Internet Printing Protocol Working Group Bob Herriot INTERNET DRAFT Xerox Corporation Expires 13 August 2001 Ira McDonald High North Inc [Target Category: Standards Track] 13 February 2001 Internet Printing Protocol (IPP): IPP URL Scheme Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved. Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. 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. Abstract This document is a product of the Internet Printing Protocol Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Comments should be submitted to the ipp@pwg.org mailing list. This document is intended for use in registering the "ipp" URL scheme with IANA and fully conforms to the requirements in [RFC-2717]. This document defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme for specifying the location of an IPP Printer, IPP Job, or other IPP object (defined in some future version of IPP) which implements the IPP/1.1 Model [RFC-2911] and the IPP/1.1 Protocol encoding over HTTP [RFC-2910] or any later version of IPP. The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON. The IPP URL scheme defined in this document is based on the ABNF for the HTTP URL scheme defined in HTTP/1.1 [RFC-2616], which is derived from the URI Generic Syntax [RFC-2396] and further updated by [RFC-2732] and [RFC-2373] (for IPv6 addresses in URLs). An IPP URL is transformed into an HTTP URL according to the rules specified in section 5 of the IPP/1.1 Protocol [RFC-2910]. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 1] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 Table of Contents 1. Introduction ............................................... 3 2. Terminology ................................................ 4 2.1. Conformance Terminology ................................ 4 2.2. Model Terminology ...................................... 4 3. IPP Model for Printers and Jobs ............................ 4 4. IPP URL Scheme ............................................. 6 4.1. IPP URL Scheme Applicability and Intended Usage ........ 6 4.2. IPP URL Scheme Associated IPP Port ..................... 6 4.3. IPP URL Scheme Associated MIME Type .................... 6 4.4. IPP URL Scheme Character Encoding ...................... 6 4.5. IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF .......................... 7 4.5.1. IPP URL Examples ................................... 8 4.5.2. IPP URL Comparisons ................................ 9 5. Conformance Requirements ................................... 10 5.1. Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients ............... 10 5.2. Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers .............. 10 6. IANA Considerations ........................................ 11 7. Internationalization Considerations ........................ 11 8. Security Considerations .................................... 11 9. References ................................................. 12 10. Acknowledgments ........................................... 13 11. Authors' Addresses ........................................ 14 12. Appendix X - Change History ............................... 14 13. Full Copyright Statement .................................. 15 Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 2] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 1. Introduction See section 1 'Introduction' in [RFC-2911] for a full description of the IPP document set and overview information about IPP. The open issues in this document each begin 'ISSUE_n:'. This document is a product of the Internet Printing Protocol Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Comments should be submitted to the ipp@pwg.org mailing list. This document is intended for use in registering the "ipp" URL scheme with IANA and fully conforms to the requirements in [RFC-2717]. This document defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme for specifying the location of an IPP Printer, IPP Job, or other IPP object (defined in some future version of IPP) which implements the IPP/1.1 Model [RFC-2911] and the IPP/1.1 Protocol encoding over HTTP [RFC-2910] or any later version of IPP. The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON. This document defines: - IPP URL scheme applicability and intended usage; - IPP URL scheme associated port (i.e., well-known port 631); - IPP URL scheme associated MIME type (i.e., "application/ipp"); - IPP URL scheme syntax in ABNF [RFC-2234]; - IPP URL scheme character encoding; - IPP URL scheme IANA, internationalization, and security considerations. This document is laid out as follows: - Section 2 is the terminology used throughout the document. - Section 3 provides references to the IPP Printer and IPP Job object model. - Section 4 specifies IPP URL scheme. - Section 5 specifies the conformance requirements for IPP Clients and IPP Printers that claim conformance to this document. - Section 6, 7, and 8 specify IANA, internationalization, and security considerations. - Sections 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13 list references, acknowledgements, authors' addresses, change history, and full IETF copyright statement. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 3] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 2. Terminology This specification document uses the terminology defined in this section. 2.1. Conformance Terminology The uppercase terms "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT" "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC-2119]. These terms are used to specify conformance requirements for all implementations of this specification. 2.2. Model Terminology See section 12.2 'Model Terminology' in [RFC-2911]. 3. IPP Model for Printers and Jobs See section 2 'IPP Objects', section 2.1 'Printer Object', and section 2.2 'Job Object' in [RFC-2911] for a full description of the IPP object model and terminology. In this document, "IPP Client" means the software (on some hardware platform) that submits, monitors, and/or manages print jobs via IPP/1.1 [RFC-2910] [RFC-2911], or any later version of IPP to a spooler, gateway, or actual printing device. In this document, "IPP Printer object" means the software (on some hardware platform) that receives print jobs and/or printer/job operations via IPP/1.1 [RFC-2910] [RFC-2911], or any later version of IPP from an "IPP Client". In this document, "IPP Printer" is a synonym for "IPP Printer object". In this document, "IPP Job object" means the set of attributes and documents for one print job on an "IPP Printer". In this document, "IPP Job" is a synonym for "IPP Job object". In this document, "IPP URL" means a URL with the "ipp" scheme. Note: In this document, "IPP URL" is a synonym for "ipp_URL" (in section 4 'IPP URL Scheme' of this document) and "ipp-URL" (in Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 4] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' of [RFC-2910]). Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 5] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 4. IPP URL Scheme 4.1. IPP URL Scheme Applicability and Intended Usage This document is intended for use in registering the "ipp" URL scheme with IANA and fully conforms to the requirements in [RFC-2717]. This document defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme for specifying the location of an IPP Printer, IPP Job, or other IPP object (defined in some future version of IPP) which implements the IPP/1.1 Model [RFC-2911] and the IPP/1.1 Protocol encoding over HTTP [RFC-2910] or any later version of IPP. The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON. 4.2. IPP URL Scheme Associated IPP Port All IPP URLs which do NOT explicitly specify a port MUST be used over IANA-assigned well-known port 631 for the IPP protocol described in [RFC-2910]. See: IANA Port Numbers Registry [IANA-PORTREG]. registration with IANA. 4.3. IPP URL Scheme Associated MIME Type All IPP protocol operations (requests and responses) MUST be conveyed in an "application/ipp" MIME media type as registered in [IANA-MIMEREG]. IPP URLs MUST refer to IPP Printers which support this "application/ipp" MIME media type. See: IANA MIME Media Types Registry [IANA-MIMEREG]. 4.4. IPP URL Scheme Character Encoding The IPP URL scheme defined in this document is based on the ABNF for the HTTP URL scheme defined in HTTP/1.1 [RFC-2616], which is derived from the URI Generic Syntax [RFC-2396] and further updated by [RFC-2732] and [RFC-2373] (for IPv6 addresses in URLs). The IPP URL scheme is case-insensitive in the host name or host address part; however the path part is case-sensitive, as in [RFC-2396]. Codepoints outside [US-ASCII] MUST be hex escaped by the mechanism specified in [RFC-2396]. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 6] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 4.5. IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF Note: In this document, "IPP URL" is a synonym for "ipp_URL" (in section 4 'IPP URL Scheme' of this document) and "ipp-URL" (in section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' of [RFC-2910]). This document is intended for use in registering the "ipp" URL scheme with IANA and fully conforms to the requirements in [RFC-2717]. This document defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme for specifying the location of an IPP Printer, IPP Job, or other IPP object (defined in some future version of IPP) which implements the IPP/1.1 Model [RFC-2911] and the IPP/1.1 Protocol encoding over HTTP [RFC-2910] or any later version of IPP. The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON. The IPP protocol places a limit of 1023 octets (NOT characters) on the length of a URI (see section 4.1.5 'uri' in [RFC-2911]). An IPP Printer MUST return 'client-error-request-value-too-long' (see section 13.1.4.10 in [RFC-2911]) when a URI received in a request (e.g., in the "printer-uri" attribute) is too long. Note: IPP Printers ought to be cautious about depending on URI lengths above 255 bytes, because some older client or proxy implementations might not properly support these lengths. IPP URLs MUST be represented in absolute form. Absolute URLs always begin with a scheme name followed by a colon. For definitive information on URL syntax and semantics, see "Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax and Semantics" [RFC-2396]. This specification adopts the definitions of "URI-reference", "absoluteURI", "relativeURI", "port", "host","abs_path", "rel_path", and "authority" from [RFC-2396], as updated by [RFC-2732] and [RFC-2373] (for IPv6 addresses in URLs). The IPP URL scheme syntax in ABNF is as follows: ipp_URL = "ipp:" "//" host [ ":" port ] [ abs_path [ "?" query ]] If the port is empty or not given, port 631 is assumed. The semantics are that the identified resource (see section 5.1.2 of [RFC-2616]) is located at the IPP Printer or IPP Job listening for HTTP connections on that port of that host, and the Request-URI for the identified resource is 'abs_path'. Note: The use of IP addresses in URLs SHOULD be avoided whenever possible (see [RFC-1900]). If the 'abs_path' is not present in the URL, it MUST be given as "/" Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 7] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 when used as a Request-URI for a resource (see section 5.1.2 of [RFC-2616]). If a proxy receives a host name which is not a fully qualified domain name, it MAY add its domain to the host name it received. If a proxy receives a fully qualified domain name, the proxy MUST NOT change the host name. 4.5.1. IPP URL Examples The following are examples of valid IPP URLs for IPP Printers: ipp://abc.com ipp://abc.com/printer ipp://abc.com/tiger ipp://abc.com/printers/tiger ipp://abc.com/printers/fox ipp://abc.com/printers/tiger/bob ipp://abc.com/printers/tiger/ira ipp://printer.abc.com ipp://printers.abc.com/tiger ipp://printers.abc.com/tiger/bob ipp://printers.abc.com/tiger/ira Each of the above URLs are legitimate URLs for IPP Printers and each references a logically different IPP Printer, even though some of the IPP Printers may share the same hardware. The last part of the path 'bob' or 'ira' may represent two different hardware devices where 'tiger' represents some grouping of IPP Printers (e.g., a load-balancing spooler) or the two names may represent separate human recipients ('bob' and 'ira') on the same hardware device (e.g., a printer supporting two job queues). In either case both 'bob' and 'ira' behave as different IPP Printers. The following are examples of IPP URLs with (optional) ports and paths: ipp://abc.com ipp://abc.com/~smith/printer ipp://abc.com:631/~smith/printer The first and second IPP URLs above MUST be resolved to port 631 (IANA assigned well-known port for IPP). The second and third IPP URLs above are equivalent (see section 4.5.2 below). Note: The use of IP addresses in URLs SHOULD be avoided whenever possible (see [RFC-1900]). The following literal IPv4 addresses: Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 8] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 192.9.5.5 ; IPv4 address in IPv4 style 186.7.8.9 ; IPv4 address in IPv4 style are represented in the following example IPP URLs: ipp://192.9.5.5/prt1 ipp://186.7.8.9/printers/tiger/bob The following literal IPv6 addresses (conformant to [RFC-2373]): ::192.9.5.5 ; IPv4 address in IPv6 style ::FFFF:129.144.52.38 ; IPv4 address in IPv6 style 2010:836B:4179::836B:4179 ; IPv6 address per RFC 2373 are represented in the following example IPP URLs: ipp://[::192.9.5.5]/prt1 ipp://[::FFFF:129.144.52.38]:631/printers/tiger ipp://[2010:836B:4179::836B:4179]/printers/tiger/bob 4.5.2. IPP URL Comparisons When comparing two IPP URLs to decide if they match or not, an IPP Client SHOULD use a case-sensitive octet-by-octet comparison of the entire URLs, with these exceptions: - A port that is empty or not given is equivalent to the well-known port for that IPP URL (port 631); - Comparisons of host names MUST be case-insensitive; - Comparisons of scheme names MUST be case-insensitive; - An empty 'abs_path' is equivalent to an 'abs_path' of "/". Characters other than those in the "reserved" and "unsafe" sets (see [RFC-2396] and [RFC-2732]) are equivalent to their ""%" HEX HEX" encoding. For example, the following three URIs are equivalent: ipp://abc.com:631/~smith/printer ipp://ABC.com/%7Esmith/printer ipp://ABC.com:/%7esmith/printer Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 9] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 5. Conformance Requirements 5.1. Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients IPP Clients that conform to this specification: a) MUST send IPP URLs (e.g., in the "printer-uri" operation attribute in 'Print-Job') that conform to the ABNF specified in section 4.5 of this document; b) MUST send IPP operations via the port specified in the IPP URL (if present) or otherwise via IANA assigned well-known port 631; c) MUST convert IPP URLs to their corresponding HTTP URL forms according to the rules in section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in [RFC-2910]; d) SHOULD interoperate with IPP/1.0 Printers according to the rules in section 9 'Interoperability with IPP/1.0 Implementations' and section 9.2 'Security and URL Schemes' in [RFC-2910]. 5.2. Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers IPP Printers that conform to this specification: a) SHOULD reject received IPP URLs in "application/ipp" request bodies (e.g., in the "printer-uri" attribute in a 'Print-Job' request) that do not conform to the ABNF for IPP URLs specified in section 4.5 of this document; b) SHOULD return IPP URLs in "application/ipp" response bodies (e.g., in the "job-uri" attribute in a 'Print-Job' response) that do conform to the ABNF for IPP URLs specified in section 4.5 of this document; c) MUST listen for IPP operations on IANA-assigned well-known port 631, unless explicitly configured by system administrators or site policies; d) SHOULD NOT listen for IPP operations on any other port, unless explicitly configured by system administrators or site policies; e) SHOULD interoperate with IPP/1.0 Clients according to the rules in section 9 'Interoperability with IPP/1.0 Implementations' and section 9.2 'Security and URL Schemes' in [RFC-2910]. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 10] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 6. IANA Considerations This document is intended for use in registering the "ipp" URL scheme with IANA and fully conforms to the requirements in [RFC-2717]. This document defines the "ipp" URL (Uniform Resource Locator) scheme for specifying the location of an IPP Printer, IPP Job, or other IPP object (defined in some future version of IPP) which implements the IPP/1.1 Model [RFC-2911] and the IPP/1.1 Protocol encoding over HTTP [RFC-2910] or any later version of IPP. The intended usage of the "ipp" URL scheme is COMMON. This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional IANA considerations, beyond those described in [RFC-2910] and [RFC-2911]. See: Section 6 'IANA Considerations' in [RFC-2910] See: Section 6 'IANA Considerations' in [RFC-2911]. 7. Internationalization Considerations This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional internationalization considerations, beyond those described in [RFC-2910] and [RFC-2911]. See: Section 7 'Internationalization Considerations' in [RFC-2910]. See: Section 7 'Internationalization Considerations' in [RFC-2911]. 8. Security Considerations This IPP URL Scheme specification does not introduce any additional security considerations, beyond those described in [RFC-2910] and [RFC-2911]. See: Section 8 'Security Considerations' in [RFC-2910]. See: Section 8 'Security Considerations' in [RFC-2911]. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 11] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 9. References See: Section 10 'References' in [RFC-2910]. See: Section 9 'References' in [RFC-2911]. [IANA-CHARREG] IANA Charset Registry. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/character-sets [IANA-MIMEREG] IANA MIME Media Types Registry. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/media-types/... [IANA-PORTREG] IANA Port Numbers Registry. ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/port-numbers [NET-SSL3] Netscape. The SSL Protocol, Version 3 (text version 3.02), November 1996. [RFC-1759] R. Smith, F. Wright, T. Hastings, S. Zilles, J. Gyllenskog. Printer MIB, RFC 1759, March 1995. [RFC-1900] B. Carpenter, Y. Rekhter. Renumbering Needs Work, RFC 1900, February 1996. [RFC-2046] N. Freed, N. Borenstein. MIME Part Two: Media Types, RFC 2046, November 1996. [RFC-2048] N. Freed, J. Klensin, J. Postel. MIME Part Four: Registration Procedures, RFC 2048, November 1996. [RFC-2234] D. Crocker, P. Overell. Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF, RFC 2234, November 1997. [RFC-2373] R. Hinden, S. Deering. IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture, RFC 2373, July 1998. [RFC-2396] T. Berners-Lee, R. Fielding, L. Masinter. Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax, RFC 2396, August 1998. [RFC-2246] T. Dierks, C. Allen. The TLS Protocol Version, RFC 2246, January 1999. [RFC-2277] H. Alvestrand. IETF Policy on Character Sets and Languages, RFC 2277, January 1998. [RFC-2279] F. Yergeau. UTF-8, a Transformation Format of ISO 10646, RFC 2279, January 1998. [RFC-2565] R. Herriot, S. Butler, P. Moore, R. Turner. IPP/1.0 Encoding and Transport, RFC 2565, April 1999 (Experimental). Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 12] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 [RFC-2566] R. deBry, T. Hastings, R. Herriot, S. Isaacson, P. Powell. IPP/1.0 Model and Semantics, RFC 2566, April 1999 (Experimental). [RFC-2579] K. McCloghrie, D. Perkins, J. Schoenwaelder. Textual Conventions for SMIv2, RFC 2579, April 1999. [RFC-2616] R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J. Mogul, H. Frystyk, L. Masinter, P. Leach, T. Berners-Lee. Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1, RFC 2616, June 1999. [RFC-2617] J. Franks, P. Hallam-Baker, J. Hostetler, S. Lawrence, P. Leach, A. Luotonen, L. Stewart. HTTP Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication, RFC 2617, June 1999. [RFC-2717] R. Petke, I. King. Registration Procedures for URL Scheme Names, RFC 2717, November 1999. [RFC-2718] L. Masinter, H. Alvestrand, D. Zigmond, R. Petke. Guidelines for new URL Scheme Names, RFC 2718, November 1999. [RFC-2732] R. Hinden,B. Carpenter, L. Masinter. Format for Literal IPv6 Addresses in URL's, RFC 2732, December 1999. [RFC-2910] R. Herriot, S. Butler, P. Moore, R. Turner, J. Wenn. IPP/1.1 Encoding and Transport, RFC 2910, September 2000. [RFC-2911] T. Hastings, R. Herriot, R. deBry, S. Isaacson, P. Powell. IPP/1.1 Model and Semantics, RFC 2911, September 2000. [RFC-2978] N. Freed, J. Postel. IANA Charset Registration Procedures, RFC 2978, October 2000. [RFC-3066] H. Alvestrand. Tags for the Identification of Languages, RFC 3066, January 2001. [US-ASCII] Coded Character Set -- 7-bit American Standard Code for Information Interchange, ANSI X3.4-1986. 10. Acknowledgments This document is a product of the Internet Printing Protocol Working Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Comments should be submitted to the ipp@pwg.org mailing list. Thanks to Pat Fleming (IBM), Tom Hastings (Xerox), Harry Lewis (IBM), and Hugo Parra (Novell). Section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in IPP/1.1 Encoding and Transport Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 13] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 [RFC-2910] was the primary input to this IPP URL Scheme specification. 11. Authors' Addresses Robert Herriot Xerox Corporation 3400 Hill View Ave, Building 1 Palo Alto, CA 94304 Phone: +1 650-813-7696 Fax: +1 650-813-6860 Email: robert.herriot@pahv.xerox.com Ira McDonald High North Inc 221 Ridge Ave Grand Marais, MI 49839 Phone: +1 906-494-2434 Email: imcdonald@crt.xerox.com Email: imcdonald@sharplabs.com 12. Appendix X - Change History [To be deleted before RFC publication] 13 February 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-02.txt - revised section 3 'IPP Model for Printers and Jobs' and section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF' to add notes stating that "IPP URL" (in this document) is a synonym for "ipp-URL" in [RFC-2910], per request of Bob Herriot; - revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF' to correct typo that showed "http:" rather than "ipp:" in the one-line ABNF, per request of Tom Hastings; - revised section 4.5.1 'IPP URL Examples' to add a note discouraging the use of literal IP addresses in URLs, per [RFC-2616] and [RFC-1900]; 5 February 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-01.txt - revised section 4.1 'IPP URL Applicability and Intended Usage' to clarify that a given IPP URL MAY identify an IPP Printer object or an IPP Job object, per request of Tom Hastings; - revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF' to define IPP URLs consistently with section 3.2.2 'http URL' of HTTP/1.1 [RFC-2616], per request of Tom Hastings; Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 14] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 - revised section 4.5 'IPP URL Scheme Syntax in ABNF' to clarify that IPP URLs may reference IPP Printer objects, IPP Job objects, or (possibly other future) IPP objects, per request of Bob Herriot; - added section 4.5.1 'IPP URL Examples' to supply meaningful examples of IPP URLs with host names, IPv4 addresses, and IPv6 addresses, per request of Tom Hastings; - added section 4.5.2 'IPP URL Comparisons' to define IPP URL comparisons consistently with section 3.3 'URI Comparison' of HTTP/1.1 [RFC-2616], per request of Tom Hastings; - revised section 5.1 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients' to clarify that an IPP Client MUST convert IPP URLs to their corresponding HTTP URL forms according to section 5 'IPP URL Scheme' in [RFC-2910], per request of Tom Hastings and Bob Herriot; - revised section 5.1 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Clients' and section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to clarify that IPP Clients and IPP Printers SHOULD interoperate with IPP/1.0 systems according to section 9 'Interoperability with IPP/1.0 Implementations' in [RFC-2910], per request of Carl Kugler; - revised section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to clarify that an IPP Printer MUST listen on (IANA assigned well-known) port 631, unless explicitly configured, per request of Michael Sweet; - revised section 5.2 'Conformance Requirements for IPP Printers' to clarify that an IPP Printer SHOULD NOT listen on ports other than (IANA assigned well-known) port 631, unless explicitly configured, per request of Don Wright; - revised section 6 'IANA Considerations' to clarify that the sole purpose of the entire document is IANA registration of the "ipp" URL scheme; - deleted Appendix A 'Registration of IPP Port' as unnecessary (port is already registered); - deleted Appendix B 'Registration of MIME "application/ipp" as unnecessary (MIME registry has recently caught up to RFC 2910); 11 January 2001 - draft-ietf-ipp-url-scheme-00.txt - initial version - simple "ipp" URL scheme without parameters or query part (consistent with existing and IPP/1.1 implementations); - added Appendix A 'Registration of IPP Port' (placeholder) for updated IANA registration of port 631 with references to IPP/1.1; - added Appendix B 'Registration of MIME "application/ipp"' with updated IANA registration for IPP MIME type with references to both IPP/1.0 and IPP/1.1; 13. Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved. This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 15] Internet Draft IPP URL Scheme 13 February 2001 others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English. The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns. This document and the information contained herein is provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Herriot, McDonald Expires 13 August 2001 [Page 16]