Network Working Group J. Palme
Request for Comments: 2110 Stockholm University/KTH
Category: Standards Track A. Hopmann
Microsoft Corporation
March 1997
MIME E-mail Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HTML (MHTML)
Status of this Document
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
Although HTML [RFC 1866] was designed within the context of MIME,
more than the specification of HTML as defined in RFC 1866 is needed
for two electronic mail user agents to be able to interoperate using
HTML as a document format. These issues include the naming of objects
that are normally referred to by URIs, and the means of aggregating
objects that go together. This document describes a set of guidelines
that will allow conforming mail user agents to be able to send,
deliver and display these objects, such as HTML objects, that can
contain links represented by URIs. In order to be able to handle
inter-linked objects, the document uses the MIME type
multipart/related and specifies the MIME content-headers "Content-
Location" and "Content-Base".
Table of Contents
1. Introduction.............................................. 2
2. Terminology............................................... 3
2.1 Conformance requirement terminology................... 3
2.2 Other terminology..................................... 4
3. Overview.................................................. 5
4. The Content-Location and Content-Base MIME Content Headers 6
4.1 MIME content headers.................................. 6
4.2 The Content-Base header............................... 7
4.3 The Content-Location Header........................... 7
4.4 Encoding of URIs in e-mail headers.................... 8
5. Base URIs for resolution of relative URIs................. 8
6. Sending documents without linked objects.................. 9
7. Use of the Content-Type: Multipart/related................ 9
8. Format of Links to Other Body Parts....................... 11
RFC 2110 MHTML March 1997
8.1 General principle..................................... 11
8.2 Use of the Content-Location header.................... 11
8.3 Use of the Content-ID header and CID URLs............. 12
9 Examples................................................... 12
9.1 Example of a HTML body without included linked objects 12
9.2 Example with absolute URIs to an embedded GIF picture 13
9.3 Example with relative URIs to an embedded GIF picture 13
9.4 Example using CID URL and Content-ID header to an
embedded GIF picture.................................. 14
10. Content-Disposition header............................... 15
11. Character encoding issues and end-of-line issues......... 15
12. Security Considerations.................................. 16
13. Acknowledgments.......................................... 17
14. References............................................... 18
15. Author's Address......................................... 19
Mailing List Information
Further discussion on this document should be done through the
mailing list MHTML@SEGATE.SUNET.SE.
To subscribe to this list, send a message to
LISTSERV@SEGATE.SUNET.SE
which contains the text
SUB MHTML <your name (not your e-mail address)>
Archives of this list are available by anonymous ftp from
FTP://SEGATE.SUNET.SE/lists/mHTML/
The archives are also available by e-mail. Send a message to
LISTSERV@SEGATE.SUNET.SE with the text "INDEX MHTML" to get a list
of the archive files, and then a new message "GET " to
retrieve the archive files.
Comments on less important details may also be sent to the editor,
Jacob Palme <jpalme@dsv.su.se>.
More information may also be available at URL:
HTTP://www.dsv.su.se/~jpalme/ietf/jp-ietf-home.HTML
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