One document matched: draft-bernstein-owner-hack-00.txt
The Owner Hack
INTERNET-DRAFT draft-bernstein-owner-hack-00.txt (expires 1 February 1997)
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Status of this memo
This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
The fundamental problem in managing a large mailing list is matching
bounce messages to subscription addresses.
Often a bounce message refers to a failing address that does not
appear on the mailing list. One of the mailing list subscribers is
forwarding messages to that address. Which subscriber? As the list
grows, this question becomes more and more difficult to answer.
The owner hack completely eliminates this problem _right now_. It
automatically and reliably identifies the subscription address
relevant to each bounce message. It provides the address in a form
that is trivial for automated bounce handlers to parse. It requires
support from the local mailer, but it does not require support from
any other hosts.
Network Working Group D. Bernstein
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX: NNNN IR
Category: Informational 13 August 1996
The Owner Hack
Status of this memo
This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
this memo is unlimited.
1. Introduction
The fundamental problem in managing a large mailing list is matching
bounce messages to subscription addresses.
Often a bounce message refers to a failing address that does not
appear on the mailing list. One of the mailing list subscribers is
forwarding messages to that address. Which subscriber? As the list
grows, this question becomes more and more difficult to answer.
Sometimes a bounce message doesn't identify the address that failed.
On occasion it doesn't even include a copy of the original message.
See RFC 1211 for an extensive collection of horror stories.
In theory, one could solve this problem with the DSN option and DSN
format described in RFC 1891, RFC 1892, and RFC 1894. Unfortunately,
the DSN option is useless unless it is supported by every
intermediate MTA. The complexity of RFC 1891 means that it will be
many years, perhaps infinitely many, before DSNs are universally
supported. Furthermore, the complexity of RFC 1894 means that parsing
the subscriber address is difficult even on the occasions that the
address is available.
The owner hack completely eliminates this problem _right now_. It
automatically and reliably identifies the subscription address
relevant to each bounce message. It provides the address in a form
that is trivial for automated bounce handlers to parse. It requires
support from the local mailer, but it does not require support from
any other hosts.
Bernstein [Page 1]
XXX NNNN The Owner Hack August 1996
2. The owner hack
Here is the owner hack: each recipient of the message sees a
different envelope sender address. When a message to the
djb-sos@silverton.berkeley.edu mailing list is sent to
God@heaven.af.mil, for example, it has the following envelope sender:
djb-sos-owner-God=heaven.af.mil@silverton.berkeley.edu
If the message bounces, the bounce message will be sent back to
djb-sos-owner-God=heaven.af.mil@silverton.berkeley.edu.
If God is forwarding His mail, the bounce message will still go to
djb-sos-owner-God=heaven.af.mil@silverton.berkeley.edu. No matter how
uninformative the bounce message is, it will display God's
subscription address in its envelope.
Another benefit of the owner hack is that God Himself can see what
address He used to subscribe.
Making the owner hack work requires two pieces of local software
support. First: it must be easy to modify the outgoing sender address
separately for each envelope recipient. For example, with one mailer,
qmail, a user can simply touch ~/.qmail-list-owner and
~/.qmail-list-owner-default to apply the owner hack to user-list.
Second, and more important: it must be easy to identify a collection
of addresses, such as djb-sos-owner-*, and send all mail for those
addresses to one place, while preserving the * information. Under
qmail, all user-list-owner-* mail will be sent to the user once he
touches ~/.qmail-list-owner-default. Sending the mail through an
automated bounce-handling program is just as easy.
With older mailers, applying the owner hack would require setting up
a new user-list-owner-recipient alias for each new recipient. This
inconvenience has prevented the owner hack from being widely
exploited, even though the idea is not new.
Bernstein [Page 1]
XXX NNNN The Owner Hack August 1996
3. The per-message owner hack
The owner hack is not restricted to distinguishing mailing list
subscribers; it can also be used to distinguish messages.
For example, a user can send one message with an envelope sender
address of user-dsn-1, the next message with user-dsn-2, and so on.
As long as the local mailer gives all user-dsn-* back to that user,
he can reliably match up incoming bounces with outgoing messages.
The per-message owner hack can be combined with the per-recipient
owner hack. Every application of RFC 1891's ORCPT and ENVID can be
handled with the owner hack---easily, reliably, and right now.
4. Security considerations
Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
Author's address
D. J. Bernstein
Email: djb@pobox.com
Bernstein [Page 7]
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