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- Request For Comments: 886
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- Proposed Standard for Message Header Munging
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- Thu Dec 15 03:37:52 1983
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- Marshall T. Rose
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- Department of Information and Computer Science
- University of California, Irvine
- Irvine, CA 92717
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- MRose.UCI@Rand-Relay
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- This memo proposes a standard for the ARPA Internet community. If
- this proposal is adopted, hosts on the ARPA Internet that do message
- translation would be expected to adopt and implement this standard.
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- Request For Comments: 886 M. Rose
- Proposed Standard for Message Header Munging UCI
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- Introduction
-
- This memo describes the rules that are to be used when mail is
- transformed from one standard format to another. The scope of this
- memo is limited to text messages (computer network mail, or
- electronic mail) that traverse the ARPA Internet. This memo is not
- presented as a replacement or amendment for the "Standard for the
- Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages", RFC822. Rather, this memo
- focuses on a particular aspect of mail, and provides a conceptual
- and practical basis for implementors of transport agents and user
- agents which support message munging.
-
- Although this memo has been specifically prepared for use with the
- 822 standard, an understanding of the 822 standard is not required
- to make use of this memo. The remainder of this section reminds
- the reader of some key concepts presented in the 822 standard, and
- how they relate to the perspective of this memo.
-
- Messages are viewed as consisting of an envelope and contents. The
- envelope is manipulated solely by transport agents, and contains
- the information required by the transport agents to deliver the
- message to its recipients. Although this memo does not address
- itself directly to the envelope, we shall see that some of the
- rules discussed later are applicable to the envelope.
-
- The contents of the message consists of a rigorously structured
- part, known as the headers, followed by a freely formated part,
- called the body. The message body is completely uninteresting to
- us. Our emphasis is strictly on the headers of the message. Each
- header in the message consists of a field, its value, and a
- terminating end-of-line sequence. The 822 standard discusses,
- among other things, continuation lines, the syntax that is used to
- distinguish between fields and values, and the syntax and semantics
- of the values of various fields. For our part, we shall concern
- ourselves only with the notion that the headers section consists of
- one or more headers, which are divided into one or more field/value
- pairs.
-
- The term "message munging" refers to the actions taken by a
- transport or user agent to transform the contents of a message from
- conformance with one standard format to another. The 822 standard
- refers to this as "Network-Specific Transformation". Other phrases
- might be "header munging" or "mail filtering". Regardless of the
- term used, the key notion is that this action transforms a message
- from its current format (the source message) to the structure
- required by the target standard. A "munging agent", for the
- purposes of this memo, is an entity which performs message munging.
- A munging agent may be part of either a transport or user agent.
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- Request For Comments: 886 M. Rose
- Proposed Standard for Message Header Munging UCI
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- Background
-
- As more networks connect into the ARPA Internet community, their
- users will exchange computer mail messages with other Internet
- hosts. Although the 822 standard must be strictly adhered to for
- mail that traverses the ARPA Internet, other networks might not
- internally adopt this standard. It is nevertheless desirable to
- permit mail to flow between hosts which internally conform to the
- standard and those which do not. The 822 standard is very clear to
- indicate that:
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- "This standard is NOT intended to dictate the internal formats
- used by sites, the specific message system features that they
- are expected to support, or any of the characteristics of user
- interface programs that create or read messages."
-
- This plainly states that even hosts within the ARPA Internet, may
- opt to use a different standard than 822 for their internal use,
- but they are expressly required to use the 822 standard when
- transferring mail to other hosts in the ARPA Internet. As such, it
- is not difficult to imagine message munging becoming a common
- activity among transport and user agents.
-
- There are other reasons why message munging may become a widespread
- practice. An example from CSnet will serve here. The CSnet relays
- provide authorized access for mail services to the ARPA Internet
- for the CSnet phonenet sites. CSnet sites are not registered with
- the NIC, and hence are often absent from the host tables of ARPA
- Internet sites. As a result, addresses for mailboxes on CSnet
- phonenet sites are unknown to ARPA Internet sites. From an ARPA
- Internet site, it would be impossible to send messages to these
- addresses, since the local transport agent has no handle on the
- destination hosts of the phonenet mailboxes. Obviously, even
- replying to a such a message is simply not possible. To solve this
- problem, the transport agents on the CSnet relays perform message
- munging on mail destined for the ARPA Internet. Phonenet addresses
- of the form "mbox@host" are transformed to "mbox.host@relay", where
- "relay" is the ARPA Internet host name of the relay performing the
- transformation. Other addresses are left alone. Agents throughout
- the ARPA Internet are now able to process these addresses, since
- the host-part is a known ARPA Internet host.
-
- The source-routing solution to this problem will hopefully be
- replaced by domain handling when domains are implemented in the ARPA
- Internet. When this is the case, phonenet addresses of the form
- "mbox@host" will become "mbox@host.CSNET". Despite this change,
- (which cannot help but be for the better, as the use of
- source-routing leads to a plethora of problems), message munging
- will still occur as it will most likely be necessary to add domain
- names during message transmission (see section 6.2.2 of the 822
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- standard).
-
- For an alternate reason, consider that it is not unlikely for users
- to wish to transform mail from their archives which conforms to an
- older standard to the current standard. There could be many
- reasons for this, although a common one would be that a user wishes
- to re-introduce the message into the transport system. Although
- the aged message was perfectly valid when it was composed (e.g., in
- the days of the 733 standard), it might no longer conform to the
- current standard (i.e., 822). In this case, a user agent would
- have to perform message munging, in order to make the message
- acceptable to the local transport agent.
-
- To summarize, even under the most "homogeneous" of environments,
- message munging will still be required on the part of transport and
- user agents, under certain conditions.
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- Section 3.4.10 of the 822 standard briefly discusses the topic of
- "Network-Specific Transformations". In short, the 822 standard
- envisions a message traversing net-A to reach net-B as going
- through three phases:
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- o Transformation
- The message is made to conform to net-A's standards
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- o Transformation Reversal
- Net-A's idiosyncrasies are removed and the message now
- conforms to the 822 standard
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- o Transformation
- The message is made to conform to net-B's standards
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- This memo concerns itself solely with this section of the 822
- standard. The 822 standard presents end-of-line sequences as an
- example of an area where transformation might occur. Although this
- is a valid concern, our emphasis deals with constructs of higher
- semantics: fields and structured field values.
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- Scope
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- This memo does not specify the particular transformation rules that
- should be used when munging a message from one standard to another.
-
- Rather, this memo attempts to make clear the policies that are to
- be followed when implementing any munging agent for the ARPA
- Internet. The derivation of the formulas specific to message
- munging between two given standards is left to the implementors of
- such munging systems or to the writers of future RFCs. As such,
- this memo can be considered to present the philosophy and
- conceptual basis of message munging in the ARPA Internet.
-
- NOTE: It is critical that this position be understood. The
- actual policies used by domain-specific munging agents is
- completely beyond the scope of this memo.
-
- For ease of explanation, some of the examples in this memo use
- message munging between the ARPA Internet and the USENET
- distribution network as an example. This memo should NOT be
- considered to specify how this particular munging activity should
- take place. Instead, this context has been chosen for its
- familiarity and simplicity.
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- Message Decomposition
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- A munging agent concerns itself with transforming a message in
- conformance with a source standard to a message in conformance with a
- target standard. This transformation occurs at various levels. Four
- of these are presented here.
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- o Field Transformation
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- For two standards, some fields may convey identical semantics
- but have different names. As standards progress, for
- example, the names of fields may change, but the presence of
- those fields and their contents continue to have the same
- meaning. For example, prior to 822 standard, some mailers
- considered the Remailed- prefix to have semantics equivalent
- to the 822 standard's Resent- prefix. In this circumstance,
- one aspect of message munging would be to simply substitute
- the field names.
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- o Value Transformation
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- The value of certain fields may be viewed as containing
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- structured components. The syntax and semantics of these
- components may differ significantly between two formats. In
- this circumstance, one aspect of message munging would be to
- transform components from one representation to another.
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- o Field/Value Combination
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- The semantics of a given header in a particular standard may
- not be directly expressed using a single header from another
- standard. In this circumstance, one aspect of message munging
- would be to map the field/value of a header in the source
- message to any number of headers in the target message (or
- vice-versa). As expected, further complication could result
- by performing value transformation in addition to one-to-many
- or many-to-one field transformation.
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- o Header Ordering
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- Some standards may require that fields appear in a particular
- order in the headers part of the message. Others make no
- requirements as to the order in which the fields appear. In
- this circumstance, one aspect of message munging from the
- latter to the former standard would be to capture the essential
- information from the source message in order to construct the
- first field of the target message. As expected, further
- complication could result by requiring several field/values be
- consulted in the source message before sufficient context is
- present to construct the first field of the target message.
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- Canonical Forms
-
- Fundamental to the activity of transformation is the notion of a
- canonical form. For a given message standard, each field and
- structured field value may be thought of as an object with a
- particular semantics that is representable by one or more strings.
- That is, each of these strings has an identical semantics, as they
- all refer to the same object. For example, in terms of the 822
- standard, the two strings
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- The Protocol Police <NetSer@UCI>
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- NetSer@UCI
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- are semantically equivalent. For the purposes of this memo, a
- fully-qualified canonical form of an object is thought of as the
- simplest string that represents the full and complete meaning of an
- object. The meaning of "simple" is, of course, open to
- interpretation. In some cases, "simplest" may mean "shortest". In
- other cases, a longer, but unabbreviated string may be "simpler"
- than a shorter string. Regardless of this, a canonical form is a
- representation of an object. This representation contains the
- smallest amount of information required to fully describe the
- meaning of the object.
-
- It is not difficult to determine what a canonical form should
- describe for different objects. In terms of the 822 standard, the
- following should be considered as minimal definitions of canonical
- forms:
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- object specifies contains
- ------ --------- --------
- field field-name name
- address mailbox local-part
- domain-part
- date date-time date-part
- time-part
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- In terms of USENET, the following might be considered as minimal
- definitions of canonical forms:
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- object specifies contains
- ------ --------- --------
- field field-name name
- address mailbox user
- route
- date date-time date-part
- time-part
-
- NOTE: This memo clearly has no authority to specify the
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- minimal canonical forms for USENET. The above table is listed
- solely for the benefit of the examples which follow.
-
- Conceptually, transformation of fields and structured field values
- occurs between canonical forms. That is, to transform an address,
- one reduces the string representing the object to its canonical
- form, to capture the essence of its meaning, and this form is then
- transformed, somehow, to the equivalent canonical form for the
- target standard. This target canonical form can later be output
- using a string representation.
-
- NOTE: This memo does not require that canonical forms be
- represented or otherwise implemented as strings. Nor does
- this standard require that strings be used during the
- transformation process. Thinking of a canonical form as a
- string is a convenient formalism only, not an implementational
- requirement.
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- Transformation Rules
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- All of the forms of message decomposition discussed above may now
- be viewed as transformation between canonical forms. Hence, it now
- becomes necessary to consider how canonical forms should be
- manipulated during transformation. That is, what rules are to be
- followed when constructing an equivalent canonical form? There are
- several guidelines that must be followed, that we will characterize
- in the following fashion:
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- o Preservation of information
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- All attempts must be made to preserve all information
- contained in the original canonical form. This information
- can be highly useful to the recipients of munged messages.
- Obviously, for two widely-differing formats, this may not be
- possible. For example, some standards may not have a group
- addressing notation such as the one present in the 822
- standard, e.g., the notation
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- List: Support@UCI, ZOTnet@UCI;
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- might not be permitted. If one were to consider membership in
- a group as part of an address' canonical form, then this
- portion of the canonical form could not be transformed to the
- other standard.
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- The 822 standard supports a liberal commenting convention
- which might prove quite useful in preserving information.
- Implementors may wish to consider capturing the original
- information in commentary text. For example, if the USENET
- address
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- mark@cbosgd.UUCP (Mark Horton)
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- had the USENET canonical of
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- user: mark
- route: ucbvax!ihnp4!cbosgd
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- and if the corresponding 822 canonical was
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- local-part: ucbvax!ihnp4!cbosgd!mark
- domain-part: USENET.UCI
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- then it would not be unreasonable for an implementation to
- output this canonical form as
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- "mark@cbosgd.UUCP" <ucbvax!ihnp4!cbosgd!mark@USENET.UCI>
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- NOTE: Implementors should exercise extreme caution in
- using a policy such as this. Information placed between
- commentary delimiters must still conform to the target
- standard at the syntactic level.
-
- Note however that in the above example, the commentary
- information "(Mark Horton)" was discarded. This practice is
- strongly discouraged. Although the canonical form for an
- object does not rely on commentary information as a necessary
- part, implementors are encouraged to preserve this information
- whenever possible.
-
- Finally, preservation of information requires preservation of
- case at all costs. Only under the most restrictive of
- circumstances should an implementation change the case of the
- strings output for a canonical form.
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- o Re-Formatting
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- Ideally, the target message should have the exact horizontal
- and vertical padding as the source message. Because a string
- representing the source canonical form of an object may not be
- of the same length as the string representing the target
- canonical form, the number of characters on each physical and
- logical line in the headers may be different.
-
- The 822 standard supports a header folding convention which
- permits long field/value pairs to be represented on more than
- one physical line. When a new canonical form is output to the
- target message, it is possible that the resulting field/value
- pair may be longer than the number of characters that
- antiquated display devices can present on a single line. The
- 822 standard suggests 65 or 72 characters-per-line as a metric
- for this limitation. Although not required, message munging
- agents may re-fold headers if (and only if) this limitation is
- exceeded. Note however that under no circumstances should a
- header be re-folded if it was not munged. Refolding without
- munging may occur on behalf of some transport or user agent,
- but it may not occur on behalf of a munging agent. Put more
- simply, this memo does not authorize or forbid such activity,
- although it does discourage it.
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- o Error Recovery
-
- The preceding discussion has made been under the assumption
- that the objects composing the field/value pairs of the source
- message have conformed to the source standard. It is an
- unfortunate reality that this may not be the case. In fact,
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- for those standards which are poorly specified (if at all),
- determining that an object is improperly constructed might be
- quite difficult. In addition, it is possible, though
- hopefully extremely improbable that a target canonical form
- does not exist for a particular source canonical form. In
- these cases, munging agents must be able to recover.
-
- At this point, we introduce two extension fields for the 822
- standard. As such, these fields are hereby designated as
- "reserved" and may not be used for other purposes. These
- fields are:
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- Illegal-Field
- Illegal-Object
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- The syntax of these fields is as follows:
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- munge-field =
- "Illegal-Field" ":" *text
- / "Illegal-Object" ":" *text
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- munge-object =
- <a "field-name", the exact field-names which are
- valid will be presented later>
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- The semantics of these fields are as follows:
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- An Illegal-Field header should be introduced when a
- header-line which does not conform to the source standard is
- found in the source message. Illegal-Field should be used
- only when a header-line is so poorly formed as to prevent
- recognition of the field in the header-line. For example, if
- the line lacks a colon, or has a poorly formed field-name,
- then it should not be output to the target message and a new
- header-line should be introduced in its place. This
- header-line has Illegal-Field as its field and contains the
- offending line as its value. Illegal-Field should not be used
- if the field can be identified, but the value is poorly
- formed.
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- An Illegal-Object header should be introduced when an object
- in the source message can not be parsed into a canonical form,
- or if the canonical form it represents has no corresponding
- target canonical form. The offending object should not be
- output to the target message in the header-line in which it
- occurs. If the header-line now contains no objects, then the
- header-line should not be output to the target message as
- well. Then, an Illegal-Object field should be introduced into
- the target message. The value of this Illegal-Object field
- should at the very minimum contain the name of the field that
- contained the object, the object in question, and an
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- explanation as to why the object was illegal. Alternately,
- the value of this Illegal-Object field should consist of the
- entire header-line (field and value) that contained the object
- in question along with an explanation as to why the object was
- illegal.
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- NOTE: In the circumstance where multiple objects exist
- in a single header-line in the source message, and one of
- those objects is determined to be illegal, the actual
- policy used in determining how much information can be
- considered to be "uncorrupted" is left to the
- implementors. Munging agents which use sophisticated
- parsers may attempt to recover in mid-stream (so to
- speak) and continue parsing objects on the header-line.
- Other agents may wish to continue recover with the next
- header-line in the source message. Regardless of the
- policy used, the agent must present the contents of the
- entire header-line in the associated Illegal-Object
- header.
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- Implementations should not take extraordinary measures to
- perform syntax/semantics checking of the source message --
- only those fields which must be examined should be rigorously
- checked. This memo strongly discourages any additional
- examination. It is not the intention of this memo to suggest
- that composing agents should produce messages which do not
- conform to the source standard. A composing agent should not
- expect a munging agent to enforce adherence to the source
- standard.
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- o Introduction of Information
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- Munging agents are authorized to introduce a "Received" header
- into the target message when a message is transformed.
-
- NOTE: Adding a "Received" header is entirely optional.
- This memo strongly recommends that this header be
- introduced whenever some munging (translation of addresses
- and/or dates) occurs.
-
- NOTE: Although this memo does not specify the position
- that the introduced header should have in relation to the
- other fields in the target message, it is strongly
- recommended that the introduced header be grouped with
- the other "Received" headers, at the very beginning of
- the message.
-
- When introducing a "Received" field, three phrases, which are
- normally optional in such a field, should be specified by the
- munging agent. These are:
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- "from" domain # the source domain
- "by" domain # the target domain
- "with" protocol # the munging agent's host
-
- For example, suppose we have a munging agent on the UCI host,
- and that this agent services a USENET/ARPA boundary. When the
- UCI host gets a message from the USENET domain for the ARPA
- domain, the following happens: First, the UCI mailsystem would
- prepend the header:
-
- Received: from nma by UCI with UUCP; 15 Dec 83 03:53:00 PST
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- Second, the munging agent, when transforming the message,
- would prepend the header:
-
- Received: from USENET by ARPA with UCI; 15 Dec 03:54:00 PST
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- Finally, the UCI mailsystem would then deliver the message to
- the appropriate ARPA mailsystem, which in turn would prepend
- the header:
-
- Received: from UCI by ISIF with SMTP; 15 Dec 83 03:55:00 PST
-
- This example might be a bit clearer if the domains were
- qualified a bit more. The first three lines of the message
- could look like this:
-
- Received: from UCI.ARPA by ISIF.ARPA; 15 Dec 83 03:55:00 PST
- Received: from USENET by ARPA with UCI; 15 Dec 03:54:00 PST
- Received: from nma.USENET by UCI.USENET; 15 Dec 83 03:53:00 PST
-
- The key point to notice is that the munging agent used the
- "from" and "by" clauses to denote the domain boundary that was
- crossed, and used the "with" clause to denote itself. Since
- the agent is munging the message according to some set of
- transformation rules, it is actually using a "mail protocol",
- and as such is justified in identifying itself in the "with"
- clause.
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- Objects of Interest
-
- At present, only three types of objects are of interest: fields,
- addresses, and dates. In the context of the 822 standard,
- header-lines containing the following fields are to be viewed as
- appropriate for transformation:
-
- Address Fields: From, Sender, Reply-To, To, cc, Bcc,
- and any of these fields with the Resent- prefix
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- Date Fields: Date, Resent-Date
-
- Hence the definition of munge-object, in 822 terms, is:
-
- munge-object =
- "From"
- / "Sender"
- / "Reply-To"
- / "To"
- / "cc"
- / "Bcc"
- / "Resent-From"
- / "Resent-Sender"
- / "Resent-Reply-To"
- / "Resent-To"
- / "Resent-cc"
- / "Resent-Bcc"
- / "Date"
- / "Resent-Date"
-
- NOTE: The list of munge-objects is extensible. For the
- purposes of this memo, the above fields are defined as the
- MINIMUM list of munge-objects for the 822 standard.
- Implementors are encouraged to introduce other fields to the
- list of munge-objects as their munging agents require. These
- additions should also be registered with the revisions of this
- memo as they gain popularity.
-
- For the purposes of the remainder of this memo, an address
- header-line is defined as any header-line in the source message
- whose field component is one of the fields listed above as an
- address field. Further, a date header-line is defined as any
- header-line in the source message whose field component is one of
- the fields listed above as an date field.
-
- If address munging is performed, then all addresses contained in
- all address header-lines must be munged. It is expressly forbidden
- to perform address munging on the source message and without
- performing address munging on every address header-line. Further,
- it is expressly forbidden to munge some, but not all, of the
- addresses in any address header-line. All addresses in all of the
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- message's address header-lines must be address munged. If address
- munging is not performed, then these header-lines need not be
- considered for munging.
-
- A similar requirement is made for date munging. If date munging is
- performed, then all instances of header-lines whose field is Date
- or Resent-Date must be fully date munged.
-
- NOTE: Certain fields are to be excluding from munging of any
- sort, all munging agents must preserve their contents exactly.
- At present, there is one such field: "Received". This contents
- of this field should ALWAYS be preserved for trace and
- debugging purposes.
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- Page 14
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- Request For Comments: 886 M. Rose
- Proposed Standard for Message Header Munging UCI
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- Bibliography
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- D.H. Crocker, "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text
- Messages", RFC 822, (August, 1982).
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- M.R. Horton, "Standard for the Interchange of USENET Messages", RFC
- 850, (June, 1983).
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- M.T. Rose, "Achieving Interoperability between two Domains --
- Connecting the ZOTnet and UUCP Computer Mail Networks", Technical
- Report Number 201, Department of Information and Computer Science,
- University of California, Irvine, (January, 1983).
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- P.V. Mockapetris, "Domain Names -- Concepts and Facilities", RFC
- 882, (November, 1983).
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- Page 15
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- Request For Comments: 886 M. Rose
- Proposed Standard for Message Header Munging UCI
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- Appendices
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- Minimal Canonical Forms
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- This memo defines the minimal canonical forms for the 822 standard.
- Implementations may wish to augment these forms with additional
- information that may be present in the source message. An earlier
- example suggested that group membership might be part of an
- address' canonical form. Further, since the 822 standard permits
- routes to be specified in addresses, e.g.,
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- Fred Rated <@ISI-Troll.ARPA,@UCI-750a.UCI: FRated@UCI-750b>
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- Perhaps they too should be considered part of the 822 address'
- canonical form?
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- This memo makes no such requirement, if implementations wish to
- make use of this additional information, then they are free to do
- so. This practice is neither encouraged nor discouraged. In short
- the spirit of this memo is to require those minimal components
- required by the 822 standard, nothing more.
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- Page 16
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