Network Working Group                                      L. Masinter
Request for Comments: 2397                           Xerox Corporation
Category: Standards Track                                  August 1998


                        The "data" URL scheme

Status of this Memo

  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 Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

1. Abstract

  A new URL scheme, "data", is defined. It allows inclusion of small
  data items as "immediate" data, as if it had been included
  externally.

2. Description

  Some applications that use URLs also have a need to embed (small)
  media type data directly inline. This document defines a new URL
  scheme that would work like 'immediate addressing'. The URLs are of
  the form:

                   data:[<mediatype>][;base64],<data>

  The <mediatype> is an Internet media type specification (with
  optional parameters.) The appearance of ";base64" means that the data
  is encoded as base64. Without ";base64", the data (as a sequence of
  octets) is represented using ASCII encoding for octets inside the
  range of safe URL characters and using the standard %xx hex encoding
  of URLs for octets outside that range.  If <mediatype> is omitted, it
  defaults to text/plain;charset=US-ASCII.  As a shorthand,
  "text/plain" can be omitted but the charset parameter supplied.

  The "data:" URL scheme is only useful for short values. Note that
  some applications that use URLs may impose a length limit; for
  example, URLs embedded within <A> anchors in HTML have a length limit
  determined by the SGML declaration for HTML [RFC1866]. The LITLEN
  (1024) limits the number of characters which can appear in a single



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  attribute value literal, the ATTSPLEN (2100) limits the sum of all
  lengths of all attribute value specifications which appear in a tag,
  and the TAGLEN (2100) limits the overall length of a tag.

  The "data" URL scheme has no relative URL forms.

3. Syntax

      dataurl    := "data:" [ mediatype ] [ ";base64" ] "," data
      mediatype  := [ type "/" subtype ] *( ";" parameter )
      data       := *urlchar
      parameter  := attribute "=" value

  where "urlchar" is imported from [RFC2396], and "type", "subtype",
  "attribute" and "value" are the corresponding tokens from [RFC2045],
  represented using URL escaped encoding of [RFC2396] as necessary.

  Attribute values in [RFC2045] are allowed to be either represented as
  tokens or as quoted strings. However, within a "data" URL, the
  "quoted-string" representation would be awkward, since the quote mark
  is itself not a valid urlchar. For this reason, parameter values
  should use the URL Escaped encoding instead of quoted string if the
  parameter values contain any "tspecial".

  The ";base64" extension is distinguishable from a content-type
  parameter by the fact that it doesn't have a following "=" sign.

4. Examples

  A data URL might be used for arbitrary types of data. The URL

                         data:,A%20brief%20note

  encodes the text/plain string "A brief note", which might be useful
  in a footnote link.

  The HTML fragment:

  <IMG
  SRC="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODdhMAAwAPAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAMAAw
  AAAC8IyPqcvt3wCcDkiLc7C0qwyGHhSWpjQu5yqmCYsapyuvUUlvONmOZtfzgFz
  ByTB10QgxOR0TqBQejhRNzOfkVJ+5YiUqrXF5Y5lKh/DeuNcP5yLWGsEbtLiOSp
  a/TPg7JpJHxyendzWTBfX0cxOnKPjgBzi4diinWGdkF8kjdfnycQZXZeYGejmJl
  ZeGl9i2icVqaNVailT6F5iJ90m6mvuTS4OK05M0vDk0Q4XUtwvKOzrcd3iq9uis
  F81M1OIcR7lEewwcLp7tuNNkM3uNna3F2JQFo97Vriy/Xl4/f1cf5VWzXyym7PH
  hhx4dbgYKAAA7"
  ALT="Larry">




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  could be used for a small inline image in a HTML document.  (The
  embedded image is probably near the limit of utility. For anything
  else larger, data URLs are likely to be inappropriate.)

  A data URL scheme's media type specification can include other
  parameters; for example, one might specify a charset parameter.

     data:text/plain;charset=iso-8859-7,%be%fg%be

  can be used for a short sequence of greek characters.

  Some applications may use the "data" URL scheme in order to provide
  setup parameters for other kinds of networking applications. For
  example, one might create a media type
          application/vnd-xxx-query

  whose content consists of a query string and a database identifier
  for the "xxx" vendor's databases. A URL of the form:

  data:application/vnd-xxx-
  query,select_vcount,fcol_from_fieldtable/local

  could then be used in a local application to launch the "helper" for
  application/vnd-xxx-query and give it the immediate data included.

5. History

  This idea was originally proposed August 1995. Some versions of the
  data URL scheme have been used in the definition of VRML, and a
  version has appeared as part of a proposal for embedded data in HTML.
  Various changes have been made, based on requests, to elide the media
  type, pack the indication of the base64 encoding more tightly, and
  eliminate "quoted printable" as an encoding since it would not easily
  yield valid URLs without additional %xx encoding, which itself is
  sufficient. The "data" URL scheme is in use in VRML, new applications
  of HTML, and various commercial products. It is being used for object
  parameters in Java and ActiveX applications.

6. Security

  Interpretation of the data within a "data" URL has the same security
  considerations as any implementation of the given media type.  An
  application should not interpret the contents of a data URL which is
  marked with a media type that has been disallowed for processing by
  the application's configuration.






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  Sites which use firewall proxies to disallow the retrieval of certain
  media types (such as application script languages or types with known
  security problems) will find it difficult to screen against the
  inclusion of such types using the "data" URL scheme.  However, they
  should be aware of the threat and take whatever precautions are
  considered necessary within their domain.

  The effect of using long "data" URLs in applications is currently
  unknown; some software packages may exhibit unreasonable behavior
  when confronted with data that exceeds its allocated buffer size.

7. References

  [RFC2396] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter,
              "Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI): Generic Syntax", RFC
              2396, August 1998.

  [RFC1866]   Berners-Lee, T., and D. Connolly, "Hypertext Markup
              Language - 2.0.", RFC 1866, November 1995.

  [RFC2045]   Freed N., and N. Borenstein., "Multipurpose Internet Mail
              Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
              Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.

Author contact information:

  Larry Masinter
  Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
  3333 Coyote Hill Road
  Palo Alto, CA 94304

  EMail: [email protected]



















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RFC 2397                 The "data" URL scheme               August 1998


Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
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