SVG 1.1 (Second Edition) – 22 June 2010

Appendix P: Media Type Registration for image/svg+xml

Contents

This appendix is normative.

P.1 Introduction

This appendix registers a new MIME media type, "image/svg+xml" in conformance with BCP 13 and W3CRegMedia.

P.2 Registration of media type image/svg+xml

Type name:

image

Subtype name:

svg+xml

Required parameters:

None.

Optional parameters:

charset

Same as application/xml media type, as specified in [RFC3023] or it's successor.

Encoding considerations:

Same as for application/xml. See [RFC3023], section 3.2.

Security considerations:

As with other XML types and as noted in [RFC3023] section 10, repeated expansion of maliciously constructed XML entities can be used to consume large amounts of memory, which may cause XML processors in constrained environments to fail.

SVG documents may be transmitted in compressed form using gzip compression. For systems which employ MIME-like mechanisms, such as HTTP, this is indicated by the Content-Transfer-Encoding header; for systems which do not, such as direct filesystem access, this is indicated by the filename extension and by the Macintosh File Type Codes. In addition, gzip compressed content is readily recognised by the initial byte sequence as described in [RFC1952] section 2.3.1.

Several SVG elements may cause arbitrary URIs to be referenced. In this case, the security issues of [RFC3986], section 7, should be considered.

In common with HTML, SVG documents may reference external media such as images, audio, video, style sheets, and scripting languages. Scripting languages are executable content. In this case, the security considerations in the Media Type registrations for those formats shall apply.

In addition, because of the extensibility features for SVG and of XML in general, it is possible that "image/svg+xml" may describe content that has security implications beyond those described here. However, if the processor follows only the normative semantics of this specification, this content will be outside the SVG namespace and shall be ignored. Only in the case where the processor recognizes and processes the additional content, or where further processing of that content is dispatched to other processors, would security issues potentially arise. And in that case, they would fall outside the domain of this registration document.

Interoperability considerations:

This specification describes processing semantics that dictate behavior that must be followed when dealing with, among other things, unrecognized elements and attributes, both in the SVG namespace and in other namespaces.

Because SVG is extensible, conformant "image/svg+xml" processors must expect that content received is well-formed XML, but it cannot be guaranteed that the content is valid to a particular DTD or Schema or that the processor will recognize all of the elements and attributes in the document.

SVG has a published Test Suite and associated implementation report showing which implementations passed which tests at the time of the report. This information is periodically updated as new tests are added or as implementations improve.

Published specification:

This media type registration is extracted from Appendix P of the SVG 1.1 specification.

Applications that use this media type:

SVG is used by Web browsers, often in conjunction with HTML; by mobile phones and digital cameras, as a format for interchange of graphical assets in desk top publishing, for industrial process visualization, display signage, and many other applications which require scalable static or interactive graphical capability.

Additional information:
Magic number(s):
File extension(s):
svg, svgz (if gzip-compressed)
Macintosh file type code(s):
"svg " (all lowercase, with a space character as the fourth letter), "svgz" (all lowercase, if gzip-compressed).
Person & email address to contact for further information:

Chris Lilley, Doug Schepers ([email protected]).

Intended usage:

COMMON

Restrictions on usage:

None

Author:

The SVG specification is a work product of the World Wide Web Consortium's SVG Working Group.

Change controller:

The W3C has change control over this specification.

SVG 1.1 (Second Edition) – 22 June 2010