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Spec: Atom 1.0
Updated: v1.0 2005-12-31
Table of Contents
- Status of This Memo
- Copyright Notice
- Abstract
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Atom Documents
- 3. Common Atom Constructs
-
4. Atom Element Definitions
- 4.1. Container Elements
-
4.2. Metadata Elements
- 4.2.1. The "atom:author" Element
- 4.2.2. The "atom:category" Element
- 4.2.3. The "atom:contributor" Element
- 4.2.4. The "atom:generator" Element
- 4.2.5. The "atom:icon" Element
- 4.2.6. The "atom:id" Element
- 4.2.7. The "atom:link" Element
- 4.2.8. The "atom:logo" Element
- 4.2.9. The "atom:published" Element
- 4.2.10. The "atom:rights" Element
- 4.2.11. The "atom:source" Element
- 4.2.12. The "atom:subtitle" Element
- 4.2.13. The "atom:summary" Element
- 4.2.14. The "atom:title" Element
- 4.2.15. The "atom:updated" Element
- 5. Securing Atom Documents
- 6. Extending Atom
- 7. IANA Considerations
- 8. Security Considerations
- 9. References
- Appendix A. Contributors
- Appendix B. RELAX NG Compact Schema
- Authors' Addresses
- Full Copyright Statement
- Intellectual Property
- Acknowledgement
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 (C) The Internet Society (2005).
This document specifies Atom, an XML-based Web content and metadata syndication format.
Atom is an XML-based document format that describes lists of related information known as "feeds". 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.
A brief, single-entry Atom Feed Document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
<title>Example Feed</title>
<link href="http://example.org/"/>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
<author>
<name>John Doe</name>
</author>
<id>urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6</id>
<entry>
<title>Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok</title>
<link href="http://example.org/2003/12/13/atom03"/>
<id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a</id>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
<summary>Some text.</summary>
</entry>
</feed>
A more extensive, single-entry Atom Feed Document:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
<title type="text">dive into mark</title>
<subtitle type="html">
A <em>lot</em> of effort
went into making this effortless
</subtitle>
<updated>2005-07-31T12:29:29Z</updated>
<id>tag:example.org,2003:3</id>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" hreflang="en" href="http://example.org/"/>
<link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://example.org/feed.atom"/>
<rights>Copyright (c) 2003, Mark Pilgrim</rights>
<generator uri="http://www.example.com/" version="1.0">Example Toolkit</generator>
<entry>
<title>Atom draft-07 snapshot</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://example.org/2005/04/02/atom"/>
<link rel="enclosure" type="audio/mpeg" length="1337" href="http://example.org/audio/ph34r_my_podcast.mp3"/>
<id>tag:example.org,2003:3.2397</id>
<updated>2005-07-31T12:29:29Z</updated>
<published>2003-12-13T08:29:29-04:00</published>
<author>
<name>Mark Pilgrim</name>
<uri>http://example.org/</uri>
<email>[email protected]</email>
</author>
<contributor>
<name>Sam Ruby</name>
</contributor>
<contributor>
<name>Joe Gregorio</name>
</contributor>
<content type="xhtml" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://diveintomark.org/">
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<p><i>[Update: The Atom draft is finished.]</i></p>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
</feed>
The XML Namespaces URI (W3C.REC-xml-names-19990114) for the XML data format described in this specification is:
For convenience, this data format may be referred to as "Atom 1.0". This specification uses "Atom" internally.
This specification describes conformance in terms of two artifacts: Atom Feed Documents and Atom Entry Documents. Additionally, it places some requirements on Atom Processors.
This specification uses the namespace prefix atom:
for the Namespace URI identified in Section
1.2, above. Note that the choice of namespace prefix is arbitrary and not semantically significant.
Atom is specified using terms from the XML Infoset (W3C.REC-xml-infoset-20040204). 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.
Some sections of this specification are illustrated with fragments of a non- normative RELAX NG Compact schema (RELAXNG). However, the text of this specification provides the definition of conformance. A complete schema appears in Appendix B.
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), as scoped to those conformance targets.
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 root is the atom:feed
element.
An Atom Entry Document represents exactly one Atom entry, outside of the context of an Atom feed.
Its root is the atom:entry
element.
namespace atom = "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
start = atomFeed | atomEntry
Both kinds of Atom Documents are specified in terms of the XML Information Set, serialized as XML
1.0 (W3C.REC-xml-20040204) and identified with the
application/atom+xml
media type. Atom Documents MUST be well-formed XML. This specification does
not define a DTD for Atom Documents, and hence does not require them to be valid (in the sense used
by XML).
Atom allows the use of IRIs (RFC3987). Every URI
(RFC3986) is also an IRI, so a URI may be used wherever below
an IRI is named. There are two special considerations: (1) when an IRI that is not also a URI is
given for dereferencing, it MUST be mapped to a URI using the steps in Section 3.1 of
(RFC3987) and (2) when an IRI is serving as an atom:id
value, it MUST NOT be so mapped, so that the comparison works as described in Section 4.2.6.1.
Any element defined by this specification MAY have an xml:base
attribute [W3C .REC-
xmlbase-20010627]. When xml:base
is used in an Atom Document, it serves the function described in
section 5.1.1 of (RFC3986), establishing the base URI (or
IRI) for resolving any relative references found within the effective scope of the xml:base
attribute.
Any element defined by this specification MAY have an xml:lang
attribute, whose content indicates
the natural language for the element and its descendents. The language context is only significant
for elements and attributes declared to be "Language- Sensitive" by this specification. Requirements
regarding the content and interpretation of xml:lang
are specified in XML 1.0
(W3C.REC-xml-20040204), Section 2.12.
atomCommonAttributes =
attribute xml:base { atomUri }?,
attribute xml:lang { atomLanguageTag }?,
undefinedAttribute*
Atom is an extensible format. See Section 6 of this document for a full description of how Atom Documents can be extended.
Atom Processors MAY keep state sourced from Atom Feed Documents and combine them with other Atom Feed Documents, in order to facilitate a contiguous view of the contents of a feed. The manner in which Atom Feed Documents are combined in order to reconstruct a feed (e.g., updating entries and metadata, dealing with missing entries) is out of the scope of this specification.
Many of Atom's elements share a few common structures. This section defines those 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.
Note that there MUST NOT be any white space in a Date construct or in any IRI. Some XML-emitting implementations erroneously insert white space around values by default, and such implementations will emit invalid Atom Documents.
A Text construct contains human-readable text, usually in small quantities. The content of Text constructs is Language-Sensitive.
atomPlainTextConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "text" | "html" }?,
text
atomXHTMLTextConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "xhtml" },
xhtmlDiv
atomTextConstruct = atomPlainTextConstruct | atomXHTMLTextConstruct
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, Atom Processors MUST behave as though it were
present with a value of text
. Unlike the atom:content
element defined in Section 4.1.3, MIME
media types (MIMEREG) MUST NOT be used as values for the
type
attribute on Text constructs.
Example atom:title
with text content:
<title type="text">
Less: <
</title>
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, Atom Processors MAY
collapse white space (including line breaks) and display the text using typographic techniques such
as justification and proportional fonts.
Example atom:title
with HTML content:
<title type="html">
Less: <em> &lt; </em>
</title>
If the value of type
is html
, the content of the Text construct MUST NOT contain child elements
and SHOULD be suitable for handling as HTML
(HTML). Any markup within MUST be escaped; for
example, <br>
as <br>
. HTML markup within SHOULD be such that it could validly appear
directly within an HTML <DIV>
element, after unescaping. Atom Processors that display such
content MAY use that markup to aid in its display.
Example atom:title
with XHTML content:
<title type="xhtml" xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<xhtml:div>
Less: <xhtml:em> < </xhtml:em>
</xhtml:div>
</title>
If the value of type
is xhtml
, the content of the Text construct MUST be a single XHTML div
element (XHTML) and SHOULD be
suitable for handling as XHTML. The XHTML div
element itself MUST NOT be considered part of the
content. Atom Processors that display the content MAY use the markup to aid in displaying it. The
escaped versions of characters such as &
and >
represent those characters, not markup.
Examples of valid XHTML content:
<summary type="xhtml">
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
This is <b>XHTML</b> content.
</div>
</summary>
...
<summary type="xhtml">
<xhtml:div xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
This is <xhtml:b>XHTML</xhtml:b> content.
</xhtml:div>
</summary>
The following example assumes that the XHTML namespace has been bound to the xh
prefix earlier in
the document:
<summary type="xhtml">
<xh:div>
This is <xh:b>XHTML</xh:b> content.
</xh:div>
</summary>
A Person construct is an element that describes a person, corporation, or similar entity (hereafter, 'person').
atomPersonConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
(element atom:name { text }
& element atom:uri { atomUri }?
& element atom:email { atomEmailAddress }?
& extensionElement*)
This specification assigns no significance to the order of appearance of the child elements in a Person construct. Person constructs allow extension Metadata elements (see Section 6.4).
The atom:name
element's content conveys a human-readable name for the person. The content of
atom:name
is Language-Sensitive. Person constructs MUST contain exactly one atom:name
element.
The atom:uri
element's content conveys an IRI 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 an IRI reference (RFC3987).
The atom:email
element's content conveys an e-mail address associated with the person. Person
constructs MAY contain an atom:email
element, but MUST NOT contain more than one. Its content
MUST conform to the "addr-spec" production in (RFC2822).
A Date construct is an element whose content MUST conform to the "date-time" production in (RFC3339). In addition, an uppercase "T" character MUST be used to separate date and time, and an uppercase "Z" character MUST be present in the absence of a numeric time zone offset.
atomDateConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
xsd:dateTime
Such date values happen to be compatible with the following specifications: [ISO.8601.1988],
(W3C.NOTE-datetime-19980827), and
(W3C.REC-xmlschema-2-20041028).
Example Date constructs:
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02.25Z</updated>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02+01:00</updated>
<updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02.25+01:00</updated>
Date values SHOULD be as accurate as possible. For example, it would be generally inappropriate for a publishing system to apply the same timestamp to several entries that were published during the course of a single day.
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 element children consist of
metadata elements followed by zero or more atom:entry
child elements.
atomFeed =
element atom:feed {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContributor*
& atomGenerator?
& atomIcon?
& atomId
& atomLink*
& atomLogo?
& atomRights?
& atomSubtitle?
& atomTitle
& atomUpdated
& extensionElement*),
atomEntry*
}
This specification assigns no significance to the order of atom:entry
elements within the feed.
The following child elements are defined by this specification (note that the presence of some of these elements is required):
-
atom:feed
elements MUST contain one or moreatom:author
elements, unless all of theatom:feed
element's childatom:entry
elements contain at least oneatom:author
element. -
atom:feed
elements MAY contain any number ofatom:category
elements. -
atom:feed
elements MAY contain any number ofatom:contributor
elements. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:generator
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:icon
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:logo
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:id
element. -
atom:feed
elements SHOULD contain oneatom:link
element with arel
attribute value of "self". This is the preferred URI for retrieving Atom Feed Documents representing this Atom feed. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:link
element with arel
attribute value of "alternate" that has the same combination of type andhreflang
attribute values. -
atom:feed
elements MAY contain additionalatom:link
elements beyond those described above. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:rights
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:subtitle
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:title
element. -
atom:feed
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:updated
element.
If multiple atom:entry
elements with the same atom:id
value appear in an Atom Feed Document,
they represent the same entry. Their atom:updated
timestamps SHOULD be different. If an Atom
Feed Document contains multiple entries with the same atom:id
, Atom Processors MAY choose to
display all of them or some subset of them. One typical behavior would be to display only the entry
with the latest atom:updated
timestamp.
Experience teaches that feeds that contain textual content are in general more useful than those
that do not. Some applications (one example is full-text indexers) require a minimum amount of text
or (X)HTML to function reliably and predictably. Feed producers should be aware of these issues.
It is advisable that each atom:entry
element contain a non-empty atom:title
element, a non-
empty
atom:content
element when that element is present, and a non-empty atom:summary
element when the
entry contains no atom:content
element. However, the absence of atom:summary
is not an error,
and Atom Processors MUST NOT fail to function correctly as a consequence of such an absence.
The atom:entry
element represents an individual entry, acting as a container for metadata and data
associated with the 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 stand-alone Atom Entry Document.
atomEntry =
element atom:entry {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContent?
& atomContributor*
& atomId
& atomLink*
& atomPublished?
& atomRights?
& atomSource?
& atomSummary?
& atomTitle
& atomUpdated
& extensionElement*)
}
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):
-
atom:entry
elements MUST contain one or moreatom:author
elements, unless theatom:entry
contains anatom:source
element that contains anatom:author
element or, in an Atom Feed Document, theatom:feed
element contains anatom:author
element itself. -
atom:entry
elements MAY contain any number ofatom:category
elements. -
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:content
element. -
atom:entry
elements MAY contain any number ofatom:contributor
elements. -
atom:entry
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:id
element. -
atom:entry
elements that contain no childatom:content
element MUST contain at least oneatom:link
element with arel
attribute value of "alternate". -
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:link
element with arel
attribute value of "alternate" that has the same combination oftype
andhreflang
attribute values. -
atom:entry
elements MAY contain additionalatom:link
elements beyond those described above. -
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:published
element. -
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:rights
element. -
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:source
element. -
atom:entry
elements MUST contain anatom:summary
element in either of the following cases:- the
atom:entry
contains anatom:content
that has asrc
attribute (and is thus empty). - the
atom:entry
contains content that is encoded in Base64; i.e., thetype
attribute ofatom:content
is a MIME media type (MIMEREG), but is not an XML media type (RFC3023), does not begin withtext/
, and does not end with/xml
or+xml
.
- the
-
atom:entry
elements MUST NOT contain more than oneatom:summary
element. -
atom:entry
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:title
element. -
atom:entry
elements MUST contain exactly oneatom:updated
element.
The atom:content
element either contains or links to the content of the entry. The content of
atom:content
is Language-Sensitive.
atomInlineTextContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "text" | "html" }?,
(text)*
}
atomInlineXHTMLContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "xhtml" },
xhtmlDiv
}
atomInlineOtherContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
(text|anyElement)*
}
atomOutOfLineContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
attribute src { atomUri },
empty
}
atomContent = atomInlineTextContent
| atomInlineXHTMLContent
| atomInlineOtherContent
| atomOutOfLineContent
On the atom:content
element, the value of the type
attribute MAY be one of text
, html
, or
xhtml
. Failing that, it MUST conform to the syntax of a MIME media type, but MUST NOT be a
composite type (see Section 4.2.6 of (MIMEREG)). If neither
the type attribute nor the src
attribute is provided, Atom Processors MUST behave as though the
type
attribute were present with a value of text
.
atom:content
MAY have a src
attribute, whose value MUST be an IRI reference
(RFC3987). If the src
attribute is present, atom:content
MUST be empty. Atom Processors MAY use the IRI to retrieve the content and MAY choose to ignore
remote content or to present it in a different manner than local content.
If the src
attribute is present, the type
attribute SHOULD be provided and MUST be a MIME media
type (MIMEREG), rather than text
, html
, or xhtml
. The
value is advisory; that is to say, when the corresponding URI (mapped from an IRI, if necessary) is
dereferenced, if the server providing that content also provides a media type, the server- provided
media type is authoritative.
Atom Documents MUST conform to the following rules. Atom Processors MUST interpret atom:content
according to the first applicable rule.
-
If the value of
type
istext
, the content ofatom:content
MUST NOT contain child elements. Such text is intended to be presented to humans in a readable fashion. Thus, Atom Processors MAY collapse white space (including line breaks), and display the text using typographic techniques such as justification and proportional fonts. -
If the value of
type
ishtml
, the content ofatom:content
MUST NOT contain child elements and SHOULD be suitable for handling as HTML (HTML). The HTML markup MUST be escaped; for example,<br>
as<br>
. The HTML markup SHOULD be such that it could validly appear directly within an HTML<DIV>
element. Atom Processors that display the content MAY use the markup to aid in displaying it. -
If the value of
type
isxhtml
, the content ofatom:content
MUST be a single XHTMLdiv
element (XHTML) and SHOULD be suitable for handling as XHTML. The XHTMLdiv
element itself MUST NOT be considered part of the content. Atom Processors that display the content MAY use the markup to aid in displaying it. The escaped versions of characters such as&
and>
represent those characters, not markup. -
If the value of
type
is an XML media type (RFC3023) or ends with+xml
or/xml
(case insensitive), the content of atom:content MAY include child elements and SHOULD be suitable for handling as the indicated media type. If thesrc
attribute is not provided, this would normally mean that theatom:content
element would contain a single child element that would serve as the root element of the XML document of the indicated type. -
If the value of
type
begins withtext/
(case insensitive), the content ofatom:content
MUST NOT contain child elements. -
For all other values of
type
, the content ofatom:content
MUST be a valid Base64 encoding, as described in (RFC3548), section 3. When decoded, it SHOULD be suitable for handling as the indicated media type. In this case, the characters in the Base64 encoding MAY be preceded and followed in theatom:content
element by white space, and lines are separated by a single newline (U+000A
) character.
XHTML inline:
<content type="xhtml">
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
This is <b>XHTML</b> content.
</div>
</content>
<content type="xhtml">
<xhtml:div xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
This is <xhtml:b>XHTML</xhtml:b> content.
</xhtml:div>
</content>
The following example assumes that the XHTML namespace has been bound to the xh
prefix earlier in
the document:
<content type="xhtml">
<xh:div>
This is <xh:b>XHTML</xh:b> content.
</xh:div>
</content>
The atom:author
element is a Person construct that indicates the author of the entry or feed.
atomAuthor = element atom:author { atomPersonConstruct }
If an atom:entry
element does not contain atom:author
elements, then the atom:author
elements
of the contained atom:source
element are considered to apply. In an Atom Feed Document, the
atom:author
elements of the containing atom:feed
element are considered to apply to the entry if
there are no atom:author
elements in the locations described above.
The atom:category
element conveys information about a category associated with an entry or feed.
This specification assigns no meaning to the content (if any) of this element.
atomCategory =
element atom:category {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute term { text },
attribute scheme { atomUri }?,
attribute label { text }?,
undefinedContent
}
The term
attribute is a string that identifies the category to which the entry or feed belongs.
Category elements MUST have a term
attribute.
The scheme
attribute is an IRI that identifies a categorization scheme. Category elements MAY have
a scheme
attribute.
The label
attribute provides a human-readable label for display in end-user applications. The
content of the label
attribute is Language-Sensitive. Entities such as &
and <
represent their corresponding characters (&
and <
, respectively), not markup. Category elements
MAY have a label
attribute.
The atom:contributor
element is a Person construct that indicates a person or other entity who
contributed to the entry or feed.
atomContributor = element atom:contributor { atomPersonConstruct }
The atom:generator
element's content identifies the agent used to generate a feed, for debugging
and other purposes.
atomGenerator =
element atom:generator {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute uri { atomUri }?,
attribute version { text }?,
text
}
The content of this element, when present, MUST be a string that is a human- readable name for the
generating agent. Entities such as &
and <
represent their corresponding characters (&
and <
respectively), not markup.
The atom:generator
element MAY have a uri
attribute whose value MUST be an IRI reference
(RFC3987). When dereferenced, the resulting URI (mapped from
an IRI, if necessary) 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.
The atom:icon
element's content is an IRI reference
(RFC3987) that identifies an image that provides iconic
visual identification for a feed.
atomIcon =
element atom:icon {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
The image SHOULD have an aspect ratio of one (horizontal) to one (vertical) and SHOULD be suitable for presentation at a small size.
The atom:id
element conveys a permanent, universally unique identifier for an entry or feed.
atomId =
element atom:id {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
Its content MUST be an IRI, as defined by (RFC3987). Note that the definition of "IRI" excludes relative references. Though the IRI might use a dereferencable scheme, Atom Processors MUST NOT assume it can be dereferenced.
When an Atom Document is relocated, migrated, syndicated, republished, exported, or imported, the
content of its atom:id
element MUST NOT change. Put another way, an atom:id
element pertains to
all instantiations of a particular Atom entry or feed; revisions retain the same content in their
atom:id
elements. It is suggested that the atom:id
element be stored along with the associated
resource.
The content of an atom:id
element MUST be created in a way that assures uniqueness.
Because of the risk of confusion between IRIs that would be equivalent if they were mapped to URIs
and dereferenced, the following normalization strategy SHOULD be applied when generating atom:id
elements:
- Provide the scheme in lowercase characters.
- Provide the host, if any, in lowercase characters.
- Only perform percent-encoding where it is essential.
- Use uppercase A through F characters when percent-encoding.
- Prevent dot-segments from appearing in paths.
- For schemes that define a default authority, use an empty authority if the default is desired.
- For schemes that define an empty path to be equivalent to a path of
/
, use/
. - For schemes that define a port, use an empty port if the default is desired.
- Preserve empty fragment identifiers and queries.
- Ensure that all components of the IRI are appropriately character normalized, e.g., by using NFC or NFKC.
Instances of atom:id
elements can be compared to determine whether an entry or feed is the same as
one seen before. Processors MUST compare atom:id
elements on a character-by-character basis (in a
case-sensitive fashion). Comparison operations MUST be based solely on the IRI character strings
and MUST NOT rely on dereferencing the IRIs or URIs mapped from them.
As a result, two IRIs 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, these are four distinct identifiers, despite the fact that they differ only in case:
http://www.example.org/thing
http://www.example.org/Thing
http://www.EXAMPLE.org/thing
HTTP://www.example.org/thing
Likewise, these are three distinct identifiers, because IRI %
-escaping is significant for the
purposes of comparison:
http://www.example.com/~bob
http://www.example.com/%7ebob
http://www.example.com/%7Ebob
The atom:link
element defines a reference from an entry or feed to a Web resource. This
specification assigns no meaning to the content (if any) of this element.
atomLink =
element atom:link {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute href { atomUri },
attribute rel { atomNCName | atomUri }?,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
attribute hreflang { atomLanguageTag }?,
attribute title { text }?,
attribute length { text }?,
undefinedContent
}
The href
attribute contains the link's IRI. atom:link
elements MUST have an href
attribute,
whose value MUST be a IRI reference (RFC3987).
atom:link
elements MAY have a rel
attribute that indicates the link relation type. If the rel
attribute is not present, the link element MUST be interpreted as if the link relation type is
"alternate".
The value of rel
MUST be a string that is non-empty and matches either the isegment-nz-nc
or the
"IRI" production in (RFC3987). Note that use of a relative
reference other than a simple name is not allowed. If a name is given, implementations MUST
consider the link relation type equivalent to the same name registered within the IANA Registry of
Link Relations (Section 7), and thus to the IRI that would be obtained by appending the value of the
rel attribute to the string "http://www.iana.org/assignments/relation/". The value of rel
describes the meaning of the link, but does not impose any behavioral requirements on Atom
Processors.
This document defines five initial values for the Registry of Link Relations:
-
The value
alternate
signifies that the IRI in the value of thehref
attribute identifies an alternate version of the resource described by the containing element. -
The value
related
signifies that the IRI in the value of the href attribute identifies a resource related to the resource described by the containing element. For example, the feed for a site that discusses the performance of the search engine at "http://search.example.com" might contain, as a child ofatom:feed
:<link rel="related" href="http://search.example.com/"/>
An identical link might appear as a child of any
atom:entry
whose content contains a discussion of that same search engine. -
The value
self
signifies that the IRI in the value of thehref
attribute identifies a resource equivalent to the containing element. -
The value
enclosure
signifies that the IRI in the value of thehref
attribute identifies a related resource that is potentially large in size and might require special handling. Foratom:link
elements withrel="enclosure"
, thelength
attribute SHOULD be provided. -
The value
via
signifies that the IRI in the value of thehref
attribute identifies a resource that is the source of the information provided in the containing element.
On the link
element, the type
attribute's value is an advisory media type: it is a hint about
the type of the representation that is expected to be returned when the value of the href
attribute is dereferenced. Note that the type
attribute does not override the actual media type
returned with the representation. Link elements MAY have a type
attribute, whose value MUST
conform to the syntax of a MIME media type (MIMEREG).
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 elements MAY have an hreflang
attribute, whose value MUST be a language tag
(RFC3066).
The title
attribute conveys human-readable information about the link. The content of the title
attribute is Language-Sensitive. Entities such as &
and <
represent their corresponding
characters (&
and <
, respectively), not markup. Link elements MAY have a title
attribute.
The length
attribute indicates an advisory length of the linked content in octets; it is a hint
about the content length of the representation returned when the IRI in the href attribute is mapped
to a URI and dereferenced. Note that the length
attribute does not override the actual content
length of the representation as reported by the underlying protocol. Link elements MAY have a
length
attribute.
The atom:logo
element's content is an IRI reference
(RFC3987) that identifies an image that provides visual
identification for a feed.
atomLogo =
element atom:logo {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
The image SHOULD have an aspect ratio of 2 (horizontal) to 1 (vertical).
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.
atomPublished = element atom:published { atomDateConstruct }
Typically, atom:published
will be associated with the initial creation or first availability of
the resource.
The atom:rights
element is a Text construct that conveys information about rights held in and over
an entry or feed.
atomRights = element atom:rights { atomTextConstruct }
The atom:rights
element SHOULD NOT be used to convey machine-readable licensing information.
If an atom:entry
element does not contain an atom:rights
element, then the atom:rights
element
of the containing atom:feed
element, if present, is considered to apply to the entry.
If an atom:entry
is copied from one feed into another feed, then the source atom:feed
's metadata
(all child elements of atom:feed
other than the atom:entry
elements) MAY be preserved within the
copied entry by adding an atom:source
child element, if it is not already present in the entry,
and including some or all of the source feed's Metadata elements as the atom:source
element's
children. Such metadata SHOULD be preserved if the source atom:feed
contains any of the child
elements atom:author
, atom:contributor
, atom:rights
, or atom:category
and those child
elements are not present in the source atom:entry
.
atomSource =
element atom:source {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContributor*
& atomGenerator?
& atomIcon?
& atomId?
& atomLink*
& atomLogo?
& atomRights?
& atomSubtitle?
& atomTitle?
& atomUpdated?
& extensionElement*)
}
The atom:source
element is designed to allow the aggregation of entries from different feeds while
retaining information about an entry's source feed. For this reason, Atom Processors that are
performing such aggregation SHOULD include at least the required feed-level Metadata elements
(atom:id
, atom:title
, and atom:updated
) in the atom:source
element.
The atom:subtitle
element is a Text construct that conveys a human- readable description or
subtitle for a feed.
atomSubtitle = element atom:subtitle { atomTextConstruct }
The atom:summary
element is a Text construct that conveys a short summary, abstract, or excerpt of
an entry.
atomSummary = element atom:summary { atomTextConstruct }
It is not advisable for the atom:summary
element to duplicate atom:title
or atom:content
because Atom Processors might assume there is a useful summary when there is none.
The atom:title
element is a Text construct that conveys a human- readable title for an entry or
feed.
atomTitle = element atom:title { atomTextConstruct }
The atom:updated
element is a Date construct indicating the most recent instant in time when an
entry or feed was modified in a way the publisher considers significant. Therefore, not all
modifications necessarily result in a changed atom:updated
value.
atomUpdated = element atom:updated { atomDateConstruct }
Publishers MAY change the value of this element over time.
Because Atom is an XML-based format, existing XML security mechanisms can be used to secure its content.
Producers of feeds and/or entries, and intermediaries who aggregate feeds and/or entries, may have sound reasons for signing and/or encrypting otherwise- unprotected content. For example, a merchant might digitally sign a message that contains a discount coupon for its products. A bank that uses Atom to deliver customer statements is very likely to want to sign and encrypt those messages to protect their customers' financial information and to assure the customer of their authenticity. Intermediaries may want to encrypt aggregated feeds so that a passive observer cannot tell what topics the recipient is interested in. Of course, many other examples exist as well.
The algorithm requirements in this section pertain to the Atom Processor. They require that a recipient, at a minimum, be able to handle messages that use the specified cryptographic algorithms. These requirements do not limit the algorithms that the sender can choose.
The root of an Atom Document (i.e., atom:feed
in an Atom Feed Document, atom:entry
in an Atom
Entry Document) or any atom:entry
element MAY have an Enveloped Signature, as described by XML-
Signature and Syntax Processing
(W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212).
Atom 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 an Atom 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.
Section 6.5.1 of (W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212) requires support for Canonical XML (W3C.REC-xml-c14n-20010315). However, many implementers do not use it because signed XML documents enclosed in other XML documents have their signatures broken. Thus, Atom Processors that verify signed Atom Documents MUST be able to canonicalize with the exclusive XML canonicalization method identified by the URI "http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#", as specified in Exclusive XML Canonicalization (W3C.REC-xml-exc-c14n-20020718).
Intermediaries such as aggregators may need to add an atom:source
element to an entry that does
not contain its own atom:source
element. If such an entry is signed, the addition will break the
signature. Thus, a publisher of individually-signed entries should strongly consider adding an
atom:source
element to those entries before signing them. Implementers should also be aware of the
issues concerning the use of markup in the xml:
namespace as it interacts with canonicalization.
Section 4.4.2 of (W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212) requires support for DSA signatures and recommends support for RSA signatures. However, because of the much greater popularity in the market of RSA versus DSA, Atom Processors that verify signed Atom Documents MUST be able to verify RSA signatures, but do not need be able to verify DSA signatures. Due to security issues that can arise if the keying material for message authentication code (MAC) authentication is not handled properly, Atom Documents SHOULD NOT use MACs for signatures.
The root 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).
Section 5.1 of (W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210) requires support of TripleDES, AES-128, and AES-256. Atom Processors that decrypt Atom Documents MUST be able to decrypt with AES-128 in Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode.
Encryption based on (W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210) does not ensure integrity of the original document. There are known cryptographic attacks where someone who cannot decrypt a message can still change bits in a way where part or all the decrypted message makes sense but has a different meaning. Thus, Atom Processors that decrypt Atom Documents SHOULD check the integrity of the decrypted document by verifying the hash in the signature (if any) in the document, or by verifying a hash of the document within the document (if any).
When an Atom Document is to be both signed and encrypted, it is generally a good idea to first sign the document, then encrypt the signed document. This provides integrity to the base document while encrypting all the information, including the identity of the entity that signed the document. Note that, if MACs are used for authentication, the order MUST be that the document is signed and then encrypted, and not the other way around.
This specification describes Atom's XML markup vocabulary. Markup from other vocabularies ("foreign
markup") can be used in an Atom Document. Note that the atom:content
element is designed to
support the inclusion of arbitrary foreign markup.
The Atom namespace is reserved for future forward-compatible revisions of Atom. Future versions of this specification could add new elements and attributes to the Atom markup vocabulary. Software written to conform to this version of the specification will not be able to process such markup correctly and, in fact, will not be able to distinguish it from markup error. For the purposes of this discussion, unrecognized markup from the Atom vocabulary will be considered "foreign markup".
Atom Processors that encounter foreign markup in a location that is legal according to this specification MUST NOT stop processing or signal an error. It might be the case that the Atom Processor is able to process the foreign markup correctly and does so. Otherwise, such markup is termed "unknown foreign markup".
When unknown foreign markup is encountered as a child of atom:entry
, atom:feed
, or a Person
construct, Atom Processors MAY bypass the markup and any textual content and MUST NOT change their
behavior as a result of the markup's presence.
When unknown foreign markup is encountered in a Text Construct or atom:content
element, software
SHOULD ignore the markup and process any text content of foreign elements as though the surrounding
markup were not present.
Atom allows foreign markup anywhere in an Atom document, except where it is explicitly forbidden.
Child elements of atom:entry
, atom:feed
, atom:source
, and Person constructs are considered
Metadata elements and are described below. Child elements of Person constructs are considered to
apply to the construct. The role of other foreign markup is undefined by this specification.
A Simple Extension element MUST NOT have any attributes or child elements. The element MAY contain character data or be empty. Simple Extension elements are not Language-Sensitive.
simpleExtensionElement =
element * - atom:* {
text
}
The element can be interpreted as a simple property (or name/value pair) of the parent element that encloses it. The pair consisting of the namespace-URI of the element and the local name of the element can be interpreted as the name of the property. The character data content of the element can be interpreted as the value of the property. If the element is empty, then the property value can be interpreted as an empty string.
The root element of a Structured Extension element MUST have at least one attribute or child element. It MAY have attributes, it MAY contain well-formed XML content (including character data), or it MAY be empty. Structured Extension elements are Language-Sensitive.
structuredExtensionElement =
element * - atom:* {
(attribute * { text }+, (text|anyElement)*)
| (attribute * { text }*, (text?, anyElement+, (text|anyElement)*))
}
The structure of a Structured Extension element, including the order of its child elements, could be significant.
This specification does not provide an interpretation of a Structured Extension element. The syntax of the XML contained in the element (and an interpretation of how the element relates to its containing element) is defined by the specification of the Atom extension.
An Atom Document, when serialized as XML 1.0, can be identified with the following media type:
Information | Description |
---|---|
MIME media type name: | application |
MIME subtype name: | atom+xml |
Mandatory parameters: | None. |
Optional parameters: |
charset : This parameter has semantics identical to the charset parameter of the application/xml media type as specified in (RFC3023). |
Encoding considerations: | Identical to those of application/xml as described in (RFC3023), Section 3.2. |
Security considerations: | As defined in this specification. In addition, as this media type uses the +xml convention, it shares the same security considerations as described in (RFC3023), Section 10. |
Interoperability considerations: | There are no known interoperability issues. |
Published specification: | This specification. |
Applications that use this media type: | No known applications currently use this media type. |
Additional information:
Information | Description |
---|---|
Magic number(s): | As specified for application/xml in (RFC3023), Section 3.2. |
File extension: | .atom |
Fragment identifiers: | As specified for application/xml in (RFC3023), Section 5. |
Base URI: | As specified in (RFC3023), Section 6. |
Macintosh File Type code: | TEXT |
Person and email address to contact for further information: | Mark Nottingham [email protected] |
Intended usage: | COMMON |
Author/Change controller: | IESG |
This registry is maintained by IANA and initially contains five values: alternate
, related
,
self
, enclosure
, and via
. New assignments are subject to IESG Approval, as outlined in
(RFC2434). Requests should be made by email to IANA, which
will then forward the request to the IESG, requesting approval. The request should use the following
template:
- Attribute Value: (A value for the
rel
attribute that conforms to the syntax rule given in Section 4.2.7.2) - Description:
- Expected display characteristics:
- Security considerations:
Text constructs and atom:content
allow the delivery of HTML and XHTML. Many elements in these
languages are considered 'unsafe' in that they open clients to one or more types of attack.
Implementers of software that processes Atom should carefully consider their handling of every type
of element when processing incoming (X)HTML in Atom Documents. See the security sections of
(RFC2854) and
(HTML) for guidance.
Atom Processors should pay particular attention to the security of the IMG, SCRIPT, EMBED, OBJECT, FRAME, FRAMESET, IFRAME, META, and LINK elements, but other elements might also have negative security properties.
(X)HTML can either directly contain or indirectly reference executable content.
Atom Processors handle URIs. See Section 7 of (RFC3986).
Atom Processors handle IRIs. See Section 8 of (RFC3987).
Atom Processors should be aware of the potential for spoofing attacks where the attacker publishes
an atom:entry
with the atom:id
value of an entry from another feed, perhaps with a falsified
atom:source
element duplicating the atom:id
of the other feed. For example, an Atom Processor
could suppress display of duplicate entries by displaying only one entry from a set of entries with
identical atom:id
values. In that situation, the Atom Processor might also take steps to determine
whether the entries originated from the same publisher before considering them duplicates.
Atom Documents can be encrypted and signed using (W3C.REC-xmlenc-core-20021210) and (W3C.REC-xmldsig-core-20020212), respectively, and are subject to the security considerations implied by their use.
Digital signatures provide authentication, message integrity, and non- repudiation with proof of origin. Encryption provides data confidentiality.
(All references are resolved into the document as links.)
(All other references are resolved into the document as links.)
ISO.8601.1988: International Organization for Standardization, "Data elements and interchange formats - Information interchange - Representation of dates and times", ISO Standard 8601, June 1988.
The following people contributed to preliminary versions of this document: Tim Bray, Mark Pilgrim, and Sam Ruby. Norman Walsh provided the Relax NG schema. The content and concepts within are a product of the Atom community and the Atompub Working Group.
The Atompub Working Group has dozens of very active contributors who proposed ideas and wording for this document, including:
Danny Ayers, James Aylett, Roger Benningfield, Arve Bersvendsen, Tim Bray, Dan Brickley, Thomas Broyer, Robin Cover, Bill de hOra, Martin Duerst, Roy Fielding, Joe Gregorio, Bjoern Hoehrmann, Paul Hoffman, Anne van Kesteren, Brett Lindsley, Dare Obasanjo, David Orchard, Aristotle Pagaltzis, John Panzer, Graham Parks, Dave Pawson, Mark Pilgrim, David Powell, Julian Reschke, Phil Ringnalda, Antone Roundy, Sam Ruby, Eric Scheid, Brent Simmons, Henri Sivonen, Ray Slakinski, James Snell, Henry Story, Asbjorn Ulsberg, Walter Underwood, Norman Walsh, Dave Winer, and Bob Wyman.
This appendix is informative.
The Relax NG schema explicitly excludes elements in the Atom namespace that are not defined in this revision of the specification. Requirements for Atom Processors encountering such markup are given in Sections 6.2 and 6.3.
# -*- rnc -*-
# RELAX NG Compact Syntax Grammar for the
# Atom Format Specification Version 11
namespace atom = "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
namespace xhtml = "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
namespace s = "http://www.ascc.net/xml/schematron"
namespace local = ""
start = atomFeed | atomEntry
# Common attributes
atomCommonAttributes =
attribute xml:base { atomUri }?,
attribute xml:lang { atomLanguageTag }?,
undefinedAttribute*
# Text Constructs
atomPlainTextConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "text" | "html" }?,
text
atomXHTMLTextConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "xhtml" },
xhtmlDiv
atomTextConstruct = atomPlainTextConstruct | atomXHTMLTextConstruct
# Person Construct
atomPersonConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
(element atom:name { text }
& element atom:uri { atomUri }?
& element atom:email { atomEmailAddress }?
& extensionElement*)
# Date Construct
atomDateConstruct =
atomCommonAttributes,
xsd:dateTime
# atom:feed
atomFeed =
[
s:rule [
context = "atom:feed"
s:assert [
test = "atom:author or not(atom:entry[not(atom:author)])"
"An atom:feed must have an atom:author unless all "
~ "of its atom:entry children have an atom:author."
]
]
]
element atom:feed {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContributor*
& atomGenerator?
& atomIcon?
& atomId
& atomLink*
& atomLogo?
& atomRights?
& atomSubtitle?
& atomTitle
& atomUpdated
& extensionElement*),
atomEntry*
}
# atom:entry
atomEntry =
[
s:rule [
context = "atom:entry"
s:assert [
test = "atom:link[@rel='alternate'] "
~ "or atom:link[not(@rel)] "
~ "or atom:content"
"An atom:entry must have at least one atom:link element "
~ "with a rel attribute of 'alternate' "
~ "or an atom:content."
]
]
s:rule [
context = "atom:entry"
s:assert [
test = "atom:author or "
~ "../atom:author or atom:source/atom:author"
"An atom:entry must have an atom:author "
~ "if its feed does not."
]
]
]
element atom:entry {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContent?
& atomContributor*
& atomId
& atomLink*
& atomPublished?
& atomRights?
& atomSource?
& atomSummary?
& atomTitle
& atomUpdated
& extensionElement*)
}
# atom:content
atomInlineTextContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "text" | "html" }?,
(text)*
}
atomInlineXHTMLContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { "xhtml" },
xhtmlDiv
}
atomInlineOtherContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
(text|anyElement)*
}
atomOutOfLineContent =
element atom:content {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
attribute src { atomUri },
empty
}
atomContent = atomInlineTextContent
| atomInlineXHTMLContent
| atomInlineOtherContent
| atomOutOfLineContent
# atom:author
atomAuthor = element atom:author { atomPersonConstruct }
# atom:category
atomCategory =
element atom:category {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute term { text },
attribute scheme { atomUri }?,
attribute label { text }?,
undefinedContent
}
# atom:contributor
atomContributor = element atom:contributor { atomPersonConstruct }
# atom:generator
atomGenerator = element atom:generator {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute uri { atomUri }?,
attribute version { text }?,
text
}
# atom:icon
atomIcon = element atom:icon {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
# atom:id
atomId = element atom:id {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
# atom:logo
atomLogo = element atom:logo {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomUri)
}
# atom:link
atomLink =
element atom:link {
atomCommonAttributes,
attribute href { atomUri },
attribute rel { atomNCName | atomUri }?,
attribute type { atomMediaType }?,
attribute hreflang { atomLanguageTag }?,
attribute title { text }?,
attribute length { text }?,
undefinedContent
}
# atom:published
atomPublished = element atom:published { atomDateConstruct }
# atom:rights
atomRights = element atom:rights { atomTextConstruct }
# atom:source
atomSource =
element atom:source {
atomCommonAttributes,
(atomAuthor*
& atomCategory*
& atomContributor*
& atomGenerator?
& atomIcon?
& atomId?
& atomLink*
& atomLogo?
& atomRights?
& atomSubtitle?
& atomTitle?
& atomUpdated?
& extensionElement*)
}
# atom:subtitle
atomSubtitle = element atom:subtitle { atomTextConstruct }
# atom:summary
atomSummary = element atom:summary { atomTextConstruct }
# atom:title
atomTitle = element atom:title { atomTextConstruct }
# atom:updated
atomUpdated = element atom:updated { atomDateConstruct }
# Low-level simple types
atomNCName = xsd:string { minLength = "1" pattern = "[^:]*" }
# Whatever a media type is, it contains at least one slash
atomMediaType = xsd:string { pattern = ".+/.+" }
# As defined in RFC 3066
atomLanguageTag = xsd:string {
pattern = "[A-Za-z]{1,8}(-[A-Za-z0-9]{1,8})*"
}
# Unconstrained; it's not entirely clear how IRI fit into
# xsd:anyURI so let's not try to constrain it here
atomUri = text
# Whatever an email address is, it contains at least one @
atomEmailAddress = xsd:string { pattern = ".+@.+" }
# Simple Extension
simpleExtensionElement =
element * - atom:* {
text
}
# Structured Extension
structuredExtensionElement =
element * - atom:* {
(attribute * { text }+,
(text|anyElement)*)
| (attribute * { text }*,
(text?, anyElement+, (text|anyElement)*))
}
# Other Extensibility
extensionElement =
simpleExtensionElement | structuredExtensionElement
undefinedAttribute =
attribute * - (xml:base | xml:lang | local:*) { text }
undefinedContent = (text|anyForeignElement)*
anyElement =
element * {
(attribute * { text }
| text
| anyElement)*
}
anyForeignElement =
element * - atom:* {
(attribute * { text }
| text
| anyElement)*
}
# XHTML
anyXHTML = element xhtml:* {
(attribute * { text }
| text
| anyXHTML)*
}
xhtmlDiv = element xhtml:div {
(attribute * { text }
| text
| anyXHTML)*
}
# EOF
Author | Role | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Mark Nottingham | editor | [email protected] | http://www.mnot.net/ |
Robert Sayre | editor | [email protected] | http://boswijck.com |
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.
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