Re: Request: URN support in browsers needed!

Jon P. Knight ([email protected])
Sat, 22 Oct 1994 17:13:18 +0100 (BST)


On Fri, 21 Oct 1994, Daniel W. Connolly wrote:
> Then suppose the resulting document (let's suppose the answer above is
> urn:234lkj23/4lk2j ) contains:
>
> <html>
> <head><isindex><title>An Example</title></head>
> <body>
> <p> See <a href="../overview.html">the overview</a> for
> more info.
>
> What if the user selects that link? Is this an error? Must the process
> of resolving urn:234lkj23/4lk2j yield some "local" address (ala the
> HTTP URI: or Location: header or the HTLM <BASE> tag) for use
> with relative HREF's?

The URN is a Uniform Resource NAME, not a Uniform Resource LOCATOR. It
has to be passed to the URN resolution service to obtain a URL which can
then be used to locate and retreive the document. So the answer is, yes,
the process of resolving <urn:234lkj23/4lk2j> will provide a URL which can
then be used as the document's base for relative HREFs.

Jon

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Jon Knight, Research Student in High Performance Networking and Distributed
Systems in the Department of _Computer_Studies_ at Loughborough University.
* It's not how big your share is, its how much you share that's important *