2377353cae
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Sebrecht <nicolas.s-dev@laposte.net>
1292 lines
55 KiB
Plaintext
1292 lines
55 KiB
Plaintext
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Network Working Group B. Leiba
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Request for Comments: 2683 IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
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Category: Informational September 1999
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IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations
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Status of this Memo
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This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
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not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
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memo is unlimited.
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Copyright Notice
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Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.
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1. Abstract
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The IMAP4 specification [RFC-2060] describes a rich protocol for use
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in building clients and servers for storage, retrieval, and
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manipulation of electronic mail. Because the protocol is so rich and
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has so many implementation choices, there are often trade-offs that
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must be made and issues that must be considered when designing such
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clients and servers. This document attempts to outline these issues
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and to make recommendations in order to make the end products as
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interoperable as possible.
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2. Conventions used in this document
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In examples, "C:" indicates lines sent by a client that is connected
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to a server. "S:" indicates lines sent by the server to the client.
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The words "must", "must not", "should", "should not", and "may" are
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used with specific meaning in this document; since their meaning is
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somewhat different from that specified in RFC 2119, we do not put
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them in all caps here. Their meaning is as follows:
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must -- This word means that the action described is necessary
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to ensure interoperability. The recommendation should
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not be ignored.
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must not -- This phrase means that the action described will be
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almost certain to hurt interoperability. The
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recommendation should not be ignored.
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Leiba Informational [Page 1]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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should -- This word means that the action described is strongly
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recommended and will enhance interoperability or
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usability. The recommendation should not be ignored
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without careful consideration.
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should not -- This phrase means that the action described is strongly
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recommended against, and might hurt interoperability or
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usability. The recommendation should not be ignored
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without careful consideration.
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may -- This word means that the action described is an
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acceptable implementation choice. No specific
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recommendation is implied; this word is used to point
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out a choice that might not be obvious, or to let
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implementors know what choices have been made by
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existing implementations.
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3. Interoperability Issues and Recommendations
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3.1. Accessibility
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This section describes the issues related to access to servers and
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server resources. Concerns here include data sharing and maintenance
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of client/server connections.
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3.1.1. Multiple Accesses of the Same Mailbox
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One strong point of IMAP4 is that, unlike POP3, it allows for
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multiple simultaneous access to a single mailbox. A user can, thus,
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read mail from a client at home while the client in the office is
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still connected; or the help desk staff can all work out of the same
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inbox, all seeing the same pool of questions. An important point
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about this capability, though is that NO SERVER IS GUARANTEED TO
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SUPPORT THIS. If you are selecting an IMAP server and this facility
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is important to you, be sure that the server you choose to install,
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in the configuration you choose to use, supports it.
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If you are designing a client, you must not assume that you can
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access the same mailbox more than once at a time. That means
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1. you must handle gracefully the failure of a SELECT command if the
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server refuses the second SELECT,
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2. you must handle reasonably the severing of your connection (see
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"Severed Connections", below) if the server chooses to allow the
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second SELECT by forcing the first off,
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3. you must avoid making multiple connections to the same mailbox in
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your own client (for load balancing or other such reasons), and
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4. you must avoid using the STATUS command on a mailbox that you have
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selected (with some server implementations the STATUS command has
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the same problems with multiple access as do the SELECT and
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Leiba Informational [Page 2]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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EXAMINE commands).
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A further note about STATUS: The STATUS command is sometimes used to
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check a non-selected mailbox for new mail. This mechanism must not
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be used to check for new mail in the selected mailbox; section 5.2 of
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[RFC-2060] specifically forbids this in its last paragraph. Further,
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since STATUS takes a mailbox name it is an independent operation, not
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operating on the selected mailbox. Because of this, the information
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it returns is not necessarily in synchronization with the selected
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mailbox state.
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3.1.2. Severed Connections
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The client/server connection may be severed for one of three reasons:
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the client severs the connection, the server severs the connection,
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or the connection is severed by outside forces beyond the control of
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the client and the server (a telephone line drops, for example).
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Clients and servers must both deal with these situations.
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When the client wants to sever a connection, it's usually because it
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has finished the work it needed to do on that connection. The client
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should send a LOGOUT command, wait for the tagged response, and then
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close the socket. But note that, while this is what's intended in
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the protocol design, there isn't universal agreement here. Some
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contend that sending the LOGOUT and waiting for the two responses
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(untagged BYE and tagged OK) is wasteful and unnecessary, and that
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the client can simply close the socket. The server should interpret
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the closed socket as a log out by the client. The counterargument is
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that it's useful from the standpoint of cleanup, problem
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determination, and the like, to have an explicit client log out,
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because otherwise there is no way for the server to tell the
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difference between "closed socket because of log out" and "closed
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socket because communication was disrupted". If there is a
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client/server interaction problem, a client which routinely
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terminates a session by breaking the connection without a LOGOUT will
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make it much more difficult to determine the problem.
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Because of this disagreement, server designers must be aware that
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some clients might close the socket without sending a LOGOUT. In any
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case, whether or not a LOGOUT was sent, the server should not
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implicitly expunge any messages from the selected mailbox. If a
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client wants the server to do so, it must send a CLOSE or EXPUNGE
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command explicitly.
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When the server wants to sever a connection it's usually due to an
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inactivity timeout or is because a situation has arisen that has
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changed the state of the mail store in a way that the server can not
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communicate to the client. The server should send an untagged BYE
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Leiba Informational [Page 3]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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response to the client and then close the socket. Sending an
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untagged BYE response before severing allows the server to send a
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human-readable explanation of the problem to the client, which the
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client may then log, display to the user, or both (see section 7.1.5
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of [RFC-2060]).
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Regarding inactivity timeouts, there is some controversy. Unlike
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POP, for which the design is for a client to connect, retrieve mail,
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and log out, IMAP's design encourages long-lived (and mostly
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inactive) client/server sessions. As the number of users grows, this
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can use up a lot of server resources, especially with clients that
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are designed to maintain sessions for mailboxes that the user has
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finished accessing. To alleviate this, a server may implement an
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inactivity timeout, unilaterally closing a session (after first
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sending an untagged BYE, as noted above). Some server operators have
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reported dramatic improvements in server performance after doing
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this. As specified in [RFC-2060], if such a timeout is done it must
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not be until at least 30 minutes of inactivity. The reason for this
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specification is to prevent clients from sending commands (such as
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NOOP) to the server at frequent intervals simply to avert a too-early
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timeout. If the client knows that the server may not time out the
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session for at least 30 minutes, then the client need not poll at
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intervals more frequent than, say, 25 minutes.
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3.2. Scaling
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IMAP4 has many features that allow for scalability, as mail stores
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become larger and more numerous. Large numbers of users, mailboxes,
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and messages, and very large messages require thought to handle
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efficiently. This document will not address the administrative
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issues involved in large numbers of users, but we will look at the
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other items.
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3.2.1. Flood Control
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There are three situations when a client can make a request that will
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result in a very large response - too large for the client reasonably
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to deal with: there are a great many mailboxes available, there are a
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great many messages in the selected mailbox, or there is a very large
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message part. The danger here is that the end user will be stuck
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waiting while the server sends (and the client processes) an enormous
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response. In all of these cases there are things a client can do to
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reduce that danger.
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There is also the case where a client can flood a server, by sending
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an arbitratily long command. We'll discuss that issue, too, in this
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section.
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Leiba Informational [Page 4]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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3.2.1.1. Listing Mailboxes
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Some servers present Usenet newsgroups to IMAP users. Newsgroups,
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and other such hierarchical mailbox structures, can be very numerous
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but may have only a few entries at the top level of hierarchy. Also,
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some servers are built against mail stores that can, unbeknownst to
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the server, have circular hierarchies - that is, it's possible for
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"a/b/c/d" to resolve to the same file structure as "a", which would
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then mean that "a/b/c/d/b" is the same as "a/b", and the hierarchy
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will never end. The LIST response in this case will be unlimited.
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Clients that will have trouble with this are those that use
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C: 001 LIST "" *
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to determine the mailbox list. Because of this, clients should not
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use an unqualified "*" that way in the LIST command. A safer
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approach is to list each level of hierarchy individually, allowing
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the user to traverse the tree one limb at a time, thus:
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C: 001 LIST "" %
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S: * LIST () "/" Banana
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S: * LIST ...etc...
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S: 001 OK done
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and then
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C: 002 LIST "" Banana/%
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S: * LIST () "/" Banana/Apple
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S: * LIST ...etc...
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S: 002 OK done
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Using this technique the client's user interface can give the user
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full flexibility without choking on the voluminous reply to "LIST *".
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Of course, it is still possible that the reply to
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C: 005 LIST "" alt.fan.celebrity.%
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may be thousands of entries long, and there is, unfortunately,
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nothing the client can do to protect itself from that. This has not
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yet been a notable problem.
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Servers that may export circular hierarchies (any server that
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directly presents a UNIX file system, for instance) should limit the
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hierarchy depth to prevent unlimited LIST responses. A suggested
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depth limit is 20 hierarchy levels.
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Leiba Informational [Page 5]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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3.2.1.2. Fetching the List of Messages
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When a client selects a mailbox, it is given a count, in the untagged
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EXISTS response, of the messages in the mailbox. This number can be
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very large. In such a case it might be unwise to use
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C: 004 FETCH 1:* ALL
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to populate the user's view of the mailbox. One good method to avoid
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problems with this is to batch the requests, thus:
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C: 004 FETCH 1:50 ALL
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S: * 1 FETCH ...etc...
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S: 004 OK done
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C: 005 FETCH 51:100 ALL
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S: * 51 FETCH ...etc...
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S: 005 OK done
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C: 006 FETCH 101:150 ALL
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...etc...
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Using this method, another command, such as "FETCH 6 BODY[1]" can be
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inserted as necessary, and the client will not have its access to the
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server blocked by a storm of FETCH replies. (Such a method could be
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reversed to fetch the LAST 50 messages first, then the 50 prior to
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that, and so on.)
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As a smart extension of this, a well designed client, prepared for
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very large mailboxes, will not automatically fetch data for all
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messages AT ALL. Rather, the client will populate the user's view
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only as the user sees it, possibly pre-fetching selected information,
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and only fetching other information as the user scrolls to it. For
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example, to select only those messages beginning with the first
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unseen one:
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C: 003 SELECT INBOX
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S: * 10000 EXISTS
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S: * 80 RECENT
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S: * FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Draft \Seen)
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S: * OK [UIDVALIDITY 824708485] UID validity status
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S: * OK [UNSEEN 9921] First unseen message
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S: 003 OK [READ-WRITE] SELECT completed
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C: 004 FETCH 9921:* ALL
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... etc...
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If the server does not return an OK [UNSEEN] response, the client may
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use SEARCH UNSEEN to obtain that value.
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Leiba Informational [Page 6]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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This mechanism is good as a default presentation method, but only
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works well if the default message order is acceptable. A client may
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want to present various sort orders to the user (by subject, by date
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sent, by sender, and so on) and in that case (lacking a SORT
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extension on the server side) the client WILL have to retrieve all
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message descriptors. A client that provides this service should not
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do it by default and should inform the user of the costs of choosing
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this option for large mailboxes.
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3.2.1.3. Fetching a Large Body Part
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The issue here is similar to the one for a list of messages. In the
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BODYSTRUCTURE response the client knows the size, in bytes, of the
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body part it plans to fetch. Suppose this is a 70 MB video clip. The
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client can use partial fetches to retrieve the body part in pieces,
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avoiding the problem of an uninterruptible 70 MB literal coming back
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from the server:
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C: 022 FETCH 3 BODY[1]<0.20000>
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S: * 3 FETCH (FLAGS(\Seen) BODY[1]<0> {20000}
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S: ...data...)
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S: 022 OK done
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C: 023 FETCH 3 BODY[1]<20001.20000>
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S: * 3 FETCH (BODY[1]<20001> {20000}
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S: ...data...)
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S: 023 OK done
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C: 024 FETCH 3 BODY[1]<40001.20000>
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...etc...
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3.2.1.4. BODYSTRUCTURE vs. Entire Messages
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Because FETCH BODYSTRUCTURE is necessary in order to determine the
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number of body parts, and, thus, whether a message has "attachments",
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clients often use FETCH FULL as their normal method of populating the
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user's view of a mailbox. The benefit is that the client can display
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a paperclip icon or some such indication along with the normal
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message summary. However, this comes at a significant cost with some
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server configurations. The parsing needed to generate the FETCH
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BODYSTRUCTURE response may be time-consuming compared with that
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needed for FETCH ENVELOPE. The client developer should consider this
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issue when deciding whether the ability to add a paperclip icon is
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worth the tradeoff in performance, especially with large mailboxes.
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Some clients, rather than using FETCH BODYSTRUCTURE, use FETCH BODY[]
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(or the equivalent FETCH RFC822) to retrieve the entire message.
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They then do the MIME parsing in the client. This may give the
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client slightly more flexibility in some areas (access, for instance,
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to header fields that aren't returned in the BODYSTRUCTURE and
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Leiba Informational [Page 7]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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ENVELOPE responses), but it can cause severe performance problems by
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forcing the transfer of all body parts when the user might only want
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to see some of them - a user logged on by modem and reading a small
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text message with a large ZIP file attached may prefer to read the
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text only and save the ZIP file for later. Therefore, a client
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should not normally retrieve entire messages and should retrieve
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message body parts selectively.
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3.2.1.5. Long Command Lines
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A client can wind up building a very long command line in an effort to
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try to be efficient about requesting information from a server. This
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can typically happen when a client builds a message set from selected
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messages and doesn't recognise that contiguous blocks of messages may
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be group in a range. Suppose a user selects all 10,000 messages in a
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large mailbox and then unselects message 287. The client could build
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that message set as "1:286,288:10000", but a client that doesn't
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handle that might try to enumerate each message individually and build
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"1,2,3,4, [and so on] ,9999,10000". Adding that to the fetch command
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results in a command line that's almost 49,000 octets long, and,
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clearly, one can construct a command line that's even longer.
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A client should limit the length of the command lines it generates to
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approximately 1000 octets (including all quoted strings but not
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including literals). If the client is unable to group things into
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ranges so that the command line is within that length, it should
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split the request into multiple commands. The client should use
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literals instead of long quoted strings, in order to keep the command
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length down.
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For its part, a server should allow for a command line of at least
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8000 octets. This provides plenty of leeway for accepting reasonable
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length commands from clients. The server should send a BAD response
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to a command that does not end within the server's maximum accepted
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command length.
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3.2.2. Subscriptions
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The client isn't the only entity that can get flooded: the end user,
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too, may need some flood control. The IMAP4 protocol provides such
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control in the form of subscriptions. Most servers support the
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SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, and LSUB commands, and many users choose to
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narrow down a large list of available mailboxes by subscribing to the
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ones that they usually want to see. Clients, with this in mind,
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should give the user a way to see only subscribed mailboxes. A
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client that never uses the LSUB command takes a significant usability
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feature away from the user. Of course, the client would not want to
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hide the LIST command completely; the user needs to have a way to
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Leiba Informational [Page 8]
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RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
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choose between LIST and LSUB. The usual way to do this is to provide
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a setting like "show which mailboxes?: [] all [] subscribed only".
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3.2.3. Searching
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IMAP SEARCH commands can become particularly troublesome (that is,
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slow) on mailboxes containing a large number of messages. So let's
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put a few things in perspective in that regard.
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The flag searches should be fast. The flag searches (ALL, [UN]SEEN,
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[UN]ANSWERED, [UN]DELETED, [UN]DRAFT, [UN]FLAGGED, NEW, OLD, RECENT)
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are known to be used by clients for the client's own use (for
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instance, some clients use "SEARCH UNSEEN" to find unseen mail and
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"SEARCH DELETED" to warn the user before expunging messages).
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Other searches, particularly the text searches (HEADER, TEXT, BODY)
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are initiated by the user, rather than by the client itself, and
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somewhat slower performance can be tolerated, since the user is aware
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that the search is being done (and is probably aware that it might be
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time-consuming). A smart server might use dynamic indexing to speed
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commonly used text searches.
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The client may allow other commands to be sent to the server while a
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SEARCH is in progress, but at the time of this writing there is
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little or no server support for parallel processing of multiple
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commands in the same session (and see "Multiple Accesses of the Same
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Mailbox" above for a description of the dangers of trying to work
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around this by doing your SEARCH in another session).
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Another word about text searches: some servers, built on database
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back-ends with indexed search capabilities, may return search results
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that do not match the IMAP spec's "case-insensitive substring"
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requirements. While these servers are in violation of the protocol,
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there is little harm in the violation as long as the search results
|
||
are used only in response to a user's request. Still, developers of
|
||
such servers should be aware that they ARE violating the protocol,
|
||
should think carefully about that behaviour, and must be certain that
|
||
their servers respond accurately to the flag searches for the reasons
|
||
outlined above.
|
||
|
||
In addition, servers should support CHARSET UTF-8 [UTF-8] in
|
||
searches.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 9]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
3.3 Avoiding Invalid Requests
|
||
|
||
IMAP4 provides ways for a server to tell a client in advance what is
|
||
and isn't permitted in some circumstances. Clients should use these
|
||
features to avoid sending requests that a well designed client would
|
||
know to be invalid. This section explains this in more detail.
|
||
|
||
3.3.1. The CAPABILITY Command
|
||
|
||
All IMAP4 clients should use the CAPABILITY command to determine what
|
||
version of IMAP and what optional features a server supports. The
|
||
client should not send IMAP4rev1 commands and arguments to a server
|
||
that does not advertize IMAP4rev1 in its CAPABILITY response.
|
||
Similarly, the client should not send IMAP4 commands that no longer
|
||
exist in IMAP4rev1 to a server that does not advertize IMAP4 in its
|
||
CAPABILITY response. An IMAP4rev1 server is NOT required to support
|
||
obsolete IMAP4 or IMAP2bis commands (though some do; do not let this
|
||
fact lull you into thinking that it's valid to send such commands to
|
||
an IMAP4rev1 server).
|
||
|
||
A client should not send commands to probe for the existance of
|
||
certain extensions. All standard and standards-track extensions
|
||
include CAPABILITY tokens indicating their presense. All private and
|
||
experimental extensions should do the same, and clients that take
|
||
advantage of them should use the CAPABILITY response to determine
|
||
whether they may be used or not.
|
||
|
||
3.3.2. Don't Do What the Server Says You Can't
|
||
|
||
In many cases, the server, in response to a command, will tell the
|
||
client something about what can and can't be done with a particular
|
||
mailbox. The client should pay attention to this information and
|
||
should not try to do things that it's been told it can't do.
|
||
|
||
Examples:
|
||
|
||
* Do not try to SELECT a mailbox that has the \Noselect flag set.
|
||
* Do not try to CREATE a sub-mailbox in a mailbox that has the
|
||
\Noinferiors flag set.
|
||
* Do not respond to a failing COPY or APPEND command by trying to
|
||
CREATE the target mailbox if the server does not respond with a
|
||
[TRYCREATE] response code.
|
||
* Do not try to expunge a mailbox that has been selected with the
|
||
[READ-ONLY] response code.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 10]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
3.4. Miscellaneous Protocol Considerations
|
||
|
||
We describe here a number of important protocol-related issues, the
|
||
misunderstanding of which has caused significant interoperability
|
||
problems in IMAP4 implementations. One general item is that every
|
||
implementer should be certain to take note of and to understand
|
||
section 2.2.2 and the preamble to section 7 of the IMAP4rev1 spec
|
||
[RFC-2060].
|
||
|
||
3.4.1. Well Formed Protocol
|
||
|
||
We cannot stress enough the importance of adhering strictly to the
|
||
protocol grammar. The specification of the protocol is quite rigid;
|
||
do not assume that you can insert blank space for "readability" if
|
||
none is called for. Keep in mind that there are parsers out there
|
||
that will crash if there are protocol errors. There are clients that
|
||
will report every parser burp to the user. And in any case,
|
||
information that cannot be parsed is information that is lost. Be
|
||
careful in your protocol generation. And see "A Word About Testing",
|
||
below.
|
||
|
||
In particular, note that the string in the INTERNALDATE response is
|
||
NOT an RFC-822 date string - that is, it is not in the same format as
|
||
the first string in the ENVELOPE response. Since most clients will,
|
||
in fact, accept an RFC-822 date string in the INTERNALDATE response,
|
||
it's easy to miss this in your interoperability testing. But it will
|
||
cause a problem with some client, so be sure to generate the correct
|
||
string for this field.
|
||
|
||
3.4.2. Special Characters
|
||
|
||
Certain characters, currently the double-quote and the backslash, may
|
||
not be sent as-is inside a quoted string. These characters must be
|
||
preceded by the escape character if they are in a quoted string, or
|
||
else the string must be sent as a literal. Both clients and servers
|
||
must handle this, both on output (they must send these characters
|
||
properly) and on input (they must be able to receive escaped
|
||
characters in quoted strings). Example:
|
||
|
||
C: 001 LIST "" %
|
||
S: * LIST () "" INBOX
|
||
S: * LIST () "\\" TEST
|
||
S: * LIST () "\\" {12}
|
||
S: "My" mailbox
|
||
S: 001 OK done
|
||
C: 002 LIST "" "\"My\" mailbox\\%"
|
||
S: * LIST () "\\" {17}
|
||
S: "My" mailbox\Junk
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 11]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
S: 002 OK done
|
||
|
||
Note that in the example the server sent the hierarchy delimiter as
|
||
an escaped character in the quoted string and sent the mailbox name
|
||
containing imbedded double-quotes as a literal. The client used only
|
||
quoted strings, escaping both the backslash and the double-quote
|
||
characters.
|
||
|
||
The CR and LF characters may be sent ONLY in literals; they are not
|
||
allowed, even if escaped, inside quoted strings.
|
||
|
||
And while we're talking about special characters: the IMAP spec, in
|
||
the section titled "Mailbox International Naming Convention",
|
||
describes how to encode mailbox names in modified UTF-7 [UTF-7 and
|
||
RFC-2060]. Implementations must adhere to this in order to be
|
||
interoperable in the international market, and servers should
|
||
validate mailbox names sent by client and reject names that do not
|
||
conform.
|
||
|
||
As to special characters in userids and passwords: clients must not
|
||
restrict what a user may type in for a userid or a password. The
|
||
formal grammar specifies that these are "astrings", and an astring
|
||
can be a literal. A literal, in turn can contain any 8-bit
|
||
character, and clients must allow users to enter all 8-bit characters
|
||
here, and must pass them, unchanged, to the server (being careful to
|
||
send them as literals when necessary). In particular, some server
|
||
configurations use "@" in user names, and some clients do not allow
|
||
that character to be entered; this creates a severe interoperability
|
||
problem.
|
||
|
||
3.4.3. UIDs and UIDVALIDITY
|
||
|
||
Servers that support existing back-end mail stores often have no good
|
||
place to save UIDs for messages. Often the existing mail store will
|
||
not have the concept of UIDs in the sense that IMAP has: strictly
|
||
increasing, never re-issued, 32-bit integers. Some servers solve
|
||
this by storing the UIDs in a place that's accessible to end users,
|
||
allowing for the possibility that the users will delete them. Others
|
||
solve it by re-assigning UIDs every time a mailbox is selected.
|
||
|
||
The server should maintain UIDs permanently for all messages if it
|
||
can. If that's not possible, the server must change the UIDVALIDITY
|
||
value for the mailbox whenever any of the UIDs may have become
|
||
invalid. Clients must recognize that the UIDVALIDITY has changed and
|
||
must respond to that condition by throwing away any information that
|
||
they have saved about UIDs in that mailbox. There have been many
|
||
problems in this area when clients have failed to do this; in the
|
||
worst case it will result in loss of mail when a client deletes the
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 12]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
wrong piece of mail by using a stale UID.
|
||
|
||
It seems to be a common misunderstanding that "the UIDVALIDITY and
|
||
the UID, taken together, form a 64-bit identifier that uniquely
|
||
identifies a message on a server". This is absolutely NOT TRUE.
|
||
There is no assurance that the UIDVALIDITY values of two mailboxes be
|
||
different, so the UIDVALIDITY in no way identifies a mailbox. The
|
||
ONLY purpose of UIDVALIDITY is, as its name indicates, to give the
|
||
client a way to check the validity of the UIDs it has cached. While
|
||
it is a valid implementation choice to put these values together to
|
||
make a 64-bit identifier for the message, the important concept here
|
||
is that UIDs are not unique between mailboxes; they are only unique
|
||
WITHIN a given mailbox.
|
||
|
||
Some server implementations have attempted to make UIDs unique across
|
||
the entire server. This is inadvisable, in that it limits the life
|
||
of UIDs unnecessarily. The UID is a 32-bit number and will run out
|
||
in reasonably finite time if it's global across the server. If you
|
||
assign UIDs sequentially in one mailbox, you will not have to start
|
||
re-using them until you have had, at one time or another, 2**32
|
||
different messages in that mailbox. In the global case, you will
|
||
have to reuse them once you have had, at one time or another, 2**32
|
||
different messages in the entire mail store. Suppose your server has
|
||
around 8000 users registered (2**13). That gives an average of 2**19
|
||
UIDs per user. Suppose each user gets 32 messages (2**5) per day.
|
||
That gives you 2**14 days (16000+ days = about 45 years) before you
|
||
run out. That may seem like enough, but multiply the usage just a
|
||
little (a lot of spam, a lot of mailing list subscriptions, more
|
||
users) and you limit yourself too much.
|
||
|
||
What's worse is that if you have to wrap the UIDs, and, thus, you
|
||
have to change UIDVALIDITY and invalidate the UIDs in the mailbox,
|
||
you have to do it for EVERY mailbox in the system, since they all
|
||
share the same UID pool. If you assign UIDs per mailbox and you have
|
||
a problem, you only have to kill the UIDs for that one mailbox.
|
||
|
||
Under extreme circumstances (and this is extreme, indeed), the server
|
||
may have to invalidate UIDs while a mailbox is in use by a client -
|
||
that is, the UIDs that the client knows about in its active mailbox
|
||
are no longer valid. In that case, the server must immediately
|
||
change the UIDVALIDITY and must communicate this to the client. The
|
||
server may do this by sending an unsolicited UIDVALIDITY message, in
|
||
the same form as in response to the SELECT command. Clients must be
|
||
prepared to handle such a message and the possibly coincident failure
|
||
of the command in process. For example:
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 13]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
C: 032 UID STORE 382 +Flags.silent \Deleted
|
||
S: * OK [UIDVALIDITY 12345] New UIDVALIDITY value!
|
||
S: 032 NO UID command rejected because UIDVALIDITY changed!
|
||
C: ...invalidates local information and re-fetches...
|
||
C: 033 FETCH 1:* UID
|
||
...etc...
|
||
|
||
At the time of the writing of this document, the only server known to
|
||
do this does so only under the following condition: the client
|
||
selects INBOX, but there is not yet a physical INBOX file created.
|
||
Nonetheless, the SELECT succeeds, exporting an empty INBOX with a
|
||
temporary UIDVALIDITY of 1. While the INBOX remains selected, mail
|
||
is delivered to the user, which creates the real INBOX file and
|
||
assigns a permanent UIDVALIDITY (that is likely not to be 1). The
|
||
server reports the change of UIDVALIDITY, but as there were no
|
||
messages before, so no UIDs have actually changed, all the client
|
||
must do is accept the change in UIDVALIDITY.
|
||
|
||
Alternatively, a server may force the client to re-select the
|
||
mailbox, at which time it will obtain a new UIDVALIDITY value. To do
|
||
this, the server closes this client session (see "Severed
|
||
Connections" above) and the client then reconnects and gets back in
|
||
synch. Clients must be prepared for either of these behaviours.
|
||
|
||
We do not know of, nor do we anticipate the future existance of, a
|
||
server that changes UIDVALIDITY while there are existing messages,
|
||
but clients must be prepared to handle this eventuality.
|
||
|
||
3.4.4. FETCH Responses
|
||
|
||
When a client asks for certain information in a FETCH command, the
|
||
server may return the requested information in any order, not
|
||
necessarily in the order that it was requested. Further, the server
|
||
may return the information in separate FETCH responses and may also
|
||
return information that was not explicitly requested (to reflect to
|
||
the client changes in the state of the subject message). Some
|
||
examples:
|
||
|
||
C: 001 FETCH 1 UID FLAGS INTERNALDATE
|
||
S: * 5 FETCH (FLAGS (\Deleted))
|
||
S: * 1 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) INTERNALDATE "..." UID 345)
|
||
S: 001 OK done
|
||
|
||
(In this case, the responses are in a different order. Also, the
|
||
server returned a flag update for message 5, which wasn't part of the
|
||
client's request.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 14]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
C: 002 FETCH 2 UID FLAGS INTERNALDATE
|
||
S: * 2 FETCH (INTERNALDATE "...")
|
||
S: * 2 FETCH (UID 399)
|
||
S: * 2 FETCH (FLAGS ())
|
||
S: 002 OK done
|
||
|
||
(In this case, the responses are in a different order and were
|
||
returned in separate responses.)
|
||
|
||
C: 003 FETCH 2 BODY[1]
|
||
S: * 2 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) BODY[1] {14}
|
||
S: Hello world!
|
||
S: )
|
||
S: 003 OK done
|
||
|
||
(In this case, the FLAGS response was added by the server, since
|
||
fetching the body part caused the server to set the \Seen flag.)
|
||
|
||
Because of this characteristic a client must be ready to receive any
|
||
FETCH response at any time and should use that information to update
|
||
its local information about the message to which the FETCH response
|
||
refers. A client must not assume that any FETCH responses will come
|
||
in any particular order, or even that any will come at all. If after
|
||
receiving the tagged response for a FETCH command the client finds
|
||
that it did not get all of the information requested, the client
|
||
should send a NOOP command to the server to ensure that the server
|
||
has an opportunity to send any pending EXPUNGE responses to the
|
||
client (see [RFC-2180]).
|
||
|
||
3.4.5. RFC822.SIZE
|
||
|
||
Some back-end mail stores keep the mail in a canonical form, rather
|
||
than retaining the original MIME format of the messages. This means
|
||
that the server must reassemble the message to produce a MIME stream
|
||
when a client does a fetch such as RFC822 or BODY[], requesting the
|
||
entire message. It also may mean that the server has no convenient
|
||
way to know the RFC822.SIZE of the message. Often, such a server
|
||
will actually have to build the MIME stream to compute the size, only
|
||
to throw the stream away and report the size to the client.
|
||
|
||
When this is the case, some servers have chosen to estimate the size,
|
||
rather than to compute it precisely. Such an estimate allows the
|
||
client to display an approximate size to the user and to use the
|
||
estimate in flood control considerations (q.v.), but requires that
|
||
the client not use the size for things such as allocation of buffers,
|
||
because those buffers might then be too small to hold the actual MIME
|
||
stream. Instead, a client should use the size that's returned in the
|
||
literal when you fetch the data.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 15]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
The protocol requires that the RFC822.SIZE value returned by the
|
||
server be EXACT. Estimating the size is a protocol violation, and
|
||
server designers must be aware that, despite the performance savings
|
||
they might realize in using an estimate, this practice will cause
|
||
some clients to fail in various ways. If possible, the server should
|
||
compute the RFC822.SIZE for a particular message once, and then save
|
||
it for later retrieval. If that's not possible, the server must
|
||
compute the value exactly every time. Incorrect estimates do cause
|
||
severe interoperability problems with some clients.
|
||
|
||
3.4.6. Expunged Messages
|
||
|
||
If the server allows multiple connections to the same mailbox, it is
|
||
often possible for messages to be expunged in one client unbeknownst
|
||
to another client. Since the server is not allowed to tell the
|
||
client about these expunged messages in response to a FETCH command,
|
||
the server may have to deal with the issue of how to return
|
||
information about an expunged message. There was extensive
|
||
discussion about this issue, and the results of that discussion are
|
||
summarized in [RFC-2180]. See that reference for a detailed
|
||
explanation and for recommendations.
|
||
|
||
3.4.7. The Namespace Issue
|
||
|
||
Namespaces are a very muddy area in IMAP4 implementation right now
|
||
(see [NAMESPACE] for a proposal to clear the water a bit). Until the
|
||
issue is resolved, the important thing for client developers to
|
||
understand is that some servers provide access through IMAP to more
|
||
than just the user's personal mailboxes, and, in fact, the user's
|
||
personal mailboxes may be "hidden" somewhere in the user's default
|
||
hierarchy. The client, therefore, should provide a setting wherein
|
||
the user can specify a prefix to be used when accessing mailboxes. If
|
||
the user's mailboxes are all in "~/mail/", for instance, then the
|
||
user can put that string in the prefix. The client would then put
|
||
the prefix in front of any name pattern in the LIST and LSUB
|
||
commands:
|
||
|
||
C: 001 LIST "" ~/mail/%
|
||
|
||
(See also "Reference Names in the LIST Command" below.)
|
||
|
||
3.4.8. Creating Special-Use Mailboxes
|
||
|
||
It may seem at first that this is part of the namespace issue; it is
|
||
not, and is only indirectly related to it. A number of clients like
|
||
to create special-use mailboxes with particular names. Most
|
||
commonly, clients with a "trash folder" model of message deletion
|
||
want to create a mailbox with the name "Trash" or "Deleted". Some
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 16]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
clients want to create a "Drafts" mailbox, an "Outbox" mailbox, or a
|
||
"Sent Mail" mailbox. And so on. There are two major
|
||
interoperability problems with this practice:
|
||
|
||
1. different clients may use different names for mailboxes with
|
||
similar functions (such as "Trash" and "Deleted"), or may manage
|
||
the same mailboxes in different ways, causing problems if a user
|
||
switches between clients and
|
||
2. there is no guarantee that the server will allow the creation of
|
||
the desired mailbox.
|
||
|
||
The client developer is, therefore, well advised to consider
|
||
carefully the creation of any special-use mailboxes on the server,
|
||
and, further, the client must not require such mailbox creation -
|
||
that is, if you do decide to do this, you must handle gracefully the
|
||
failure of the CREATE command and behave reasonably when your
|
||
special-use mailboxes do not exist and can not be created.
|
||
|
||
In addition, the client developer should provide a convenient way for
|
||
the user to select the names for any special-use mailboxes, allowing
|
||
the user to make these names the same in all clients used and to put
|
||
them where the user wants them.
|
||
|
||
3.4.9. Reference Names in the LIST Command
|
||
|
||
Many implementers of both clients and servers are confused by the
|
||
"reference name" on the LIST command. The reference name is intended
|
||
to be used in much the way a "cd" (change directory) command is used
|
||
on Unix, PC DOS, Windows, and OS/2 systems. That is, the mailbox
|
||
name is interpreted in much the same way as a file of that name would
|
||
be found if one had done a "cd" command into the directory specified
|
||
by the reference name. For example, in Unix we have the following:
|
||
|
||
> cd /u/jones/junk
|
||
> vi banana [file is "/u/jones/junk/banana"]
|
||
> vi stuff/banana [file is "/u/jones/junk/stuff/banana"]
|
||
> vi /etc/hosts [file is "/etc/hosts"]
|
||
|
||
In the past, there have been several interoperability problems with
|
||
this. First, while some IMAP servers are built on Unix or PC file
|
||
systems, many others are not, and the file system semantics do not
|
||
make sense in those configurations. Second, while some IMAP servers
|
||
expose the underlying file system to the clients, others allow access
|
||
only to the user's personal mailboxes, or to some other limited set
|
||
of files, making such file-system-like semantics less meaningful.
|
||
Third, because the IMAP spec leaves the interpretation of the
|
||
reference name as "implementation-dependent", in the past the various
|
||
server implementations handled it in vastly differing ways.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 17]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
The following recommendations are the result of significant
|
||
operational experience, and are intended to maximize
|
||
interoperability.
|
||
|
||
Server implementations must implement the reference argument in a way
|
||
that matches the intended "change directory" operation as closely as
|
||
possible. As a minimum implementation, the reference argument may be
|
||
prepended to the mailbox name (while suppressing double delimiters;
|
||
see the next paragraph). Even servers that do not provide a way to
|
||
break out of the current hierarchy (see "breakout facility" below)
|
||
must provide a reasonable implementation of the reference argument,
|
||
as described here, so that they will interoperate with clients that
|
||
use it.
|
||
|
||
Server implementations that prepend the reference argument to the
|
||
mailbox name should insert a hierarchy delimiter between them, and
|
||
must not insert a second if one is already present:
|
||
|
||
C: A001 LIST ABC DEF
|
||
S: * LIST () "/" ABC/DEF <=== should do this
|
||
S: A001 OK done
|
||
|
||
C: A002 LIST ABC/ /DEF
|
||
S: * LIST () "/" ABC//DEF <=== must not do this
|
||
S: A002 OK done
|
||
|
||
On clients, the reference argument is chiefly used to implement a
|
||
"breakout facility", wherein the user may directly access a mailbox
|
||
outside the "current directory" hierarchy. Client implementations
|
||
should have an operational mode that does not use the reference
|
||
argument. This is to interoperate with older servers that did not
|
||
implement the reference argument properly. While it's a good idea to
|
||
give the user access to a breakout facility, clients that do not
|
||
intend to do so should not use the reference argument at all.
|
||
|
||
Client implementations should always place a trailing hierarchy
|
||
delimiter on the reference argument. This is because some servers
|
||
prepend the reference argument to the mailbox name without inserting
|
||
a hierarchy delimiter, while others do insert a hierarchy delimiter
|
||
if one is not already present. A client that puts the delimiter in
|
||
will work with both varieties of server.
|
||
|
||
Client implementations that implement a breakout facility should
|
||
allow the user to choose whether or not to use a leading hierarchy
|
||
delimiter on the mailbox argument. This is because the handling of a
|
||
leading mailbox hierarchy delimiter also varies from server to
|
||
server, and even between different mailstores on the same server. In
|
||
some cases, a leading hierarchy delimiter means "discard the
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 18]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
reference argument" (implementing the intended breakout facility),
|
||
thus:
|
||
|
||
C: A001 LIST ABC/ /DEF
|
||
S: * LIST () "/" /DEF
|
||
S: A001 OK done
|
||
|
||
In other cases, however, the two are catenated and the extra
|
||
hierarchy delimiter is discarded, thus:
|
||
|
||
C: A001 LIST ABC/ /DEF
|
||
S: * LIST () "/" ABC/DEF
|
||
S: A001 OK done
|
||
|
||
Client implementations must not assume that the server supports a
|
||
breakout facility, but may provide a way for the user to use one if
|
||
it is available. Any breakout facility should be exported to the
|
||
user interface. Note that there may be other "breakout" characters
|
||
besides the hierarchy delimiter (for instance, UNIX filesystem
|
||
servers are likely to use a leading "~" as well), and that their
|
||
interpretation is server-dependent.
|
||
|
||
3.4.10. Mailbox Hierarchy Delimiters
|
||
|
||
The server's selection of what to use as a mailbox hierarchy
|
||
delimiter is a difficult one, involving several issues: What
|
||
characters do users expect to see? What characters can they enter
|
||
for a hierarchy delimiter if it is desired (or required) that the
|
||
user enter it? What character can be used for the hierarchy
|
||
delimiter, noting that the chosen character can not otherwise be used
|
||
in the mailbox name?
|
||
|
||
Because some interfaces show users the hierarchy delimiters or allow
|
||
users to enter qualified mailbox names containing them, server
|
||
implementations should use delimiter characters that users generally
|
||
expect to see as name separators. The most common characters used
|
||
for this are "/" (as in Unix file names), "\" (as in OS/2 and Windows
|
||
file names), and "." (as in news groups). There is little to choose
|
||
among these apart from what users may expect or what is dictated by
|
||
the underlying file system, if any. One consideration about using
|
||
"\" is that it's also a special character in the IMAP protocol. While
|
||
the use of other hierarchy delimiter characters is permissible, A
|
||
DESIGNER IS WELL ADVISED TO STAY WITH ONE FROM THIS SET unless the
|
||
server is intended for special purposes only. Implementers might be
|
||
thinking about using characters such as "-", "_", ";", "&", "#", "@",
|
||
and "!", but they should be aware of the surprise to the user as well
|
||
as of the effect on URLs and other external specifications (since
|
||
some of these characters have special meanings there). Also, a
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 19]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
server that uses "\" (and clients of such a server) must remember to
|
||
escape that character in quoted strings or to send literals instead.
|
||
Literals are recommended over escaped characters in quoted strings in
|
||
order to maintain compatibility with older IMAP versions that did not
|
||
allow escaped characters in quoted strings (but check the grammar to
|
||
see where literals are allowed):
|
||
|
||
C: 001 LIST "" {13}
|
||
S: + send literal
|
||
C: this\%\%\%\h*
|
||
S: * LIST () "\\" {27}
|
||
S: this\is\a\mailbox\hierarchy
|
||
S: 001 OK LIST complete
|
||
|
||
In any case, a server should not use normal alpha-numeric characters
|
||
(such as "X" or "0") as delimiters; a user would be very surprised to
|
||
find that "EXPENDITURES" actually represented a two-level hierarchy.
|
||
And a server should not use characters that are non-printable or
|
||
difficult or impossible to enter on a standard US keyboard. Control
|
||
characters, box-drawing characters, and characters from non-US
|
||
alphabets fit into this category. Their use presents
|
||
interoperability problems that are best avoided.
|
||
|
||
The UTF-7 encoding of mailbox names also raises questions about what
|
||
to do with the hierarchy delimiters in encoded names: do we encode
|
||
each hierarchy level and separate them with delimiters, or do we
|
||
encode the fully qualified name, delimiters and all? The answer for
|
||
IMAP is the former: encode each hierarchy level separately, and
|
||
insert delimiters between. This makes it particularly important not
|
||
to use as a hierarchy delimiter a character that might cause
|
||
confusion with IMAP's modified UTF-7 [UTF-7 and RFC-2060] encoding.
|
||
|
||
To repeat: a server should use "/", "\", or "." as its hierarchy
|
||
delimiter. The use of any other character is likely to cause
|
||
problems and is STRONGLY DISCOURAGED.
|
||
|
||
3.4.11. ALERT Response Codes
|
||
|
||
The protocol spec is very clear on the matter of what to do with
|
||
ALERT response codes, and yet there are many clients that violate it
|
||
so it needs to be said anyway: "The human-readable text contains a
|
||
special alert that must be presented to the user in a fashion that
|
||
calls the user's attention to the message." That should be clear
|
||
enough, but I'll repeat it here: Clients must present ALERT text
|
||
clearly to the user.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 20]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
3.4.12. Deleting Mailboxes
|
||
|
||
The protocol does not guarantee that a client may delete a mailbox
|
||
that is not empty, though on some servers it is permissible and is,
|
||
in fact, much faster than the alternative or deleting all the
|
||
messages from the client. If the client chooses to try to take
|
||
advantage of this possibility it must be prepared to use the other
|
||
method in the even that the more convenient one fails. Further, a
|
||
client should not try to delete the mailbox that it has selected, but
|
||
should first close that mailbox; some servers do not permit the
|
||
deletion of the selected mailbox.
|
||
|
||
That said, a server should permit the deletion of a non-empty
|
||
mailbox; there's little reason to pass this work on to the client.
|
||
Moreover, forbidding this prevents the deletion of a mailbox that for
|
||
some reason can not be opened or expunged, leading to possible
|
||
denial-of-service problems.
|
||
|
||
Example:
|
||
|
||
[User tells the client to delete mailbox BANANA, which is
|
||
currently selected...]
|
||
C: 008 CLOSE
|
||
S: 008 OK done
|
||
C: 009 DELETE BANANA
|
||
S: 009 NO Delete failed; mailbox is not empty.
|
||
C: 010 SELECT BANANA
|
||
S: * ... untagged SELECT responses
|
||
S: 010 OK done
|
||
C: 011 STORE 1:* +FLAGS.SILENT \DELETED
|
||
S: 011 OK done
|
||
C: 012 CLOSE
|
||
S: 012 OK done
|
||
C: 013 DELETE BANANA
|
||
S: 013 OK done
|
||
|
||
3.5. A Word About Testing
|
||
|
||
Since the whole point of IMAP is interoperability, and since
|
||
interoperability can not be tested in a vacuum, the final
|
||
recommendation of this treatise is, "Test against EVERYTHING." Test
|
||
your client against every server you can get an account on. Test
|
||
your server with every client you can get your hands on. Many
|
||
clients make limited test versions available on the Web for the
|
||
downloading. Many server owners will give serious client developers
|
||
guest accounts for testing. Contact them and ask. NEVER assume that
|
||
because your client works with one or two servers, or because your
|
||
server does fine with one or two clients, you will interoperate well
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 21]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
in general.
|
||
|
||
In particular, in addition to everything else, be sure to test
|
||
against the reference implementations: the PINE client, the
|
||
University of Washington server, and the Cyrus server.
|
||
|
||
See the following URLs on the web for more information here:
|
||
|
||
IMAP Products and Sources: http://www.imap.org/products.html
|
||
IMC MailConnect: http://www.imc.org/imc-mailconnect
|
||
|
||
4. Security Considerations
|
||
|
||
This document describes behaviour of clients and servers that use the
|
||
IMAP4 protocol, and as such, has the same security considerations as
|
||
described in [RFC-2060].
|
||
|
||
5. References
|
||
|
||
[RFC-2060] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol - Version
|
||
4rev1", RFC 2060, December 1996.
|
||
|
||
[RFC-2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
|
||
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
|
||
|
||
[RFC-2180] Gahrns, M., "IMAP4 Multi-Accessed Mailbox Practice", RFC
|
||
2180, July 1997.
|
||
|
||
[UTF-8] Yergeau, F., " UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode
|
||
and ISO 10646", RFC 2044, October 1996.
|
||
|
||
[UTF-7] Goldsmith, D. and M. Davis, "UTF-7, a Mail-Safe
|
||
Transformation Format of Unicode", RFC 2152, May 1997.
|
||
|
||
[NAMESPACE] Gahrns, M. and C. Newman, "IMAP4 Namespace", Work in
|
||
Progress.
|
||
|
||
6. Author's Address
|
||
|
||
Barry Leiba
|
||
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
|
||
30 Saw Mill River Road
|
||
Hawthorne, NY 10532
|
||
|
||
Phone: 1-914-784-7941
|
||
EMail: leiba@watson.ibm.com
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 22]
|
||
|
||
RFC 2683 IMAP4 Implementation Recommendations September 1999
|
||
|
||
|
||
7. Full Copyright Statement
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.
|
||
|
||
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
|
||
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
|
||
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
|
||
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
|
||
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
|
||
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
|
||
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
|
||
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
|
||
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
|
||
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
|
||
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
|
||
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
|
||
English.
|
||
|
||
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
|
||
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
|
||
|
||
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
|
||
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
|
||
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
|
||
BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
|
||
HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
|
||
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
|
||
|
||
Acknowledgement
|
||
|
||
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
|
||
Internet Society.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Leiba Informational [Page 23]
|
||
|