Network Working Group M. Amundsen
Internet-Draft CA Technologies, Inc.
Expires: March 6, 2015 L. Richardson
M. Foster
Fingi, Inc.
September 2, 2014
Application-Level Profile Semantics (ALPS)
draft-amundsen-richardson-foster-alps-00
Abstract
This document describes ALPS, a data format for defining simple
descriptions of application-level semantics, similar in complexity to
HTML microformats. An ALPS document can be used as a profile to
explain the application semantics of a document with an application-
agnostic media type (such as HTML, HAL, Collection+JSON, Siren,
etc.). This increases the reusability of profile documents across
media types.
Editorial Note (To be removed by RFC Editor)
Distribution of this document is unlimited. Comments should be sent
to the IETF Media-Types mailing list (see [1]).
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on March 6, 2015.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Notational Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2.1. Describing Domain-Specific Semantics . . . . . . . . 4
1.2.2. ALPS-based Server Implementations . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2.3. ALPS-based Client Implementations . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3. A Simple ALPS Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4. Identifying an ALPS Document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2. ALPS Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.1. Compliance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.2. ALPS Document Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.2.1. 'alps' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.2.2. 'doc' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.2.3. 'descriptor' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2.2.4. 'ext' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
2.2.5. 'format' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
2.2.6. 'href' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
2.2.7. 'id' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
2.2.8. 'link' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
2.2.9. 'name' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
2.2.10. 'rel' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.2.11. 'rt' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.2.12. 'type' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.2.13. 'value' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.2.14. 'version' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
2.3. ALPS Representations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
2.3.1. Sample HTML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
2.3.2. XML Representation Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
2.3.3. JSON Representation Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
3. Applying ALPS documents to Existing Media Types . . . . . . . 21
3.1. Linking to ALPS Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4.1. application/alps+xml . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4.2. application/alps+json . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5. Internationalization Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
6. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
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7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Appendix A. Frequently Asked Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
A.1. Why are there no URLs in ALPS? . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
A.2. Why is there no workflow component in the ALPS
specification? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
A.3. Why is there no way to indicate ranges for semantic
descriptors? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
1. Introduction
This document describes ALPS, a media type for defining simple
descriptions of application-level semantics, similar in complexity to
HTML microformats. These descriptions contain both human-readable
and machine-readable explanations of the semantics. An ALPS document
can be used as a profile to explain the application semantics of a
document with an application-agnostic media type (such as HTML, HAL,
Collection+JSON, Siren. etc.).
This document identifies a registry for ALPS documents, (The ALPS
Profile Registry or APR). The details of this registry, its goals,
and operations are covered in a separate document (TBD).
This document also identifies a process for authoring, publishing,
and sharing normative human-readable instructions on applying an ALPS
document as a profile to responses of a given media type. For
example, a document that describes how to apply the semantics of an
ALPS profile to an HTML document.
This document registers two media-type identifiers with the IANA:
'application/alps+xml' ("ALPS+XML") and 'application/alps+json'
("ALPS+JSON").
1.1. Notational Conventions
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in[RFC2119].
1.2. Motivation
When implementing a hypermedia client/server application using a
general media type (HTML, Atom, Collection+JSON, etc.), client and
server instances need to share an understanding of domain-specific
information such as data element names, link relation values, and
state transfer parameters. This information is directly related to
the application being implemented (e.g. accounting, contact
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management, etc.) rather than the media type used in the
representations.
1.2.1. Describing Domain-Specific Semantics
Instead of creating and registering an entirely new media type (i.e.
'application/accounting'), representation authors can create an ALPS
document that describes a "profile" of the target domain; one that
explains the vital domain-specific semantic descriptors and state
transitions. This profile can then be consistently applied to a wide
range of media types by server implementors and successfully consumed
by client applications. The focus on defining application-level
semantics, independent of transfer protocol or media type, makes it
possible to serve application-specific representations using an
application-agnostic media type.
1.2.2. ALPS-based Server Implementations
Server implementors can use ALPS documents as a basis for building
domain-specific solutions without having to create their own custom
media type or re-invent the vocabulary and transition set for a
common domain (e.g. accounting, microblogging, etc.). Using a
preexisting ALPS profile as a guide, servers can map internal data to
commonly-understood semantic descriptors and state transitions,
increasing the likelihood that existing client applications (those
who share the same understanding of the ALPS document) will be able
to successfully interact with that server.
1.2.3. ALPS-based Client Implementations
Armed with a document's ALPS profile, client applications can
associate the ALPS descriptor 'id' and/or 'name' attribute values
with the appropriate elements within the document. Client
applications can "code for the profile" and better adjust to detailed
changes to the response layout, or even the wholesale replacement of
one media type with another.
1.3. A Simple ALPS Example
Below is an ALPS document that describes elements of a simple request
/response interaction in a contact management application. The
profile defines a semantic descriptor called "contact", and three
subordinate descriptors ("fullName", "email", and "phone").
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The ALPS document also defines a single, safe state transition, to be
represented by a hypermedia control (e.g. HTML.GET form) with the
'id' value of "collection." This hypermedia control has one input
value ("nameSearch"). When executed, the response will contain one
or more "contact" type items.
A contact list.
A simple link/form for getting a list of contacts.
Input for a search form.A link to an individual contact.
ALPS Contact Profile document
Implementing the ALPS profile above requires implementing the
descriptors defined by the ALPS document. In this case, there are
two "top level" descriptors: the safe state transition ("collection")
and the semantic descriptor "contact". Below is a single HTML
document that shows both these elements in a representation.
HTML ALPS Contact Representation
HTML representations implement most ALPS elements using HTML's
"class" attribute. The "collection" ID has become the CSS class of
an HTML form's submit button. The "contact" ID has become the CSS
class of the TR elements in an HTML table. The subordinate
descriptors "fullname","email", and "phone" are rendered as the TD
elements of each TR.
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This HAL document uses the same profile to express the same
application-level semantics as the HTML document.
Ann Arbuckleaa@example.org123.456.7890Zelda Zackneyzz@example.org987.664.3210
HAL XML Contacts Representation
In a HAL representation, all state transitions ("collection" and
"item", in this case) are represented as link relations. All data
descriptors ("fullName", "email", and "phone") are represented as XML
tags named after the descriptors.
This Collection+JSON document uses the ALPS profile to express the
same application-level semantics as the HTML and HAL documents.
{
"collection" : {
"version" : "1.0",
"href" : "http://example.org/contacts/",
"links" : [
{
"rel" : "profile",
"href" : "http://alps.io/profiles/contacts"
},
{
"rel" : "type",
"href" : "http://alps.io/profiles/contacts#contact"
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}
],
"queries" : [
{
"rel" : "collection",
"rt" : "contact",
"href" : "http://example.org/contacts/",
"data" : [
{
"name" : "nameSearch",
"value" : "",
"prompt" : "Search Name"
}
]
}
],
"items" : [
{
"href" : "http://example.org/contacts/1",
"rel" : "item",
"rt" : "contact",
"data" : [
{"name" : "fullName", "value" : "Ann Arbuckle"},
{"name" : "email", "value" : "aa@example.org"},
{"name" : "phone", "value" : "123.456.7890"}
],
"links" : [
{
"rel" : "type",
"href" : "http://alps.io/profiles/contacts#contact"
}
]
},
{
"href" : "http://example.org/contacts/100",
"rel" : "item",
"rt" : "contact",
"data" : [
{
"name" : "fullName",
"value" : "Zelda Zackney"
},
{
"name" : "email",
"value" : "zz@example.org"
},
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{
"name" : "phone",
"value" : "987.654.3210"
}
],
"links" : [
{
"rel" : "type",
"href" : "http://alps.io/profiles/contacts#contact"
}
]
}
]
}
}
Collection+JSON Contacts Representation
The descriptor "collection" has become the link relation associated
with a Collection+JSON query. The descriptors "fullName", "email",
and "phone" have become the names of key-value pairs in the items in
a Collection+JSON collection.
1.4. Identifying an ALPS Document
An ALPS vocabulary is identified by a unique URL. This URL SHOULD be
assumed to be dereferencable. All ALPS URLs MUST be unique and all
ALPS documents intended for public consumption SHOULD be registered
in an ALPS Registry [TK: add text on where/how to find registries
-mamund].
In order to reduce load on servers responding to ALPS document
requests, it is RECOMMENDED that servers use cache control directives
that instruct client apps to locally cache the results. Clients
making these ALPS document requests SHOULD honor the server's caching
directives.
2. ALPS Documents
An ALPS document contains a machine-readable collection of
identifying strings and their human-readable explanations. An ALPS
document can be represented in either XML or JSON format. This
section identifies the general elements and properties of an ALPS
document, their meaning, and their use, independent of how the
document is represented. Section 2.3 provides specific details on
constructing a valid ALPS document in XML and in JSON format.
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2.1. Compliance
An implementation is not compliant if it fails to satisfy one or more
of the MUST or REQUIRED level requirements. An implementation that
satisfies all the MUST or REQUIRED level and all the SHOULD level
requirements is said to be "unconditionally compliant"; one that
satisfies all the MUST level requirements but not all the SHOULD
level requirements is said to be "conditionally compliant."
2.2. ALPS Document Properties
The ALPS media type defines a small set of properties. These
properties appear in both the XML and JSON formats. Below is a list
of the properties that can appear in an ALPS document.
2.2.1. 'alps'
Indicates the root of the ALPS document. This property is REQUIRED,
and it SHOULD have one or more 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3) child
properties.
Examples:
XML: ...
JSON: { "alps" : ... }
2.2.2. 'doc'
A text field that contains free-form, usually human-readable, text.
The 'doc' element MAY have two properties: 'href' (Section 2.2.6) and
'format' (Section 2.2.5). If the 'href' property appears it SHOULD
contain a dereferencable URL that points to human-readable text. If
the 'format' property appears it SHOULD contain one of the following
values:
1. "text"
2. "html"
3. "asciidoc"
Any program processing "doc" elements SHOULD honor the "format"
directive and parse/render the content appropriately. If the value
in the "format" property is not recognized and/or supported, the
processing program MUST treat the content as plain text. If no
'format' property is present, the content SHOULD be treated as plain
text.
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XML:
Date of Birth
...
JSON: { "doc" : { "format" : "text" : "value" : "Date of Birth ..."
} }
A 'doc' element SHOULD appear as a child of 'descriptor'
(Section 2.2.3). When present, it describes the meaning and use of
the related 'descriptor'.
XML: ...
JSON: { "descriptor" : { { "doc" : { "value" : "..." } ... } }
The 'doc' element MAY appear as a child of 'alps' (Section 2.2.1).
When present, it describes the purpose of the ALPS document as a
whole.
XML: ... ...
JSON: { "alps : "doc" : { "value" : "..." }, ... }
2.2.3. 'descriptor'
A 'descriptor' element defines the semantics of specific data
elements or state transitions that MAY exist in an associated
representation.
One or more 'descriptor' elements SHOULD appear as children of 'alps'
(Section 2.2.1). It may also appear as a child of itself; that is,
the 'descriptor' property may be nested.
The 'descriptor' property SHOULD have either an 'id' (Section 2.2.7)
or 'href' (Section 2.2.6) attribute. It MAY have both.
Additionally, the 'descriptor' MAY have any of the following
attributes:
1. 'doc' (Section 2.2.2)
2. 'ext' (Section 2.2.4)
3. 'name' (Section 2.2.9)
4. 'type' (Section 2.2.12)
If present, the 'href' property MUST be a dereferenceable URL, that
points to another 'descriptor' either within the current ALPS
document or in another ALPS document.
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If 'descriptor' has an 'href' attribute, then 'descriptor' is
inheriting all the attributes and sub-properties of the descriptor
pointed to by 'href'. When 'descriptor' has a property defined
locally, that property value takes precedence over any inherited
property value. Since there is no limit to the nesting of elements
-- even ones linked remotely -- it is important to process 'all
descriptor' chains starting from the bottom to make sure you have
collected all the available properties and have established the
correct value for each of them.
If 'descriptor' is declared at the top level of an ALPS document,
then a client SHOULD assume that 'descriptor' can appear anywhere in
a runtime message.
If 'descriptor' is nested, i.e. declared as a child of another
descriptor, then:
1. A client SHOULD assume them to appear in any sibling 'descriptor'
element and recursively in their child descriptors.
2. A client SHOULD NOT assume that it can appear anywhere outside of
parent descriptor, unless it was explicitly referenced by another
descriptor in 'href' attribute. In that case the same rules are
applied to 'descriptor' containing 'href' attribute.
2.2.3.1. 'Descriptors and Link Relation Types'
When a representation is generated that includes state transitions,
valid values for link relation types are:
1. A registered IANA link relation type (e.g. rel="edit", a short
string).
2. An extension link relation type as defined by [RFC5988] whose
value is the fully-qualified URI of an associated document
describing the relation type. This includes URI fragment
identifiers of ALPS descriptors (e.g. rel="http://alps.io/
profiles/item#purchased-by", a URI) per the conventions of
Section 2.2.7.2.
3. The 'id' property of a state transition descriptor of an
associated ALPS document (e.g. rel="purchased-by", a short
string) per the conventions of section Section 2.2.7.1 and
Section 2.2.7.3 if the representation includes an ALPS profile.
2.2.4. 'ext'
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The 'ext' element can be used to extend the ALPS document with
author-specific information. It provides a way to customize ALPS
documents with additional properties not covered in this
specification. This is an OPTIONAL element.
The 'ext' element has the following properties.
1. id (Section 2.2.7)
2. href (Section 2.2.6)
3. value (Section 2.2.13)
The id (Section 2.2.7) property is REQUIRED. The href
(Section 2.2.6) is RECOMMENDED and it SHOULD point to documentation
that explains the use and meaning of this ext (Section 2.2.4)
element. The value (Section 2.2.13) property is OPTIONAL. The
content is undetermined; its meaning and use SHOULD be explained by
the document found by de-referencing the href (Section 2.2.6)
property.
Examples:
XML:
JSON: { "ext" : { "id" : "directions", "href" : "http://alps.io/ext/
directions", value="north south east west" } }
The 'ext' element MAY appear as a child of the following elements:
1. 'alps' (Section 2.2.1)
2. 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3)
Since the 'ext' element has no specific meaning within this
specification, it MUST be ignored by any application that does not
understand its meaning.
2.2.5. 'format'
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Indicates how the text content should be parsed and/or rendered.
This version of the spec identifies three possible values for
"format": "text", "html", and "asciidoc." Any other values for this
attribute are undefined and SHOULD be treated as plain text. If the
program does not recognize the value of the "format" property and/or
the "format" property is missing, the content SHOULD be treated as
plain text. This property MAY appear as an attribute of the 'doc'
(Section 2.2.2) element.
2.2.6. 'href'
Contains a resolvable URL.
When it appears as an attribute of 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3),
'href' points to another 'descriptor' either within the existing ALPS
document or in another ALPS document.
When it appears as an attribute of 'ext' (Section 2.2.4), 'href'
points to an external document which provides the defintion of the
extension.
When it appears as an attribute of 'link' (Section 2.2.8), 'href'
points to an external document whose relationship to the current
document or 'descriptor' is described by the associated 'rel'
(Section 2.2.10) property.
When it appears as an attribute of 'doc' (Section 2.2.2), 'href'
points to a document that contains human-readable text that describes
the associated 'descriptor' or ALPS document.
2.2.7. 'id'
A document-wide unique identifier for the related element. This
SHOULD appear as an attribute of a 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3).
The value of this attribute MAY be used as an identifier in the
related runtime hypermedia representation. In the example below the
ALPS descriptor with an 'id' of "q" is used to identify an HTML input
element:
'id' in ALPS...
...becomes the 'class' in HTML
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It should be noted that the exact mapping from ALPS elements (e.g.
'id') to elements within a particular media type (HTML,
Collection+JSON, etc.) is covered in separate documents (to be
specified).
2.2.7.1. ALPS 'id' and 'name' Properties
In some cases, media types support non-unique identifiers (e.g.
HTML's 'name' property) or will allow the same identifier value for
multiple elements in the same representation (e.g. and and ). In those cases, translating that
representation into ALPS documents could result in multiple 'id'
properties with the same value.
To avoid this, ALPS document designers can add the name
(Section 2.2.9) property to a 'descriptor' to hold the common value
("search") while still using the id (Section 2.2.7) property to hold
a document-wide unique value. For example:
HTML Representation of a Search Transition
ALPS Description of the same Search Transition
2.2.7.2. Fragment Identifiers and 'id'
When applied to an ALPS document, a URI fragment identifier points to
the 'descriptor' whose 'id' is the value of the fragment. For
example, the fragment identifier "customer" in the URI http://
example.com/my-alps-document#customer refers to an ALPS 'descriptor'
with 'id' set to "customer".
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A relative URL with a fragment identifier (e.g. "#customer") refers
to a 'descriptor' within the ALPS document containing the reference.
The complete URI to an ALPS 'descriptor' (including the fragment)
forms an "abstract semantic type" identifier. This is a resolvable
URI (URL) that can be used to indicate the type of a resource; for
instance, it can be used as the value of the IANA-registered relation
type 'type'.
2.2.7.3. Link Relation Values and 'id' or 'name'
Since a state transition 'descriptor' may define a relation type
value, it is important to avoid creating conflicts with existing
IANA-registered values. If the resulting link relation type is the
same as a registered relation type, the descriptor MUST not change
the meaning of the IANA relation type.
Further, since the 'id' of a 'descriptor' may define a link relation
value per Section 2.2.3.1, if a conflict exists in defining such a
descriptor's document-wide unique 'id' with another 'descriptor', the
conflicting 'descriptor' MUST define a unique 'id' and MAY specify a
'name' property to resolve the conflict.
If it is unclear whether a registered link relation type in a
representation document refers to a relation registered with IANA or
a relation registered in an ALPS profile, the semantics of that link
are undefined.
2.2.8. 'link'
An element that identifies a link between the current ALPS element
and some other (possibly external) resource. MAY be a child element
of the 'alps' (Section 2.2.1) and the 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3)
elements.
The 'link' element MUST define the two attributes 'href'
(Section 2.2.6) and 'rel' (Section 2.2.10).
2.2.9. 'name'
Indicates the name of the 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3) as found in
generic representations. It MAY appear as a property of
'descriptor'.
This is used when the name of the 'descriptor' is used as an 'id'
(Section 2.2.7) value elsewhere in the ALPS document. For instance,
if a single ALPS document defines a semantic descriptor (data
element) called "customer" and a safe descriptor (transition element)
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also called "customer", they cannot both have 'id="customer"' in the
ALPS document. One of them needs to have some other 'id', and to set
'name="customer"'.
The use of the 'name' property usually indicates an ambiguity in the
application semantics. Thus, it SHOULD only be used when creating an
ALPS profile that describes an existing design.
2.2.10. 'rel'
Contains a [RFC5988] approved value: either an extension relation
type (a URI) or a registered relation type (a short string).
Appears as a property oflink (Section 2.2.8).
2.2.11. 'rt'
Indicates the resource type that will be returned when executing the
specified network request. The 'rt' attribute SHOULD appear only on
a 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3) with a 'type' (Section 2.2.12) value
of 'safe', 'unsafe', or 'idempotent.'
The 'rt' attribute is OPTIONAL and is an opaque string and MAY match
the 'id' (Section 2.2.7) of an existing'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3).
2.2.12. 'type'
Indicates the type of hypermedia control to which the element is
applied within the resulting representation. This SHOULD appear for
each 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3) element. The four valid values
are:
"semantic" A state element (e.g. HTML.SPAN, HTML.INPUT, etc.).
"safe" A hypermedia control that triggers a safe, idempotent state
transition (e.g. HTTP.GET or HTTP.HEAD).
"idempotent" A hypermedia control that triggers an unsafe,
idempotent state transition (e.g. HTTP.PUT or HTTP.DELETE).
"unsafe" A hypermedia control that triggers an unsafe, non-
idempotent state transition (e.g. HTTP.POST).
If no 'type' attribute is associated with the element, then
'type="semantic"' is implied.
2.2.13. 'value'
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Contains a string value. It MAY appear as an attribute of the 'doc'
(Section 2.2.2) and the 'ext' (Section 2.2.4) elements.
2.2.14. 'version'
Indicates the version of the ALPS specification used in the document.
This SHOULD appear as a property of the 'alps' (Section 2.2.1)
element. Currently the only valid value is "1.0". If no value
appears, then 'version="1.0"' is implied.
2.3. ALPS Representations
An ALPS document may be represented in either XML or JSON format.
This section contains notes on how the ALPS elements and attributes
appear in each format, along with examples to guide ALPS document
authors.
2.3.1. Sample HTML
Below is a simple HTML document that contains a handful of semantic
descriptors and transition instructions. This document was generated
from the XML and JSON ALPS documents that follow. Use this HTML
document as a guide when evaluating the XML and JSON examples.
HTML Sample
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2.3.2. XML Representation Example
In the XML version of an ALPS document, the following ALPS properties
always appear as XML elements: 'alps' (Section 2.2.1), 'doc'
(Section 2.2.2), 'descriptor' (Section 2.2.3), and 'ext'
(Section 2.2.4). All other ALPS properties appear as XML attributes.
2.3.2.1. Complete XML Representation
Below is an example of an application/alps+xml representation.
A search form with two inputs.input for searchresults format
Complete XML Representation
2.3.3. JSON Representation Example
When representing ALPS documents in JSON format, the 'descriptor'
(Section 2.2.3) and 'ext' (Section 2.2.4) properties are always
expressed as arrays of anonymous objects - even when there is only
one member in the array.
For example:
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"descriptor" : [
{
"id" : "value",
"name" : "search",
"type" : "descriptor",
"doc" : { "value" : "input for search" }
},
{ "href" : "#resultType" }
]
Arrays in ALPS+JSON
The 'doc' (Section 2.2.2) property is always expressed as a named
object.
For example:
{
"doc" : {
"format" : "text",
"value" : "Rules are important"
}
}
Descriptions in ALPS+JSON
2.3.3.1. Complete JSON Representation
Below is a example of the application/alps+json representation of an
ALPS document.
{
"alps" : {
"version" : "1.0",
"doc" : {
"href" : "http://example.org/samples/full/doc.html"
},
"descriptor" : [
{
"id" : "search",
"type" : "safe",
"doc" : {"value" :
"A search form with a two inputs"
},
"descriptor" : [
{
"id" : "value",
"name" : "search",
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"type" : "descriptor",
"doc" : { "value" : "input for search" }
},
{ "href" : "#resultType" }
]
},
{
"id" : "resultType",
"type" : "descriptor",
"description" : {"value" : "results format"},
"ext" : [
{
"href" : "http://alps.io/ext/range",
"value" : "summary,detail"
}
]
}
]
}
}
Complete ALPS+JSON Representation
3. Applying ALPS documents to Existing Media Types
An ALPS document can be applied to many existing media types as long
as there exists an agreed mapping between ALPS and the target media
type. Section 1.3 gave some informative examples of this.
Normative, up-to-date guidance on applying ALPS documents to existing
media types are available at the official ALPS Web site at (http://
alps.io/docs/mapping). [TK : this page does not yet exist. -mamund]
Not all media types can faithfully represent all ALPS descriptors.
For instance, the 'application/json' media type has no standard way
of representing hyperlinks. The [details of how to apply ALPS to
such a media type will necesarily be incomplete, and it will not be
possible to represent some aspects of an ALPS profile in documents in
that media type.
3.1. Linking to ALPS Documents
To indicate that an ALPS profile describes the semantics of some
representation document, the representation document SHOULD be linked
to the ALPS document. The "profile" link relation [RFC6906] MUST be
used when creating this link. If the media type of the
representation document has no native ability to link to other
resources, or no ability to express link relations, the HTTP header
'Link' [RFC5988] MAY be used to connect the representation document
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and the ALPS profile. If the media type of the representation
document defines a parameter for linking the document to a profile,
that parameter MAY be used to connect the representation document and
the ALPS profile.
A single representation document may be described by more than one
ALPS profile. If two ALPS profiles give conflicting semantics for
the same element, the document linked to earlier in the
representation SHOULD take precedence. A profile linked to using the
'Link' header takes precedence over a profile linked to within the
representation document itself. A profile linked to using a media
type parameter takes precedence over a profile linked to using the
'Link' header and a profile linked to within the representation
document itself.
4. IANA Considerations
This specification establishes two media types: 'application/
alps+xml' and 'application/alps+json'
4.1. application/alps+xml
Type name: application
Subtype name: alps+xml
Required parameters: None
Optional parameters:
charset This parameter has identical semantics to the charset
parameter of the 'application/xml' media type as specified
in[RFC3023].
profile A whitespace-separated list of IRIs identifying specific
constraints or conventions that apply to an ALPS document.
A profile must not change the semantics of the resource
representation when processed without profile knowledge, so
that clients both with and without knowledge of a profiled
resource can safely use the same representation. The
profile parameter may also be used by clients to express
their preferences in the content negotiation process. It is
recommended that profile IRIs are dereferenceable and
provide useful documentation at that IRI.
Encoding considerations:
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binary Same as encoding considerations of application/xml as
specified in[RFC3023].
Security considerations: This format shares security issues common
to all XML content types. It does not provide executable content.
Information contained in ALPS documents do not require privacy or
integrity services.
Interoperability considerations: ALPS is not described by a DTD and
applies only the well-formedness rules of XML. It should only be
parsed by a non-validating parser.
Published specification: This Document
Applications that use this media type: Various
Additional information:
magic number(s): none
file extensions: .xml
macintosh type file code: TEXT
object idenfiers: none
person to contact for further information:
Name: Mike Amundsen
Email: mca@amundsen.com
Intended usage: Common
Author/change controller: Mike Amundsen
4.2. application/alps+json
Type name: application
Subtype name: alps+json
Required parameters: None
Optional parameters:
profile A whitespace-separated list of IRIs identifying specific
constraints or conventions that apply to an ALPS document.
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A profile must not change the semantics of the resource
representation when processed without profile knowledge, so
that clients both with and without knowledge of a profiled
resource can safely use the same representation. The
profile parameter may also be used by clients to express
their preferences in the content negotiation process. It is
recommended that profile IRIs are dereferenceable and
provide useful documentation at that IRI.
Encoding considerations: binary
Security considerations: This media type shares security issues
common to all JSON content types. See [RFC4627] Section #6 for
additional information. ALPS+JSON does not provide executable
content. Information contained in ALPS+JSON documents do not
require privacy or integrity services.
Interoperability considerations: None
Published specification: This Document
Applications that use this media type: Various
Additional information:
magic number(s): none
file extensions: .json
macintosh type file code: TEXT
object idenfiers: none
person to contact for further information:
Name: Mike Amundsen
Email: mca@amundsen.com
Intended usage: Common
Author/change controller: Mike Amundsen
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5. Internationalization Considerations
[TK]
[[insert text (consider rfc 5987)]]
6. Acknowledgements
The following people made contributions to this specification:
7. References
7.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3023] Murata, M., St. Laurent, S., and D. Kohn, "XML Media
Types", RFC 3023, January 2001.
[RFC4627] Crockford, D., "The application/json Media Type for
JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)", RFC 4627, July 2006.
[RFC5988] Nottingham, M., "Web Linking", RFC 5988, October 2010.
[RFC6906] Wilde, E., "The 'profile' Link Relation Type", RFC 6906,
March 2013.
7.2. Informative References
[draft-ietf-appsawg-uri-get-off-my-lawn-05]
Nottingham, M., "Standardising Structure in URIs", I-D
draft-ietf-appsawg-uri-get-off-my-lawn-05, September 2013.
Appendix A. Frequently Asked Questions
A.1. Why are there no URLs in ALPS?
ALPS is meant to describe a service in a universal way. The same
ALPS description document can be used by many ALPS-compliant servers.
Since each service implementation is in charge of their own URL
space, ALPS descriptions do not include URLs. See Standardising
Structure in URIs [draft-ietf-appsawg-uri-get-off-my-lawn-05] for
more on this principle.
When implementing ALPS-compliant servers, implementors are free to
use any URL design they wish. All that is required is that
implementors use the same ALPS profile descriptor 'id' and 'name'
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properties in the representations. When implementing ALPS-compliant
client applications, the URLs will be supplied at runtime by the
server represetentations. Client apps only need to recognize the
descriptor 'id' and 'name' values from the referenced ALPS profile
document.
A.2. Why is there no workflow component in the ALPS specification?
ALPS is not designed to describe workflows or execution paths for a
service. Instead, ALPS is designed to describe a shared set of data
and actions elements that server MAY implement in order to create a
service. Each action descriptor (where the descriptor's type
property is set to "safe", "unsafe", or "idemponent") SHOULD describe
a state transition that a ALPS-compliant client application can
invoke when it is available. Servers are free to implement the
transitions they find useful and to arrange them in any order they
wish. ALPS-compliant client applications SHOULD be able to recognize
these descriptors when they appear and are free to act upon them
directly, render them for humans to invoke, or ignore/hide them
completely.
A.3. Why is there no way to indicate ranges for semantic descriptors?
For most all service implementations, there are cases where it would
be helpful to document a range of possible values for a semantic
element. For example, when implementing the descriptor {"id":"size",
...}, one service might want to indicate the list of supported values
such as: "small", "meduim", "large", etc. However, another service
might have a very different list of possible values such as
"standard", "oversized", "undersized", etc. And there may be a
service that only supports a single value here and will always supply
it ("onesie").
Since ALPS is meant to provide a single description that can be used
by multiple services, establishing ranges within the ALPS description
is considered over-constraining service implementations. Services
are free to supply this information within representations at run
time. But including them in the global ALPS profile is discouraged.
Authors' Addresses
Mike Amundsen
CA Technologies, Inc.
EMail: mca@amundsen.com
URI: http://amundsen.com
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Leonard Richardson
EMail: leonardr@segfault.org
URI: http://crummy.com
Mark W. Foster
Fingi, Inc.
EMail: mwf@fosrias.com
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