<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE rfc [
  <!ENTITY nbsp    "&#160;">
  <!ENTITY zwsp   "&#8203;">
  <!ENTITY nbhy   "&#8209;">
  <!ENTITY wj     "&#8288;">
]>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="rfc2629.xslt" ?>
<!-- generated by https://github.com/cabo/kramdown-rfc version 1.7.19 (Ruby 3.3.4) -->
<rfc xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" ipr="trust200902" docName="draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags-11" category="info" submissionType="IETF" tocInclude="true" sortRefs="true" symRefs="true" version="3">
  <!-- xml2rfc v2v3 conversion 3.21.0 -->
  <front>
    <title abbrev="Notable CBOR Tags">Notable CBOR Tags</title>
    <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags-11"/>
    <author initials="C." surname="Bormann" fullname="Carsten Bormann">
      <organization>Universität Bremen TZI</organization>
      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Postfach 330440</street>
          <city>Bremen</city>
          <code>D-28359</code>
          <country>Germany</country>
        </postal>
        <phone>+49-421-218-63921</phone>
        <email>cabo@tzi.org</email>
      </address>
    </author>
    <date year="2024" month="August" day="13"/>
    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>
    <abstract>
      <?line 129?>

<t>The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR, RFC 8949) is a data
format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small
code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the
need for version negotiation.</t>
      <t>In CBOR, one point of extensibility is the definition of CBOR tags.
RFC 8949's original edition, RFC 7049, defined a basic set of 16 tags as well
as a registry that can be used to contribute additional tag
definitions <xref target="IANA.cbor-tags"/>.
Since RFC 7049 was published, at the time of writing some 190
definitions of tags and ranges of tags have been added to that
registry.</t>
      <!-- TAG_REPORT_SQUASH_RANGES=1 tag-report.rb minus the 16 -->

<t>The present document provides a roadmap to a large subset of these tag
definitions.  Where applicable, it points to an IETF standards or
standard development document
that specifies the tag.  Where no such document exists, the intention
is to collect specification information from the sources of the
registrations.  After some more development, the present document is
intended to be useful as a reference document for the IANA
registrations of the CBOR tags the definitions of which have been
collected.</t>
    </abstract>
    <note>
      <name>Note to Readers</name>
      <?line 156?>

<t>This is an individual submission to the CBOR working group of the
IETF, <eref target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/cbor/about/">https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/cbor/about/</eref>.
Discussion currently takes places on the github repository
<eref target="https://github.com/cabo/notable-tags">https://github.com/cabo/notable-tags</eref>.
If the CBOR WG believes this is a useful document, discussion is
likely to move to the CBOR WG mailing list and a github repository at
the CBOR WG github organization, <eref target="https://github.com/cbor-wg">https://github.com/cbor-wg</eref>.</t>
      <t>The current version is true work in progress; some of the sections
haven't been filled in yet, and in particular, permission has not been
obtained from all authors of registered tag definitions to copy over their text.</t>
    </note>
  </front>
  <middle>
    <?line 171?>

<section anchor="intro">
      <name>Introduction</name>
      <t>(TO DO, expand on text from abstract here; move references here and
neuter them in the abstract as per <xref section="4.3" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC7322"/>.)</t>
      <t>The selection of the tags presented here is somewhat arbitrary;
considerations such as how wide the scope and area of application of a
tag definition is combine with an assessment how "ready to use" the
tag definition is (i.e., is the tag specification in a state where it
can be used).</t>
      <t>This document can only be a snapshot of a subset of the current registrations.
The most up to date set of registrations is always available in the
registry "<xref section="CBOR Tags" relative="#cbor-tags" sectionFormat="bare" target="IANA.cbor-tags"/>" <xref target="IANA.cbor-tags"/>.</t>
      <section anchor="terms">
        <name>Terminology</name>
        <t>The definitions of <xref target="STD94"/> apply.
Specifically: The term "byte" is used in its now customary sense as a synonym for
"octet"; "byte strings" are CBOR data items carrying a sequence of
zero or more (binary) bytes, while "text strings" are CBOR data items carrying a
sequence of zero or more Unicode scalar values (code points that can
be part of a string of Unicode characters), encoded in UTF-8 <xref target="STD63"/>.
Where bit arithmetic is explained, this document uses the notation
familiar from the programming language C (<xref target="C"/>, including C++14's <tt>0bnnn</tt>
binary literals <xref target="Cplusplus20"/>), except that superscript notation
(example for two to the power of 64: 2<sup>64</sup>) denotes exponentiation; in
the plain text version of this document, superscript notation is
rendered in paragraph text by C-incompatible surrogate notation as
seen in this example.
Ranges expressed using <tt>..</tt> are inclusive of the limits given.
<!-- , and in display math by a crude plain text representation. -->
Type names such as "int", "bigint" or "decfrac" are taken from
<xref section="D" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC8610"/>, the Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL).</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="rfc-7049-original-cbor-specification">
      <name>RFC 7049 (original CBOR specification)</name>
      <t><xref target="RFC7049"/> defines a number of tags that are listed here for
convenience only.</t>
      <table anchor="origtags">
        <name>Tag numbers defined in RFC 7049</name>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">Tag number</th>
            <th align="left">Tag content</th>
            <th align="left">Short Description</th>
            <th align="left">Section of RFC 7049</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">0</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">Standard date/time string</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.1</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Epoch-based date/time</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.1</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">2</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Positive bignum</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.2</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">3</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Negative bignum</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.2</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">4</td>
            <td align="left">array</td>
            <td align="left">Decimal fraction</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">5</td>
            <td align="left">array</td>
            <td align="left">Bigfloat</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">21</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Expected conversion to base64url encoding</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.2</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">22</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Expected conversion to base64 encoding</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.2</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">23</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Expected conversion to base16 encoding</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.2</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">24</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Encoded CBOR data item</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.1</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">32</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">URI</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">33</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">base64url</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">34</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">base64</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">35</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">Regular expression</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">36</td>
            <td align="left">UTF-8 string</td>
            <td align="left">MIME message</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.4.3</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">55799</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Self-describe CBOR</td>
            <td align="left">2.4.5</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <section anchor="related-tags">
        <name>Tags Related to Those Defined in RFC 7049</name>
        <t>Separately registered tags that are directly related to the tags
predefined in RFC 7049 include:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Tag 63, registered by this document (<xref target="iana"/>), is a parallel to tag 24, with
the single difference that its byte string tag content carries a
CBOR Sequence <xref target="RFC8742"/> instead of a single CBOR data item.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Tag 257, registered by Peter Occil with a specification in
<eref target="http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/binarymime.html">http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/binarymime.html</eref>, is a parallel to
tag 36, except that the tag content is a byte string, which
therefore can also carry binary MIME messages as per <xref target="RFC2045"/>.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Tag 21065, being registered by this document (<xref target="iana"/>), is a parallel to tag 35, with
the difference that its text string tag content carries an
I-Regexp regular expression <xref target="RFC9485"/> instead of a regexp of a
more unspecified flavor.
Companion tag 21066, being registered by Joe Hildebrand with a
specification in
<eref target="https://github.com/hildjj/cbor-specs/blob/main/regexp.md">https://github.com/hildjj/cbor-specs/blob/main/regexp.md</eref>, is the
equivalent for JavaScript (ECMA262), but besides the regular
expression itself also can include the regular expression flags
as a separate item.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
      </section>
      <section anchor="tag35">
        <name>Tags from RFC 7049 not listed in RFC 8949</name>
        <t>Appendix <xref target="RFC8949" section="G.3" sectionFormat="bare"/> of RFC 8949 <xref target="STD94"/>
states:</t>
        <blockquote>
          <t>Tag 35 is not defined by this document; the registration based on the
   definition in RFC 7049 remains in place.</t>
        </blockquote>
        <t>The reason for this exclusion is that the definition of Tag 35 in
<xref section="2.4.4.3" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC7049"/>, leaves too much open to ensure interoperability:</t>
        <blockquote>
          <t>Tag 35 is for regular expressions in Perl Compatible Regular
  Expressions (PCRE) / JavaScript syntax [ECMA262].</t>
        </blockquote>
        <t>Not only are two partially incompatible specifications given for the
semantics, JavaScript regular expressions have also developed
significantly within the decade since JavaScript 5.1 (which was
referenced as "ECMA262" by <xref target="RFC7049"/>),
making it less reliable to assume that a producing application will
manage to stay within that 2011 subset.</t>
        <t>Nonetheless, the registration is in place, so it is available for
applications that simply want to mark a text string as being a regular
expression roughly of the PCRE/Javascript flavor families.
See also Tag 21065 and 21066 above.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security">
      <name>Security</name>
      <t>A number of CBOR tags are defined in security specifications that make
use of CBOR.</t>
      <section anchor="cose">
        <name>COSE</name>
        <t>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) is defined in a number of RFCs.
<xref target="RFC8152"/> was the initial specification, set up the registries, and
populated them with an initial set of assignments.
A revision split this specification into the data
structure definitions (<xref target="RFC9052"/>), an Internet Standard <xref target="STD96"/>, and a
separate document defining the representation for the algorithms
employed <xref target="RFC9053"/>, which is expected to be updated more frequently
than the COSE format itself.
<xref target="RFC9054"/> added a separate set of algorithms for cryptographic hash
functions (Hash functions have been a component of some <xref target="RFC9053"/> combined
algorithms but weren't originally assigned separate codepoints themselves).
A revised COSE counter signature structure was defined in <xref target="RFC9338"/>, another part
of <xref target="STD96"/>; this also defines a tag for these.</t>
        <table anchor="cosetags">
          <name>Tag numbers defined in RFC9052, COSE, and RFC 9338</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag number</th>
              <th align="left">Tag content</th>
              <th align="left">Short Description</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">16</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Encrypt0</td>
              <td align="left">COSE Single Recipient Encrypted Data Object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">17</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Mac0</td>
              <td align="left">COSE Mac w/o Recipients Object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">18</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Sign1</td>
              <td align="left">COSE Single Signer Data Object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">19</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Countersignature</td>
              <td align="left">COSE standalone V2 countersignature (<xref target="RFC9338"/>)</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">96</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Encrypt</td>
              <td align="left">COSE Encrypted Data Object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">97</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Mac</td>
              <td align="left">COSE MACed Data Object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">98</td>
              <td align="left">COSE_Sign</td>
              <td align="left">COSE Signed Data Object</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <section anchor="hashtags">
          <name>Tags for Bare Hash Values</name>
          <t><xref target="RFC9054"/> does not define CBOR tags for cryptographic Hash values; it rightly notes
that Hash values are often used in structures that are
application-specific and should be defined with those applications.</t>
          <t>However, there are many cases where just a bare hash value is
required, and for these cases common tags are useful.
In one use case, these tags occur in a data structure that is
specified to indicate elision by using one of these tags as an
alternative to some other data structure.
To enable agility, tags need to indicate the hash function used,
preferably using the COSE algorithms registry as populated by
<xref target="RFC9054"/>.</t>
          <aside>
            <t>(Note that there is another registry, "<xref section="Named Information Hash Algorithm Registry" relative="#hash-alg" sectionFormat="bare" target="IANA.named-information"/>"
<xref target="IANA.named-information"/>, that also defines numbers for some hash algorithms.
We are not using this registry here, as more recent entries seem to
have stopped assigning numbers.
If desired, tags that employ this registry could be added later.)</t>
          </aside>
          <t>The codepoint range available for the COSE algorithms registry is
large, but the most likely range to be used for standard Hash
functions is "Integer values between -256 and 255", which have the
registry policy "Standards Action With Expert Review" (<xref section="16.4" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC8152"/>, Registry "<xref section="COSE Algorithms" relative="#algorithms" sectionFormat="bare" target="IANA.cose"/>" <xref target="IANA.cose"/>).</t>
          <t>To this end, the present document registers a range of 512 tags from
18300 to 18811 (inclusive), paralleling the algorithm identifier
range of <tt>-256 .. 255</tt> (inclusive).
The tag number for COSE algorithm number N is then defined to be
<tt>18556+N</tt>, except for <tt>N = 0</tt> (see below).
The tag value is a CBOR byte string, with the exception <tt>N = 0</tt>.</t>
          <t>For example, in <xref target="IANA.cose"/> SHA-256 has the COSE algorithm identifier
<tt>-16</tt>.
This is in the range <tt>-256 .. 255</tt> (inclusive range).
Therefore, tag 18540 (<tt>= 18556 + (-16)</tt>) is the tag for a byte string
containing a SHA-256 hash.</t>
          <t>As a special case, there is one exception: Tag 18556 (<tt>= 18556 + 0</tt>)
stands for the combination of a an explicit numeric COSE algorithm
identifier with a hash value in an array, analogous to the use of
<tt>COSE_CertHash</tt> in <xref target="RFC9360"/>:</t>
          <figure anchor="hashcddl">
            <name>Generic CDDL for Tags for Bare Hash Values</name>
            <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
Standard_COSE_Hash<alg, value> =
    #6.<hashmiddle .plus (alg .within directhash)>(value)
General_COSE_Hash<alg, value> = #6.<hashmiddle>([
    hashAlg: alg .within (int .ne directhash  / tstr),
    hashValue: value .within bstr ])
hashmiddle = 18556
directhash = (-256 .. -1) / (1 .. 255)
]]></sourcecode>
          </figure>
          <t>An example for the SHA-256 hash of "hello world" in CBOR diagnostic
notation:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cbor-diag"><![CDATA[
18540(
 h'b94d27b9934d3e08a52e52d7da7dabfac484efe37a5380ee9088f7ace2efcde9')
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>The same in CBOR pretty printed hex:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cbor-pretty"><![CDATA[=============== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per RFC 8792 ================

d9 486c                                 # tag(18540)
   58 20                                # bytes(32)
      \
     b94d27b9934d3e08a52e52d7da7dabfac484efe37a5380ee9088f7ace2efcde9
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>As none has been registered, no real example can be given for a hash
algorithm with an identifier not in the standard range, but if
<tt>-4711</tt> were such an identifier, a hash with an explicit algorithm
number could look like:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cbor-diag"><![CDATA[
18556([-4711, h'1234123412341234123412341234123412341234'])
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>Note that not all tags assigned in this section do parallel an
algorithm that is a cryptographic hash algorithm.
Where this is not the case, there currently is no defined semantics
for this tag, but the tags are assigned anyway.
The semantics of tags that parallel algorithm assignments other than
for cryptographic hash functions could be defined by a future version
of this specification.</t>
          <t>Note also that the cryptographic hashes in the content of the tag are
not protected; any further protection (confidentiality, integrity)
needs to be provided in the surrounding data structure, storage
system, or communication channel.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section anchor="rfc-8392-cwt">
        <name>RFC 8392 (CWT)</name>
        <t><xref target="RFC8392"/> defines the CBOR Web Token (CWT), making use of COSE to
define a CBOR variant of the JOSE Web Token (JWT), <xref target="RFC7519"/>, a
standardized security token that has found use in the area of web
applications, but is not technically limited to those.</t>
        <table anchor="cwttags">
          <name>Tag number defined for RFC 8392 CBOR Web Token (CWT)</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag number</th>
              <th align="left">Tag content</th>
              <th align="left">Short Description</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">61</td>
              <td align="left">CBOR Web Token (CWT)</td>
              <td align="left">CBOR Web Token (CWT)</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="cbor-based-representation-formats">
      <name>CBOR-based Representation Formats</name>
      <t>Representation formats can be built on top of CBOR.</t>
      <section anchor="yang-cbor">
        <name>YANG-CBOR</name>
        <t>YANG <xref target="RFC7950"/> is a data modeling language originally designed in
the context of the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)
<xref target="RFC6241"/>, now widely used for modeling management and
configuration information.  <xref target="RFC7950"/> defines an XML-based
representation format, and <xref target="RFC7951"/> defines a JSON-based
<xref target="RFC8259"/> representation format for YANG.</t>
        <t>YANG-CBOR <xref target="RFC9254"/> is a representation format for
YANG data in CBOR.</t>
        <table anchor="yangtags">
          <name>Tag numbers defined for YANG-CBOR</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag number</th>
              <th align="left">Tag content</th>
              <th align="left">Short Description</th>
              <th align="left">Section of YANG-CBOR</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">43</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">YANG bits datatype</td>
              <td align="left">6.7</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">44</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer</td>
              <td align="left">YANG enumeration datatype</td>
              <td align="left">6.6</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">45</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer or text string</td>
              <td align="left">YANG identityref datatype</td>
              <td align="left">6.10</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">46</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer or text string or array</td>
              <td align="left">YANG instance-identifier datatype</td>
              <td align="left">6.13</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">47</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer</td>
              <td align="left">YANG Schema Item iDentifier (sid)</td>
              <td align="left">3.2</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <t><xref target="I-D.bormann-cbor-yang-standin"/> proposes to employ additional tags to enable the use of
efficient binary encodings for certain frequently used YANG data types
<xref target="RFC6991"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="protocols">
      <name>Protocols</name>
      <t>Protocols may want to allocate CBOR tag numbers to identify specific
protocol elements.</t>
      <section anchor="dots">
        <name>DOTS</name>
        <t>DDoS Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) defines tag number 271 for the DOTS
signal channel object in <xref target="RFC9132"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="rains">
        <name>RAINS</name>
        <t>As an example for how experimental protocols can make use of CBOR tag
definitions, the RAINS (Another Internet Naming Service) Protocol
Specification defines tag number 15309736 for a RAINS Message
<xref target="I-D.trammell-rains-protocol"/>.
(The seemingly random tag number was chosen so that, when represented
as an encoded CBOR tag
argument, it contains the Unicode character <u format="lit-num">雨</u>
in UTF-8, which represents rain in a number of languages.)</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="datatypes">
      <name>Datatypes</name>
      <section anchor="advanced-arithmetic">
        <name>Advanced arithmetic</name>
        <t>General information about the representation of numbers in CBOR can be
found in <xref target="STD94"/> as well as <xref target="I-D.bormann-cbor-numbers"/>.</t>
        <t>A number of tags have been registered for arithmetic representations
beyond those built into CBOR and defined by tags in <xref target="RFC7049"/>.
These are all documented under <tt>http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/</tt>; the
last pathname component for the URL is given in the column "Reference"
of <xref target="arithtags"/>.</t>
        <table anchor="arithtags">
          <name>Tags for advanced arithmetic</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag number</th>
              <th align="left">Tag content</th>
              <th align="left">Short Description</th>
              <th align="left">Reference</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">30</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Rational number</td>
              <td align="left">rational.html</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">264</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Decimal fraction with arbitrary  exponent</td>
              <td align="left">bigfrac.html</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">265</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Bigfloat with arbitrary exponent</td>
              <td align="left">bigfrac.html</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">268</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Extended decimal fraction</td>
              <td align="left">extended.html</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">269</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Extended bigfloat</td>
              <td align="left">extended.html</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">270</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Extended rational number</td>
              <td align="left">extended.html</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <t>CBOR's basic generic data model (Section <xref target="RFC8949" section="2" sectionFormat="bare"/> of RFC 8949 <xref target="STD94"/>) has a number
system with limited-range integers (major types 0 and 1:
-2<sup>64</sup>..2<sup>64</sup>-1) and floating point numbers that
cover binary16, binary32, and binary64 (including non-finites) from
<xref target="IEEE754"/>.
With the tags defined with <xref target="RFC7049"/>, the extended generic data model
(Section <xref target="RFC8949" section="2.1" sectionFormat="bare"/> of RFC 8949 <xref target="STD94"/>) adds unlimited-range integers (tag numbers 2
and 3, "bigint" in CDDL) as well as floating point values using the bases
2 (tag number 5, "bigfloat") and 10 (tag number 4, "decfrac").</t>
        <t>This pre-defined number system has a number of limitations that are
addressed in three of the tags discussed here:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Tag number 30 allows the representation of rational numbers as a
ratio of two integers: a numerator (usually written as the top part
of a fraction), and a denominator (the bottom part), where both
integers can be limited-range basic and unlimited-range integers.
The mathematical value of a rational number is the numerator divided
by the denominator.
This tag can express all numbers that the extended generic data
model of <xref target="RFC7049"/> can express, except for non-finites <xref target="IEEE754"/>; it
also can express rational numbers that cannot be expressed with
denominators that are a power of 2 or a power of 10.  </t>
            <t>
For example, the rational number 1/3 is encoded:  </t>
            <sourcecode type="cbor-pretty"><![CDATA[
  d8 1e      ---- Tag 30
     82      ---- Array length 2
        01   ---- 1
        03   ---- 3
]]></sourcecode>
            <t>
Many programming languages have built-in support for rational
numbers or support for them is included in their standard libraries;
tag number 30 is a way for these platforms to interchange these
rational numbers in CBOR.</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Tag numbers 4 and 5 are limited in the range of the (base 10 or base
2) exponents by the limited-range integers in the basic generic data
model.  Tag numbers 264 and 265 are exactly equivalent to 4 and 5,
respectively, but also allow unlimited-range integers as exponents.
While applications for floating point numbers with exponents outside
the CBOR basic integer range are limited, tags 264 and 265 allow
unlimited roundtripping with other formats that allow very large or
very small exponents, such as those JSON <xref target="RFC8259"/> can provide if the
limitations of I-JSON <xref target="RFC7493"/> do not apply.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>The tag numbers 268..270 extend these tags further by providing a way
to express non-finites within a tag with this number.  This does not
increase the expressiveness of the data model (the non-finites can
already be expressed using major type 7 floating point numbers), but
does allow both finite and non-finite values to carry the same tag.
In most applications, a choice that includes some of the three tags
30, 264, 265 for finite values and major type 7 floating point values
for non-finites (as well as possibly other parts of the CBOR number
system) will be the preferred solution.</t>
        <t>This document suggests using the CDDL typenames defined in
<xref target="arith-tags-cddl"/> for the three most useful tag numbers in this section.</t>
        <figure anchor="arith-tags-cddl">
          <name>CDDL for extended arithmetic tags</name>
          <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
rational = #6.30([numerator: integer, denominator: integer .ne 0])
rational_of<N,D> = #6.30([numerator: N, denominator: D])
; the value 1/3 can be notated as rational_of<1, 3>

extended_decfrac = #6.264([e10: integer, m: integer])
extended_bigfloat = #6.265([e2: integer, m: integer])
]]></sourcecode>
        </figure>
      </section>
      <section anchor="variants-of-undefined">
        <name>Variants of undefined</name>
        <t><tt>https://github.com/svaarala/cbor-specs/blob/master/cbor-absent-tag.rst</tt>
defines tag 31 to be applied to the CBOR value Undefined (0xf7),
slightly modifying its semantics to stand for an absent value in a
CBOR Array.</t>
        <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here.)</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="typed-and-homogeneous-arrays">
        <name>Typed and Homogeneous Arrays</name>
        <t><xref target="RFC8746"/> defines tags for various kinds of arrays.  A summary is
reproduced in <xref target="arraytags"/>.</t>
        <table anchor="arraytags">
          <name>Tag numbers defined for Arrays</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Semantics</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">64</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint8 Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">65</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint16, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">66</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint32, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">67</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint64, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">68</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint8 Typed Array, clamped arithmetic</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">69</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint16, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">70</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint32, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">71</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">uint64, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">72</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint8 Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">73</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint16, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">74</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint32, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">75</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint64, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">76</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">(reserved)</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">77</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint16, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">78</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint32, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">79</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">sint64, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">80</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary16, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">81</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary32, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">82</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary64, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">83</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary128, big endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">84</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary16, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">85</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary32, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">86</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary64, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">87</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">IEEE 754 binary128, little endian, Typed Array</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">40</td>
              <td align="left">array of two arrays*</td>
              <td align="left">Multi-dimensional Array, row-major order</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">1040</td>
              <td align="left">array of two arrays*</td>
              <td align="left">Multi-dimensional Array, column-major order</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">41</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Homogeneous Array</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <!--  cols='r l l' -->

</section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="domain-specific">
      <name>Domain-Specific</name>
      <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here; explain how
tags 52 and 54 essentially obsolete 260/261.)</t>
      <table anchor="tab-domain-specific">
        <name>Select Domain-Specific Tags</name>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="left">Tag number</th>
            <th align="left">Tag content</th>
            <th align="left">Short Description</th>
            <th align="left">Reference</th>
            <th align="left">Author</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">37</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Binary UUID (<xref section="4.1.2" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC4122"/>)</td>
            <td align="left">https://github.com/lucas-clemente/cbor-specs/blob/master/uuid.md</td>
            <td align="left">Lucas Clemente</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">48</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">IEEE MAC Address</td>
            <td align="left">
              <xref target="RFC9542"/></td>
            <td align="left"> </td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">52</td>
            <td align="left">byte string or array</td>
            <td align="left">IPv4, [prefixlen,IPv4], [IPv4,prefixpart]</td>
            <td align="left">
              <xref target="RFC9164"/></td>
            <td align="left"> </td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">54</td>
            <td align="left">byte string or array</td>
            <td align="left">IPv6, [prefixlen,IPv6], [IPv6,prefixpart]</td>
            <td align="left">
              <xref target="RFC9164"/></td>
            <td align="left"> </td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">257</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Binary MIME message</td>
            <td align="left">http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/binarymime.html</td>
            <td align="left">Peter Occil</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">260</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Network Address (IPv4 or IPv6 or MAC Address)</td>
            <td align="left">http://www.employees.org/~ravir/cbor-network.txt</td>
            <td align="left">Ravi Raju</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">261</td>
            <td align="left">map</td>
            <td align="left">Network Address Prefix (IPv4 or IPv6 Address + Mask Length)</td>
            <td align="left">https://github.com/toravir/CBOR-Tag-Specs/blob/master/networkPrefix.md</td>
            <td align="left">Ravi Raju</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">263</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Hexadecimal string</td>
            <td align="left">https://github.com/toravir/CBOR-Tag-Specs/blob/master/hexString.md</td>
            <td align="left">Ravi Raju</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">266</td>
            <td align="left">text string</td>
            <td align="left">Internationalized resource identifier (IRI)</td>
            <td align="left">https://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/iri.html</td>
            <td align="left">Peter Occil</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">267</td>
            <td align="left">text string</td>
            <td align="left">Internationalized resource identifier reference (IRI reference)</td>
            <td align="left">https://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/iri.html</td>
            <td align="left">Peter Occil</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="left">1048</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">IEEE OUI/CID</td>
            <td align="left">
              <xref target="RFC9542"/></td>
            <td align="left"> </td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>Notes:</t>
      <ul spacing="normal">
        <li>
          <t>In the registration for Tag 37, the reference for UUID points to
<xref target="RFC4122"/>, which has been obsoleted by <xref target="RFC9562"/>.
The new RFC has a somewhat different internal structure; the
definition of the layout of a binary UUID is now distributed over
<xref section="5" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC9562"/>.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Tags 48, 52, and 54 are recommended for new designs that need to
represent MAC addresses, IP addresses, and IP address prefixes; they
essentially replace tags 260 and 261, which continue to be available
for their existing applications.</t>
        </li>
        <li>
          <t>Tag 263 describes a different kind of Hexadecimal string
(sequence of hex digit pairs, same layout as tag 23) from the
hex-string defined by the YANG data type <tt>hex-string</tt> (sequence of hex
digit pairs separated by colons, <xref section="3" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC6991"/>).</t>
        </li>
      </ul>
      <section anchor="human-readable-text">
        <name>Human-readable Text</name>
        <table anchor="tab-text">
          <name>Select Tags for Human-readable Text</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="left">Tag</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Semantics</th>
              <th align="left">Reference</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="left">38</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Language-tagged string</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref section="A" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC9290"/></td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <t>Tag 38 was originally registered by Peter Occil in
<eref target="http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/langtags.html">http://peteroupc.github.io/CBOR/langtags.html</eref>; it has since been
adopted and extended in <xref section="A" sectionFormat="of" target="RFC9290"/>, where a detailed
definition of the tag and a few simple examples for its use are
provided.</t>
        <t>The problem that this tag was designed to solve is that text strings
often need additional information to be properly presented to a human.
While Unicode (and the UTF-8 form of Unicode used in CBOR) define the
characters, additional information about the human language in use
and the writing direction appropriate for the text given are often
required.</t>
        <t>The need to provide language information with text has been well-known
for a while and led to a common form for this information, the
language tag, defined in <xref target="BCP47"/>.</t>
        <t>Less well-known is the need to provide separate directionality
information as well.
The need for this information is demonstrated in <xref target="W3C-STRINGS-BIDI"/>,
which points out that it is "actually a bad idea to rely on language
information to apply direction" and points out further reference
information on this.
<xref target="W3C-BIDI-USE-CASES"/> shows more examples for language tags and
directionality, while <xref target="W3C-UBA-BASICS"/> provides an introduction to the
way browsers, where "the order of characters in memory (logical) is
not the same as the order in which they are displayed (visual)",
"produce the correct order at the time of display" (Unicode
Bidirectional Algorithm).</t>
        <t>Tag 38 meets the requirements of its specific application in
<xref target="RFC9290"/>, which could be summarized as: Supplying the necessary
information to present isolated, linear, comparatively small pieces of
human-readable text.
It neither addresses more complex requirements of specific languages
such as <xref target="W3C-SIMPLE-RUBY"/>, nor does it address requirements for more
complex structure in texts such as emphasis, lists, or tables.
These more complex requirements are typically met by specific media
types such as HTML <xref target="HTML"/>.</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="extended-time-formats">
        <name>Extended Time Formats</name>
        <t>Additional tag definitions have been provided for date and time values.</t>
        <table anchor="timetags">
          <name>Tag numbers for date and time</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="right">Tag</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Semantics</th>
              <th align="left">Reference</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">100</td>
              <td align="left">integer</td>
              <td align="left">date in number of days since epoch</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref target="RFC8943"/></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">1004</td>
              <td align="left">text string</td>
              <td align="left">RFC 3339 full-date string</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref target="RFC8943"/></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">1001</td>
              <td align="left">map</td>
              <td align="left">extended time</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref target="I-D.ietf-cbor-time-tag"/></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">1002</td>
              <td align="left">map</td>
              <td align="left">duration</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref target="I-D.ietf-cbor-time-tag"/></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">1003</td>
              <td align="left">map</td>
              <td align="left">period</td>
              <td align="left">
                <xref target="I-D.ietf-cbor-time-tag"/></td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <t>Note that tags 100 and 1004 are for calendar dates that are not
anchored to a specific time zone; they are meant to specify calendar
dates as perceived by humans, e.g. for use in personal identification
documents.
Converting such a calendar date into a specific point in time needs the
addition of a time-of-day (for which a CBOR tag is outstanding) and
timezone information (also outstanding).  Alternatively, a calendar
date plus timezone information can be converted into a time period
(range of time values given by the starting and the ending time); note
that these time periods are not always exactly 24 h (86400 s) long.</t>
        <t><xref target="RFC8943"/> does not suggest CDDL <xref target="RFC8610"/> type names for the two tags.
We suggest copying the definitions in <xref target="time-tags-cddl"/> into
application-specific CDDL as needed.</t>
        <figure anchor="time-tags-cddl">
          <name>CDDL for calendar date tags (RFC8943)</name>
          <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
caldate = #6.100(int); calendar date as # of days from 1970-01-01
tcaldate = #6.1004(tstr); calendar date as RFC 3339 full-date string
]]></sourcecode>
        </figure>
        <t>Tag 1001 extends tag 1 by additional information (such as picosecond
resolution) and allows the use of Decimal and Bigfloat numbers for the
time.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="platform-oriented">
      <name>Platform-oriented</name>
      <section anchor="perl">
        <name>Perl</name>
        <t>(These are actually not as Perl-specific as the title of this section
suggests.  See also the penultimate paragraph of Section <xref target="RFC8949" section="3.4" sectionFormat="bare"/> of RFC 8949 <xref target="STD94"/>.)</t>
        <t>These are all documented under <tt>http://cbor.schmorp.de/</tt>; the
last pathname component is given in <xref target="perltags"/>.</t>
        <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here.)</t>
        <table anchor="perltags">
          <name>Tag numbers that aid the Perl platform</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="right">Tag</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Semantics</th>
              <th align="left">Reference</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">256</td>
              <td align="left">multiple</td>
              <td align="left">mark value as having string references</td>
              <td align="left">stringref</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">25</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer</td>
              <td align="left">reference the nth previously seen string</td>
              <td align="left">stringref</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">26</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Serialized Perl object with classname and constructor arguments</td>
              <td align="left">perl-object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">27</td>
              <td align="left">array</td>
              <td align="left">Serialized language-independent object with type name and constructor arguments</td>
              <td align="left">generic-object</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">28</td>
              <td align="left">multiple</td>
              <td align="left">mark value as (potentially) shared</td>
              <td align="left">value-sharing</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">29</td>
              <td align="left">unsigned integer</td>
              <td align="left">reference nth marked value</td>
              <td align="left">value-sharing</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">22098</td>
              <td align="left">multiple</td>
              <td align="left">hint that indicates an additional level of indirection</td>
              <td align="left">indirection</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
      </section>
      <section anchor="json">
        <name>JSON</name>
        <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here.)</t>
        <t>Tag number 262 has been registered to identify byte strings that carry embedded
JSON text (<tt>https://github.com/toravir/CBOR-Tag-Specs/blob/master/embeddedJSON.md</tt>).</t>
        <t>Tag number 275 can be used to identify maps that contain keys that are
all of type Text String, as they would occur in JSON
(<tt>https://github.com/ecorm/cbor-tag-text-key-map</tt>).</t>
      </section>
      <section anchor="weird-text-encodings">
        <name>Weird text encodings</name>
        <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here.)</t>
        <t>Some variants of UTF-8 are in use in specific areas of application.
Tags have been registered to be able to carry around strings
identified as to which of these
variants is used, in case they are not also valid UTF-8 and can therefore not
be represented as a CBOR text string
(<tt>https://github.com/svaarala/cbor-specs/blob/master/cbor-nonutf8-string-tags.rst</tt>).</t>
        <table anchor="weirdtags">
          <name>Tag numbers for UTF-8 variants</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="right">Tag Number</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Semantics</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">272</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">Non-UTF-8 CESU-8 string</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">273</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">Non-UTF-8 WTF-8 string</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">274</td>
              <td align="left">byte string</td>
              <td align="left">Non-UTF-8 MUTF-8 string</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="application-specific">
      <name>Application-specific</name>
      <t>(TO DO: Obtain permission to copy the definitions here.)</t>
      <table anchor="tab-apptags">
        <name>Application-specific Tags</name>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="right">Tag number</th>
            <th align="left">Tag content</th>
            <th align="left">Short Description</th>
            <th align="left">Reference</th>
            <th align="left">Author</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">39</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Identifier</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/lucas-clemente/cbor-specs/blob/master/id.md">https://github.com/lucas-clemente/cbor-specs/blob/master/id.md</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Lucas Clemente</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">42</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">IPLD content identifier</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/ipld/cid-cbor/">https://github.com/ipld/cid-cbor/</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Volker Mische</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">103</td>
            <td align="left">array</td>
            <td align="left">Geographic Coordinates</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/allthingstalk/cbor/blob/master/CBOR-Tag103-Geographic-Coordinates.md">https://github.com/allthingstalk/cbor/blob/master/CBOR-Tag103-Geographic-Coordinates.md</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Danilo Vidovic</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">104</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Geographic Coordinate Reference System  WKT or EPSG number</td>
            <td align="left">
              <xref target="I-D.clarke-cbor-crs"/></td>
            <td align="left"> </td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">120</td>
            <td align="left">multiple</td>
            <td align="left">Internet of Things Data Point</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/allthingstalk/cbor/blob/master/CBOR-Tag120-Internet-of-Things-Data-Points.md">https://github.com/allthingstalk/cbor/blob/master/CBOR-Tag120-Internet-of-Things-Data-Points.md</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Danilo Vidovic</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">258</td>
            <td align="left">array</td>
            <td align="left">Mathematical finite set</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/input-output-hk/cbor-sets-spec/blob/master/CBOR_SETS.md">https://github.com/input-output-hk/cbor-sets-spec/blob/master/CBOR_SETS.md</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Alfredo Di Napoli</td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">259</td>
            <td align="left">map</td>
            <td align="left">Map datatype with key-value operations (e.g. <tt>.get()</tt>/<tt>.set()</tt>/<tt>.delete()</tt>)</td>
            <td align="left">
              <eref target="https://github.com/shanewholloway/js-cbor-codec/blob/master/docs/CBOR-259-spec--explicit-maps.md">https://github.com/shanewholloway/js-cbor-codec/blob/master/docs/CBOR-259-spec--explicit-maps.md</eref></td>
            <td align="left">Shane Holloway</td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <section anchor="enumerated-alternative-data-items">
        <name>Enumerated Alternative Data Items</name>
        <t>(Original Text for this section was contributed by Duncan Coutts and
Michael Peyton Jones; all errors are the author's.)</t>
        <t>A set of CBOR tag numbers has been allocated (<xref target="iana"/>) for
encoding data composed of enumerated alternatives:</t>
        <table anchor="tab-tag-enum">
          <name>Tags for Enumerated Alternative Data Items</name>
          <thead>
            <tr>
              <th align="right">Tags</th>
              <th align="left">Data Item</th>
              <th align="left">Meaning</th>
            </tr>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">121..127</td>
              <td align="left">any</td>
              <td align="left">alternatives 0..6, 1+1 encoding</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">1280..1400</td>
              <td align="left">any</td>
              <td align="left">alternatives 7..127, 1+2 encoding</td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
              <td align="right">101</td>
              <td align="left">array [uint, any]</td>
              <td align="left">alternatives as given by the uint + 128</td>
            </tr>
          </tbody>
        </table>
        <t>The tags defined in this section are for encoding data that can be
in one of a number of different enumerated forms.</t>
        <t>For example data representing the result of some action might be either
a failure with some failure detail, or a success with some result. In
this example there are two cases, the failure case and the success case,
and we can enumerate them as 0 and 1.</t>
        <t>In general the number of alternatives, and what data is expected in each
alternative case is entirely application dependent.</t>
        <t>The tags defined in this specification allow the encoding of any number
of alternatives, but provide compact encoding for the common cases of
low numbers of alternatives:</t>
        <ul spacing="normal">
          <li>
            <t>Alternatives 0..6 can be encoded in 2 bytes;</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Alternatives 7..127 can be encoded in 3 bytes;</t>
          </li>
          <li>
            <t>Alternatives 128+ can be encoded in 3-12 bytes.</t>
          </li>
        </ul>
        <t>There are no special considerations for deterministic encoding
Section <xref target="RFC8949" section="4.2" sectionFormat="bare"/> of RFC 8949 <xref target="STD94"/>: The case numbers covered by each tag do not
overlap; particularly, tag 101 encoding starts where the more compact
special encodings for 0..6 and 7..127 end.</t>
        <t>For cases 0..6 and 7..127, the tag value indicates the value of the alternative.
For cases 128+, a single tag number is used with an enclosed two-element array that contains the case number and the value of the alternative.</t>
        <section anchor="semantics">
          <name>Semantics</name>
          <t>The value consists of a case number and a case body. The case number is
an unsigned integer that indicates which case out of the set of
alternatives is used. The case body is any CBOR data value.</t>
          <t>In a setting where the application uses a schema (formally or
informally), then there will be an appropriate sub-schema for each case
in the set of alternatives. The representation of the case body should
comply with the schema corresponding to the case number used.</t>
          <t>To continue the example above about representing failure or success,
suppose that the failure detail consists of an integer code and a
string, and suppose that the successful result is a byte string. A
failure value will use case 0 and the case body will be a CBOR list
containing an integer and a text string. Alternatively, a success value
will use case 1 and the body will be a single CBOR byte string.</t>
          <t>Decoders that enforce a schema must check the case number is within the
range of cases allowed, and that the case body follows the schema for
the supplied case number. Generic decoders should allow any case number
and any CBOR data value for the case body.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="rationale">
          <name>Rationale</name>
          <t>CBOR has direct support for <em>combinations</em> of multiple values but not
for <em>alternatives</em> of multiple values. Combinations are expressed in
CBOR using lists or maps.</t>
          <t>Most programming languages have a notion of data consisting of
combinations of data values, often called records, structs or objects. Many
programming languages also have a notion of data consisting of multiple
alternative data values. For example C has unions, and other languages
have "tagged" unions (where it is always clear which alternative is in
use).</t>
          <t>Crucially for this set of tags, the set of alternatives must be closed
and ordered. This allows encoding using an unsigned number to distinguish
each case.</t>
          <t>Note that this does <em>not</em> correspond to the notion in some programming
languages of classes and subclasses since in that context the set of
alternatives is open and unordered. Alternatives of this kind are
well-supported by tag 27 "Serialized language-independent object with
type name and constructor arguments".</t>
          <t>In functional programming languages, the primary way of forming new data
types is to enumerate a set of alternatives (each of which may be a
record). Such forms of data are also supported in hybrid functional
languages or languages with functional features.</t>
          <t>Thus, in some applications, it is very common to have data making use of
alternatives, and it is worth finding a compact encoding, at least for
the common cases. Just as most records are small, most alternatives are
also small.</t>
          <t>In this specification we reserve 7 values in the 2-byte part of the
available tag encoding space for alternatives 0..6 which are by far the
most common. We reserve a range of 121 values in the 3-bytes tag
encoding space. To cover the general case we use an encoding using a
pair consisting of an unsigned integer and the case body, the first 24
of which also result in a 3-byte encoding.</t>
        </section>
        <section anchor="examples">
          <name>Examples</name>
          <t>To elaborate on the example from the introduction, we have a "result"
that is a failure or success, where:</t>
          <ul spacing="normal">
            <li>
              <t>the failure detail consists of an integer code and a string;</t>
            </li>
            <li>
              <t>the successful result is a byte string.</t>
            </li>
          </ul>
          <t>This corresponds to the following schema, in CDDL notation:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
result = #6.121([int, text])
       / #6.122(bytes)
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>Example values:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cbor-diag"><![CDATA[
121([3, "the printer is on fire"])
]]></sourcecode>
          <sourcecode type="cbor-diag"><![CDATA[
122(h'ff00')
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>As a second example, here is one based on a data type defined within the
Haskell programming language, representing a simple expression tree.</t>
          <sourcecode type="haskell"><![CDATA[
-- A data type representing simple arithmetic expressions

data Expr = Lit Int -- integer literal
| Add Expr Expr -- addition
| Sub Expr Expr -- subtraction
| Neg Expr -- unary negation
| Mul Expr Expr -- multiplication
| Div Expr Expr -- integer division
]]></sourcecode>
          <t>In CDDL notation, and using the tags in this specification, such data
could be encoded using this schema:</t>
          <sourcecode type="cddl"><![CDATA[
; A data type representing simple arithmetic expressions

expr = 121(int)          ; integer literal
     / 122([expr, expr]) ; addition
     / 123([expr, expr]) ; subtraction
     / 124(expr)         ; unary negation
     / 125([expr, expr]) ; multiplication
     / 126([expr, expr]) ; integer division
]]></sourcecode>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="implementation-aids">
      <name>Implementation aids</name>
      <section anchor="invalid-tag">
        <name>Invalid Tag</name>
        <t>The present document registers tag numbers 65535, 4294967295, and
18446744073709551615 (16-bit 0xffff, 32-bit 0xffffffff, and 64-bit
0xffffffffffffffff) as Invalid Tags, tags that are always invalid,
independent of the tag content provided.  The purpose of these tag
number registrations is to enable the tag numbers to be reserved for
internal use by implementations to note the absence of a tag on a data
item where a tag could also be expected with that data item as tag
content.</t>
        <t>The Invalid Tags are not intended to ever occur in interchanged CBOR
data items.  Generic CBOR decoder implementations are encouraged to
raise an error if an Invalid Tag occurs in a CBOR data item even if
there is no validity checking implemented otherwise.</t>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section anchor="iana">
      <name>IANA Considerations</name>
      <t>In the registry "<xref section="CBOR Tags" relative="#cbor-tags" sectionFormat="bare" target="IANA.cbor-tags"/>" <xref target="IANA.cbor-tags"/>,
IANA has allocated the first to third tag in <xref target="tab-tag-values"/> from the
FCFS space, with the present document as the specification reference.
IANA also has allocated the tags in the next five rows from the Specification
Required space, with the present document as the specification reference.</t>
      <table anchor="tab-tag-values">
        <name>Values for Tags</name>
        <thead>
          <tr>
            <th align="right">Tag</th>
            <th align="left">Data Item</th>
            <th align="left">Semantics</th>
            <th align="left">Reference</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">65535</td>
            <td align="left">(none valid)</td>
            <td align="left">always invalid</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="invalid-tag"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">4294967295</td>
            <td align="left">(none valid)</td>
            <td align="left">always invalid</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="invalid-tag"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">18446744073709551615</td>
            <td align="left">(none valid)</td>
            <td align="left">always invalid</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="invalid-tag"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">63</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Encoded CBOR Sequence <xref target="RFC8742"/></td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="related-tags"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">21065</td>
            <td align="left">text string</td>
            <td align="left">I-Regexp</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="related-tags"/>; <xref target="RFC9485"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">18300 to 18555 (inclusive)</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Bare Hash value (COSE algorithm -256 to -1)</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="hashtags"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">18556</td>
            <td align="left">array</td>
            <td align="left">[COSE algorithm identifier, Bare Hash value]</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="hashtags"/></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td align="right">18557 to 18811 (inclusive)</td>
            <td align="left">byte string</td>
            <td align="left">Bare Hash value (COSE algorithm 1 to 255)</td>
            <td align="left">draft-bormann-cbor-notable-tags, <xref target="hashtags"/></td>
          </tr>
        </tbody>
      </table>
      <t>In addition, IANA has allocated the tags from
<xref target="tab-tag-enum"/>, with a reference to the present document.</t>
    </section>
    <section anchor="security-considerations">
      <name>Security Considerations</name>
      <t>The security considerations of <xref target="STD94"/> apply; the tags discussed here
may also have specific security considerations that are mentioned in
their specific sections above.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>
  <back>
    <references anchor="sec-combined-references">
      <name>References</name>
      <references anchor="sec-normative-references">
        <name>Normative References</name>
        <referencegroup anchor="STD63" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/std63">
          <reference anchor="RFC3629" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3629">
            <front>
              <title>UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646</title>
              <author fullname="F. Yergeau" initials="F." surname="Yergeau"/>
              <date month="November" year="2003"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>ISO/IEC 10646-1 defines a large character set called the Universal Character Set (UCS) which encompasses most of the world's writing systems. The originally proposed encodings of the UCS, however, were not compatible with many current applications and protocols, and this has led to the development of UTF-8, the object of this memo. UTF-8 has the characteristic of preserving the full US-ASCII range, providing compatibility with file systems, parsers and other software that rely on US-ASCII values but are transparent to other values. This memo obsoletes and replaces RFC 2279.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="STD" value="63"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3629"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC3629"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <referencegroup anchor="STD94" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/std94">
          <reference anchor="RFC8949" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8949">
            <front>
              <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)</title>
              <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
              <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman"/>
              <date month="December" year="2020"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the need for version negotiation. These design goals make it different from earlier binary serializations such as ASN.1 and MessagePack.</t>
                <t>This document obsoletes RFC 7049, providing editorial improvements, new details, and errata fixes while keeping full compatibility with the interchange format of RFC 7049. It does not create a new version of the format.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="STD" value="94"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8949"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8949"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <reference anchor="IANA.cbor-tags" target="https://www.iana.org/assignments/cbor-tags">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IANA</organization>
            </author>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="IANA.cose" target="https://www.iana.org/assignments/cose">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE)</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IANA</organization>
            </author>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="IANA.named-information" target="https://www.iana.org/assignments/named-information">
          <front>
            <title>Named Information</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IANA</organization>
            </author>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8610">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL): A Notational Convention to Express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) and JSON Data Structures</title>
            <author fullname="H. Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz"/>
            <author fullname="C. Vigano" initials="C." surname="Vigano"/>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <date month="June" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document proposes a notational convention to express Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) data structures (RFC 7049). Its main goal is to provide an easy and unambiguous way to express structures for protocol messages and data formats that use CBOR or JSON.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8610"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8610"/>
        </reference>
        <referencegroup anchor="STD96" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/std96">
          <reference anchor="RFC9052" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9052">
            <front>
              <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Structures and Process</title>
              <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
              <date month="August" year="2022"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format designed for small code size and small message size. There is a need to be able to define basic security services for this data format. This document defines the CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) protocol. This specification describes how to create and process signatures, message authentication codes, and encryption using CBOR for serialization. This specification additionally describes how to represent cryptographic keys using CBOR.</t>
                <t>This document, along with RFC 9053, obsoletes RFC 8152.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="STD" value="96"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9052"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9052"/>
          </reference>
          <reference anchor="RFC9338" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9338">
            <front>
              <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Countersignatures</title>
              <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
              <date month="December" year="2022"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format designed for small code size and small message size. CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) defines a set of security services for CBOR. This document defines a countersignature algorithm along with the needed header parameters and CBOR tags for COSE. This document updates RFC 9052.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="STD" value="96"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9338"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9338"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <reference anchor="RFC9053">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Initial Algorithms</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
            <date month="August" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format designed for small code size and small message size. There is a need to be able to define basic security services for this data format. This document defines a set of algorithms that can be used with the CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) protocol (RFC 9052).</t>
              <t>This document, along with RFC 9052, obsoletes RFC 8152.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9053"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9053"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9054">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Hash Algorithms</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
            <date month="August" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) syntax (see RFC 9052) does not define any direct methods for using hash algorithms. There are, however, circumstances where hash algorithms are used, such as indirect signatures, where the hash of one or more contents are signed, and identification of an X.509 certificate or other object by the use of a fingerprint. This document defines hash algorithms that are identified by COSE algorithm identifiers.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9054"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9054"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9360">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE): Header Parameters for Carrying and Referencing X.509 Certificates</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
            <date month="February" year="2023"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) message structure uses references to keys in general. For some algorithms, additional properties are defined that carry parameters relating to keys as needed. The COSE Key structure is used for transporting keys outside of COSE messages. This document extends the way that keys can be identified and transported by providing attributes that refer to or contain X.509 certificates.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9360"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9360"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8392">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Web Token (CWT)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Jones" initials="M." surname="Jones"/>
            <author fullname="E. Wahlstroem" initials="E." surname="Wahlstroem"/>
            <author fullname="S. Erdtman" initials="S." surname="Erdtman"/>
            <author fullname="H. Tschofenig" initials="H." surname="Tschofenig"/>
            <date month="May" year="2018"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>CBOR Web Token (CWT) is a compact means of representing claims to be transferred between two parties. The claims in a CWT are encoded in the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR), and CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) is used for added application-layer security protection. A claim is a piece of information asserted about a subject and is represented as a name/value pair consisting of a claim name and a claim value. CWT is derived from JSON Web Token (JWT) but uses CBOR rather than JSON.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8392"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8392"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9132">
          <front>
            <title>Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) Signal Channel Specification</title>
            <author fullname="M. Boucadair" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Boucadair"/>
            <author fullname="J. Shallow" initials="J." surname="Shallow"/>
            <author fullname="T. Reddy.K" initials="T." surname="Reddy.K"/>
            <date month="September" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies the Distributed Denial-of-Service Open Threat Signaling (DOTS) signal channel, a protocol for signaling the need for protection against Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks to a server capable of enabling network traffic mitigation on behalf of the requesting client.</t>
              <t>A companion document defines the DOTS data channel, a separate reliable communication layer for DOTS management and configuration purposes.</t>
              <t>This document obsoletes RFC 8782.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9132"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9132"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8746">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags for Typed Arrays</title>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." role="editor" surname="Bormann"/>
            <date month="February" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR), as defined in RFC 7049, is a data format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the need for version negotiation.</t>
              <t>This document makes use of this extensibility to define a number of CBOR tags for typed arrays of numeric data, as well as additional tags for multi-dimensional and homogeneous arrays. It is intended as the reference document for the IANA registration of the CBOR tags defined.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8746"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8746"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
      <references anchor="sec-informative-references">
        <name>Informative References</name>
        <reference anchor="RFC8152">
          <front>
            <title>CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE)</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schaad" initials="J." surname="Schaad"/>
            <date month="July" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format designed for small code size and small message size. There is a need for the ability to have basic security services defined for this data format. This document defines the CBOR Object Signing and Encryption (COSE) protocol. This specification describes how to create and process signatures, message authentication codes, and encryption using CBOR for serialization. This specification additionally describes how to represent cryptographic keys using CBOR.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8152"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8152"/>
        </reference>
        <referencegroup anchor="BCP47" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp47">
          <reference anchor="RFC4647" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4647">
            <front>
              <title>Matching of Language Tags</title>
              <author fullname="A. Phillips" initials="A." role="editor" surname="Phillips"/>
              <author fullname="M. Davis" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Davis"/>
              <date month="September" year="2006"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>This document describes a syntax, called a "language-range", for specifying items in a user's list of language preferences. It also describes different mechanisms for comparing and matching these to language tags. Two kinds of matching mechanisms, filtering and lookup, are defined. Filtering produces a (potentially empty) set of language tags, whereas lookup produces a single language tag. Possible applications include language negotiation or content selection. This document, in combination with RFC 4646, replaces RFC 3066, which replaced RFC 1766. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="47"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4647"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4647"/>
          </reference>
          <reference anchor="RFC5646" target="https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5646">
            <front>
              <title>Tags for Identifying Languages</title>
              <author fullname="A. Phillips" initials="A." role="editor" surname="Phillips"/>
              <author fullname="M. Davis" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Davis"/>
              <date month="September" year="2009"/>
              <abstract>
                <t>This document describes the structure, content, construction, and semantics of language tags for use in cases where it is desirable to indicate the language used in an information object. It also describes how to register values for use in language tags and the creation of user-defined extensions for private interchange. This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.</t>
              </abstract>
            </front>
            <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="47"/>
            <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="5646"/>
            <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC5646"/>
          </reference>
        </referencegroup>
        <reference anchor="W3C-STRINGS-BIDI" target="https://www.w3.org/International/articles/strings-and-bidi/">
          <front>
            <title>Strings and bidi</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2017" month="July" day="31"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="W3C-BIDI-USE-CASES" target="https://www.w3.org/International/articles/lang-bidi-use-cases/">
          <front>
            <title>Use cases for bidi and language metadata on the Web</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2021" month="May" day="06"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="W3C-UBA-BASICS" target="https://www.w3.org/International/articles/inline-bidi-markup/uba-basics">
          <front>
            <title>Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm basics</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2016" month="August" day="09"/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="W3C-SIMPLE-RUBY" target="https://www.w3.org/TR/simple-ruby/">
          <front>
            <title>W3C Rules for Simple Placement of Japanese Ruby</title>
            <author>
              <organization/>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="June" day="09"/>
          </front>
          <refcontent>W3C First Public Working Draft</refcontent>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="HTML" target="https://html.spec.whatwg.org">
          <front>
            <title>HTML — Living Standard</title>
            <author>
              <organization>WHATWG</organization>
            </author>
            <date/>
          </front>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC2045">
          <front>
            <title>Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies</title>
            <author fullname="N. Freed" initials="N." surname="Freed"/>
            <author fullname="N. Borenstein" initials="N." surname="Borenstein"/>
            <date month="November" year="1996"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This initial document specifies the various headers used to describe the structure of MIME messages. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2045"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC2045"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC4122">
          <front>
            <title>A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace</title>
            <author fullname="P. Leach" initials="P." surname="Leach"/>
            <author fullname="M. Mealling" initials="M." surname="Mealling"/>
            <author fullname="R. Salz" initials="R." surname="Salz"/>
            <date month="July" year="2005"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This specification defines a Uniform Resource Name namespace for UUIDs (Universally Unique IDentifier), also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique IDentifier). A UUID is 128 bits long, and can guarantee uniqueness across space and time. UUIDs were originally used in the Apollo Network Computing System and later in the Open Software Foundation\'s (OSF) Distributed Computing Environment (DCE), and then in Microsoft Windows platforms.</t>
              <t>This specification is derived from the DCE specification with the kind permission of the OSF (now known as The Open Group). Information from earlier versions of the DCE specification have been incorporated into this document. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4122"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC4122"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9562">
          <front>
            <title>Universally Unique IDentifiers (UUIDs)</title>
            <author fullname="K. Davis" initials="K." surname="Davis"/>
            <author fullname="B. Peabody" initials="B." surname="Peabody"/>
            <author fullname="P. Leach" initials="P." surname="Leach"/>
            <date month="May" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This specification defines UUIDs (Universally Unique IDentifiers) --
also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique IDentifiers) -- and a Uniform
Resource Name namespace for UUIDs. A UUID is 128 bits long and is
intended to guarantee uniqueness across space and time. UUIDs were
originally used in the Apollo Network Computing System (NCS), later
in the Open Software Foundation's (OSF's) Distributed Computing
Environment (DCE), and then in Microsoft Windows platforms.</t>
              <t>This specification is derived from the OSF DCE specification with the
kind permission of the OSF (now known as "The Open Group"). Information from earlier versions of the OSF DCE specification have
been incorporated into this document. This document obsoletes RFC
4122.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9562"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9562"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7049">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)</title>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <author fullname="P. Hoffman" initials="P." surname="Hoffman"/>
            <date month="October" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) is a data format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the need for version negotiation. These design goals make it different from earlier binary serializations such as ASN.1 and MessagePack.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7049"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7049"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8742">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Sequences</title>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <date month="February" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Sequence format and associated media type "application/cbor-seq". A CBOR Sequence consists of any number of encoded CBOR data items, simply concatenated in sequence.</t>
              <t>Structured syntax suffixes for media types allow other media types to build on them and make it explicit that they are built on an existing media type as their foundation. This specification defines and registers "+cbor-seq" as a structured syntax suffix for CBOR Sequences.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8742"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8742"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7493">
          <front>
            <title>The I-JSON Message Format</title>
            <author fullname="T. Bray" initials="T." role="editor" surname="Bray"/>
            <date month="March" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>I-JSON (short for "Internet JSON") is a restricted profile of JSON designed to maximize interoperability and increase confidence that software can process it successfully with predictable results.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7493"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7493"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8259">
          <front>
            <title>The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format</title>
            <author fullname="T. Bray" initials="T." role="editor" surname="Bray"/>
            <date month="December" year="2017"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) is a lightweight, text-based, language-independent data interchange format. It was derived from the ECMAScript Programming Language Standard. JSON defines a small set of formatting rules for the portable representation of structured data.</t>
              <t>This document removes inconsistencies with other specifications of JSON, repairs specification errors, and offers experience-based interoperability guidance.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="STD" value="90"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8259"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8259"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.ietf-cbor-time-tag">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags for Time, Duration, and Period</title>
            <author fullname="Carsten Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann">
              <organization>Universität Bremen TZI</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Ben Gamari" initials="B." surname="Gamari">
              <organization>Well-Typed</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Henk Birkholz" initials="H." surname="Birkholz">
              <organization>Fraunhofer Institute for Secure Information Technology</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="30" month="October" year="2023"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR, RFC 8949) is a data
   format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small
   code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the
   need for version negotiation.

   In CBOR, one point of extensibility is the definition of CBOR tags.
   RFC 8949 defines two tags for time: CBOR tag 0 (RFC3339 time as a
   string) and tag 1 (POSIX time as int or float).  Since then,
   additional requirements have become known.  The present document
   defines a CBOR tag for time that allows a more elaborate
   representation of time, as well as related CBOR tags for duration and
   time period.  This document is intended as the reference document for
   the IANA registration of the CBOR tags defined.


   // (This cref will be removed by the RFC editor:) The present
   // revision (–12) addresses the IESG reviews.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-cbor-time-tag-12"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9485">
          <front>
            <title>I-Regexp: An Interoperable Regular Expression Format</title>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <author fullname="T. Bray" initials="T." surname="Bray"/>
            <date month="October" year="2023"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document specifies I-Regexp, a flavor of regular expression that is limited in scope with the goal of interoperation across many different regular expression libraries.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9485"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9485"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9290">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Problem Details for Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP) APIs</title>
            <author fullname="T. Fossati" initials="T." surname="Fossati"/>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <date month="October" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines a concise "problem detail" as a way to carry machine-readable details of errors in a Representational State Transfer (REST) response to avoid the need to define new error response formats for REST APIs for constrained environments. The format is inspired by, but intended to be more concise than, the problem details for HTTP APIs defined in RFC 7807.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9290"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9290"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6991">
          <front>
            <title>Common YANG Data Types</title>
            <author fullname="J. Schoenwaelder" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Schoenwaelder"/>
            <date month="July" year="2013"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document introduces a collection of common data types to be used with the YANG data modeling language. This document obsoletes RFC 6021.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6991"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6991"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9254">
          <front>
            <title>Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG in the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Veillette" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Veillette"/>
            <author fullname="I. Petrov" initials="I." role="editor" surname="Petrov"/>
            <author fullname="A. Pelov" initials="A." surname="Pelov"/>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson"/>
            <date month="July" year="2022"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>YANG (RFC 7950) is a data modeling language used to model configuration data, state data, parameters and results of Remote Procedure Call (RPC) operations or actions, and notifications.</t>
              <t>This document defines encoding rules for YANG in the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) (RFC 8949).</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9254"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9254"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9542">
          <front>
            <title>IANA Considerations and IETF Protocol and Documentation Usage for IEEE 802 Parameters</title>
            <author fullname="D. Eastlake 3rd" initials="D." surname="Eastlake 3rd"/>
            <author fullname="J. Abley" initials="J." surname="Abley"/>
            <author fullname="Y. Li" initials="Y." surname="Li"/>
            <date month="April" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>Some IETF protocols make use of Ethernet frame formats and IEEE 802 parameters. This document discusses several aspects of such parameters and their use in IETF protocols, specifies IANA considerations for assignment of points under the IANA Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI), and provides some values for use in documentation. This document obsoletes RFC 7042.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="BCP" value="141"/>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9542"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9542"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC9164">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags for IPv4 and IPv6 Addresses and Prefixes</title>
            <author fullname="M. Richardson" initials="M." surname="Richardson"/>
            <author fullname="C. Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann"/>
            <date month="December" year="2021"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This specification defines two Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) tags for use with IPv6 and IPv4 addresses and prefixes.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="9164"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC9164"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.bormann-cbor-numbers">
          <front>
            <title>On Numbers in CBOR</title>
            <author fullname="Carsten Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann">
              <organization>Universität Bremen TZI</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="8" month="July" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR), as defined in STD 94
   (RFC 8949), is a data representation format whose design goals
   include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small
   message size, and extensibility without the need for version
   negotiation.

   Among the kinds of data that a data representation format needs to be
   able to carry, numbers have a prominent role, but also have inherent
   complexity that needs attention from protocol designers and
   implementers of CBOR libraries and of the applications that use them.

   This document gives an overview over number formats available in CBOR
   and some notable CBOR tags registered, and it attempts to provide
   information about opportunities and potential pitfalls of these
   number formats.


   // This is a rather drafty initial revision, pieced together from
   // various components, so it has a higher level of redundancy than
   // ultimately desired.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-bormann-cbor-numbers-00"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.bormann-cbor-yang-standin">
          <front>
            <title>Stand-in Tags for YANG-CBOR</title>
            <author fullname="Carsten Bormann" initials="C." surname="Bormann">
              <organization>Universität Bremen TZI</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Maria Matějka" initials="M." surname="Matějka">
              <organization>CZ.NIC</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="21" month="February" year="2024"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   YANG (RFC 7950) is a data modeling language used to model
   configuration data, state data, parameters and results of Remote
   Procedure Call (RPC) operations or actions, and notifications.

   YANG-CBOR (RFC 9254) defines encoding rules for YANG in the Concise
   Binary Object Representation (CBOR) (RFC 8949).  While the overall
   structure of YANG-CBOR is encoded in an efficient, binary format,
   YANG itself has its roots in XML and therefore traditionally encodes
   some information such as date/times and IP addresses/prefixes in a
   verbose text form.

   This document defines how to use existing CBOR tags for this kind of
   information in YANG-CBOR as a "stand-in" for the text-based
   information that would be found in the original form of YANG-CBOR.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-bormann-cbor-yang-standin-00"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="C" target="https://www.iso.org/standard/74528.html">
          <front>
            <title>Information technology — Programming languages — C</title>
            <author>
              <organization>International Organization for Standardization</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2018" month="June"/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="ISO/IEC" value="9899:2018"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="Cplusplus20" target="https://isocpp.org/files/papers/N4860.pdf">
          <front>
            <title>Programming languages — C++</title>
            <author>
              <organization>International Organization for Standardization</organization>
            </author>
            <date year="2020" month="March"/>
          </front>
          <refcontent>ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21 N4860</refcontent>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="IEEE754" target="https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8766229">
          <front>
            <title>IEEE Standard for Floating-Point Arithmetic</title>
            <author>
              <organization>IEEE</organization>
            </author>
            <date/>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="IEEE Std" value="754-2019"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.1109/IEEESTD.2019.8766229"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7322">
          <front>
            <title>RFC Style Guide</title>
            <author fullname="H. Flanagan" initials="H." surname="Flanagan"/>
            <author fullname="S. Ginoza" initials="S." surname="Ginoza"/>
            <date month="September" year="2014"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document describes the fundamental and unique style conventions and editorial policies currently in use for the RFC Series. It captures the RFC Editor's basic requirements and offers guidance regarding the style and structure of an RFC. Additional guidance is captured on a website that reflects the experimental nature of that guidance and prepares it for future inclusion in the RFC Style Guide. This document obsoletes RFC 2223, "Instructions to RFC Authors".</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7322"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7322"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7519">
          <front>
            <title>JSON Web Token (JWT)</title>
            <author fullname="M. Jones" initials="M." surname="Jones"/>
            <author fullname="J. Bradley" initials="J." surname="Bradley"/>
            <author fullname="N. Sakimura" initials="N." surname="Sakimura"/>
            <date month="May" year="2015"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>JSON Web Token (JWT) is a compact, URL-safe means of representing claims to be transferred between two parties. The claims in a JWT are encoded as a JSON object that is used as the payload of a JSON Web Signature (JWS) structure or as the plaintext of a JSON Web Encryption (JWE) structure, enabling the claims to be digitally signed or integrity protected with a Message Authentication Code (MAC) and/or encrypted.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7519"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7519"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7950">
          <front>
            <title>The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language</title>
            <author fullname="M. Bjorklund" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Bjorklund"/>
            <date month="August" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>YANG is a data modeling language used to model configuration data, state data, Remote Procedure Calls, and notifications for network management protocols. This document describes the syntax and semantics of version 1.1 of the YANG language. YANG version 1.1 is a maintenance release of the YANG language, addressing ambiguities and defects in the original specification. There are a small number of backward incompatibilities from YANG version 1. This document also specifies the YANG mappings to the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF).</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7950"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7950"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC6241">
          <front>
            <title>Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)</title>
            <author fullname="R. Enns" initials="R." role="editor" surname="Enns"/>
            <author fullname="M. Bjorklund" initials="M." role="editor" surname="Bjorklund"/>
            <author fullname="J. Schoenwaelder" initials="J." role="editor" surname="Schoenwaelder"/>
            <author fullname="A. Bierman" initials="A." role="editor" surname="Bierman"/>
            <date month="June" year="2011"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF) defined in this document provides mechanisms to install, manipulate, and delete the configuration of network devices. It uses an Extensible Markup Language (XML)-based data encoding for the configuration data as well as the protocol messages. The NETCONF protocol operations are realized as remote procedure calls (RPCs). This document obsoletes RFC 4741. [STANDARDS-TRACK]</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6241"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC6241"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC7951">
          <front>
            <title>JSON Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG</title>
            <author fullname="L. Lhotka" initials="L." surname="Lhotka"/>
            <date month="August" year="2016"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>This document defines encoding rules for representing configuration data, state data, parameters of Remote Procedure Call (RPC) operations or actions, and notifications defined using YANG as JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) text.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7951"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC7951"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.trammell-rains-protocol">
          <front>
            <title>RAINS (Another Internet Naming Service) Protocol Specification</title>
            <author fullname="Brian Trammell" initials="B." surname="Trammell">
              <organization>ETH Zurich</organization>
            </author>
            <author fullname="Christian Fehlmann" initials="C." surname="Fehlmann">
              <organization>ETH Zurich</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="29" month="January" year="2019"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   This document defines an alternate protocol for Internet name
   resolution, designed as a prototype to facilitate conversation about
   the evolution or replacement of the Domain Name System protocol.  It
   attempts to answer the question: "how would we design DNS knowing
   what we do now," on the background of a set of properties of an
   idealized Internet naming service.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-trammell-rains-protocol-05"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="RFC8943">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tags for Date</title>
            <author fullname="M. Jones" initials="M." surname="Jones"/>
            <author fullname="A. Nadalin" initials="A." surname="Nadalin"/>
            <author fullname="J. Richter" initials="J." surname="Richter"/>
            <date month="November" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR), as specified in RFC 7049, is a data format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the need for version negotiation.</t>
              <t>In CBOR, one point of extensibility is the definition of CBOR tags. RFC 7049 defines two tags for time: CBOR tag 0 (date/time string as per RFC 3339) and tag 1 (POSIX "seconds since the epoch"). Since then, additional requirements have become known. This specification defines a CBOR tag for a date text string (as per RFC 3339) for applications needing a textual date representation within the Gregorian calendar without a time. It also defines a CBOR tag for days since the date 1970-01-01 in the Gregorian calendar for applications needing a numeric date representation without a time. This specification is the reference document for IANA registration of the CBOR tags defined.</t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="RFC" value="8943"/>
          <seriesInfo name="DOI" value="10.17487/RFC8943"/>
        </reference>
        <reference anchor="I-D.clarke-cbor-crs">
          <front>
            <title>Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) Tag for Coordinate Reference System (CRS) Specification</title>
            <author fullname="Trevor Clarke" initials="T." surname="Clarke">
              <organization>Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp.</organization>
            </author>
            <date day="17" month="March" year="2020"/>
            <abstract>
              <t>   The Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR, RFC 7049) is a data
   format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small
   code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the
   need for version negotiation.

   In CBOR, one point of extensibility is the definition of CBOR tags.
   An existing CBOR tag, 103, allows for the representation of
   geographic coordinates.  Proper exploitation of geographic
   coordinates requires an associated reference frame.  The present
   document defines a CBOR tag for referencing the coordinate reference
   system (CRS) for a geographic coordinate.  It is intended as the
   reference document for the IANA registration of the CBOR tag defined.

              </t>
            </abstract>
          </front>
          <seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-clarke-cbor-crs-02"/>
        </reference>
      </references>
    </references>
    <?line 1010?>

<section numbered="false" anchor="acknowledgements">
      <name>Acknowledgements</name>
      <t>(Many, TBD)</t>
      <!--  LocalWords:  CBOR extensibility IANA uint sint IEEE endian
 -->
<!--  LocalWords:  signedness endianness
 -->

</section>
    <section anchor="contributors" numbered="false" toc="include" removeInRFC="false">
      <name>Contributors</name>
      <contact initials="P." surname="Occil" fullname="Peter Occil">
        <organization/>
        <address>
          <email>poccil14 at gmail dot com</email>
        </address>
      </contact>
      <t>Peter Occil registered tags 30, 264, 265, 268–270
(<xref target="advanced-arithmetic"/>), 38, 257, 266 and 267
(<xref target="domain-specific"/>), and contributed much of the text about
these tags in this document.</t>
      <contact initials="D." surname="Coutts" fullname="Duncan Coutts">
        <organization/>
        <address>
          <email>duncan@well-typed.com</email>
        </address>
      </contact>
      <contact initials="M. P." surname="Jones" fullname="Michael Peyton Jones">
        <organization/>
        <address>
          <email>me@michaelpj.com</email>
        </address>
      </contact>
      <contact initials="J." surname="Doe" fullname="Jane Doe">
        <organization>To do</organization>
        <address>
      </address>
      </contact>
      <t>Further contributors will be listed here as text is added.</t>
      <t>Please stay tuned.</t>
    </section>
  </back>
  <!-- ##markdown-source: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-->

</rfc>
