XEP-0004: Data Forms

This document defines an XMPP protocol extension for data forms and generic data description.


NOTICE: The protocol defined herein is a Final Standard of the XMPP Standards Foundation and may be considered a stable technology for implementation and deployment.


Document Information

Series: XEP
Number: 0004
Publisher: XMPP Standards Foundation
Status: Final
Type: Standards Track
Version: 2.8
Last Updated: 2007-05-21
Approving Body: XMPP Council
Dependencies: XMPP Core
Supersedes: None
Superseded By: None
Short Name: x-data
Schema: <http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/x-data.xsd>
Wiki Page: <http://wiki.jabber.org/index.php/Data Forms (XEP-0004)>

Author Information

Ryan Eatmon

Email: reatmon@jabber.org
JabberID: reatmon@jabber.org

Joe Hildebrand

Email: jhildebrand@jabber.com
JabberID: hildjj@jabber.org

Jeremie Miller

Email: jer@jabber.org
JabberID: jer@jabber.org

Thomas Muldowney

Email: temas@jabber.org
JabberID: temas@jabber.org

Peter Saint-Andre

Email: stpeter@jabber.org
JabberID: stpeter@jabber.org

Legal Notice

This XMPP Extension Protocol is copyright 1999 - 2007 by the XMPP Standards Foundation (XSF) and is in full conformance with the XSF's Intellectual Property Rights Policy <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/ipr-policy.shtml>. This material may be distributed only subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Creative Commons Attribution License (<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/>).

Discussion Venue

The preferred venue for discussion of this document is the Standards discussion list: <http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/standards>.

Relation to XMPP

The Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) is defined in the XMPP Core (RFC 3920) and XMPP IM (RFC 3921) specifications contributed by the XMPP Standards Foundation to the Internet Standards Process, which is managed by the Internet Engineering Task Force in accordance with RFC 2026. Any protocol defined in this document has been developed outside the Internet Standards Process and is to be understood as an extension to XMPP rather than as an evolution, development, or modification of XMPP itself.

Conformance Terms

The following keywords as used in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119: "MUST", "SHALL", "REQUIRED"; "MUST NOT", "SHALL NOT"; "SHOULD", "RECOMMENDED"; "SHOULD NOT", "NOT RECOMMENDED"; "MAY", "OPTIONAL".


Table of Contents


1. Introduction
2. Requirements
3. Protocol
    3.1. Form Types
    3.2. The Field Element
    3.3. Field Types
    3.4. Multiple Items in Form Results
4. Data Validation
5. Examples
    5.1. Configuration
    5.2. Search
6. Service Discovery
7. Security Considerations
8. IANA Considerations
9. XMPP Registrar Considerations
    9.1. Protocol Namespaces
    9.2. Parameter Values
10. XML Schema
11. Changes in Final State
12. Changes in Draft State
Notes
Revision History


1. Introduction

Several existing Jabber/XMPP protocols involve the exchange of structured data between users and applications for common tasks such as registration (In-Band Registration [1]) and searching (Jabber Search [2]). Unfortunately, these early protocols were "hard coded" and thus place significant restrictions on the range of information that can be exchanged. Furthermore, other protocols (e.g., Multi-User Chat [3]) may need to exchange data for purposes such as configuration, but the configuration options may differ depending on the specific implementation or deployment. Finally, developers may want to extend other protocols (e.g., Service Discovery [4]) in a flexible manner in order to provide information that is not defined in the base protocol. In all of these cases, it would be helpful to use a generic data description format that can be used for dynamic forms generation and data "modelling" in a variety of circumstances.

An example may be helpful. Let us imagine that when a user creates a multi-user chatroom on a text conferencing service, the service allows the user to configure the room in various ways. While most implementations will probably provide a somewhat common set of configurable features (discussion logging, maximum number of room occupants, etc.), there will be some divergence: perhaps one implementation will enable archiving of the room log in a variety of file types (XML, HTML, PDF, etc.) and for a variety of time periods (hourly, daily, weekly, etc.), whereas another implementation may present a boolean on/off choice of logging in only one format (e.g., daily logs saved in HTML). Obviously, the first implementation will have more configuration options than the second implementation. Rather than "hard-coding" every option via distinct XML elements (e.g., <room_logging_period/>), a better design would involve a more flexible format.

The 'jabber:x:data' protocol described herein defines such a flexible format for use by Jabber/XMPP entities, steering a middle course between the simplicity of "name-value" pairs and the complexity of XForms 1.0 [5] (on which development had just begun when this protocol was designed). In many ways, 'jabber:x:data' is similar to the Forms Module of XHTML 1.0 [6]; however, it provides several Jabber-specific data types, enables applications to require data fields, integrates more naturally into the "workflow" semantics of IQ stanzas, and can be included as an extension of existing Jabber/XMPP protocols in ways that the XHTML Forms Module could not when this protocol was developed (especially because Modularization of XHTML [7] did not exist at that time).

2. Requirements

This document addresses the following requirements:

  1. Data Gathering -- the protocol should enable a form-processing entity (commonly a server, service, or bot) to gather data from a form-submitting entity (commonly a client controlled by a human user); this should be done via distinct data fields (e.g., items in a questionnaire or configuration form), each of which can be a different data "type" and enable free-form input or a choice between multiple options (as is familiar from HTML forms).
  2. Data Reporting -- the protocol should enable a form-processing entity to report data (e.g., search results) to a form-submitting entity, again via distinct data fields.
  3. Portability -- the protocol should as much as possible define generic data formats and basic datatypes only; hints may be provided regarding the user interface, but they should be hints only and not hard-and-fast requirements.
  4. Simplicity -- the protocol should be simple for clients to implement, and most of the complexity (e.g., data validation and processing) should be the responsibility of servers and components rather than clients.
  5. Flexibility -- the protocol should be flexible and extensible rather than "hard-coded".
  6. Compatibility -- the protocol should define an extension to existing Jabber/XMPP protocols and not break existing implementations unless absolutely necessary.

3. Protocol

The base syntax for the 'jabber:x:data' namespace is as follows (a formal description can be found in the XML Schema section below):

<x xmlns='jabber:x:data'
   type='{form-type}'>
  <title/>
  <instructions/>
  <field var='field-name'
         type='{field-type}'
         label='description'>
    <desc/>
    <required/>
    <value>field-value</value>
    <option label='option-label'><value>option-value</value></option>
    <option label='option-label'><value>option-value</value></option>
  </field>
</x>
  

The <x/> element qualified by the 'jabber:x:data' namespace SHOULD be included either directly as a first-level child of a <message/> stanza or as a second-level child of an <iq/> stanza (where the first-level child is an element qualified by a "wrapper" namespace); see also the restrictions enumerated below.

The OPTIONAL <title/> and <instructions/> elements enable the form-processing entity to label the form as a whole and specify natural-language instructions to be followed by the form-submitting entity. The XML character data for these elements SHOULD NOT contain newlines (the \n and \r characters), and any handling of newlines (e.g., presentation in a user interface) is unspecified herein; however, multiple instances of the <instructions/> element MAY be included.

3.1 Form Types

The data gathered or provided in a 'jabber:x:data' form can be situated in a number of different contexts. Examples include an empty form that needs to be filled out, a completed form, the results of a submission, a search result, or simply a set of data that is encapsulated using the 'jabber:x:data' namespace. The full context for the data is provided by three things:

  1. the "wrapper" protocol (i.e., the namespace whose root element is the direct child of the <iq/> stanza and the parent of the <x/> element qualified by the 'jabber:x:data' namespace)
  2. the place of the form within a transaction (e.g., an IQ "set" or "result") or structured conversation (e.g., a message <thread/>)
  3. the 'type' attribute on the form's root <x/> element

The first two pieces of contextual information are provided by other protocols, whereas the form types are described in the following table.

Table 1: Form Types

Type Description
form The form-processing entity is asking the form-submitting entity to complete a form.
submit The form-submitting entity is submitting data to the form-processing entity.
cancel The form-submitting entity has cancelled submission of data to the form-processing entity.
result The form-processing entity is returning data (e.g., search results) to the form-submitting entity, or the data is a generic data set.

In order to maintain the context of the data as captured in the form type, the following rules MUST be observed:

3.2 The Field Element

A data form of type "form", "submit", or "result" SHOULD contain at least one <field/> element; a data form of type "cancel" SHOULD NOT contain any <field/> elements.

The <field/> element MAY contain any of the following child elements:

If the <field/> element type is anything other than "fixed" (see below), it MUST possess a 'var' attribute that uniquely identifies the field in the context of the form (if it is "fixed", it MAY possess a 'var' attribute). The <field/> element MAY possess a 'label' attribute that defines a human-readable name for the field. For data forms of type "form", each <field/> element SHOULD possess a 'type' attribute that defines the data "type" of the field data (if no 'type' is specified, the default is "text-single"); fields provided in the context of other forms types MAY possess a 'type' attribute as well.

If fields are presented in a user interface (e.g., as items in a questionnaire or form result), the order of the field elements in the XML SHOULD determine the order of items presented to the user.

3.3 Field Types

The following field types represent data "types" that are commonly exchanged between Jabber/XMPP entities. These field types are not intended to be as comprehensive as the datatypes defined in, for example, XML Schema Part 2 [9], nor do they define user interface elements.

Table 2: Field Types

Type Description
boolean The field enables an entity to gather or provide an either-or choice between two options. The default value is "false". [10]
fixed The field is intended for data description (e.g., human-readable text such as "section" headers) rather than data gathering or provision. The <value/> child SHOULD NOT contain newlines (the \n and \r characters); instead an application SHOULD generate multiple fixed fields, each with one <value/> child.
hidden The field is not shown to the form-submitting entity, but instead is returned with the form.
jid-multi * The field enables an entity to gather or provide multiple Jabber IDs.
jid-single * The field enables an entity to gather or provide a single Jabber ID.
list-multi The field enables an entity to gather or provide one or more options from among many.
list-single The field enables an entity to gather or provide one option from among many.
text-multi ** The field enables an entity to gather or provide multiple lines of text.
text-private The field enables an entity to gather or provide a single line or word of text, which shall be obscured in an interface (e.g., *****).
text-single The field enables an entity to gather or provide a single line or word of text, which may be shown in an interface. This field type is the default and MUST be assumed if a form-submitting entity receives a field type it does not understand.

* Note: Data provided for fields of type "jid-single" or "jid-multi" MUST contain one or more valid Jabber IDs, where validity is determined by the addressing rules defined in XMPP Core (see the Data Validation section below).

** Note: Data provided for fields of type "text-multi" SHOULD NOT contain any newlines (the \n and \r characters). Instead, the application SHOULD split the data into multiple strings (based on the newlines inserted by the platform), then specify each string as the XML character data of a distinct <value/> element. Similarly, an application that receives multiple <value/> elements for a field of type "text-multi" SHOULD merge the XML character data of the value elements into one text block for presentation to a user, with each string separated by a newline character as appropriate for that platform.

3.4 Multiple Items in Form Results

In some contexts (e.g., the results of a search request), it may be necessary to communicate multiple items. Therefore, a data form of type "result" MAY contain two child elements not described in the basic syntax above: one <reported/> element followed by zero or more <item/> elements. The syntax is as follows:

<x xmlns='jabber:x:data'
   type='result'>
  <reported>
    <field var='field-name' label='description' type='{field-type}'/>
  </reported>
  <item>
    <field var='field-name'>
      <value>field-value</value>
    </field>
  </item>
  <item>
    <field var='field-name'>
      <value>field-value</value>
    </field>
  </item>
  .
  .
  .
</x>
    

Each of these elements MUST contain one or more <field/> children. The <reported/> element defines the data format for the result items by specifying the fields to be expected for each item; for this reason, the <field/> elements SHOULD possess a 'type' attribute and 'label' attribute in addition to the 'var' attribute, and SHOULD NOT contain a <value/> element. Each <item/> element defines one item in the result set, and MUST contain each field specified in the <reported/> element (although the XML character data of the <value/> element MAY be null).

4. Data Validation

Data validation is the responsibility of the form-processing entity (commonly a server, service, or bot) rather than the form-submitting entity (commonly a client controlled by a human user). This helps to meet the requirement for keeping client implementations simple. If the form-processing entity determines that the data provided is not valid, it SHOULD return a "Not Acceptable" error, optionally providing a textual explanation in the XMPP <text/> element or an application-specific child element that identifies the problem (see Error Condition Mappings [11] for information about mappings and formats).

5. Examples

For the sake of the following examples, let us suppose that there exists a bot hosting service on the Jabber network, located at <botster.shakespeare.lit>. This service enables registered users to create and configure new bots, find and interact with existing bots, and so on. We will assume that these interactions occur using the Ad-Hoc Commands [12] protocol, which is used as a "wrapper" protocol for data forms qualified by the 'jabber:x:data' namespace. The examples in the sections that follow show most of the features of the data forms protocol described above.

Note: Additional examples can be found in the specifications for various using protocols, such as XEP-0045: Multi-User Chat and XEP-0055: Jabber Search.

5.1 Configuration

The first step is for a user to create a new bot on the hosting service. We will assume that this is done by sending a "create" command to the desired bot:

Example 1. User Requests Bot Creation

<iq from='romeo@montague.net/home'
    to='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    type='get'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='create1'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands' 
           node='create'
           action='execute'/>
</iq>
    

The hosting service then returns a data form to the user:

Example 2. Service Returns Bot Creation Form

<iq from='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    to='romeo@montague.net/home'
    type='result'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='create1'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands'
           node='create'
           sessionid='create:20040408T0128Z'
           status='executing'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='form'>
      <title>Bot Configuration</title>
      <instructions>Fill out this form to configure your new bot!</instructions>
      <field type='hidden'
             var='FORM_TYPE'>
        <value>jabber:bot</value>
      </field>
      <field type='fixed'><value>Section 1: Bot Info</value></field>
      <field type='text-single'
             label='The name of your bot'
             var='botname'/>
      <field type='text-multi'
             label='Helpful description of your bot'
             var='description'/>
      <field type='boolean'
             label='Public bot?'
             var='public'>
        <required/>
      </field>
      <field type='text-private'
             label='Password for special access'
             var='password'/>
      <field type='fixed'><value>Section 2: Features</value></field>
      <field type='list-multi'
             label='What features will the bot support?'
             var='features'>
        <option label='Contests'><value>contests</value></option>
        <option label='News'><value>news</value></option>
        <option label='Polls'><value>polls</value></option>
        <option label='Reminders'><value>reminders</value></option>
        <option label='Search'><value>search</value></option>
        <value>news</value>
        <value>search</value>
      </field>
      <field type='fixed'><value>Section 3: Subscriber List</value></field>
      <field type='list-single'
             label='Maximum number of subscribers'
             var='maxsubs'>
        <value>20</value>
        <option label='10'><value>10</value></option>
        <option label='20'><value>20</value></option>
        <option label='30'><value>30</value></option>
        <option label='50'><value>50</value></option>
        <option label='100'><value>100</value></option>
        <option label='None'><value>none</value></option>
      </field>
      <field type='fixed'><value>Section 4: Invitations</value></field>
      <field type='jid-multi'
             label='People to invite'
             var='invitelist'>
        <desc>Tell all your friends about your new bot!</desc>
      </field>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

The user then submits the configuration form:

Example 3. User Submits Bot Creation Form

<iq from='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    to='romeo@montague.net/home'
    type='set'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='create2'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands'
           node='create'
           sessionid='create:20040408T0128Z'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='submit'>
      <field type='hidden' var='FORM_TYPE'>
        <value>jabber:bot</value>
      </field>
      <field type='text-single' var='botname'>
        <value>The Jabber Google Bot</value>
      </field>
      <field type='text-multi' var='description'>
        <value>This bot enables you to send requests to</value>
        <value>Google and receive the search results right</value>
        <value>in your Jabber client. It&apos; really cool!</value>
        <value>It even supports Google News!</value>
      </field>
      <field type='boolean' var='public'>
        <value>0</value>
      </field>
      <field type='text-private' var='password'>
        <value>v3r0na</value>
      </field>
      <field type='list-multi' var='features'>
        <value>news</value>
        <value>search</value>
      </field>
      <field type='list-single' var='maxsubs'>
        <value>50</value>
      </field>
      <field type='jid-multi' var='invitelist'>
        <value>juliet@capulet.com</value>
        <value>benvolio@montague.net</value>
      </field>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

The service then returns the results to the user:

Example 4. Service Returns Bot Creation Result

<iq from='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    to='romeo@montague.net/home'
    type='result'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='create2'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands'
           node='create'
           sessionid='create:20040408T0128Z'
           status='completed'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='result'>
      <field type='hidden' var='FORM_TYPE'>
        <value>jabber:bot</value>
      </field>
      <field type='text-single' var='botname'>
        <value>The Jabber Google Bot</value>
      </field>
      <field type='boolean' var='public'>
        <value>0</value>
      </field>
      <field type='text-private' var='password'>
        <value>v3r0na</value>
      </field>
      <field type='list-multi' var='features'>
        <value>news</value>
        <value>search</value>
      </field>
      <field type='list-single' var='maxsubs'>
        <value>50</value>
      </field>
      <field type='jid-multi' var='invitelist'>
        <value>juliet@capulet.com</value>
        <value>benvolio@montague.net</value>
      </field>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

5.2 Search

Now that the user has created this search bot, let us suppose that one of the friends he has invited decides to try it out by sending a search request:

Example 5. User Requests Search Form

<iq from='juliet@capulet.com/chamber'
    to='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    type='get'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='search1'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands' 
           node='search'
           action='execute'/>
</iq>
    

Example 6. Service Returns Search Form

<iq from='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    to='juliet@capulet.com/chamber'
    type='result'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='search1'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands' 
           node='search'
           status='executing'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='form'>
      <title>Joogle Search</title>
      <instructions>Fill out this form to search for information!</instructions>
      <field type='text-single'
             var='search_request'>
        <required/>
      </field>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

Example 7. User Submits Search Form

<iq from='juliet@capulet.com/chamber'
    to='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    type='get'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='search2'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands' 
           node='search'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='submit'>
      <field type='text-single' var='search_request'>
        <value>verona</value>
      </field>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

Example 8. Service Returns Search Results

<iq from='joogle@botster.shakespeare.lit'
    to='juliet@capulet.com/chamber'
    type='result'
    xml:lang='en'
    id='search2'>
  <command xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/commands' 
           node='search'
           status='completed'>
    <x xmlns='jabber:x:data' type='result'>
      <title>Joogle Search: verona</title>
      <reported>
        <field var='name'/>
        <field var='url'/>
      </reported>
      <item>
        <field var='name'>
          <value>Comune di Verona - Benvenuti nel sito ufficiale</value>
        </field>
        <field var='url'>
          <value>http://www.comune.verona.it/</value>
        </field>
      </item>
      <item>
        <field var='name'>
          <value>benvenuto!</value>
        </field>
        <field var='url'>
          <value>http://www.hellasverona.it/</value>
        </field>
      </item>
      <item>
        <field var='name'>
          <value>Universita degli Studi di Verona - Home Page</value>
        </field>
        <field var='url'>
          <value>http://www.univr.it/</value>
        </field>
      </item>
      <item>
        <field var='name'>
          <value>Aeroporti del Garda</value>
        </field>
        <field var='url'>
          <value>http://www.aeroportoverona.it/</value>
        </field>
      </item>
      <item>
        <field var='name'>
          <value>Veronafiere - fiera di Verona</value>
        </field>
        <field var='url'>
          <value>http://www.veronafiere.it/</value>
        </field>
      </item>
    </x>
  </command>
</iq>
    

6. Service Discovery

If an entity supports inclusion of the <x/> element qualified by the 'jabber:x:data' namespace as a direct child of the <message/> stanza type, it MUST report support by including a service discovery feature of "jabber:x:data" (see Protocol Namespaces regarding issuance of one or more permanent namespaces) in response to a Service Discovery information request:

Example 9. Service Discovery information request

<iq type='get'
    from='romeo@montague.net/orchard'
    to='juliet@capulet.com/balcony'
    id='disco1'>
  <query xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/disco#info'/>
</iq>
  

Example 10. Service Discovery information response

<iq type='result'
    from='juliet@capulet.com/balcony'
    to='romeo@montague.net/orchard'
    id='disco1'>
  <query xmlns='http://jabber.org/protocol/disco#info'>
    ...
    <feature var='jabber:x:data'/>
    ...
  </query>
</iq>
  

If an entity supports data forms indirectly through inclusion of data forms in a wrapper namespace (rather than directly within a <message/> stanza), it MUST NOT advertise support for the 'jabber:x:data' namespace, since support is implicit in support for the wrapper protocol.

7. Security Considerations

There are no security concerns related to this specification above and beyond those described in the relevant section of XMPP Core.

8. IANA Considerations

This document requires no interaction with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) [13].

9. XMPP Registrar Considerations

9.1 Protocol Namespaces

The XMPP Registrar [14] includes the 'jabber:x:data' namespace in its registry of protocol namespaces.

9.2 Parameter Values

The XMPP Registrar maintains a registry of parameter values related to the 'jabber:x:data' namespace, specifically as defined in Field Standardization for Data Forms [15]; the registry is located at <http://www.xmpp.org/registrar/formtypes.html>.

10. XML Schema

This schema is descriptive, not normative.

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>

<xs:schema
    xmlns:xs='http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema'
    targetNamespace='jabber:x:data'
    xmlns='jabber:x:data'
    elementFormDefault='qualified'>

  <xs:annotation>
    <xs:documentation>
      The protocol documented by this schema is defined in
      XEP-0004: http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0004.html
    </xs:documentation>
  </xs:annotation>

  <xs:element name='x'>
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name='instructions' 
                    minOccurs='0' 
                    maxOccurs='unbounded' 
                    type='xs:string'/>
        <xs:element name='title' minOccurs='0' type='xs:string'/>
        <xs:element ref='field' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
        <xs:element ref='reported' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='1'/>
        <xs:element ref='item' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name='type' use='required'>
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>
            <xs:enumeration value='cancel'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='form'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='result'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='submit'/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>

  <xs:element name='field'>
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element name='desc' minOccurs='0' type='xs:string'/>
        <xs:element name='required' minOccurs='0' type='empty'/>
        <xs:element ref='value' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
        <xs:element ref='option' minOccurs='0' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name='label' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
      <xs:attribute name='type' use='optional' default='text-single'>
        <xs:simpleType>
          <xs:restriction base='xs:NCName'>
            <xs:enumeration value='boolean'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='fixed'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='hidden'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='jid-multi'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='jid-single'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='list-multi'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='list-single'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='text-multi'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='text-private'/>
            <xs:enumeration value='text-single'/>
          </xs:restriction>
        </xs:simpleType>
      </xs:attribute>
      <xs:attribute name='var' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>

  <xs:element name='option'>
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element ref='value'/>
      </xs:sequence>
      <xs:attribute name='label' type='xs:string' use='optional'/>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>

  <xs:element name='value' type='xs:string'/>

  <xs:element name='reported'>
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element ref='field' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
    <xs:annotation>
      <xs:documentation>
        When contained in a "reported" element, the "field" element
        SHOULD NOT contain a "value" child.
      </xs:documentation>
    </xs:annotation>
  </xs:element>

  <xs:element name='item'>
    <xs:complexType>
      <xs:sequence>
        <xs:element ref='field' maxOccurs='unbounded'/>
      </xs:sequence>
    </xs:complexType>
  </xs:element>

  <xs:simpleType name='empty'>
    <xs:restriction base='xs:string'>
      <xs:enumeration value=''/>
    </xs:restriction>
  </xs:simpleType>

</xs:schema>
  

11. Changes in Final State

The following substantive protocol changes have been made while this specification has been in the Final state:

12. Changes in Draft State

The following substantive protocol changes were made while this specification was in the Draft state:


Notes

1. XEP-0077: In-Band Registration <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0077.html>.

2. XEP-0055: Jabber Search <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0055.html>.

3. XEP-0045: Multi-User Chat <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0045.html>.

4. XEP-0030: Service Discovery <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0030.html>.

5. XForms 1.0 <http://www.w3.org/TR/xforms>.

6. XHTML 1.0 <http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1>.

7. Modularization of XHTML <http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-xhtml-modularization-20040218/>.

8. RFC 3920: Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP): Core <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3920>.

9. XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes <http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/>.

10. In accordance with Section 3.2.2.1 of XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes, the allowable lexical representations for the xs:boolean datatype are the strings "0" and "false" for the concept 'false' and the strings "1" and "true" for the concept 'true'; implementations MUST support both styles of lexical representation.

11. XEP-0086: Error Condition Mappings <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0086.html>.

12. XEP-0050: Ad-Hoc Commands <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0050.html>.

13. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is the central coordinator for the assignment of unique parameter values for Internet protocols, such as port numbers and URI schemes. For further information, see <http://www.iana.org/>.

14. The XMPP Registrar maintains a list of reserved protocol namespaces as well as registries of parameters used in the context of XMPP extension protocols approved by the XMPP Standards Foundation. For further information, see <http://www.xmpp.org/registrar/>.

15. XEP-0068: Field Data Standardization for Data Forms <http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0068.html>.


Revision History

Version 2.8 (2007-05-21)

Removed mentions of presence stanzas; added section on discovering support; added section on substantive changes in Final state.

(psa)

Version 2.7 (2006-01-25)

Incorporated errata: (1) clarified rules regarding inclusion of option and value elements depending on field type; (2) clarified handling of default values; (3) added value elements to list-multi field in Example 2; (4) harmonized spelling of form-processing entity and form-submitting entity.

(psa)

Version 2.6 (2004-10-13)

Incorporated errata: (1) corrected syntax of <reported/> element (<field/> element should not contain a <value/> child); (2) corrected Example 8.

(psa)

Version 2.5 (2004-05-07)

Clarified terminology regarding form-processing entities and form-submitting entities; corrected several small errors in the schema.

(psa)

Version 2.4 (2004-05-04)

Per discussion by the authors and Jabber Council, specified that the 'var' attribute is required for all field types except "fixed", for which the 'var' attribute is optional.

(psa)

Version 2.3 (2004-03-31)

Formalization and further editorial revisions.

(psa)

Version 2.2 (2004-01-22)

Editorial revisions.

(psa)

Version 2.1 (2003-02-16)

Added schema.

(psa)

Version 2.0 (2002-12-09)

Per a vote of the Jabber Council, changed status to Final.

(psa)

Version 1.1 (2002-10-15)

Call for Experience changes (see Changes in Draft State section). This version voted to Final on 2002-12-09.

(rwe)

Version 1.0 (2002-04-24)

Per a vote of the Jabber Council, changed status to Draft.

(psa)

Version 0.6 (2002-03-15)

Protocol tweaks based on Standards list discussion.

(rwe)

Version 0.5 (2002-02-06)

Protocol tweaks based on implementation and discussion.

(rwe)

Version 0.4 (2001-11-16)

Major redesign to attempt to clarify the scope of this document and limit what it is trying to solve.

(rwe)

Version 0.3 (2001-07-23)

Protocol update

(rwe)

Version 0.2 (2001-06-29)

Protocol update and DocBook version

(rwe)

Version 0.1 (2001-01-25)

Initial release

(rwe)

END