Network Working Group C. Jennings
Internet-Draft Cisco
Intended status: Standards Track Z. Shelby
Expires: November 19, 2018 ARM
J. Arkko
A. Keranen
Ericsson
C. Bormann
Universitaet Bremen TZI
May 18, 2018

Sensor Measurement Lists (SenML)
draft-ietf-core-senml-16

Abstract

This specification defines a format for representing simple sensor measurements and device parameters in the Sensor Measurement Lists (SenML). Representations are defined in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON), Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR), Extensible Markup Language (XML), and Efficient XML Interchange (EXI), which share the common SenML data model. A simple sensor, such as a temperature sensor, could use one of these media types in protocols such as HTTP or CoAP to transport the measurements of the sensor or to be configured.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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This Internet-Draft will expire on November 19, 2018.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2018 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 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of 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 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.


Table of Contents

1. Overview

Connecting sensors to the Internet is not new, and there have been many protocols designed to facilitate it. This specification defines a format and media types for carrying simple sensor information in a protocol such as HTTP [RFC7230] or CoAP [RFC7252]. The SenML format is designed so that processors with very limited capabilities could easily encode a sensor measurement into the media type, while at the same time a server parsing the data could relatively efficiently collect a large number of sensor measurements. SenML can be used for a variety of data flow models, most notably data feeds pushed from a sensor to a collector, and the web resource model where the sensor is requested as a resource representation (e.g., “GET /sensor/temperature”).

There are many types of more complex measurements and measurements that this media type would not be suitable for. SenML strikes a balance between having some information about the sensor carried with the sensor data so that the data is self describing but it also tries to make that a fairly minimal set of auxiliary information for efficiency reason. Other information about the sensor can be discovered by other methods such as using the CoRE Link Format [RFC6690].

SenML is defined by a data model for measurements and simple meta-data about measurements and devices. The data is structured as a single array that contains a series of SenML Records which can each contain fields such as an unique identifier for the sensor, the time the measurement was made, the unit the measurement is in, and the current value of the sensor. Serializations for this data model are defined for JSON [RFC8259], CBOR [RFC7049], XML [W3C.REC-xml-20081126], and Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) [W3C.REC-exi-20140211].

For example, the following shows a measurement from a temperature gauge encoded in the JSON syntax.

[
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"Cel","v":23.1}
]

In the example above, the array has a single SenML Record with a measurement for a sensor named “urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063” with a current value of 23.1 degrees Celsius.

2. Requirements and Design Goals

The design goal is to be able to send simple sensor measurements in small packets from large numbers of constrained devices. Keeping the total size of payload small makes it easy to use SenML also in constrained networks, e.g., in a 6LoWPAN [RFC4944]. It is always difficult to define what small code is, but there is a desire to be able to implement this in roughly 1 KB of flash on a 8 bit microprocessor. Experience with power meters and other large scale deployments has indicated that the solution needs to support allowing multiple measurements to be batched into a single HTTP or CoAP request. This “batch” upload capability allows the server side to efficiently support a large number of devices. It also conveniently supports batch transfers from proxies and storage devices, even in situations where the sensor itself sends just a single data item at a time. The multiple measurements could be from multiple related sensors or from the same sensor but at different times.

The basic design is an array with a series of measurements. The following example shows two measurements made at different times. The value of a measurement is given by the “v” field, the time of a measurement is in the “t” field, the “n” field has a unique sensor name, and the unit of the measurement is carried in the “u” field.

[
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"Cel","t":1.276020076e+09,
   "v":23.5},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"Cel","t":1.276020091e+09,
   "v":23.6}
]

To keep the messages small, it does not make sense to repeat the “n” field in each SenML Record so there is a concept of a Base Name which is simply a string that is prepended to the Name field of all elements in that record and any records that follow it. So a more compact form of the example above is the following.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"Cel","t":1.276020076e+09,
   "v":23.5},
  {"u":"Cel","t":1.276020091e+09,
   "v":23.6}
]

In the above example the Base Name is in the “bn” field and the “n” fields in each Record are the empty string so they are omitted.

Some devices have accurate time while others do not so SenML supports absolute and relative times. Time is represented in floating point as seconds. Values greater than or equal to 2**28 represent an absolute time relative to the Unix epoch. Values less than 2**28 represent time relative to the current time.

A simple sensor with no absolute wall clock time might take a measurement every second, batch up 60 of them, and then send the batch to a server. It would include the relative time each measurement was made compared to the time the batch was sent in each SenML Record. The server might have accurate NTP time and use the time it received the data, and the relative offset, to replace the times in the SenML with absolute times before saving the SenML information in a document database.

3. Terminology

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.

This document also uses the following terms:

SenML Record:
One measurement or configuration instance in time presented using the SenML data model.
SenML Pack:
One or more SenML Records in an array structure.
SenML Label:
A short name used in SenML Records to denote different SenML fields (e.g., “v” for “value”).
SenML Field:
A component of a record that associates a value to a SenML Label for this record.
SensML:
Sensor Streaming Measurement List (see Section 4.8).
SensML Stream:
One or more SenML Records to be processed as a stream.

This document uses the terms “attribute” and “tag” where they occur with the underlying technologies (XML, CBOR [RFC7049], and Link Format [RFC6690]), not for SenML concepts per se. Note that “attribute” has been widely used previously as a synonym for SenML “field”, though.

All comparisons of text strings are performed byte-by-byte (and therefore necessarily case-sensitive).

Where arithmetic is used, this specification uses the notation familiar from the programming language C, except that the operator “**” stands for exponentiation.

4. SenML Structure and Semantics

Each SenML Pack carries a single array that represents a set of measurements and/or parameters. This array contains a series of SenML Records with several fields described below. There are two kinds of fields: base and regular. Both the base fields and the regular fields can be included in any SenML Record. The base fields apply to the entries in the Record and also to all Records after it up to, but not including, the next Record that has that same base field. All base fields are optional. Regular fields can be included in any SenML Record and apply only to that Record.

4.1. Base Fields

Base Name:
This is a string that is prepended to the names found in the entries.
Base Time:
A base time that is added to the time found in an entry.
Base Unit:
A base unit that is assumed for all entries, unless otherwise indicated. If a record does not contain a Unit value, then the Base Unit is used. Otherwise the value found in the Unit (if any) is used.
Base Value:
A base value is added to the value found in an entry, similar to Base Time.
Base Sum:
A base sum is added to the sum found in an entry, similar to Base Time.
Version:
Version number of media type format. This field is an optional positive integer and defaults to 5 if not present. [RFC Editor: change the default value to 10 when this specification is published as an RFC and remove this note]

4.2. Regular Fields

Name:
Name of the sensor or parameter. When appended to the Base Name field, this must result in a globally unique identifier for the resource. The name is optional, if the Base Name is present. If the name is missing, Base Name must uniquely identify the resource. This can be used to represent a large array of measurements from the same sensor without having to repeat its identifier on every measurement.
Unit:
Unit for a measurement value. Optional.
Value:
Value of the entry. Optional if a Sum value is present, otherwise required. Values are represented using basic data types. This specification defines floating point numbers (“v” field for “Value”), booleans (“vb” for “Boolean Value”), strings (“vs” for “String Value”) and binary data (“vd” for “Data Value”). Exactly one value field MUST appear unless there is Sum field in which case it is allowed to have no Value field.
Sum:
Integrated sum of the values over time. Optional. This field is in the unit specified in the Unit value multiplied by seconds. For historical reason it is named sum instead of integral.
Time:
Time when value was recorded. Optional.
Update Time:
Period of time in seconds that represents the maximum time before this sensor will provide an updated reading for a measurement. Optional. This can be used to detect the failure of sensors or communications path from the sensor.

4.3. SenML Labels

Table 1 provides an overview of all SenML fields defined by this document with their respective labels and data types.

SenML Labels
Name Label CBOR Label JSON Type XML Type
Base Name bn -2 String string
Base Time bt -3 Number double
Base Unit bu -4 String string
Base Value bv -5 Number double
Base Sum bs -6 Number double
Version bver -1 Number int
Name n 0 String string
Unit u 1 String string
Value v 2 Number double
String Value vs 3 String string
Boolean Value vb 4 Boolean boolean
Data Value vd 8 String (*) string (*)
Value Sum s 5 Number double
Time t 6 Number double
Update Time ut 7 Number double

(*) Data Value is base64 encoded string with URL safe alphabet as defined in Section 5 of [RFC4648], with padding omitted.

For details of the JSON representation see Section 5, for the CBOR Section 6, and for the XML Section 7.

4.4. Extensibility

The SenML format can be extended with further custom fields. Both new base and regular fields are allowed. See Section 12.2 for details. Implementations MUST ignore fields they don’t recognize unless that field has a label name that ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated.

All SenML Records in a Pack MUST have the same version number. This is typically done by adding a Base Version field to only the first Record in the Pack, or by using the default value.

Systems reading one of the objects MUST check for the Version field. If this value is a version number larger than the version which the system understands, the system MUST NOT use this object. This allows the version number to indicate that the object contains structure or semantics that is different from what is defined in the present document beyond just making use of the extension points provided here. New version numbers can only be defined in an RFC that updates this specification or it successors.

4.5. Records and Their Fields

4.5.1. Names

The Name value is concatenated to the Base Name value to yield the name of the sensor. The resulting concatenated name needs to uniquely identify and differentiate the sensor from all others. The concatenated name MUST consist only of characters out of the set “A” to “Z”, “a” to “z”, “0” to “9”, “-“, “:”, “.”, “/”, and “_”; furthermore, it MUST start with a character out of the set “A” to “Z”, “a” to “z”, or “0” to “9”. This restricted character set was chosen so that concatenated names can be used directly within various URI schemes (including segments of an HTTP path with no special encoding; note that a name that contains “/” characters maps into multiple URI path segments) and can be used directly in many databases and analytic systems. [RFC5952] contains advice on encoding an IPv6 address in a name. See Section 14 for privacy considerations that apply to the use of long-term stable unique identifiers.

Although it is RECOMMENDED that concatenated names are represented as URIs [RFC3986] or URNs [RFC8141], the restricted character set specified above puts strict limits on the URI schemes and URN namespaces that can be used. As a result, implementers need to take care in choosing the naming scheme for concatenated names, because such names both need to be unique and need to conform to the restricted character set. One approach is to include a bit string that has guaranteed uniqueness (such as a 1-wire address [AN1796]). Some of the examples within this document use the device URN namespace as specified in [I-D.ietf-core-dev-urn]. UUIDs [RFC4122] are another way to generate a unique name. However, the restricted character set does not allow the use of many URI schemes, such as the ‘tag’ scheme [RFC4151] and the ‘ni’ scheme [RFC6920], in names as such. The use of URIs with characters incompatible with this set, and possible mapping rules between the two, are outside of the scope of the present document.

4.5.2. Units

If the Record has no Unit, the Base Unit is used as the Unit. Having no Unit and no Base Unit is allowed; any information that may be required about units applicable to the value then needs to be provided by the application context.

4.5.3. Time

If either the Base Time or Time value is missing, the missing field is considered to have a value of zero. The Base Time and Time values are added together to get the time of measurement.

Values less than 268,435,456 (2**28) represent time relative to the current time. That is, a time of zero indicates that the sensor does not know the absolute time and the measurement was made roughly “now”. A negative value indicates seconds in the past from roughly “now”. Positive values up to 2**28 indicate seconds in the future from “now”. Positive values can be used, e.g., for actuation use when the desired change should happen in the future but the sender or the receiver does not have accurate time available.

Values greater than or equal to 2**28 represent an absolute time relative to the Unix epoch (1970-01-01T00:00Z in UTC time) and the time is counted same way as the Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) “seconds since the epoch” [TIME_T]. Therefore the smallest absolute time value that can be expressed (2**28) is 1978-07-04 21:24:16 UTC.

Because time values up to 2**28 are used for presenting time relative to “now” and Time and Base Time are added together, care must be taken to ensure that the sum does not inadvertently reach 2**28 (i.e., absolute time) when relative time was intended to be used.

Obviously, “now”-referenced SenML records are only useful within a specific communication context (e.g., based on information on when the SenML pack, or a specific record in a SensML stream, was sent) or together with some other context information that can be used for deriving a meaning of “now”; the expectation for any archival use is that they will be processed into UTC-referenced records before that context would cease to be available. This specification deliberately leaves the accuracy of “now” very vague as it is determined by the overall systems that use SenML. In a system where a sensor without wall-clock time sends a SenML record with a “now”-referenced time over a high speed RS 485 link to an embedded system with accurate time that resolves “now” based on the time of reception, the resulting time uncertainty could be within 1 ms. At the other extreme, a deployment that sends SenML wind speed readings over a LEO satellite link from a mountain valley might have resulting reception time values that are easily a dozen minutes off the actual time of the sensor reading, with the time uncertainty depending on satellite locations and conditions.

4.5.4. Values

If only one of the Base Sum or Sum value is present, the missing field is considered to have a value of zero. The Base Sum and Sum values are added together to get the sum of measurement. If neither the Base Sum or Sum are present, then the measurement does not have a sum value.

If the Base Value or Value is not present, the missing field(s) are considered to have a value of zero. The Base Value and Value are added together to get the value of the measurement.

Representing the statistical characteristics of measurements, such as accuracy, can be very complex. Future specification may add new fields to provide better information about the statistical properties of the measurement.

In summary, the structure of a SenML record is laid out to support a single measurement per record. If multiple data values are measured at the same time (e.g., air pressure and altitude), they are best kept as separate records linked through their Time value; this is even true where one of the data values is more “meta” than others (e.g., describes a condition that influences other measurements at the same time).

4.6. Resolved Records

Sometimes it is useful to be able to refer to a defined normalized format for SenML records. This normalized format tends to get used for big data applications and intermediate forms when converting to other formats. Also, if SenML Records are used outside of a SenML Pack, they need to be resolved first to ensure applicable base values are applied.

A SenML Record is referred to as “resolved” if it does not contain any base values, i.e., labels starting with the character ‘b’, except for Version fields (see below), and has no relative times. To resolve the Records, the applicable base values of the SenML Pack (if any) are applied to the Record. That is, for the base values in the Record or before the Record in the Pack, name and base name are concatenated, base time is added to the time of the Record, if the Record did not contain Unit the Base Unit is applied to the record, etc. In addition the records need to be in chronological order in the Pack. An example of this is shown in Section 5.1.4.

The Version field MUST NOT be present in resolved records if the SenML version defined in this document is used and MUST be present otherwise in all the resolved SenML Records.

Future specification that defines new base fields need to specify how the field is resolved.

4.7. Associating Meta-data

SenML is designed to carry the minimum dynamic information about measurements, and for efficiency reasons does not carry significant static meta-data about the device, object or sensors. Instead, it is assumed that this meta-data is carried out of band. For web resources using SenML Packs, this meta-data can be made available using the CoRE Link Format [RFC6690]. The most obvious use of this link format is to describe that a resource is available in a SenML format in the first place. The relevant media type indicator is included in the Content-Type (ct=) link attribute (which is defined for the Link Format in Section 7.2.1 of [RFC7252]).

4.8. Sensor Streaming Measurement Lists (SensML)

In some usage scenarios of SenML, the implementations store or transmit SenML in a stream-like fashion, where data is collected over time and continuously added to the object. This mode of operation is optional, but systems or protocols using SenML in this fashion MUST specify that they are doing this. SenML defines separate media types to indicate Sensor Streaming Measurement Lists (SensML) for this usage (see Section 12.3.2). In this situation, the SensML stream can be sent and received in a partial fashion, i.e., a measurement entry can be read as soon as the SenML Record is received and does not have to wait for the full SensML Stream to be complete.

If times relative to “now” (see Section 4.5.3) are used in SenML Records of a SensML stream, their interpretation of “now” is based on the time when the specific Record is sent in the stream.

4.9. Configuration and Actuation usage

SenML can also be used for configuring parameters and controlling actuators. When a SenML Pack is sent (e.g., using a HTTP/CoAP POST or PUT method) and the semantics of the target are such that SenML is interpreted as configuration/actuation, SenML Records are interpreted as a request to change the values of given (sub)resources (given as names) to given values at the given time(s). The semantics of the target resource supporting this usage can be described, e.g., using [I-D.ietf-core-interfaces]. Examples of actuation usage are shown in Section 5.1.7.

5. JSON Representation (application/senml+json)

For the SenML fields shown in Table 2, the SenML labels are used as the JSON object member names within JSON objects representing the JSON SenML Records.

JSON SenML Labels
Name label Type
Base Name bn String
Base Time bt Number
Base Unit bu String
Base Value bv Number
Base Sum bs Number
Version bver Number
Name n String
Unit u String
Value v Number
String Value vs String
Boolean Value vb Boolean
Data Value vd String
Value Sum s Number
Time t Number
Update Time ut Number

The root JSON value consists of an array with one JSON object for each SenML Record. All the fields in the above table MAY occur in the records with member values of the type specified in the table.

Only the UTF-8 [RFC3629] form of JSON is allowed. Characters in the String Value are encoded using the escape sequences defined in [RFC8259]. Octets in the Data Value are base64 encoded with URL safe alphabet as defined in Section 5 of [RFC4648], with padding omitted.

Systems receiving measurements MUST be able to process the range of floating point numbers that are representable as an IEEE double precision floating point numbers [IEEE.754.1985]. This allows time values to have better than microsecond precision over the next 100 years. The number of significant digits in any measurement is not relevant, so a reading of 1.1 has exactly the same semantic meaning as 1.10. If the value has an exponent, the “e” MUST be in lower case. In the interest of avoiding unnecessary verbosity and speeding up processing, the mantissa SHOULD be less than 19 characters long and the exponent SHOULD be less than 5 characters long.

5.1. Examples

5.1.1. Single Datapoint

The following shows a temperature reading taken approximately “now” by a 1-wire sensor device that was assigned the unique 1-wire address of 10e2073a01080063:

[
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"Cel","v":23.1}
]

5.1.2. Multiple Datapoints

The following example shows voltage and current now, i.e., at an unspecified time.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063:","n":"voltage","u":"V","v":120.1},
  {"n":"current","u":"A","v":1.2}
]

The next example is similar to the above one, but shows current at Tue Jun 8 18:01:16.001 UTC 2010 and at each second for the previous 5 seconds.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a0108006:","bt":1.276020076001e+09,
   "bu":"A","bver":5,
   "n":"voltage","u":"V","v":120.1},
  {"n":"current","t":-5,"v":1.2},
  {"n":"current","t":-4,"v":1.3},
  {"n":"current","t":-3,"v":1.4},
  {"n":"current","t":-2,"v":1.5},
  {"n":"current","t":-1,"v":1.6},
  {"n":"current","v":1.7}
]

As an example of Sensor Streaming Measurement Lists (SensML), the following stream of measurements may be sent via a long lived HTTP POST from the producer of the stream to its consumer, and each measurement object may be reported at the time it was measured:

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","bt":1.320067464e+09,
   "bu":"%RH","v":21.2},
  {"t":10,"v":21.3},
  {"t":20,"v":21.4},
  {"t":30,"v":21.4},
  {"t":40,"v":21.5},
  {"t":50,"v":21.5},
  {"t":60,"v":21.5},
  {"t":70,"v":21.6},
  {"t":80,"v":21.7},
...

5.1.3. Multiple Measurements

The following example shows humidity measurements from a mobile device with a 1-wire address 10e2073a01080063, starting at Mon Oct 31 13:24:24 UTC 2011. The device also provides position data, which is provided in the same measurement or parameter array as separate entries. Note time is used to for correlating data that belongs together, e.g., a measurement and a parameter associated with it. Finally, the device also reports extra data about its battery status at a separate time.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","bt":1.320067464e+09,
   "bu":"%RH","v":20},
  {"u":"lon","v":24.30621},
  {"u":"lat","v":60.07965},
  {"t":60,"v":20.3},
  {"u":"lon","t":60,"v":24.30622},
  {"u":"lat","t":60,"v":60.07965},
  {"t":120,"v":20.7},
  {"u":"lon","t":120,"v":24.30623},
  {"u":"lat","t":120,"v":60.07966},
  {"u":"%EL","t":150,"v":98},
  {"t":180,"v":21.2},
  {"u":"lon","t":180,"v":24.30628},
  {"u":"lat","t":180,"v":60.07967}
]

The size of this example represented in various forms, as well as that form compressed with gzip is given in the following table.

Size Comparisons
Encoding Size Compressed Size
JSON 573 206
XML 649 235
CBOR 254 196
EXI 161 184

5.1.4. Resolved Data

The following shows the example from the previous section show in resolved format.

[
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"%RH","t":1.320067464e+09,
   "v":20},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lon","t":1.320067464e+09,
   "v":24.30621},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lat","t":1.320067464e+09,
   "v":60.07965},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"%RH","t":1.320067524e+09,
   "v":20.3},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lon","t":1.320067524e+09,
   "v":24.30622},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lat","t":1.320067524e+09,
   "v":60.07965},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"%RH","t":1.320067584e+09,
   "v":20.7},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lon","t":1.320067584e+09,
   "v":24.30623},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lat","t":1.320067584e+09,
   "v":60.07966},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"%EL","t":1.320067614e+09,
   "v":98},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"%RH","t":1.320067644e+09,
   "v":21.2},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lon","t":1.320067644e+09,
   "v":24.30628},
  {"n":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063","u":"lat","t":1.320067644e+09,
   "v":60.07967}
]

5.1.5. Multiple Data Types

The following example shows a sensor that returns different data types.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063:","n":"temp","u":"Cel","v":23.1},
  {"n":"label","vs":"Machine Room"},
  {"n":"open","vb":false},
  {"n":"nfv-reader","vd":"aGkgCg"}
]

5.1.6. Collection of Resources

The following example shows the results from a query to one device that aggregates multiple measurements from other devices. The example assumes that a client has fetched information from a device at 2001:db8::2 by performing a GET operation on http://[2001:db8::2] at Mon Oct 31 16:27:09 UTC 2011, and has gotten two separate values as a result, a temperature and humidity measurement as well as the results from another device at http://[2001:db8::1] that also had a temperature and humidity. Note that the last record would use the Base Name from the 3rd record but the Base Time from the first record.

[
  {"bn":"2001:db8::2/","bt":1.320078429e+09,
   "n":"temperature","u":"Cel","v":25.2},
  {"n":"humidity","u":"%RH","v":30},
  {"bn":"2001:db8::1/","n":"temperature","u":"Cel","v":12.3},
  {"n":"humidity","u":"%RH","v":67}
]

5.1.7. Setting an Actuator

The following example show the SenML that could be used to set the current set point of a typical residential thermostat which has a temperature set point, a switch to turn on and off the heat, and a switch to turn on the fan override.

[
  {"bn":"urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063:"},
  {"n":"temp","u":"Cel","v":23.1},
  {"n":"heat","u":"/","v":1},
  {"n":"fan","u":"/","v":0}
]

In the following example two different lights are turned on. It is assumed that the lights are on a network that can guarantee delivery of the messages to the two lights within 15 ms (e.g. a network using 802.1BA [IEEE802.1ba-2011] and 802.1AS [IEEE802.1as-2011] for time synchronization). The controller has set the time of the lights coming on to 20 ms in the future from the current time. This allows both lights to receive the message, wait till that time, then apply the switch command so that both lights come on at the same time.

[
  {"bt":1.320078429e+09,"bu":"/","n":"2001:db8::3","v":1},
  {"n":"2001:db8::4","v":1}
]

The following shows two lights being turned off using a non deterministic network that has a high odds of delivering a message in less than 100 ms and uses NTP for time synchronization. The current time is 1320078429. The user has just turned off a light switch which is turning off two lights. Both lights are dimmed to 50% brightness immediately to give the user instant feedback that something is changing. However given the network, the lights will probably dim at somewhat different times. Then 100 ms in the future, both lights will go off at the same time. The instant but not synchronized dimming gives the user the sensation of quick responses and the timed off 100 ms in the future gives the perception of both lights going off at the same time.

[
  {"bt":1.320078429e+09,"bu":"/","n":"2001:db8::3","v":0.5},
  {"n":"2001:db8::4","v":0.5},
  {"n":"2001:db8::3","t":0.1,"v":0},
  {"n":"2001:db8::4","t":0.1,"v":0}
]

6. CBOR Representation (application/senml+cbor)

The CBOR [RFC7049] representation is equivalent to the JSON representation, with the following changes:

CBOR representation: integers for map keys
Name Label CBOR Label
Version bver -1
Base Name bn -2
Base Time bt -3
Base Unit bu -4
Base Value bv -5
Base Sum bs -6
Name n 0
Unit u 1
Value v 2
String Value vs 3
Boolean Value vb 4
Value Sum s 5
Time t 6
Update Time ut 7
Data Value vd 8

The following example shows a dump of the CBOR example for the same sensor measurement as in Section 5.1.2.

0000 87 a7 21 78 1b 75 72 6e 3a 64 65 76 3a 6f 77 3a |..!x.urn:dev:ow:|
0010 31 30 65 32 30 37 33 61 30 31 30 38 30 30 36 3a |10e2073a0108006:|
0020 22 fb 41 d3 03 a1 5b 00 10 62 23 61 41 20 05 00 |".A...[..b#aA ..|
0030 67 76 6f 6c 74 61 67 65 01 61 56 02 fb 40 5e 06 |gvoltage.aV..@^.|
0040 66 66 66 66 66 a3 00 67 63 75 72 72 65 6e 74 06 |fffff..gcurrent.|
0050 24 02 fb 3f f3 33 33 33 33 33 33 a3 00 67 63 75 |$..?.333333..gcu|
0060 72 72 65 6e 74 06 23 02 fb 3f f4 cc cc cc cc cc |rrent.#..?......|
0070 cd a3 00 67 63 75 72 72 65 6e 74 06 22 02 fb 3f |...gcurrent."..?|
0080 f6 66 66 66 66 66 66 a3 00 67 63 75 72 72 65 6e |.ffffff..gcurren|
0090 74 06 21 02 f9 3e 00 a3 00 67 63 75 72 72 65 6e |t.!..>...gcurren|
00a0 74 06 20 02 fb 3f f9 99 99 99 99 99 9a a3 00 67 |t. ..?.........g|
00b0 63 75 72 72 65 6e 74 06 00 02 fb 3f fb 33 33 33 |current....?.333|
00c0 33 33 33                                        |333|
00c3

In CBOR diagnostic notation (Section 6 of [RFC7049]), this is:

[{-2: "urn:dev:ow:10e2073a0108006:",
  -3: 1276020076.001, -4: "A", -1: 5, 0: "voltage", 1: "V", 2: 120.1},
 {0: "current", 6: -5, 2: 1.2}, {0: "current", 6: -4, 2: 1.3},
 {0: "current", 6: -3, 2: 1.4}, {0: "current", 6: -2, 2: 1.5},
 {0: "current", 6: -1, 2: 1.6}, {0: "current", 6: 0, 2: 1.7}]

7. XML Representation (application/senml+xml)

A SenML Pack or Stream can also be represented in XML format as defined in this section.

Only the UTF-8 form of XML is allowed. Characters in the String Value are encoded using the escape sequences defined in [RFC8259]. Octets in the Data Value are base64 encoded with URL safe alphabet as defined in Section 5 of [RFC4648].

The following example shows an XML example for the same sensor measurement as in Section 5.1.2.

<sensml xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml">
  <senml bn="urn:dev:ow:10e2073a0108006:" bt="1.276020076001e+09"
  bu="A" bver="5" n="voltage" u="V" v="120.1"></senml>
  <senml n="current" t="-5" v="1.2"></senml>
  <senml n="current" t="-4" v="1.3"></senml>
  <senml n="current" t="-3" v="1.4"></senml>
  <senml n="current" t="-2" v="1.5"></senml>
  <senml n="current" t="-1" v="1.6"></senml>
  <senml n="current" v="1.7"></senml>
</sensml>

The SenML Stream is represented as a sensml element that contains a series of senml elements for each SenML Record. The SenML fields are represented as XML attributes. For each field defined in this document, the following table shows the SenML labels, which are used for the XML attribute name, as well as the according restrictions on the XML attribute values (“type”) as used in the XML senml elements.

XML SenML Labels
Name Label Type
Base Name bn string
Base Time bt double
Base Unit bu string
Base Value bv double
Base Sum bs double
Base Version bver int
Name n string
Unit u string
Value v double
String Value vs string
Data Value vd string
Boolean Value vb boolean
Value Sum s double
Time t double
Update Time ut double

The RelaxNG [RNC] schema for the XML is:

default namespace = "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml"
namespace rng = "http://relaxng.org/ns/structure/1.0"

senml = element senml {
  attribute bn { xsd:string }?,
  attribute bt { xsd:double }?,
  attribute bv { xsd:double }?,
  attribute bs { xsd:double }?,
  attribute bu { xsd:string }?,
  attribute bver { xsd:int }?,

  attribute n { xsd:string }?,
  attribute s { xsd:double }?,
  attribute t { xsd:double }?,
  attribute u { xsd:string }?,
  attribute ut { xsd:double }?,

  attribute v { xsd:double }?,
  attribute vb { xsd:boolean }?,
  attribute vs { xsd:string }?,
  attribute vd { xsd:string }?
}

sensml =
  element sensml {
    senml+
}

start = sensml

8. EXI Representation (application/senml-exi)

For efficient transmission of SenML over e.g. a constrained network, Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) can be used. This encodes the XML Schema [W3C.REC-xmlschema-1-20041028] structure of SenML into binary tags and values rather than ASCII text. An EXI representation of SenML SHOULD be made using the strict schema-mode of EXI. This mode however does not allow tag extensions to the schema, and therefore any extensions will be lost in the encoding. For uses where extensions need to be preserved in EXI, the non-strict schema mode of EXI MAY be used.

The EXI header MUST include an “EXI Options”, as defined in [W3C.REC-exi-20140211], with an schemaId set to the value of “a” indicating the schema provided in this specification. Future revisions to the schema can change the value of the schemaId to allow for backwards compatibility. When the data will be transported over CoAP or HTTP, an EXI Cookie SHOULD NOT be used as it simply makes things larger and is redundant to information provided in the Content-Type header.

The following is the XSD Schema to be used for strict schema guided EXI processing. It is generated from the RelaxNG.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
elementFormDefault="qualified"
targetNamespace="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml"
xmlns:ns1="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml">
  <xs:element name="senml">
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:attribute name="bn" type="xs:string" />
      <xs:attribute name="bt" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="bv" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="bs" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="bu" type="xs:string" />
      <xs:attribute name="bver" type="xs:int" />
      <xs:attribute name="n" type="xs:string" />
      <xs:attribute name="s" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="t" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="u" type="xs:string" />
      <xs:attribute name="ut" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="v" type="xs:double" />
      <xs:attribute name="vb" type="xs:boolean" />
      <xs:attribute name="vs" type="xs:string" />
      <xs:attribute name="vd" type="xs:string" />
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>
  <xs:element name="sensml">
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element maxOccurs="unbounded" ref="ns1:senml" />
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>
</xs:schema>

The following shows a hexdump of the EXI produced from encoding the following XML example. Note this example is the same information as the first example in Section 5.1.2 in JSON format.

<sensml xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml">
  <senml bn="urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063:" n="voltage" u="V"
  v="120.1"></senml>
  <senml n="current" u="A" v="1.2"></senml>
</sensml>

Which compresses with EXI to the following displayed in hexdump:

0000 a0 30 0d 84 80 f3 ab 93 71 d3 23 2b b1 d3 7b b9 |.0......q.#+..{.|
0010 d1 89 83 29 91 81 b9 9b 09 81 89 81 c1 81 81 b1 |...)............|
0020 99 d2 84 bb 37 b6 3a 30 b3 b2 90 1a b1 58 84 c0 |....7.:0.....X..|
0030 33 04 b1 ba b9 39 32 b7 3a 10 1a 09 06 40 38    |3....92.:....@8|
003f

The above example used the bit packed form of EXI but it is also possible to use a byte packed form of EXI which can makes it easier for a simple sensor to produce valid EXI without really implementing EXI. Consider the example of a temperature sensor that produces a value in tenths of degrees Celsius over a range of 0.0 to 55.0. It would produce an XML SenML file such as:

<sensml xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml">
  <senml n="urn:dev:ow:10e2073a01080063" u="Cel" v="23.1"></senml>
</sensml>

The compressed form, using the byte alignment option of EXI, for the above XML is the following:

0000 a0 00 48 80 6c 20 01 06 1d 75 72 6e 3a 64 65 76 |..H.l ...urn:dev|
0010 3a 6f 77 3a 31 30 65 32 30 37 33 61 30 31 30 38 |:ow:10e2073a0108|
0020 30 30 36 33 02 05 43 65 6c 01 00 e7 01 01 00 03 |0063..Cel.......|
0030 01                                              |.|
0031

A small temperature sensor device that only generates this one EXI file does not really need a full EXI implementation. It can simply hard code the output replacing the 1-wire device ID starting at byte 0x14 and going to byte 0x23 with its device ID, and replacing the value “0xe7 0x01” at location 0x31 and 0x32 with the current temperature. The EXI Specification [W3C.REC-exi-20140211] contains the full information on how floating point numbers are represented, but for the purpose of this sensor, the temperature can be converted to an integer in tenths of degrees (231 in this example). EXI stores 7 bits of the integer in each byte with the top bit set to one if there are further bytes. So the first bytes at is set to low 7 bits of the integer temperature in tenths of degrees plus 0x80. In this example 231 & 0x7F + 0x80 = 0xE7. The second byte is set to the integer temperature in tenths of degrees right shifted 7 bits. In this example 231 » 7 = 0x01.

9. Fragment Identification Methods

A SenML Pack typically consists of multiple SenML Records and for some applications it may be useful to be able to refer with a Fragment Identifier to a single record, or a set of records, in a Pack. The fragment identifier is only interpreted by a client and does not impact retrieval of a representation. The SenML Fragment Identification is modeled after CSV Fragment Identifiers [RFC7111].

To select a single SenML Record, the “rec” scheme followed by a single number is used. For the purpose of numbering records, the first record is at position 1. A range of records can be selected by giving the first and the last record number separated by a ‘-‘ character. Instead of the second number, the ‘*’ character can be used to indicate the last SenML Record in the Pack. A set of records can also be selected using a comma separated list of record positions or ranges.

(We use the term “selecting a record” for identifying it as part of the fragment, not in the sense of isolating it from the Pack — the record still needs to be interpreted as part of the Pack, e.g., using the base values defined in earlier records)

9.1. Fragment Identification Examples

The 3rd SenML Record from “coap://example.com/temp” resource can be selected with:

coap://example.com/temp#rec=3

Records from 3rd to 6th can be selected with:

coap://example.com/temp#rec=3-6

Records from 19th to the last can be selected with:

coap://example.com/temp#rec=19-*

The 3rd and 5th record can be selected with:

coap://example.com/temp#rec=3,5

To select the Records from third to fifth, the 10th record, and all from 19th to the last:

coap://example.com/temp#rec=3-5,10,19-*

9.2. Fragment Identification for the XML and EXI Formats

In addition to the SenML Fragment Identifiers described above, with the XML and EXI SenML formats also the syntax defined in the XPointer element() Scheme [XPointerElement] of the XPointer Framework [XPointerFramework] can be used. (This is required by [RFC7303] for media types using the “+xml” structured syntax suffix. SenML allows this for the EXI formats as well for consistency.)

Note that fragment identifiers are available to the client side only; they are not provided in transfer protocols such as CoAP or HTTP. Thus, they cannot be used by the server in deciding which media type to send. Where a server has multiple representations available for a resource identified by a URI, it might send a JSON or CBOR representation when the client was directed to use an XML/EXI fragment identifier with this. Clients can prevent running into this problem by explicitly requesting an XML or EXI media type (e.g., using the CoAP Accept option) when XML/EXI-only fragment identifier syntax is in use in the URI.

10. Usage Considerations

The measurements support sending both the current value of a sensor as well as an integrated sum. For many types of measurements, the sum is more useful than the current value. For historical reasons, this field is called “sum” instead of “integral” which would more accurately describe its function. For example, an electrical meter that measures the energy a given computer uses will typically want to measure the cumulative amount of energy used. This is less prone to error than reporting the power each second and trying to have something on the server side sum together all the power measurements. If the network between the sensor and the meter goes down over some period of time, when it comes back up, the cumulative sum helps reflect what happened while the network was down. A meter like this would typically report a measurement with the unit set to watts, but it would put the sum of energy used in the “s” field of the measurement. It might optionally include the current power in the “v” field.

While the benefit of using the integrated sum is fairly clear for measurements like power and energy, it is less obvious for something like temperature. Reporting the sum of the temperature makes it easy to compute averages even when the individual temperature values are not reported frequently enough to compute accurate averages. Implementers are encouraged to report the cumulative sum as well as the raw value of a given sensor.

Applications that use the cumulative sum values need to understand they are very loosely defined by this specification, and depending on the particular sensor implementation may behave in unexpected ways. Applications should be able to deal with the following issues:

  1. Many sensors will allow the cumulative sums to “wrap” back to zero after the value gets sufficiently large.
  2. Some sensors will reset the cumulative sum back to zero when the device is reset, loses power, or is replaced with a different sensor.
  3. Applications cannot make assumptions about when the device started accumulating values into the sum.

Typically applications can make some assumptions about specific sensors that will allow them to deal with these problems. A common assumption is that for sensors whose measurement values are always positive, the sum should never get smaller; so if the sum does get smaller, the application will know that one of the situations listed above has happened.

Despite the name sum, the sum field is not useful for applications that maintain a running count of the number of times that an event happened or keeping track of a counter such as the total number of bytes sent on an interface. Data like that can be sent directly in the value field.

11. CDDL

As a convenient reference, the JSON and CBOR representations can be described with the common CDDL [I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl] specification in Figure 1 (informative).

SenML-Pack = [1* record]

record = {
  ? bn => tstr,        ; Base Name
  ? bt => numeric,     ; Base Time
  ? bu => tstr,        ; Base Units
  ? bv => numeric,     ; Base Value
  ? bs => numeric,     ; Base Sum
  ? bver => uint,      ; Base Version
  ? n => tstr,        ; Name
  ? u => tstr,        ; Units
  ? s => numeric,     ; Value Sum
  ? t => numeric,     ; Time
  ? ut => numeric,    ; Update Time
  ? ( v => numeric // ; Numeric Value
      vs => tstr //   ; String Value
      vb => bool //   ; Boolean Value
      vd => binary-value ) ; Data Value
  * key-value-pair
}

; now define the generic versions
key-value-pair = ( label => value )

label = non-b-label / b-label
non-b-label = tstr .regexp  "[A-Zac-z0-9][-_:.A-Za-z0-9]*" / uint
b-label = tstr .regexp  "b[-_:.A-Za-z0-9]+" / nint

value = tstr / binary-value / numeric / bool
numeric = number / decfrac

Figure 1: Common CDDL specification for CBOR and JSON SenML

For JSON, we use text labels and base64url-encoded binary data (Figure 2).

bver = "bver" n  = "n"   s  = "s"
bn  = "bn"    u  = "u"   t  = "t"
bt  = "bt"    v  = "v"   ut = "ut"
bu  = "bu"    vs = "vs"  vd = "vd"
bv  = "bv"    vb = "vb"
bs  = "bs"

binary-value = tstr             ; base64url encoded

Figure 2: JSON-specific CDDL specification for SenML

For CBOR, we use integer labels and native binary data (Figure 3).

bver = -1  n  = 0   s  = 5
bn  = -2   u  = 1   t  = 6
bt  = -3   v  = 2   ut = 7
bu  = -4   vs = 3   vd = 8
bv  = -5   vb = 4
bs  = -6

binary-value = bstr

Figure 3: CBOR-specific CDDL specification for SenML

12. IANA Considerations

Note to RFC Editor: Please replace all occurrences of “RFC-AAAA” with the RFC number of this specification.

IANA will create a new registry for “Sensor Measurement Lists (SenML) Parameters”. The sub-registries defined in Section 12.1 and Section 12.2 will be created inside this registry.

12.1. Units Registry

IANA will create a registry of SenML unit symbols. The primary purpose of this registry is to make sure that symbols uniquely map to give type of measurement. Definitions for many of these units can be found in location such as [NIST811] and [BIPM]. Units marked with an asterisk are NOT RECOMMENDED to be produced by new implementations, but are in active use and SHOULD be implemented by consumers that can use the related base units.

Symbol Description Type Reference
m meter float RFC-AAAA
kg kilogram float RFC-AAAA
g gram* float RFC-AAAA
s second float RFC-AAAA
A ampere float RFC-AAAA
K kelvin float RFC-AAAA
cd candela float RFC-AAAA
mol mole float RFC-AAAA
Hz hertz float RFC-AAAA
rad radian float RFC-AAAA
sr steradian float RFC-AAAA
N newton float RFC-AAAA
Pa pascal float RFC-AAAA
J joule float RFC-AAAA
W watt float RFC-AAAA
C coulomb float RFC-AAAA
V volt float RFC-AAAA
F farad float RFC-AAAA
Ohm ohm float RFC-AAAA
S siemens float RFC-AAAA
Wb weber float RFC-AAAA
T tesla float RFC-AAAA
H henry float RFC-AAAA
Cel degrees Celsius float RFC-AAAA
lm lumen float RFC-AAAA
lx lux float RFC-AAAA
Bq becquerel float RFC-AAAA
Gy gray float RFC-AAAA
Sv sievert float RFC-AAAA
kat katal float RFC-AAAA
m2 square meter (area) float RFC-AAAA
m3 cubic meter (volume) float RFC-AAAA
l liter (volume)* float RFC-AAAA
m/s meter per second (velocity) float RFC-AAAA
m/s2 meter per square second (acceleration) float RFC-AAAA
m3/s cubic meter per second (flow rate) float RFC-AAAA
l/s liter per second (flow rate)* float RFC-AAAA
W/m2 watt per square meter (irradiance) float RFC-AAAA
cd/m2 candela per square meter (luminance) float RFC-AAAA
bit bit (information content) float RFC-AAAA
bit/s bit per second (data rate) float RFC-AAAA
lat degrees latitude (note 1) float RFC-AAAA
lon degrees longitude (note 1) float RFC-AAAA
pH pH value (acidity; logarithmic quantity) float RFC-AAAA
dB decibel (logarithmic quantity) float RFC-AAAA
dBW decibel relative to 1 W (power level) float RFC-AAAA
Bspl bel (sound pressure level; logarithmic quantity)* float RFC-AAAA
count 1 (counter value) float RFC-AAAA
/ 1 (Ratio e.g., value of a switch, note 2) float RFC-AAAA
% 1 (Ratio e.g., value of a switch, note 2)* float RFC-AAAA
%RH Percentage (Relative Humidity) float RFC-AAAA
%EL Percentage (remaining battery energy level) float RFC-AAAA
EL seconds (remaining battery energy level) float RFC-AAAA
1/s 1 per second (event rate) float RFC-AAAA
1/min 1 per minute (event rate, “rpm”)* float RFC-AAAA
beat/min 1 per minute (Heart rate in beats per minute)* float RFC-AAAA
beats 1 (Cumulative number of heart beats)* float RFC-AAAA
S/m Siemens per meter (conductivity) float RFC-AAAA

New entries can be added to the registration by Expert Review as defined in [RFC8126]. Experts should exercise their own good judgment but need to consider the following guidelines:

  1. There needs to be a real and compelling use for any new unit to be added.
  2. Each unit should define the semantic information and be chosen carefully. Implementers need to remember that the same word may be used in different real-life contexts. For example, degrees when measuring latitude have no semantic relation to degrees when measuring temperature; thus two different units are needed.
  3. These measurements are produced by computers for consumption by computers. The principle is that conversion has to be easily be done when both reading and writing the media type. The value of a single canonical representation outweighs the convenience of easy human representations or loss of precision in a conversion.
  4. Use of SI prefixes such as “k” before the unit is not recommended. Instead one can represent the value using scientific notation such a 1.2e3. The “kg” unit is exception to this rule since it is an SI base unit; the “g” unit is provided for legacy compatibility.
  5. For a given type of measurement, there will only be one unit type defined. So for length, meters are defined and other lengths such as mile, foot, light year are not allowed. For most cases, the SI unit is preferred.

    (Note that some amount of judgment will be required here, as even SI itself is not entirely consistent in this respect. For instance, for temperature [ISO-80000-5] defines a quantity, item 5-1 (thermodynamic temperature), and a corresponding unit 5-1.a (Kelvin), and then goes ahead to define another quantity right besides that, item 5-2 (“Celsius temperature”), and the corresponding unit 5-2.a (degree Celsius). The latter quantity is defined such that it gives the thermodynamic temperature as a delta from T0 = 275.15 K. ISO 80000-5 is defining both units side by side, and not really expressing a preference. This level of recognition of the alternative unit degree Celsius is the reason why Celsius temperatures exceptionally seem acceptable in the SenML units list alongside Kelvin.)
  6. Symbol names that could be easily confused with existing common units or units combined with prefixes should be avoided. For example, selecting a unit name of “mph” to indicate something that had nothing to do with velocity would be a bad choice, as “mph” is commonly used to mean miles per hour.
  7. The following should not be used because the are common SI prefixes: Y, Z, E, P, T, G, M, k, h, da, d, c, n, u, p, f, a, z, y, Ki, Mi, Gi, Ti, Pi, Ei, Zi, Yi.
  8. The following units should not be used as they are commonly used to represent other measurements Ky, Gal, dyn, etg, P, St, Mx, G, Oe, Gb, sb, Lmb, mph, Ci, R, RAD, REM, gal, bbl, qt, degF, Cal, BTU, HP, pH, B/s, psi, Torr, atm, at, bar, kWh.
  9. The unit names are case sensitive and the correct case needs to be used, but symbols that differ only in case should not be allocated.
  10. A number after a unit typically indicates the previous unit raised to that power, and the / indicates that the units that follow are the reciprocal. A unit should have only one / in the name.
  11. A good list of common units can be found in the Unified Code for Units of Measure [UCUM].

12.2. SenML Label Registry

IANA will create a new registry for SenML labels. The initial content of the registry is:

IANA Registry for SenML Labels, CL = CBOR Label, EI = EXI ID
Name Label CL JSON Type XML Type EI Reference
Base Name bn -2 String string a RFC-AAAA
Base Time bt -3 Number double a RFC-AAAA
Base Unit bu -4 String string a RFC-AAAA
Base Value bv -5 Number double a RFC-AAAA
Base Sum bs -6 Number double a RFC-AAAA
Base Version bver -1 Number int a RFC-AAAA
Name n 0 String string a RFC-AAAA
Unit u 1 String string a RFC-AAAA
Value v 2 Number double a RFC-AAAA
String Value vs 3 String string a RFC-AAAA
Boolean Value vb 4 Boolean boolean a RFC-AAAA
Data Value vd 8 String string a RFC-AAAA
Value Sum s 5 Number double a RFC-AAAA
Time t 6 Number double a RFC-AAAA
Update Time ut 7 Number double a RFC-AAAA

This is the same table as Table 1, with notes removed, and with columns added for the information that is all the same for this initial set of registrations, but will need to be supplied with a different value for new registrations.

All new entries must define the Label Name, Label, and XML Type but the CBOR labels SHOULD be left empty as CBOR will use the string encoding for any new labels. The EI column contains the EXI schemaId value of the first Schema which includes this label or is empty if this label was not intended for use with EXI. The Note field SHOULD contain information about where to find out more information about this label.

The JSON, CBOR, and EXI types are derived from the XML type. All XML numeric types such as double, float, integer and int become a JSON Number. XML boolean and string become a JSON Boolean and String respectively. CBOR represents numeric values with a CBOR type that does not lose any information from the JSON value. EXI uses the XML types.

New entries can be added to the registration by Expert Review as defined in [RFC8126]. Experts should exercise their own good judgment but need to consider that shorter labels should have more strict review. New entries should not be made that counteract the advice at the end of Section 4.5.4.

All new SenML labels that have “base” semantics (see Section 4.1) MUST start with the character ‘b’. Regular labels MUST NOT start with that character. All new SenML labels with Value semantics (see Section 4.2) MUST have “Value” in their (long form) name.

Extensions that add a label that is intended for use with XML need to create a new RelaxNG scheme that includes all the labels in the IANA registry.

Extensions that add a label that is intended for use with EXI need to create a new XSD Schema that includes all the labels in the IANA registry and then allocate a new EXI schemaId value. Moving to the next letter in the alphabet is the suggested way to create the new value for the EXI schemaId. Any labels with previously blank ID values SHOULD be updated in the IANA table to have their ID set to this new schemaId value.

Extensions that are mandatory to understand to correctly process the Pack MUST have a label name that ends with the ‘_’ character.

12.3. Media Type Registrations

The following registrations are done following the procedure specified in [RFC6838] and [RFC7303]. This document registers media types for each serialization format of SenML (JSON, CBOR, XML, and EXI) and also a corresponding set of media types for the streaming use (SensML, see Section 4.8). Clipboard formats are defined for the JSON and XML forms of SenML but not for streams or non-textual formats.

The reason there are both SenML and the streaming SensML formats is that they are not the same data formats and they require separate negotiation to understand if they are supported and which one is being used. The non streaming format is required to have some sort of end of pack syntax which indicates there will be no more records. Many implementations that receive SenML wait for this end of pack marker before processing any of the records. On the other hand, with the streaming formats, it is explicitly not required to wait for this end of pack marker. Many implementations that produce streaming SensML will never send this end of pack marker so implementations that receive streaming SensML can not wait for the end of pack marker before they start processing the records. Given the SenML and streaming SenML are different data formats, and the requirement for separate negotiation, a media type for each one is needed.

Note to RFC Editor - please remove this paragraph. Note that a request for media type review for senml+json was sent to the media-types@iana.org on Sept 21, 2010. A second request for all the types was sent on October 31, 2016. Please change all instances of RFC-AAAA with the RFC number of this document.

12.3.1. senml+json Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: senml+json

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using a subset of the encoding allowed in [RFC8259]. See RFC-AAAA for details. This simplifies implementation of very simple system and does not impose any significant limitations as all this data is meant for machine to machine communications and is not meant to be human readable.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any JSON key value pairs that they do not understand unless the key ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” field can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the JSON object.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/senml+json is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): senml

Windows Clipboard Name: “JSON Sensor Measurement List”

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Macintosh Universal Type Identifier code: org.ietf.senml-json conforms to public.text

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.2. sensml+json Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: sensml+json

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using a subset of the encoding allowed in [RFC8259]. See RFC-AAAA for details. This simplifies implementation of very simple system and does not impose any significant limitations as all this data is meant for machine to machine communications and is not meant to be human readable.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any JSON key value pairs that they do not understand unless the key ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” field can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the JSON object.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/sensml+json is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): sensml

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.3. senml+cbor Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: senml+cbor

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [RFC7049]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any key value pairs that they do not understand unless the key ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” field can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the CBOR object.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/senml+cbor is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): senmlc

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Macintosh Universal Type Identifier code: org.ietf.senml-cbor conforms to public.data

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.4. sensml+cbor Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: sensml+cbor

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [RFC7049]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any key value pairs that they do not understand unless the key ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” field can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the CBOR object.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/sensml+cbor is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): sensmlc

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.5. senml+xml Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: senml+xml

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [W3C.REC-xml-20081126]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any XML tags or attributes that they do not understand unless the attribute name ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” attribute in the senml XML tag can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the XML SenML Pack.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/senml+xml is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): senmlx

Windows Clipboard Name: “XML Sensor Measurement List”

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Macintosh Universal Type Identifier code: org.ietf.senml-xml conforms to public.xml

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.6. sensml+xml Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: sensml+xml

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [W3C.REC-xml-20081126]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any XML tags or attributes that they do not understand unless the attribute name ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” attribute in the senml XML tag can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the XML SenML Pack.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/sensml+xml is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): sensmlx

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.7. senml-exi Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: senml-exi

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [W3C.REC-exi-20140211]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any XML tags or attributes that they do not understand unless the attribute name ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” attribute in the senml XML tag can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the XML SenML Pack. Further information on using schemas to guide the EXI can be found in RFC-AAAA.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/senml-exi is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): senmle

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Macintosh Universal Type Identifier code: org.ietf.senml-exi conforms to public.data

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.3.8. sensml-exi Media Type Registration

Type name: application

Subtype name: sensml-exi

Required parameters: none

Optional parameters: none

Encoding considerations: Must be encoded as using [W3C.REC-exi-20140211]. See RFC-AAAA for details.

Security considerations: See Section 13 of RFC-AAAA.

Interoperability considerations: Applications MUST ignore any XML tags or attributes that they do not understand unless the attribute name ends with the ‘_’ character in which case an error MUST be generated. This allows backwards compatible extensions to this specification. The “bver” attribute in the senml XML tag can be used to ensure the receiver supports a minimal level of functionality needed by the creator of the XML SenML Pack. Further information on using schemas to guide the EXI can be found in RFC-AAAA.

Published specification: RFC-AAAA

Applications that use this media type: The type is used by systems that report e.g., electrical power usage and environmental information such as temperature and humidity. It can be used for a wide range of sensor reporting systems.

Fragment identifier considerations: Fragment identification for application/sensml-exi is supported by using fragment identifiers as specified by RFC-AAAA.

Additional information:

Magic number(s): none

File extension(s): sensmle

Macintosh file type code(s): none

Person & email address to contact for further information: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Intended usage: COMMON

Restrictions on usage: None

Author: Cullen Jennings <fluffy@iii.ca>

Change controller: IESG

12.4. XML Namespace Registration

This document registers the following XML namespaces in the IETF XML registry defined in [RFC3688].

URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:senml

Registrant Contact: The IESG.

XML: N/A, the requested URIs are XML namespaces

12.5. CoAP Content-Format Registration

IANA is requested to assign CoAP Content-Format IDs for the SenML media types in the “CoAP Content-Formats” sub-registry, within the “CoRE Parameters” registry [RFC7252]. IDs for the JSON, CBOR, and EXI Content-Formats are assigned from the “Expert Review” (0-255) range and for the XML Content-Format from the “IETF Review or IESG Approval” range. The assigned IDs are shown in Table 8.

CoAP Content-Format IDs
Media type Encoding ID Reference
application/senml+json - TBD:110 RFC-AAAA
application/sensml+json - TBD:111 RFC-AAAA
application/senml+cbor - TBD:112 RFC-AAAA
application/sensml+cbor - TBD:113 RFC-AAAA
application/senml-exi - TBD:114 RFC-AAAA
application/sensml-exi - TBD:115 RFC-AAAA
application/senml+xml - TBD:310 RFC-AAAA
application/sensml+xml - TBD:311 RFC-AAAA

13. Security Considerations

Sensor data presented with SenML can contain a wide range of information ranging from information that is very public, such as the outside temperature in a given city, to very private information that requires integrity and confidentiality protection, such as patient health information. When SenML is used for configuration or actuation, it can be used to change the state of systems and also impact the physical world, e.g., by turning off a heater or opening a lock.

The SenML formats alone do not provide any security and instead rely on the protocol that carries them to provide security. Applications using SenML need to look at the overall context of how these formats will be used to decide if the security is adequate. In particular for sensitive sensor data and actuation use it is important to ensure that proper security mechanisms are used to provide, e.g., confidentiality, data integrity, and authentication as appropriate for the usage.

The SenML formats defined by this specification do not contain any executable content. However, future extensions could potentially embed application specific executable content in the data.

SenML Records are intended to be interpreted in the context of any applicable base values. If records become separated from the record that establishes the base values, the data will be useless or, worse, wrong. Care needs to be taken in keeping the integrity of a Pack that contains unresolved SenML Records (see Section 4.6).

See also Section 14.

14. Privacy Considerations

Sensor data can range from information with almost no privacy considerations, such as the current temperature in a given city, to highly sensitive medical or location data. This specification provides no security protection for the data but is meant to be used inside another container or transfer protocol such as S​/​MIME [RFC5751] or HTTP with TLS [RFC2818] that can provide integrity, confidentiality, and authentication information about the source of the data.

The name fields need to uniquely identify the sources or destinations of the values in a SenML Pack. However, the use of long-term stable unique identifiers can be problematic for privacy reasons [RFC6973], depending on the application and the potential of these identifiers to be used in correlation with other information. They should be used with care or avoided as for example described for IPv6 addresses in [RFC7721].

15. Acknowledgement

We would like to thank Alexander Pelov, Alexey Melnikov, Andrew McClure, Andrew McGregor, Bjoern Hoehrmann, Christian Amsuess, Christian Groves, Daniel Peintner, Jan-Piet Mens, Jim Schaad, Joe Hildebrand, John Klensin, Karl Palsson, Lennart Duhrsen, Lisa Dusseault, Lyndsay Campbell, Martin Thomson, Michael Koster, Peter Saint-Andre, Roni Even, and Stephen Farrell, for their review comments.

16. References

16.1. Normative References

[BIPM] Bureau International des Poids et Mesures, "The International System of Units (SI)", 8th edition, 2006.
[IEEE.754.1985] Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Standard for Binary Floating-Point Arithmetic", IEEE Standard 754, August 1985.
[NIST811] Thompson, A. and B. Taylor, "Guide for the Use of the International System of Units (SI)", NIST Special Publication 811, 2008.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC3629] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO 10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, DOI 10.17487/RFC3629, November 2003.
[RFC3688] Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry", BCP 81, RFC 3688, DOI 10.17487/RFC3688, January 2004.
[RFC4648] Josefsson, S., "The Base16, Base32, and Base64 Data Encodings", RFC 4648, DOI 10.17487/RFC4648, October 2006.
[RFC6838] Freed, N., Klensin, J. and T. Hansen, "Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13, RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013.
[RFC7049] Bormann, C. and P. Hoffman, "Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR)", RFC 7049, DOI 10.17487/RFC7049, October 2013.
[RFC7252] Shelby, Z., Hartke, K. and C. Bormann, "The Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)", RFC 7252, DOI 10.17487/RFC7252, June 2014.
[RFC7303] Thompson, H. and C. Lilley, "XML Media Types", RFC 7303, DOI 10.17487/RFC7303, July 2014.
[RFC8126] Cotton, M., Leiba, B. and T. Narten, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017.
[RFC8259] Bray, T., "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format", STD 90, RFC 8259, DOI 10.17487/RFC8259, December 2017.
[RNC] ISO/IEC, "Information technology — Document Schema Definition Language (DSDL) — Part 2: Regular-grammar-based validation — RELAX NG", ISO/IEC 19757-2, Annex C: RELAX NG Compact syntax, December 2008.
[TIME_T] The Open Group Base Specifications, "Vol. 1: Base Definitions, Issue 7", Section 4.15 'Seconds Since the Epoch', IEEE Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition, 2013.
[W3C.REC-exi-20140211] Schneider, J., Kamiya, T., Peintner, D. and R. Kyusakov, "Efficient XML Interchange (EXI) Format 1.0 (Second Edition)", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-exi-20140211, February 2014.
[W3C.REC-xml-20081126] Bray, T., Paoli, J., Sperberg-McQueen, M., Maler, E. and F. Yergeau, "Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition)", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xml-20081126, November 2008.
[W3C.REC-xmlschema-1-20041028] Thompson, H., Beech, D., Maloney, M. and N. Mendelsohn, "XML Schema Part 1: Structures Second Edition", World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xmlschema-1-20041028, October 2004.
[XPointerElement] Grosso, P., Maler, E., Marsh, J. and N. Walsh, "XPointer element() Scheme", W3C Recommendation REC-xptr-element, March 2003.
[XPointerFramework] Grosso, P., Maler, E., Marsh, J. and N. Walsh, "XPointer Framework", W3C Recommendation REC-XPointer-Framework, March 2003.

16.2. Informative References

[AN1796] Linke, B., "Overview of 1-Wire Technology and Its Use", June 2008.
[I-D.ietf-cbor-cddl] Birkholz, H., Vigano, C. and C. Bormann, "Concise data definition language (CDDL): a notational convention to express CBOR data structures", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-cbor-cddl-02, February 2018.
[I-D.ietf-core-dev-urn] Arkko, J., Jennings, C. and Z. Shelby, "Uniform Resource Names for Device Identifiers", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-dev-urn-01, March 2018.
[I-D.ietf-core-interfaces] Shelby, Z., Vial, M., Koster, M., Groves, C., Zhu, J. and B. Silverajan, "Reusable Interface Definitions for Constrained RESTful Environments", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-core-interfaces-11, March 2018.
[IEEE802.1as-2011] IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks - Timing and Synchronization for Time-Sensitive Applications in Bridged Local Area Networks", 2011.
[IEEE802.1ba-2011] IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks--Audio Video Bridging (AVB) Systems", 2011.
[ISO-80000-5] "Quantities and units – Part 5: Thermodynamics", ISO 80000-5, Edition 1.0, May 2007.
[RFC2818] Rescorla, E., "HTTP Over TLS", RFC 2818, DOI 10.17487/RFC2818, May 2000.
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R. and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005.
[RFC4122] Leach, P., Mealling, M. and R. Salz, "A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122, DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005.
[RFC4151] Kindberg, T. and S. Hawke, "The 'tag' URI Scheme", RFC 4151, DOI 10.17487/RFC4151, October 2005.
[RFC4944] Montenegro, G., Kushalnagar, N., Hui, J. and D. Culler, "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over IEEE 802.15.4 Networks", RFC 4944, DOI 10.17487/RFC4944, September 2007.
[RFC5751] Ramsdell, B. and S. Turner, "Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (S​/​MIME) Version 3.2 Message Specification", RFC 5751, DOI 10.17487/RFC5751, January 2010.
[RFC5952] Kawamura, S. and M. Kawashima, "A Recommendation for IPv6 Address Text Representation", RFC 5952, DOI 10.17487/RFC5952, August 2010.
[RFC6690] Shelby, Z., "Constrained RESTful Environments (CoRE) Link Format", RFC 6690, DOI 10.17487/RFC6690, August 2012.
[RFC6920] Farrell, S., Kutscher, D., Dannewitz, C., Ohlman, B., Keranen, A. and P. Hallam-Baker, "Naming Things with Hashes", RFC 6920, DOI 10.17487/RFC6920, April 2013.
[RFC6973] Cooper, A., Tschofenig, H., Aboba, B., Peterson, J., Morris, J., Hansen, M. and R. Smith, "Privacy Considerations for Internet Protocols", RFC 6973, DOI 10.17487/RFC6973, July 2013.
[RFC7111] Hausenblas, M., Wilde, E. and J. Tennison, "URI Fragment Identifiers for the text/csv Media Type", RFC 7111, DOI 10.17487/RFC7111, January 2014.
[RFC7230] Fielding, R. and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing", RFC 7230, DOI 10.17487/RFC7230, June 2014.
[RFC7721] Cooper, A., Gont, F. and D. Thaler, "Security and Privacy Considerations for IPv6 Address Generation Mechanisms", RFC 7721, DOI 10.17487/RFC7721, March 2016.
[RFC8141] Saint-Andre, P. and J. Klensin, "Uniform Resource Names (URNs)", RFC 8141, DOI 10.17487/RFC8141, April 2017.
[UCUM] Schadow, G. and C. McDonald, "The Unified Code for Units of Measure (UCUM)", Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University School of Informatics, 2013.

Authors' Addresses

Cullen Jennings Cisco 400 3rd Avenue SW Calgary, AB T2P 4H2 Canada EMail: fluffy@iii.ca
Zach Shelby ARM 150 Rose Orchard San Jose, 95134 USA Phone: +1-408-203-9434 EMail: zach.shelby@arm.com
Jari Arkko Ericsson Jorvas, 02420 Finland EMail: jari.arkko@piuha.net
Ari Keranen Ericsson Jorvas, 02420 Finland EMail: ari.keranen@ericsson.com
Carsten Bormann Universitaet Bremen TZI Postfach 330440 Bremen, D-28359 Germany Phone: +49-421-218-63921 EMail: cabo@tzi.org