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Java Network Programming (3rd ed) [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Harold, Elliotte Rusty

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3.4 MIME Media Types


MIME is an open standard for sending
multipart, multimedia data through Internet email. The data may be
binary, or it may use multiple ASCII and non-ASCII character sets.
Although MIME was originally intended just for email, it has become a
widely used technique to describe a file's contents
so that client software can tell the difference between different
kinds of data. For example, a web browser uses MIME to tell whether a
file is a GIF image or a printable PostScript file.


Officially, MIME stands for Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions,
which is the expansion of the acronym used in RFC 2045. However, you
will hear other versionsmost frequently Multipart Internet
Mail Extensions and Multimedia Internet Mail Extensions.

MIME supports more than 100 predefined types of content. Content
types are classified at two levels: a type and a subtype. The type
shows very generally what kind of data is contained: is it a picture,
text, or movie? The subtype identifies the specific type of data: GIF
image, JPEG image, TIFF image. For example, HTML's
content type is text/html; the type is
text, and the subtype is html.
The content type for a GIF image is image/gif; the
type is image, and the subtype is
gif. Table 3-2 lists the more common defined
content types. On most systems, a simple text file maintains a
mapping between MIME types and the application used to process that
type of data; on Unix, this file is called
mime.types. The most current list of registered
MIME types is available from http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/.
For more on MIME, see the comp.mail.mime FAQ at http://www.uni-giessen.de/faq/archiv/mail.mime-faq.part1-9/.

Web servers use MIME to identify the kind of data
they're sending. Web clients use MIME to identify
the kind of data they're willing to accept. Most web
servers and clients understand at least two MIME text content types,
text/html and text/plain, and
two image formats, image/gif and
image/jpeg. More recent browsers also understand
application/xml and several other image formats.
Java relies on MIME types to pick the appropriate content handler for
a particular stream of data.

Table 3-2. Predefined MIME content types

Type


Subtype


Description


text


The document represents printable text.


calendar


Calendaring and scheduling information in the iCalendar format; see
RFC 2445.


css


A Cascading Style Sheet used for HTML and XML.


directory


Address book information such as name, phone number, and email
address; used by Netscape vCards; defined in RFCs 2425 and 2426.


enriched


A very simple HTML-like language for adding basic font and
paragraph-level formatting such as bold and italic to email; used by
Eudora; defined in RFC 1896.


html


Hypertext Markup Language as used by web browsers.


plain


This is supposed to imply raw ASCII text. However, some web servers
use text/plain as the default MIME type for any
file they can't recognize. Therefore, anything and
everything, most notably .class byte code files,
can get identified as a text/plain file.


richtext


An HTML-like markup for encoding formatting into pure ASCII text.
It's never really caught on, in large part because
of the popularity of HTML.


rtf


An incompletely defined Microsoft format for word processing files.


sgml


The Standard Generalized Markup Language; ISO standard 8879:1986.


tab-separated-values


The interchange format used by many spreadsheets and databases;
records are separated by linebreaks and fields by tabs.


xml


The W3C standard Extensible Markup Language. For various technical
reasons, application/xml should be used instead,
but often isn't.


multipart


Multipart MIME messages encode several different files into one
message.


mixed


Several message parts intended for sequential viewing.


alternative


The same message in multiple formats so a client may choose the most
convenient one.


digest


A popular format for merging many email messages into a single
digest; used by many mailing lists and some FAQ lists.


parallel


Several parts intended for simultaneous viewing.


byteranges


Several separately contiguous byte ranges; used in HTTP 1.1.


encrypted


One part for the body of the message and one part for the information
necessary to decode the message.


signed


One part for the body of the message and one part for the digital
signature.


related


Compound documents formed by aggregating several smaller parts.


form-data


Form responses.


message


An email message.


external-body


Just the headers of the email message; the message's
body is not included but exists at some other location and is
referenced, perhaps by a URL.


http


An HTTP 1.1 request from a web client to a web server.


news


A news article.


partial


Part of a longer email message that has been split into multiple
parts to allow transmission through email gateways.


rfc822


A standard email message including headers.


image


Two-dimensional pictures.


cgm


A Computer Graphics Metafile format image. CGM is ISO standard
8632:1992 for device-independent vector graphics and bitmap images.


g3fax


The standard for bitmapped fax images.


gif


A Graphics Interchange Format image.


jpeg


The Joint Photographic Experts Group file format for bitmapped images
with lossy compression.


png


A Portable Network Graphics Format image. The format was developed at
the W3C as a modern replacement for GIF that supports 24-bit color
and is not encumbered by patents.


tiff


The Tagged Image File format from Adobe.


audio


Sound.


basic


8-bit ISDN -law encoded audio with a single channel and a sample rate
of eight kilohertz. This is the format used by
.au and .snd files and
supported by the java.applet.AudioClip class.


video


Video.


mpeg


The Motion Picture Experts Group format for video data with lossy
compression.


quicktime


Apple's proprietary QuickTime movie format. Before
being included in a MIME message, QuickTime files must be
"flattened".


model


3-D images.


vrml


A Virtual Reality Modeling Language file, a format for 3-D data on
the Web.


iges


The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification for interchanging
documents between different CAD programs.


mesh


The mesh structures used in finite element and finite difference
methods.


application


Binary data specific to some application.


octet-stream


Unspecified binary data, which is usually saved into a file for the
user. This MIME type is sometimes used to serve
.class byte code files.


java


A nonstandard subtype sometimes used to serve
.class byte code files.


postscript


Adobe PostScript.


dca-rft


IBM's Document Content Architecture-Richly Formatted
Text.


mac-BinHex40


A means of encoding the two forks of a Macintosh document in a single
ASCII file.


pdf


An Adobe Acrobat file.


zip


A zip compressed file.


macwriteii


A MacWrite II word-processing document.


msword


A Microsoft Word document.


xml+xhtml


An XHTML document


xml


An Extensible Markup Language document.

A MIME-compliant program is not required to understand all these
different types of data; it just needs to recognize what it can and
cannot handle. Many programsNetscape Navigator, for
exampleuse various helper programs to display types of content
they themselves don't understand.

MIME allows you to define additional nonstandard subtypes by using
the prefix x-. For example, the content type
application/x-tex has the MIME type
application and the nonstandard subtype
x-tex for a TeX document. These x-types are not
guaranteed to be understood by any program other than the one that
created them. Indeed, two programs may use the same x-type to mean
two completely different things, or different programs may use
different x-types to mean the same thing. However, many nonstandard
types have come into common use; some of the more common ones are
listed in Table 3-3.

Table 3-3. X-types

Type


X-subtype


Description


application


Subtypes of an application; the name of the subtype is usually a file
format name or an application name.


x-aiff


SGI's AIFF audio data format.


x-bitmap


An X Windows bitmap image.


x-gzip


Data compressed in the GNU gzip format.


x-dvi


A TeX DVI document.


x-framemaker


A FrameMaker document.


x-latex


A LaTeX document.


x-macBinHex40


Identical to application/mac-BinHex40, but older
software may use this x-type instead.


x-mif


A FrameMaker MIF document.


x-sd


A session directory protocol announcement, used to announce MBONE
events.


x-shar


A shell archive; the Unix equivalent of a Windows or Macintosh
self-extracting archive. Software shouldn't be
configured to unpack shell archives automatically, because a shell
archive can call any program the user who runs it has the rights to
call.


x-tar


A tar archive.


x-gtar


A GNU tar archive.


x-tcl


A tool command language (TCL) program. You should never configure
your web browser or email program to automatically run programs you
download from the web or receive in email messages.


x-tex


A TeX document.


x-texinfo


A GNU texinfo document.


x-troff


A troff document.


x-troff-man


A troff document written with the man macros.


x-troff-me


A troff document that should be processed using the
me macros.


x-troff-ms


A troff document that should be processed using the
ms macros.


x-wais-source


A WAIS source.


x-www-form-urlencoded


A string that has been encoded like a URL, with + replacing spaces
and % escapes replacing non-alphanumeric characters that
aren't separators.


audio


x-aiff


The same as application/x-aiff: an AIFF audio file.


x-mpeg


The MP3 sound format.


x-mpeg.mp3


The MP3 sound format.


x-wav


The Windows WAV sound format.


image


x-fits


The FITS image format used primarily by astronomers.


x-macpict


A Macintosh PICT image.


x-pict


A Macintosh PICT image.


x-macpaint


A MacPaint image.


x-pbm


A portable bitmap image.


x-portable-bitmap


A portable bitmap image.


x-pgm


A PGM image.


video


x-msvideo


A Microsoft AVI Video for Windows.


x-sgi-movie


A Silicon Graphics movie.


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