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.well-known/feeds resource identifier

This document describes the use of URIs whose path component is /.well-known/feeds.

Registration

Information required by RFC5785:

URI suffix: feeds
Change controller: Dan Q <https://danq.me/>
Specification document(s): https://github.com/Dan-Q/well-known-feeds
Status: provisional
Related information: OPML 2.0 specification <http://opml.org/spec2.opml>

Representation

The feeds well-known resource endpoint provides an OPML document of any valid OPML version. That OPML document's <body> is expected to contain one or more <outline> elements, referencing some or all of the feeds published by or representative of the website. This might include for example outlines of type="rss" referring to feeds themselves, references of type="include" pointing to further OPML documents, or any other valid OPML content.

If in-use by a website, a request to the feeds well-known resource endpoint must return a valid OPML document using the text/x-opml, application/xml, or text/xml MIME type.

As an alternative to Link:/<link rel="alternate">

.well-known/feeds supplements but does not replace the utility of techniques like <link rel="alternate"> to reference RSS feeds associated with a web page. Specific differences include:

  • .well-known/feeds provides a single lightweight location from which a user agent can retreive feed information, obviating the need for <link> headers delivered with every page
  • .well-known/feeds is especially suitable for websites with multiple feeds, for example a news site or community weblog with different categories of feed
  • <link rel="alternate"> remains the best way to associate a feed with a specific page rather than with the entire site

Use Cases

.well-known/feeds benefits:

  • Content publishers who want to promote their feeds in a site-wide way
  • Producers of feed reader software who need a way to enumerate feeds belonging to a site that a subscriber might like to add to their reading list
  • Content consumers who want to use their feed reader see a "menu" of possible subscriptions available from a particular website
  • Syndication services that want to be able to dynamically subscribe to new feeds published by a site, as they're added

Security Considerations

There are no security considerations for this well-known resource identifier.