%ents; ]>
User Geolocation This document defines an XMPP protocol extension for communicating information about the current geographical location of an entity. &LEGALNOTICE; 0080 Draft Standards Track Standards XMPP Core XEP-0060 geoloc http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/geoloc.xsd &hildjj; &stpeter; 1.3 2006-08-21 psa

Folded in civil location from XEP-0112.

1.2 2005-05-12 psa

Changed xs:string to xs:decimal for bearing and specified that bearing is to be interpreted as decimal degrees relative to true north.

1.1 2004-10-29 psa

Changed xs:int to xs:decimal for altitude; changed MUST NOT to SHOULD NOT regarding inferences about accuracy.

1.0 2004-10-12 psa

Per a vote of the Jabber Council, advanced status to Draft; also added internationalization considerations and linked to an archived version of the GPS datum example.

0.9 2004-10-12 psa

Clarified several points in the implementation notes.

0.8 2004-09-15 psa

Specified error flow for IQ example.

0.7 2004-04-25 psa

Corrected several errors; added reference to XEP-0033.

0.6 2004-02-19 psa

Reverted from infobits to geoloc elements; moved physical address protocol back to XEP-0112.

0.5 2003-12-16 psa

Converted to use of infobits.

0.4 2003-09-08 psa

Merged in contents of XEP-0112.

0.3 2003-08-21 psa

Changed protocol name from 'location' to 'geoloc'.

0.2 2003-07-29 psa

Incorporated Standards list feedback; changed document type to Informational.

0.1 2003-04-15 jjh

Initial version.

This document defines a format for capturing data about an entity's geographical location (geoloc). The format defined herein can describe most earthbound geographical locations, especially locations that may change fairly frequently. Potential uses for this approach include:

Geographical location is captured in terms of Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates as well as civil location (city, street, building, etc.).

The format defined herein was designed to address the following requirements:

Information about the entity's location is provided by the entity and propagated on the network by the entity's associated application (usually a client). The information is structured by means of a <geoloc/> element that is qualified by the 'http://jabber.org/protocol/geoloc' namespace; the geolocation information itself is provided as the XML character data of the following child elements:

Element Name Datatype Definition Example
alt xs:decimal Altitude in meters above or below sea level 1609
area xs:string A named area such as a campus or neighborhood Central Park
bearing xs:decimal GPS bearing (direction in which the entity is heading to reach its next waypoint), measured in decimal degrees relative to true north It is the responsibility of the receiver to translate bearing into decimal degrees relative to magnetic north, if desired.  
building xs:string A specific building on a street or in an area The Empire State Building
country xs:string The nation where the user is located USA
datum xs:string GPS datum If datum is not included, receiver MUST assume WGS84; receivers MUST implement WGS84; senders MAY use another datum, but it is not recommended.  
description xs:string A natural-language name for or description of the location Bill's house
error xs:decimal Horizontal GPS error in arc minutes 10
floor xs:string A particular floor in a building 102
lat xs:decimal Latitude in decimal degrees North 39.75
locality xs:string A locality within the administrative region, such as a town or city New York City
lon xs:decimal Longitude in decimal degrees East -104.99
postalcode xs:string A code used for postal delivery 10027
region xs:string An administrative region of the nation, such as a state or province New York
room xs:string A particular room in a building Observatory
street xs:string A thoroughfare within the locality, or a crossing of two thoroughfares 34th and Broadway
text xs:string A catch-all element that captures any other information about the location Northwest corner of the lobby
timestamp xs:datetime UTC timestamp specifying the moment when the reading was taken (MUST conform to the DateTime profile of &xep0082;) 2004-02-19T21:12Z

NOTE: The datatypes specified above are defined in &w3xmlschema2;.

The location information SHOULD be communicated by means of &xep0060; or the subset of pubsub defined in &xep0163;. Because location information is not pure presence information and can change independently of the user's availability, it SHOULD NOT be provided as an extension to &PRESENCE;, although an application MAY do so if necessary.

In order to provide information about one's location, the publishing entity should use the pubsub protocol (the following examples show use of the publish-subscribe subset specified in XEP-0163).

id='publish1'> Italy 45.44 Venice 12.33 ]]> Italy 45.44 Venice 12.33 ]]>

If an entity wishes to request the location of another entity but the requestee does not publish that information via pubsub (including PEP), the requestor MAY send an IQ to the requestee:

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The receiving entity SHOULD make a careful access control decision before returning the actual location.

Italy 45.44 Venice 12.33 ]]>

If the receiving entity decides not to return the actual location, it MUST return an IQ error, which SHOULD be &forbidden; but MAY be some other appropriate error, such as ¬allowed;:

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If an entity wants to send another entity its postition but it does not publish that information via pubsub, it MAY do so in a message. There SHOULD be a body element so that receiving entities that do not support the geolocation protocol can present a message to the recipient.

This message contains a location. Elsinore 56.033 12.618 http://www.mapquest.com/maps/map.adp?latlongtype=decimal&latitude=56.033&longitude=12.618 ]]>

If an entity wishes all of the entities on its roster to be informed of a new location, the entity MAY publish a presence stanza that includes a location, although this is NOT RECOMMENDED (since location SHOULD be published using pubsub instead in order to ensure appropriate access control):

1609 Jabber, Inc. 10 39.75477 -104.99768 2004-02-19T21:12Z ]]>

Avoid "Mars probe" issues: as specified in Table 1, the units for <lat/> and <lon/> MUST be decimal degrees (where South and West are negative, North and East are positive), the units for <alt/> MUST be meters above or below sea level, and the units for <error/> MUST be arc minutes.

In applications where updates are sent whenever there is a certain distance change in location, those applications SHOULD account for time as well, to avoid rate-limiting when the user is (for example) on a jet plane. One possible way to do this would be to send updates at most once per minute of time (every time 60 seconds have elapsed).

Inferences SHOULD NOT be made about accuracy from the number of digits specified in the location or altitude.

Why the datum madness? See <http://www.jabber.org/protocol/geoloc/gps_datum.html> for an example.

An entity can provide a GPS path by publishing a series of items (i.e., multiple pubsub events) with appropriate values of the <timestamp/> element.

There are many XML data formats for physical location or address information. It is beyond the scope of this document to provide a mapping from the extension defined herein to every such format. However, it would be valuable to provide a mapping from the XMPP format to the formats used in other presence or extended presence protocols. The two main protocols of interest are:

  1. The Wireless Village (now "IMPS") specifications for mobile instant messaging; these specifications define a presence attribute for address information as encapsulated in the IMPS "Address" element The Wireless Village Initiative: Presence Attributes v1.1 (WV-029); for further information, visit <http://www.openmobilealliance.org/tech/affiliates/wv/wvindex.html>..

  2. The SIP-based SIMPLE specifications; in particular, the IETF's GEOPRIV Working Group has defined an extension to the IETF's &pidf; for location information, as specified in &rfc4119; (also known as "PIDF-LO").

The following table also maps the format defined herein to the vCard XML format specified in &xep0054;.

XMPP Wireless Village / IMPS SIMPLE (PIDF-LO) vCard XML
<country/> <Country/> <country/> <CTRY/> As noted in XEP-0054, the XML vCard format defined in draft-dawson-vcard-xml-dtd-01 specified a <COUNTRY/> element rather than a <CTRY/> element; refer to XEP-0054 for details.
<region/> -- <A1/> and/or <A2/> <REGION/>
<locality/> <City/> <A3/> <LOCALITY/>
<area/> <NamedArea/> <A4/> and/or <A5/> --
<street/> <Street/> The IMPS specification also enables one to define an intersection (e.g., "Broadway and 34th Street") as the combination of a <Crossing1/> element (e.g., "Broadway") and a <Crossing2/> element (e.g., "34th Street"). To map from IMPS to XMPP, an application SHOULD map such a combination to one XMPP <street/> element. <A6/> The PIDF-LO format provides information elements for much more granular control over a traditional street address; in PIDF-LO the <A6/> element is the street name only, and further information is provided in distinct elements for a leading street direction (e.g., "N"), trailing street suffix (e.g., "SW"), street suffix (e.g., "Avenue"), house number (e.g., "909"), and house number suffix (e.g., "1/2"). To map from PIDF-LO to XMPP, an application SHOULD construct the complete street address from the PIDF-LO elements (<A6/>, <PRD/>, <POD/>, <STS/>, <HNO/>, and <HNS/>) and map the result to one XMPP <street/> element. <STREET/>
<building/> <Building/> <LMK/> --
<floor/> -- <FLR/> --
<room/> -- -- --
<postalcode/> -- <PC/> <PCODE/>
<text/> <FreeTextLocation/> <LOC/> <EXTADR/>
-- <Accuracy/> This element provides accuracy in meters. The geolocation protocol defined in XEP-0080 specifies such an element for XMPP, which SHOULD be used when mapping from IMPS to XMPP. -- --
-- -- <NAM/> This element provides a name for the location, e.g., a certain store in a building. This SHOULD be mapped to the XMPP <text/> element. --

Because the character data contained in <geoloc/> child elements of type 'xs:string' is intended to be readable by humans, the <geoloc/> element SHOULD possess an 'xml:lang' attribute specifying the natural language of such character data.

It is imperative to control access to location information, at least by default. Imagine that a stalker got unauthorized access to this information, with enough accuracy and timeliness to be able to find the target person. This scenario could lead to loss of life, so please take access control checks seriously. If an error is deliberately added to a location, the error SHOULD be the same for all receivers, to minimize the likelihood of triangulation. In the case of deliberate error, the <error/> element SHOULD NOT be included.

This document requires no interaction with &IANA;.

The ®ISTRAR; includes 'http://jabber.org/protocol/geoloc' to its registry of protocol namespaces.

The protocol documented by this schema is defined in XEP-0080: http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0080.html ]]>