Network Working Group
Request for Comments: 615
NIC #21531
D. Crocker (UCLA-NMC)
MAR 74
Proposed Network
Standard Data Pathname Syntax

There seems to be an increasing call for a Network Standard Data Pathname (NSDP); that is, a standardized means of referring to a specific location for/of a collection of bits somewhere on the Network.

The reasons for a standard or virtual anything have been discussed, at length, elsewhere and will not be elaborated upon here. Rather than attack the entire issue of virtual pathnames, I wish only to propose a standardized SYNTAX for specifying pathnames. Such a standard will be useful for 1) users who are unfamiliar with a site or who use several different sites and do not want to have to remember each site's idiosynchracies, 2) programs accessing data at several other sites, and 3) documentation:

The syntax allows the user to specify the necessary network, host, peripheral device, directory, file, type, and site-specific fields. Adding other fields, as needed, is expected to be quite simple.

First the BNF:

   <NSDP> ::= % <bulk> <cr><lf>
   
   <bulk> ::= <field> / <field> <bulk>
   
   <field> ::= <key> <L-delim> <name> <R-delim>
   
   <key> ::= NETWORK / HOST / PERIPHERAL/ DIRECTORY /
             FILE / TYPE / SITEPARM / N / H / P / D / F /
             T / S

<L-delim> ::= any printable character that is not in the

succeeding <name> field and that is
acceptable to the object site: For visual
aesthetics and to facilitate human parsing, anytime <L-delim> is a left-bracket
character (<, [, (, _), <R-delim> must be the complementary right-bracket character
(>, ], ), |).

<name> ::=    any sequence of characters acceptable to the
              object site. This is the actual data field
              with the file, directory, device (or
              whatever) name.

<R-delim> ::= Either 1) the same character as <L-delim> or
              2) if the <L-delim> character is a
              left-bracket character (<, [, (, _) then its
              complementary right-bracket (>, ], ), |).

<lf> ::= line-feed

And some elaboration:

The syntax allows <name> fields to be an arbitrary number of rs long. Case is irrelevant to the syntax, though some sites will care about case in <name> fields:

<Key> indicates what part of the pathname the next <name> is going to refer to: The single-character keys are abbreviations for the respective full-word keys:

<Fields> ARE order dependent, but defaulted ones may be omitted. The

order is as indicated for <key>s: That is, Network, Host, ..: Siteparm:

Fields may be repeated, as appropriate for the object site; that is,

multiple Directory fields, etc:

The validity of any combination of <field>s is entirely site-dependent: For example, if a site will accept it, an NSDP with a Host field, and nothing more, is permissible:

<delim> is used to delimit the beginning and end of the <name> field:

Explanation of <key>s:

       NETWORK or N:   Currently, only ARPA is defined.
       
       HOST or H:      Reference to host, by official name or
                       nickname or number: The default radix is
                       ten; a numeric string ending with "H"
                       indicates hexadecimal, "O"(oh) indicates
                       octal, and (gratuitously) "D" indicates
                       decimal:

PERIPHERAL or P: Peripheral device being referred to:

      DIRECTORY or D:  Name of a directory which contains a
                       pointer to the entity (directory or
                       filename) specified in the following
                       <field>:
      
      FILE or F:       Basic name of the file or data set:
      
      TYPE or T:       Optional modifier to filename: (Tenex
                       calls it the extension.)
      
      SITEPARM or S:   A parameter, such as an access
                       specification or version number, peculiar
                       to the object site. The content of the
                       <name> field must serve to identify what
                       Siteparm is involved. Each site will be
                       responsible for defining the syntax of
                       Siteparm <name>s it will accept.
      
      DISK or DSK:     Immediately accessible, direct-access
                       storage.
      
      ONLINE or ONL:    Whatever immediately-accessible (measured
                        in fractions of a second) storage the
                        user accesses by default; usually disk:
      
      TAPE or TAP:      Industry-compatible magnetic tape:
      
      TAPE7 or TP7:     7-Track industry compatible tape:
      
      TAPE9 or TP9:     9-Track industry compatible tape:
      
      DECTAPE or DEC:   DEC Tape.
      
      OFFLINE or OFF:   Any tertiary storage; usually tape,
                        though "devices" like the Datacomputer
                        are permissible: The user should expect
                        to wait minutes or hours before being
                        able to access OFFLINE files:
      
      PRINTER or PTR:   Any available line-printer:
      
      DOCPRINTER or DOC:Upper-lower case line printer, preferably
                        with 8 1/2" X 11" unlined paper.
      
      PAPER or PAP:     Paper tape.
      
      PUNCH or PUN:     Standard 8O-column card punch.
      
      READER or RDR:    Standard 80-column card reader:
      
      OPERATOR or OPR:  System Operator's console.

CONSULTANT or CON: On-line consultant.

Defaults:

Defaults will generally be context dependent. Consequently, the following

defaults are offered only as guidelines:

      Network:    ARPA
      
      Host:       The host interpreting the NVP

Peripheral:

                  ONLINE (DISK)
      
      Directory:  The user's current "working" directory,
                  usually set by the logon process:
      
      Filename:    None.
      
      Type:        None.
      
      Siteparm:     None.

General Comments

The only field that must be considered in relation to any host's current syntax is the escape-to-NVP field (The per-cent sign as the first character of a pathname specification): It is not currently known to conflict with any host's syntax:

Exclamation mark (!) is the only other character that seems permissible (on the assumption that the character should be a graphic): Its use would cause minor problems at Multics; but more importantly as a graphic, it is too similar to the numeral "1":

The syntax is intended to be adequate for all hosts, so any given portion

of it may be inappropriate for any given host.

A site is expected to permit specifications in a given field iff that

site already has a way of accepting the same information:

I believe that any modifications to the syntax will be graceful additions, rather than wholesale redesign, and thus can be deferred for a while. Currently, any undefined attributes must be specified in a Siteparm field:

Perhaps Version, Access protection and Accounting, as well as other types of information, should be made standard <key>s, rather than buried as Siteparms. I expect that the next version of the NSDP Syntax specification will include them as <key>s, but I would like to wait for some comments from the community.

The syntax does not currently allow addressing any collection of bits smaller than a file: This can be remedied by adding PAGE, BYTE and other <key>s; but, again, I would like to solicit some comments first:

Disclaimer

A pathname specified in the proposed syntax is fairly easy to type but is quite ugly to read: So, at the expense of design cleanliness, the <L-delim>/<R-delim> syntax was modified in an attempt to remedy the problem somewhat: As you will see below, it is only partially successful.

The first draft of this document had a syntax that was a mix of Tenex and

Multics conventions: That is,

       (Network)[Host]Peripheral:Directory>Filename:Type;Siteparm

Though visually more attractive and generally quicker to type, it lacks extensibility. For example, adding Version number or Access protection as standard fields would be difficult:

It is suggested that human interfaces be built to translate to/from NSDP

syntax and the user's standard environment.

Some sample pathnames:

%H[ISI]D<DCROCKER>F(MESSAGE)T/TXT/S(P77O4O4)<cr><lf> refers to my

protected message file at ISI (<DCROCKER>MESSAGE:TXT;P77O4O4).

%H/OFFICE-l/D>JOURNAL>F<l8659>T.NLS.<cr><lf> refers to NIC Journal

document #18659 (Tenex file <JOURNAL>l8659:NLS):

%H/65/D.ARP061.D.LAD:F.DOCUMENT.<cr><lf> refers to a file
ARPO6l:LAD.DOCUMENT at UCLA-CCN. Note the use of multiple Directory
fields.

%H[540]D//D>udd>D>Comp=net>D>Map>F(Mail)<cr><lf> refers to file CompNet>Map>Mail at Mit-Multics. Note that the initial NSPD Directory <name> field is empty. This conforms to Multics' method of starting at the top of its directory structure:

I would like to thank Jon Postel, Vint Cerf, Jim White, Charlie Kline,

Ken Pogran, Jerry Burchfiel and Tom Boynton for their suggestions.

                                 -5-