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<pre class=metadata>
Group: WHATWG
H1: MIME Sniffing
Shortname: mimesniff
Text Macro: TWITTER mimesniff
Text Macro: LATESTRD 2023-07
Abstract: The MIME Sniffing standard defines sniffing resources.
Translation: ja https://triple-underscore.github.io/mimesniff-ja.html
Markup Shorthands: css off
</pre>
<pre class=biblio>
{
"FTP": {
"aliasOf": "rfc0959"
},
"HTTP-SEMANTICS": {
"aliasOf": "rfc9110"
},
"KEYWORDS": {
"aliasOf": "rfc2119"
},
"MIMETYPE": {
"aliasOf": "rfc2046"
},
"SECCONTSNIFF": {
"authors": ["Adam Barth", "Juan Caballero", "Dawn Song"],
"date": "May 2009",
"href": "https://www.adambarth.com/papers/2009/barth-caballero-song.pdf",
"title": "Secure Content Sniffing for Web Browsers, or How to Stop Papers from Reviewing Themselves"
}
}
</pre>
<pre class=anchors>
spec: HTTP-SEMANTICS; urlPrefix: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9110
type: dfn
text: media-type; url: #name-media-type
text: quoted-string; url: #name-quoted-strings
text: token; url: #name-tokens
</pre>
<pre class=link-defaults>
spec:html;
type:element; text:script
type:element-attr; text:type
</pre>
<h2 id=introduction>Introduction</h2>
<p>
The HTTP <code>Content-Type</code> header field is intended to indicate the
MIME type of an HTTP response.
However, many HTTP servers supply a <code>Content-Type</code> header field
value that does not match the actual contents of the response.
Historically, web browsers have tolerated these servers by examining the
content of HTTP responses in addition to the <code>Content-Type</code> header
field in order to determine the effective MIME type of the response.
<p>
Without a clear specification for how to "sniff" the MIME type, each user
agent has been forced to reverse-engineer the algorithms of other user agents
in order to maintain interoperability.
Inevitably, these efforts have not been entirely successful, resulting in
divergent behaviors among user agents.
In some cases, these divergent behaviors have had security implications, as a
user agent could interpret an HTTP response as a different MIME type than
the server intended.
<p>
These security issues are most severe when an "honest" server allows
potentially malicious users to upload their own files and then serves the
contents of those files with a low-privilege MIME type.
For example, if a server believes that the client will treat a contributed
file as an image (and thus treat it as benign), but a user agent believes the
content to be HTML (and thus privileged to execute any scripts contained
therein), an attacker might be able to steal the user's authentication
credentials and mount other cross-site scripting attacks.
(Malicious servers, of course, can specify an arbitrary MIME type in the
<code>Content-Type</code> header field.)
<p>
This document describes a content sniffing algorithm that carefully balances
the compatibility needs of user agent with the security constraints imposed
by existing web content.
The algorithm originated from research conducted by Adam Barth, Juan
Caballero, and Dawn Song, based on content sniffing algorithms present in
popular user agents, an extensive database of existing web content, and
metrics collected from implementations deployed to a sizable number of users.
[[SECCONTSNIFF]]
<h2 id=conformance-requirements>Conformance requirements</h2>
<p>
The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",
"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
For readability, these keywords will generally not appear in all uppercase
letters.
[[!KEYWORDS]]
<p>
Requirements phrased in the imperative as part of algorithms (such as "strip
any leading space characters" or "return false and abort these steps") are to
be interpreted with the meaning of the keyword used in introducing the
algorithm.
<p>
Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps can be
implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is equivalent.
In particular, note that the algorithms defined in this specification are
intended to be easy to understand and are not intended to be performant.
<h2 id=terminology>Terminology</h2>
<p>
This specification depends on the Infra Standard. [[!INFRA]]
<p>An <dfn>HTTP token code point</dfn> is U+0021 (!), U+0023 (#), U+0024 ($), U+0025 (%),
U+0026 (&), U+0027 ('), U+002A (*), U+002B (+), U+002D (-), U+002E (.), U+005E (^), U+005F (_),
U+0060 (`), U+007C (|), U+007E (~), or an <a>ASCII alphanumeric</a>.</p>
<p class=note>This matches the value space of the <a>token</a> token production. [[HTTP-SEMANTICS]]
<p>An <dfn>HTTP quoted-string token code point</dfn> is U+0009 TAB, a <a>code point</a> in the range
U+0020 SPACE to U+007E (~), inclusive, or a <a>code point</a> in the range U+0080 through
U+00FF (ÿ), inclusive.
<p class=note>This matches the effective value space of the <a>quoted-string</a> token
production. By definition it is a superset of the <a>HTTP token code points</a>. [[HTTP-SEMANTICS]]
<p>
A <dfn>binary data byte</dfn> is a <a>byte</a> in the range 0x00 to
0x08 (NUL to BS), the <a>byte</a> 0x0B (VT), a <a>byte</a> in the
range 0x0E to 0x1A (SO to SUB), or a <a>byte</a> in the range 0x1C to
0x1F (FS to US).
<p>
A <dfn>whitespace byte</dfn> (abbreviated
<abbr lt="whitespace byte">0xWS</abbr>) is any one of the following
<a>bytes</a>: 0x09 (HT), 0x0A (LF), 0x0C (FF), 0x0D (CR),
0x20 (SP).
<p>
A <dfn>tag-terminating byte</dfn> (abbreviated
<abbr lt="tag terminating byte">0xTT</abbr>) is any one of the following
<a>bytes</a>: 0x20 (SP), 0x3E ("<code>></code>").
<p>
Equations are using the mathematical operators as defined in
[[!ENCODING]]. In addition, the bitwise NOT is
represented by ~.
<h2 id=understanding-mime-types>MIME types</h2>
<h3 id=mime-type-representation>MIME type representation</h3>
<p>A <dfn export lt="MIME type|MIME type record" id=mime-type>MIME type</dfn> represents an
<i>internet media type</i> as defined by
<cite>Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types</cite>. It can also be
referred to as a <a>MIME type record</a>. [[!MIMETYPE]]
<p class=note>Standards are encouraged to consistently use the term <a>MIME type</a> to avoid
confusion with the use of <i>media type</i> as described in <cite>Media Queries</cite>.
[[MEDIAQUERIES]]
<p>A <a>MIME type</a>'s <dfn export for="MIME type" id=type>type</dfn> is a non-empty
<a>ASCII string</a>.
<p>A <a>MIME type</a>'s <dfn export for="MIME type" id=subtype>subtype</dfn> is a non-empty
<a>ASCII string</a>.
<p>A <a>MIME type</a>'s <dfn export for="MIME type" id=parameters>parameters</dfn> is an
<a>ordered map</a> whose <a for=map>keys</a> are <a>ASCII strings</a> and <a for=map>values</a> are
<a for=/>strings</a> limited to <a>HTTP quoted-string token code points</a>. It is initially empty.
<!-- Candidate for "isomorphic string" if we ever decide to add that. -->
<h3 id=mime-type-miscellaneous>MIME type miscellaneous</h3>
<p>The <dfn export for="MIME type">essence</dfn> of a <a>MIME type</a> <var>mimeType</var> is
<var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">type</a>, followed by U+002F (/), followed by
<var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">subtype</a>.
<p>A <a>MIME type</a> is <dfn export>supported by the user agent</dfn> if the user agent has the
capability to interpret a <a>resource</a> of that <a>MIME type</a> and present it to the user.
<p class=XXX>Ideally this would be more precise. See
<a href=https://github.com/w3c/preload/issues/113>w3c/preload #113</a>.
<div algorithm>
<p>To <dfn export>minimize a supported MIME type</dfn> given a <a>MIME type</a> <var>mimeType</var>,
run these steps. They return an <a>ASCII string</a>.
<ol>
<li><p>If <var>mimeType</var> is a <a>JavaScript MIME type</a>, then return
"<code>text/javascript</code>".
<li><p>If <var>mimeType</var> is a <a>JSON MIME type</a>, then return
"<code>application/json</code>".
<li>
<p>If <var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">essence</a> is "<code>image/svg+xml</code>", then
return "<code>image/svg+xml</code>".
<p class=note>SVG is worth distinguishing from other <a>XML MIME types</a>.
<li><p>If <var>mimeType</var> is an <a>XML MIME type</a>, then return
"<code>application/xml</code>".
<li><p>If <var>mimeType</var> is <a>supported by the user agent</a>, then return
<var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">essence</a>.
<li><p>Return the empty string.
</ol>
<p class=note>The goal of this algorithm is to allow the caller to distinguish MIME types with
different processing models, such as those for GIF and PNG, but otherwise provide as little
information as possible.
</div>
<h3 id=mime-type-writing>MIME type writing</h3>
<p>A <dfn export id=valid-mime-type>valid MIME type string</dfn> is a string that matches the
<a spec="HTTP-SEMANTICS">media-type</a> token production. In particular, a <a>valid MIME type string</a> may
include <a for="MIME type">parameters</a>. [[!HTTP-SEMANTICS]]
<p class=note>A <a>valid MIME type string</a> is supposed to be used for conformance checkers only.
<div class=example id=example-valid-mime-type-string>
<p>"<code>text/html</code>" is a <a>valid MIME type string</a>.
<p>"<code>text/html;</code>" is not a <a>valid MIME type string</a>, though
<a>parse a MIME type</a> returns a <a>MIME type record</a> for it identical to if the input had
been "<code>text/html</code>".
</div>
<p>A
<dfn export id=valid-mime-type-with-no-parameters>valid MIME type string with no parameters</dfn> is
a <a>valid MIME type string</a> that does not contain U+003B (;).
<h3 id=parsing-a-mime-type>Parsing a MIME type</h3>
<p>To <dfn export>parse a MIME type</dfn>, given a string <var>input</var>, run these steps:
<ol>
<li><p>Remove any leading and trailing <a>HTTP whitespace</a> from <var>input</var>.
<li><p>Let <var>position</var> be a <a for=string>position variable</a> for <var>input</var>,
initially pointing at the start of <var>input</var>.
<li><p>Let <var>type</var> be the result of <a>collecting a sequence of code points</a> that are
not U+002F (/) from <var>input</var>, given <var>position</var>.
<li><p>If <var>type</var> is the empty string or does not solely contain
<a>HTTP token code points</a>, then return failure.
<li><p>If <var>position</var> is past the end of <var>input</var>, then return failure.
<li><p>Advance <var>position</var> by 1. (This skips past U+002F (/).)
<li><p>Let <var>subtype</var> be the result of <a>collecting a sequence of code points</a> that are
not U+003B (;) from <var>input</var>, given <var>position</var>.
<li><p>Remove any trailing <a>HTTP whitespace</a> from <var>subtype</var>.
<li><p>If <var>subtype</var> is the empty string or does not solely contain
<a>HTTP token code points</a>, then return failure.
<li><p>Let <var>mimeType</var> be a new <a>MIME type record</a> whose <a for="MIME type">type</a>
is <var>type</var>, in <a>ASCII lowercase</a>, and <a for="MIME type">subtype</a> is
<var>subtype</var>, in <a>ASCII lowercase</a>.
<li>
<p>While <var>position</var> is not past the end of <var>input</var>:
<ol>
<li><p>Advance <var>position</var> by 1. (This skips past U+003B (;).)
<li>
<p><a>Collect a sequence of code points</a> that are <a>HTTP whitespace</a> from
<var>input</var> given <var>position</var>.
<p class=note>This is roughly equivalent to <a>skip ASCII whitespace</a>, except that
<a>HTTP whitespace</a> is used rather than <a>ASCII whitespace</a>.
<li><p>Let <var>parameterName</var> be the result of <a>collecting a sequence of code points</a>
that are not U+003B (;) or U+003D (=) from <var>input</var>, given <var>position</var>.
<li><p>Set <var>parameterName</var> to <var>parameterName</var>, in <a>ASCII lowercase</a>.
<li>
<p>If <var>position</var> is not past the end of <var>input</var>, then:
<ol>
<li><p>If the <a>code point</a> at <var>position</var> within <var>input</var> is U+003B (;),
then <a for=iteration>continue</a>.
<li><p>Advance <var>position</var> by 1. (This skips past U+003D (=).)
</ol>
<li><p>If <var>position</var> is past the end of <var>input</var>, then
<a for=iteration>break</a>.
<li><p>Let <var>parameterValue</var> be null.
<li>
<p>If the <a>code point</a> at <var>position</var> within <var>input</var> is U+0022 ("),
then:
<ol>
<li><p>Set <var>parameterValue</var> to the result of <a>collecting an HTTP quoted string</a>
from <var>input</var>, given <var>position</var> and true.
<li>
<p><a>Collect a sequence of code points</a> that are not U+003B (;) from <var>input</var>,
given <var>position</var>.
<p class=example id=example-mime-type-parser-trailing-garbage>Given
<code>text/html;charset="shift_jis"iso-2022-jp</code> you end up with
<code>text/html;charset=shift_jis</code>.
</ol>
<li>
<p>Otherwise:
<ol>
<li><p>Set <var>parameterValue</var> to the result of
<a>collecting a sequence of code points</a> that are not U+003B (;) from <var>input</var>,
given <var>position</var>.
<li><p>Remove any trailing <a>HTTP whitespace</a> from <var>parameterValue</var>.
<li><p>If <var>parameterValue</var> is the empty string, then <a for=iteration>continue</a>.
</ol>
<li>
<p>If all of the following are true
<ul class=brief>
<li><var>parameterName</var> is not the empty string
<li><var>parameterName</var> solely contains <a>HTTP token code points</a>
<li><var>parameterValue</var> solely contains <a>HTTP quoted-string token code points</a>
<li><var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">parameters</a>[<var>parameterName</var>]
<a for=map lt=exist>does not exist</a>
</ul>
<p>then <a for=map>set</a> <var>mimeType</var>'s
<a for="MIME type">parameters</a>[<var>parameterName</var>] to <var>parameterValue</var>.
</ol>
<li><p>Return <var>mimeType</var>.
</ol>
<hr>
<p>To <dfn export>parse a MIME type from bytes</dfn>, given a <a>byte sequence</a> <var>input</var>,
run these steps:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>string</var> be <var>input</var>, <a>isomorphic decoded</a>.
<li><p>Return the result of <a>parse a MIME type</a> with <var>string</var>.
</ol>
<h3 id=serializing-a-mime-type>Serializing a MIME type</h3>
<p>To <dfn export>serialize a MIME type</dfn>, given a <a>MIME type</a> <var>mimeType</var>, run
these steps:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>serialization</var> be the concatenation of <var>mimeType</var>'s
<a for="MIME type">type</a>, U+002F (/), and <var>mimeType</var>'s <a for="MIME type">subtype</a>.
<li>
<p><a for=map>For each</a> <var>name</var> → <var>value</var> of <var>mimeType</var>'s
<a for="MIME type">parameters</a>:
<ol>
<li><p>Append U+003B (;) to <var>serialization</var>.
<li><p>Append <var>name</var> to <var>serialization</var>.
<li><p>Append U+003D (=) to <var>serialization</var>.
<li>
<p>If <var>value</var> does not solely contain <a>HTTP token code points</a> or <var>value</var>
is the empty string, then:
<ol>
<li><p>Precede each occurrence of U+0022 (") or U+005C (\) in <var>value</var> with U+005C (\).
<li><p>Prepend U+0022 (") to <var>value</var>.
<li><p>Append U+0022 (") to <var>value</var>.
</ol>
<li><p>Append <var>value</var> to <var>serialization</var>.
</ol>
<li><p>Return <var>serialization</var>.
</ol>
<hr>
<p>To <dfn export>serialize a MIME type to bytes</dfn>, given a <a>MIME type</a>
<var>mimeType</var>, run these steps:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>stringSerialization</var> be the result of <a>serialize a MIME type</a> with
<var>mimeType</var>.
<li><p>Return <var>stringSerialization</var>, <a>isomorphic encoded</a>.
</ol>
<h3 id=mime-type-groups>MIME type groups</h3>
<p>An <dfn export>image MIME type</dfn> is a <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">type</a> is
"<code>image</code>".
<p>An <dfn export>audio or video MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose
<a for="MIME type">type</a> is "<code>audio</code>" or "<code>video</code>", or whose
<a for="MIME type">essence</a> is "<code>application/ogg</code>".
<p>A <dfn export>font MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">type</a> is
"<code>font</code>", or whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a> is one of the following: [[RFC8081]]
<ul class="brief">
<li><code>application/font-cff</code>
<li><code>application/font-off</code>
<li><code>application/font-sfnt</code>
<li><code>application/font-ttf</code>
<li><code>application/font-woff</code>
<li><code>application/vnd.ms-fontobject</code>
<li><code>application/vnd.ms-opentype</code>
</ul>
<p>A <dfn export>ZIP-based MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose
<a for="MIME type">subtype</a> ends in "<code>+zip</code>" or whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a>
is one of the following:
<ul class="XXX brief">
<li><code>application/zip</code>
</ul>
<p>An <dfn export>archive MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose
<!--<span>type</span> is equal to "<code title>archive</code>" or-->
<a for="MIME type">essence</a> is one of the following:
<ul class="brief">
<li><code>application/x-rar-compressed</code>
<li><code>application/zip</code>
<li><code>application/x-gzip</code>
</ul>
<p>An <dfn export>XML MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">subtype</a>
ends in "<code>+xml</code>" or whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a> is "<code>text/xml</code>" or
"<code>application/xml</code>". [[RFC7303]]
<p>An <dfn export>HTML MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a>
is "<code>text/html</code>".
<p>A <dfn export>scriptable MIME type</dfn> is an <a>XML MIME type</a>, <a>HTML MIME type</a>, or
any <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a> is "<code>application/pdf</code>".
<p>A <dfn export>JavaScript MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose
<a for="MIME type">essence</a> is one of the following:
<ul class="brief">
<li><code>application/ecmascript</code>
<li><code>application/javascript</code>
<li><code>application/x-ecmascript</code>
<li><code>application/x-javascript</code>
<li><code>text/ecmascript</code>
<li><code>text/javascript</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.0</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.1</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.2</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.3</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.4</code>
<li><code>text/javascript1.5</code>
<li><code>text/jscript</code>
<li><code>text/livescript</code>
<li><code>text/x-ecmascript</code>
<li><code>text/x-javascript</code>
</ul>
<p>A <a>string</a> is a <dfn export>JavaScript MIME type essence match</dfn> if it is an
<a>ASCII case-insensitive</a> match for one of the <a>JavaScript MIME type</a> essence strings.
<p class="note">This hook is used by the <{script/type}> attribute of <{script}> elements. [[HTML]]
<p>A <dfn export>JSON MIME type</dfn> is any <a>MIME type</a> whose <a for="MIME type">subtype</a>
ends in "<code>+json</code>" or whose <a for="MIME type">essence</a> is
"<code>application/json</code>" or "<code>text/json</code>".
<h2 id=handling-a-resource>Handling a resource</h2>
<p class=XXX>
A <dfn>resource</dfn> is ….
<p>
For each <a>resource</a> it handles, the user agent must keep track of
the following associated metadata:
<ul>
<li>
A <dfn export>supplied MIME type</dfn>, the <a>MIME type</a> determined by
the <a>supplied MIME type detection algorithm</a>.
<li>
A <dfn>check-for-apache-bug flag</dfn>, which defaults to unset.
<li>
A <dfn>no-sniff flag</dfn>, which defaults to set if the user agent does
not wish to perform sniffing on the <a>resource</a> and unset
otherwise.
<p class=note>
The user agent can choose to use outside information, such as previous
experience with a site, to determine whether to opt out of sniffing for a
particular <a>resource</a>. The user agent can also choose to opt
out of sniffing for all <a>resources</a>. However,
opting out of sniffing does not exempt the user agent from using the
<a>MIME type sniffing algorithm</a>.
<li>
A <dfn export>computed MIME type</dfn>, the <a>MIME type</a>
determined by the <a>MIME type sniffing algorithm</a>.
</ul>
<h3 id=interpreting-the-resource-metadata>Interpreting the resource metadata</h3>
<p>
The <a>supplied MIME type</a> of a <a>resource</a> is provided
to the user agent by an external source associated with that
<a>resource</a>.
The method of obtaining this information varies depending upon how the
<a>resource</a> is retrieved.
<p>
To determine the <a>supplied MIME type</a> of a <a>resource</a>,
user agents must use the following <dfn>supplied MIME type detection
algorithm</dfn>:
<ol>
<li>
Let <var>supplied-type</var> be null.
<li>
If the <a>resource</a> is retrieved via HTTP, execute the following
steps:
<ol>
<li>
If one or more <code>Content-Type</code> headers are associated with the
<a>resource</a>, execute the following steps:
<ol>
<li>
Set <var>supplied-type</var> to the value of the last
<code>Content-Type</code> header associated with the
<a>resource</a>.
<p class=note>
File extensions are not used to determine the <a>supplied MIME
type</a> of a <a>resource</a> retrieved via HTTP because they are
unreliable and easily spoofed.
<li>
Set the <a>check-for-apache-bug flag</a> if
<var>supplied-type</var> is <strong>exactly</strong> equal to one of
the values in the following table:
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Bytes in Hexadecimal
<th>Bytes in ASCII
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>
74 65 78 74 2F 70 6C 61 69 6E
<td>
<code>text/plain</code>
<tr>
<td>
74 65 78 74 2F 70 6C 61 69 6E<br>
3B 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3D<br>
49 53 4F 2D 38 38 35 39 2D 31
<td>
<code>text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1</code>
<tr>
<td>
74 65 78 74 2F 70 6C 61 69 6E<br>
3B 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3D<br>
69 73 6F 2D 38 38 35 39 2D 31
<td>
<code>text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1</code>
<tr>
<td>
74 65 78 74 2F 70 6C 61 69 6E<br>
3B 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3D<br>
55 54 46 2D 38
<td>
<code>text/plain; charset=UTF-8</code>
</table>
<p class=note>
The <a>supplied MIME type detection algorithm</a> detects these
exact <a>byte</a> sequences because some older installations of
Apache contain
<a href="https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13986">a
bug</a> that causes them to supply one of these Content-Type headers
when serving files with unrecognized <a lt="MIME type">MIME
types</a>.
</ol>
</ol>
[[!HTTP-SEMANTICS]]
<li>
If the <a>resource</a> is retrieved directly from the file system,
set <var>supplied-type</var> to the <a>MIME type</a> provided by the
file system.
<li>
If the <a>resource</a> is retrieved via another protocol (such as
FTP), set <var>supplied-type</var> to the <a>MIME type</a> as
determined by that protocol, if any.
[[FTP]]
<li>
If <var>supplied-type</var> is not a <a>MIME type</a>, the
<a>supplied MIME type</a> is undefined.
Abort these steps.
<li>
The <a>supplied MIME type</a> is <var>supplied-type</var>.
</ol>
<h3 id=reading-the-resource-header>Reading the resource header</h3>
<p>
A <dfn>resource header</dfn> is the <a>byte sequence</a> at the
beginning of a <a>resource</a>, as determined by
<a lt="read the resource header">reading the resource header</a>.
<p>
To <dfn>read the resource header</dfn>, perform the following steps:
<ol>
<li>
Let <var>buffer</var> be a <a>byte sequence</a>.
<li>
Read <a>bytes</a> of the <a>resource</a> into
<var>buffer</var> until one of the following conditions is met:
<ul>
<li>
the end of the <a>resource</a> is reached.
<li>
the number of <a>bytes</a> in <var>buffer</var> is
greater than or equal to 1445.
<li>
a reasonable amount of time has elapsed, as determined by the user
agent.
</ul>
<p class=note>
If the number of <a>bytes</a> in <var>buffer</var> is
greater than or equal to 1445, the <a>MIME type sniffing
algorithm</a> will be deterministic for the majority of cases.
However, certain factors (such as a slow connection) may prevent the
user agent from reading 1445 <a>bytes</a> in a
reasonable amount of time.
<li>
The <a>resource header</a> is <var>buffer</var>.
</ol>
<p class=note>
The <a>resource header</a> need only be determined once per
<a>resource</a>.
<h2 id=matching-a-mime-type-pattern>Matching a MIME type pattern</h2>
<p>
A <dfn>byte pattern</dfn> is a <a>byte sequence</a> used as a template
to be matched against in the <a>pattern matching algorithm</a>.
<p>
A <dfn>pattern mask</dfn> is a <a>byte sequence</a> used to determine
the significance of <a>bytes</a> being compared against a
<a>byte pattern</a> in the <a>pattern matching algorithm</a>.
<p class=note>
In a <a>pattern mask</a>, 0xFF indicates the <a>byte</a> is
strictly significant, 0xDF indicates that the <a>byte</a> is
significant in an ASCII case-insensitive way, and 0x00 indicates that the
<a>byte</a> is not significant.
<p>To determine whether a <a>byte sequence</a> matches a particular <a>byte pattern</a>, use the
following <dfn>pattern matching algorithm</dfn>. It is given a <a>byte sequence</a>
<var>input</var>, a <a>byte pattern</a> <var>pattern</var>, a <a>pattern mask</a> <var>mask</var>,
and a <a for=/>set</a> of <a>bytes</a> to be ignored <var>ignored</var>, and returns true or false.
<ol>
<li><p>Assert: <var>pattern</var>'s <a for="byte sequence">length</a> is equal to
<var>mask</var>'s <a for="byte sequence">length</a>.
<li><p>If <var>input</var>'s <a for="byte sequence">length</a> is less than <var>pattern</var>'s
<a for="byte sequence">length</a>, return false.
<li><p>Let <var>s</var> be 0.
<li>
<p>While <var>s</var> < <var>input</var>'s <a for="byte sequence">length</a>:
<ol>
<li><p>If <var>ignored</var> does not <a for=set>contain</a> <var>input</var>[<var>s</var>],
<a for=iteration>break</a>.
<li><p>Set <var>s</var> to <var>s</var> + 1.
</ol>
<li><p>Let <var>p</var> be 0.
<li>
<p>While <var>p</var> < <var>pattern</var>'s <a for="byte sequence">length</a>:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>maskedData</var> be the result of applying the bitwise AND operator to
<var>input</var>[<var>s</var>] and <var>mask</var>[<var>p</var>].
<li><p>If <var>maskedData</var> is not equal to <var>pattern</var>[<var>p</var>], return false.
<li><p>Set <var>s</var> to <var>s</var> + 1.
<li><p>Set <var>p</var> to <var>p</var> + 1.
</ol>
<li><p>Return true.
</ol>
<h3 id=matching-an-image-type-pattern>Matching an image type pattern</h3>
<p>To determine which <a>image MIME type</a> <a>byte pattern</a> a <a>byte sequence</a>
<var>input</var> matches, if any, use the following
<dfn>image type pattern matching algorithm</dfn>:
<ol>
<li><p>Execute the following steps for each row <var>row</var> in the following table:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>patternMatched</var> be the result of the <a>pattern matching algorithm</a>
given <var>input</var>, the value in the first column of <var>row</var>, the value in the second
column of <var>row</var>, and the value in the third column of <var>row</var>.
<li><p>If <var>patternMatched</var> is true, return the value in the fourth column of
<var>row</var>.
</ol>
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>
<a>Byte Pattern</a>
<th>
<a>Pattern Mask</a>
<th>
Leading <a lt=byte>Bytes</a> to Be Ignored
<th>
<a>Image MIME Type</a>
<th>
Note
<tbody>
<!-- https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/image/vnd.microsoft.icon -->
<!-- https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms997538.aspx -->
<tr>
<td>
00 00 01 00
<td>
FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/x-icon</code>
<td>
A Windows Icon signature.
<!-- https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms997538.aspx -->
<tr>
<td>
00 00 02 00
<td>
FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/x-icon</code>
<td>
A Windows Cursor signature.
<tr>
<td>
42 4D
<td>
FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/bmp</code>
<td>
The string "<code>BM</code>", a BMP signature.
<!-- https://www.w3.org/Graphics/GIF/spec-gif87.txt -->
<tr>
<td>
47 49 46 38 37 61
<td>
FF FF FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/gif</code>
<td>
The string "<code>GIF87a</code>", a GIF signature.
<!-- https://www.w3.org/Graphics/GIF/spec-gif89a.txt -->
<tr>
<td>
47 49 46 38 39 61
<td>
FF FF FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/gif</code>
<td>
The string "<code>GIF89a</code>", a GIF signature.
<!-- https://developers.google.com/speed/webp/docs/riff_container#webp-file-header -->
<tr>
<td>
52 49 46 46 00 00 00 00 57 45 42 50 56 50
<td>
FF FF FF FF 00 00 00 00 FF FF FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/webp</code>
<td>
The string "<code>RIFF</code>" followed by four
<a>bytes</a> followed by the string
"<code>WEBPVP</code>".
<!-- https://www.w3.org/TR/PNG/#5PNG-file-signature -->
<tr>
<td>
89 50 4E 47 0D 0A 1A 0A
<td>
FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/png</code>
<td>
An error-checking <a>byte</a> followed by the string
"<code>PNG</code>" followed by CR LF SUB LF, the PNG signature.
<!-- https://www.digicamsoft.com/itu/itu-t81-36.html -->
<tr>
<td>
FF D8 FF
<td>
FF FF FF
<td>
None.
<td>
<code>image/jpeg</code>
<td>
The JPEG Start of Image marker followed by the indicator
<a>byte</a> of another marker.
</table>
<li><p>Return undefined.
</ol>
<h3 id=matching-an-audio-or-video-type-pattern>Matching an audio or video type pattern</h3>
<p>To determine which <a>audio or video MIME type</a> <a>byte pattern</a> a <a>byte sequence</a>
<var>input</var> matches, if any, use the following <dfn>audio or video type pattern matching
algorithm</dfn>:
<ol>
<li><p>Execute the following steps for each row <var>row</var> in the following table:
<ol>
<li><p>Let <var>patternMatched</var> be the result of the <a>pattern matching algorithm</a>
given <var>input</var>, the value in the first column of <var>row</var>, the value in the second
column of <var>row</var>, and the value in the third column of <var>row</var>.
<li><p>If <var>patternMatched</var> is true, return the value in the fourth column of
<var>row</var>.