rfc2288.txt
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Network Working Group C. Lynch
Request for Comments: 2288 Coalition for Networked Information
Category: Informational C. Preston
Preston & Lynch
R. Daniel
Los Alamos National Laboratory
February 1998
Using Existing Bibliographic Identifiers
as
Uniform Resource Names
Status 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 (1998). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
A system for Uniform Resource Names (URNs) must be capable of
supporting identifiers from existing widely-used naming systems.
This document discusses how three major bibliographic identifiers
(the ISBN, ISSN and SICI) can be supported within the URN framework
and the currently proposed syntax for URNs.
1. Introduction
The ongoing work of several IETF working groups, most recently in the
Uniform Resource Names working group, has culminated the development
of a syntax for Uniform Resource Names (URNs). The functional
requirements and overall framework for Uniform Resource Names are
specified in RFC 1737 [Sollins & Masinter] and the specification for
the URN syntax is RFC 2141 [Moats].
As part of the validation process for the development of URNs the
IETF working group has agreed that it is important to demonstrate
that the current URN syntax proposal can accommodate existing
identifiers from well established namespaces. One such
infrastructure for assigning and managing names comes from the
bibliographic community. Bibliographic identifiers function as names
for objects that exist both in print and, increasingly, in electronic
formats. This memo demonstrates the feasibility of supporting three
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RFC 2288 Bibligraphic Identifiers February 1998
representative bibliographic identifiers within the currently
proposed URN framework and syntax.
Note that this document does not purport to define the "official"
standard way of moving these bibliographic identifiers into URNs; it
merely demonstrates feasibility. It has not been developed in
consultation with these standards bodies and maintenance agencies
that oversee the existing bibliographic identifiers. Any actual
Internet standard for encoding these bibliographic identifiers as
URNs will need to be developed in consultation with the responsible
standards bodies and maintenance agencies.
In addition, there are several open questions with regard to the
management and registry of Namespace Identifiers (NIDs) for URNs.
For purposes of illustration, we have used the three NIDs "ISBN",
"ISSN" and "SICI" for the three corresponding bibliographic
identifiers discussed in this document. While we believe this to be
the most appropriate choice, it is not the only one. The NIDs could
be based on the standards body and standard number (e.g. "US-ANSI-
NISO-Z39.56-1997" rather than "SICI"). Alternatively, one could lump
all bibliographic identifiers into a single "BIBLIOGRAPHIC" name
space, and structure the namespace-specific string to specify which
identifier is being used. Any final resolution of this must wait for
the outcome of namespace management discussions in the working group
and the broader IETF community.
For the purposes of this document, we have selected three major
bibliographic identifiers (national and international) to fit within
the URN framework. These are the International Standard Book Number
(ISBN) [ISO1], the International Standard Serials Number (ISSN)
[NISO1,ISO2, ISO3], and the Serial Item and Contribution Identifier
(SICI) [NISO2]. An ISBN is used to identify a monograph (book). An
ISSN is used to identify serial publications (journals, newspapers)
as a whole. A SICI augments the ISSN in order to identify
individual issues of serial publications, or components within those
issues (such as an individual article, or the table of contents of a
given issue). The ISBN and ISSN are defined in the United States by
standards issued by the National Information Standards Organization
(NISO) and also by parallel international standards issued under the
auspices of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
NISO is the ANSI-accredited standards body serving libraries,
publishers and information services. The SICI code is defined by a
NISO document in the United States and does not have a parallel
international standards document at present.
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RFC 2288 Bibligraphic Identifiers February 1998
Many other bibliographic identifiers are in common use (for example,
CODEN, numbers assigned by major bibliographic utilities such as OCLC
and RLG, national library numbers such as the Library of Congress
Control Number) or are under development. While we do not discuss
them in this document, many of these will also need to be supported
within the URN framework as it moves to large scale implementation.
The issues involved in supporting those additional identifiers are
anticipated to be broadly similar to those involved in supporting
ISBNs, ISSNs, and SICIs.
2. Identification vs. Resolution
It is important to distinguish between the resource identified by a
URN and the resources a URN resolver that can reasonably return when
attempting to resolve an identifier. For example, the ISSN 0040-781X
identifies the popular magazine "Time" -- all of it, every issue for
from the start of publication to present. Resolving such an
identifier should not result in the equivalent of hundreds of
thousands of pages of text and photos being dumped to the user's
machine. It is more reasonable for ISSNs to resolve to a
navigational system, such as an HTML-based search form, so the user
may select issues or articles of interest. ISBNs and SICIs, on the
other hand, do identify finite, manageably-sized objects, but these
objects may still be large enough that resolution to a hierarchical
system is appropriate.
In addition, the materials identified by an ISSN, ISBN or SICI may
exist only in printed or other physical form, not electronically.
The best that a resolver may be able to offer is information about
where to get the physical resource, such as library holdings or a
bookstore or publisher order form. The URN Framework provides
resolution services that may be used to describe any differences
between the resource identified by a URN and the resource that would
be returned as a result of resolving that URN.
3. International Standard Book Numbers
3.1 Overview
An International Standard Book Number (ISBN) identifies an edition of
a monographic work. The ISBN is defined by the standard
NISO/ANSI/ISO 2108:1992 [ISO1]
Basically, an ISBN is a ten-digit number (actually, the last digit
can be the letter "X" as well, as described below) which is divided
into four variable length parts usually separated by hyphens when
printed. The parts are as follows (in this order):
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RFC 2288 Bibligraphic Identifiers February 1998
* a group identifier which specifies a group of publishers, based on
national, geographic or some other criteria,
* the publisher identifier,
* the title identifier,
* and a modulus 11 check digit, using X instead of 10.
The group and publisher number assignments are managed in such a way
that the hyphens are not needed to parse the ISBN unambiguously into
its constituent parts. However, the ISBN is normally transmitted and
displayed with hyphens to make it easy for human beings to recognize
these parts without having to make reference to or have knowledge of
the number assignments for group and publisher identifiers.
3.2 Encoding Considerations and Lexical Equivalence
Embedding ISBNs within the URN framework presents no particular
encoding problems, since all of the characters that can appear in an
ISBN are valid in the identifier segment of the URN. %-encoding, as
described in [MOATS] is never needed.
Example: URN:ISBN:0-395-36341-1
For the ISBN namespace, some additional equivalence rules are
appropriate. Prior to comparing two ISBN URNs for equivalence, it is
appropriate to remove all hyphens, and to convert any occurrences of
the letter X to upper case.
3.3 Additional considerations
The ISBN standard and related community implementation guidelines
define when different versions of a work should be assigned the same
or differing ISBNs. In actuality, however, practice varies somewhat
depending on publisher as to whether different ISBNs are assigned for
paperbound vs. hardbound versions of the same work, electronic vs.
printed versions of the same work, or versions of the same work
distinguished in some other way (e.g., published for example in the
US and in Europe). The choice of whether to assign a new ISBN or to
reuse an existing one when publishing a revised printing of an
existing edition of a work or even a revised edition of a work is
somewhat subjective. Practice varies from publisher to publisher
(indeed, the distinction between a revised printing and a new edition
is itself somewhat subjective). The use of ISBNs within the URN
framework simply reflects these existing practices. Note that it is
likely that an ISBN URN will often resolve to many instances of the
work (many URLs).
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RFC 2288 Bibligraphic Identifiers February 1998
4. International Standard Serials Numbers
4.1 Overview
International Standard Serials Numbers (ISSN) identify a work that is
published on a continued basis in issues; they identify the entire
(often open-ended, in the case of an actively published) work. ISSNs
are defined by the international standards ISO 3297:1986 [ISO2] and
ISO/DIS 3297 [ISO3] and within the United States by NISO Z39.9-1992
[NISO1]. The ISSN International Centre is located in Paris and
coordinates a network of regional centers. The National Serials Data
Program within the Library of Congress is the US Center of this
network.
ISSNs have the form NNNN-NNNN where N is a digit, the last digit may
be an upper case X as the result of the check character calculation.
Unlike the ISBN the ISSN components do not have much structure;
blocks of numbers are passed out to the regional centers and
publishers.
4.2 Encoding Considerations and Lexical Equivalence
Again, there is no problem representing ISSNs 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. Just as for ISBNs, hyphens should be dropped prior to
comparison and occurrences of 'x' normalized to uppercase.
4.3 Additional Considerations
The ISSN standard and related community implementation guidelines
specify when new ISSNs should be assigned vs. continuing to use an
existing one. There are some publications where practice within the
bibliographic community varies from institution to institution, such
as annuals or annual conference proceedings. In some cases these are
treated as serials and ISSNs are used, and in some cases they are
treated as monographs and ISBNs are used. For example SIGMOD Record
volume 24 number 2 June 1995 contains the Proceedings of the 1995 ACM
SIGMOD International Conference on Management of Data. If you
subscribe to the journal (ISSN 0163-5808) this is simply the June
issue. On the other hand you may have acquired this volume as the
conference proceedings (a monograph) and as such would use the ISBN
0-89791-731-6 to identify the work. There are also varying practices
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