Network Working Group J. Klensin
Internet-Draft
Updates: 5892, 5894 (if approved) P. Faltstrom
Intended status: Standards Track Netnod
Expires: July 10, 2015 January 6, 2015
IDNA Update for Unicode 7.0.0
draft-klensin-idna-5892upd-unicode70-03.txt
Abstract
The current version of the IDNA specifications anticipated that each
new version of Unicode would be reviewed to verify that no changes
had been introduced that required adjustments to the set of rules
and, in particular, whether new exceptions or backward compatibility
adjustments were needed. That review was conducted for Unicode 7.0.0
and identified a potentially problematic new code point. This
specification discusses that code point and associated issues and
updates RFC 5892 accordingly. It also applies an editorial
clarification that was the subject of an earlier erratum. In
addition, the discussion of the specific issue updates RFC 5894.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
This Internet-Draft will expire on July 10, 2015.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
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publication of this document. Please review these documents
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
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described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Problem Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.1. IDNA assumptions about Unicode normalization . . . . . . 5
2.2. New code point U+08A1, decomposition, and language
dependency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.3. Other examples of the same behavior . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.4. Hamza and Combining Sequences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3. Proposed/ Alternative Changes to RFC 5892 for new character
U+08A1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.1. Disallow This New Code Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2. Disallow the combining sequences for these characters . . 10
3.3. Do Nothing Other Than Warn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.4. Normalization Form IETF (or DNS) . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4. Editorial clarification to RFC 5892 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
5. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
8. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Appendix A. Change Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
A.1. Changes from version -00 to -01 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
A.2. Changes from version -01 to -02 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
A.3. Changes from version -02 to -03 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
1. Introduction
The current version of the IDNA specifications, known as "IDNA2008"
[RFC5890], anticipated that each new version of Unicode would be
reviewed to verify that no changes had been introduced that required
adjustments to IDNA's rules and, in particular, whether new
exceptions or backward compatibility adjustments were needed. When
that review was carefully conducted for Unicode 7.0.0 [Unicode7],
comparing it to prior versions including the text in Unicode 6.2
[Unicode62], it identified a problematic new code point (U+08A1,
ARABIC LETTER BEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE). The specific problem is
discussed in detail in Section 2. The behavior of that code point,
while non-optimal for IDNA, follows that of a few code points that
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predate Unicode 7.x and even the IDNA 2008 specifications and Unicode
6.0. Those existing code points make the question of what, if
anything, to do about this new one exceedingly problematic because
different reasonable criteria yield different decisions,
specifically:
o To disallow it as an IDNA exception case creates inconsistencies
with how those earlier code points were handled.
o To disallow it and the similar code points as well would
necessitate invalidating some potential labels that would have
been valid under IDNA2008 until this time. However, there is
reason to believe that no such labels exist.
o To permit the new code point to be treated as PVALID creates a
situation in which it is possible, within the same script, to
compose the same character symbol (glyph) in two different ways
that do not compare equal even after normalization. That
condition would then apply to it and the earlier code points with
the same behavior. That situation contradicts a fundamental
assumption of IDNA that is discussed in more detail below.
NOTE IN DRAFT:
This working draft discusses four alternatives, including, for
illustration, a radical idea that seems too drastic to be
considered now although it would have been appropriate to discuss
when the IDNA2008 specifications were being developed. The
authors suggest that the community discuss the relevant tradeoffs
and make a decision and that the document then be revised to
reflect that decision, with the other alternatives discussed as
options not chosen. Because there is no ideal choice, the
discussion of the issues in Section 2, is probably as or more
important than the particular choice of how to handle this code
point. In addition to providing information for this document,
that section should be considered as an updating addendum to RFC
5894 [RFC5894] and should be incorporated into any future revision
of that document.
As the result of this version of the document containing several
alternate proposals, some of the text is also a little bit
redundant. That will be corrected in future versions.
As anticipated when IDNA2008, and RFC 5892 in particular, were
written, exceptions and explicit updates are likely to be needed only
if there is disagreement between the Unicode Consortium's view about
what is best for the Standard and the IETF's view of what is best for
IDNs, the DNS, and IDNA. It was hoped that a situation would never
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arise in which the the two perspectives would disagree, but the
possibility was anticipated and considerable mechanism added to RFC
5890 and 5982 as a result. It is probably important to note that a
disagreement in this context does not imply that anyone is "wrong",
only that the two different groups have different needs and therefore
criteria about what is acceptable. For that reason, the IETF has, in
the past, allowed some characters for IDNA that active Unicode
Technical Committee members suggested be disallowed to avoid a change
in derived tables [RFC6452]. This document describes a case where
the IETF should disallow a character or characters that the various
properties would otherwise treat as PVALID.
This document provides the "flagging for the IESG" specified by
Section 5.1 of RFC 5892. As specified there, the change itself
requires IETF review because it alters the rules of Section 2 of that
document.
Readers of this document are expected to be familiar with Unicode
terminology [Unicode62] and the IETF conventions for representing
Unicode code points [RFC5137].
As a convenience to readers of RFC 5892 and to reduce the risks of
confusion, this document also formally applies the content of an
erratum to the text of the RFC (see Section 4) and so brings that RFC
up to date with all agreed changes.
[[RFC Editor: please remove the following comment and note if they
get to you.]]
[[IESG: It might not be a bad idea to incorporate some version of
the following into the Last Call announcement.]]
NOTE IN DRAFT to IETF Reviewers: The issues in this document, and
particularly the choices among options for either adding exception
cases to RFC 5892 or ignoring the issue, warning people, and
hoping the results do not include serious problems, are fairly
esoteric. Understanding them requires that one have at least some
understanding of how the Arabic Script works and the reasons the
Unicode Standard gives various Arabic Script characters a fairly
extended discussion [Unicode62-Arabic]. It also requires
understanding of a number of Unicode principles, including the
Normalization Stability rules [UAX15-Versioning] as applied to new
precomposed characters and guidelines for adding new characters.
There is considerable discussion of the issues in Section 2 and
references are provided for those who want to pursue them, but
potential reviewers should assume that the background needed to
understand the reasons for this change is no less deep in the
subject matter than would be expected of someone reviewing a
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proposed change in, e.g., the fundamentals of BGP, TCP congestion
control, or some cryptographic algorithm. Put more bluntly, one's
ability to read or speak languages other than English, or even one
or more languages that use the Arabic script, does not make one an
expert in these matters.
2. Problem Description
2.1. IDNA assumptions about Unicode normalization
IDNA makes several assumptions about Unicode, Unicode "characters",
and the effects of normalization. Those assumptions were based on
careful reading of the Unicode Standard at the time [Unicode5],
guided by advice and commitments by members of the Unicode Technical
Committee. Those assumptions, and the associated requirements, are
necessitated by three properties of DNS labels that do not apply to
blocks of running text:
1. There is no language context for a label. While particular DNS
zones may impose restrictions, including language or script
restrictions, on what labels can be registered, neither the DNS
nor IDNA impose either type of restriction or give the user of a
label any indication about the registration or other restrictions
that may have been imposed.
2. Labels are often mnemonics rather than words in any language.
They may be abbreviations or acronyms or contain embedded digits
and have other characteristics that are not typical of words.
3. Labels are, in practice, usually short. Even when they are the
maximum length allowed by the DNS and IDNA, they are typically
too short to provide significant context. Statements that
suggest that languages can almost always be determined from
relatively short paragraphs or equivalent bodies of text do not
apply to DNS labels because of their typical short length and
because, as noted above, they are not required to be formed
according to language-based rules.
At the same time, because the DNS is an exact-match system, there
must be no ambiguity about whether two labels are equal. Although
there have been extensive discussions about "confusingly similar"
characters, labels, and strings, such tests between scripts are
always somewhat subjective: they are affected by choices of type
styles and by what the user expects to see. In spite of the fact
that the glyphs that represent many characters in different scripts
are identical in appearance (e.g., basic Latin "a" (U+0061) and the
identical-appearing Cyrillic character (U+0430), the most important
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test is that, if two glyphs are the same within a given script, they
must represent the same character no matter how they are formed.
Unicode normalization, as explained in [UAX15], is expected to
resolve those "same script, same glyph, different formation methods"
issues. Within the Latin script, the code point sequence for lower
case "o" (U+006F) and combining diaeresis (U+0308) will, when
normalized using the "NFC" method required by IDNA, produce the
precombined small letter o with diaeresis (U+00F6) and hence the two
ways of forming the character will compare equal (and the combining
sequence is effectively prohibited from U-labels).
NFC was preferred over other normalization methods for IDNA because
it is more compact, more likely to be produced on keyboards on which
the relevant characters actually appeared, and because it does not
lose substantive information (e.g., some types of compatibility
equivalence involves judgment calls as to whether two characters are
actually the same -- they may be "the same" in some contexts but not
others -- while canonical equivalence is about different ways to
produce the glyph for the same abstract character).
IDNA also assumed that the extensive Unicode stability rules would be
applied and work as specified when new code points were added. Those
rules, as described in The Unicode Standard and the normative annexes
identified below, provide that:
1. New code points representing precombined characters that can be
formed from combining sequences will not be added to Unicode
unless neither the relevant base character nor required combining
character are part of the Standard within the relevant script
[UAX15-Versioning].
2. If circumstances require that principle be violated,
normalization stability requires that the newly-added character
decompose (even under NFC) to the previously-available combining
sequence [UAX15-Exclusion].
There is no explicit provision in the Standard's discussion of
conditions for adding new code points, nor of normalization
stability, for an exception based on different languages using the
same script.
2.2. New code point U+08A1, decomposition, and language dependency
Unicode 7.0.0 introduces the new code point U+08A1, ARABIC LETTER BEH
WITH HAMZA ABOVE. As can be deduced from the name, it is visually
identical to the glyph that can be formed from a combining sequence
consisting of the code point for ARABIC LETTER BEH (U+0628) and the
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code point for Combining Hamza Above (U+0654). The two rules
summarized above suggest that either the new code point should not be
allocated at all or that it should have a decomposition to
\u'0628'\u'0654'.
Had the issues outlined in this document been better understood at
the time, it probably would have been wise for RFC 5892 to disallow
either the precomposed character or the combining sequence of each
pair in those cases in which Unicode normalization rules do not cause
the right thing to happen, i.e., the combining sequence and
precomposed character to be treated as equivalent. Failure to do so
at the time places an extra burden on registries to be sure that
conflicts (and the potential for confusion and attacks) do not exist.
Oddly, had the exclusion been made part of the specification at that
time, the preference for precombined forms noted above would probably
have dictated excluding the combining sequence, something not
otherwise done in IDNA2008 because the NFC requirement serves the
same purpose. Today, the only thing that can be excluded without the
potential disruption of disallowing a previously-PVALID combining
sequence is the to exclude the newly-added code point so whatever is
done, or might have been contemplated with hindsight, will be
somewhat inconsistent.
2.3. Other examples of the same behavior
One of the things that complicates the issue with the new U+08A1 code
point is that there are several other Arabic-script code points that
behave in the same way for similar language-specific reasons.
In particular, at least three other grapheme clusters that have been
present for many version of Unicode can be seen as involving issues
similar to those for the newly-added ARABIC LETTER BEH WITH HAMZA
ABOVE. ARABIC LETTER HAH WITH HAMZA ABOVE (U+0681) and ARABIC LETTER
REH WITH HAMZA ABOVE (U+076C) do not have decomposition forms and are
preferred over combining sequences using HAMZA ABOVE (U+0654)
[Unicode62-Hamza]. By contrast, ARABIC LETTER ALEF WITH HAMZA ABOVE
(U+0623) decomposes into \u'0627'\u'0654' and ARABIC LETTER YEH WITH
HAMZA ABOVE (U+0626) decomposes into \u'064A'\u'0654' so the
precomposed character and combining sequences compare equal when both
are normalized, as this specification prefers.
There are other variations in which a precomposed character involving
HAMZA ABOVE has a decomposition to a combining sequence that can form
it. For example, ARABIC LETTER U WITH HAMZA ABOVE (U+0677) has a
compatibility (???) decomposition into the combining sequence
\u'06C7'\u'0674'.
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2.4. Hamza and Combining Sequences
As the Unicode Standard points out at some length [Unicode62-Arabic],
Hamza is a problematic abstract character and the "Hamza Above"
construction even more so [Unicode62-Hamza]. Those sections explain
a distinction made by Unicode between the use of a Hamza mark to
denote a glottal stop and one used as a diacritic mark to denote a
separate letter. In the first case, the combining sequence is used.
In the second, a precombined character is assigned.
Unlike Unicode generally and because of concerns about identifier
spoofing and attacks based on similarities, character distinctions in
IDNA are based much more strictly on the appearance of characters;
language and pronunciation distinctions within a script are not
considered. So, for IDNA, BEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE is not-quite-
tautologically the same as BEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE, even if one of them
is written as U+08A1 (new to Unicode 7.0.0) and the other as the
sequence \u'0628'\u'0654' (feasible with Unicode 7.0.0 but also
available in versions of Unicode going back at least to the version
[Unicode32] used in the original version of IDNA [RFC3490]. Because
the precomposed form and combining sequence are, for IDNA purposes,
the same, IDNA expects that normalization (specifically the
requirement that all U-labels be in NFC form) will cause them to
compare equal.
If Unicode also considered them the same, then the principle would
apply that new precomposed ("composition") forms are not added unless
one of the code points that could be used to construct it did not
exist in an earlier version (and even then is
discouraged)[UAX15-Versioning]. When exceptions are made, they are
expected to conform to the rules and classes in the "Composition
Exclusion Table", with class 2 being relevant to this case
[UAX15-Exclusion]. That rule essentially requires that the
normalization for the old combining sequence to itself be retained
(for stability) but that the newly-added character be treated as
canonically decomposable and decompose back to the older sequence
even under NFC. That was not done for this particular case,
presumably because of the distinction about pronunciation modifiers
versus separate letters noted above. Because, for IDNA and the DNS,
there is a possibility that the composing sequence \u'0628'\u'0654'
already appears in labels, the only choice other than allowing an
otherwise-identical, and identically-appearing, label with U+08A1
substituted to identify a different DNS entry is to DISALLOW the new
character.
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3. Proposed/ Alternative Changes to RFC 5892 for new character U+08A1
NOTE IN DRAFT: See the comments in the Introduction, Section 1 and
the first paragraph of each Subsection below for the status of the
Subsections that follow. Each one, in combination with the material
in Section 2 above, also provides information about the reasons why
that particular strategy is appropriate.
3.1. Disallow This New Code Point
If chosen by the community, this subsection would update the portion
of the IDNA2008 specification that identifies rules for what
characters are permitted [RFC5892] to disallow that code point.
With the publication of this document, Section 2.6 ("Exceptions (F)")
of RFC 5892 [RFC5892] is updated by adding 08A1 to the rule in
Category F so that the rule itself reads:
F: cp is in {00B7, 00DF, 0375, 03C2, 05F3, 05F4, 0640, 0660,
0661, 0662, 0663, 0664, 0665, 0666, 0667, 0668,
0669, 06F0, 06F1, 06F2, 06F3, 06F4, 06F5, 06F6,
06F7, 06F8, 06F9, 06FD, 06FE, 07FA, 08A1, 0F0B,
3007, 302E, 302F, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035,
303B, 30FB}
and then add to the subtable designated
"DISALLOWED -- Would otherwise have been PVALID"
after the line that begins "07FA", the additional line:
08A1; DISALLOWED # ARABIC LETTER BEH WITH HAMZA ABOVE
This has the effect of making the cited code point DISALLOWED
independent of application of the rest of the IDNA rule set to the
current version of Unicode. Those wishing to create domain name
labels containing Beh with Hamza Above may continue to use the
sequence
U+0628, ARABIC LETTER BEH
followed by
U+0654, ARABIC HAMZA ABOVE
which was valid for IDNA purposes in Unicode 5.0 and earlier and
which continues to be valid.
In principle, much the same thing could be accomplished by using the
IDNA "BackwardCompatible" category (IDNA Category G, RFC 5892
Section 5.3). However, that category is described as applying only
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when "property values in versions of Unicode after 5.2 have changed
in such a way that the derived property value would no longer be
PVALID or DISALLOWED". Because U+08A1 is a newly-added code point in
Unicode 7.0.0 and no property values of code points in prior versions
have changed, category G does not apply. If that section of RFC 5892
were to be replaced in the future, perhaps consideration should be
given to adding Normalization Stability and other issues to that
description but, at present, it is not relevant.
3.2. Disallow the combining sequences for these characters
If chosen by the community, this subsection would update the portion
of the IDNA2008 specification that identifies contextual rules
[RFC5892] to prohibit (combining) Hamza Above (U+0654) in conjunction
with Arabic BEH (U+0628), HAH (U+062D), and REH (U+0631). Note that
the choice of this option is consistent with the general preference
for precomposed characters discussed above but would ban some labels
that are valid today and that might, in principle, be in use.
The required prohibition could be imposed by creating a new
contextual rule in RFC 5892 to constrain combining sequences
containing Hamza Above.
As the Unicode Standard points out at some length [Unicode62-Arabic],
Hamza is a problematic abstract character and the "Hamza Above"
construction even more so. IDNA has historically associated
characters whose use is reasonable in some contexts but not others
with the special derived property "CONTEXTO" and then specified
specific, context-dependent, rules about where they may be used.
Because Hamza Above is problematic (and spawns edge cases, as
discussed in the Unicode Standard section cited above), it was
suggested that a contextual rule might be appropriate. There are at
least two reasons why a contextual rule would not be suitable for the
present situation.
1. As discussed above, the present situation is a normalization
stability and predictability problem, not a contextual one. Had
the same issues arisen with a newly-added precomposed character
that could previously be constructed from non-problematic base
and combining characters, it would be even more clearly a
normalization issue and, following the principles discussed there
and particularly in UAX 15 [UAX15-Exclusion], might not have been
assigned at all.
2. The contextual rule sets are designed around restricting the use
of code points to a particular script or adjacent to particular
characters within that script. Neither of these cases applies to
the newly-added character even if one could imagine rules for the
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use of Hamza Above (U+0654) that would reflect the considerations
of Chapter 8 of Unicode 6.2. Even had the latter been desired,
it would be somewhat late now -- Hamza Above has been present as
a combining character (U+0654) in many versions of Unicode.
While that section of the Unicode Standard describes the issues,
it does not provide actionable guidance about what to do about it
for cases going forward or when visual identity is important.
3.3. Do Nothing Other Than Warn
The recommendation from UTC is to simply warn registries, at all
levels of the tree, to be careful with this set of characters, making
language distinctions within zones. Because the DNS cannot make or
enforce language distinctions, this suggestion is problematic but it
would avoid having the IETF either invalidating label strings that
are potentially now in use or creating inconsistencies among the
characters that combine with Hamza Above but that also have
precomposed forms that do not have decompositions. The potential
would still exist for registries to respect the warning and deprecate
such labels if they existed.
3.4. Normalization Form IETF (or DNS)
The most radical possibility would be to decide that none of the
Unicode Normalization Forms specified in UAX 15 [UAX15] are adequate
for use with the DNS because, contrary to their apparent
descriptions, normalization tables are actually determined using
language information. However, use of language information is
unacceptable for IDNA for reasons described elsewhere in this
document. The remedy would be to define an IETF-specific (or DNS-
specific) normalization form, building on NFC but adhering strictly
to the rule that normalization causes two different forms of the same
character (glyph image) within the same script to be treated as
equal. In practice such a form would be implemented for IDNA
purposes as an additional rule within RFC 5892 (and its successors)
that constituted an exception list for the NFC tables. For this set
of characters, the special IETF normalization form would be
equivalent to the exclusion discussed in Section 3.2 above.
4. Editorial clarification to RFC 5892
Verified RFC Editor Erratum 3312 [RFC5892Erratum] provides a
clarification to Appendix A and Section A.1 of RFC 5892. This
section of this document updates the RFC to apply that clarification.
1. In Appendix A, add a new paragraph after the paragraph that
begins "The code point...". The new paragraph should read:
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"For the rule to be evaluated to True for the label, it MUST be
evaluated separately for every occurrence of the Code point in
the label; each of those evaluations must result in True."
2. In Appendix A, Section A.1, replace the "Rule Set" by
Rule Set:
False;
If Canonical_Combining_Class(Before(cp)) .eq. Virama Then True;
If cp .eq. \u200C And
RegExpMatch((Joining_Type:{L,D})(Joining_Type:T)*cp
(Joining_Type:T)*(Joining_Type:{R,D})) Then True;
5. Acknowledgements
The Unicode 7.0.0 changes were extensively discussed within the IAB's
Internationalization Program. The authors are grateful for the
discussions and feedback there, especially from Andrew Sullivan and
David Thaler. Additional information was requested and received from
Mark Davis and Ken Whistler and while they probably do not agree with
the necessity of excluding this code point or taking even more
drastic action as their responsibility is to look at the Unicode
Consortium requirements for stability, the decision would not have
been possible without their input. Thanks to Bill McQuillan and Ted
Hardie for reading versions of the document carefully enough to
identify and report some confusing typographical errors. Several
experts and reviewers who prefer to remain anonymous also provided
helpful input and comments on preliminary versions of this document.
6. IANA Considerations
When the IANA registry and tables are updated to reflect Unicode
7.0.0, changes should be made according to the decisions the IETF
makes about Section 3.
7. Security Considerations
[[CREF1: NOTE IN DRAFT: This section is unchanged in version -01 of
this document relative to what appeared in -00. It will need to be
rewritten once decisions are made about what path to follow. In
particular, if "just warn" is chosen, it will need to contain very
strong warnings.]]
This specification excludes a code point for which the Unicode-
specified normalization behavior could result in two ways to form a
visually-identical character within the same script not comparing
equal. That behavior could create a dream case for someone intending
to confuse the user by use of a domain name that looked identical to
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another one, was entirely in the same script, but was still
considered different (see, for example, the discussion of false
negatives in identifier comparison in Section 2.1 of RFC 6943
[RFC6943]). This exclusion therefore should improve Internet
security.
8. References
8.1. Normative References
[RFC5137] Klensin, J., "ASCII Escaping of Unicode Characters", BCP
137, RFC 5137, February 2008.
[RFC5890] Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for
Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework",
RFC 5890, August 2010.
[RFC5892] Faltstrom, P., "The Unicode Code Points and
Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA)",
RFC 5892, August 2010.
[RFC5892Erratum]
"RFC5892, "The Unicode Code Points and Internationalized
Domain Names for Applications (IDNA)", August 2010, Errata
ID: 3312", Errata ID 3312, August 2012,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/errata_search.php/doc/html/rfc5892>.
[RFC5894] Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for
Applications (IDNA): Background, Explanation, and
Rationale", RFC 5894, August 2010.
[RFC6943] Thaler, D., "Issues in Identifier Comparison for Security
Purposes", RFC 6943, May 2013.
[UAX15] Davis, M., Ed., "Unicode Standard Annex #15: Unicode
Normalization Forms", June 2014,
<http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/>.
[UAX15-Exclusion]
"Unicode Standard Annex #15: ob. cit., Section 5",
<http://www.unicode.org/reports/
tr15/#Primary_Exclusion_List_Table>.
[UAX15-Versioning]
"Unicode Standard Annex #15, ob. cit., Section 3",
<http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr15/#Versioning>.
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[Unicode5]
The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version
5.0", ISBN 0-321-48091-0, 2007.
Boston, MA, USA: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-321-48091-0.
This printed reference has now been updated online to
reflect additional code points. For code points, the
reference at the time RFC 5890-5894 were published is to
Unicode 5.2.
[Unicode62]
The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version
6.2.0", ISBN 978-1-936213-07-8, 2012,
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.2.0/>.
Preferred citation: The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode
Standard, Version 6.2.0, (Mountain View, CA: The Unicode
Consortium, 2012. ISBN 978-1-936213-07-8)
[Unicode62-Arabic]
"The Unicode Standard, Version 6.2.0, ob.cit., Chapter 8",
Chapter 8, 2012,
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.2.0/ch08.pdf>.
Subsection titled "Encoding Principles", paragraph
numbered 4, starting on page 251.
[Unicode62-Hamza]
"The Unicode Standard, Version 6.2.0, ob.cit., Chapter 8",
Chapter 8, 2012,
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode6.2.0/ch08.pdf>.
Subsection titled "Combining Hamza Above" starting on page
263.
[Unicode7]
The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version
7.0.0", ISBN 978-1-936213-09-2, 2014,
<http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode7.0.0/>.
Preferred Citation: The Unicode Consortium. The Unicode
Standard, Version 7.0.0, (Mountain View, CA: The Unicode
Consortium, 2014. ISBN 978-1-936213-09-2)
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8.2. Informative References
[RFC3490] Faltstrom, P., Hoffman, P., and A. Costello,
"Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications (IDNA)",
RFC 3490, March 2003.
[RFC6452] Faltstrom, P. and P. Hoffman, "The Unicode Code Points and
Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA) -
Unicode 6.0", RFC 6452, November 2011.
[Unicode32]
The Unicode Consortium, "The Unicode Standard, Version
3.2.0", .
The Unicode Standard, Version 3.2.0 is defined by The
Unicode Standard, Version 3.0 (Reading, MA, Addison-
Wesley, 2000. ISBN 0-201-61633-5), as amended by the
Unicode Standard Annex #27: Unicode 3.1
(http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr27/) and by the Unicode
Standard Annex #28: Unicode 3.2
(http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr28/).
Appendix A. Change Log
RFC Editor: Please remove this appendix before publication.
A.1. Changes from version -00 to -01
o Version 01 of this document is an extensive rewrite and
reorganization, reflecting discussions with UTC members and adding
three more options for discussion to the original proposal to
simply disallow the new code point.
A.2. Changes from version -01 to -02
Corrected a typographical error in which Hamza Above was incorrectly
listed with the wrong code point.
A.3. Changes from version -02 to -03
Corrected a typographical error in the Abstract in which RFC 5892 was
incorrectly shown as 5982.
Authors' Addresses
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John C Klensin
1770 Massachusetts Ave, Ste 322
Cambridge, MA 02140
USA
Phone: +1 617 245 1457
Email: john-ietf@jck.com
Patrik Faltstrom
Netnod
Franzengatan 5
Stockholm 112 51
Sweden
Phone: +46 70 6059051
Email: paf@netnod.se
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