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Simultaneously, the IETF published the content of RFC 3986 as the full standard STD 66, reflecting the establishment of the URI generic syntax as an official Internet protocol. In 2001, the World Wide Web Consortium's (W3C) Technical Architecture Group (TAG) published a guide to best practices and canonical URIs for publishing multiple versions ...
RFC 3986 / STD 66 (plus errata), the current generic URI syntax specification. RFC 2396 (obsolete, plus errata) and RFC 2732 (plus errata) together comprised the previous version of the generic URI syntax specification. RFC 1738 (mostly obsolete) and RFC 1808 (obsolete), which define URLs.
The following normalizations are described in RFC 3986 [1] to result in equivalent URIs: . Converting percent-encoded triplets to uppercase. The hexadecimal digits within a percent-encoding triplet of the URI (e.g., %3a versus %3A) are case-insensitive and therefore should be normalized to use uppercase letters for the digits A-F. [2] Example:
RFC 2960, RFC 4960, RFC 3286 Tag URI scheme: RFC 4151 TELNET: RFC 15, RFC 854, RFC 855 Transmission Control Protocol: RFC 675, RFC 793, RFC 9293 Transport Layer Security 1.0: RFC 2246 Trivial File Transfer Protocol: RFC 783, RFC 1350 Usenet: RFC 850, RFC 1036 Uniform Resource Identifier: RFC 3986 User Datagram Protocol: RFC 768 UTF-8: RFC 3629 ...
This was dropped some time between June 1994 (RFC 1630) and October 1994 (draft-ietf-uri-url-08.txt). [12] In his book Weaving the Web , Berners-Lee emphasizes his preference for the original inclusion of "universal" in the expansion rather than the word "uniform", to which it was later changed, and he gives a brief account of the contention ...
Since RFC 3986 [5] in 2005, use of the terms "Uniform Resource Name" and "Uniform Resource Locator" has been deprecated in technical standards in favor of the term Uniform Resource Identifier (URI), which encompasses both, a view proposed in 2001 by a joint working group between the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and Internet Engineering Task ...
This field holds the URI of the target, enclosed in double-quote characters ('"'), where the URI is as specified in RFC 3986. An example DNS URI resource record
An MSRP URI has a scheme (which is "msrp" or "msrps"), authority, as defined by RFC 3986, which holds the IP/domain name and possibly the port, an optional session identifier, the transport and additional optional parameters.