Receipt Working Group Roger Fajman Internet Draft National Institutes of Health Expires: 10 April 1996 5 October 1995 An Extensible Message Format for Message Disposition Notifications draft-ietf-receipt-mdn-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 draft documents 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 refer- ence material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the "1id-abstracts.txt" listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow Directories on ftp.is.co.za (Africa), nic.nordu.net (Europe), munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ds.internic.net (US East Coast), or ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast). Any questions, comments, and reports of defects or ambiguities in this specification may be sent to the mailing list for the RECEIPT working group of the IETF, using the address . Requests to subscribe to the mailing list should be addressed to . Implementors of this specification are encouraged to subscribe to the mailing list, so that they will quickly be informed of any problems which might hinder inter- operability. Abstract This memo defines a MIME content-type that may be used by a mail user agent (UA) or electronic mail gateway to report the disposition of a message after it has been sucessfully delivered to a recipient. This content-type is intended to be machine-processable. Additional message headers are also defined to permit Message Disposition Notifications (MDNs) to be requested by the sender of a message. The purpose is to extend Internet Mail to support functionality often found in other messaging systems, such as X.400 and the proprietary "LAN-based" systems, and often referred to as "read receipts," "acknowledgements," or "receipt notifications." The intention is to do this while respecting the privacy concerns that Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 1 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft have often been expressed when such functions have been discussed in the past. Because many messages are sent between the Internet and other messaging systems (such as X.400 or the proprietary "LAN-based" systems), the MDN protocol is designed to be useful in a multi- protocol messaging environment. To this end, the protocol described in this memo provides for the carriage of "foreign" addresses, in addition to those normally used in Internet mail. Additional attributes may also be defined to support "tunneling" of foreign notifications through Internet mail. 1. Introduction This memo defines a MIME [1] content-type for message disposition notifications (MDNs). An MDN can be used to notify the sender of a message of any of several conditions that may occur after successful delivery, such as display of the message contents, printing of the message, deletion (without display) of the message, or the recipient's refusal to provide MDNs. The "message/disposition-notification" content-type defined herein is intended for use within the framework of the "multipart/report" content type defined in [2]. This memo defines the format of the notifications and the RFC 822 headers used to request them. 1.1 Purposes The MDNs defined in this memo are expected to serve several pur- poses: (a) Inform human beings of the disposition of messages after succcessful delivery, in a manner which is largely independent of human language; (b) Allow mail user agents to keep track of the disposition of messages sent, by associating returned MDNs with earlier message transmissions; (c) Convey disposition notification requests and disposition notifications between Internet Mail and "foreign" mail systems via a gateway; (d) Allow "foreign" notifications to be tunneled through a MIME- capable message system and back into the original messaging system that issued the original notification, or even to a third messaging system; Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 2 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft (e) Allow language-independent, yet reasonably precise, indications of the disposition of a message to be delivered. 1.2 Requirements These purposes place the following constraints on the notification protocol: (a) It must be readable by humans, as well as being machine- parsable. (b) It must provide enough information to allow message senders (or the user agents) to unambiguously associate an MDN with the message that was sent and the original recipient address for which the MDN is issued (if such information is available), even if the message was forwarded to another recipient address. (c) It must also be able to describe the disposition of a message independent of any particular human language or of the ter- minology of any particular mail system. 2. Requesting MDNs A request that the receiving user agent issue message disposition notifications is made by placing a Disposition-notification-to header into the message. The syntax of the header using the ABNF of RFC 822 [5] is mdn-request-header = "Disposition-notification-to" ":" address The address token is as specified in RFC 822 [5]. Note that the presence of a Disposition-notification-to header in a message is merely a request for an MDN. The recipients' user agents are always free to silently ignore such a request. Alternatively, an explicit denial of the request for information about the disposi- tion of the message may be sent using the "denied" disposition in an MDN. One and only one MDN may be issued on behalf of each particular recipient by their user agent. That is, once an MDN has been issued on behalf of a recipient, no further MDNs may be issued on behalf of that recipient, even if another disposition is performed on the message. If a message is forwarded, a "forwarded" MDN may been issued for the recipient doing the forwarding and the recipient of the forwarded message may also cause an MDN to be generated. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 3 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft While Internet standards normally do not specify the behavior of user interfaces, it is strongly recommended that the user agent obtain the user's consent before sending an MDN. This consent could be obtained for each message through some sort of prompt or dialog box, or globally through the user's setting of a preference. The user might also indicate globally that MDNs are never to be sent or that a "denied" MDN is always sent in response to a request for an MDN. A message that contains a Disposition-notification-to header SHOULD also contain a Message-ID header as specified in RFC 822 [5]. This will permit automatic correlation of MDNs with original messages by user agents. If it desired to request message disposition notifications for some recipients and not others, two copies of the message should be sent, one with an Disposition-notification-to header and one without. The other headers of the message (To, cc, bcc, etc.) are the same in both copies. The recipients in the respective message envelopes determine for whom message disposition notifications are requested and for whom they are not. If desired, the Message-ID header may be the same in both copies of the message. Since electronic mail addresses may be rewritten while the message is in transit, it is useful for the original recipient address to be made available by the delivering MTA. The MTA may be able to obtain this information from the ORCPT parameter of the SMTP MAIL FROM command, as defined in [4]. If this information is available, the delivering MTA may insert an Original-recipient header into the message. The syntax of this header using the ABNF of RFC 822 [5] is as follows original-recipient-header = "Original-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address The address-type and generic-address token are as as specified in the description of the Original-recipient field in section 3.2.3. 3. Format of a Message Disposition Notification A message disposition notification is a MIME message with a top- level content-type of multipart/report (defined in [2]). When a multipart/report content is used to transmit an MDN: (a) The report-type parameter of the multipart/report content is "disposition-notification". (b) The first component of the multipart/report contains a human- readable explanation of the MDN, as described in [2]. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 4 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft (c) The second component of the multipart/report is of content-type message/disposition-notification, described in section 3.1 of this document. (d) If the original message or a portion of the message is to be returned to the sender, it appears as the third component of the multipart/report. NOTE: For message dispostion notifications gatewayed from foreign systems, the headers of the original message may not be available. In this case the third component of the MDN may be omitted, or it may contain "simulated" RFC 822 headers which contain equivalent information. In particular, it is very desirable to preserve the subject and date fields from the original message. The MDN MUST be addressed (in both the message header and the transport envelope) to the address from the Disposition- notification-to header which from the original message for which the MDN was generated. The From field of the message header of the MDN MUST contain the address of the person on whose behalf the message disposition notification is being issued. The envelope sender address of the MDN should be the same as the address in the From header. A message disposition notification MUST NOT itself request an MDN. That is, it MUST NOT contain a Disposition-notification-to header. The Message-ID header (if present) for an MDN MUST be different from the Message-ID of the message for which the MDN is being issued. A particular MDN describes the disposition of exactly one message for exactly one recipient. Multiple MDNs may be generated as a result of one message submission, one per recipient. However, due to various circumstances, MDNs may not be generated for some recipients for which MDNs were requested. 3.1 The message/disposition-notification content-type The message/disposition-notification content-type is defined as follows: Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 5 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft MIME type name: message MIME subtype name: disposition-notification Optional parameters: none Encoding considerations: "7bit" encoding is sufficient and MUST be used to maintain readability when viewed by non-MIME mail readers. Security considerations: discussed in section 5 of this memo. The message/disposition-notification report type for use in the multipart/report is "disposition-notification". The body of a message/delivery-status consists of one or more "fields" formatted according to the ABNF of RFC 822 header "fields" (see [5]). Using the ABNF of RFC 822, the syntax of the message/disposition-notification content is as follows: disposition-notification-content = reporting-ua-field CRLF [ mdn-gateway-field CRLF ] [ original-recipient-field CRLF ] final-recipient-field CRLF [ original-message-id-field CRLF ] disposition-field CRLF *( extension-field CRLF) 3.1.1 General conventions for fields Since these fields are defined according to the rules of RFC 822, the same conventions for continuation lines and comments apply. Notification fields may be continued onto multiple lines by begin- ning each additional line with a SPACE or HTAB. Text which appears in parentheses is considered a comment and not part of the contents of that notification field. Field names are case-insensitive, so the names of notification fields may be spelled in any combination of upper and lower case letters. Comments in notification fields may use the "encoded-word" construct defined in [6]. 3.1.2 "*-type" subfields Several fields consist of a "-type" subfield, followed by a semi- colon, followed by "*text". For these fields, the keyword used in the address-type, UA-type, or MTA-type subfield indicates the expected format of the address, UA-name, or MTA-name that follows. The "-type" subfields are defined as follows: Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 6 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft (a) An "address-type" specifies the format of a mailbox address. For example, Internet mail addresses use the "rfc822" address- type. address-type = atom (b) An "UA-name-type" specifies the format of a user agent name. For example, for a Eudora user agent on an Internet host, the UA name might be the domain name of that host, and a UA-name- type of "Eudora" might be used. ua-name-type = atom (c) An "MTA-name-type" specifies the format of a mail transfer agent name. For example, for an SMTP server on an Internet host, the MTA name is the domain name of that host, and the "dns" MTA-name-type is used. mta-name-type = atom Values for address-type, ua-name-type, and mta-name-type are case- insensitive. Thus address-type values of "RFC822" and "rfc822" are equivalent. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) will maintain a registry of address-type, ua-name-type, and mta-name-type values, along with descriptions of the meanings of each, or a reference to a one or more specifications that provide such descriptions. (The "rfc822" address-type is defined in [4].) Registration forms for address-type and mta-name-type appear in [8]. A registration form for ua-name-type appears in this document. IANA will not accept registrations for any address-type name that begins with "X-". These type names are reserved for experimental use. 3.1.3 Lexical tokens imported from RFC 822 The following lexical tokens, defined in RFC 822 [5], are used in the ABNF grammar for MDNs: addr-spec, atom, CHAR, comment, CR, CRLF, DIGIT, LF, linear-white-space, SPACE, text. The date-time lexical token is defined in RFC 1123 [7]. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 7 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 3.2 Message/disposition-notification Fields 3.2.1 The Reporting-UA field reporting-ua-field = "Reporting-UA" ":" ua-name-type ";" ua-name ua-name = *text The Reporting-UA field is defined as follows: A MDN describes the disposition of a message after it has been delivered a recipient. In all cases, the Reporting-UA is the UA that performed the disposition described in the MDN. This field is required. 3.2.2 The MDN-Gateway field The MDN-Gateway field indicates the name of the gateway or MTA that translated a foreign (non-Internet) message disposition notification into this MDN. This field MUST appear in any MDN which was trans- lated by a gateway from a foreign system into MDN format, and MUST NOT appear otherwise. mdn-gateway-field = "MDN-Gateway" ":" mta-name-type ";" mta-name For gateways into Internet mail, the MTA-name-type will normally be "smtp", and the mta-name will be the Internet domain name of the gateway. 3.2.3 Original-Recipient field The Original-Recipient field indicates the original recipient address as specified by the sender of the message for which the MDN is being issued. For Internet Mail messages the value of the Original-Recipient field is obtained from the Original-Recipient header from the message for which the MDN is being generated. If there is no Original-Recipient header in the message, then the Original-Recipient field MUST be omitted. original-recipient-field = "Original-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address generic-address = *text The address-type field indicates the type of the original recipient address. If the message originated within the Internet, the address-type field field will normally be "rfc822", and the address will be according to the syntax specified in [5]. The value "un- Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 8 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft known" should be used if the Reporting UA cannot determine the type of the original recipient address from the message envelope. This address is the same as that provided by the sender and can be used to automatically correlate MDN reports and message transactions. 3.3.4 Final-Recipient field The Final-Recipient field indicates the recipient for which the MDN is being issued. This field MUST be present. The syntax of the field is as follows: final-recipient-field = "Final-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address The generic-address subfield of the Final-Recipient field MUST contain the mailbox address of the recipient (from the From header) as it was when the message was accepted for delivery by the UA. The Final-Recipient address may differ from the address originally provided by the sender, because it may have been transformed during forwarding and gatewaying into an totally unrecognizable mess. However, in the absence of the optional Original-Recipient field, the Final-Recipient field and any returned content may be the only information available with which to correlate the MDN with a par- ticular message recipient. The address-type subfield indicates the type of address expected by the reporting MTA in that context. Recipient addresses obtained via SMTP will normally be of address-type "rfc822". Since mailbox addresses (including those used in the Internet) may be case sensitive, the case of alphabetic characters in the address MUST be preserved. 3.3.5 Original-Message-ID field The Original-Message-ID field indicates the message-ID of the message for which the MDN is being issued. It is obtained from the Message-ID header of the message for which the MDN is issued. This field SHOULD be present if the original message contained a Message- ID header. The syntax of the field is original-message-id-field = "Original-Message-ID" ":" "<" addr-spec ">" The addr-spec token is as specified in RFC 822 [5]. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 9 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 3.3.6 Disposition field The Disposition field indicates the action performed by the Reporting-UA on behalf of the user. This field MUST be present. The syntax for the action-field is: disposition-field = "Disposition" ":" disposition-value disposition-value = "displayed" / "printed" / "forwarded" / "deleted" / "obsoleted" / "expired" / "terminated" / "denied" The disposition-value may be spelled in any combination of upper and lower case characters. "displayed" The message has been displayed by the UA to someone reading the recipient's mailbox. There is no guarantee that the content has been read or understood. "printed" The message has been converted to hardcopy form by the UA on behalf of someone reading the recipient's mail- box. This could include sending the message to a fax machine. "forwarded" The message has been forwarded to another mailbox. "deleted" The message has been deleted without being displayed to the recipient. "obsoleted" The message has been rendered obsolete by another message. "expired" The message has reached its expiration date and has been removed from the recipient's mailbox. "terminated" The recipient's mailbox has been terminated. "denied" The recipient does not wish the sender to be informed of the message's disposition. A UA may also siliently ignore message disposition requests in this situation. 3.4 Extension fields Additional MDN fields may be defined in the future by later revi- sions or extensions to this specification. Extension-field names beginning with "X-" will never be defined as standard fields; such names are reserved for experimental use. MDN field names NOT Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 10 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft beginning with "X-" MUST be registered with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) and described in an RFC. Extension MDN fields may be defined for the following reasons: (a) To allow additional information from foreign disposition reports to be tunneled through Internet MDNs. The names of such MDN fields should begin with an indication of the foreign environment name (e.g. X400-Physical-Forwarding-Address). (b) To allow transmission of diagnostic information which is specific to a particular user agent (UA). The names of such MDN fields should begin with an indication of the UA implemen- tation which produced the MDN. (e.g. Foomail-information). If an UA developer does not wish to register the meanings of such extension fields, "X-" fields may be used for this purpose. To avoid name collisions, the name of the UA implementation should follow the "X-", (e.g. "X-Foomail-Log-ID"). 4. Conformance and Usage Requirements A UA or gateway conforms to this specification if it generates MDNs according to the protocol defined in this memo. It is not necessary to be able to generate all of the values of the Disposition field. UAs and gateways MUST NOT generate the Original-Recipient field of an MDN unless the mail protocols provide the address originally specified by the sender at the time of submission. Ordinary SMTP does not make that guarantee, but the SMTP extension defined in [4] permits such information to be carried in the envelope if it is available. The Original-recipient header defined in this document provides a way for the MTA to pass the original recipient address to the UA. Each sender-specified recipient address may result in more than one MDN. If an MDN is requested for a recipient that is forwarded to multiple recipients of an "alias" (as defined in [4], section 7.2.7), each of the recipients may issue an MDN. By contrast, successful distribution of a message to a mailing list exploder may be considered final disposition of the message. A mailing list exploder may issue an MDN indicating that the message has been forwarded to the list. In this case, the request for MDNs is not propogated to the members of the list. Alternatively, the mailing list exploder may issue no MDN and propogate the request for MDNs to all members of the list. The later behavior is not recom- mended for any but small, closely knit lists. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 11 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft This specification places no restrictions on the processing of MDNs received by user agents or mailing lists. 5. Security considerations The following security considerations apply when using MDNs: 5.1 Forgery MDNs may be forged as easily as ordinary Internet electronic mail. User agents and automatic mail handling facilities (such as mail distribution list exploders) that wish to make automatic use of MDNs should take appropriate precautions to minimize the potential damage from denial-of-service attacks. Security threats related to forged MDNs include the sending of: (a) A falsified disposition notification when the indicated dis- position of the message has not actually ocurred, (b) Unsolicited MDNs 5.2 Confidentiality Another dimension of security is confidentiality. There may be cases in which a message recipient does not wish the disposition of messages addressed to him to be known. In this situation, it is acceptable for the UA to issue "denied" MDNs or to silently ignore requests for MDNs. In general, any optional MDN field may be omitted if the Reporting UA site or user determines that inclusion of the field would impose too great a compromise of site confidentiality. The need for such confidentiality must be balanced against the utility of the omitted information in MDNs. 5.3 Non-Repudiation Within the framework of today's internet mail, the MDNs defined in this document provide valuable information to the mail user; however, MDNs can not be relied upon as a guarantee that a message was or was not not seen by the recipient. Even if MDNs are not actively forged, they may be lost in transit. The MDN issuing mechanism may be bypassed in some manner by the recipient. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 12 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 6. Appendix - collected grammar NOTE: The following lexical tokens are defined in RFC 822: addr- spec, address, atom, CHAR, comment, CR, CRLF, DIGIT, LF, linear- white-space, SPACE, text. The date-time lexical token is defined in RFC 1123 [7]. mdn-request-header = "Disposition-notification-to" ":" address original-recipient-header = "Original-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address disposition-notification-content = reporting-ua-field CRLF [ mdn-gateway-field CRLF ] [ original-recipient-field CRLF ] final-recipient-field CRLF [message-id-field CRLF] disposition-field CRLF *( extension-field CRLF) address-type = atom ua-name-type = atom mta-name-type = atom reporting-ua-field = "Reporting-UA" ":" ua-name-type ";" ua-name ua-name = *text mdn-gateway-field = "MDN-Gateway" ":" mta-name-type ";" mta-name original-recipient-field = "Original-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address generic-address = *text final-recipient-field = "Final-Recipient" ":" address-type ";" generic-address disposition-field = "Disposition" ":" disposition-value disposition-value = "displayed" / "printed" / "forwarded" / "deleted" / "obsoleted" / "expired" / "terminated" / "denied" original-message-id-field = "Original-Message-ID" ":" "<" addr-spec ">" extension-field = extension-field-name ":" *text extension-field-name = atom Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 13 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 7. Appendix - Guidelines for gatewaying MDNs NOTE: This section provides non-binding recommendations for the construction of mail gateways that wish to provide semi-transparent disposition notifications between the Internet and another electronic mail system. Specific MDN gateway requirements for a particular pair of mail systems may be defined by other documents. 6.1 Gatewaying from other mail systems to MDNs A mail gateway may issue an MDN to convey the contents of a "for- eign" disposition notification over Internet mail. When there are appropriate mappings from the foreign notification elements to MDN fields, the information may be transmitted in those MDN fields. Additional information (such as might be needed to tunnel the foreign notification through the Internet) may be defined in exten- sion MDN fields. (Such fields should be given names that identify the foreign mail protocol, e.g. X400-* for X.400 protocol elements) The gateway must attempt to supply reasonable values for the Reporting-UA, Final-Recipient, and Disposition fields. These will normally be obtained by translating the values from the foreign notification into their Internet-style equivalents. However, some loss of information is to be expected. The sender-specified recipient address, and the original message-id, if present in the foreign notification, should be preserved in the Original-Recipient and Original-Message-ID fields. The gateway should also attempt to preserve the "final" recipient address from the foreign system. Whenever possible, foreign protocol elements should be encoded as meaningful printable ASCII strings. For MDNs produced from foreign disposition notifications, the name of the gateway MUST appear in the MDN-Gateway field of the MDN. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 14 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 7.2 Gatewaying from MDNs to other mail systems It may be possible to gateway MDNs from the Internet into a foreign mail system. The primary purpose of such gatewaying is to convey disposition information in a form that is usable by the destination system. A secondary purpose is to allow "tunneling" of MDNs through foreign mail systems, in case the MDN may be gatewayed back into the Internet. In general, the recipient of the MDN (i.e., the sender of the original message) will want to know, for each recipient: the closest available approximation to the original recipient address, and the disposition (displayed, printed, etc.). If possible, the gateway should attempt to preserve the Original- Recipient address and Original-Message-ID (if present), in the resulting foreign disposition report. If it is possible to tunnel an MDN through the destination environ- ment, the gateway specification may define a means of preserving the MDN information in the disposition reports used by that environment. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 15 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 9. Appendix - IANA registration forms for MDN types The forms below are for use when registering a new address-type, UA-name-type, or MTA-name-type with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). Each piece of information requested by a registration form may be satisfied either by providing the informa- tion on the form itself, or by including a reference to a published, publicly available specification which includes the necessary information. IANA MAY reject MDN type registrations because of incomplete registration forms, imprecise specifications, or inap- propriate type names. To register an MDN type, complete the applicable form below and send it via Internet electronic mail to . Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 16 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 9.1 IANA registration form for address-type A registration for an address-type MUST include the following information: (a) The proposed address-type name. (b) The syntax for mailbox addresses of this type, specified using BNF, regular expressions, ASN.1, or other non-ambiguous lan- guage. (c) If addresses of this type are not composed entirely of graphic characters from the US-ASCII repertoire, a specification for how they are to be encoded as graphic US-ASCII characters in a MDN Original-Recipient or Final-Recipient MDN field. (d) [optional] A specification for how addresses of this type are to be translated to and from Internet electronic mail ad- dresses. 9.2 IANA registration form for UA-name-type A registration for a UA-name-type must include the following infor- mation: (a) The proposed UA-name-type name. (b) A description of the syntax of UA names of this type, using BNF, regular expressions, ASN.1, or other non-ambiguous lan- guage. (c) If UA names of this type do not consist entirely of graphic characters from the US-ASCII repertoire, a specification for how an MTA name of this type should be expressed as a sequence of graphic US-ASCII characters. 9.3 IANA registration form for MTA-name-type A registration for a MDN MTA-name-type must include the following information: (a) The proposed MTA-name-type name. (b) A description of the syntax of MTA names of this type, using BNF, regular expressions, ASN.1, or other non-ambiguous lan- guage. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 17 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft (c) If MTA names of this type do not consist entirely of graphic characters from the US-ASCII repertoire, a specification for how an MTA name of this type should be expressed as a sequence of graphic US-ASCII characters. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 18 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 10. Appendix - Examples NOTE: These examples are provided as illustration only, and are not considered part of the MDN protocol specification. If an example conflicts with the protocol definition above, the example is wrong. Likewise, the use of *-type subfield names or extension fields in these examples is not to be construed as a definition for those type names or extension fields. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 19 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 10.1 This is an MDN issued after a message has been displayed to the user of an Internet Mail user agent. Date: Wed, 20 Sep 1995 00:19:00 (EDT) -0400 From: Joe Recipient Message-Id: <199509200019.12345@mega.edu> Subject: Disposition notification To: Jane Sender MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/report; report-type=disposition-notification; boundary="RAA14128.773615765/mega.edu" --RAA14128.773615765/mega.edu The message sent on 1995 Sep 19 at 13:30:00 (EDT) -0400 to Joe Recipient with subject "First draft of report" has been displayed. This is no guarantee that the message has been read or understood. --RAA14128.773615765/mega.edu content-type: message/disposition-notification Reporting-UA: foomail; joes-pc.cs.mega.edu Original-Recipient: rfc822;Joe_Recipient@mega.edu Final-Recipient: rfc822;Joe_Recipient@mega.edu Original-Message-ID: <199509192301.12345@mega.edu> Disposition: displayed --RAA14128.773615765/mega.edu content-type: message/rfc822 [original message goes here] --RAA14128.773615765/mega.edu-- Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 20 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 11. Acknowledgments This document is based on the Delivery Status Notifications document [8] by Keith Moore and Greg Vaudreuil. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 21 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 12. References [1] Borenstein, N., Freed, N. "Multipurpose Internet Mail Exten- sions", RFC 1521, Bellcore, Innosoft, September 1993. [2] Vaudreuil, G. "The Multipart/Report Content Type for the Reporting of Mail System Administrative Messages", Internet- Draft draft-ietf-notary-mime-report-03.txt, 5 May 1995. [3] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC 821, USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1982. [4] Moore, K. "SMTP Service Extension for Delivery Status Notifications", Internet-Draft draft-ietf-notary-smtp-drpt-04.txt, 29 May 1995. [5] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, UDEL, August 1982. [6] Moore, K. "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Part Two: Message Header Extensions for Non-Ascii Text", RFC 1522, University of Tennessee, September 1993. [7] Braden, R. (ed.) "Requirements for Internet Hosts - Application and Support", RFC 1123, October 1989. [8] Moore, K. and Vaudreuil, G. "An Extensible Format for Delivery Status Notifications, Internet Draft, 21 June 1995. Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 22 Message Disposition Notifications 5 October 1995 Internet Draft 12. Author's Address Roger Fajman National Institutes of Health 12 South Drive MSC 5659 Bethesda, Maryland 20892-5659 USA Email: raf@cu.nih.gov Voice: +1 301 402 4265 Fax: +1 301 480 6241 Fajman Expires 10 April 1996 Page 23