Network Working Group S. Hardcastle-Kille
Request for Comments: 1485 ISODE Consortium
July 1993
A String Representation of Distinguished Names
(OSI-DS 23 (v5))
Status of this Memo
This RFC specifies an IAB standards track protocol for the Internet
community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
Please refer to the current edition of the "IAB Official Protocol
Standards" for the standardization state and status of this protocol.
Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
The OSI Directory uses distinguished names as the primary keys to
entries in the directory. Distinguished Names are encoded in ASN.1.
When a distinguished name is communicated between to users not using a
directory protocol (e.g., in a mail message), there is a need to have
a user-oriented string representation of distinguished name. This
specification defines a string format for representing names, which is
designed to give a clean representation of commonly used names, whilst
being able to represent any distinguished name. Please send comments
to the author or to the discussion group <osi-ds@CS.UCL.AC.UK>.
Table of Contents
1. Why a notation is needed...................................... 12. A notation for Distinguished Name............................. 22.1 Goals......................................................... 22.2 Informal definition........................................... 22.3 Formal definition............................................. 33. Examples...................................................... 64. References.................................................... 65. Security Considerations....................................... 66. Author's Address.............................................. 7
Many OSI Applications make use of Distinguished Names (DN) as defined
in the OSI Directory, commonly known as X.500 [CCI88]. This
specification assumes familiarity with X.500, and the concept of
Distinguished Name. It is important to have a common format to be
able to unambiguously represent a distinguished name. This might be
done to represent a directory name on a business card or in an email
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RFC 1485 Distinguished Names July 1993
message. There is a need for a format to support human to human
communication, which must be string based (not ASN.1) and user
oriented. This notation is targeted towards a general user oriented
system, and in particular to represent the names of humans. Other
syntaxes may be more appropriate for other uses of the directory.
For example, the OSF Syntax may be more appropriate for some system
oriented uses. (The OSF Syntax uses "/" as a separator, and forms
names in a manner intended to resemble UNIX filenames).
The following goals are laid out:
o To provide an unambiguous representation of a distinguished
name
o To be an intuitive format for the majority of names
o To be fully general, and able to represent any distinguished
name
o To be amenable to a number of different layouts to achieve an
attractive representation.
o To give a clear representation of the contents of the
distinguished name
This notation is designed to be convenient for common forms of name.
Some examples are given. The author's directory distinguished name
would be written:
CN=Steve Hardcastle-Kille, OU=Computer Science, O=University
College London, C=GB
This may be folded, perhaps to display in multi-column format. For
example:
CN=Steve Hardcastle-Kille,
OU=Computer Science,
O=University College London,
C=GB
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RFC 1485 Distinguished Names July 1993
Another name might be:
CN=Christian Huitema, O=INRIA, C=FR
Semicolon (";") may be used as an alternate separator.
CN=Christian Huitema; O=INRIA; C=FR
In running text, this would be written as <CN=Christian Huitema;
O=INRIA; C=FR>. Another example, shows how different attribute types
are handled:
CN=James Hacker,
L=Basingstoke,
O=Widget Inc,
CN=GB
Here is an example of a multi-valued Relative Distinguished Name,
where the namespace is flat within an organisation, and department is
used to disambiguate certain names:
OU=Sales + CN=J. Smith, O=Widget Inc., C=US
The final example shows quoting of a comma in an Organisation name:
CN=L. Eagle, O="Sue, Grabbit and Runn", C=GB
A formal definition can now be given. The structure is specified in
a BNF grammar in Figure 1. This BNF uses the grammar defined in RFC
822, with the terminals enclosed in <> [Cro82]. This definition is
in an abstract character set, and so may be written in any character
set supporting the explicitly defined special characters. The
quoting mechanism is used for the following cases:
o Strings containing ",", "+", "="or """, <CR>, "<",
">", "#", or ";".
o Strings with leading or trailing spaces
o Strings containing consecutive spaces
There is an escape mechanism from the normal user oriented form, so
that this syntax may be used to print any valid distinguished name.
This is ugly. It is expected to be used only in pathological cases.
There are two parts to this mechanism:
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RFC 1485 Distinguished Names July 1993
1. Attributes types are represented in a (big-endian) dotted
notation. (e.g., OID.2.6.53).
2. Attribute values are represented in hexadecimal
(e.g., #0A56CF).
The keyword specification is optional in the BNF, but mandatory for
this specification. This is so that the same BNF may be used for the
related specification on User Friendly Naming [HK93]. When this
specification is followed, the attribute type keywords must always be
present. A list of valid keywords for well known attribute types
used in naming is given in Table 1. This is a list of keywords which
must be supported. These are chosen because they appear in common
forms of name, and can do so in a place which does not correspond to
the default schema used. A register of valid keyworkds is maintained
by the IANA.
Only string type attributes are considered, but other attribute
syntaxes could be supported locally. It is assumed that the
interface will translate from the supplied string into
PrintableString or T.61.
The "+" notation is used to specify multi-component RDNs. In this
case, the types for attributes in the RDN must be explicit. The name
is presented/input in a little-endian order (most significant
component last).
When an address is written in a context where there is a need to
delimit the entire address (e.g., in free text), it is recommended
that the delimiters <> are used. The terminator > is a special in
the notation to facilitate this delimitation.
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RFC 1485 Distinguished Names July 1993
<name> ::= <name-component> ( <spaced-separator> )
| <name-component> <spaced-separator> <name>
<spaced-separator> ::= <optional-space>
<separator>
<optional-space>
<separator> ::= "," | ";"
<optional-space> ::= ( <CR> ) *( " " )
<name-component> ::= <attribute>
| <attribute> <optional-space> "+"
<optional-space> <name-component>
<attribute> ::= <string>
| <key> <optional-space> "=" <optional-space> <string>
<key> ::= 1*( <keychar> ) | "OID." <oid>
<keychar> ::= letters, numbers, and space
<oid> ::= <digitstring> | <digitstring> "." <oid>
<digitstring> ::= 1*<digit>
<digit> ::= digits 0-9
<string> ::= *( <stringchar> | <pair> )
| '"' *( <stringchar> | <special> | <pair> ) '"'
| "#" <hex>
<special> ::= "," | "=" | '"' | <CR> | "+" | "<" | ">"
| "#" | ";"
<pair> ::= "
<stringchar> ::= any char except <special> or "
<hex> ::= 2*<hexchar>
<hexchar> ::= 0-9, a-f, A-F
Figure 1: BNF Grammar for Distinguished Name
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RFC 1485 Distinguished Names July 1993
Key Attribute (X.520 keys)
______________________________
CN CommonName
L LocalityName
ST StateOrProvinceName
O OrganizationName
OU OrganizationalUnitName
C CountryName
Table 1: Standardised Keywords
This section gives a few examples of distinguished names written
using this notation:
CN=Marshall T. Rose, O=Dover Beach Consulting, L=Santa Clara,
ST=California, C=US
CN=FTAM Service, CN=Bells, OU=Computer Science, O=University
College London, C=GB
CN=Steve Hardcastle-Kille, OU=Computer Science, O=University
College London, C=GB
CN=Steve Hardcastle-Kille, OU=Computer Science, O=University
College London, C=GB
[CCI88] The Directory --- overview of concepts, models and services,
December 1988. CCITT X.500 Series Recommendations.
[Cro82] D.H. Crocker. Standard of the format of ARPA internet text
messages. STD 11, RFC 822, University of Delaware,
August 1982.
[HK93] S.E. Hardcastle-Kille. Using the OSI directory to achieve
user friendly naming. RFC 1484, Department of Computer
Science, University College London, July 1993.