" attribute should be provided.
Software MUST apply the following rules in succession in the order below to ascertain the rules governing the content of "atom:content".
The "atom:copyright" element is a Text construct that conveys a human-readable copyright statement for the entry. atom:entry elements MAY contain an atom:copyright element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
The atom:copyright element SHOULD NOT be used to convey machine-readable licensing information.
If an atom:entry element does not contain an atom:copyright element, then the atom:copyright element of the containing atom:feed element's atom:head element, if present, should be considered to apply to the entry.
The "atom:origin" element's content conveys the original source of the entry; e.g., the feed where the entry was first published.
If the source is an Atom Feed Document, then the content of atom:origin MUST be the same, character-for-character, as that of the atom:id element in that document's atom:head section (i.e., the XPath expression "/atom:feed/atom:head/atom:id").
The content of this element MUST be a URI. atom:entry elements MAY contain an atom:origin element, but MUST NOT contain more than one.
[[ talk about what it means to keep a view of a feed ]]
Because Atom is an XML-based format, existing XML security mechanisms can be used to secure its content.
Note that while these mechanisms are available to secure Atom documents, they should not be used indiscriminately.
The document element of an Atom document (i.e., atom:feed in an Atom Feed Document, atom:entry in an Atom Entry Document) MAY have an Enveloped Signature, as described by XML-Signature and Syntax Processing [W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212]. Other XML signature mechanisms MUST NOT be used on the document element of an Atom document.
Processors MUST NOT reject an Atom document containing such a signature because they are not capable of verifying it; they MUST continue processing and MAY inform the user of their failure to validate the signature.
In other words, the presence of an element with the namespace URI "http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#" and a local name of "Signature" as a child of the document element must not cause a processor to fail merely because of its presence.
Other elements in an Atom document MUST NOT be signed unless their definitions explicitly specify such a capability.
The document element of an Atom document (i.e., atom:feed in an Atom Feed Document, atom:entry in an Atom Entry Document) MAY be encrypted, using the mechanisms described by XML Encryption Syntax and Processing [W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210]. Other XML encryption mechanisms MUST NOT be used on the document element of an Atom document.
[[ ... ]]
[[ ... ]]
An Atom Document, when serialized as XML 1.0, can be identified with the following media type:
Additional information:
Atom document can be encrypted and signed using [W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210] and [W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212], respectively, and is subject to the security considerations implied by their use.
| [Atom-autodiscovery] | Pilgrim, M., "Atom Feed Autodiscovery", work-in-progress, August 2004. |
| [Atom-protocol] | Gregorio, J. and R. Sayre, "The Atom Publishing Protocol", work-in-progress, July 2004. |
| [RFC2045] | Freed, N. and N.S. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996. |
| [RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |
| [RFC2396] | Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R.T. and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax", RFC 2396, August 1998. |
| [RFC2822] | Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822, April 2001. |
| [RFC3023] | Murata, M., St. Laurent, S. and D. Kohn, "XML Media Types", RFC 3023, January 2001. |
| [RFC3066] | Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of Languages", BCP 47, RFC 3066, January 2001. |
| [RFC3339] | Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps", RFC 3339, July 2002. |
| [RFC3548] | Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 3548, July 2003. |
| [W3C.NOTE-datetime-19980827] | Wolf, M and C Wicksteed, "Date and Time Formats", W3C NOTE NOTE-datetime-19980827, August 1998. |
| [W3C.REC-xml-20040204] | Yergeau, F, Paoli, J, Sperberg-McQueen, C, Bray, T and E Maler, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Third Edition)", W3C REC REC-xml-20040204, February 2004. |
| [W3C.REC-xml-infoset-20011024] | Tobin, R and J Cowan, "XML Information Set", W3C FirstEdition REC-xml-infoset-20011024, October 2001. |
| [W3C.REC-xml-names-19990114] | Hollander, D, Bray, T and A Layman, "Namespaces in XML", W3C REC REC-xml-names-19990114, January 1999. |
| [W3C.REC-xmlbase-20010627] | Marsh, J, "XML Base", W3C REC REC-xmlbase-20010627, June 2001. |
| [W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212] | Solo, D, Reagle, J and D Eastlake, "XML-Signature Syntax and Processing", W3C REC REC-xmldsig-core-20020212, February 2002. |
| [W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210] | Reagle, J and D Eastlake, "XML Encryption Syntax and Processing", W3C REC REC-xmlenc-core-20021210, December 2002. |
| Mark Nottingham (editor) | |
| EMail: | mnot@pobox.com |
| URI: | http://www.mnot.net/ |
| Robert Sayre (editor) | |
| Boswijck Memex Consulting | |
| EMail: | rfsayre@boswijck.com |
| URI: | http://boswijck.com |
The following people contributed to preliminary drafts of this document: Tim Bray, Mark Pilgrim, and Sam Ruby. The content and concepts within are a product of the Atom community and the Atom Publishing Format and Protocol Working Group.
[[ this section should be removed before final publication. ]]
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