Network Working Group                                       D. Goldsmith
Request for Comments: 1641                                      M. Davis
Category: Experimental                                    Taligent, Inc.
                                                              July 1994


                       Using Unicode with MIME

Status of this Memo

  This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
  community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any
  kind.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  The Unicode Standard, version 1.1, and ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993(E)
  jointly define a 16 bit character set (hereafter referred to as
  Unicode) which encompasses most of the world's writing systems.
  However, Internet mail (STD 11, RFC 822) currently supports only 7-
  bit US ASCII as a character set. MIME (RFC 1521 and RFC 1522) extends
  Internet mail to support different media types and character sets,
  and thus could support Unicode in mail messages. MIME neither defines
  Unicode as a permitted character set nor specifies how it would be
  encoded, although it does provide for the registration of additional
  character sets over time.

  This document specifies the usage of Unicode within MIME.

Motivation

  Since Unicode is starting to see widespread commercial adoption,
  users will want a way to transmit information in this character set
  in mail messages and other Internet media. Since MIME was expressly
  designed to allow such extensions and is on the standards track for
  the Internet, it is the most appropriate means for encoding Unicode.
  RFC 1521 and RFC 1522 do not define Unicode as an allowed character
  set, but allow registration of additional character sets.

  In addition to allowing use of Unicode within MIME bodies, another
  goal is to specify a way of using Unicode that allows text which
  consists largely, but not entirely, of US-ASCII characters to be
  represented in a way that can be read by mail clients who do not
  understand Unicode. This is in keeping with the philosophy of MIME.
  Such an encoding is described in another document, "UTF-7: A Mail
  Safe Transformation Format of Unicode" [UTF-7].





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RFC 1641                Using Unicode with MIME                July 1994


Overview

  Several ways of using Unicode are possible. This document specifies
  both guidelines for use of Unicode within MIME, and a specific usage.
  The usage specified in this document is a straightforward use of
  Unicode as specified in "The Unicode Standard, Version 1.1".

  This encoding is intended for situations where sender and recipient
  do not want to do a lot of processing, when the text does not consist
  primarily of characters from the US-ASCII character set, or when
  sender and receiver are known in advance to support Unicode.

  Another encoding is intended for situations where the text consists
  primarily of US-ASCII, with occasional characters from other parts of
  Unicode. This encoding allows the US-ASCII portion to be read by all
  recipients without having to support Unicode. This encoding is
  specified in another document, "UTF-7: A Mail Safe Transformation
  Format of Unicode" [UTF-7].

  Finally, in keeping with the principles set forth in RFC 1521, text
  which can be represented using the US-ASCII or ISO-8859-x character
  sets should be so represented where possible, for maximum
  interoperability.

Definitions

  The definition of character set Unicode:

     The 16 bit character set Unicode is defined by "The Unicode
     Standard, Version 1.1". This character set is identical with the
     character repertoire and coding of the international standard
     ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993(E); Coded Representation Form=UCS-2;
     Subset=300; Implementation Level=3.

     Note. Unicode 1.1 further specifies the use and interaction of
     these character codes beyond the ISO standard. However, any valid
     10646 BMP (Basic Multilingual Plane) sequence is a valid Unicode
     sequence, and vice versa; Unicode supplies interpretations of
     sequences on which the ISO standard is silent as to
     interpretation.

     This character set is encoded as sequences of octets, two per 16-
     bit character, with the most significant octet first. Text with an
     odd number of octets is ill-formed.

     Rationale. ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993(E) specifies that when characters
     in the UCS-2 form are serialized as octets, that the most
     significant octet appear first.  This is also in keeping with



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RFC 1641                Using Unicode with MIME                July 1994


     common network practice of choosing a canonical format for
     transmission.

General Specification of Unicode Character Sets Within MIME

  The Unicode Standard is currently at version 1.1. Although new
  versions should be compatible with old implementations if an
  implementation is compliant with the standard, some implementations
  may choose to check the version of the character set that is being
  used. In order to allow some implementations to check the version
  number and allow others to ignore it, all registrations of Unicode
  variants and versions for MIME usage should have MIME charset names
  which conform to one of the two following patterns:

     UNICODE-major-minor
     UNICODE-major-minor-variant

  Where major and minor are strings of decimal digits (0 through 9)
  specifying the major and minor version number of the Unicode standard
  to which the text in question conforms. In the interests of
  interoperability, the lowest version number compatible with the text
  should be used. The lowest acceptable version number is UNICODE-1-1,
  corresponding to "The Unicode Standard, Version 1.1". The optional
  trailing string "variant" describes the particular transformation
  format of Unicode that the registration describes; its content is up
  to the particular registration. If there is no trailing variant
  string, the charset name refers to the basic two octet form of
  Unicode as described in "The Unicode Standard".

  Example. A hypothetical charset which referred to the UTF-8
  transformation format of Unicode/10646 (also known as UTF-2 or UTF-
  FSS) might be named UNICODE-1-1-UTF-8.

Encoding Character Set Unicode Within MIME

  Character set Unicode uses 16 bit characters, and therefore would
  normally be used with the Binary or Base64 content transfer encodings
  of MIME. In header fields, it would normally be used with the B
  content transfer encoding. The MIME character set identifier is
  UNICODE-1-1.

  Example. Here is a text portion of a MIME message containing the
  Japanese word "nihongo" (hexadecimal 65E5,672C,8A9E) written in Han
  characters.

  Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UNICODE-1-1
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64




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RFC 1641                Using Unicode with MIME                July 1994


  ZeVnLIqe

  Example. Here is a text portion of a MIME message containing the
  Unicode sequence "A<NOT IDENTICAL TO><ALPHA>." (hexadecimal
  0041,2262,0391,002E)

  Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UNICODE-1-1
  Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

  AEEiYgORAC4=

Acknowledgements

  Many thanks to the following people for their contributions,
  comments, and suggestions. If we have omitted anyone it was through
  oversight and not intentionally.

        Glenn Adams
        Harald T. Alvestrand
        Nathaniel Borenstein
        Lee Collins
        Jim Conklin
        Dave Crocker
        Steve Dorner
        Dana S. Emery
        Ned Freed
        John H. Jenkins
        John C. Klensin
        Valdis Kletnieks
        Keith Moore
        Masataka Ohta
        Einar Stefferud

Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

References

[UNICODE 1.1] "The Unicode Standard, Version 1.1": Version 1.0, Volume 1
             (ISBN 0-201-56788-1), Version 1.0, Volume 2 (ISBN 0-201-
             60845-6), and "Unicode Technical Report #4, The Unicode
             Standard, Version 1.1" (available from The Unicode
             Consortium, and soon to be published by Addison-Wesley).

[ISO 10646]   ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993(E) Information Technology--Universal
             Multiple-octet Coded Character Set (UCS).




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RFC 1641                Using Unicode with MIME                July 1994


[UTF-7]       Goldsmith, D., and M. Davis, "UTF-7: A Mail Safe
             Transformation Format of Unicode", RFC 1642, Taligent,
             Inc., July 1994.

[US-ASCII]    Coded Character Set--7-bit American Standard Code for
             Information Interchange, ANSI X3.4-1986.

[ISO-8859]    Information Processing -- 8-bit Single-Byte Coded Graphic
             Character Sets -- Part 1: Latin Alphabet No. 1, ISO 8859-
             1:1987.  Part 2: Latin alphabet No.  2, ISO 8859-2, 1987.
             Part 3: Latin alphabet No. 3, ISO 8859-3, 1988.  Part 4:
             Latin alphabet No.  4, ISO 8859-4, 1988.  Part 5:
             Latin/Cyrillic alphabet, ISO 8859-5, 1988.  Part 6:
             Latin/Arabic alphabet, ISO 8859-6, 1987.  Part 7:
             Latin/Greek alphabet, ISO 8859-7, 1987.  Part 8:
             Latin/Hebrew alphabet, ISO 8859-8, 1988.  Part 9: Latin
             alphabet No. 5, ISO 8859-9, 1990.

[RFC822]      Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet
             Text Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, UDEL, August 1982.

[RFC-1521]    Borenstein N., and N. Freed, "MIME (Multipurpose Internet
             Mail Extensions) Part One:  Mechanisms for Specifying and
             Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC
             1521, Bellcore, Innosoft, September 1993.

[RFC-1522]    Moore, K., "Representation of Non-Ascii Text in Internet
             Message Headers" RFC 1522, University of Tennessee,
             September 1993.

[UTF-8]       X/Open Company Ltd., "File System Safe UCS Transformation
             Format (FSS_UTF)", X/Open Preliminary Specification,
             Document Number: P316. This information also appears in
             Unicode Technical Report #4, and in a forthcoming annex to
             ISO/IEC 10646.
















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RFC 1641                Using Unicode with MIME                July 1994


Authors' Addresses

  David Goldsmith
  Taligent, Inc.
  10201 N. DeAnza Blvd.
  Cupertino, CA 95014-2233

  Phone: 408-777-5225
  Fax: 408-777-5081
  EMail: [email protected]


  Mark Davis
  Taligent, Inc.
  10201 N. DeAnza Blvd.
  Cupertino, CA 95014-2233

  Phone: 408-777-5116
  Fax: 408-777-5081
  EMail: [email protected]































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