NETMOD Working Group K. Watsen
Internet-Draft Juniper Networks
Intended status: Best Current Practice Q. Wu
Expires: December 29, 2018 Huawei Technologies
A. Farrel
Juniper Networks
B. Claise
Cisco Systems, Inc.
June 27, 2018

Handling Long Lines in Artwork in Drafts
draft-kwatsen-netmod-artwork-folding-06

Abstract

This document introduces a simple and yet time-proven strategy for handling long lines in artwork in drafts using a backslash ('\') character where line-folding has occurred. The strategy works on any text based artwork, producing consistent results regardless the artwork content. Using a per-artwork header, the strategy is both self-documenting and enables automated reconstitution of the original artwork.

Status of This Memo

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This Internet-Draft will expire on December 29, 2018.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Internet drafts many times contain artwork that exceed the 72 character limit specified by RFC 7994 [RFC7994]. The "xml2rfc" utility, in an effort to maintain clean formatting, issues a warning whenever artwork lines exceed 69 characters. According to RFC Editor, there is currently no convention in place for how to handle long lines, other than clearly indicating that some manipulation has occurred.

This document introduces a simple and yet time-proven strategy for handling long lines using a backslash ('\') character where line-folding has occurred. The strategy works on any text based artwork, producing consistent results regardless the artwork content. Using a per-artwork header, the strategy is both self-documenting and enables automated reconstitution of the original artwork.

2. Requirements Language

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.

3. Goals

3.1. Automated folding of long lines in artwork

Automated folding of long lines is needed in order to support draft compilations that entail a) validation of source input files (e.g., YANG, XML, JSON, ABNF, ASN.1) and/or b) dynamic generation of output (e.g., tree diagrams) that are stitched into the final draft to be submitted.

Generally, in order for tooling to be able to process input files, the files must be in their original/natural state, which may include having some long lines. Thus, these source files need to be modified before inclusion in the draft in order to satisfy the line length limits. This modification SHOULD be automated to reduce effort and errors resulting from manual effort.

Similarly, dynamically generated output (e.g., tree diagrams) must also be modified, if necessary, in order for the resulting I-D to satisfy the line length limits. When needed, this effort again SHOULD be automated to reduce effort and errors resulting from manual effort.

3.2. Automated reconstitution of original artwork

Automated reconstitution of the original artwork is needed to support validation of artwork extracted from drafts. Already YANG modules are extracted from drafts and validated as part of the draft-submission process. Additionally, there has been some discussion regarding needing to do the same for examples contained within drafts ([yang-doctors-thread]). Thus, it SHOULD be possible to mechanically reconstitute artwork in order to satisfy the tooling input parsers.

4. Limitations

4.1. Doesn't work well on graphical artwork

While the solution presented in this document will work on any kind of text-based artwork, it is most useful on artwork that represents sourcecode (YANG, XML, JSON, etc.) or, more generally, on artwork that has not been laid out in two dimensions (e.g., diagrams).

Fundamentally, the issue is whether the artwork remains readable once folded. Artwork that is unpredictable is especially susceptible to looking bad when folded; falling into this category are most UML diagrams. Artwork that is somewhat structured (e.g., YANG tree diagrams [RFC8340]) fairs better when folded, as the eyes seem to be able to still see the vertical lines, even when they are interrupted.

It is NOT RECOMMENDED to use the solution presented in this document on graphical artwork.

4.2. Doesn't work as well as format-specific options

The solution presented in this document works generically for all artwork, as it only views artwork as plain text. However, various formats sometimes have built-in mechanisms that can be used to prevent long lines.

For instance, some source formats allow any quoted string to be broken up into substrings separated by a concatenation character ('+'), any of which can by on a different line.

In another example, some languages allow factoring chunks of code into call outs, such as functions. Using such call outs is especially helpful when in some deeply-nested code, as they typically reset the indentation back to the first column.

As such, it is RECOMMENDED that authors do as much as possible within the selected format to avoid long lines.

5. Folded Structure

Artwork that has been folded as specified by this document MUST contain the following structure.

5.1. Header

The header is two lines long.

=== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per BCP XX (RFC XXXX) ===

The first line is an N-character string:

where N is the column on which folding occurred (the minimal value is 53, the length of the string above) padded with roughly equivalent number of equal ('=') characters on both sides of the string to reach the artwork's maximum line length.

The second line is a blank line. This line provides visual separation for the readability.

5.2. Body

The character encoding is the same as described in Section 2 of [RFC7994], except that, per [RFC7991], tab ('\t') characters are prohibited.

The backslash ('\') character may appear anywhere in the artwork, including at the end of any line.

Lines that have a backslash occurring on the artwork's maximum column value (N) followed by the '\n' character are considered "folded".

A really long line may be folded multiple times.

Folded lines are continued on the next line on column 0.

6. Algorithm

6.1. Folding

Determine the desired maximum line length from input. If no value is explicitly specified, the value "69" SHOULD be used.

Ensure that the desired maximum line length is not less than the minimum header, which is 53 characters. If the desired maximum line length is less than this minimum, exit (this artwork can not be folded).

Scan the artwork to see if any line exceeds the desired maximum. If no line exceeds the desired maximum, exit (this artwork does not need to be folded).

Scan the artwork to ensure no existing lines already end with a '\' character on the desired maximum column, as this would lead to an ambiguous result. If such a line is found, exit (this artwork cannot be folded).

Scan the artwork to ensure the horizontal tab character '\t' does not appear. If any horizontal tab character appears, exit (this artwork cannot be folded).

For each line in the artwork, from top-to-bottom, if the line exceeds the desired maximum, then fold the line at the desired maximum column by inserting the string "\\n" (backlash followed by line return) at the column before the maximum column. Note that the column before needs to be used in order to enable the '\' character to be placed on the desired maximum column. The result of this operation is that the character that was on the maximum column is now the first character of the next line.

Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the artwork. Note that this algorithm naturally addresses the case where the remainder of a folded line is still longer than the desired maximum, and hence needs to be folded again, ad infinitum.

6.2. Unfolding

Scan the beginning of the artwork for the header described in Section 5.1. If the header is not present, starting on the first line of the artwork, exit (this artwork does not need to be unfolded).

Calculate the folding-column used from the length of the provided header.

Remove the 2-line header from the artwork.

For each line in the artwork, from top-to-bottom, if the line has a '\' on the folding-column followed by a '\n' character, then remove both the '\' and '\n' characters, which will bring up the next line, and then scan the remainder of the line to see if it again has a '\' after folding-column characters followed by a '\n' character, and so on.

Continue in this manner until reaching the end of the artwork.

7. Example

The following self-documenting example illustrates a folded document.

The source artwork cannot be presented here, as it would again need to be folded. Alas, only the result can be provided.

This artwork was folded on column 69, the default value.

=========== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per BCP XX (RFC XXXX) ===========

# Boundary condition tests using numbers for counting purposes.
#
# Any printable character (including ' ' and '\') can be used
# as a substitute for any number, except for on the 4th row,
# the trailing '9' is not allowed to be a '\' character, as
# that leads to an ambiguous result.
123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678
123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
90
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
901

# One very long line (280 characters)
#
# Any printable character (including ' ' and '\') can be used
# as a substitute for any number, except the 69th character
# is  not allowed to be a '\' character, as that leads to an
# ambiguous result.
12345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678\
90123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456\
78901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234\
56789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012\
34567890

8. Security Considerations

This BCP has no Security Considerations.

9. IANA Considerations

This BCP has no IANA Considerations.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC7991] Hoffman, P., "The "xml2rfc" Version 3 Vocabulary", RFC 7991, DOI 10.17487/RFC7991, December 2016.
[RFC7994] Flanagan, H., "Requirements for Plain-Text RFCs", RFC 7994, DOI 10.17487/RFC7994, December 2016.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017.

10.2. Informative References

[RFC8340] Bjorklund, M. and L. Berger, "YANG Tree Diagrams", BCP 215, RFC 8340, DOI 10.17487/RFC8340, March 2018.
[yang-doctors-thread] "[yang-doctors] automating yang doctor reviews"

Appendix A. POSIX Shell Script

This non-normative appendix section includes a shell script that can both fold and unfold artwork based on the solution presented in this document.

For folding:
  gsed "/.\{$testcol\}/s/\(.\{$foldcol\}\)/\1\\\\\n/g"

For unfolding:
  gsed ":x; /[^\t]\\{$foldcol\\}\\\\\$/N; s/\\\\\n/\t/; tx; s/\t//g"

As a testament for the simplicity of this solution, note that at the core of the script are the following two one-liners:

Disclaimer: this script has the limitation of disallowing the input file from containing any HTAB ('\t') characters. It does not, for instance, make an attempt to convert an HTAB character to a fixed number of SPACE (' ') characters.

=====START SCRIPT=====

=========== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per BCP XX (RFC XXXX) ===========

#!/bin/bash
#
# the only reason why /bin/sh isn't being used 
# is because "echo -n" is broken on the Mac.

print_usage() {
  echo
  echo "Folds the text file, only if needed, at the specified"
  echo "column, according to BCP XX."
  echo
  echo "Usage: $0 [-c <col>] [-r] -i <infile> -o <outfile>"
  echo
  echo "  -c: column to fold on (default: 69)"
  echo "  -r: reverses the operation"
  echo "  -i: the input filename"
  echo "  -o: the output filename"
  echo "  -d: show debug messages"
  echo "  -h: show this message"
  echo
  echo "Exit status code: zero on success, non-zero otherwise."
  echo
}


# global vars, do not edit
debug=0
reversed=0
infile=""
outfile=""
maxcol=69  # default, may be overridden by param
hdr_txt="=== NOTE: '\' line wrapping per BCP XX (RFC XXXX) ==="
equal_chars="==========================================="

fold_it() {
  # since upcomming tests are >= (not >)
  testcol=`expr "$maxcol" + 1`

  # check if file needs folding
  grep ".\{$testcol\}" $infile >> /dev/null 2>&1
  if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
    if [[ $debug -eq 1 ]]; then
      echo "nothing to do"
    fi
    cp $infile $outfile
    return 0
  fi

  foldcol=`expr "$maxcol" - 1` # for the inserted '\' char

  # ensure file doesn't have any '\' char on $maxcol already
  #  - as this would lead to false positives...
  grep "^.\{$foldcol\}\\\\$" $infile >> /dev/null 2>&1
  if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: infile has a '\\\' on colomn $maxcol already."
    echo
    exit 1
  fi

  # calculate '=' character-filled header
  length=${#hdr_txt}
  left_sp=`expr \( "$maxcol" - "$length" \) / 2`
  right_sp=`expr "$maxcol" - "$length" - "$left_sp"`
  header=`printf "%.*s%s%.*s" "$left_sp" "$equal_chars" "$hdr_txt" "\
$right_sp"  "$equal_chars"`

  # generate outfile and return
  echo -ne "$header\n\n" > $outfile
  gsed "/.\{$testcol\}/s/\(.\{$foldcol\}\)/\1\\\\\n/g" < $infile >> \
$outfile
  return 0
}


unfold_it() {
  # check if it looks like a BCP XX header
  line=`head -n 1 $infile | fgrep "$hdr_txt"`
  if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
    if [[ $debug -eq 1 ]]; then
      echo "nothing to do"
    fi
    cp $infile $outfile
    return 0
  fi

  # determine what maxcol value was used
  maxcol=${#line}

  # output all but the first two lines (the header) to wip (work in \
progress) file
  awk "NR>2" $infile > /tmp/wip

  # unfold wip file
  foldcol=`expr "$maxcol" - 1` # for the inserted '\' char
  gsed ":x; /[^\t]\\{$foldcol\\}\\\\\$/N; s/\\\\\n/\t/; tx; s/\t//g"\
 /tmp/wip > $outfile

  # clean up and return
  rm /tmp/wip
  return 0
}


process_input() {
  while [ "$1" != "" ]; do
    if [ "$1" == "-h" -o "$1" == "--help" ]; then
      print_usage
      exit 1
    fi
    if [ "$1" == "-d" ]; then
      debug=1
    fi
    if [ "$1" == "-c" ]; then
      maxcol="$2"
      shift
    fi
    if [ "$1" == "-r" ]; then
      reversed=1
    fi
    if [ "$1" == "-i" ]; then
      infile="$2"
      shift
    fi
    if [ "$1" == "-o" ]; then
      outfile="$2"
      shift
    fi
    shift 
  done

  if [ -z "$infile" ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: infile parameter missing (use -h for help)"
    echo
    exit 1
  fi

  if [ -z "$outfile" ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: outfile parameter missing (use -h for help)"
    echo
    exit 1
  fi

  if [ ! -f "$infile" ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: specified file \"$infile\" is does not exist."
    echo
    exit 1
  fi

  min_supported=${#hdr_txt}
  if [ $maxcol -lt $min_supported ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: the folding column cannot be less than $min_support\
ed"
    echo
    exit 1
  fi

  max_supported=`expr ${#equal_chars} + ${#hdr_txt} + ${#equal_chars\
}`
  if [ $maxcol -gt $max_supported ]; then
    echo
    echo "Error: the folding column cannot be more than $max_support\
ed"
    echo
    exit 1
  fi
  
}


main() {
  if [ "$#" == "0" ]; then
     print_usage
     exit 1
  fi

  process_input $@

  if [[ $reversed -eq 0 ]]; then
    fold_it
    code=$?
  else
    unfold_it
    code=$?
  fi
  exit $code
}

main "$@"

=====END SCRIPT=====

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the following folks for their various contributions (sorted by first name): Martin Bjorklund, Jonathan Hansford, and Rob Wilton.

The authors additionally thank the RFC Editor, for confirming that there is no set convention today for handling long lines in artwork.

Authors' Addresses

Kent Watsen Juniper Networks EMail: kwatsen@juniper.net
Qin Wu Huawei Technologies EMail: bill.wu@huawei.com
Adrian Farrel Juniper Networks EMail: afarrel@juniper.net
Benoît Claise Cisco Systems, Inc. EMail: bclaise@cisco.com