Internet-Draft | CDDL grammar updates | June 2023 |
Bormann | Expires 19 December 2023 | [Page] |
At the time of writing, the Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) is defined by RFC 8610 and RFC 9165. The latter has used the extension point provided in RFC 8610, the control operator.¶
As CDDL is being used in larger projects, the need for corrections and additional features has become known that cannot be easily mapped into this single extension point. Hence, there is a need for evolution of the base CDDL specification itself.¶
The present document updates errata and makes other small fixes for the ABNF grammar defined for CDDL in RFC 8610.¶
Previous versions of the changes in this document were part of draft-bormann-cbor-cddl-2-draft and previously draft-bormann-cbor-cddl-freezer. This submission extracts out those grammar changes that are ready for publication.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
The latest revision of this draft can be found at https://cbor-wg.github.io/update-8610-grammar/. Status information for this document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-cbor-update-8610-grammar/.¶
Discussion of this document takes place on the CBOR Working Group mailing list (mailto:[email protected]), which is archived at https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/browse/cbor/. Subscribe at https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/cbor/.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/cbor-wg/update-8610-grammar.¶
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At the time of writing, the Concise Data Definition Language (CDDL) is defined by RFC 8610 and RFC 9165. The latter has used the extension point provided in RFC 8610, the control operator.¶
As CDDL is being used in larger projects, the need for corrections and additional features has become known that cannot be easily mapped into this single extension point. Hence, there is a need for evolution of the base CDDL specification itself.¶
The present document updates errata and makes other small fixes for the ABNF grammar defined for CDDL in RFC 8610.¶
Previous versions of the changes in this document were part of draft-bormann-cbor-cddl-2-draft and previously draft-bormann-cbor-cddl-freezer. This submission extracts out those grammar changes that are ready for publication.¶
Proposals for grammar and other changes that need more work can be found in [I-D.bormann-cbor-cddl-2-draft]. Proposals for other additions to the CDDL specification base are in [I-D.draft-bormann-cbor-cddl-freezer].¶
Note that the existing extension point "control operator" (Section 3.8 of [RFC8610]) can be exercised for new features in parallel to the work described here; one set of such proposals is in [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl-more-control].¶
The present document, in conjunction with [RFC8610] as well as [RFC9165] and [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl-more-control], is intended to be the specification base of what has colloquially been called CDDL 1.1. Additional documents describe further work on CDDL.¶
The Terminology from [RFC8610] applies. The grammar in [RFC8610] is based on ABNF, which is defined in [RFC5234] and [RFC7405].¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
errata fix (targets 1.0 and 2.0)¶
A number of errata reports have been made around some details of text string and byte string literal syntax: [Err6527] and [Err6543]. These are being addressed in this section, updating details of the ABNF for these literal syntaxes. Also, [Err6526] needs to be applied (backslashes have been lost during RFC processing in some text explaining backslash escaping).¶
The ABNF used in [RFC8610] for the content of text string literals is rather permissive:¶
; RFC 8610 ABNF: text = %x22 *SCHAR %x22 SCHAR = %x20-21 / %x23-5B / %x5D-7E / %x80-10FFFD / SESC SESC = "\" (%x20-7E / %x80-10FFFD)¶
This allows almost any non-C0 character to be escaped by a backslash,
but critically misses out on the \uXXXX
and \uHHHH\uLLLL
forms
that JSON allows to specify characters in hex (which should be
applying here according to Bullet 6 of Section 3.1 of [RFC8610]).
Both can be solved by updating the SESC production to:¶
(Notes:
In ABNF, strings such as "A"
, "B"
etc. are case-insensitive, as is
intended here.
We could have written %x62
as %s"b"
, but didn't, in order to
maximize ABNF tool compatibility.)¶
Now that SESC is more restrictively formulated, this also requires an update to the BCHAR production used in the ABNF syntax for byte string literals:¶
; RFC 8610 ABNF: bytes = [bsqual] %x27 *BCHAR %x27 BCHAR = %x20-26 / %x28-5B / %x5D-10FFFD / SESC / CRLF bsqual = "h" / "b64"¶
In BCHAR, the updated version explicitly allows \'
, which is no
longer allowed in the updated SESC:¶
The ABNF used in [RFC8610] for the content of byte string literals lumps together byte strings notated as text with byte strings notated in base16 (hex) or base64 (but see also updated BCHAR production above):¶
; RFC 8610 ABNF: bytes = [bsqual] %x27 *BCHAR %x27 BCHAR = %x20-26 / %x28-5B / %x5D-10FFFD / SESC / CRLF¶
Errata report 6543 proposes to handle the two cases in separate productions (where, with an updated SESC, BCHAR obviously needs to be updated as above):¶
This potentially causes a subtle change, which is hidden in the WS production:¶
This allows any non-C0 character in a comment, so this fragment becomes possible:¶
foo = h' 43424F52 ; 'CBOR' 0A ; LF, but don't use CR! '¶
The current text is not unambiguously saying whether the three apostrophes
need to be escaped with a \
or not, as in:¶
foo = h' 43424F52 ; \'CBOR\' 0A ; LF, but don\'t use CR! '¶
... which would be supported by the existing ABNF in [RFC8610].¶
This document takes the simpler approach of leaving the processing of
the content of the byte string literal to a semantic step after
processing the syntax of the bytes
/BCHAR
rules as updated by
Figure 1 and Figure 2.¶
The rules in Figure 4 are therefore applied to the result of this
processing where bsqual
is given as h
or b64
.¶
Note that this approach also works well with the use of byte strings
in Section 3 of [RFC9165].
It does require some care when copy-pasting into CDDL models from ABNF
that contains single quotes (which may also hide as apostrophes
in comments); these need to be escaped or possibly replaced by %x27
.¶
Finally, our approach may leave the door open wider to extending
bsqual
as proposed in Appendix A.1 of [I-D.bormann-cbor-cddl-2-draft].¶
The two subsections in this section specify two small changes to the grammar that are intended to enable certain kinds of specifications.¶
backward (not forward)¶
[RFC8610] requires a CDDL file to have at least one rule.¶
; RFC 8610 ABNF: cddl = S 1*(rule S)¶
This makes sense when the file has to stand alone, as a CDDL data model needs to have at least one rule to provide an entry point (start rule).¶
With CDDL 2.0, CDDL files can also include directives, and these might be the source of all the rules that ultimately make up the module created by the file. Any other rule content in the file has to be available for directive processing, making the requirement for at least one rule cumbersome.¶
Therefore, we extend the grammar as follows:¶
; new top-level rule: cddl = S *(rule S)¶
and make the existence of at least one rule a semantic constraint, to be fulfilled after processing of all directives.¶
backward (not forward)¶
The CDDL 1.0 syntax for expressing tags in CDDL is (ABNF as in [RFC5234]):¶
; extracted from RFC 8610 ABNF: type2 /= "#" "6" ["." uint] "(" S type S ")"¶
This means tag numbers can only be given as literal numbers (uints). Some specifications operate on ranges of tag numbers, e.g., [RFC9277] has a range of tag numbers 1668546817 (0x63740101) to 1668612095 (0x6374FFFF) to tag specific content formats. This can currently not be expressed in CDDL.¶
CDDL 2.0 extends this to:¶
; new rules collectively defining the tagged case: type2 /= "#" "6" ["." tag-number] "(" S type S ")" tag-number = uint / ("<" type ">")¶
So the above range can be expressed in a CDDL fragment such as:¶
ct-tag<content> = #6.<ct-tag-number>(content) ct-tag-number = 1668546817..1668612095 ; or use 0x63740101..0x6374FFFF¶
Note that this syntax reuses the angle bracket syntax for generics;
this reuse is innocuous as a generic parameter/argument only ever
occurs after a rule name (id
), while it occurs after .
here.
(Whether there is potential for human confusion can be debated; the
above example deliberately uses generics as well.)¶
The grammar fixes and updates in this document are not believed to create additional security considerations. The security considerations in Section 5 of [RFC8610] do apply, and specifically the potential for confusion is increased in an environment that uses a combination of CDDL tools some of which have been updated and some of which have not been, in particular based on Section 2.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
This appendix provides the full ABNF from [RFC8610] with the updates applied in the present document.¶
TODO acknowledge.¶