- From: Paul Hoffman / IMC <phoffman@imc.org>
- Date: Thu, 29 Jan 2004 16:39:58 -0800
- To: ietf-charsets@iana.org
At 6:15 PM -0500 1/29/04, Bruce Lilly wrote: >One issue is that the MIBenum values assigned to these charsets does not >seem to be consistent with the description above and with the reference >information at the indicated URIs. IANA asked me where we wanted the registrations. After talking with a few folks, I told them: ===== Registration of new charset KOI7-switched, March 30 Vendor Registration of ISO-8859-11, April 27 Set By Standards Organizations Register EBCDIC Character Set "OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_1", November 3 Register EBCDIC Character Set "OSD_EBCDIC_DF04_15", November 3 Register EBCDIC Character Set "OSD_EBCDIC_DF03_IRV", November 3 Vendor Registration of new charset [Amiga-1251], November 7 Vendor ===== They appear to have ignored my request on the EBCDIC registrations. >Conversely, it is not clear why KOI7-switched has been >assigned a Vendor MIBenum value, nor which vendor might be responsible. "Vendor" doesn't really mean "a specific vendor", it pretty much means "not 'Reserved', 'Set By Standards Organizations', or 'Unicode / 10646'". >Another issue is that the three OSD_EBCDIC_DF* charsets give no indication >in the source documents as to whether or not the charsets are suitable for >use with MIME text. Such an indication is supposed to be part of the >registration (RFC 2978 section 5). Whoops, good catch. I missed that. > A related issue is the fact that the >registry itself provides no such indication for any charsets, which >is at best highly inconvenient for implementors. I will take this up with IANA and will try to get a future version of the database to contain it. >None of the charsets above have been provided with an alias beginning with >"cs" for use with the printer MIB as discussed in section 2.3 of RFC 2978. >If that were consistently done, there would be no charset with a confusing >Alias: None >line in the registry. Good catch; these should be added. I'll work on that. >How can we minimize these issues in the future? I believe that use >of RFC 2978 >(or a successor) as a checklist during the review process would >help. I believe >that the addition to the registration template of a brief history of the >charset origin (originator and affiliation) would help in determining >whether a particular charset is a Vendor charset or Set By [a] Standards >Organization[s]. Finally, inclusion of a "MIME-text" field in the registry >with a yes/no value would not only be a boon to implementors of applications >which use charsets in a MIME context, but would prompt IANA to obtain a >statement of MIME text compatibility if it is lacking in the registration >application. All of those sound like excellent suggestions. --Paul Hoffman, Director --Internet Mail Consortium
Received on Thursday, 29 January 2004 19:44:42 UTC