One document matched: draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-08.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-07.txt
Network Working Group Jutta Degener
Internet Draft Philip Guenther
Intended status: Standards Track Sendmail, Inc.
Expires: September 2007 March 2007
Updates: RFC-ietf-sieve-3028bis-12
Sieve Email Filtering: Editheader Extension
draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-08.txt
Status of this memo
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
Abstract
This document defines two new actions for the "Sieve" email
filtering language that add and delete email header fields.
1. Introduction
Email header fields are a flexible and easy to understand means
of communication between email processors.
This extension enables sieve scripts to interact with other
components that consume or produce header fields by allowing
the script to delete and add header fields.
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2. Conventions used.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [KEYWORDS].
Conventions for notations are as in [SIEVE] section 1.1, including
use of the "Usage:" label for the definition of action and tagged
arguments syntax.
The term "header field" is used here as in [IMAIL] to mean a
logical line of an email message header.
The capability string associated with the extension defined in
this document is "editheader".
3. Action addheader
Usage: "addheader" [":last"] <field-name: string> <value: string>
The addheader action adds a header field to the existing message
header. If the field-name is not a valid 7-bit US-ASCII header
field name as described by the [IMAIL] "field-name" nonterminal
syntax element, the implementation MUST flag an error. The
addheader action does not affect Sieve's implicit keep.
If the specified field value does not match the RFC 2822
"unstructured" nonterminal syntax element or exceeds a length
limit set by the implementation, the implementation MUST either
flag an error or encode the field using folding white space and
the encodings described in [RFC2047] or [RFC2231] to be compliant
with RFC 2822.
An implementation MAY impose a length limit onto the size of
the encoded header field; such a limit MUST NOT be less
than 998 characters, not including the terminating CRLF
supplied by the implementation.
By default, the header field is inserted at the beginning of the
existing message header. If the optional flag ":last" is
specified, it is appended at the end.
Example:
/* Don't redirect if we already redirected */
if not header :contains "X-Sieve-Filtered"
["<kim@job.example.com>", "<kim@home.example.com>"]
{
addheader "X-Sieve-Filtered" "<kim@job.example.com>";
redirect "kim@home.example.com";
}
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4. Action deleteheader
Usage: "deleteheader" [":index" <fieldno: number> [":last"]]
[COMPARATOR] [MATCH-TYPE]
<field-name: string>
[<value-patterns: string-list>]
By default, the deleteheader action deletes all occurrences of
the named header field. The deleteheader action does not affect
Sieve's implicit keep.
The field-name is mandatory and always matched as a case-insensitive
US-ASCII string. If the field-name is not a valid 7-bit header
field name as described by the [IMAIL] "field-name" nonterminal
syntax element, the implementation MUST flag an error.
The value-patterns, if specified, restrict which occurrences of
the header field are deleted to those whose values match any of
the specified value-patterns, the matching being according to
the match-type and comparator and performed as if by the "header"
test. In particular, leading and trailing whitespace in the
field values is ignored.
If :index <fieldno> is specified, the attempts to match a value
are limited to the <fieldno> occurrence of the named header
field, beginning at 1, the first named header field. If :last
is specified, the count is backwards; 1 denotes the last named
header field, 2 the second to last, and so on. The counting
happens before the <value-patterns> match, if any. For example:
deleteheader :index 2 :contains "Received" "via carrier-pigeon"
deletes the second "Received" header field if it contains
the string "via carrier-pigeon" (not the second Received field
that contains "via carrier-pigeon").
It is not an error if no header fields match the conditions in
the deleteheader action or if the :index argument is greater
than the number of named header fields.
If an script uses the deleteheader action to remove "Received"
header fields and then performs a "redirect" action, the
implementation SHOULD NOT send the outgoing message with fewer
Received header fields than the original message. If the
implementation does not permit that for the involved script, it
is implementation defined what Received header fields are present
in such an outgoing message. The above overrides the requirement
on Received header fields in RFC-ietf-sieve-3028bis-12 section
4.2.
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5. Interaction with Other Sieve Extensions
Actions that generate [MDN], [DSN], or similar disposition
messages MUST do so using the original, unmodified message header.
Similarly, if an error terminates processing of the script, the
original message header MUST be used when doing the implicit
keep required by [SIEVE] section 2.10.6.
With the exception of the special handling of "redirect" and
"Received" header fields described above, all other actions that
store or send the message MUST do so with the current set of
header fields.
Tests and actions such as "exists", "header", or "vacation"
[VACATION] that examine header fields MUST examine the current
state of a header as modified by any actions that have taken
place so far.
As an example, the "header" test in the following fragment will
always evaluate to true, regardless of whether the incoming
message contained an "X-Hello" header field or not:
addheader "X-Hello" "World";
if header :contains "X-Hello" "World"
{
fileinto "international";
}
However, if the presence or value of a header field affects how
the implementation parses or decodes other parts of the message,
then for the purposes of that parsing or decoding the implementation
MAY ignore some or all changes made to those header fields. For
example, in an implementation that supports the [BODY] extension,
"body" tests may be unaffected by deleting or adding Content-Type
or Content-Transfer-Encoding header fields. This does not rescind
the requirement that changes to those header fields affect direct
tests; only the semantic side effects of changes to the fields
may be ignored.
For the purpose of weeding out duplicates, a message modified
by addheader or deleteheader MUST be considered the same as
the original message. For example, in an implementation that
obeys the constraint in [SIEVE] section 2.10.3 and does not deliver
the same message to a folder more than once, the following
code fragment
keep;
addheader "X-Flavor" "vanilla";
keep;
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MUST only file one message. It is up to the implementation
to pick which of the redundant "fileinto" or "keep" actions is
executed, and which ones are ignored.
The "implicit keep" is thought to be executed at the end of
the script, after the headers have been modified. (However,
a canceled "implicit keep" remains canceled.)
6. IANA Considerations
The following template specifies the IANA registration of the Sieve
extension specified in this document:
To: iana@iana.org
Subject: Registration of new Sieve extension
Capability name: editheader
Description: adds actions 'addheader' and 'deleteheader'
that modify the header of the message being
processed
RFC number: this RFC
Contact Address: Jutta Degener <jutta@pobox.com>
This information should be added to the list of sieve extensions
given on http://www.iana.org/assignments/sieve-extensions.
7. Security Considerations
Someone with write access to a user's script storage may use this
extension to generate headers that a user would otherwise be
shielded from (e.g., by a gateway MTA that removes them).
A sieve filter that removes header fields may unwisely destroy
evidence about the path a message has taken.
While this specification overrides the requirement that redirected
messages have more Received header fields than the message as
received, doing so removes an important mechanisms for detecting
loops and therefore should not be permitted by implementations
without due consideration, such as requiring administrative
action to enable it.
Any change in a message content may interfere with digital
signature mechanisms that include the header in the signed
material. Since normal message delivery adds "Received:"
header fields to the beginning of a message, many such schemas
are impervious to headers prefixed to a message, and will
work with "addheader" unless :last is used.
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Any decision mechanism in a user's filter that is based
on headers is vulnerable to header spoofing. For example,
if the user adds an APPROVED header or tag, a malicious sender
may add that tag or header themselves. One way to guard against
this is to delete or rename any such headers or stamps prior
to processing the message.
8. Acknowledgments
Thanks to Eric Allman, Cyrus Daboo, Matthew Elvey, Ned Freed,
Arnt Gulbrandsen, Simon Josefsson, Will Lee, William Leibzon,
Mark E. Mallett, Chris Markle, Alexey Melnikov, Randall Schwartz,
Nigel Swinson, Kjetil Torgrim Homme, and Rand Wacker for extensive
corrections and suggestions.
9. Authors' Addresses
Jutta Degener
5245 College Ave, Suite #127
Oakland, CA 94618
Email: jutta@pobox.com
Philip Guenther
Sendmail, Inc.
6425 Christie Ave, 4th Floor
Emeryville, CA 94608
Email: guenther@sendmail.com
10. Discussion
This section will be removed when this document leaves the
Internet-Draft stage.
This draft is intended as an extension to the Sieve mail filtering
language. Sieve extensions are discussed on the MTA Filters mailing
list at <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>. Subscription requests can
be sent to <ietf-mta-filters-request@imc.org> (send an email
message with the word "subscribe" in the body).
More information on the mailing list along with a WWW archive of
back messages is available at <http://www.imc.org/ietf-mta-filters/>.
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10.1 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-07.txt
Let implementations permit redirected messages to have fewer
Received header fields, but warn about the consequences.
Updated boilerplate to match RFC 4748.
Added "Intended-Status: Standards Track" and
"Updates: draft-ietf-sieve-3028bis-12"
Change the references from appendices to sections.
Update [SIEVE], [BODY], [DSN], and [MDN] references.
10.2 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-06.txt
Make deleteheader match addheader on the description of invalid
field-names.
Update copyright boilerplate
Update references
10.3 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-05.txt
MDN and DSN references are merely informative
10.4 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-04.txt
Ignore leading and trailing whitespace when matching header field
values.
Header modifications are ignored when continuing after an error
or generating MDNs or DSNs
Added references for MDN and DSN
Update IANA registration to match 3028bis
Added [KEYWORDS] boilerplate text
Describe an invalid field-name to addheader as an error (might
be detected at runtime)
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10.5 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-03.txt
Change "Syntax:" to "Usage:".
Updated references.
10.6 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-02.txt
Clarify that value-patterns restrict which occurrences are deleted.
Add informative reference to [BODY].
10.7 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-01.txt
Whitespace and line length tweaks noted by ID-nits.
Clarified what is being counted by :index.
Update the [SIEVE] reference to the I-D of the revision.
10.8 Changes from draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-00.txt
Updated IPR boilerplate to RFC 3978/3979.
Many corrections in response to WGLC comments. Of particular note:
- correct a number of spelling and grammar errors
- document that neither addheader nor deleteheader affects the
implicit keep
- add normative references to RFC 2047 and RFC 2231
- it is not an error for deleteheader to affect nothing
- change "foo.tld" to "foo.example.com"
- add an informative reference to [VACATION], citing it as an
example of an action that examines header fields
- add weasel words about changes to fields that have secondary
effects
- add security consideration for combination of header changes
and "reject"
10.9 Changes from draft-degener-sieve-editheader-03.txt
Renamed to draft-ietf-sieve-editheader-00.txt;
tweaked the title and abstract.
Added Philip Guenther as co-author.
Updated IPR boilerplate.
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10.10 Changes from draft-degener-sieve-editheader-02.txt
Changed the duplicate restrictions from "messages with different
headers MUST be considered different" to their direct opposite,
"messages with different headers MUST be considered the same,"
as requested by workgroup members on the mailing list.
Expanded mention of header signature schemes to Security
Considerations.
Added IANA Considerations section.
11. Normative References
[IMAIL] Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 2822, April
2001.
[KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2047] Moore, K., "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions) Part Three: Message Header Extensions for
Non-ASCII Text", RFC 2047, November 1996.
[RFC2231] Freed, N. and K. Moore, "MIME Parameter Value and
Encoded Word Extensions: Character Sets, Languages, and
Continuations", RFC 2231, November 1997.
[SIEVE] Guenther, P. and T. Showalter, "Sieve: A Mail Filtering
Language", draft-ietf-sieve-3028bis-12, February 2007.
12. Informative References
[BODY] Degener, J. and P. Guenther, "Sieve Email Filtering:
Body Extension", draft-ietf-sieve-body-06, February 2007.
[DSN] Moore, K. and G. Vaudreuil, "An Extensible Message Format
for Delivery Status Notifications", RFC 3464, January
2003.
[MDN] T. Hansen, Ed., G. Vaudreuil, Ed., "Message Disposition
Notification", RFC 3798, May 2004.
[VACATION] Showalter, T. and N. Freed, "Sieve Email Filtering:
Vacation Extension", draft-ietf-sieve-vacation-06,
February 2006.
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