One document matched: draft-ietf-notary-mime-report-00.txt
Network Working Group Greg Vaudreuil
Internet Draft Octel Network Services
Expires: 1-25-95 August 1, 1994
Multipart/Report
<draft-ietf-notary-mime-report-00.txt>
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet Draft. Internet Drafts are working documents
of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas, and its Working
Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as
Internet Drafts.
Internet Drafts are valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated,
replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate
to use Internet Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as
a "work in progress".
1. Introduction
This memo defines a generic packaging mechanism for mail system reports.
The Multipart/Report is a convention for interpersonal message
notifications for MIME.
2. Multipart/Report
Mime type name: Multipart
Mime Sub-Type name: Report
Required Parameters: Boundary, Report-type
Optional Parameters: None
Encoding Considerations: 7bit should always be adequate.
The syntax of a Multipart/Report is identical to the Multipart\Mixed
content type. The Report may contain up to three body parts. The
Multipart/Report must always be the outer-most MIME content. The semantics
of a Multipart/Report which is not the outermost content type such as a
forwarded Multipart/Report are undefined. The report-type parameter
indicates the type of Report. Expected Report types include delivery
status and read receipts.
The Multipart/Report is required to be the outermost content type so
that existing final delivery agents which can route messages based on
RFC 822 heasder fields may detect the multipart/report header and
provide automated processing of reports.
The first body part is intended to be a single text/plain or
multipart/alternative set of text/plain body parts describing the report in
human readable form. This text may be in any character set or language as
appropriate for the environment.
The second body part is a machine parseable description of the Report such
as a message/delivery-report. This body part is described in a separate
document and is indicated by the Report-type parameter. If the delivery
Internet Draft Multipart/Report August 1, 1994
report is to be privacy enhanced, this body part may be packaged in a a
multi-part security content.
Note that multipart security body parts which operate on the entirity
of the multipart/report will violate the reqirement that the
multipart/report be the top-level content-type on the message.
The third body part may be of any content-type and contains the returned
message for which the delivery report is defined. This may include
Message/RFC822 but is not restricted to be such.
References 3.
[1] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages",
STD 11, RFC 822, UDEL, August 1982.
[2] Borenstein, N., Freed, N. "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions", RFC
1341, Bellcore, Innosoft, June 1992.
[3] Moore, K., Vaudreuil, G., An Extensible Message Format for Delivery ``
Status Reports'' , Internet-Draft, Work In Progress.
4. Security Consideration
Multipart/Report introduces no security threats beyond those already
present in Internet mail. Automated use of report types without
authentication may present opportunities for denial-of-service attacks.
5. Author's Address
Gregory M. Vaudreuil
Octel Network Services
17080 Dallas Parkway
Dallas, TX 75248-1905
USA
Greg.Vaudreuil@Octel.Com
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