draft-ietf-idn-utf6-00.txt [plain text]
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Mark Welter
INTERNET-DRAFT Brian W. Spolarich
draft-ietf-idn-utf6-00 WALID, Inc.
November 16, 2000 Expires May 16, 2001
UTF-6 - Yet Another ASCII-Compatible Encoding for IDN
Status of this memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all
provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
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Copyright (c) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
This document describes a tranformation method for representing
Unicode character codepoints in host name parts in a fashion that is
completely compatible with the current Domain Name System. It is
proposed as a potential candidate for an ASCII-Compatible Encoding (ACE)
for supporting the deployment of an internationalized Domain Name System.
The tranformation method, an extension of the UTF-5 encoding proposed by
Duerst, provides both for more efficient representation of typical Unicode
sequences while preserving simplicity and readability. This transformation
method is deployed as part of the current WALID multilingual domain name
system implementation, although that status should not necessarily influence
the evaluation of its merits as a candidate encoding method.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1.1 Terminology
2. Hostname Part Transformation
2.1 Post-Converted Name Prefix
2.2 Hostname Prepartion
2.3 Definitions
2.4 UTF-6 Encoding
2.4.1 Variable Length Hex Encoding
2.4.2 UTF-6 Compression Algorithm
2.4.3 Forward Transformation Algorithm
2.5 UTF-6 Decoding
2.5.1 Variable Length Hex Decoding
2.5.2 UTF-6 Decompression Algorithm
2.5.3 Reverse Transformation Algorithm
3. Examples
3.1 'www.walid.com' (in Arabic)
4. Security Considerations
5. References
1. Introduction
UTF-6 describes an encoding scheme of the ISO/IEC 10646 [ISO10646]
character set (whose character code assignments are synchronized
with Unicode [UNICODE3]), and the procedures for using this scheme
to transform host name parts containing Unicode character sequences
into sequences that are compatible with the current DNS protocol
[STD13]. As such, it satisfies the definition of a 'charset' as
defined in [IDNREQ].
1.1 Terminology
The key words "MUST", "SHALL", "REQUIRED", "SHOULD", "RECOMMENDED", and
"MAY" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119
[RFC2119].
Hexadecimal values are shown preceded with an "0x". For example,
"0xa1b5" indicates two octets, 0xa1 followed by 0xb5. Binary values are
shown preceded with an "0b". For example, a nine-bit value might be
shown as "0b101101111".
Examples in this document use the notation from the Unicode Standard
[UNICODE3] as well as the ISO 10646 names. For example, the letter "a"
may be represented as either "U+0061" or "LATIN SMALL LETTER A".
UTF-6 converts strings with internationalized characters into
strings of US-ASCII that are acceptable as host name parts in current
DNS host naming usage. The former are called "pre-converted" and the
latter are called "post-converted". This specification defines both
a forward and reverse transformation algorithm.
2. Hostname Part Transformation
According to [STD13], hostname parts must be case-insensitive, start and
end with a letter or digit, and contain only letters, digits, and the
hyphen character ("-"). This, of course, excludes most characters used
by non-English speakers, characters, as well as many other characters in
the ASCII character repertoire. Further, domain name parts must be
63 octets or shorter in length.
2.1 Post-Converted Name Prefix
This document defines the string 'wq--' as a prefix to identify
UTF-6-encoded sequences. For the purposes of comparison in the IDN
Working Group activities, the 'wq--' prefix should be used solely to
identify UTF-6 sequences. However, should this document proceed beyond
draft status the prefix should be changed to whatever prefix, if any,
is the final consensus of the IDN working group.
Note that the prepending of a fixed identifier sequence is only one
mechanism for differentiating ASCII character encoded international
domain names from 'ordinary' domain names. One method, as proposed in
[IDNRACE], is to include a character prefix or suffix that does not
appear in any name in any zone file. A second method is to insert a
domain component which pushes off any international names one or more
levels deeper into the DNS heirarchy. There are trade-offs between
these two methods which are independent of the Unicode to ASCII
transcoding method finally chosen. We do not address the international
vs. 'ordinary' name differention issue in this paper.
2.2 Hostname Prepartion
The hostname part is assumed to have at least one character disallowed
by [STD13], and that is has been processed for logically equivalent
character mapping, filtering of disallowed characters (if any), and
compatibility composition/decomposition before presentation to the UTF-6
conversion algorithm.
While it is possible to invent a transcoding mechanism that relies
on certain Unicode characters being deemed illegal within domain names
and hence available to the transcoding mechanism for improving encoding
efficiency, we feel that such a proposal would complicate matters
excessively. We also believe that Unicode name preprocessing for
both name resolution and name registration should be considered as s
separate, independent issues, which we will attempt to address in a
separate document.
2.3 Definitions
For clarity:
'integer' is an unsigned binary quantity;
'byte' is an 8-bit integer quantity;
'nibble' is a 4-bit integer quantity.
2.4 UTF-6 Encoding
The idea behind this scheme was to improve on the UTF-5 transformation
algorithm described in [IDNDUERST] by providing a straightforward
compression mechanism. UTF-6 defines a compression mechanism by
indentifying identical leading byte or nibble values in the pre-converted
string, and using the length of this leading value to select a mask which
can be applied to the pre-converted string. The resulting post-converted
string is preserves the simplicity and readability of UTF-5 while
enabling longer sequences to be encoded into a single host name part.
2.4.1 Variable Length Hex Encoding
The variable length hex encoding algorithm was introduced by Duerst in
[IDNDUERST]. It encodes an integer value in a slight modification of
traditional hexadecimal notation, the difference being that the most
significant digit is represented with an alternate set of "digits"
- -- 'g through 'v' are used to represent 0 through 15. The result is a
variable length encoding which can efficiently represent integers of
arbitrary length.
The variable length nibble encoding of an integer, C, is defined
as follows:
1. Skip over leading non-significant zero nibbles to find I,
the first significant nibble of c;
2. Emit the Ith character of the set [ghijklmopqrstuv];
3. Continue from most to least significant, encoding each remaining
nibble J by emitting the Jth character of the set [0123456789abcdef].
Examples:
0x1f4c is encoded as "hf4c"
0x0624 is encoded as "m24"
0x0000 is encoded as "g"
'n' a single character in single quotes stands for the
Unicode code point for that character.
2.4.2 UTF-6 Compression Algorithm
UTF-6 improves on the UTF-5 encoding by providing compression, which
enables encoding of a larger number of characters in each hostname
part. The compression algorithm is defined as follows:
1. Set the mask to 0xFFFF;
2. If the number of non '-' characters is less than 2, proceed to
step 5;
3. If the most significant byte of every non '-' character is the
same value:
3a. Set HB to this value;
3b. Emit 'Y';
3c. Emit the variable length hex encoding of HB;
3d. Set the mask to 0x00FF;
3e. Proceed to step 5.
4. If the most significant nibble of every non '-' character is the
same value:
4a. Set HN to this value;
4b. Emit 'Z';
4c. Emit the variable length hex encoding of HN;
4d. Set the mask to 0x0FFF.
5. Foreach input character:
5a. Set HN to the result of the bitwise AND of the input
character and the mask;
5b. Emit the variable length nibble encoding of HN.
2.4.3 Forward Transformation Algorithm
The UTF-6 transformation algorithm accepts a string in UTF-16
[ISO10646] format as input. The encoding algorithm is as follows:
1. Break the hostname string into dot-separated hostname parts.
For each hostname part, perform steps 2 and 3 below;
2. Compress the component using the method described in section
2.4.2 above, and encode using the encoding described in section 2.4.1;
3. Prepend the post-converted name prefix 'wq--' (see section 2.1
above) to the resulting string.
2.5 UTF-6 Decoding
2.5.1 Variable Length Hex Decoding
1. Let N be the lower case of the first input character;
If N is not in set [ghijklmnopqrstuv] return error,
else consume the input character;
2. Let R = N - 'g';
3. If another input character exists,
then let N be the lower case of the next input character,
else goto Step 9;
4. If N is not in the set [0123456789abcdef], go to Step 9;
5. Let N = the lower case of the next input character and consume
the input character;
6. Let R = R * 16;
7. If N is in set [0123456789],
then let R = R + (N - '0'),
else let R = R + (N - 'a') + 10;
8. Go to step 3;
9. Return decoded result R.
2.5.2 UTF-6 Decompression Algorithm
1. Let N be the lower case of the first input character;
2. If N != 'y' and N != 'z',
2a. Let CPART be 0;
2b. Let VMAX be 0xFFFF;
This is the no-compression case;
3. If N == 'y',
3a. Let M be the variable length hex decoding of the next
character;
3b. Let CPART be the result of M * 0x0100;
3c. Let VMAX be 0x00FF;
3d. Continue to Step 5;
4. If N == 'z',
4a. Let M be the variable length hex decoding of the next
character;
4b. Let CPART be the result of M * 0x1000;
4c. Let VMAX be 0x0FFF;
4d. Continue to Step 5;
5. While another input character exists, let N be the lower case of
the next input character, and do the following:
5a. If N == '-' consume the character and
then append '-' to the result string,
else let VPART be the next variable hex decoded value;
5b. If VPART > VMAX, return error,
else append CPART + VPART to the result string;
6. Return the result string.
2.5.3 Reverse Transformation Algorithm
1. Break the string into dot-separated components and apply Steps
2 through 4 to each component:
2. Check for legality (in terms of RFC1035 permitted characters) and
return error status if illegal,
3. Remove the post converted name prefix 'wq--' (see Section 2.1),
4. Decompress the component using the decompression algorithm
described above.
5. Concatenate the decoded segments with dot separators and return.
3. Examples
The examples below illustrate the encoding algorithm and provide
comparisons to alternate encoding schemes. UTF-5 sequences are
prefixed with '----', as no ACE prefix was defined for that encoding.
3.1 'www.walid.com' (in Arabic):
UTF-16: U+0645 U+0648 U+0642 U+0639 . U+0648 U+0644 U+064A U+062F .
U+0634 U+0631 U+0643 U+0629
UTF-6: wq--ymk5k8k2j9.wq--ymk8k4kaif.wq--ymj4j1k3i9
UTF-5: ----m45m48m42m39.----m48m44m4am2f.----m34m31m43m29
RACE: bq--azcuqqrz.bq--azeeisrp.bq--ay2dcqzj
LACE: bq--aqdekscche.bq--aqdeqrckf5.bq--aqddimkdfe
3.2 Mixed Katakana and Hiragana (SOREZORENOBASHO)
UTF-16: U+305D U+308C U+305E U+308C U+306E U+5834 U+6240
UTF-6:
UTF-5:
RACE: bq--4ayf3memgbpdbdbqnzmdiysa
LACE: bq--auyf4dc7rrxacwbuafrea
3.3 Currently Disallowed ASCII Characters ($OneBillionDollars!):
UTF-16: U+0024 U+004F U+006E U+0065 U+0042 U+0069 U+006C U+006C
U+0069 U+006F U+006E U+0044 U+006F U+006C U+006C U+0061
U+0072 U+0073 U+0021
UTF-6:
UTF-5:
RACE: bq--aase74tfijuwy4djn6xei44mnrqxe5zb
LACE: bq--cmacit4omvbgs4dmnfxw5rdpnrwgc5ttee
4. Security Considerations
Much of the security of the Internet relies on the DNS and any
change to the characteristics of the DNS may change the security of
much of the Internet. Therefore UTF-6 makes no changes to the DNS itself.
UTF-6 is designed so that distinct Unicode sequences map to distinct
domain name sequences (modulo the Unicode and DNS equivalence rules).
Therefore use of UTF-6 with DNS will not negatively affect security.
5. References
[IDNCOMP] Paul Hoffman, "Comparison of Internationalized Domain Name
Proposals", draft-ietf-idn-compare.
[IDNREQ] James Seng, "Requirements of Internationalized Domain Names",
draft-ietf-idn-requirement.
[IDNNAMEPREP] Paul Hoffman and Marc Blanchet, "Preparation of
Internationalized Host Names", draft-ietf-idn-nameprep
[IDNDUERST] M. Duerst, "Internationalization of Domain Names",
draft-duerst-dns-i18n.
[ISO10646] ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993. International Standard -- Information
technology -- Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) --
Part 1: Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane. Five amendments and
a technical corrigendum have been published up to now. UTF-16 is
described in Annex Q, published as Amendment 1. 17 other amendments are
currently at various stages of standardization.
[RFC2119] Scott Bradner, "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", March 1997, RFC 2119.
[STD13] Paul Mockapetris, "Domain names - implementation and
specification", November 1987, STD 13 (RFC 1035).
[UNICODE3] The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard -- Version
3.0", ISBN 0-201-61633-5. Described at
<http://www.unicode.org/unicode/standard/versions/Unicode3.0.html>.
A. Acknowledgements
The structure (and some of the structural text) of this document is
intentionally borrowed from the LACE IDN draft (draft-ietf-idn-lace)
by Mark Davis and Paul Hoffman.
The 'SOREZORENOBASHO' example was taken from draft-ietf-idn-brace draft
by Adam Costello.
B. IANA Considerations
There are no IANA considerations in this document.
C. Author Contact Information
Mark Welter
Brian W. Spolarich
WALID, Inc.
State Technology Park
2245 S. State St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
+1-734-822-2020
mwelter@walid.com
briansp@walid.com
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