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Network Working Group                                       L. McIntyreRequest for Comments: 2301                            Xerox CorporationCategory: Standards Track                                     S. Zilles                                                    Adobe Systems, Inc.                                                             R. Buckley                                                      Xerox Corporation                                                             D. Venable                                                      Xerox Corporation                                                             G. Parsons                                                       Northern Telecom                                                            J. Rafferty                                                   Human Communications                                                             March 1998File Format for Internet FaxStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document describes the TIFF (Tag Image File Format)   representation of image data specified by the ITU-T Recommendations   for black-and-white and color facsimile. This file format   specification is commonly known as TIFF-FX. It formally defines   minimal, extended and lossless JBIG modes (Profiles S, F, J) for   black-and-white fax, and base JPEG, lossless JBIG and Mixed Raster   Content modes (Profiles C, L, M) for color and grayscale fax. These   modes or profiles correspond to the content of the applicable ITU-T   Recommendations. Files formatted according to this specification use   the image/tiff MIME Content Type.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Table of Contents1. INTRODUCTION........................................................41.1. Scope..........................................................51.2. Approach.......................................................51.3. Overview of this draft.........................................52. TIFF and Fax........................................................72.1. TIFF Overview..................................................72.1.1. File Structure.............................................72.1.2. Image Structure............................................92.1.3. TIFF File Structure for Fax Applications..................102.2 TIFF Fields for All Fax Applications...........................112.2.1. TIFF Fields required for all fax modes....................122.2.2. Additional TIFF Fields required for all fax modes.........132.2.3. TIFF Fields recommended for all fax modes.................152.2.4. New TIFF Fields recommended for fax modes.................163. Minimal Black-and-White Fax Mode...................................183.1. Overview......................................................183.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................183.2.1 Baseline Fields............................................183.2.2 Extension Fields...........................................203.2.3 New Fields.................................................203.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................203.4. End of Line (EOL) and Return to Control (RTC).................203.4.1 RTC Exclusion..............................................213.5. File Structure................................................223.6. Minimal Black-and-White Mode Summary..........................234. Extended Black-and-White Fax Mode..................................244.1. TIFF-F Overview...............................................254.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................264.2.1. Baseline Fields...........................................264.2.2. Extension Fields..........................................284.2.3. New Fields................................................294.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................294.3.1. Baseline Fields...........................................294.3.2. Extension Fields..........................................294.3.3. New Fields................................................294.4. Technical Implementation Issues...............................304.4.1. Strips....................................................304.4.2. Bit Order.................................................314.4.3. Multi-Page................................................314.4.4. Compression...............................................314.4.5. Example Use of Page-quality Fields........................32     4.4.6. Practical Guidelines for Writing and Reading Multi-Page            TIFF-F Files..............................................334.4.7. Use of TIFF-F for Streaming Applications..................344.5. Implementation Warnings.......................................344.5.1. Uncompressed Data.........................................34McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19984.5.2. Encoding and Resolution...................................354.5.3. EOL byte-aligned..........................................354.5.4. EOL.......................................................364.5.5. RTC Exclusion.............................................364.5.6. Use of EOFB for T.6 Compressed Images.....................374.6. Example Use of TIFF-F.........................................374.7. Extended Black-and-white Fax Mode Summary.....................375. Lossless JBIG Black-and-White Fax Mode.............................395.1. Overview......................................................405.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................405.2.1. Baseline Fields...........................................405.2.2. Extension Fields..........................................405.2.3. New Fields................................................415.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................415.4. Lossless JBIG Black-and-White Mode Summary....................416. Base Color Fax Mode................................................436.1. Overview......................................................436.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................436.2.1. Baseline Fields...........................................436.2.2. Extension Fields..........................................456.2.3. New Fields................................................466.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................476.4. Base Color Fax Mode Summary...................................477. Lossless Color Mode................................................497.1. Overview......................................................507.1.1. Color Encoding............................................507.1.2. JBIG Encoding.............................................507.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................517.2.1. Baseline Fields...........................................517.2.2. Extension Fields..........................................527.2.3. New Fields................................................537.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................537.4. Lossless Color Fax Mode Summary...............................538. Mixed Raster Content Mode..........................................558.1 Overview.......................................................558.1.1. MRC 3-layer model.........................................558.1.2. A TIFF Representation for the MRC 3-layer model...........568.2. Required TIFF Fields..........................................588.2.1. Baseline Fields...........................................588.2.2. Extension Fields..........................................598.2.3. New Fields................................................608.3. Recommended TIFF Fields.......................................628.4. Rules and Requirements for Images.............................628.5. MRC Fax Mode Summary..........................................639. MIME content-type image/tiff.......................................66   9.1 Refinement of MIME content-type image/tiff for Facsimile       Applications...................................................6610. Security Considerations...........................................67McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 199811. References........................................................6712. Authors' Addresses................................................69Annex A: Summary of TIFF Fields for Internet Fax .....................70Annex B. IANA Registration for image/tiff Application Parameter         Values used for facsimile....................................75Full Copyright Statement..............................................771. Introduction   This document describes the use of TIFF (Tag Image File Format) to   represent the data content and structure generated by the current   suite of ITU-T Recommendations for Group 3 facsimile. These   Recommendations and the TIFF fields described here support the   following facsimile modes or profiles:      S:  minimal black-and-white mode, using binary MH compression             [T.4]      F:  extended black-and-white mode, using binary MH, MR and MMR             compression [T.4,T.6]      J:  lossless JBIG black-and-white mode, with JBIG compression             [T.85,T.82]      C:  lossy color and grayscale mode, using JPEG compression             [T.42,T.81]      L:  lossless color and grayscale mode, using JBIG compression             [T.43,T.82]      M:  mixed raster content mode [T.44], using a combination of             existing compression methods   Each profile corresponds to the content of ITU-T Recommendations   shown and is a subset of the full TIFF for facsimile specification.   Profile S describes a minimal interchange set of fields, which will   guarantee that, at least, binary black-and-white images will be   supported. Implementations are required to support this minimal   interchange set of fields.   With the intent of specifying a file format for Internet Fax, this   draft:       1.  specifies the structure of TIFF files for facsimile data,       2.  defines ITU fax-compatible values for existing TIFF fields,       3.  defines new TIFF fields and values required for compatibility           with ITU color fax.   This specification of TIFF for facsimile is known as TIFF-FX.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19981.1 Scope   This document defines a TIFF-based file format specification for   enabling standardized messaging-based fax over the Internet. It   specifies the TIFF fields and field values required for compatibility   with the existing ITU-T Recommendations for Group 3 black-and-white,   grayscale and color facsimile. TIFF has historically been used for   handling fax image files in applications such as store-and-forward   messaging.  Implementations that support this file format   specification for import/export may elect to support it as a native   format. This document recommends a TIFF file structure that is   compatible with low-memory and page-level streaming implementations.   Unless otherwise noted, the current TIFF specification [TIFF] and   selected TIFF Technical Notes [TTN1,TTN2] are the primary references   for describing TIFF and defining TIFF fields. This document is the   primary reference for defining TIFF field values for fax   applications.1.2 Approach   The basic approach to using TIFF for facsimile data is to insert the   compressed fax image data in a TIFF file and use TIFF fields to   encode the parameters that describe the image data. These fields will   have values that comply with the ITU-T Recommendations. The MIME   content type of the resulting file will be image/tiff, with an   optional Application parameter [TIFF-REG]; seeSection 9.   This approach takes advantage of TIFF features and structures that   bridge the data formats and performance requirements of both legacy   fax machines and host-based fax applications. TIFF constructs for   pages, images, and strips allow a TIFF file to preserve the fax data   stream structure and the performance advantages that come with it. A   TIFF-based approach also builds on an established base of users and   implementors and ensures backward compatibility with existing TIFF-   based IETF proposals and work in progress for Internet fax.1.3 Overview of this draftSection 2 gives an overview of TIFF.Section 2.1 describes the   structure of TIFF files, including general guidelines for structuring   multi-page TIFF files.Section 2.2 lists the TIFF fields that are   required or recommended for all fax modes. The TIFF fields used only   by specific fax modes are described in Sections3-8, which describe   the individual fax modes. These sections also specify the ITU-   compatible field values (image parameters) for each mode.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   The full set of permitted fields of TIFF for facsimile are included   in the current TIFF specification,Section 2 of this document and the   sections on specific modes of facsimile operation. This document   defines profiles of TIFF for facsimile, where a profile is a subset   of the full set of permitted fields and field values of TIFF for   facsimile.Section 3 defines the minimal black-and-white facsimile mode (Profile   S), which is required in all implementations.Section 4 defines the   extended black-and-white fax mode (Profile F), which provides a   standard definition of TIFF-F.Section 5 describes the lossless   black-and-white mode using JBIG compression (Profile J).Section 6   defines the base color mode, required in all color implementations,   for the lossy JPEG representation of color and grayscale facsimile   data (Profile C).Section 7 defines the lossless JBIG color and   grayscale facsimile mode (Profile L) andSection 8 defines the Mixed   Raster Content facsimile mode (Profile M). Each of these sections   concludes with a table summarizing the required and recommended   fields for each mode and the values they can have.Section 9 describes the MIME content type image/tiff and the use of   the optional Application parameter in connection with TIFF for   facsimile. Sections10,11,12 and13 give Security Considerations,   the ISOC Copyright Notice, References and Authors' Addresses. Annex A   gives a summary of the TIFF fields used or defined in this document   and provides a convenient reference for implementors.   To implement only the minimal interchange black-and-white set of   fields and values (Profile S), one need read only Sections1,2,3,9   and 10.   The following tree diagram shows the relationship among profiles and   between profiles and coding methods.                                S (MH)                               / \                       B&W    /   \   Color                  ------------     ----------                 /      \                    \                /        F (MMR, MR)          C (JPEG)               /                             / \              J (JBIG)                   ----   \                                        /        \                                       L (JBIG)   \                                                   \                                                    M (MRC)   A profile is based on a collection of ITU-T facsimile coding methods.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   For example, Profile S, the minimal mode, is based on Modified   Huffman (MH) compression, which are defined in ITU-T Rec. T.4.   Profile F specifies Modified Read (MR) and Modified Modified Read   (MMR) compressions, which are defined in ITU-T Rec. T.4 and T.6.   All implementations of TIFF for facsimile MUST implement Profile S,   which is the root node of the tree. All color implementations of TIFF   for facsimile MUST implement Profile C. The implementation of a   particular profile MUST also implement those profiles on the path   that connect it to the root node, and MAY optionally implement   profiles not on the path connecting it to the root node. For example,   an implementation of Profile M must also implement Profiles C and S,   and may optionally implement Profile F, J or L. For another example,   an implementation of Profile C must also implement Profile S, and may   optionally implement Profile F or J.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", " NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED",  "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [REQ].2. TIFF and Fax2.1. TIFF Overview   TIFF provides a means for describing, storing and interchanging   raster image data. A primary goal of TIFF is to provide a rich   environment within which applications can exchange image data. The   current TIFF specification [TIFF] defines a commonly used, core set   of TIFF fields known as Baseline TIFF. The current specification and   TIFF Technical Notes 1 and 2 [TTN1,TTN2] define several TIFF   extensions. The TIFF- based specification for fax applications uses a   subset of Baseline TIFF fields, with selected extensions, as   described in this document. In a few cases, this document defines new   TIFF fields specifically for fax applications.2.1.1. File Structure   TIFF is designed for raster images, which makes it a good match for   facsimile documents, which are multi-page raster images. Each raster   image consists of a number of rows or scanlines, each of which has   the same number of pixels, the unit of sampling. Each pixel has at   least one sample or component (exactly one for black-and-white   images).   A TIFF file begins with an 8-byte image file header. The first two   bytes describe the byte order used within the file. Legal values are   "II" (0x4949) when bytes are ordered from least to most significant   (little- endian), and "MM" (0x4D4D), when bytes are ordered from mostMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   to least significant (big-endian) within a 16- or 32-bit integer.   Either byte order can be used, except in the case of the minimal   black-and-white mode, which SHALL use value "II". The next two bytes   contain the value 42 that identifies the file as a TIFF file and is   ordered according to the value in the first two bytes of the header.   The last four bytes give the offset that points to the first image   file directory (IFD). This and all other offsets in a TIFF file are   with respect to the beginning of the TIFF file. An IFD can be at any   location in the file after the header but must begin on a word   boundary.   An IFD is a sequence of tagged fields, sorted in ascending order by   tag value. An IFD consists of a 2-byte count of the number of fields,   a sequence of field entries and a 4-byte offset to the next IFD. The   fields contain information about the image and pointers to the image   data. Each separate raster image in the file is represented by an   IFD.   Each field entry in an IFD has 12 bytes and consists of a 2-byte Tag,   2 bytes identifying the field type (e.g. short, long, rational,   ASCII), 4 bytes giving the count (number of values or offsets), and 4   bytes that either contain the offset to a field value stored outside   the IFD, or, based on the type and count, the field value itself.   Resolution and metadata such as dates, names and descriptions are   examples of "long" field values that do not fit in 4 bytes and   therefore use offsets in the field entry. Details are given in the   TIFF specification [TIFF].   A TIFF file can contain more than one IFD, where each IFD is a   subfile whose type is given in the NewSubfileType field. Multiple   IFDs can be organized either as a linked list, with the last entry in   each IFD pointing to the next IFD (the pointer in the last IFD is 0),   or as a tree, using the SubIFDs field in the primary IFD [TTN1]. The   SubIFDs field contains an array of pointers to child IFDs of the   primary IFD.   Child IFDs describe related images, such as reduced resolution   versions of the primary IFD image. The same IFD can point both to a   next IFD and to child IFDs, and child IFDs can themselves point to   other IFDs.   All fax modes represent a multi-page fax image as a linked list of   IFDs, with a NewSubfileType field containing a bit that identifies   the IFD as one page of a multi-page document. Each IFD has a   PageNumber field, identifying the page number in ascending order,   starting at 0 for the first page. While a Baseline TIFF reader is notMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   required to read any IFDs beyond the first, an implementation that   reads the files that comply with this specification SHALL read   multiple IFDs. Only the Mixed Raster Content fax mode, described inSection 8, requires the use of child IFDs.   The following figure illustrates the structure of a multi-page TIFF   file.                   +-----------------------+                   |         Header        |------------+                   +-----------------------+            | First IFD                   |      IFD (page 0)     |<-----------+ Offset               +---|                       |------------+         Value |   +-----------------------+            |        Offset +-->|      Long Values      |--+         |                   +-----------------------|  | Strip   |                   |       Image Data      |<-+ Offset  |                   |     strip 1 page 0    |  |         |                   +-----------------------+  |         |                   |           :           |  :         |                                                        |                   +-----------------------+            | Next IFD                   |      IFD (page 1)     |<-----------+ Offset               +---|                       |------------+         Value |   +-----------------------+            |        Offset +-->|      Long Values      |--+         |                   +-----------------------|  | Strip   |                   |       Image Data      |<-+ Offset  |                   |     strip 1 page 1    |  |         |                   +-----------------------+  |         |                   |     strip 2 page 1    |<-+         |                   +-----------------------+  |         |                   |          :            |  :         |                                                        |                   +-----------------------+            | Next IFD                   |      IFD (page 2)     |<-----------+ Offset                   |          :            |2.1.2 Image Structure   An IFD stores an image as one or more strips, as shown in the   preceding figure. A strip consists of 1 or more scanlines (rows) of   raster image data in compressed form. An image may be stored in a   single strip or may be divided into several strips, which would   require less memory to buffer. (Baseline TIFF recommends about 8k   bytes per strip, but existing fax usage is typically one strip per   image.)McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   Each IFD requires three strip-related fields: StripOffsets,   RowsPerStrip and StripByteCounts. The StripOffsets field is an array   of pointers to the strip or strips that contain the actual image   data. The StripByteCounts field gives the number of bytes in each   strip after compression. TIFF requires that each strip, except the   last, contain the same number of scanlines, which is given in the   RowsPerStrip field. This document introduces the new StripRowCounts   field that allows a variable number of scanlines per strip, which is   required by the Mixed Raster Content fax mode (Section 8).   Image data is stored as uninterpreted, compressed image data streams   within a strip. The formats of these streams follow the ITU-T   Recommendations. The Compression field in the IFD indicates the type   of compression, and other TIFF fields in the IFD describe image   attributes, such as color encoding and spatial resolution.   Compression parameters are stored in the compressed data stream,   rather than in TIFF fields. This makes the TIFF representation and   compressed data format specification independent of each another.   This approach, modeled on [TTN2], allows TIFF to gracefully add new   compression schemes as they become available.   Some attributes can be specified both in the compressed data stream   and within a TIFF field. It is possible that the two values will   differ. When this happens for values required to interpret the data   stream, then the values in the data stream take precedence. For   informational values that are not required to interpret the data   stream, such as author name, then the TIFF field value takes   precedence.2.1.3 TIFF File Structure for Fax Applications   The TIFF specification has a very flexible file structure, which does   not specify the ordering of IFDs, field values and image data in a   file. Individual applications may require or recommend an ordering.   This specification recommends that when using a TIFF file for   facsimile, A multi-page fax document SHOULD be represented as a   linked list of IFDs. It also recommends that a TIFF file for   facsimile SHOULD order pages in a TIFF file in the same way that they   are ordered in a fax data stream. In a TIFF file, a page consists of   several elements: one or more IFDs (including subIFDs), long field   values that are stored outside the IFDs, and image data (in one or   more strips).   The minimal black-and-white mode (Profile S) specifies a required   ordering of pages and elements within a page (Section 3.5). The   extended black-and-white mode (Profile F) provides guidelines for   ordering pages and page elements (Section 4.4.6). Other profilesMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   SHOULD follow these guidelines. This recommendation is intended to   simplify the implementation of TIFF writers and readers in fax   applications and the conversion between TIFF file and fax data stream   representations. However, for interchange robustness, readers SHOULD   be prepared to read TIFF files whose structure is consistent with   [TIFF], which supports a more flexible file structure than is   recommended here.   This specification introduces an optional new GlobalParametersIFD   field, defined inSection 2.2.4. This field has type IFD and   indicates parameters describing the fax session. While it is often   possible to obtain these parameters by scanning the file, it is   convenient to make them available together in one place for fast and   easy access. If the GlobalParametersIFD occurs in a TIFF file, it   SHOULD be located in the first IFD, immediately following the 8-byte   image file header.2.2 TIFF Fields for All Fax Applications   The TIFF specification [TIFF] is organized as a baseline set and   several extensions, including technical notes [TTN1,TTN2] that will   be incorporated in the next release of TIFF. The baseline and   extensions have required and optional fields.   Facsimile applications require (and recommend) a mixture of baseline   and extensions fields, as well as some new fields that are not part   of the TIFF specification and that are defined in this document. This   sub- section lists the fields that are required or recommended for   all modes. In particular,Section 2.2.1 lists the fields that are   required by all modes and that have values that do not depend on the   mode.Section 2.2.2 lists the fields that are required by all modes   and that have values which do depend on the mode.Section 2.2.3 lists   the fields that are recommended for all modes. Fields that are   required or recommended by some but not all modes are given in the   section (Section 3-8) that describes that mode. The sections for each   fax mode have sub-sections for required and recommended fields; each   sub-section organizes the fields according to whether they are   baseline, extension or new.   The fields required for facsimile have only a few legal values,   specified in the ITU-T Recommendations. Of these legal values, some   are required and some are optional, just as they are required   (mandatory) or optional in fax implementations that conform to the   ITU-T Recommendations. The required and optional values are noted in   the sections on the different fax modes.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   This section describes the fields required or recommended by all fax   modes. The pattern for the description of TIFF fields in this draft   is:FieldName(TagValueInDecimal) = allowable values.                    TYPE    WhetherRequiredByTIFForTIFFforFAX    Count = (omitted if =1) = (if not in current spec but available)    Explanation of the field, how it's used, and the values it can have.    Default value, if any, as specified in [TIFF]   When a field's default value is the desired value, that field may be   omitted from the relevant IFD unless specifically required by the   text of this specification.2.2.1.  TIFF fields required for all fax modes   The TIFF fields listed in this section SHALL be used by all fax   modes, but have field values that are not specified by the ITU   standards, i.e. the fields do not depend on the mode. The next sub-   section lists the fields that SHALL be used by all fax modes, but   which do have values specified by the ITU-specified or mode-specific   values. Fields that SHALL be used by some but not all modes are given   in the sections (3-8) which describe the modes that uses them.ImageLength(257)                                           SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Total number of scanlines in image.    No default, must be specified.PageNumber(297)                                                    SHORT    RequiredByTIFFforFAX, TIFFExtension    Count = 2    The first number represents the page number (0 for the first page);    the second number is the total number of pages in the document. If    the second value is 0, then the total page count is not available.    No default, must be specifiedRowsPerStrip(278)                                          SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The number of scanlines per TIFF strip, except for the last strip.    For a single strip image, this is the same as the value of the    ImageLength field.    Default = 2**32 - 1 (meaning all scanlines in one strip)StripByteCounts(279)                                       SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Count = number of strips    For each strip, the number of bytes in that strip after compression.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    No default, must be specified.StripOffsets(273)                                          SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Count = number of strips    For each strip, the byte offset from the beginning of the file to    the start of that strip.    No default, must be specified.2.2.2 Additional TIFF fields required for all fax modes   The TIFF fields listed in this section SHALL be used by all fax   modes, but the values associated with them depend on the mode being   described and the associated ITU Recommendations. Therefore, only the   fields are defined here; the values applicable to a particular fax   mode are described in Sections3-8. Fields that SHALL be used by some   but not all modes are given in the section (3-8) describing the mode   that uses them.BitsPerSample(258)                                                 SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Number of bits per image sample    Default = 1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)Compression(259)                                                   SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Compression method used for image data    Default = 1 (no compression, so may not be omitted for FAX)FillOrder(266)                                                     SHORT    RequiredByTIFFforFax    The default bit order in Baseline TIFF per [TIFF] is indicated by    FillOrder=1, where bits are not reversed before being stored.    However, TIFF for Fax typically utilizes the setting of FillOrder=2,    where the bit order within bytes is reversed before storage (i.e.,    bits are stored with the Least Significant Bit first).    Default = 1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)    Facsimile data appears on the phone line in bit-reversed order    relative to its description in the relevant ITU compression    Recommendation. Therefore, a wide majority of facsimile    implementations choose this natural order for storage. Nevertheless,    all readers conforming to this specification must be able to read    data in both bit orders.ImageWidth(256)                                            SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The number of pixels (columns) per scanline (row) of the image    No default, must be specified.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998NewSubFileType(254)                                                 LONG    RequiredByTIFFforFAX    A general indication of the kind of data contained in this IFD    Bit 1 is 1 if the image is a single page of a multi-page document.    Default = 0 (no subfile bits on, so may not be omitted for FAX)PhotometricInterpretation(262)                                     SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The color space of the image data    No default, must be specifiedResolutionUnit(296)                                                SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The unit of measure for resolution. 2 = inch, 3 = centimeter;    Default = 2 (field may be omitted if this is the value)SamplesPerPixel(277)                                               SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The number of color components per pixel; SamplesPerPixel is 1 for a    black-and-white, grayscale or indexed (palette) image.    Default =1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)XResolution(282)                                                RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The horizontal resolution of the image in pixels per resolution    unit. The ITU-T Recommendations for facsimile specify a small number    of horizontal resolutions: 100, 200, 300, 400 pixels per inch, and    80, 160 pixels per centimeter (or 204, 408 pixels per inch). The    allowed XResolution values for each mode are given in the section    defining that mode. Per [T.4], it is permissible for applications to    treat the following XResolution values as being equivalent: <204,    200> and <400,408> in pixels/inch. These equivalencies were allowed    by [T.4] to permit conversions between inch and metric based    facsimile terminals.    TIFF for Facsimile Writers SHOULD express XResolution in inch based    units, for consistency with historical practice and to maximize    interoperability. See the table below for information on how to    convert from an ITU-T metric value to its inch based equivalent    resolution.    No default, must be specifiedYResolution(283)                                                RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The vertical resolution of the image in pixels per resolution unit.    The ITU-T Recommendations for facsimile specify a small number of    vertical resolutions: 100, 200, 300, 400 pixels per inch, and 38.5,    77, 154 pixels per centimeter (or 98, 196, 391 pixels per inch). The    allowed YResolution values for each mode are given in the sectionMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    defining that mode. Per [T.4], it is permissible for applications to    treat the following YResolution values as being equivalent: <98,    100>, <196, 200>, and <391, 400> in pixels/inch. These equivalencies    were allowed by [T.4] to permit conversions between inch and metric    based facsimile terminals. TIFF for Facsimile Writers SHOULD express    YResolution in inch based units, for consistency with historical    practice and to maximize interoperability. See the table below for    information on how to convert from an ITU-T metric value to its inch    based equivalent resolution. No default, must be specified      +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+      |         XResolution         |         YResolution         |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |ResolutionUnit|ResolutionUnit|ResolutionUnit|ResolutionUnit|      |  =2 (inch)   |   =3 (cm)    |  =2 (inch)   |   =3 (cm)    |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     100      |              |     100      |              |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     204      |      80      |      98      |     38.5     |      |     200      |              |     100      |              |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     204      |      80      |     196      |      77      |      |     200      |              |     200      |              |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     204      |      80      |     391      |     154      |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     300      |              |     300      |              |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+      |     408      |     160      |     391      |     154      |      |     400      |              |     400      |              |      +--------------+--------------+--------------+--------------+2.2.3 TIFF fields recommended for all fax modes   The TIFF fields listed in this section MAY be used by all fax modes.   However, Profile S writers (the minimal fax mode described inSection3) SHOULD NOT use these fields. Recommended fields that are mode-   specific are described in Sections3-8.DateTime(306)                                                      ASCII    OptionalInTIFFBaseline    Date/time of image creation in 24-hour format "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS".    No default.DocumentName(269)                                                  ASCII    OptionalInTIFFExtension(DocumentStorageAndRetrieval)    The name of the scanned document. This is a TIFF extension field,    not a Baseline TIFF field.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    No default.ImageDescription(270)                                              ASCII    OptionalInTIFFBaseline    A string describing the contents of the image.    No default.Orientation(274) = 1-8.                                            SHORT    OptionalinTIFFBaseline    1: 0th row represents the visual top of the image; the 0th column    represents the visual left side of the image. See the current TIFF    spec [TIFF] for further values; Baseline TIFF only requires value=1.    Default = 1.    Note: It is recommended that a writer that is aware of the    orientation will include this field to give a positive indication of    the orientation, even if the value is the default. If the    Orientation field is omitted, the reader SHALL assume a value of 1.Software(305)                                                      ASCII    OptionalInTIFFBaseline    The optional name and release number of the software package that    created the image.    No default.2.2.4 New TIFF fields recommended for fax modes   The new TIFF fields listed in this section MAY be used by all fax   modes, but their support is not expected for the minimal fax mode   described inSection 3. In addition, support for these new TIFF   fields has not been included in historical TIFF-F readers described   inSection 4 and [TIFF- F]. These fields describe "global" parameters   of the fax session that created the image data. They are optional,   not part of the current TIFF specification, and are defined in this   document.   The first new field, GlobalParametersIFD, is an IFD that contains   global parameters and is located in a Primary IFD.GlobalParametersIFD (400)                                            IFD    An IFD containing global parameters. It is recommended that a TIFF    writer place this field in the first IFD, where a TIFF reader would    find it quickly.   Each field in the GlobalParametersIFD is a TIFF field that is legal   in any IFD. Required baseline fields should not be located in the   GlobalParametersIFD, but should be in each image IFD. If a conflict   exists between fields in the GlobalParametersIFD and in the image   IFDs, then the data in the image IFD shall prevail.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   Among the GlobalParametersIFD entries is a new ProfileType field   which generally describes information in this IFD and in the TIFF   file.ProfileType(401)                                                    LONG    The type of image data stored in this IFD.    0 = Unspecified    1 = Group 3 fax    No default   The following new global fields are defined in this document as IFD   entries for use with fax applications.FaxProfile(402) = 0 - 6.                                            BYTE    The profile that applies to this file; a profile is subset of the    full set of permitted fields and field values of TIFF for facsimile.    The currently defined values are:    0: does not conform to a profile defined for TIFF for facsimile    1: minimal black & white lossless, Profile S    2: extended black & white lossless, Profile F    3: lossless JBIG black & white, Profile J    4: lossy color and grayscale, Profile C    5: lossless color and grayscale, Profile L    6: Mixed Raster Content, Profile MCodingMethods(403)                                                  LONG    This field indicates which coding methods are used in the file. A    bit value of 1 indicates which of the following coding methods is    used:    Bit 0: unspecified compression,    Bit 1: 1-dimensional coding, ITU-T Rec. T.4 (MH - Modified Huffman),    Bit 2: 2-dimensional coding, ITU-T Rec. T.4 (MR - Modified Read),    Bit 3: 2-dimensional coding, ITU-T Rec. T.6 (MMR - Modified MR),    Bit 4: ITU-T Rec. T.82 coding, using ITU-T Rec. T.85 (JBIG),    Bit 5: ITU-T Rec. T.81 (Baseline JPEG),    Bit 6: ITU-T Rec. T.82 coding, using ITU-T Rec. T.43 (JBIG color),    Bits 7-31: reserved for future use    Note: There is a limit of 32 compression types to identify standard    compression methods.VersionYear(404)                                                    BYTE    Count: 4    The year of the standard specified by the FaxProfile field, given as    4 characters, e.g. '1997'; used in lossy and lossless color modes.ModeNumber (405)                                                    BYTE    The mode of the standard specified by the FaxProfile field. A    value of 0 indicates Mode 1.0; used in Mixed Raster Content mode.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19983. Minimal Black-and-White Fax Mode   This section defines the minimal black-and-white subset of TIFF for   facsimile. This subset is designated Profile S. All implementations   of TIFF for facsimile SHALL support the minimal subset.   Black-and-white mode is the binary fax application most users are   familiar with today. This mode is appropriate for black-and-white   text and line art. Black-and-white mode is divided into two levels of   capability. This section describes the minimal interchange set of   TIFF fields that must be supported by all implementations in order to   assure that some form of image, albeit black-and-white, can be   interchanged. This minimum interchange set is a strict subset of the   fields and values defined for the extended black-and-white mode   (TIFF-F or Profile F) inSection 4, which describes extensions to the   minimal interchange set of fields that provide a richer set of   black-and-white capabilities.3.1. Overview   The minimal interchange portion of the black-and-white facsimile mode   supports 1-dimensional Modified Huffman (MH) compression, with the   original Group 3 fax resolutions, commonly called "standard" and   "fine."   To assure interchange, this mode uses the minimal set of fields, with   a minimal set of values. There are no recommended fields in this   mode. Further, the TIFF file is required to be "little endian," which   means that the byte order value in the TIFF header is "II". This mode   defines a required ordering for the pages in a fax document and for   the IFDs and image data of a page. It also requires that a single   strip contain the image data for each page; seeSection 3.5. The   image data may contain RTC sequences, as specified inSection 3.4.3.2. Required TIFF Fields   Besides the fields listed inSection 2.2.1, the minimal black-and-   white fax mode requires the following fields. The fields listed inSection 2.2.1 and the fields and fax-specific values specified in   this sub- section must be supported by all implementations.3.2.1 Baseline fieldsBitsPerSample(258) = 1.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Binary data only.    Default = 1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Compression(259) = 3.                                              SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    3 = 1- or 2- dimensional coding.    The value 3 is a TIFF extension value [TIFF]. The T4Options field    must be specified and its value specifies that the data is encoded    using the Modified Huffman (MH) encoding of [T.4].FillOrder(266) = 2.                                                SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    2 = Least Significant Bit first   NOTE: Baseline TIFF readers are only required to support FillOrder =   1, where the lowest numbered pixel is stored in the MSB of the byte.   However, because many devices, such as modems, transmit the LSB first   when converting the data to serial form, it is common for black-and-   white fax products to use the second FillOrder =2, where the lowest   numbered pixel is stored in the LSB. Therefore, this value is   specified in the minimal black-and-white mode.ImageWidth(256) = 1728.                                    SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    This mode only supports a page width of 1728 pixels. This width    corresponds to North American Letter and Legal and to ISO A4 size    pages.    No default, must be specified.NewSubFileType(254) = (Bit 1=1).                                    LONG    RequiredByTIFFforFAX    Bit 1 is 1 if the image is a single page of a multi-page document.    Default = 0 (no subfile bits on, so may not be omitted for fax)PhotometricInterpretation(262) = 0.                                SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    0 = pixel value 1 means black    No default, must be specifiedResolutionUnit(296) = 2.                                           SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The unit of measure for resolution. 2 = inch.    Default = 2 (field may be omitted if this is the value)SamplesPerPixel(277) = 1.                                          SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The number of components per pixel; 1 for black-and-white    Default =1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)XResolution(282) = 200, 204.                                    RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaselineMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    The horizontal resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per    resolution unit. In pixels/inch, the allowed values are 200 and 204,    which may be treated as equivalent. SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-    metric equivalency.    No default, must be specifiedYResolution(283) = 98, 100, 196, 200.                           RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The vertical resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per    resolution unit. In pixels/inch, the allowed values are 98, 100,    196 and 200; 98 and 100 may be treated as equivalent, and 196 and    200 may be treated as equivalent. SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric    equivalency.    No default, must be specified3.2.2 Extension fieldsT4Options(292) = (Bit 0 = 0, Bit 1 = 0, Bit 2 = 0, 1)               LONG    RequiredTIFFExtension (when Compression = 3)    Bit 0 = 0 indicates MH encoding.    Bit 1 must be 0    Bit 2 = 1 indicates that EOLs are byte aligned, = 0 EOLs not byte    aligned    Default is all bits are 0 (applies when EOLs are not byte aligned)   Note: The T4Options field is required when the Compression field has   a value of 3. Bit 0 of this field specifies the encoding used (MH   only in this mode) and Bit 2 indicates whether the EOL codes are   byte-aligned or not. If they are byte aligned, then fill bits have   been added as necessary so that the End of Line (EOL) codes always   end on byte boundaries. SeeSection 3.4 for details.3.2.3. New Fields   None.3.3. Recommended TIFF Fields   None.3.4. End of Line (EOL) and Return to Control (RTC)   The handling of End of Line (EOL) codes and Return to Control (RTC)   sequences illustrate the differences between conventional fax, which   is bit and stream oriented, and TIFF, which is byte and file   oriented. Conventional fax, Baseline TIFF and TIFF extensions for fax   all handle EOLs and RTCs differently.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   In conventional fax, an MH-compressed fax data stream for a page   consists of the following sequence:      EOL, compressed data (first line), EOL, compressed data, ... ,      EOL, compressed data (last line), RTC (6 consecutive EOL codes)   Baseline TIFF does not use EOL codes or Return to Control (RTC)   sequences for MH-compressed data. However, the TIFF extension field   T4Options used in this specification for MH compression (Compression   = 3) requires EOLs.   Furthermore, Bit 2 in the T4Options field indicates whether or not   the EOL codes are byte aligned. If Bit 2 = 1, indicating the EOL   codes are byte aligned, then fill bits have been added as necessary   before EOL codes so that an EOL code always ends on a byte boundary,   and the first bit of data following an EOL begins on a byte boundary.   Without fill bits, an EOL code may end in the middle of a byte. Byte   alignment relieves application software of the burden of bit-shifting   every byte while parsing scan lines for line-oriented image   manipulation (such as writing a TIFF file). Not all TIFF readers   historically used for fax are able to deal with non-byte aligned   data.   While TIFF extension requires EOL codes, TIFF in fax applications has   traditionally prohibited RTC sequences. Implementations that want   common processing and interfaces for fax data streams and Internet   fax files would prefer that the TIFF data include RTC sequences.   To reconcile these differences, RTCs are allowed in cases where EOL   codes are not byte aligned and no fill bits have been added to the   data. This corresponds to situations where the fax data is simply   inserted in a strip without being processed or interpreted. RTCs   should not occur in the data when EOLs have been byte aligned. This   is formally specified in the next sub-section.3.4.1. RTC Exclusion   Implementations which wish to maintain strict conformance with TIFF   and compatibility with the historical use of TIFF for fax SHOULD NOT   include the RTC sequence when writing TIFF files. However,   implementations which need to support "transparency" of T.4-generated   image data MAY include RTCs when writing TIFF files if the flag   settings of the T4Options field are set for non-byte aligned data,   i.e. Bit 2 is 0. Implementors of TIFF readers should be aware that   there are some existing TIFF implementations for fax that include the   RTC sequence in MH image data. Therefore, minimal set readers MUST be   able to process files which do not include RTCs and SHOULD be able to   process files which do include RTCs.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19983.5. File Structure   The TIFF header, described inSection 2.1.1, contains two bytes which   describe the byte order used within the file. For the minimal black-   and- white mode, these bytes SHALL have the value "II" (0x4949),   denoting that the bytes in the TIFF file are in LSByte-first order   (little- endian). The first or 0th IFD immediately follows the   header, so that offset to the first IFD is 8. The headers values are   shown in the following table:          +--------+-------------------+--------+-----------+          | Offset |   Description     |     Value          |          +--------+-------------------+--------+-----------+          |   0    |   Byte Order      |  0x4949 (II)       |          +--------+-------------------+--------+-----------+          |   2    |   Identifier      |  42 decimal        |          +--------+-------------------+--------+-----------+          |   4    | Offset of 0th IFD |  0x 0000 0008      |          +--------+-------------------+--------+-----------+   The minimal black-and-white mode SHALL order IFDs and image data   within a file as follows: 1) there SHALL be an IFD for each page in a   multi- page fax document; (2) the IFDs SHALL occur in the same order   in the file as the pages occur in the document; (3) the IFD SHALL   precede the image data to which it has offsets; (4) the image data   SHALL occur in the same order in the file as the pages occur in the   document; (5) the IFD, the value data and the image data it has   offsets to SHALL precede the next image IFD; and (6) the image data   for each page SHALL be contained within a single strip.   As a result of (6), the StripOffsets field will contain the pointer   to the image data. With two exceptions, the field entries in the IFD   contain the field values instead of offsets to field values located   outside the IFD. The two exceptions are the values for the   XResolution and YResolution fields, both of which are type RATIONAL   and require 2 4- byte numbers. These "long" field values SHALL be   placed immediately after  the IFD which contains the offsets to them,   and before the image data pointed to by that IFD.   The effect of these requirements is that the IFD for the first page   SHALL come first in the file after the TIFF header, followed by the   long field values for XResolution and YResolution, followed by the   image data for the first page, then the IFD for second page, etc.   This is shown in the following figure. Each IFD is required to have a   PageNumber field, which has value 0 for the first page, 1 for the   second page, and so on.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998                   +-----------------------+                   |         Header        |------------+                   +-----------------------+            | First IFD                   |      IFD (page 0)     | <----------+ Offset               +---|                       |------------+               |   |                       |--+         |         Value |   +-----------------------+  |         |        Offset +-->|      Long Values      |  |         |                   +-----------------------|  | Strip   |                   |  Image Data (page 0)  |<-+ Offset  |                   +-----------------------+            | Next IFD                   |      IFD (page 1)     | <----------+ Offset               +---|                       |------------+               |   |                       |--+         |         Value |   +-----------------------+  |         |        Offset +-->|      Long Values      |  |         |                   +-----------------------|  | Strip   |                   |  Image Data (page 1)  |<-+ Offset  |                   +-----------------------+            | Next IFD                   |      IFD (page 2)     | <----------+ Offset                   +-----------------------+                   |          :            |   Using this file structure may reduce the memory requirements in   implementations. It is also provides some support for streaming, in   which a file can be processed as it is received and before the entire   file is received.3.6 Minimal Black-and-white Mode Summary   The table below summarizes the TIFF fields that comprise the minimal   interchange set for black-and-white facsimile. The Baseline and   Extension fields and field values MUST be supported by all   implementations. For convenience in the table, certain fields which   have a value that is a sequence of flag bits are shown taking integer   values that correspond to the flags that are set. An implementation   should test the setting of the relevant flag bits individually,   however, to allow extensions to the sequence of flag bits to be   appropriately ignored. (See, for example, T4Options below.)      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | Baseline Fields           |  Values                        |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | BitsPerSample             | 1                              |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | Compression               | 3: 1D Modified Huffman coding  |      |                           |     set T4Options = 0 or 4     |      +------------------------------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | FillOrder                 | 2: least significant bit first |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | ImageWidth                | 1728                           |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | ImageLength               | n: total number of scanlines   |      |                           | in image                       |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | NewSubFileType            | 2: Bit 1 identifies single     |      |                           | page of a multi-page document  |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | PageNumber                | n,m: page number n followed by |      |                           | total page count m             |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | PhotometricInterpretation | 0: pixel value 1 means black   |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | ResolutionUnit            | 2: inch                        |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | RowsPerStrip              | number of scanlines per strip  |      |                           | = ImageLength, with one strip  |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | SamplesPerPixel           | 1                              |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | StripByteCounts           | number of bytes in TIFF strip  |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | StripOffsets              | offset from beginning of       |      |                           | file to single TIFF strip      |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | XResolution               | 204, 200 (pixels/inch)         |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | YResolution               | 98, 196, 100, 200 (pixels/inch)|      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | Extension Fields                                           |      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+      | T4Options                 | 0: MH coding, EOLs not byte    |      |                           |               aligned          |      |                           | 4: MH coding, EOLs byte aligned|      +---------------------------+--------------------------------+4. Extended Black-and-White fax mode   This section defines the extended black-and-white mode or Profile F   of TIFF for facsimile. It provides a standard definition of what has   historically been known as TIFF Class F and now TIFF-F. In doing so,   it aligns this mode with current ITU-T Recommendations for black-   and-white fax and with existing industry practice. Implementations of   this profile include implementations of Profile S.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   This section describes extensions to the minimal interchange set of   fields (Profile S) that provide a richer set of black-and-white   capabilities. The fields and values described in this section are a   superset of the fields and values defined for the minimal interchange   set inSection 3. In addition to the MH encoding, Modified READ (MR)   and Modified Modified READ (MMR) encoding as described in [T.4] and   [T.6] are supported.Section 4.1 gives an overview of TIFF-F.Section 4.2 describes the   TIFF fields that SHALL be used in this mode.Section 4.3 describes   the fields that MAY be used in this mode. In the spirit of the   original TIFF-F specification, Sections4.4 and4.5 discuss technical   implementation issues and warnings.Section 4.6 gives an example use   of TIFF-F.Section 4.7 gives a summary of the required and   recommended fields and their values.4.1 TIFF-F Overview   Though it has been in common usage for many years, TIFF-F has   previously never been documented in the form of a standard.  An   informal TIFF-F document was originally created by a small group of   fax experts led by Joe Campbell.  The existence of TIFF-F is noted in   [TIFF] but it is not defined.  This document serves as the formal   definition of the F application of [TIFF] for Internet applications.   For ease of reference, the term TIFF-F will be used throughout this   document as a shorthand for the extended black-and-white mode or   profile of TIFF for facsimile.   Up until the TIFF 6.0 specification, TIFF supported various "Classes"   which defined the use of TIFF for various applications. Classes were   used to support specific applications. In this spirit, TIFF-F has   been known historically as "TIFF Class F".  Previous informal TIFF-F   documents [TIFF-F0] used the "Class F" terminology.  As of TIFF 6.0   [TIFF], the TIFF Class concept has been eliminated in favor of the   concept of Baseline TIFF.  Therefore, this document updates the   definition of TIFF-F as the F profile of TIFF for facsimile, by using   Baseline  TIFF as defined in [TIFF] as the starting point and then   adding the TIFF extensions to Baseline TIFF which apply for TIFF-F.   In almost all  cases, the resulting definition of TIFF-F fields and   values remains  consistent with those used historically in earlier   definitions of TIFF  Class F.  Where some of the values for fields   have been updated to provide more precise conformance with the ITU-T   [T.4] and [T.30] fax recommendations, these differences are noted.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19984.2. Required TIFF Fields   This section lists the required fields and the values they must have   to be ITU-compatible. Besides the fields listed inSection 2.2.1, the   extended black-and-white fax mode SHALL use the following fields.4.2.1. Baseline fieldsBitsPerSample(258) = 1.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Binary data only.    Default = 1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)Compression(259) = 3, 4.                                           SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    3 = 1- or 2- dimensional coding, must have T4Options field This is    a TIFF Extension value [TIFF].    4 = 2-dimensional coding, ITU-T Rec. T.6 (MMR - Modified Modified    Read, must have T6Options field)) This is a TIFF Extension value.    Default = 1 (and is not applicable; field must be specified)   NOTE: Baseline TIFF permits use of value 2 for Modified Huffman   encoding, but data is presented in a form which does not use EOLs,   and so TIFF for facsimile uses Compression=3 instead. See Sections   4.4.4, 4.5.1 and 4.5.2 for more information on compression and   encoding.FillOrder(266) = 1 , 2.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Profile F readers must be able to read data in both bit orders,    but the vast majority of facsimile products store data LSB    first, exactly as it appears on the telephone line.              1 = Most Significant Bit first.              2 = Least Significant Bit firstImageWidth(256)                                            SHORT or LONG    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    This mode supports the following fixed page widths: 1728, 2592, 3456    (corresponding to North American Letter and Legal, ISO A4 paper    sizes), 2048, 3072, 4096 (corresponding to ISO B4 paper size), and    2432, 3648, 4864 (corresponding to ISO A3 paper size).    No default; must be specified   NOTE: Historical TIFF-F did not include support for the following   widths related to higher resolutions: 2592, 3072, 3648, 3456, 4096   and 4864. Historical TIFF-F documents also included the following   values related to A5 and A6 widths: 816 and 1216. Per the most recentMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   version of [T.4], A5 and A6 documents are no longer supported in   Group 3 facsimile, so the related width values are now obsolete. Seesection 4.5.2 for more information on inch/metric equivalencies and   other implementation details.NewSubFileType(254) = (Bit 1=1).                                    LONG    RequiredByTIFFforFAX    Bit 1 is 1 if the image is a single page of a multi-page document.    Default = 0 (no subfile bits on, so may not be omitted for fax)   NOTE: Bit 1 is always set to 1 for TIFF-F, indicating a single page   of a multi-page image. The same bit settings are used when TIFF-F is   used for a one page fax image. SeeSection 4.4.3 for details on   multi-page files.PhotometricInterpretation(262) = 0, 1.                             SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    0 = pixel value 1 means black, 1 = pixel value 1 means white.    This field allows notation of an inverted or negative image.    No default, must be specifiedResolutionUnit(296) = 2, 3.                                        SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The unit of measure for resolution. 2 = inch, 3 = centimeter; TIFF-F    has traditionally used inch-based measures.    Default = 2 (field may be omitted if this is the value)SamplesPerPixel(277) = 1.                                          SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    1 = monochrome, bilevel in this case (see BitsPerSample)    Default =1 (field may be omitted if this is the value)XResolution(282) = 200, 204, 300, 400, 408                      RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The horizontal resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per    resolution unit. In pixels/inch, the allowed values are: 200, 204,    300, 400, and 408. SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric equivalency.    No default, must be specified   NOTE: The values of 200 and 408 have been added to the historical   TIFF-F values, for consistency with [T.30]. Some existing TIFF-F   implementations may also support values of 80 pixels/cm, which is   equivalent to 204 pixels per inch. Seesection 4.5.2 for information   on implementation details.YResolution(283) = 98, 100, 196, 200, 300, 391, and 400       RATIONAL    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    The vertical resolution of the image is expressed in pixels perMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    resolution unit. In pixels/inch, the allowed values are: 98, 100,    196, 200, 300, 391, and 400 pixels/inch.    SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric equivalency.    No default, must be specified   NOTE: The values of 100, 200, and 391 have been added to the   historical TIFF-F values, for consistency with [T.30].  Some existing   TIFF-F implementations may also support values of 77 and 38.5 (cm),   which are equivalent to 196 and 98 pixels per inch respectively. Seesection 4.5.2 for more information on implementation details.   NOTE: Not all combinations of XResolution, YResolution and ImageWidth   are legal. The following table gives the legal combinations and   corresponding paper size [T.30].    +--------------+-----------------+---------------------------+    |   XResolution x YResolution    |         ImageWidth        |    +--------------+-----------------+---------+--------+--------+    |      200x100, 204x98           |         |        |        |    |      200x200, 204x196          |  1728   |  2048  |  2432  |    |           204x391              |         |        |        |    +--------------+-----------------+---------+--------+--------+    |          300 x 300             |  2592   |  3072  |  3648  |    +--------------+-----------------+---------+--------+--------+    |     408 x 391, 400 x 400       |  3456   |  4096  |  4864  |    +--------------+-----------------+---------+--------+--------+                                     |Letter,A4|   B4   |   A3   |                                     |  Legal  |        |        |                                     +---------+--------+--------+                                     |         Paper Size        |                                     +---------------------------+4.2.2. Extension fieldsT4Options(292) = (Bit 0 = 0 or 1, Bit 1 = 0, Bit 2 = 0 or 1)        LONG    RequiredTIFFExtension (when Compression = 3)    T4Options was also known as Group3Options in a prior version of    [TIFF].    Bit 0 = 1 indicates MR encoding, = 0 indicates MH encoding.    Bit 1 must be 0    Bit 2 = 1 indicates that EOLs are byte aligned, = 0 EOLs not byte    aligned    Default is all bits are 0 (applies when MH encoding is used and EOLs    are not byte aligned EOLs) (SeeSection 3.2.2.)    The T4Options field is required when the Compression field has a    value of 3. This field specifies the encoding used (MH or MR) and    whether the EOL codes are byte-aligned or not. If they are byteMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    aligned, then fill bits have been added as necessary so that the End    of Line (EOL) codes always end on byte boundaries See Sections3.4,    4.5.3 and 4.5.4 for details.T6Options(293) = (Bit 0 = 0, Bit 1 = 0). LONG    RequiredTIFFExtension (when Compression = 4)    Used to indicate parameterization of 2D Modified Modified Read    compression. T6Options was also known as Group4Options in a prior    version of [TIFF].    Bit 0 must be 0.    Bit 1 = 0 indicates uncompressed data mode is not allowed; = 1    indicates uncompressed data is allowed (see [TIFF]).    Default is all bits 0. For FAX, the field must be present and have    the value 0. The use of uncompressed data where compression would    expand the data size is not allowed for FAX.   NOTE: MMR compressed data is two-dimensional and does not use EOLs.   Each MMR encoded image MUST include an "end-of-facsimile-block"   (EOFB) code at the end of each coded strip; seeSection 4.5.6.4.2.3. New fields   None.4.3. Recommended TIFF fields4.3.1. Baseline fields   SeeSection 2.2.3.4.3.2. Extension fields   SeeSection 2.2.3.4.3.3. New fields   Three new, optional fields, used in the original TIFF-F description   to describe page quality, are defined in this specification.  The   information contained in these fields is usually obtained from   receiving facsimile hardware (if applicable). They SHOULD NOT be used   in writing TIFF-F files for facsimile image data that is error   corrected or otherwise guaranteed not to have coding errors. Some   applications need to understand exactly the error content of the   data.  For example, a CAD program might wish to verify that a  file   has a low error level before importing it into a high-accuracy   document. Because Group 3 facsimile devices do not necessarily   perform error correction on the image data, the quality of a received   page must be inferred from the pixel count of decoded scan lines. AMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   "good" scan line is defined as a line that, when decoded, contains   the correct number of pixels. Conversely, a "bad" scan line is   defined as a line that, when decoded, comprises an incorrect number   of pixels.BadFaxLines(326)                                           SHORT or LONG    The number of "bad" scan lines encountered by the facsimile device    during reception. A "bad" scanline is defined as a scanline that,    when decoded, comprises an incorrect number of pixels. Note that    PercentBad = (BadFaxLines/ImageLength) * 100    No default.CleanFaxData(327) = 0, 1, 2.                                       SHORT    Indicates if "bad" lines encountered during reception are stored in    the data, or if "bad" lines have been replaced by the receiver.    0 = No "bad" lines    1 = "bad" lines exist, but were regenerated by the receiver,    2 = "bad" lines exist, but have not been regenerated.    No default.   NOTE: Many facsimile devices do not actually output bad lines.   Instead, the previous good line is repeated in place of a bad line.   Although this substitution, known as line regeneration, results in a   visual improvement to the image, the data is nevertheless corrupted.   The CleanFaxData field describes the error content of the data.  That   is, when the BadFaxLines and ImageLength fields indicate that the   facsimile device encountered lines with an incorrect number of pixels   during reception, the CleanFaxData field indicates whether these bad   lines are actually still in the data or if the receiving facsimile   device replaced them with regenerated lines.ConsecutiveBadFaxLines(328)                               LONG or SHORT    Maximum number of consecutive "bad" scanlines received.  The    BadFaxLines field indicates only the quantity of bad lines.    No Default.   NOTE: The BadFaxLines and ImageLength data indicate only the quantity   of bad lines. The ConsecutiveBadFaxLines field is an indicator of the   distribution of bad lines and may therefore be a better general   indicator of perceived image quality. SeeSection 4.4.5 for examples   of the use of these fields.4.4. Technical Implementation Issues4.4.1   Strips   In general, TIFF files divide an image into "strips," also known as   "bands."  Each strip contains a few scanlines of the image. By usingMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   strips, a TIFF reader need not load the entire image into memory,   thus enabling it to fetch and decompress small random portions of the   image as necessary.   The number of scanlines in a strip is described by the RowsPerStrip   value and the number of bytes in the strip after compression by the   StripByteCount value.  The location in the TIFF file of each strip is   given by the StripOffsets values.   Strip size is application dependent. The recommended approach for   multi- page TIFF-F images is to represent each page as a single   strip. Existing TIFF-F usage is typically one strip per page in   multi-page TIFF-F files. See Sections2.1.2 and2.1.3.4.4.2  Bit Order   The current TIFF specification [TIFF] does not require a Baseline   TIFF reader to support FillOrder=2, i.e. lowest numbered 1-bit pixel   in the least significant bit of a byte. It further recommends that   FillOrder=2 be used only in special purpose applications.   Facsimile data appears on the phone line in bit-reversed order   relative to its description in ITU-T Recommendation T.4.  Therefore,   a wide majority of facsimile applications choose this natural order   for data in a file. Nevertheless, TIFF-F readers must be able to read   data in both bit orders and support FillOrder values of 1 and 2.4.4.3. Multi-Page   Many existing applications already read TIFF-F-like files, but do not   support the multi-page field.  Since a multi-page format greatly   simplifies file management in fax application software, TIFF-F   specifies multi-page documents (NewSubfileType = 2) as the standard   case.   It is recommended that applications export multiple page TIFF-F files   without manipulating fields and values.   Historically, some TIFF-F   writers have attempted to produce individual single-page TIFF-F files   with modified NewSubFileType and PageNumber (page one-of-one) values   for export purposes.  However, there is no easy way to link such   multiple single page files together into a logical multiple page   document, so that this practice is not recommended.4.4.4. Compression   In Group 3 facsimile, there are three compression methods which had   been standardized as of 1994 and are in common use. The ITU-T T.4   Recommendation [T.4] defines a one-dimensional compression methodMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   known as Modified Huffman (MH) and a two-dimensional method known as   Modified READ (MR) (READ is short for Relative Element Address   Designate). In 1984, a somewhat more efficient compression method   known as Modified Modified READ (MMR) was defined in the ITU-T T.6   Recommendation [T.6]. MMR was originally defined for use with Group 4   facsimile, so that this compression method has been commonly called   Group 4 compression.  In 1991, the MMR method was approved for use in   Group 3 facsimile and has since been widely utilized.   TIFF-F supports these three compression methods. The most common   practice is the one-dimensional Modified Huffman (MH) compression   method.  This is specified by setting the Compression field value to   3 and then setting bit 0 of the T4Options field to 0.  Alternatively,   the two dimensional Modified READ (MR) method, which is much less   frequently used in historical TIFF-F implementations, may be selected   by setting bit 0 of the T4Options field to 1.  The value of Bit 2 in   this field is determined by the use of fill bits.   Depending upon the application, the more efficient two-dimensional   Modified Modified Read (MMR)compression method from T.6 may be   selected by setting the Compression field value to 4 and then setting   the first two bits (and all unused bits) of the T6Options field to 0.   More information to aid the implementor in making a compression   selection is contained inSection 4.5.2.   Baseline TIFF also permits use of Compression=2 to specify Modified   Huffman compression, but the data does not use EOLs. As a result,   TIFF-F uses Compression=3 instead of Compression=2 to specify   Modified Huffman compression.4.4.5.  Example Use of Page-quality Fields   Here are examples for writing the CleanFaxData, BadFaxLines, and   ConsecutiveBadFaxLines fields:     1.  Facsimile hardware does not provide page quality         information: MUST NOT write page-quality fields.     2.  Facsimile hardware provides page quality information, but         reports no bad lines.  Write only BadFaxLines = 0.     3.  Facsimile hardware provides page quality information, and         reports bad lines.  Write both BadFaxLines and         ConsecutiveBadFaxLines.  Also write CleanFaxData = 1 or 2 if         the hardware's regeneration capability is known.     4.  Source image data stream is error-corrected or otherwise         guaranteed to be error-free such as for a computer generated         file:  SHOULD NOT write page-quality fields.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   TIFF Writers SHOULD only generate these fields when the image has   been generated from a fax image data stream where error correction,   e.g. Group 3 Error Correction Mode, was not used.4.4.6. Practical Guidelines for Writing and Reading Multi-Page TIFF-F   Files   Traditionally, historical TIFF-F has required readers and writers to   be able to handle multi-page TIFF-F files.  Based on the experience   of various TIFF-F implementors, it has been seen that the   implementation of TIFF-F can be greatly simplified if certain   practical guidelines are followed when writing multi-page TIFF-F   files.   The structure for a multi-page TIFF-F file will include one IFD per   page of the document.  In this case, this IFD will define the   attributes for a single page. A second simplifying guideline is that   the writer of TIFF-F files SHOULD present IFDs in the same order as   the actual sequence of pages.  (The pages are numbered within TIFF-F   beginning with page 0 as the first page and then ascending (i.e. 0,   1, 2,...). However, any field values over 4 bytes will be stored   separately from the IFD. TIFF-F readers SHOULD expect IFDs to be   presented in page order, but be able to handle exceptions.   Per [TIFF], the exact placement of image data is not specified.   However, the strip offsets for each strip of image are defined from   within each IFD.   Where possible, another simplifying guideline for   the writing of TIFF-F files is to specify that the image data for   each page of a multi-page document SHOULD be contained within a   single strip (i.e. one image strip per fax page). The use of a single   image strip per page is very useful for applications such as store   and forward messaging, where the file is usually prepared in advance   of the transmission, but other assumptions may apply for the size of   the image strip for applications which require the use of "streaming"   techniques (seesection 4.4.7).  In the event a different image strip   size guideline has been used (e.g. constant size for image strips   that may be less than the page size), this will immediately be   evident from the values/offsets of the fields that are related to   strips.   A third simplifying guideline is that each IFD SHOULD be placed in   the TIFF-F file structure at a point which precedes the image which   the IFD describes.   In addition, a fourth simplifying guideline for TIFF-F writers and   readers is to place the actual image data in a physical order within   the TIFF file structure which is consistent with the logical page   order.  In practice, TIFF-F readers will need to use the stripMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   offsets to find the exact physical location of the image data,   whether or not it is presented in logical page order.   If the image data is stored in multiple strips, then the strips   SHOULD occur in the file in the same order that the data they contain   occurs in the facsimile transmission, starting at the top of the   page.   TIFF-F writers MAY make a fifth simplifying guideline, in which the   IFD, the value data and the image data to which the IFD has offsets   precede the next image IFD. However, this guideline has been relaxed   (writers MAY rather than SHOULD use it) compared to the other   guidelines given here to reflect past practices for TIFF-F.   In the case of the minimal mode, which is also the minimal subset of   Profile S, the SHOULD's and MAY's of these guidelines become SHALL's   (seeSection 3.5).   So, a TIFF-F file which is structured using the guidelines of this   section will essentially be composed of a linked list of IFDs,   presented in ascending page order, which in turn each point to a   single page of image data (one strip per page), where the pages of   image data are also placed in a logical page order within the TIFF- F   file structure.  (The pages of image data may themselves be stored in   a contiguous manner, at the option of the implementor).4.4.7.   Use of TIFF-F for Streaming Applications   TIFF-F has historically been used for handling fax image files in   applications such as store and forward messaging where the entire   size of the file is known in advance.  While TIFF-F may also possibly   be used as a file format for cases such as streaming applications,   assumptions may be required that differ from those provided in this   section (e.g., the entire size and number of pages within the image   are not known in advance).  As a result, a definition for the   streaming application of TIFF-F is beyond the scope of this document.4.5. Implementation Warnings4.5.1  Uncompressed data   TIFF-F requires the ability to read and write at least one-   dimensional T.4 Huffman ("compressed") data.  Uncompressed data is   not allowed. This means that the "Uncompressed" bit in T4Options or   T6Options must be set to 0.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19984.5.2. Encoding and Resolution   Since two-dimensional encoding is not required for Group 3   compatibility, some historic TIFF-F readers have not been able to   read such files.  The minimum subset of TIFF-F REQUIRES support for   one dimensional (Modified Huffman) files, so this choice maximizes   portability.  However, implementors seeking greater efficiency SHOULD   use T.6 MMR compression when writing TIFF-F files.  Some TIFF-F   readers will also support two-dimensional Modified READ files.   Implementors that wish to have the maximum flexibility in reading   TIFF-F files should support all three of these compression methods   (MH, MR and MMR).   For the case of resolution, almost all facsimile products support   both standard (98 dpi) vertical resolution  and "fine" (196 dpi)   resolution. Therefore, fine-resolution files are quite portable in   the real world.   In 1993, the ITU-T added support for higher resolutions in the T.30   recommendation including 200 x 200, 300 x 300, 400 x 400 in dots per   inch based units.  At the same time, support was added for metric   dimensions which are equivalent to the following inch based   resolutions: 391v x 204h and 391v x 408h.  Therefore, the full set of   inch-based equivalents of the new resolutions are supported in the   TIFF-F writer, since they may appear in some image data streams   received from Group 3 facsimile devices.  However, many facsimile   terminals and older versions of  TIFF-F readers are likely to not   support the use of these higher resolutions.   Per [T.4], it is permissible for applications to treat the following   XResolution values as being equivalent: <204,200> and <400,408>.  In   a similar respect, the following YResolution values may also be   treated as being equivalent: <98, 100>, <196, 200>, and <391, 400>.   These equivalencies were allowed by [T.4] to permit conversions   between inch and metric based facsimile terminals.   In a similar respect, the optional support of metric based   resolutions in the TIFF-F reader (i.e. 77 x 38.5 cm) is included for   completeness, since they are used in some legacy TIFF-F applications,   but this use is not recommended for the creation of TIFF-F files by a   writer.4.5.3. EOL byte-aligned   The historical convention for TIFF-F has been that all EOLs in   Modified Huffman or Modified READ data must be byte-aligned. However,   Baseline TIFF has permitted use of non-byte-aligned EOLs by default,   so that a large percentage of TIFF-F reader implementations supportMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   both conventions. Therefore, the minimum subset of TIFF-F, or Profile   S, as defined inSection 3 includes support for both byte-aligned and   non- byte-aligned EOLs; seeSection 3.2.2.   An EOL is said to be byte-aligned when Fill bits have been added as   necessary before EOL codes such that EOL always ends on a byte   boundary, thus ensuring an  EOL-sequence of a one byte preceded by a   zero nibble: xxxx0000 00000001.   Modified Huffman encoding encodes bits, not bytes. This means that   the end-of-line token may end in the middle of a byte. In byte   alignment, extra zero bits (Fill) are added so that the first bit of   data following an EOL begins on a byte boundary. In effect, byte   alignment relieves application software of the burden of bit-   shifting every byte while parsing scan lines for line-oriented image   manipulation (such as writing a TIFF file).   For Modified READ encoding, each line is terminated by an EOL and a   one bit tag bit.  Per [T.4], the value of the tag bit is 0 if the   next line contains two dimensional data and 1 if the next line is a   reference line.   To maintain byte alignment, fill bits are added   before the EOL/tag bit sequence, so that the first bit of data   following an MR tag bit begins on a byte boundary.4.5.4. EOL   As illustrated in FIGURE 1/T.4 in [T.4], facsimile documents encoded   with Modified Huffman begin with an EOL, which in TIFF-F may be byte-   aligned. The last line of the image is not terminated by an EOL.  In   a similar respect, images encoded with Modified READ two-dimensional   encoding begin with an EOL, followed by a tag bit.4.5.5. RTC Exclusion   Aside from EOLs, TIFF-F files have historically only contained image   data. This means that applications which wish to maintain strict   conformance with the rules in [TIFF] and compatibility with   historical TIFF-F, SHOULD NOT include the Return To Control sequence   (RTC) (consisting of 6 consecutive EOLs) when writing TIFF-F files.   However, applications which need to support "transparency" of [T.4]   image data MAY include RTCs if the flag settings of the T4Options   field are set for non-byte aligned MH or MR image data.  Implementors   of TIFF readers should also be aware that there are some existing   TIFF-F implementations which include the RTC sequence in MH/MR image   data. Therefore, TIFF-F readers MUST be able to process files which   do not include RTCs and SHOULD be able to process files which do   include RTCs.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19984.5.6 Use of EOFB for T.6 Compressed Images   TIFF-F pages which are encoded with the T.6 Modified Modified READ   compression method MUST include an "end-of-facsimile-block" (EOFB)   code at the end of each coded strip. Per [TIFF], the EOFB code is   followed by pad bits as needed to align on a byte boundary. TIFF   readers SHOULD ignore any bits other than pad bits beyond the EOFB.4.6. Example Use of TIFF-F   The Profile F of TIFF (i.e. TIFF-F content) is a secondary component   of the VPIM Message, as defined in [VPIM2].  Voice messaging systems   can often handle fax store-and-forward capabilities in addition to   tradi- tional voice message store-and-forward functions.  As a   result, TIFF-F fax messages can optionally be sent between compliant   VPIM systems, and may be rejected if the recipient system cannot deal   with fax.   Refer to the VPIM Specification for proper usage of this content.4.7. Extended Black-and-white Fax Mode Summary   Recommended fields are shown with an asterisk *.   Required fields or values are shown with a double asterisk **. If the   double asterisk is on the field name, then all the listed values are   required of implementations; if the double asterisks are in the   Values column, then only the values suffixed with a double asterisk   are required of implementations.       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Baseline Fields           |  Values                        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | BitsPerSample             | 1**                            |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Compression               | 3**: 1D Modified Huffman and   |       |                           |      2D Modified Read coding   |       |                           | 4: 2D Modified Modified Read   |       |                           |    coding                      |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DateTime*                 | {ASCII}: date/time in 24-hour  |       |                           | format "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS"   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | FillOrder**               | 1: most significant bit first  |       |                           | 2: least significant bit first |       +------------------------------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +------------------------------------------------------------+       | ImageDescription*         | {ASCII}: A string describing   |       |                           | the contents of the image.     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageWidth                | 1728**, 2048, 2432, 2592,      |       |                           | 3072, 3456, 3648, 4096, 4864   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageLength**             | n: total number of scanlines   |       |                           | in image                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | NewSubFileType            | 2**: Bit 1 identifies single   |       |                           | page of a multi-page document  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Orientation               | 1**-8, Default 1               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PhotometricInterpretation | 0: pixel value 1 means black   |       |  **                       | 1: pixel value 1 means white   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ResolutionUnit**          | 2: inch                        |       |                           | 3: centimeter                  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | RowsPerStrip**            | n: number of scanlines per     |       |                           | TIFF strip                     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | SamplesPerPixel           | 1**                            |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Software*                 | {ASCII}: name & release        |       |                           | number of creator software     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripByteCounts**         | <n>: number or bytes in TIFF   |       |                           | strip                          |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripOffsets**            | <n>: offset from beginning of  |       |                           | file to each TIFF strip        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | XResolution               | 200, 204**, 300, 400, 408      |       |                           | (written in pixels/inch)       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | YResolution               | 98**, 196**, 100,              |       |                           | 200, 300, 391, 400             |       |                           | (written in pixels/inch)       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Extension Fields                                           |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | T4Options                 | 0**: required if Compression   |       |                           | is Modified Huffman, EOLs are  |       |                           | not byte aligned               |       |                           | 1: required if Compression is  |       |                           | 2D Modified Read, EOLs are     |       |                           | not byte aligned               |       |                           | 4**: required if Compression   |       |                           | is Modified Huffman, EOLs are  |       |                           | byte aligned                   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | T4Options (continued)     | 5: required if Compression     |       |                           | is 2D Modified Read, EOLs are  |       |                           | byte aligned                   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | T6Options                 | 0: required if Compression is  |       |                           | 2D Modified Modified Read      |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DocumentName*             | {ASCII}: name of scanned       |       |                           | document                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PageNumber**              | n,m: page number followed by   |       |                           | total page count               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | New Fields                                                 |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | BadFaxLines*              | number of "bad" scanlines      |       |                           | encountered during reception   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | CleanFaxData*             | 0: no "bad" lines              |       |                           | 1: "bad" lines exist, but were |       |                           | regenerated by receiver        |       |                           | 2: "bad" lines exist, but have |       |                           | not been regenerated           |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ConsecutiveBadFaxLines*   | Max number of consecutive      |       |                           | "bad" lines received           |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+5. Lossless JBIG Black-and-White Fax Mode   This section defines the lossless JBIG black-and-white mode or   Profile J of TIFF for facsimile. Implementations of this profile are   required to also implement Profile S.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   The previous section described the extended interchange set of TIFF   fields for black-and-white fax, which provided support for the MH, MR   and MMR compression of black-and-white images. This section adds a   mode with JBIG compression capability.5.1. Overview   This section describes a black-and-white mode that uses JBIG   compression. The ITU-T has approved the single-progression sequential   mode of JBIG [T.82] for Group 3 facsimile. JBIG coding offers   improved compression for halftoned originals. JBIG compression is   used in accordance with the application rules given in ITU-T Rec.   T.85 [T.85].   This mode is essentially the extended black-and-white mode with JBIG   compression used instead of MH, MR or MMR.5.2. Required TIFF Fields   This section lists the required fields and the values they must have   to be ITU-compatible. Besides the fields listed inSection 2.2.1, the   extended black-and-white fax mode requires the following fields.5.2.1. Baseline fields   The TIFF fields that SHALL be used in this mode are the same as those   described inSection 4.2.1 for the extended black-and-white mode,   with two exceptions: the following text replaces the text inSection4.2.1 for the Compression and FillOrder fields.Compression(259) = 9.                                              SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    9 = ITU-T Rec. T.82 coding, applying ITU-T Rec. T.85 (JBIG). This is    a TIFF extension value.    Default = 1 (and is not applicable; field must be specified).FillOrder(266) = 2.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    2 = Pixels are arranged within a byte such that pixels with lower    column values are stored in the lower-order bits of the bytes, i.e.,    least significant bit first (LSB).   NOTE: The JBIG coding of black-and-white image data in Profile J   follows ITU-T Rec. T.85 [T.85], which specifies LSB first ordering   within a byte. Note that Baseline TIFF readers are only required to   support MSB first ordering or FillOrder = 1.5.2.2. Extension fieldsMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   Same fields as those inSection 2.2.1.5.2.3. New fields   None.5.3. Recommended TIFF Fields   SeeSection 2.2.3 and 2.2.4.5.4.  Lossless JBIG Black-and-white Fax Mode Summary   Recommended fields are shown with an asterisk *.   Required fields or values are shown with a double asterisk **. If the   double asterisk is on the field name, then all the listed values are   required of implementations; if the double asterisks are in the   Values column, then only the values suffixed with a double asterisk   are required of implementations.       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Baseline Fields           |  Values                        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | BitsPerSample             | 1**                            |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Compression               | 9**: JBIG coding               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DateTime*                 | {ASCII}: date/time in 24-hour  |       |                           | format "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS"   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | FillOrder**               | 1: most significant bit first  |       |                           | 2: least significant bit first |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageDescription*         | {ASCII}: A string describing   |       |                           | the contents of the image.     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageWidth                | 1728**, 2048, 2432, 2592,      |       |                           | 3072, 3456, 3648, 4096, 4864   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageLength**             | n: total number of scanlines   |       |                           | in image                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | NewSubFileType**          | 2: Bit 1 identifies single     |       |                           | page of a multi-page document  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Orientation               | 1**-8, Default 1               |       +------------------------------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PhotometricInterpretation | 0: pixel value 1 means black   |       |  **                       | 1: pixel value 1 means white   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ResolutionUnit**          | 2: inch                        |       |                           | 3: centimeter                  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | RowsPerStrip**            | n: number of scanlines per     |       |                           | TIFF strip                     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | SamplesPerPixel**         | 1                              |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Software*                 | {ASCII}: name & release        |       |                           | number of creator software     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripByteCounts**         | <n>: number of bytes in TIFF   |       |                           | strip                          |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripOffsets**            | <n>: offset from beginning of  |       |                           | file to each TIFF strip        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | XResolution               | 200, 204**, 300, 400, 408      |       |                           | (written in pixels/inch)       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | YResolution               | 98**, 196**, 100,              |       |                           | 200, 300, 391, 400             |       |                           | (written in pixels/inch)       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Extension Fields                                           |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DocumentName*             | {ASCII}: name of document      |       |                           |  scanned                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PageNumber**              | n,m: page number followed by   |       |                           | total page count               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | New Fields                                                 |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | GlobalParametersIFD*      | IFD: global parameters IFD     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ProfileType*              | n: type of data stored in file |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | FaxProfile*               | n: ITU-compatible fax mode     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | CodingMethods*            | n: compression algorithms used |       |                           | in file                        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19986. Base Color Fax Mode6.1. Overview   This section defines the lossy color mode or Profile C of TIFF for   facsimile. Implementations of this profile are required to also   implement Profile S.   This is the base mode for color and grayscale facsimile, which means   that all applications that support color fax must support this mode.   The basic approach is the lossy JPEG compression [T.4, Annex E; T.81]   of L*a*b* color data [T.42]. Grayscale applications use the L*   lightness component; color applications use the L*, a* and b*   components.   This mode uses a new PhotometricInterpretation field value to   describe the L*a*b* encoding specified in [T.42]. This encoding   differs in two ways from the other L*a*b* encodings used in TIFF   [TIFF,TTN1]: it specifies a different default range for the a* and   b* components, based on a comprehensive evaluation of existing   hardcopy output, and it optionally allows selectable range for the   L*, a* and b* components.6.2. Required TIFF Fields   This section lists the required fields, in addition to those given inSection 2.2.1, and the values they must support to be compatible with   ITU-T Rec. T.42 and Annex E in ITU-T Rec. T.4.6.2.1. Baseline FieldsImageWidth(256).                                           SHORT or LONG    This mode supports the following fixed page widths: 864, 1024, 1216,    1728, 2048, 2432, 2592, 3072, 3456, 3648, 4096, 4864.NewSubFileType(254) = (Bit 1=1).                                    LONG    RequiredByTIFFforFAX    Bit 1 is 1 if the image is a single page of a multi-page document.    Default = 0 (no subfile bits on, so may not be omitted for fax)BitsPerSample(258) = 8, 12.                                        SHORT    Count = SamplesPerPixel    The base color fax mode requires 8 bits per sample, with 12 as an    option. 12 bits per sample is not baseline TIFF.Compression(259) = 7.                                              SHORT    Base color fax mode uses Baseline JPEG compression. Value 7    represents JPEG compression as specified in [TTN2].McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998FillOrder(266) = 1 , 2.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Profile C readers must be able to read data in both bit orders,    but the vast majority of facsimile products store data LSB    first, exactly as it appears on the telephone line.              1 = Most Significant Bit first.              2 = Least Significant Bit firstPhotometricInterpretation(262) = 10.                               SHORT    Base color fax mode requires pixel values to be stored using the CIE    L*a*b* encoding defined in ITU-T Rec. T.42. This encoding is    indicated by the PhotometricInterpretation value 10, referred to as    ITULAB. With this encoding, the minimum sample value is  mapped to 0    and the maximum sample value is mapped to (2^n - 1), i.e. the    maximum value, where n is the BitsPerSample value. The conversion    from unsigned ITULAB-encoded samples values to signed CIE L*a*b*    values is determined by the Decode field; see Sec. 6.2.3   NOTE: PhotometricInterpretation values 8 and 9 specify encodings for   use with 8-bit-per-sample CIE L*a*b* [TIFF] and ICC L*a*b* [TTN1]   data, but they are fixed encodings, which use different minimum and   maximum samples than the T.42 default encoding. As currently defined,   they are not able to represent fax-encoded L*a*b* data.ResolutionUnit(296) = 2, 3.                                        SHORT    The unit of measure for resolution. 2 = inch, 3 = centimeter;    Default = 2 (field may be omitted if this is the value)SamplesPerPixel(277) = 1, 3.                                       SHORT    1: L* component only, required in base color mode    3: L*, a*, b* components    Encoded according to PhotometricInterpretation fieldXResolution(282) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONALYResolution(283) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONAL    The resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per resolution    unit. In pixels per inch, allowed XResolution values are: 100, 200,    300, and 400. The base color fax mode requires the pixels to be    square, hence YResolution must equal XResolution. Base resolution is    200 pixels per inch and SHALL be supported by all implementations of    this mode. SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric equivalency.NOTE: Not all combinations of XResolution, YResolution and ImageWidthare legal. The following table gives the legal combinations for inch-based resolutions and the corresponding paper sizes [T.30].McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+    |   XResolution x YResolution    |         ImageWidth        |    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+    |           100 x 100            |   864   |  1024  |  1216  |    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+    |           200 x 200            |  1728   |  2048  |  2432  |    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+    |           300 x 300            |  2592   |  3072  |  3648  |    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+    |           400 x 400            |  3456   |  4096  |  4864  |    +--------------------------------+---------------------------+                                     |Letter,A4|   B4   |   A3   |                                     |  Legal  |        |        |                                     +---------------------------+                                     |         Paper Size        |                                     +---------------------------+6.2.2 Extension FieldsThe JPEG compression standard allows for the a*b* chroma components ofan image to be subsampled relative to the L* lightness component. Theextension fields ChromaSubSampling and ChromaPositioning define thesubsampling. They are the same as YCbCrSubSampling and YCbCrPositioningin [TIFF], but have been renamed to reflect their applicability to othercolor spaces.ChromaSubSampling(530).                                            SHORT    Count = 2    Specifies the subsampling factors for the chroma components of a    L*a*b* image. The two subfields of this field, ChromaSubsampleHoriz    and ChromaSubsampleVert, specify the horizontal and vertical    subsampling factors respectively.    SHORT 0: ChromaSubsampleHoriz = 1, 2.    1: equal numbers of lightness and chroma samples horizontally,    2: twice as many lightness samples as chroma samples horizontally,    SHORT 1: ChromaSubsampleVert = 1, 2.    1: equal numbers of lightness and chroma samples vertically,    2: twice as many lightness samples as chroma samples vertically,    The default value for ChromaSubSampling is (2,2), which is the    default for chroma subsampling in color fax [T.4, Annex E]. No    chroma subsampling, i.e. ChromaSubSampling = (1,1), is an option    for color faxChromaPositioning(531) = 1.                                        SHORT    Specifies the spatial positioning of chroma components relative toMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998    the lightness component.    1: centered,    A value of 1 means chrominance samples are spatially offset and    centered with respect to luminance samples. See the current TIFF    specification under YcbCr positioning for further information.    Default = 1, which is what ITU-T T.4, Annex E specifies.6.2.3. New FieldsDecode(433).                                                   SRATIONAL    Count = 2 * SamplesPerPixel    Describes how to map image sample values into the range of values    appropriate for the current color space. In general, the values are    taken in pairs and specify the minimum and maximum output value for    each color component. For the base color fax mode, Decode has a    count of 6 values and maps the unsigned ITULAB-encoded sample values    (Lsample, asample, bsample) to signed L*a*b* values, as follows:.        L* = Decode[0] + Lsample x (Decode[1]-Decode[0])/(2^n -1)        a* = Decode[2] + asample x (Decode[3]-Decode[2])/(2^n -1)        b* = Decode[4] + bsample x (Decode[5]-Decode[4])/(2^n -1)    where Decode[0], Decode[2] and Decode[4] are the minimum values for    L*, a* and b*; Decode[1], Decode[3] and Decode[5] are the maximum    values for L*, a* and b*; and n is the BitsPerSample, either 8 or    12. For example, when n=8, L*=Decode[0] when Lsample=0 and    L*=Decode[1] when Lsample=255.    ITU-T Rec. T.42 specifies the ITULAB encoding in terms of a range    and offset for each component, which are related to the minimum and    maximum values as follows:        minimum = - (range x offset) / 2^n - 1        maximum = minimum + range    The Decode field default values depend on the color space. For the    ITULAB color space encoding, the default values correspond to the    base range and offset, as specified in ITU-T Rec. T.42 [T.42]. The    following table gives the base range and offset values for    BitsPerSample=8 and 12, and the corresponding default minimum and    maximum default values for the Decode field, calculated using the    equations above when PhotometricInterpetation=10.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998                       +-----------------------------------------------+                       | ITU-T Rec. T.42  |           Decode           | +---------+-----------|   base values    |       default values       | | BitsPer + Component +------------------+----------------------------+ | -Sample |           |  Range | Offset  |      Min     |     Max     | +---------+-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |    8    |    L*     |   100  |    0    |       0      |     100     | |         +-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |         |    a*     |   170  |   128   |  -21760/255  |  21590/255  | |         +-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |         |    b*     |   200  |    96   |  -19200/255  |  31800/255  | +---------+-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |   12    |    L*     |   100  |    0    |       0      |     100     | |         +-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |         |    a*     |   170  |  2048   | -348160/4095 | 347990/4095 | |         +-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+ |         |    b*     |   200  |  1536   | -307200/4095 | 511800/4095 | +---------+-----------+--------+---------+--------------+-------------+   For example, when PhotometricInterpretation=10 and BitsPerSample=8,   the default value for Decode is (0, 100, -21760/255, 21590/255,   -19200/255, 31800/255).6.3. Recommended TIFF Fields   See Sections2.2.3. and 2.2.4.6.4 Base Color Fax Mode Summary   Recommended fields are shown with an asterisk *   Required fields or values are shown with a double asterisk **. If the   double asterisk is on the field name, then all the listed values are   required of implementations; if the double asterisks are in the   Values column, then only the values suffixed with a double asterisk   are required of implementations.       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Baseline Fields           | Values                         |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | BitsPerSample             | 8**: 8 bits per color sample   |       |                           | 12: optional 12 bits/sample    |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Compression**             | 7: JPEG                        |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DateTime*                 | {ASCII}: date/time in 24-hour  |       |                           | format "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS"   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +------------------------------------------------------------+       | FillOrder**               | 1: most significant bit first  |       |                           | 2: least significant bit first |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageDescription*         | {ASCII}: A string describing   |       |                           | the contents of the image.     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageWidth                | 864, 1024, 1216, 1728**, 2048  |       |                           | 2432, 2592, 3072, 3456, 3648   |       |                           | 4096, 4864                     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ImageLength**             | n: total number of scanlines   |       |                           | in image                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | NewSubFileType**          | 2: Bit 1 identifies single page|       |                           | of a multi-page document       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Orientation               | 1**-8, Default 1               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PhotometricInterpretation | 10**: ITULAB                   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ResolutionUnit**          | 2: inch                        |       |                           | 3: centimeter                  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | RowsPerStrip**            | n: number of scanlines per     |       |                           | TIFF strip                     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | SamplesPerPixel           | 1**: L* (lightness)            |       |                           | 3: LAB                         |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Software*                 | {ASCII}: name & release number |       |                           | of creator software            |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripByteCounts**         | <n>: number or bytes in        |       |                           | TIFF strip                     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | StripOffsets**            | <n>: offset from beginning     |       |                           | of file to each TIFF strip     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | XResolution               | 100, 200**, 300, 400 (written  |       |                           | in pixels/inch)                |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | YResolution               | 100, 200**, 300, 400           |       |                           | (must equal XResolution)       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Extension Fields                                           |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | DocumentName*             | {ASCII}: name of scanned       |       |                           | document                       |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | PageNumber**              | n,m: page number followed by   |       |                           | total page count               |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ChromaSubSampling         | (1,1), (2, 2)**                |       |                           | (1, 1): equal numbers of       |       |                           | lightness and chroma samples   |       |                           | horizontally and vertically    |       |                           | (2, 2): twice as many lightness|       |                           | samples as chroma samples      |       |                           | horizontally and vertically    |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ChromaPositioning         | 1**: centered                  |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | New Fields                                                 |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | Decode**                  | minL, maxL, mina, maxa, minb,  |       |                           | maxb: minimum and maximum      |       |                           | values for L*a*b*              |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | GlobalParametersIFD*      | IFD: IFD containing            |       |                           | global parameters              |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | ProfileType*              | n: type of data stored in      |       |                           | TIFF file                      |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | FaxProfile*               | n: ITU-compatible fax mode     |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | CodingMethods*            | n: compression algorithms      |       |                           | used in file                   |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+       | VersionYear*              | byte sequence: year of ITU std |       +---------------------------+--------------------------------+7. Lossless Color Mode   This section defines the lossless color mode or Profile L of TIFF for   facsimile. Implementations of this profile are required to also   implement Profiles S and C.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19987.1. Overview   This mode, defined in [T.43], uses JBIG to losslessly code three   types of color and grayscale images: one bit per color CMY, CMYK and   RGB images; a palettized (i.e. mapped) color image; and continuous   tone color and grayscale images. The last two are multi-level and use   the L*a*b* encoding specified in [T.42].7.1.1. Color Encoding   While under development, this mode was called T.Palette, as one of   its major additions was palette or mapped color images. Baseline TIFF   only allows RGB color maps, but ITU-T Rec. T.43 requires L*a*b* color   maps, using the encoding specified in ITU-T Rec. T.42. Palette color   images are expressed with indices (bits per sample) of 12 bits or   less, or optionally 13 to 16 bits, per [T.43].   Enabling T.43 color maps in TIFF requires the extension field   Indexed, defined in [TTN1], and the PhotometricInterpretation field   value 10, defined inSection 6.2.1. The following table shows the   corresponding PhotometricInterpretation, SamplesPerPixel,   BitsPerSample and Indexed field values for the different T.43 image   types.       +----------------------------------------------------------+       | Image Type |PhotometricIn| Samples  | Bits Per | Indexed |       |            |-terpretation| PerPixel |  Sample  |         |       |------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------|       |     RGB    |    2=RGB    |     3    |    1     |    0    |       +----------------------------------------------------------+       |     CMY    |    5=CMYK   |     3    |    1     |    0    |       +------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------+       |     CMYK   |    5=CMYK   |     4    |    1     |    0    |       +------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------+       |   Palette  |  10=ITULAB  |     1    |    n     |    1    |       +------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------+       |  Grayscale |  10=ITULAB  |     1    |   8, 12  |    0    |       +------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------+       |    Color   |  10=ITULAB  |     3    |   8, 12  |    0    |       +------------+-------------+----------+----------+---------+7.1.2. JBIG Encoding   T.43 uses the single-progression sequential mode of JBIG, defined in   ITU-T Rec. T.82. To code multi-level images using JBIG, which is a   bi-level compression method, an image is resolved into a set of bit-   planes, and each bit-plane is then JBIG compressed. For continuous   tone color and grayscale images, Gray code conversion is used. TheMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   Gray code conversion is part of the data stream encoding, and is   therefore invisible to TIFF.7.2. Required TIFF Fields   This section lists the required fields, in addition to those inSection 2.2.1, and the values they must have to be compatible with   ITU-T Rec. T.43.7.2.1. Baseline FieldsImageWidth(256).                                           SHORT or LONG    Same page widths as the base color mode; seeSection 6.2.1.NewSubFileType(254) = (Bit 1=1).                                    LONG    RequiredByTIFFforFAX    Bit 1 is 1 if the image is a single page of a multi-page document.    Default = 0 (no subfile bits on, so may not be omitted for fax)BitsPerSample(258) = 1, 2-8, 9-16.                                 SHORT    Count = SamplesPerPixel    RGB, CMY, CMYK: 1 bit per sample    Continuous tone (L*a*b*): 2-8 bits per sample, 9-12 bits optional    Palette color: 12 or fewer bits per sample, 13-16 bits optional    Note: More than 8 bits per sample is not baseline TIFF.ColorMap(320).                                                     SHORT    Count = 3 * number of sample values    Lossless color fax mode supports palette-color (indexed) images    where the single component value is used as an index into a full    color lookup table stored in the ColorMap field. The sample value is    encoded using the number of bits given by the BitsPerSample field    value. However, per [T.43],the number of sample values may be less    than 2**BitsPerSample. The color lookup table is only required to    have as many entries as there are number of sample values. For    palette-color images in lossless color fax mode, the ITULAB encoding    with 8 or optionally 12 bits per color map value is supported. To    utilize a color map, the TIFF Indexed field must be present. TIFF    orders the color map values so that all the L* values come first,    followed by all the a* values and then all the b* values. Because    ITU-T Rec. T.43 specifies a "chunky" ordering with the L*a*b*    components of the first value, followed by those of the second    value, and so on, reproducing color map values from a fax data    stream in a TIFF file requires reordering values.Compression(259) = 10.                                             SHORT10: ITU-T Rec. T.43 representation, using ITU-T Rec. T.82 (JBIG)    codingMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998FillOrder(266) = 1 , 2.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Profile F readers must be able to read data in both bit orders,    but the vast majority of facsimile products store data LSB    first, exactly as it appears on the telephone line.              1 = Most Significant Bit first.              2 = Least Significant Bit firstPhotometricInterpretation(262) = 2, 5, 10.                         SHORT    2: RGB    5: CMYK, including CMY    10: ITULAB    Image data may also be stored as palette color images, where pixel    values are represented by a single component that is an index into a    color map using the ITULAB encoding. This color map is specified by    the ColorMap field. To use palette color images, set the    PhotometricInterpretation to 10,SamplesPerPixel to 1, and Indexed to    1. The color map is stored in the ColorMap field. SeeSection 7.1.1    for further discussion on the color encoding.ResolutionUnit(296) = 2, 3.                                        SHORT    The unit of measure for resolution. 2 = inch, 3 = centimeter;    Default = 2 (field may be omitted if this is the value)SamplesPerPixel(277) = 1, 3, 4.                                    SHORT    1: Palette color image, or L*-only if Indexed = 0 and       PhotometricInterpretation is 10 (ITULAB).    3: RGB, or L*a*b*, or CMY if PhotometricInterpretation is 5 (CMYK).    4: CMYK.XResolution(282) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONALYResolution(283) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONAL    The resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per resolution    unit. In pixels per inch, allowed XResolution values are: 100, 200,    300, and 400. The lossless color fax mode requires the pixels to be    square, hence YResolution must equal XResolution. Base resolution is    200 pixels per inch. SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric equivalency.7.2.2. Extension FieldsIndexed(364) = 0, 1.                                               SHORT    0: not a palette-color image    1: palette-color image    This field is used to indicate that each sample value is an index    into an array of color values specified in the ColorMap field.    Lossless color fax mode supports palette-color images with the    ITULAB encoding. The SamplesPerPixel value must be 1.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19987.2.3. New FieldsDecode(433)                                                    SRATIONAL    Decode is used in connection with the ITULAB encoding of image data    and color map values; seeSection 6.2.3.7.3. Recommended TIFF Fields   See Sections2.2.3. and 2.2.4.7.4. Lossless Color Fax Mode Summary   Recommended fields are shown with an asterisk *.        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        |   Baseline Fields  |             Values                   |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | BitsPerSample      | 1: Binary RGB, CMY(K)                |        |                    | 8: 8 bits per color sample           |        |                    | 9-16: optional                       |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ColorMap           | n: LAB color map                     |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | Compression        | 10: JBIG, per T.43                   |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | DateTime*          | {ASCII}:  date/time in the 24-hour   |        |                    | format "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS"         |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | FillOrder**        | 1: Most significant bit first        |        |                    | 2: Least significant bit first       |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ImageDescription*  | {ASCII}: A string describing the     |        |                    | contents of the image.               |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ImageWidth         | 864, 1024, 1216, 1728**, 2048, 2432, |        |                    | 2592, 3072, 3456, 3648, 4096, 4864   |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ImageLength**      | n: total number of scanlines in image|        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | NewSubFileType     | 2: Bit 1 identifies single page of a |        |                    | multi-page document                  |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | Orientation        | 1**-8, Default 1                     |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | PhotometricInter-  | 2: RGB                               |        | pretation          | 5: CMYK                              |        |                    | 10: ITULAB                           |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ResolutionUnit     | 2: inch                              |        |                    | 3: centimeter                        |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | RowsPerStrip       | n: number of scanlines per TIFF strip|        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | SamplesPerPixel    | 1: L* (lightness)                    |        |                    | 3: LAB, RGB, CMY                     |        |                    | 4: CMYK                              |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | Software*          | {ASCII}: name & release number of    |        |                    | creator software                     |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | StripByteCounts    | <n>: number or bytes in TIFF strip   |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | StripOffsets       | <n>: offset from beginning of file to|        |                    | each TIFF strip                      |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | XResolution        | 100, 200, 300, 400 (written in       |        |                    | pixels/inch)                         |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | YResolution        | equal to XResolution (pixels must be |        |                    | square)                              |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | Extension Fields                                          |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | DocumentName*      | {ASCII}: name of scanned document    |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | PageNumber         | n,m: page number followed by total   |        |                    | page count                           |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | Indexed            | 0: not a palette-color image         |        |                    | 1: palette-color image               |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | New Fields                                                |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------|        | Decode             | minL, maxL, mina, maxa, minb, maxb:  |        |                    |minimum and maximum values for L*a*b* |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | GlobalParameters   | IFD: global parameters IFD           |        | IFD*               |                                      |        +-----------------------------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | ProfileType*       | n: type of data stored in TIFF file  |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | FaxProfile*        | n: ITU-compatible fax mode           |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | CodingMethods*     | n:compression algorithms used in     |        |                    | file                                 |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+        | VersionYear*       | byte sequence: year of ITU fax std   |        +--------------------+--------------------------------------+8. Mixed Raster Content Mode   This section defines the Mixed Raster Content mode or Profile M of   TIFF for facsimile. Implementations of this profile are required to   implement Profiles S and C, and may optionally implement Profiles F,   J and L.8.1. Overview   Unlike previous fax modes, which use a single coding method and   spatial resolution for an entire fax page, the Mixed Raster Content   mode [T.44] enables different coding methods and resolutions within a   single page. For example, consider a page that contains black-and-   white text, which is best coded with MMR or JBIG, a color bar chart,   best coded with JBIG, and a scanned color image, best coded with   JPEG. Similarly, while spatial resolution of 400 pixels per inch may   be best for the black-and- white text, 200 pixel per inch is usually   sufficient for a color image.   Rather than applying one coding method and resolution to all   elements, MRC allows multiple coders and resolutions within a page.   By itself, MRC does not define any new coding methods or resolutions.   Instead it defines a 3-layer image model for structuring and   combining the scanned image data. The MRC 3-layer model has been   applied here using the TIFF format to yield a data structure which   differs from [T.44] though it applies the same coding methods, uses   the same compressed image data stream and is consistent with the TIFF   principle of a single IFD per image.8.1.1. MRC 3-layer model   The 3 layers of the MRC model are Foreground and Background, which   are both multi-level, and Mask, which is bi-level. Each layer may   appear only once on a page and is coded independently of the other   two. In our earlier example, the black-and-white text could be in the   Mask layer, the color chart in the Foreground layer, and the color   image in the Background layer.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   Each layer is an image and, when present, is represented by at least   one IFD in a TIFF file. This is consistent with TIFF, which provides   fields to define the attributes, such as resolution, image size, bits   per sample, etc., of a single image or layer. The distribution of   content among layers is determined by the writer, as is the choice of   coding method, color encoding and spatial resolution for a layer.   The final image is obtained by using the Mask layer to select pixels   from the other two layers. When the Mask layer pixel value is 1, the   corresponding pixel from the Foreground layer is selected; when it is   0, the corresponding pixel from the Background layer is selected.   Details are given in the Introduction of [T.44].   Not all pages, and not all parts of a page, require 3 layers. If   there is only one layer present, then that layer is the primary image   or IFD. If there is more than one layer, then the Mask must be one of   the layers, in which case it is the primary image and it must be page   size.   MRC allows a page to be split into strips, with a variable number of   scanlines in a strip. A strip can have 1, 2 or 3 layers. A single,   stripped layer may be stored as a single, stripped image in an IFD,   e.g., all strips associated with the Background layer may be treated   as a single image. Alternatively, each strip associated with a layer   may be stored as a separate image or IFD, e.g., the Background layer   can be composed of several images that are offset vertically with   respect to the page. In this case, there can be no overlap between   images associated with a single layer. According to [T.4] Annex G,   strips having more than 1 layer SHOULD NOT be more than 256 lines in   length unless the capability to receive longer strips has been   negotiated.   Furthermore, color fax also requires the spatial resolutions of   Background and Foreground images to be legal fax values that are also   integer factors of the Mask image resolution. For example, if the   Mask Layer resolution is 400 pixels per inch, then allowed   resolutions for the Foreground and Background layers are 100, 200 or   400 pixels per inch; if the Mask is at 300 pixels per inch, then   allowed values are 100 and 300. The Foreground and Background layer   resolutions can be independently set.8.1.2. A TIFF Representation for the MRC 3-layer model   In the TIFF representation of the 3-layer MRC model, each page is   represented by a single IFD, called the Primary IFD, that represents   the Mask layer (unless the Foreground or Background is the single   layer present), and a set of child IFDs that are referenced through   the SubIFDs extension field [TTN1]. To distinguish MRC-specificMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   SubIFDs from other SubIFDs, the NewSubFileType field MUST have Bit 4   ON, indicating an MRC-related IFD. A new ImageLayer field is also   introduced that consists of two values that identify the layer   (Foreground, Background, or Mask) and the order within the layer   (first, second, ... image of the layer); seeSection 8.2.3.   Because MRC allows strips with variable numbers of scanlines, a   reader MUST support StripRowCounts field because a writer may use it   in place of the RowsPerStrip field in this mode. The StripRowCounts   field allows each layer, with a variable number of scanlines in each   strip, to be represented by a single IFD, when the coding parameters   are the same for all strips in the layer. The MRC standard [T.44]   allows the Foreground and Background layers to have strips with   different coding parameters. In this case, a separate IFD is required   to represent the strips which use different coding parameters; see   text in next paragraph. In all cases, the Mask layer is required to   be represented by a single IFD and a single set of coding parameters.   The use of SubIFDs to store child IFDs is described in [TTN1]. An   example is shown graphically below. The Primary IFD associated with   page 1 (PrimaryIFD 0) points to page 2 (PrimaryIFD 1) with the   nextIFD offset. The Primary IFD, corresponding to the Mask layer   (ImageLayer=[2,1]), contains a SubIFDs field that points to a list of   child IFDs. The first child IFD represents one image of the   Background layer, i.e., ImageLayer=[1,1]. This child IFD points to   the second child IFD via the nextIFD offset. This child represents   the second Background layer image, ImageLayer=[1,2]. Finally, the   second child points to the third child, which corresponds to the   single Foreground layer image, ImageLayer=[3,1]. The next IFD offset   associated with this Foreground image is 0, indicating no more child   IFDs exist. Each primary IFD has the NewSubFileType set to 18,   indicating the IFD is MRC-specific (bit 4) and that it is a single   page of a multi-page document (bit 1). Each child IFD has the   NewSubFileType set to 16, indicating the IFD is MRC-specific. The 'V'   character should be read as a down-pointing arrow.                       (nextIFD)       PRIMARY IFD 0  ------------> PRIMARY IFD 1--> ...           ImageLayer = [2,1]           NewSubFileType = 18           SubIFDs                |                V             Child IFD                ImageLayer = [1,1]                NewSubFileType = 16                |                |(nextIFD)McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998                |                V             Child IFD                ImageLayer = [1,2]                NewSubFileType = 16                |                |(nextIFD)                |                V             Child IFD                ImageLayer = [3,1]                NewSubFileType = 16                |                |(nextIFD)                V                0   In the example above, the SubIFDs field of the Primary IFD points to   the first IFD in a list of child IFDs. TIFF allows the SubIFDs field   to point to an array of IFDs, each of which can be the first of a   list of IFDs. An MRC-enabled TIFF reader must scan all available   child IFDs to locate and identify IFDs associated with MRC layers.   In the case where the Background or Foreground layers are described   with multiple IFDs, the XPosition and YPosition TIFF fields specify   the offset to the upper-left corner of the IFD with respect to the   Mask layer; seeSection 8.2.2. When there is only a single layer   (Mask, Foreground, or Background), it is stored as the Primary IFD.8.2. Required TIFF Fields   This section describes the TIFF fields required, in addition to those   inSection 2.2.1, to represent MRC mode fax images. Since MRC mode   stores fax data as a collection of images corresponding to layers or   parts of layers, the coding methods, color encodings and spatial   resolutions used by previous modes apply to MRC. Therefore, the   descriptions here will typically reference the appropriate earlier   section. Fields and values specific to MRC mode are pointed out.8.2.1. Baseline FieldsImageWidth(256).                                           SHORT or LONG    Same page widths as the base color mode; seeSection 6.2.1.    In the MRC mode, the width of a Foreground or Background image in    the coded data stream may be less than the page width. In this case,    the image width in the coded data steam is used to interpret the    coded data, and the value of this field is used as the page width.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998NewSubFileType(254) = 16, 18.                                       LONG    For MRC fax mode, the NewSubFileType field has two bits that are    required.    Bit 1 indicates a single page of a multi-page document and must be    set for the Primary IFD;    Bit 4 indicates MRC imaging model as described in ITU-T    Recommendation T.44 [T.44], and must be set for Primary IFDs    and all MRC-specific child IFDs.BitsPerSample(258) = 1, 2-8, 9-16                                  SHORTCompression(259) = 3, 4, 7, 9, 10.                                 SHORTSamplesPerPixel(277) = 1, 3, 4.                                    SHORTFillOrder(266) = 1 , 2.                                            SHORT    RequiredByTIFFBaseline    Profile F readers must be able to read data in both bit orders,    but the vast majority of facsimile products store data LSB    first, exactly as it appears on the telephone line.              1 = Most Significant Bit first.              2 = Least Significant Bit firstResolutionUnit(296) = 2, 3.                                        SHORTPhotometricInterpretation(262) = 0, 1, 2, 5, 10.                   SHORT    For Mask layer, see Sections4.2.1 and5.2.1.    For Foreground and Background layers, see Sections6.2.1 and7.2.1.ColorMap(320).                                                     SHORTCount = 3 * (2**BitsPerSample)    Used when Foreground or Background layer is a palette-color image;    seeSection 7.2.1.XResolution(282) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONALYResolution(283) = 100, 200, 300, 400.                          RATIONAL    The resolution of the image is expressed in pixels per resolution    unit. In pixels per inch, allowed XResolution values for all layers    are: 100, 200, 300, and 400. MRC color fax mode requires the pixels    to be square, hence YResolution must equal XResolution for all    layers. The resolution of Background and Foreground layers must each    be an integer factor of the Primary image, which is the Mask layer,    when it is present; seeSection 8.4.    SeeSection 2.2.2 for inch-metric equivalency.8.2.2. Extension FieldsChromaSubSampling(530).                                            SHORTChromaPositioning(531).                                            SHORT    For Foreground and Background layers, seeSection 6.2.2.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Indexed(346) = 0, 1.                                               SHORT    For Foreground and Background layers: 1 indicates a palette-color    image, seeSection 7.2.2.T4Options(292) = 0, 1, 4, 5.                                       SHORTT6Options(293) = 0.                                                SHORT    For Mask layer, seeSection 4.2.2.SubIFDs(330).                                                        IFD    Count = number of child IFDs    Each value is an offset from the beginning of the TIFF file to a    child IFD [TTN1].XPosition(286).                                                 RATIONALYPosition(287).                                                 RATIONAL    Specifies the horizontal and vertical offsets of the top-left of the    IFD from the top-left of the Primary IFD in page resolution units.    For example, if the Primary IFD is at 400 pixels per inch, and a    foreground layer IFD is at 200 pixels per inch and located at pixel    coordinate (345, 678) with respect to the Primary IFD, the XPosition    value is 345/400 and the YPosition value is 678/400.    Color fax does not currently allow overlap of any component images    within a single layer.    Default values for XPosition and YPosition are 0.8.2.3. New FieldsDecode(433).                                                   SRATIONAL    For Foreground and Background layers, seeSection 6.2.3.DefaultImageColor(434).                                            SHORT    Count = SamplesPerPixel    In areas where no image data is available, a default color is needed    to specify the color value. If the StripByteCounts value for a strip    is 0, then the color for that strip must be defined by a default    image color.    The DefaultImageColor field uses the same encoding as the image    data, and its value is therefore interpreted using the    PhotometricInterpretation, SamplesPerPixel, BitsPerSample, and    Indexed fields. If the fax data stream requires a different    encoding, then transferring the default color value between a TIFF    file and fax data stream requires a color conversion.    For the Foreground layer image, the default value for the    DefaultImageColor field is black. For other cases, including the    Background layer image, the default value is white.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998StripRowCounts(559).                                                LONG    Count = number of strips    The number of scanlines stored in a strip. MRC allows each fax strip    to store a different number of scanlines. For strips with more than    one layer there is a maximum strip size of 256 scanlines or full    page size. The 256 maximum SHOULD be used unless the capability to    receive longer strips has been negotiated. This field replaces    RowsPerStrip for IFDs with variable-sized strips. Only one of the    two fields, StripRowCounts and RowsPerStrip, may be used in an IFD.ImageLayer (34732).                                       SHORT or LONG.    Count = 2    Image layers are defined such that layer 1 is the Background layer,    layer 3 is the Foreground layer, and layer 2 is the Mask layer,    which selects pixels from the Background and Foreground layers. The    ImageLayer tag contains two values, describing the layer to which    the image belongs and the order in which it is imaged.    ImageLayer[0] = 1, 2, 3.    1: Image is a Background image, i.e., the image that will appear       whenever the Mask contains a value of 0. Background images       typically contain low-resolution, continuous-tone imagery.    2: Image is the Mask layer. In MRC, if the Mask layer is present, it       must be the Primary IFD and be full page in extent (no gaps.)    3: Image is a Foreground image, i.e., the image that will appear       whenever the Mask contains a value of 1. The Foreground image       generally defines the color of text or lines, but may also       contain high-resolution imagery.    ImageLayer[1]:    1: first image to be imaged in this layer,    2: second image to be imaged in this layer,    3: ...    Value describing the image order. In MRC, this may be considered    the strip number. Since MRC mode currently does not allow overlap    between images within a layer, the order value does not have any    visual effect.   In MRC fax mode, it is possible that only a single layer is   transmitted. For example, if a page contains only a single   continuous-tone photograph, then only the Background layer may be   transmitted. In this case, the Background layer will be stored as the   Primary IFD. ImageLayer[0] will be 1 indicating Background;   ImageLayer[1] will be 1 since there can be no other IFDs associated   with that layer. No Mask layer will exist.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 19988.3. Recommended TIFF Fields   See Sections2.2.3. and 2.2.4.8.4. Rules and Requirements for Images   The MRC mode defines a fundamental set of rules for images in the 3-   layer representation.   1. If more than one layer exists, then the binary Mask layer SHALL be      present and be the primary image. The Mask layer SHALL support the      encoding defined inSection 3 and MAY support the encodings      defined in Sections4 and5. If only one layer exists, then the      image corresponding to that layer is the primary image.   2. When the binary Mask layer is the Primary IFD, the Primary IFD      defines and extends to the entire page boundary; all attached      model images cannot extend beyond the Primary image. Resolution      differences may cause some pixels to "hang over" the page      boundary, but no new pixels should exist completely beyond the      page extent. When the Foreground or Background layer is the      Primary IFD, the Primary IFD may not be page width.   3. The Background and Foreground images SHALL support the color      encoding defined inSection 6 and MAY support the color encoding      defined inSection 7. These images MAY optionally cover only a      portion of the strip or page.   4. Each Primary IFD and each MRC-specific SubIFD must have an      ImageLayer field to specify which layer the IFD belongs to, and      the imaging order of that IFD within the layer.   5. Each Primary IFD must have a NewSubFileType field value set to 18,      indicating a single page of a multi-page document (bit 1) and MRC      mode (bit 4).   6. Each MRC-specific child IFD must have a NewSubFileType field value      set to 16, indicating MRC mode (bit 4).   7. In MRC mode, each layer is transmitted as a sequence of strips. It      is possible that each strip of each layer can be stored as a      separate IFD. In this case, the SubIFDs structure pointed to by      the Primary IFD will contain several IFDs that have an ImageLayer      field with the layer identified as either Background (layer 1) or      Foreground (layer 3). There may be no overlap in the vertical      direction between IFDs associated with a single layer, althoughMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998      there may be a gap from one of these images to the next. The TIFF      XPosition and YPosition fields are used to indicate the placement      of these images with respect to the primary image.   8. When the Mask image is present, the resolution of Background and      Foreground images must each be an integer factor of the Mask      image. For example, if the Mask image is 400 pixels/inch, then the      Background or Foreground image may be at 400 pixels/inch (400/1),      200 pixels/inch (400/2) or 100 pixels/inch (400/4).8.5. MRC Fax Mode Summary   Recommended fields are shown with an asterisk *       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Baseline Fields  |               Values                    |       |------------------|-----------------------------------------|       | BitsPerSample    | 1: binary mask                          |       |                  | 8: 8 bits per color sample              |       |                  | 9-16: optional 12 bits/sample           |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ColorMap         | n: LAB color map                        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Compression      | 3: Modified Huffman and Modified Read   |       |                  | 4: Modified Modified Read               |       |                  | 7: JPEG                                 |       |                  | 9: JBIG, per T.85                       |       |                  | 10: JBIG, per T.43                      |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | DateTime*        | {ASCII): date/time in the 24-hour format|       |                  | "YYYY:MM:DD HH:MM:SS"                   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------|       | FillOrder**      | 1: Most significant bit first           |       |                  | 2: Least significant bit first          |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------|       | ImageDescription*| {ASCII}: A string describing the        |       |                  | contents of the image.                  |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ImageWidth       | 864, 1024, 1216, 1728**, 2048, 2432,    |       |                  | 2592, 3072, 3456, 3648, 4096, 4864      |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ImageLength**    | n: total number of scanlines in image   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | NewSubFileType   | 16, 18:                                 |       |                  | Bit 1 indicates single page of a multi- |       |                  | page document on Primary IFD            |       |                  | Bit 4 indicates MRC model               |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Orientation      | 1**-8, Default 1                        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | PhotometricInter | 0: WhiteIsZero                          |       | pretation        | 1: BlackIsZero                          |       |                  | 2: RGB                                  |       |                  | 5: CMYK                                 |       |                  | 10: ITULAB                              |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ResolutionUnit   | 2: inch                                 |       |                  | 3: centimeter                           |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | RowsPerStrip     | n: number or scanlines per strip        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | SamplesPerPixel  | 1: L* (lightness)                       |       |                  | 3: RGB, LAB, CMY                        |       |                  | 4: CMYK                                 |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Software*        | {ASCII}: name & release number of       |       |                  | creator software                        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | StripByteCounts  | <n>: number or bytes in each strip      |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | StripOffsets     | <n>: offset from beginning of file to   |       |                  | each TIFF strip                         |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------|       | XResolution      | 100, 200, 300, 400 (written in          |       |                  | pixels/inch)                            |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------|       | YResolution      | equal to XResolution (pixels must be    |       |                  | square)                                 |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Extension Fields                                           |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | T4Options        | 0: required if Compression is Modified  |       |                  | Huffman, EOLs not byte aligned          |       |                  | 1: required if Compression 2D Modified  |       |                  | Read, EOLs are not byte aligned         |       |                  | 4: required if Compression Modified     |       |                  | Huffman, EOLs byte aligned              |       |                  | 5: required if Compression 2D Modified  |       |                  | Read, EOLs are byte aligned             |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | T6Options        | 0: required if Compression is 2D        |       |                  | Modified Modified Read                  |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | DocumentName*    | {ASCII}: name of scanned document       |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | PageNumber       | n,m: page number followed by total page |       |                  | count                                   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ChromaSubSampling| (1,1), (2, 2)**                         |       |                  | (1, 1): equal numbers of lightness and  |       |                  | chroma samples horizontally & vertically|       |                  | (2, 2): twice as many lightness samples |       |                  | as chroma horizontally and vertically   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ChromaPositioning| 1: centered                             |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Indexed          | 0: not a palette-color image            |       |                  | 1: palette-color image                  |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | SubIFDs          | <IFD>: byte offset to fg/bg IFDs        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | XPosition        | horizontal offset in primary IFD        |       |                  | resolution units                        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | YPosition        | vertical offset in primary IFD          |       |                  | resolution units                        |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | New Fields                                                 |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | Decode           | minL, maxL, mina, maxa, minb, maxb:     |       |                  | minimum and maximum values for L*a*b*   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | DefaultImageColor| <n>: background color                   |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | StripRowCounts   | <n>: number of scanlines in each strip  |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ImageLayer       | n, m: layer number, imaging sequence    |       |                  | (e.g., strip number)                    |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | GlobalParameters | IFD: global parameters IFD              |       | IFD*             |                                         |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ProfileType*     | n: type of data stored in TIFF file     |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | FaxProfile*      | n: ITU-compatible fax mode              |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | CodingMethods*   | n: compression algorithms used in file  |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+       | ModeNumber*      | n: version of ITU fax standard          |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998       +------------------------------------------------------------+       | VersionYear*     | byte sequence: year of ITU fax standard |       +------------------+-----------------------------------------+9. MIME content-type image/tiff   [TIFF-REG] describes the registration of the MIME content-type   image/tiff to refer to TIFF encoded image data. When transported by   MIME, the TIFF content defined by this document must be encoded   within an image/tiff content type. In addition, an optional   "application" parameter is defined for image/tiff to identify a   particular application's subset of TIFF and TIFF extensions for the   encoded image data, if it is known. Typically, this would be used to   assist the recipient in dispatching a suitable rendering package to   handle the display or processing of the image file.9.1 Refinement of MIME content-type image/tiff for Facsimile   Applications   Since this document defines facsimile specific profiles of TIFF, it   is useful to note an appropriate application parameter for the   image/tiff MIME content-type.   The two values of the image/tiff application parameter as defined for   facsimile are shown below, separated by a comma:       faxbw, faxcolor   The "faxbw" application parameter is suitable for use by applications   that can process one or more TIFF for facsimile profiles or subsets   used for the encoding of black and white facsimile data.   The "faxcolor" application parameter is suitable for use by   applications that can process one or more TIFF for facsimile profiles   or subsets that can be used for the encoding of black and white, AND   color facsimile data.   Since this document defines several profiles of TIFF for facsimile,   the following rules should be followed when setting the application   parameter value. For TIFF image data which is encoded for the   profiles of TIFF for Facsimile that support black-and-white image   data (Profiles S, F or J), applications which use one of these   profiles or a subset should set the value of the application   parameter to "faxbw". For TIFF image data which is encoded for the   defined profiles of TIFF for Facsimile that support color image data   (Profiles C, L or M), as well as black-and-white image data,   applications which use one of these profiles or a subset should set   the value of the application parameter to "faxcolor".McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 66]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   An example of the use of the image/tiff MIME Content-type with the   application parameter set with the value 'faxbw' follows:       Content-type: image/tiff; application=faxbw   In this example, use of this parameter value will enable applications   to identify the content as being within a profile or subset of TIFF   for Facsimile that is suitable for encoding black and white image   data, Before attempting to process the image data.   In a similar respect, an example of the image/tiff MIME Content-type   with the application parameter setting suitable for handling a color   subset or profile of TIFF for facsimile is shown below:       Content-type: image/tiff; application=faxcolor10. Security Considerations   This document describes a file format for Internet fax, which is a   series of profiles of TIFF for facsimile. As such, it does not create   any security issues not already identified in [TIFF-REG], in its use   of fields as defined in [TIFF].  There are also new TIFF fields   defined within this specification, but they are of a purely   descriptive nature, so that no new security risks are incurred.   Further, the encoding specified in this document does not in any way   preclude the use of any Internet security protocol to encrypt,   authenticate, or non-repudiate TIFF-encoded facsimile messages.11. References   [REQ] Bradner, S, "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement   Levels",RFC 2119, March 1997.   [T.4] ITU-T Recommendation T.4, Standardization of group 3 facsimile   apparatus for document transmission, October 1997   [T.6] ITU-T Recommendation T.6, Facsimile coding schemes and coding   control functions for group 4 facsimile apparatus, November 1988   [T.30] ITU-T Recommendation T.30 - Procedures for Document Facsimile   Transmission in the General Switched Telephone Network, June 1996   [T.42] ITU-T Recommendation T.42, Continuous-tone colour   representation method for facsimile, February 1996McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 67]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998   [T.43] ITU-T Recommendation T.43, Colour and gray-scale image   representations using lossless coding scheme for facsimile, February   1997   [T.44] ITU-T Recommendation T.44, Mixed Raster Content (MRC), October   1997.   [T.81] ITU-T Recommendation T.81, Information technology - Digital   compression and coding of continuous-tone still images - Requirements   and guidelines, September 1992   [T.82] ITU-T Recommendation T.82, Information technology - Coded   representation of picture and audio information - Progressive bi-   level image compression, March 1995   [T.85] ITU-T Recommendation T.85, Application profile for   Recommendation T.82 - Progressive bi-level image compression (JBIG   coding scheme) for facsimile apparatus, August 1995   [TIFF] Tag Image File Format, Revision 6.0, Adobe Developers   Association, June 3, 1992,ftp://ftp.adobe.com/pub/adobe/devrelations/devtechnotes/pdffiles/tiff6.pdf        The TIFF 6.0 specification dated June 3, 1992 specification (c)        1986-1988, 1992 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All Rights Reserved.   [TIFF-FY] Parsons, G.  and J. Rafferty, "Tag Image File Format (TIFF)   - F Profile for Facsimile",RFC 2306, March 1998.   [TIFF-F0] TIFF Class F specification, Apr 28, 1990,ftp://ftp.faximum.com/pub/documents/tiff_f.txt   [TIFF-REG] Parsons, G., Rafferty J. and S. Zilles, "Tag Image File   Format (TIFF) - image/tiff MIME Sub-type Registration",RFC 2302,   March 1998.   [TTN1] Adobe PageMaker 6.0 TIFF Technical Notes, Sept. 14, 1995,http://www.adobe.com/supportservice/devrelations/PDFS/TN/TIFFPM6.pdf   [TTN2] Draft TIFF Technical Note 2, Replacement TIFF/JPEG   specification, March 17, 1995,ftp://ftp.sgi.com/graphics/tiff/TTN2.draft.txt   [VPIM2] Vaudreui,l G. and G. Parsons, "Voice Profile for Internet   Mail - version 2", work in progress, <draft-ema-vpim-06.txt>   The ITU-T Recommendations are available athttp://www.itu.ch.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 68]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 199812. Authors' Addresses   Lloyd McIntyre                     Stephen Zilles   Xerox Corporation                  Adobe Systems Inc.   Mailstop PAHV-305                  Mailstop W14   3400 Hillview Ave.                 345 Park Avenue   Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA            San Jose, CA 95110-2704, USA   Voice: +1-650-813-6762             Voice: +1-408-536-4766   Fax: +1-650-845-2340               Fax: +1-408-536-4042   Email: lmcintyre@adoc.xerox.com    Email: szilles@adobe.com   Robert Buckley                     Dennis Venable   Xerox Corporation                  Xerox Corporation   Mailstop 0128-30E                  Mailstop 0128-27E   800 Phillips Road                  800 Phillips Road   Webster, NY 14580, USA             Webster, NY 14580, USA   Voice: +1-716-422-1282             Voice: +1-716-422-8009   Fax: +1-716-422-6117               Fax: +1-716-422-6117   Email: Rob_Buckley@wb.xerox.com    Email: venable@wrc.xerox.com   Glenn S. Parsons                   James Rafferty   Northern Telecom                   Human Communications   P.O. Box 3511, Station C           12 Kevin Drive   Ottawa, ON  K1Y 4H7, Canada        Danbury, CT 06811-2901, USA   Phone: +1-613-763-7582             Phone: +1-203-746-4367   Fax: +1-613-763-2697               Fax: +1-203-746-4367   Email: Glenn.Parsons@Nortel.ca     Email: Jrafferty@worldnet.att.netMcIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 69]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Annex A:  Summary of TIFF Fields for Internet Fax   This annex includes tables which list by mode the TIFF fields used in   the proposed fax file format.  The fields are organized into 3   categories:      1)  TIFF Baseline Fields      2)  TIFF Extension Fields      3)  New Fields.   The tables include the allowed values for each fax mode. Entries   other than explicit numbers are described by:      n        - single number      n, m     - 2 numbers      a, b, c  - 3 numbers      r        - rational number      <n>      - array of numbers      <b>      - byte sequence      {ASCII}  - string      IFD      - IFD byte offset      <IFD>    - array of IFD byte offsets   A blank entry in the table indicates that the field is not used by   that particular fax mode.Table A.1  TIFF Baseline Fields            +---------------------------------------------------------+            |                    Fax Mode/Profile                     |            +---------------------------------------------------------|            | Minimal | Extended |  JBIG  |  Lossy  |Lossless| Mixed  | +----------|   B&W   |    B&W   |  B&W   |  Color  | Color  | Raster | |   TIFF   |         |          |        |         |        | Content| |  Field   |    S    |     F    |   J    |    C    |   L    |   M    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | BitsPer  | 1       | 1        | 1      | 8, 12   | 1, 2-8 | 1, 2-8 | | Sample   |         |          |        |         | 9-16   | 9-16   | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | ColorMap |         |          |        |         | <n>    | <n>    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Compres- | 3       | 3, 4     | 9      | 7       | 10     | 3, 4, 7| | sion     |         |          |        |         |        | 9,10   | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | DateTime |         | {ASCII}  | {ASCII}| {ASCII} | {ASCII}| {ASCII}| +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | FillOrder| 2       | 1, 2     | 1, 2   | 1, 2    | 1, 2   | 1,2    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 70]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998 +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | ImageDes-|         | {ASCII}  | {ASCII}| {ASCII} | {ASCII}| {ASCII}| | cription |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Image-   | n       | n        | n      | n       | n      | n      | | Length   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Image-   | 1728    | 1728, 2048, 2432  |   864, 1024, 1216, 1728,  | | Width    |         | 2592, 3072, 3456  |  2048, 2432, 2592, 3072,  | |          |         | 3648, 4096, 4864  |  3456, 3648, 4096, 4864   | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | NewSub-  | 2       | 2        | 2      | 2       | 2      | 16, 18 | | FileType |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Orien-   | 1       | 1-8      | 1-8    | 1-8     | 1-8    | 1-8    | | tation   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Photo-   | 0       | 0, 1     | 0, 1   | 10      | 2, 5,  | 0, 1,  | | metric-  |         |          |        |         | 10     | 2, 5,  | | Interp-  |         |          |        |         |        | 10     | | retation |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Resolu-  | 2       | 2, 3     | 2, 3   | 2, 3    | 2, 3   | 2, 3   | | tionUnit |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | RowsPer- | n       | n        | n      | n       | n      | n      | | Strip    |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Samples- | 1       | 1        | 1      | 1, 3    | 1, 3, 4| 1, 3, 4| | PerPixel |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Software |         | {ASCII}  | {ASCII}| {ASCII} | {ASCII}| {ASCII}| +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Strip-   | n       | <n>      | <n>    | <n>     | <n>    | <n>    | | Byte-    |         |          |        |         |        |        | | Counts   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Strip-   | n       | <n>      | <n>    | <n>     | <n>    | <n>    | | Offsets  |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | XResolu- | 204     | 200, 204, 300     |    100, 200, 300, 400     | | tion     | 200     | 400, 408          |                           | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | YResolu- | 98, 196 | 98, 196, 100, 200 |    100, 200, 300, 400     | | tion     | 100,200 | 300, 391, 400     |                           | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 71]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Table A.2  TIFF Extension Fields            +---------------------------------------------------------+            |                    Fax Mode/Profile                     |            +---------------------------------------------------------|            | Minimal | Extended |  JBIG  |  Lossy  |Lossless| Mixed  | +----------|   B&W   |    B&W   |  B&W   |  Color  | Color  | Raster | |   TIFF   |         |          |        |         |        | Content| |  Field   |    S    |     F    |   J    |    C    |   L    |   M    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Chroma-  |         |          |        | 1       |        | 1      | | Position-|         |          |        |         |        |        | | ing      |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Chroma-  |         |          |        | <1, 1>  |        | <1, 1> | | SubSampl-|         |          |        | <2, 2>  |        | <2, 2> | | ing      |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Document-|         | {ASCII}  | {ASCII}| {ASCII} | {ASCII}| {ASCII}| | Name     |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Indexed  |         |          |        |         | 0,1    | 0,1    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Page-    | n, m    | n, m     | n, m   | n, m    | n, m   | n, m   | | Number   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | SubIFDs  |         |          |        |         |        | <IFD>  | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | T4Options| 0, 4    | 0, 1,    |        |         |        | 0, 1,  | |          |         | 4, 5     |        |         |        | 4, 5   | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | T6Options|         | 0        |        |         |        | 0      | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | XPosition|         |          |        |         |        | r      | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | YPosition|         |          |        |         |        | r      | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 72]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Table A.3   New Fields            +---------------------------------------------------------+            |                    Fax Mode/Profile                     |            +---------------------------------------------------------|            | Minimal | Extended |  JBIG  |  Lossy  |Lossless| Mixed  | +----------|   B&W   |    B&W   |  B&W   |  Color  | Color  | Raster | |   TIFF   |         |          |        |         |        | Content| |  Field   |    S    |     F    |   J    |    C    |   L    |   M    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | BadFax-  |         | n        |        |         |        |        | | Lines    |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | CleanFax-|         | 0, 1, 2  |        |         |        |        | | Data     |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Coding-  |         |          | n      | n       | n      | n      | | Method   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Consecu- |         | n        |        |         |        |        | | tiveBad- |         |          |        |         |        |        | | FaxLines |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Decode   |         |          |        | <r>     | <r>    | <r>    | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Default- |         |          |        |         |        | <n>    | |ImageColor|         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Fax-     |         |          | n      | n       | n      | n      | | Profile  |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Global-  |         | IFD      | IFD    | IFD     | IFD    | IFD    | | Parame-  |         |          |        |         |        |        | | tersIFD  |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Image-   |         |          |        |         |        | n, m   | | Layer    |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Mode-    |         |          |        |         |        | n      | | Number   |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------| | Profile- |         |          | n      | n       | n      | n      | | Type     |         |          |        |         |        |        | +--------------------------------------------------------------------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 73]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998 +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Strip-   |         |          |        |         |        | <n>    | | RowCounts|         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+ | Version- |         |          |        | <b>     |<b>     |        | | Year     |         |          |        |         |        |        | +----------+---------+----------+--------+---------+--------+--------+McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 74]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Annex B.  IANA Registration for image/tiff Application ParameterValues used for facsimile   To: IANA@isi.edu   Subject: Registration of new Application parameter values for   image/tiff   MIME media type name: image/tiff   Optional parameters: Application   New Value(s): faxbw, faxcolor   Description of Use:   faxbw - The "faxbw" application parameter is suitable for use by   applications that can process one or more TIFF for facsimile profiles   or subsets used for the encoding of black-and-white facsimile data.   The definition of the use of this value is contained inSection 9 of   this document (TIFFPLUS).   Faxcolor - The "faxcolor" application parameter is suitable for use   by applications that can process one or more TIFF for facsimile   profiles or subsets that can be used for the encoding of black and   white, AND color facsimile data. The definition of the use of this   value is contained inSection 9 of this document (TIFFPLUS).McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 75]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Security Considerations:   Security considerations related to use of the TIFF subsets described   by the "faxbw" and "faxcolor" values of the Application parameter are   identified inSection 10 of this document (TIFFPLUS).Persons & email addresses to contact for further information:   Glenn W. Parsons (Glenn.Parsons@Nortel.ca)   James Rafferty (Jrafferty@worldnet.att.net)   Stephen Zilles (szilles@adobe.com)   Change Controller:  Stephen ZillesINFORMATION TO THE SUBMITTER:   The accepted registrations will be listed in the "Assigned Numbers"   series of RFCs.  The information in the registration form is freely   distributable.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 76]

RFC 2301              File Format for Internet Fax            March 1998Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.McIntyre, et. al.           Standards Track                    [Page 77]

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