Network Working Group A. Melnikov
Request for Comments: 3503 ACI Worldwide/MessagingDirect
Category: Standards Track March 2003
Message Disposition Notification (MDN) profile for
Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP)
Status of this Memo
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
The Message Disposition Notification (MDN) facility defined in RFC
2298 provides a means by which a message can request that message
processing by the recipient be acknowledged as well as a format to be
used for such acknowledgements. However, it doesn't describe how
multiple Mail User Agents (MUAs) should handle the generation of MDNs
in an Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP4) environment.
This document describes how to handle MDNs in such an environment and
provides guidelines for implementers of IMAP4 that want to add MDN
support to their products.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
Table of Contents
1. Conventions Used in this Document............................. 22. Introduction and Overview..................................... 23. Client behavior............................................... 33.1. Client behavior when receiving a message................. 53.2. Client behavior when copying a message................... 53.3. Client behavior when sending a message................... 53.4. Client behavior when saving a temporary message.......... 54. Server behavior............................................... 54.1. Server that supports arbitrary keywords.................. 54.2. Server that supports only $MDNSent keyword............... 54.3. Interaction with IMAP ACL extension...................... 65. Examples...................................................... 66. Security Considerations....................................... 77. Formal Syntax................................................. 78. Acknowledgments............................................... 79. Normative References.......................................... 810. Author's Address.............................................. 811. Full Copyright Statement...................................... 9
"C:" and "S:" in examples show lines sent by the client and server
respectively.
The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", and "MAY" in
this document when typed in uppercase are to be interpreted as
defined in "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels"
[KEYWORDS].
This memo defines an additional [IMAP4] mailbox keyword that allows
multiple Mail User Agents (MUAs) to know if a requested receipt
notification was sent.
Message Disposition Notification [MDN] does not require any special
support of IMAP in the case where a user has access to the mailstore
from only one computer and is using a single MUA. In this case, the
MUA behaves as described in [MDN], i.e., the MUA performs automatic
processing and generates corresponding MDNs, it performs requested
action and, with the user's permission, sends appropriate MDNs. The
MUA will not send MDN twice because the MUA keeps track of sent
notifications in a local configuration. However, that does not work
when IMAP is used to access the same mailstore from different
locations or is using different MUAs.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
This document defines a new special purpose mailbox keyword $MDNSent
that must be used by MUAs. It does not define any new command or
response for IMAP, but describes a technique that MUAs should use to
achieve interoperability.
When a client opens a mailbox for the first time, it verifies that
the server is capable of storing the $MDNSent keyword by examining
the PERMANENTFLAGS response code. In order to support MDN in IMAP, a
server MUST support either the $MDNSent keyword, or arbitrary message
keywords.
The use of IMAP requires few additional steps in mail processing on
the client side. The following timeline modifies the timeline found
in Section 4 of [MDN].
-- User composes message.
-- User tells MUA to send message.
-- MUA passes message to MSA (original recipient information passed
along). MUA [optionally] saves message to a folder for sent mail
with $MDNSent flag set.
-- MSA sends message to MTA.
-- Final MTA receives message.
-- Final MTA delivers message to MUA (possibly generating DSN).
-- MUA logs into IMAP server, opens mailbox, verifies if mailbox can
store $MDNSent keyword by examining PERMANENTFLAGS response.
-- MUA performs automatic processing and generates corresponding MDNs
("dispatched", "processed", "deleted", "denied" or "failed"
disposition type with "automatic-action" and "MDN-sent-
automatically" disposition modes) for messages that do not have
$MDNSent keyword, or \Draft flag set. (*)
-- MUA sets the $MDNSent keyword for every message that required an
automatic MDN to be sent, whether or not the MDN was sent.
-- MUA displays a list of messages to user.
-- User selects a message and requests that some action be performed
on it.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
-- MUA performs requested action and, with user's permission, sends
appropriate MDN ("displayed", "dispatched", "processed",
"deleted", "denied" or "failed" disposition type with "manual-
action" and "MDN-sent-manually" or "MDN-sent-automatically"
disposition mode). If the generated MDN is saved to a mailbox
with the APPEND command, the client MUST specify the $MDNSent
keyword in the APPEND.
-- MUA sets the $MDNSent keyword for all messages for which the user
confirmed the dispatching of disposition (or was explicitly
prohibited to do so).
-- User possibly performs other actions on message, but no further
MDNs are generated.
(*) Note: MUA MUST NOT use \Recent flag as an indicator that it
should send MDN, because according to [IMAP4], "If multiple
connections have the same mailbox selected simultaneously, it is
undefined which of these connections will see newly-arrived
messages with \Recent set and which will see it without \Recent
set". Thus, using \Recent as an indicator will cause
unpredictable client behavior with different IMAP4 servers.
However, the client MAY use \Seen flag as one of the indicators
that MDN must not be sent. The client MUST NOT use any other
standard flags, like \Draft or \Answered, to indicate that MDN
was previously sent, because they have different well known
meaning. In any case, in the presence of the $MDNSent keyword,
the client MUST ignore all other flags or keywords for the
purpose of generating an MDN and MUST NOT send the MDN.
When the client opens a mailbox for the first time, it must verify
that the server supports the $MDNSent keyword, or arbitrary message
keywords by examining PERMANENTFLAGS response code.
The client MUST NOT try to set the $MDNSent keyword if the server is
incapable of storing it permanently.
The client MUST be prepared to receive NO from the server as the
result of STORE $MDNSent when the server advertises the support of
storing arbitrary keywords, because the server may limit the number
of message keywords it can store in a particular mailbox. A client
SHOULD NOT send MDN if it fails to store the $MDNSent keyword.
Once the $MDNSent keyword is set, it MUST NOT be unset by a client.
The client MAY set the $MDNSent keyword when a user denies sending
the notification. This prohibits all other MUAs from sending MDN for
this message.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
The client MUST NOT send MDN if a message has the $MDNSent keyword
set. It also MUST NOT send MDN if a message has \Draft flag, because
some clients use this flag to mark a message as incomplete.
See the timeline in section 3 for details on client behavior when
receiving a message.
The client SHOULD verify that $MDNSent is preserved on a COPY
operation. Furthermore, when a message is copied between servers
with the APPEND command, the client MUST set the $MDNSent keyword
correctly.
Server implementors that want to follow this specification must
insure that their server complies with either section 4.1 or section
4.2. If the server also supports the IMAP [ACL] extension, it MUST
also comply with the section 4.3.
Servers that support only the $MDNSent keyword MUST preserve it on
the COPY operation. It is also expected that a server that supports
SEARCH <flag> will also support the SEARCH KEYWORD $MDNSent.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
Any server that conforms to either 4.1 or 4.2 and also supports the
IMAP [ACL] extension, SHOULD preserve the $MDNSent keyword on COPY
even if the client does not have 'w' right. This will prevent the
generation of a duplicated MDN for the same message. Note that the
server MUST still check if the client has rights to perform the COPY
operation on a message according to [ACL].
There are no known security issues with this extension, not found in
[MDN] and/or [IMAP4].
Section 4.3 changes ACL checking requirements on an IMAP server that
implements IMAP [ACL] extension.
The following syntax specification uses the augmented Backus-Naur
Form (BNF) notation as specified in [RFC-822], as modified by
[IMAP4]. Non-terminals referenced, but not defined below, are as
defined by [IMAP4].
Except as noted otherwise, all alphabetic characters are case-
insensitive. The use of upper or lower case characters to define
token strings is for editorial clarity only. Implementations MUST
accept these strings in a case-insensitive fashion.
flag_keyword ::= "$MDNSent" / other_keywords
other_keywords ::= atom
This document is the product of discussions that took place on the
IMAP mailing list. Special gratitude to Cyrus Daboo and Randall
Gellens for reviewing the document.
Thank you to my father who as he has helped to make me what I am. I
miss you terribly.
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RFC 3503 MDN profile for IMAP March 2003
[KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[MDN] Fajman, R., "An Extensible Message Format for Message
Disposition Notifications", RFC 2298, March 1998.
[IMAP4] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol - Version
4rev1", RFC 3501, March 2003.
[ACL] Myers, J., "IMAP4 ACL extension", RFC 2086, January 1997.
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2003). All Rights Reserved.
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Acknowledgement
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
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