RFC 2376 (rfc2376) - Page 2 of 15
XML Media Types
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 2376 XML Media Types July 1998
7 REFERENCES .....................................................13
8 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ...............................................14
9 ADDRESSES OF AUTHORS ...........................................14
10 FULL COPYRIGHT STATEMENT ......................................15
1 Introduction
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has issued a Recommendation
[REC-XML] which defines the Extensible Markup Language (XML), version
1. To enable the exchange of XML network entities, this document
proposes two new media types, text/xml and application/xml.
XML entities are currently exchanged on the World Wide Web, and XML
is also used for property values and parameter marshalling by the
WebDAV protocol for remote web authoring. Thus, there is a need for a
media type to properly label the exchange of XML network entities.
(Note that, as sometimes happens between two communities, both MIME
and XML have defined the term entity, with different meanings.)
Although XML is a subset of the Standard Generalized Markup Language
(SGML) [ISO-8897], and currently is assigned the media types
text/sgml and application/sgml, there are several reasons why use of
text/sgml or application/sgml to label XML is inappropriate. First,
there exist many applications which can process XML, but which cannot
process SGML, due to SGML's larger feature set. Second, SGML
applications cannot always process XML entities, because XML uses
features of recent technical corrigenda to SGML. Third, the
definition of text/sgml and application/sgml [RFC-1874] includes
parameters for SGML bit combination transformation format (SGML-
bctf), and SGML boot attribute (SGML-boot). Since XML does not use
these parameters, it would be ambiguous if such parameters were given
for an XML entity. For these reasons, the best approach for labeling
XML network entities is to provide new media types for XML.
Since XML is an integral part of the WebDAV Distributed Authoring
Protocol, and since World Wide Web Consortium Recommendations have
conventionally been assigned IETF tree media types, and since similar
media types (HTML, SGML) have been assigned IETF tree media types,
the XML media types also belong in the IETF media types tree.
Whitehead & Murata Informational