[Next]
| .................... Web Official Documents
|
The Official Documents of the Web
On This Page:
Introduction |
Archive Sites |
Which RFC?
Related Documents:
Other Standards Organizations
Internet technologies, including those of the World Wide Web, are
defined by semi-formal collaborative bodies called Working Groups.
There are many dozens of these groups, covering everything from the
HTML language to HTTP to new versions of the TCP/IP Internet protocols.
Formal documents prepared by these groups are published as what
are know as RFC, for Requests For Comments. For example,
RFC 1866 is the formal specification for HTML Version 2. These are
the documents that define the technologies used on the Internet.
RFCs are stored, as plain text documents, at a number of Internet
anonymous FTP archive sites. The main site for these documents is
is the machine ds.internic.net. In this case, the RFC
documents are found at the URL (the second URL points directly to
the HTML 2.0 RFC):
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/
ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1866.txt
Official Anonymous FTP Archive Sites
There are several machines around the world housing these
documents. These are:
- Africa
- ftp.is.co.za (196.4.160.8)
- Europe
- nic.nordu.net (192.36.148.17)
- ftp.nis.garr.it (192.12.192.10)
- Pacific Rim
- munnari.oz.au (128.250.1.21)
- US East Coast
- ds.internic.net (198.49.45.10)
- US West Coast
- ftp.isi.edu (128.9.0.32)
You should select the closest machine, to reduce network bandwidth.
Which RFC Do You Want?
There are literally thousands of RFCs, and it is hard to find the
ones you want. Most RFC archive sites also have indexes -- look about
and see if you can find one.
Some standards, such as ASCII codes for languages and countries,
are set by the International Standards Organization. These are also
important on the Internet, and are incorporated into a number of
Web standards.
Here is a list of the more important RFCs, and their meanings
HTML
- RFC 1590 -- The text/html Internet Media type
- RFC 1866 -- Official Specification of HTML 2.0
- RFC 1867 -- FORM-based file uploads (Experimental)
ICADD Information
in support of easy transformation to the
International Committee for Accessible Document Design (ICADD) produced
a DTD for alternative access to documents.
ICADD applications are designed to support usable access to
structured information by print-impaired individuals through
Braille, large print and voice synthesis. For more information on
SDA ( SGML Document Access (SDA) fixed attributes ) & ICADD,
see:
- ISO 12083:1993, Annex A.8: Facilities for Braille,
large print and computer voice
- ICADD ListServ: ICADD%ASUACAD.BITNET@ARIZVM1.ccit.arizona.edu
- Usenet news group: bit.listserv.easi
- Recording for the Blind: +1 800 221 4792
- Web (gopher):gopher://gopher.mic.ucla.edu:4334/0./ICADD/info/documents/iso-annex.txt
- General ICADD Info: gopher://gopher.mic.ucla.edu:4334/11/ICADD/info
E-Mail and MIME
- RFC 822 -- Standard for Internet E-mail
- RFC 1123-- Update to RFC 822
- RFC 1521 -- MIME Mail standard (11) -- message format
- RFC 1522 -- MIME Mail standard (2/2) -- extended header field data
- RFC 1590 -- The text/html Internet Media type
USEnet News
- RFC 1036 -- USENET news messages protocol
Uniform Resource Locators
- RFC 1738 -- Uniform Resource Locators
- RFC 1808 -- Relative Uniform Resource Locators
- RFC 1630 -- Overview of Resource Naming Schemes for the Internet
Language and Country Specifications
- RFC 1766 -- Language Tags for use on the Internet
- ISO 639 -- Language Codes
- ISO 3166 -- Country Codes