This document is a Pre-Draft Deliverable of the ToIP Foundation Technical Stack Working Group.
The current version is Working Draft 01.
This is a specification for an extension to the W3C Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) 1.0 specification to support the resource
parameter as listed in the W3C DID Specification Registries 1.0. It specifies the syntax and normative behavior for usage of the parameter and the requirements for DID methods that support the parameter.
In this document, the key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL", when appearing in ALL CAPITALS, are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
All other terms are linked to their definitions in the W3C Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) 1.0 specification.
The purpose of this specification is to specify how a DID URL may include a parameter that instructs a DID resolver to request the associated verifiable data registry (VDR) to directly return a digital resource identified by a decentralized identifier (DID).
The process of resolving a DID and dereferencing a DID URL (meaning a DID that includes an additional path, query, and/or fragment component as defined by the ABNF in section 3.2 of the DID 1.0 specification) is shown in figure 1 from section 7.2 of the spec:
Figure 1: The relationship of DIDs, DID URLs, DID documents, and Resources
The normal pattern for processing a DID URL consists of two steps:
The first of these two steps—the DID resolution step—is shown in figure 2.
Figure 2: The normal DID resolution process
For a DID URL, the return of the DID document to the resolver commences the second step of dereferencing (the processing of which depends on the DID URL and the DID method).
However an exception to this normal 2-step process is when the DID itself identifies a digital resource that can be returned directly from the VDR of the associated DID method. There are numerous examples of when this behavior may be desirable:
In this case, the client MAY wish to use a DID URL to request that a DID resolver return the identified digital resource in a single step as shown in Figure 3:
Figure 3: Using a DID URL to request a digital resource in a single step
Note that in this case the DID document is not involved in retrieval of the resource. Rather if a resolver calls a VDR using a DID URL that includes a resource
parameter conformant with this specification, the VDR will retrieve the identified digital resource and return that resource to the resolver directly.
To enable this single-step behavior, this specification defines a DID URL parameter named resource
. If a DID method specification supports this parameter, and if a DID URL using that method includes the parameter value resource=true
, then when a resolver calls the associated VDR using that DID URL, the VDR returns the identified digital resource, not the DID document.
IMPORTANT: The fact that a digital resource can be returned directly using a DID URL that includes the resource=true
parameter does not mean the DID does not have an associated DID document like any other DID. It simply means this DID document is not involved directly in the combined resolution/dereferencing step. If the DID alone is resolved (without the resource=true parameter), it should still return the associated DID document. There is nothing special about this DID document. It still describes and controls interactions with the identified digital resource just like any other DID document. For example:
If the DID document contains one or more alsoKnownAs
property values, then it identifies other instances of the identified digital resource available via other DIDs or URLs.
The parameter name is resource
. The parameter type is a Boolean, so the valid values are true
and false
. The parameter value of true
is case-sensitive and must be spelled out exactly. No other renderings of true
, i.e. T
, TRUE
, 1
, -1
, and so forth — are equivalent.
Following is an example DID URL based on the fictional did:example:
DID method that includes the resource
parameter:
did:example:21tDAKCERh95uGgKbJNHYp?resource=true
resource
parameter with a value of true
, a conforming DID resolver MUST return the digital resource identified by the DID from the VDR specified by the associated DID method provided such resource is available. Resource not found
".resource
parameter with any value other than true
(for example, false
), a conforming DID resolver SHOULD ignore the parameter.resource
parameter, it MUST return the authoritative DID document as defined in W3C Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) 1.0. This specification adds no additional requirements to a conforming DID document.A DID method specification conforming to this specification to include support for the resource
parameter:
versionId
parameter is included in the DID URL, the resolver MUST return the identified version of the identified digital resource.Version not found
".versionTime
parameter is included in the DID URL, the resolver MUST return the identified version of the identified digital resource.Version not found
".The resource
parameter defined by this specification is registered with the W3C DID Specification Registries 1.0 at the following URL:
https://www.w3.org/TR/did-spec-registries/#resource
To comply with the intellectual property rights protections in the charter of the ToIP Foundation (as required by all Joint Development Foundation projects hosted the Linux Foundation), all contributors to this Pre-Draft Deliverable MUST be current members of the ToIP Foundation. The following contributors each certify that they meet this requirement:
The authors wish to thank the editors and contributors to the W3C Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) 1.0 specification and in particular co-editor Amy Guy for her help.
This is a publicly available specification published by the ToIP Foundation under the following licenses: