Header of a KIP Document
KIP Documents can be recognised in a few manners, among which a magic code at the start.
The header is an optional element, most notably inserted at the start of a file, but completely optional in places where other elements of the context, such as filename extension or MIME-type give enough clarity.
Structure. The start of a KIP Document is an ASCII string of 18 characters, plus a trailing newline, coming to a total of 19 bytes:
- The start is literally
ARPA2KIP
- Following that is the
YYYYMM
formated specification version time - The following 4 characters use base64 notation for 4x6 = 24 flags, MSB sextet first and LSB sextet last.
- The trailing newline byte
'\n'
or U+000a. No carriage return, no ASCII NUL character.
Skipping the header. This header can be parsed with a normal CBOR parser, which sees it as:
- A byte string of length one,
b'R'
- A byte string of length 15,
b'A2KIP202003===='
when the specification date is 2020-03 and the flags are zero. - The letters
A
andP
dropped out; their highest 3 bits encode for a byte string and their lower 5 bits encode a length of 1 and 16.
It is up to you whether to scan for the literal start bytes and parse the rest, or to use the CBOR parser that is already needed for the job. In the latter case, be sure to validate the string lenghts.
The flags are information, they hint at intended patterns. Enforcement is always a choice of the operator working on the KIP Document.
QR-code and data: URIs.
It is not a good idea to include the header at the beginning of a QR-code,
or more generally said, in the beginning of a data:
URI, because there
already is a MIME-type and the available space is often tight.
KIP Streams. It is possible, though not advised, to inject a header into a KIP Stream. Normally, the surrounding messaging for setting up the KIP Stream should suffice to introduce the MIME-type for the stream. The one reason for the header could be to synchronise or restart a KIP Stream.
When the semantics of the KIP Stream support mixing of content, then it may even happen that a later addition to a collaborating group injects another header, all that is to be considered harmless. One distinction that is vital in KIP Streams is that the two CBOR chunks in the header are passed in immediate succession in the same transmission frame.