📄 rfc3044.txt
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Network Working Group S. RozenfeldRequest for Comments: 3044 ISSN International CentreCategory: Informational January 2001 Using The ISSN (International Serial Standard Number) as URN (Uniform Resource Names) within an ISSN-URN NamespaceStatus of this Memo This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.Abstract This document presents how the ISSN - International Standard Serial Number - which is a persistent number for unique identification of serials widely recognised and used in the bibliographic world, can be supported within the Uniform Resource Name (URN) framework as a specific URN namespace identifier. An ISSN URN resolution system using the ISSN identifier as Uniform resource Name within an ISN URN Namespace has been developed by the ISSN International Centre (ISSN-IC) and is operating as a demonstrator to evaluate all requirements to deploy it in an operational environment. This proceeds from concepts and proposals developed in several IETF RFCs emphasising the way to implement and to use "recognised" existing numbering system within the URN framework (RFC 2248, RFC 2141, RFC 2611).Rozenfeld Informational [Page 1]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001Table of Contents 1. Introduction .................................................. 2 2. The ISSN system ............................................... 3 2.1 The ISSN code .............................................. 3 2.2 Construction of ISSN ...................................... 3 2.3 The ISSN Bibliographic record .............................. 4 2.4 The ISSN Network ........................................... 4 2.5 The ISSN Register .......................................... 5 3. The ISSN and URN .............................................. 5 3.1 compatibility .............................................. 5 3.2 identification and access .................................. 7 4 Resolution .................................................... 7 4.1 Overview of the ISSN URN Resolution system ................. 8 4.2 Global Resolution .......................................... 9 5. Registration of an ISSN URN Namespace ......................... 10 6. Security Considersations ...................................... 13 7. References .................................................... 13 8. Contact information and useful links .......................... 14 9. Full Copyright Statement ...................................... 151. Introduction The ISSN International Centre has undertaken in 1999-2000 an URN implementation taking advantage of the functional compatibility between the ISSN and the URN. The present implementation at the ISSN-IC Centre based on IETF RFCs on URN includes a centralised resolution system which allows direct access to electronic resources by using the ISSN identifiers as Uniform Resource Names within an ISSN URN Namespace. It demonstrates that the URN can integrate existing identifiers from well established identification schemes used by the bibliographic community. Nevertheless, to deploy this demonstrator into a wider operational system a responsible body or infrastructure is needed to assign namespaces and manage an RDS/NAPTR global resolution framework. It is intended here that serials refer to all forms of serials published in printed form as well as in form of electronic resources. Since this document contains a Registration form for an ISSN URN Namespace, this form also includes some paragraphs already present in other parts of this document. All figures and descriptions are dated 13 July 2000.Rozenfeld Informational [Page 2]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 20012. The ISSN system The ISSN system results from a joint UNESCO and ICSU-AB working group on bibliographic descriptions set up in 1967 in order to establish a world registry of serial titles currently issued, stored or archived. Today, the ISSN system which is defined by an International standard (ISO 3297), relies on two main data elements: The International Standard Serial Number which is a unique identifier for a specific serial publication. The key-title, which is a unique name assigned to a serial, and is inseparably linked with its ISSN. And on a well established framework: the ISSN International network.2.1 The ISSN code The ISSN - International Standard Serials Number is defined in the ISO standard 3297:1998 as a code for the unique identification of serials. This standard states that: Each ISSN is a unique identifier for a specific serial publication. ISSN are applicable to the entire population of serials, whether past, present or to be published in the foreseeable future, whatever the medium of publication. Serials include periodicals, newspapers, annuals (such as reports, yearbooks, directories, etc.), and the journals, series, memoirs, proceedings, transactions, etc., of societies. Today, ISSN are assigned to data bases and electronic serial resources. Further broadening of the scope to continuing resources is under discussion.2.2 Construction of ISSN The ISO 3297 standard states that: An ISSN consists of eight digits in arabic numerals 0 to 9, except the last digit which is a check digit and can be sometimes an X. The ISSN has no internal meaningful elements to identify language, country, publisher [or medium.]Rozenfeld Informational [Page 3]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001 The check digit is always located in the extreme right position and is calculated on a modulus 11 basis with weights 8 to 2, using X in lieu of 10 where 10 would occur as a check digit. Each ISSN is inseparably linked a "the key title". The Key title is a form of the title which is constructed in order to avoid duplicates so that each key title is unique in the ISSN Data base also named the ISSN Register. ISSN and key titles are equivalent, they both identify without ambiguity a same serial. When printed or displayed the ISSN is preceded by the ISSN prefix and a space, and shall appear as two groups of four digits separated by a hyphen. examples ISSN 0000-0019 ISSN 1560-1560 ISSN are constructed and distributed by the ISSN International Centre to National Centres for assignment.2.3 The ISSN Bibliographic record It contains in addition to the ISSN and key-title some thirty bibliographic data elements enabling the unambiguous and secure identification of a serial. One characteristic of an ISSN bibliographic record is that it contains other ISSN in linking fields in order to establish relationships between the given serial and a set of other related serials already identified. To recognise and to allow access to serial resources in digital form, the ISSN format has included additional data elements: - A medium code which indicates the medium of the given serial - A linking field to express relations between the different forms of "equivalent" serials on different media (from printed version to online as well as from online to printed) - The location of an electronic resource: the URLs of a given resource.2.4 The ISSN network It is the operational structure, main functions of which are: - collecting the material which needs to be identified - assigning the ISSN and the key title to a serial for unambiguous identification - creating and editing bibliographic records in ISSN formatRozenfeld Informational [Page 4]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001 - making available the bibliographic records It consists of: - National Centres - 69 centres - responsible for the identification of serials published in their respective countries. Records created by National Centres are transmitted to the ISSN-IC for validation and update of the ISSN Register. - The International Centre which co-ordinates the network and acts as a National Centre for serials published by International institutions and by countries with no National Centre. It collects and checks all bibliographic records to update in a consistent way the ISSN Register. It maintains the ISSN Register and makes it available.2.5 The ISSN Register It is a data base controlled and maintained by the ISSN-IC. It consists in 970 000 bibliographic records stored in ISSN-MARC format (a subset of USMARC format ) which are available on different media (CD-ROM, DAT, and on the Internet).3. THE ISSN AND URN3.1 ISSN compliance with URN requirements The different specifications and requirements on URNs have been studied from the following documents: URN Syntax (RFC 2141, May 1997 - R. Moats) Using Existing Bibliographic Identifiers as Uniform Resource Names (RFC 2288 February 1998 - C. Lynch, R. Daniel) Functional Requirements for Uniform Resource Names (RFC 1737, December 1994 - K. Sollins, L. Masinter) URN Namespace Definition Mechanisms (RFC 2611, June 1999 - L. Daigle, R. Iannella) A URN Namespace for IETF Documents (RFC 2648, August 1999 - R. Moats) Requirements for URNs' functional capabilities (from RFC 1737)Rozenfeld Informational [Page 5]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001 Global scope: A URN is a name with global scope which does not imply a location. It has the same meaning everywhere. - Applicable for ISSN. Accordingly to ISO standard 3297 there is no limitations for serial resource identification. Global uniqueness: The same URN will never be assigned to two different resources. - Applicable for ISSN. By definition an ISSN is assigned to one and only one serial resource. Once assigned, an ISSN is never re- assigned. Persistence: The lifetime of a URN is permanent. - Applicable for ISSN. All ISSN are registered in the ISSN Register data base which covers current serial resources as well as ceased. Scalability: URNs can be assigned to any resource that might conceivably be available on the network, for hundreds of years. - Applicable for ISSN. More than 98500000 ISSN have yet been assigned. Legacy support: The scheme must permit the support of existing legacy naming systems. - Applicable for ISSN. By definition the ISSN system is a legacy identification system for serial resources. Independence: It is solely the responsibility of a name issuing authority to determine the conditions under which it will issue a name. - Applicable for ISSN. By definition of the ISSN system. Resolution: For URNs that have corresponding URLs, there must be some feasible mechanism to translate a URN to a URL. - Applicable for ISSN. The ISSN-IC has developed an ISSN URN resolver which translates one given ISSN into one or several URLs. In addition to these basic requirements on the functional elements of the URNs, there are other requirements for how they are encoded in a string: Single encoding, Simple comparison, Simple human transcribability, Transport friendliness, Machine consumption, Text recognition.Rozenfeld Informational [Page 6]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001 - Applicable to ISSN. As defined in the ISO standard the ISSN is a very simple and short character string which fully responds to those requirements. Considering the aim of the ISSN, its framework and new developments for electronic serial resources identification, we can state that the ISSN fulfills all expressed URN requirements. Syntax requirements Considering syntax requirements (RFC2141) for an URN namespace and the URN syntax, an ISSN based URN namespace is compliant with such requirements since it does not use any reserved characters. In RFC 2288 (4.2 Encoding Considerations and Lexical Equivalence) it is stated that: There is no problem representing ISSN in the namespace - specific string of URNs since all characters valid in the ISSN are valid in the namespace-specific URN string, and %-encoding is never required. Example: urn:ISSN:1046-8188 Supplementary comparison rules are also appropriate for the ISSN namespace, hyphens should be dropped prior to comparison and occurrences of 'x' normalised to uppercase.3.2 Identification and access The role of an URN is also to provide safe access to the characteristics of a resource and to the resource itself. One may view an ISSN bibliographic record as a metadata since it contains different data information on the resource which is to be identified, described, located and/or accessed. The ISSN is widely used as an identification number for serial resources. Since the ISSN Network provides the URLs corresponding to the identified resources the ISSN is now also a tool for the location and access to resources on the Internet. This is achieved by an ISSN URN resolution system.4. RESOLUTION The different specifications and requirements on URN resolution have been studied from the following documents: URI Resolution Services Necessary for URN Resolution (RFC 2483, January 1999 - M. Mealling)Rozenfeld Informational [Page 7]RFC 3044 ISSN as URN within an ISSN-URN Namespace January 2001 Resolution of Uniform Resource Identifiers using the Domain Name System (RFC 2168 June 1997 - R. Daniel, M. Mealling ) Architectural Principles of Uniform Resource Name Resolution (RFC 2276, January 1998 - K. Sollins )4.1. Overview of the ISSN URN Resolution system Using ISSN as Uniform Resource Name implies that some mapping mechanism is provided to ensure a reliable access to available resources when using Internet tools like a standard Web browser. From the technical point of view this has led to develop within our system the different pieces of software and services required to fulfill such aim. The resolution software be able to translate a given ISSN-URN into electronic locations: - location of the bibliographic description or metadata - location of the periodical itself (if it is in electronic form). These electronic locations are expressed in form of URLs for which
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