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- Network Working Group K. Moore
- Request for Comments: 2047 University of Tennessee
- Obsoletes: 1521, 1522, 1590 November 1996
- Category: Standards Track
-
-
- MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Part Three:
- Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text
-
- 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.
-
- Abstract
-
- STD 11, RFC 822, defines a message representation protocol specifying
- considerable detail about US-ASCII message headers, and leaves the
- message content, or message body, as flat US-ASCII text. This set of
- documents, collectively called the Multipurpose Internet Mail
- Extensions, or MIME, redefines the format of messages to allow for
-
- (1) textual message bodies in character sets other than US-ASCII,
-
- (2) an extensible set of different formats for non-textual message
- bodies,
-
- (3) multi-part message bodies, and
-
- (4) textual header information in character sets other than US-ASCII.
-
- These documents are based on earlier work documented in RFC 934, STD
- 11, and RFC 1049, but extends and revises them. Because RFC 822 said
- so little about message bodies, these documents are largely
- orthogonal to (rather than a revision of) RFC 822.
-
- This particular document is the third document in the series. It
- describes extensions to RFC 822 to allow non-US-ASCII text data in
- Internet mail header fields.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moore Standards Track [Page 1]
-
- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- Other documents in this series include:
-
- + RFC 2045, which specifies the various headers used to describe
- the structure of MIME messages.
-
- + RFC 2046, which defines the general structure of the MIME media
- typing system and defines an initial set of media types,
-
- + RFC 2048, which specifies various IANA registration procedures
- for MIME-related facilities, and
-
- + RFC 2049, which describes MIME conformance criteria and
- provides some illustrative examples of MIME message formats,
- acknowledgements, and the bibliography.
-
- These documents are revisions of RFCs 1521, 1522, and 1590, which
- themselves were revisions of RFCs 1341 and 1342. An appendix in RFC
- 2049 describes differences and changes from previous versions.
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- RFC 2045 describes a mechanism for denoting textual body parts which
- are coded in various character sets, as well as methods for encoding
- such body parts as sequences of printable US-ASCII characters. This
- memo describes similar techniques to allow the encoding of non-ASCII
- text in various portions of a RFC 822 [2] message header, in a manner
- which is unlikely to confuse existing message handling software.
-
- Like the encoding techniques described in RFC 2045, the techniques
- outlined here were designed to allow the use of non-ASCII characters
- in message headers in a way which is unlikely to be disturbed by the
- quirks of existing Internet mail handling programs. In particular,
- some mail relaying programs are known to (a) delete some message
- header fields while retaining others, (b) rearrange the order of
- addresses in To or Cc fields, (c) rearrange the (vertical) order of
- header fields, and/or (d) "wrap" message headers at different places
- than those in the original message. In addition, some mail reading
- programs are known to have difficulty correctly parsing message
- headers which, while legal according to RFC 822, make use of
- backslash-quoting to "hide" special characters such as "<", ",", or
- ":", or which exploit other infrequently-used features of that
- specification.
-
- While it is unfortunate that these programs do not correctly
- interpret RFC 822 headers, to "break" these programs would cause
- severe operational problems for the Internet mail system. The
- extensions described in this memo therefore do not rely on little-
- used features of RFC 822.
-
-
-
- Moore Standards Track [Page 2]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- Instead, certain sequences of "ordinary" printable ASCII characters
- (known as "encoded-words") are reserved for use as encoded data. The
- syntax of encoded-words is such that they are unlikely to
- "accidentally" appear as normal text in message headers.
- Furthermore, the characters used in encoded-words are restricted to
- those which do not have special meanings in the context in which the
- encoded-word appears.
-
- Generally, an "encoded-word" is a sequence of printable ASCII
- characters that begins with "=?", ends with "?=", and has two "?"s in
- between. It specifies a character set and an encoding method, and
- also includes the original text encoded as graphic ASCII characters,
- according to the rules for that encoding method.
-
- A mail composer that implements this specification will provide a
- means of inputting non-ASCII text in header fields, but will
- translate these fields (or appropriate portions of these fields) into
- encoded-words before inserting them into the message header.
-
- A mail reader that implements this specification will recognize
- encoded-words when they appear in certain portions of the message
- header. Instead of displaying the encoded-word "as is", it will
- reverse the encoding and display the original text in the designated
- character set.
-
- NOTES
-
- This memo relies heavily on notation and terms defined RFC 822 and
- RFC 2045. In particular, the syntax for the ABNF used in this memo
- is defined in RFC 822, as well as many of the terminal or nonterminal
- symbols from RFC 822 are used in the grammar for the header
- extensions defined here. Among the symbols defined in RFC 822 and
- referenced in this memo are: 'addr-spec', 'atom', 'CHAR', 'comment',
- 'CTLs', 'ctext', 'linear-white-space', 'phrase', 'quoted-pair'.
- 'quoted-string', 'SPACE', and 'word'. Successful implementation of
- this protocol extension requires careful attention to the RFC 822
- definitions of these terms.
-
- When the term "ASCII" appears in this memo, it refers to the "7-Bit
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange", ANSI X3.4-1986.
- The MIME charset name for this character set is "US-ASCII". When not
- specifically referring to the MIME charset name, this document uses
- the term "ASCII", both for brevity and for consistency with RFC 822.
- However, implementors are warned that the character set name must be
- spelled "US-ASCII" in MIME message and body part headers.
-
-
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 3]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- This memo specifies a protocol for the representation of non-ASCII
- text in message headers. It specifically DOES NOT define any
- translation between "8-bit headers" and pure ASCII headers, nor is
- any such translation assumed to be possible.
-
- 2. Syntax of encoded-words
-
- An 'encoded-word' is defined by the following ABNF grammar. The
- notation of RFC 822 is used, with the exception that white space
- characters MUST NOT appear between components of an 'encoded-word'.
-
- encoded-word = "=?" charset "?" encoding "?" encoded-text "?="
-
- charset = token ; see section 3
-
- encoding = token ; see section 4
-
- token = 1*<Any CHAR except SPACE, CTLs, and especials>
-
- especials = "(" / ")" / "<" / ">" / "@" / "," / ";" / ":" / "
- <"> / "/" / "[" / "]" / "?" / "." / "="
-
- encoded-text = 1*<Any printable ASCII character other than "?"
- or SPACE>
- ; (but see "Use of encoded-words in message
- ; headers", section 5)
-
- Both 'encoding' and 'charset' names are case-independent. Thus the
- charset name "ISO-8859-1" is equivalent to "iso-8859-1", and the
- encoding named "Q" may be spelled either "Q" or "q".
-
- An 'encoded-word' may not be more than 75 characters long, including
- 'charset', 'encoding', 'encoded-text', and delimiters. If it is
- desirable to encode more text than will fit in an 'encoded-word' of
- 75 characters, multiple 'encoded-word's (separated by CRLF SPACE) may
- be used.
-
- While there is no limit to the length of a multiple-line header
- field, each line of a header field that contains one or more
- 'encoded-word's is limited to 76 characters.
-
- The length restrictions are included both to ease interoperability
- through internetwork mail gateways, and to impose a limit on the
- amount of lookahead a header parser must employ (while looking for a
- final ?= delimiter) before it can decide whether a token is an
- "encoded-word" or something else.
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 4]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- IMPORTANT: 'encoded-word's are designed to be recognized as 'atom's
- by an RFC 822 parser. As a consequence, unencoded white space
- characters (such as SPACE and HTAB) are FORBIDDEN within an
- 'encoded-word'. For example, the character sequence
-
- =?iso-8859-1?q?this is some text?=
-
- would be parsed as four 'atom's, rather than as a single 'atom' (by
- an RFC 822 parser) or 'encoded-word' (by a parser which understands
- 'encoded-words'). The correct way to encode the string "this is some
- text" is to encode the SPACE characters as well, e.g.
-
- =?iso-8859-1?q?this=20is=20some=20text?=
-
- The characters which may appear in 'encoded-text' are further
- restricted by the rules in section 5.
-
- 3. Character sets
-
- The 'charset' portion of an 'encoded-word' specifies the character
- set associated with the unencoded text. A 'charset' can be any of
- the character set names allowed in an MIME "charset" parameter of a
- "text/plain" body part, or any character set name registered with
- IANA for use with the MIME text/plain content-type.
-
- Some character sets use code-switching techniques to switch between
- "ASCII mode" and other modes. If unencoded text in an 'encoded-word'
- contains a sequence which causes the charset interpreter to switch
- out of ASCII mode, it MUST contain additional control codes such that
- ASCII mode is again selected at the end of the 'encoded-word'. (This
- rule applies separately to each 'encoded-word', including adjacent
- 'encoded-word's within a single header field.)
-
- When there is a possibility of using more than one character set to
- represent the text in an 'encoded-word', and in the absence of
- private agreements between sender and recipients of a message, it is
- recommended that members of the ISO-8859-* series be used in
- preference to other character sets.
-
- 4. Encodings
-
- Initially, the legal values for "encoding" are "Q" and "B". These
- encodings are described below. The "Q" encoding is recommended for
- use when most of the characters to be encoded are in the ASCII
- character set; otherwise, the "B" encoding should be used.
- Nevertheless, a mail reader which claims to recognize 'encoded-word's
- MUST be able to accept either encoding for any character set which it
- supports.
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 5]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- Only a subset of the printable ASCII characters may be used in
- 'encoded-text'. Space and tab characters are not allowed, so that
- the beginning and end of an 'encoded-word' are obvious. The "?"
- character is used within an 'encoded-word' to separate the various
- portions of the 'encoded-word' from one another, and thus cannot
- appear in the 'encoded-text' portion. Other characters are also
- illegal in certain contexts. For example, an 'encoded-word' in a
- 'phrase' preceding an address in a From header field may not contain
- any of the "specials" defined in RFC 822. Finally, certain other
- characters are disallowed in some contexts, to ensure reliability for
- messages that pass through internetwork mail gateways.
-
- The "B" encoding automatically meets these requirements. The "Q"
- encoding allows a wide range of printable characters to be used in
- non-critical locations in the message header (e.g., Subject), with
- fewer characters available for use in other locations.
-
- 4.1. The "B" encoding
-
- The "B" encoding is identical to the "BASE64" encoding defined by RFC
- 2045.
-
- 4.2. The "Q" encoding
-
- The "Q" encoding is similar to the "Quoted-Printable" content-
- transfer-encoding defined in RFC 2045. It is designed to allow text
- containing mostly ASCII characters to be decipherable on an ASCII
- terminal without decoding.
-
- (1) Any 8-bit value may be represented by a "=" followed by two
- hexadecimal digits. For example, if the character set in use
- were ISO-8859-1, the "=" character would thus be encoded as
- "=3D", and a SPACE by "=20". (Upper case should be used for
- hexadecimal digits "A" through "F".)
-
- (2) The 8-bit hexadecimal value 20 (e.g., ISO-8859-1 SPACE) may be
- represented as "_" (underscore, ASCII 95.). (This character may
- not pass through some internetwork mail gateways, but its use
- will greatly enhance readability of "Q" encoded data with mail
- readers that do not support this encoding.) Note that the "_"
- always represents hexadecimal 20, even if the SPACE character
- occupies a different code position in the character set in use.
-
- (3) 8-bit values which correspond to printable ASCII characters other
- than "=", "?", and "_" (underscore), MAY be represented as those
- characters. (But see section 5 for restrictions.) In
- particular, SPACE and TAB MUST NOT be represented as themselves
- within encoded words.
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 6]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- 5. Use of encoded-words in message headers
-
- An 'encoded-word' may appear in a message header or body part header
- according to the following rules:
-
- (1) An 'encoded-word' may replace a 'text' token (as defined by RFC 822)
- in any Subject or Comments header field, any extension message
- header field, or any MIME body part field for which the field body
- is defined as '*text'. An 'encoded-word' may also appear in any
- user-defined ("X-") message or body part header field.
-
- Ordinary ASCII text and 'encoded-word's may appear together in the
- same header field. However, an 'encoded-word' that appears in a
- header field defined as '*text' MUST be separated from any adjacent
- 'encoded-word' or 'text' by 'linear-white-space'.
-
- (2) An 'encoded-word' may appear within a 'comment' delimited by "(" and
- ")", i.e., wherever a 'ctext' is allowed. More precisely, the RFC
- 822 ABNF definition for 'comment' is amended as follows:
-
- comment = "(" *(ctext / quoted-pair / comment / encoded-word) ")"
-
- A "Q"-encoded 'encoded-word' which appears in a 'comment' MUST NOT
- contain the characters "(", ")" or "
- 'encoded-word' that appears in a 'comment' MUST be separated from
- any adjacent 'encoded-word' or 'ctext' by 'linear-white-space'.
-
- It is important to note that 'comment's are only recognized inside
- "structured" field bodies. In fields whose bodies are defined as
- '*text', "(" and ")" are treated as ordinary characters rather than
- comment delimiters, and rule (1) of this section applies. (See RFC
- 822, sections 3.1.2 and 3.1.3)
-
- (3) As a replacement for a 'word' entity within a 'phrase', for example,
- one that precedes an address in a From, To, or Cc header. The ABNF
- definition for 'phrase' from RFC 822 thus becomes:
-
- phrase = 1*( encoded-word / word )
-
- In this case the set of characters that may be used in a "Q"-encoded
- 'encoded-word' is restricted to: <upper and lower case ASCII
- letters, decimal digits, "!", "*", "+", "-", "/", "=", and "_"
- (underscore, ASCII 95.)>. An 'encoded-word' that appears within a
- 'phrase' MUST be separated from any adjacent 'word', 'text' or
- 'special' by 'linear-white-space'.
-
-
-
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 7]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- These are the ONLY locations where an 'encoded-word' may appear. In
- particular:
-
- + An 'encoded-word' MUST NOT appear in any portion of an 'addr-spec'.
-
- + An 'encoded-word' MUST NOT appear within a 'quoted-string'.
-
- + An 'encoded-word' MUST NOT be used in a Received header field.
-
- + An 'encoded-word' MUST NOT be used in parameter of a MIME
- Content-Type or Content-Disposition field, or in any structured
- field body except within a 'comment' or 'phrase'.
-
- The 'encoded-text' in an 'encoded-word' must be self-contained;
- 'encoded-text' MUST NOT be continued from one 'encoded-word' to
- another. This implies that the 'encoded-text' portion of a "B"
- 'encoded-word' will be a multiple of 4 characters long; for a "Q"
- 'encoded-word', any "=" character that appears in the 'encoded-text'
- portion will be followed by two hexadecimal characters.
-
- Each 'encoded-word' MUST encode an integral number of octets. The
- 'encoded-text' in each 'encoded-word' must be well-formed according
- to the encoding specified; the 'encoded-text' may not be continued in
- the next 'encoded-word'. (For example, "=?charset?Q?=?=
- =?charset?Q?AB?=" would be illegal, because the two hex digits "AB"
- must follow the "=" in the same 'encoded-word'.)
-
- Each 'encoded-word' MUST represent an integral number of characters.
- A multi-octet character may not be split across adjacent 'encoded-
- word's.
-
- Only printable and white space character data should be encoded using
- this scheme. However, since these encoding schemes allow the
- encoding of arbitrary octet values, mail readers that implement this
- decoding should also ensure that display of the decoded data on the
- recipient's terminal will not cause unwanted side-effects.
-
- Use of these methods to encode non-textual data (e.g., pictures or
- sounds) is not defined by this memo. Use of 'encoded-word's to
- represent strings of purely ASCII characters is allowed, but
- discouraged. In rare cases it may be necessary to encode ordinary
- text that looks like an 'encoded-word'.
-
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 8]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- 6. Support of 'encoded-word's by mail readers
-
- 6.1. Recognition of 'encoded-word's in message headers
-
- A mail reader must parse the message and body part headers according
- to the rules in RFC 822 to correctly recognize 'encoded-word's.
-
- 'encoded-word's are to be recognized as follows:
-
- (1) Any message or body part header field defined as '*text', or any
- user-defined header field, should be parsed as follows: Beginning
- at the start of the field-body and immediately following each
- occurrence of 'linear-white-space', each sequence of up to 75
- printable characters (not containing any 'linear-white-space')
- should be examined to see if it is an 'encoded-word' according to
- the syntax rules in section 2. Any other sequence of printable
- characters should be treated as ordinary ASCII text.
-
- (2) Any header field not defined as '*text' should be parsed
- according to the syntax rules for that header field. However,
- any 'word' that appears within a 'phrase' should be treated as an
- 'encoded-word' if it meets the syntax rules in section 2.
- Otherwise it should be treated as an ordinary 'word'.
-
- (3) Within a 'comment', any sequence of up to 75 printable characters
- (not containing 'linear-white-space'), that meets the syntax
- rules in section 2, should be treated as an 'encoded-word'.
- Otherwise it should be treated as normal comment text.
-
- (4) A MIME-Version header field is NOT required to be present for
- 'encoded-word's to be interpreted according to this
- specification. One reason for this is that the mail reader is
- not expected to parse the entire message header before displaying
- lines that may contain 'encoded-word's.
-
- 6.2. Display of 'encoded-word's
-
- Any 'encoded-word's so recognized are decoded, and if possible, the
- resulting unencoded text is displayed in the original character set.
-
- NOTE: Decoding and display of encoded-words occurs *after* a
- structured field body is parsed into tokens. It is therefore
- possible to hide 'special' characters in encoded-words which, when
- displayed, will be indistinguishable from 'special' characters in the
- surrounding text. For this and other reasons, it is NOT generally
- possible to translate a message header containing 'encoded-word's to
- an unencoded form which can be parsed by an RFC 822 mail reader.
-
-
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
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-
- When displaying a particular header field that contains multiple
- 'encoded-word's, any 'linear-white-space' that separates a pair of
- adjacent 'encoded-word's is ignored. (This is to allow the use of
- multiple 'encoded-word's to represent long strings of unencoded text,
- without having to separate 'encoded-word's where spaces occur in the
- unencoded text.)
-
- In the event other encodings are defined in the future, and the mail
- reader does not support the encoding used, it may either (a) display
- the 'encoded-word' as ordinary text, or (b) substitute an appropriate
- message indicating that the text could not be decoded.
-
- If the mail reader does not support the character set used, it may
- (a) display the 'encoded-word' as ordinary text (i.e., as it appears
- in the header), (b) make a "best effort" to display using such
- characters as are available, or (c) substitute an appropriate message
- indicating that the decoded text could not be displayed.
-
- If the character set being used employs code-switching techniques,
- display of the encoded text implicitly begins in "ASCII mode". In
- addition, the mail reader must ensure that the output device is once
- again in "ASCII mode" after the 'encoded-word' is displayed.
-
- 6.3. Mail reader handling of incorrectly formed 'encoded-word's
-
- It is possible that an 'encoded-word' that is legal according to the
- syntax defined in section 2, is incorrectly formed according to the
- rules for the encoding being used. For example:
-
- (1) An 'encoded-word' which contains characters which are not legal
- for a particular encoding (for example, a "-" in the "B"
- encoding, or a SPACE or HTAB in either the "B" or "Q" encoding),
- is incorrectly formed.
-
- (2) Any 'encoded-word' which encodes a non-integral number of
- characters or octets is incorrectly formed.
-
- A mail reader need not attempt to display the text associated with an
- 'encoded-word' that is incorrectly formed. However, a mail reader
- MUST NOT prevent the display or handling of a message because an
- 'encoded-word' is incorrectly formed.
-
- 7. Conformance
-
- A mail composing program claiming compliance with this specification
- MUST ensure that any string of non-white-space printable ASCII
- characters within a '*text' or '*ctext' that begins with "=?" and
- ends with "?=" be a valid 'encoded-word'. ("begins" means: at the
-
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 10]
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- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
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-
- start of the field-body, immediately following 'linear-white-space',
- or immediately following a "(" for an 'encoded-word' within '*ctext';
- "ends" means: at the end of the field-body, immediately preceding
- 'linear-white-space', or immediately preceding a ")" for an
- 'encoded-word' within '*ctext'.) In addition, any 'word' within a
- 'phrase' that begins with "=?" and ends with "?=" must be a valid
- 'encoded-word'.
-
- A mail reading program claiming compliance with this specification
- must be able to distinguish 'encoded-word's from 'text', 'ctext', or
- 'word's, according to the rules in section 6, anytime they appear in
- appropriate places in message headers. It must support both the "B"
- and "Q" encodings for any character set which it supports. The
- program must be able to display the unencoded text if the character
- set is "US-ASCII". For the ISO-8859-* character sets, the mail
- reading program must at least be able to display the characters which
- are also in the ASCII set.
-
- 8. Examples
-
- The following are examples of message headers containing 'encoded-
- word's:
-
- From: =?US-ASCII?Q?Keith_Moore?= <moore@cs.utk.edu>
- To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Keld_J=F8rn_Simonsen?= <keld@dkuug.dk>
- CC: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Andr=E9?= Pirard <PIRARD@vm1.ulg.ac.be>
- Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?B?SWYgeW91IGNhbiByZWFkIHRoaXMgeW8=?=
- =?ISO-8859-2?B?dSB1bmRlcnN0YW5kIHRoZSBleGFtcGxlLg==?=
-
- Note: In the first 'encoded-word' of the Subject field above, the
- last "=" at the end of the 'encoded-text' is necessary because each
- 'encoded-word' must be self-contained (the "=" character completes a
- group of 4 base64 characters representing 2 octets). An additional
- octet could have been encoded in the first 'encoded-word' (so that
- the encoded-word would contain an exact multiple of 3 encoded
- octets), except that the second 'encoded-word' uses a different
- 'charset' than the first one.
-
- From: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Olle_J=E4rnefors?= <ojarnef@admin.kth.se>
- To: ietf-822@dimacs.rutgers.edu, ojarnef@admin.kth.se
- Subject: Time for ISO 10646?
-
- To: Dave Crocker <dcrocker@mordor.stanford.edu>
- Cc: ietf-822@dimacs.rutgers.edu, paf@comsol.se
- From: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Patrik_F=E4ltstr=F6m?= <paf@nada.kth.se>
- Subject: Re: RFC-HDR care and feeding
-
-
-
-
-
- Moore Standards Track [Page 11]
-
- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- From: Nathaniel Borenstein <nsb@thumper.bellcore.com>
- (=?iso-8859-8?b?7eXs+SDv4SDp7Oj08A==?=)
- To: Greg Vaudreuil <gvaudre@NRI.Reston.VA.US>, Ned Freed
- <ned@innosoft.com>, Keith Moore <moore@cs.utk.edu>
- Subject: Test of new header generator
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
-
- The following examples illustrate how text containing 'encoded-word's
- which appear in a structured field body. The rules are slightly
- different for fields defined as '*text' because "(" and ")" are not
- recognized as 'comment' delimiters. [Section 5, paragraph (1)].
-
- In each of the following examples, if the same sequence were to occur
- in a '*text' field, the "displayed as" form would NOT be treated as
- encoded words, but be identical to the "encoded form". This is
- because each of the encoded-words in the following examples is
- adjacent to a "(" or ")" character.
-
- encoded form displayed as
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?=) (a)
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?= b) (a b)
-
- Within a 'comment', white space MUST appear between an
- 'encoded-word' and surrounding text. [Section 5,
- paragraph (2)]. However, white space is not needed between
- the initial "(" that begins the 'comment', and the
- 'encoded-word'.
-
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?= =?ISO-8859-1?Q?b?=) (ab)
-
- White space between adjacent 'encoded-word's is not
- displayed.
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?= =?ISO-8859-1?Q?b?=) (ab)
-
- Even multiple SPACEs between 'encoded-word's are ignored
- for the purpose of display.
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?= (ab)
- =?ISO-8859-1?Q?b?=)
-
- Any amount of linear-space-white between 'encoded-word's,
- even if it includes a CRLF followed by one or more SPACEs,
- is ignored for the purposes of display.
-
-
-
- Moore Standards Track [Page 12]
-
- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a_b?=) (a b)
-
- In order to cause a SPACE to be displayed within a portion
- of encoded text, the SPACE MUST be encoded as part of the
- 'encoded-word'.
-
- (=?ISO-8859-1?Q?a?= =?ISO-8859-2?Q?_b?=) (a b)
-
- In order to cause a SPACE to be displayed between two strings
- of encoded text, the SPACE MAY be encoded as part of one of
- the 'encoded-word's.
-
- 9. References
-
- [RFC 822] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text
- Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, UDEL, August 1982.
-
- [RFC 2049] Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
- Extensions (MIME) Part Five: Conformance Criteria and Examples",
- RFC 2049, November 1996.
-
- [RFC 2045] Borenstein, N., and N. Freed, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
- Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies",
- RFC 2045, November 1996.
-
- [RFC 2046] Borenstein N., and N. Freed, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
- Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
- November 1996.
-
- [RFC 2048] Freed, N., Klensin, J., and J. Postel, "Multipurpose
- Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part Four: Registration
- Procedures", RFC 2048, November 1996.
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 13]
-
- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- 10. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- 11. Acknowledgements
-
- The author wishes to thank Nathaniel Borenstein, Issac Chan, Lutz
- Donnerhacke, Paul Eggert, Ned Freed, Andreas M. Kirchwitz, Olle
- Jarnefors, Mike Rosin, Yutaka Sato, Bart Schaefer, and Kazuhiko
- Yamamoto, for their helpful advice, insightful comments, and
- illuminating questions in response to earlier versions of this
- specification.
-
- 12. Author's Address
-
- Keith Moore
- University of Tennessee
- 107 Ayres Hall
- Knoxville TN 37996-1301
-
- EMail: moore@cs.utk.edu
-
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- Moore Standards Track [Page 14]
-
- RFC 2047 Message Header Extensions November 1996
-
-
- Appendix - changes since RFC 1522 (in no particular order)
-
- + explicitly state that the MIME-Version is not requried to use
- 'encoded-word's.
-
- + add explicit note that SPACEs and TABs are not allowed within
- 'encoded-word's, explaining that an 'encoded-word' must look like an
- 'atom' to an RFC822 parser.values, to be precise).
-
- + add examples from Olle Jarnefors (thanks!) which illustrate how
- encoded-words with adjacent linear-white-space are displayed.
-
- + explicitly list terms defined in RFC822 and referenced in this memo
-
- + fix transcription typos that caused one or two lines and a couple of
- characters to disappear in the resulting text, due to nroff quirks.
-
- + clarify that encoded-words are allowed in '*text' fields in both
- RFC822 headers and MIME body part headers, but NOT as parameter
- values.
-
- + clarify the requirement to switch back to ASCII within the encoded
- portion of an 'encoded-word', for any charset that uses code switching
- sequences.
-
- + add a note about 'encoded-word's being delimited by "(" and ")"
- within a comment, but not in a *text (how bizarre!).
-
- + fix the Andre Pirard example to get rid of the trailing "_" after
- the =E9. (no longer needed post-1342).
-
- + clarification: an 'encoded-word' may appear immediately following
- the initial "(" or immediately before the final ")" that delimits a
- comment, not just adjacent to "(" and ")" *within* *ctext.
-
- + add a note to explain that a "B" 'encoded-word' will always have a
- multiple of 4 characters in the 'encoded-text' portion.
-
- + add note about the "=" in the examples
-
- + note that processing of 'encoded-word's occurs *after* parsing, and
- some of the implications thereof.
-
- + explicitly state that you can't expect to translate between
- 1522 and either vanilla 822 or so-called "8-bit headers".
-
- + explicitly state that 'encoded-word's are not valid within a
- 'quoted-string'.
-
-
-
- Moore Standards Track [Page 15]
-
|