Network Working Group               N. Borenstein, Bellcore
           Request for Comments: 1344                        June 1992

                 Implications of MIME for Internet Mail Gateways


         Status of This Memo

           This is an informational memo for  the  Internet  community,
           and  requests  discussion  and suggestions for improvements.
           This  memo  does   not   specify   an   Internet   standard.
           Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

         Abstract

           The recent development of MIME (Multipurpose  Internet  Mail
           Extensions)  offers  a  wide  range of new opportunities for
           electronic mail system systems.  Most of these  opportunites
           are relevant only to user agents, the programs that interact
           with human users when they send and receive mail.   However,
           some  opportunities  are  also  opened up for mail transport
           systems.  While MIME was carefully designed so that it  does
           not  require  any  changes  to  Internet  electronic message
           transport  facilities,  there  are  several  ways  in  which
           message  transport  systems  may  want  to take advantage of
           MIME.  These opportunities are the subject of this memo.

         Background -- The MIME Format

           Recently, a new standardized format  has  been  defined  for
           enhanced  electronic  mail  messages  on the Internet.  This
           format, known as MIME, permits messages  to  include,  in  a
           standardized  manner,  non-ASCII  text, images, audio, and a
           variety of other kinds of interesting data.

           The  MIME  effort  was  explicitly  focused   on   requiring
           absolutely  no  changes  at  the  message  transport  level.
           Because of this fact, MIME-format mail runs transparently on
           all  known  Internet  or  Internet-style mail systems.  This
           means that those concerned solely with the  maintenance  and
           development  of message transport services can safely ignore
           MIME completely, if they so choose.

           However, the fact that MIME can be ignored, for the  purpose
           of  message  transport,  does  not  necessarily mean that it
           should be  ignored.   In  particular,  MIME  offers  several
           features that should be of interest to those responsible for
           message transport services. By  exploiting  these  features,
           transport  systems  can  provide certain additional kinds of
           service that are currently unavailable, and can alleviate  a
           few existing problems.

           The remainder of this document  is  an  attempt  to  briefly
           point  out  and  summarize some important ways in which MIME



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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


           may be of use for message transport systems.  This  document
           makes no attempt to present a complete technical description
           of MIME, however.  For that, the reader is  refered  to  the
           MIME document itself [RFC-1341].

         Mail Transport and Gateway Services:  A Key Distinction

           Before implementing any of the mechanisms discussed in  this
           memo,  one  should  be familiar with the distinction between
           mail transport service and mail gateway service.  Basically,
           mail  transport software is responsible for moving a message
           within a homogeneous electronic mail service network.   Mail
           gateways,  on  the  other  hand,  exchange  mail between two
           significantly different  mail  environments,  including  via
           non-electronic services, such as postal mail.

           In general, it is widely considered  unacceptable  for  mail
           transport  services  to  alter the contents of messages.  In
           the case of mail gateways, however, such alteration is often
           inevitable.  Thus, strictly speaking, many of the mechanisms
           described here apply only to gateways,  and  should  not  be
           used  in  simple  mail  transport  systems.   However, it is
           possible that some very special situations -- e.g., an  SMTP
           relay   that  transports  mail  across  extremely  expensive
           intercontinental network  links  --  might  need  to  modify
           messages,  in order to provide appropriate service for those
           situations, and hence must redefine its role to be that of a
           gateway.

           In this memo, it is assumed that transformations which alter
           a message's contents will be performed only by gateways, but
           it is recognized that some existing  mail  transport  agents
           may  choose to reclassify themselves as gateways in order to
           perform the functions described here.

         Rejected Messages

           An unfortunately frequent duty of message transport services
           is  the  rejection  of  mail to the sender.  This may happen
           because the mail was undeliverable, or because  it  did  not
           conform  to  the requirements of a gateway (e.g., it was too
           large).

           There has never been a standard format for rejected messages
           in  the  past.   This has been an annoyance, but not a major
           problem for text messages.  For non-text messages,  however,
           the  lack  of  a  standard rejection format is more crucial,
           because rejected messages typically appear to be  text,  and
           the  user  who  finds  himself viewing images or audio as if
           they were text is rarely happy with the result.

           MIME makes it very easy to encapsulate messages  in  such  a
           way  that  their  semantics  are  completely preserved.  The
           simplest way to do this is to make each rejection  notice  a



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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


           MIME  "multipart/mixed"  message.   That  multipart  message
           would contain two parts, a text part explaining  the  reason
           for  the  rejection,  and  an encapsulated message part that
           contained the rejected message itself.

           It should be stressed that the transport software  does  not
           need  to understand the structure of the rejected message at
           all.  It  merely  needs  to  encapsulate  it  properly.  The
           following,  for  example,  shows how any MIME message may be
           encapsulated in a rejection message in such a way  that  all
           information  will be immediately visible in the correct form
           if the  recipient  reads  it  with  a  MIME-conformant  mail
           reader:

                From: Mailer-Daemon <[email protected]>
                Subject: Rejected Message
                Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary=unique-boundary

                --unique-boundary
                Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

                A mail message you sent was rejected.  The details of
                the rejected message are as follows:

                From: Nathainel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                Message-ID: <[email protected]>
                To: [email protected]
                Subject: I know my rights!
                Rejection-reason:  No mail from libertarians is
                accepted.

                The original message follows below.
                --unique-boundary
                Content-type: message/rfc822

                The ENTIRE REJECTED MESSAGE, starting with the headers,
                goes here.

                --unique-boundary--
           In  the  above  example,  the  ONLY  thing   that   is   not
           'boilerplate"  is the choice of boundary string.  The phrase
           "unique-boundary" should be replaced by a string  that  does
           not  appear  (prefixed  by  two  hyphens) in any of the body
           parts.

           Encapsulating a message in this manner is very easily  done,
           and  will  constitute  a  significant  service  that message
           transport services can perform for MIME users.

           IMPORTANT NOTE:  The format given above  is  simply  one  of
           many possible ways to format a rejection message using MIME.
           Independent IETF efforts are needed in order to  standardize
           the format of rejections and acknowledgements.




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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


         Fragmenting and Reassembling Large Messages

           One  problem  that  occurs  with  increasing  frequency   in
           Internet  mail  is the rejection of messages because of size
           limitations.   This  problem  can  be   expected   to   grow
           substantially  more  severe  with the acceptance of MIME, as
           MIME invites the use of very large objects  such  as  images
           and audio clips.  Fortunately, MIME also provides mechanisms
           that can help alleviate the problem.

           One particularly relevant MIME  type  is  "message/partial",
           which  can  be  used  for  the  automatic  fragmentation and
           reassembly of large mail messages.  The message/partial type
           can be handled entirely at the user agent level, but message
           transport services can also make use of this type to provide
           more intelligent behavior at gateways.

           In particular, when gatewaying mail to or from a  system  or
           network  known  to enforce size limitations that are more or
           less stringent than are enforced locally, message  transport
           services  might  choose either to break a large message into
           fragments, or (perhaps less likely) to reassemble  fragments
           into  a  larger  message.   The  combination  of  these  two
           behaviors can make the  overall  Internet  mail  environment
           appear more complete and seamless than it actually is.

           Details on the message/partial format may be  found  in  the
           MIME  document.   What follows is an example of how a simple
           short message  might  be  broken  into  two  message/partial
           messages.   In  practice,  of  course,  the  message/partial
           facility would only be likely to be  used  for  much  longer
           messages.

           The following initial message:

                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                To: Ned Freed: <[email protected]>
                Subject: a test message
                Content-type: image/gif
                Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

                R0lGODdhQAGMAbMAAAAAAP/u7swzIu6ZiLsiEd1EM+5VRGaI3WYAAO67qkRV
                uwARd6q7/ywAAAAAQAGMAUME/hDISau9OOvNu/9gKI6kRJwoUa5s675wLM90l
                XW5YKxqPyKRygxv2dr4czwlMCZrQLFTYHBJ2hlyQYFiaz+i0WWBou7fOq1x8vXWfU
                qU1fJ2qEhYaHGjhZQmJ2QT1xBW1ak1xUdV0/VjtsbpUEDaEJCQOIpqeoNV+LXo5W
                fVN3dZKceAQPvgyhwQ2lqcXGxx5wja59eJIGUNCszF90sYp50CoqFZ4DoqMMo6M

           can  be  transformed,  invertibly,  into  the  following two
           message/partial messages:


                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>





           Borenstein                                          [Page 4]




           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


                To: Ned Freed <[email protected]>
                Subject: a test message
                Content-type: message/partial; id="[email protected]";
                     number=1; total=2

                Content-type: image/gif
                Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

                R0lGODdhQAGMAbMAAAAAAP/u7swzIu6ZiLsiEd1EM+5VRGaI3WYAAO67qkRV

           and

                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                To: Ned Freed <[email protected]>
                Subject: a test message
                Content-type: message/partial; id="[email protected]";
                     number=2; total=2

                uwARd6q7/ywAAAAAQAGMAUME/hDISau9OOvNu/9gKI6kRJwoUa5s675wLM90l
                XW5YKxqPyKRygxv2dr4czwlMCZrQLFTYHBJ2hlyQYFiaz+i0WWBou7fOq1x8vXWfU
                qU1fJ2qEhYaHGjhZQmJ2QT1xBW1ak1xUdV0/VjtsbpUEDaEJCQOIpqeoNV+LXo5W
                fVN3dZKceAQPvgyhwQ2lqcXGxx5wja59eJIGUNCszF90sYp50CoqFZ4DoqMMo6M

           Fragmenting such messages rather than rejecting  them  might
           be  a  reasonable option for some gateway services, at least
           for a certain range of message  sizes.   Of  course,  it  is
           often  difficult for a gateway to know what size limitations
           will  be encountered "downstream",  but intelligent  guesses
           are often possible.  Moreover, an IETF working group on SMTP
           extensions has proposed augmenting SMTP with a  "SIZE"  verb
           that   would   facilitate  this  process,  thereby  possibly
           requiring  fragmentation   on   the   fly   during   message
           transmission.

           Note also that fragmentation or reassembly might  reasonably
           be  performed,  in  differing  circumstances,  by either the
           sending or receiving gateway  systems,  depending  on  which
           system knew more about the capabilities of the other.

         Using or Removing External-Body Pointers

           Another MIME type oriented to extremely  large  messages  is
           the  "message/external-body" type.  In this type of message,
           all or part of the body data is not included in  the  actual
           message  itself.   Instead,  the  Content-Type  header field
           includes information that tells how the  body  data  can  be
           retrieved -- either via a file system, via anonymous ftp, or
           via other mechanisms.

           The message/external-body type provides  a  new  option  for
           mail  transport  services  that  wishes  to optimize the way
           bandwidth resources are used in a  given  environment.   For
           example, the basic use of message/external-body is to reduce
           bandwidth in email traffic. However, when  email  crosses  a



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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


           slow and expensive boundary -- e.g., a satellite link across
           the Pacific -- it might make  sense  to  retrieve  the  data
           itself  and  transform  the external-body reference into the
           actual data.  Alternately, it might make sense to  copy  the
           data  itself  to  a  new  location,  closer  to  the message
           recipients, and  change  the  location  pointed  to  in  the
           message.    Because   the  external-body  specification  can
           include an expiration date, message transport  services  can
           trade  off  storage  and  bandwidth  capabilities  to try to
           optimize  the  overall  use  of  resources  for  very  large
           messages.

           Such behaviors by a  gateway  require  careful  analysis  of
           cost/benefit   tradeoffs  and  would be a dramatic departure
           from  typical  mail  transport   services.    However,   the
           potential  benefits  are quite significant, so that such the
           appropriate use of these service options should be explored.

           For example, the following message includes PostScript  data
           by external reference:

                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                To: Ned Freed <[email protected]>
                Subject: The latest MIME draft
                Content-Type: message/external-body;
                     name="BodyFormats.ps";
                     site="thumper.bellcore.com";
                     access-type=ANON-FTP;
                     directory="pub";
                     mode="image";
                     expiration="Fri, 14 Jun 1991 19:13:14 -0400 (EDT)"

                Content-type: application/postscript

           A gateway to Australia might choose to copy the file  to  an
           Australian  FTP archive, changing the relevant parameters on
           the Content-type header field.  Alternately, it might choose
           simply  to  transform  the message into one in which all the
           data were included:

                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                To: Ned Freed <[email protected]>
                Subject: The latest MIME draft
                Content-type: application/postscript

                %!PS-Adobe-1.0
                %%Creator: greenbush:nsb (Nathaniel Borenstein,MRE 2A-
                274,4270,9938586,21462)
                etc...

           This is an example which suggests both the benefits and  the
           dangers.  There  is considerable benefit to having a copy of
           the data immediately  available,   but  there  also  may  be
           considerable  expense involved in transporting it to all  of



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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


           a the members of a list, if only a few  will  use  the  data
           anytime soon.

           Alternatively, instead of replacing an external-body message
           with  its real contents, it might make sense to transform it
           into a "multipart/alternative" message containing  both  the
           external  body  reference  and  the  expanded version.  This
           means that only the external body part can be  forwarded  if
           desired,  and  the recipient doesn't lose the information as
           to where the data was fetched from, if they want to fetch an
           up-to-date version in the future.  Such information could be
           represented, in MIME, in the following form:

                From:  Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
                To: Ned Freed <[email protected]>
                Subject: The latest MIME draft
                Content-type: multipart/alternative; boundary=foo

                --foo
                Content-Type: message/external-body;
                     name="BodyFormats.ps";
                     site="thumper.bellcore.com";
                     access-type=ANON-FTP;
                     directory="pub";
                     mode="image";
                     expiration="Fri, 14 Jun 1991 19:13:14 -0400 (EDT)"

                Content-type: application/postscript
                --foo
                Content-type: application/postscript

                %!PS-Adobe-1.0
                %%Creator: greenbush:nsb (Nathaniel Borenstein,MRE 2A-
                274,4270,9938586,21462)
                etc...
                --foo--

           Similarly for the case where a message is copied to a  local
           FTP  site,  one  could  offer two external body parts as the
           alternatives, allowing the user agent to  choose  which  FTP
           site is preferred.

         Image and other Format Conversions

           MIME currently defines  two  image  formats,  image/gif  and
           image/jpeg.   The  former  is  much more convenient for many
           users, and can be displayed more quickly  on  many  systems.
           The  latter  is  a  much  more  compact  representation, and
           therfore places less stress on mail transport facilities.

           Message  transport  services  can  optimize  both  transport
           bandwidth  and  user  convenience by intelligent translation
           between these formats (and other formats that might be added
           later).   When  a message of type image/gif is submitted for



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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


           long-haul delivery, it might  reasonably  be  translated  to
           image/jpeg.   Conversely,  when  image/jpeg data is received
           for  final  delivery  on  a  system  with  adequate  storage
           resources,  it  might  be  translated  to  image/gif for the
           convenience of the recipient.   Software  to  perform  these
           translations  is  widely  available.   It  should  be noted,
           however,  that  performance  of  such  conversions  presumes
           support for the new format by the recipient.

           Although MIME currently only defines one audio format,  more
           are  likely  to  be  defined and registered with IANA in the
           future.  In that case, similar format conversion  facilities
           might be appropriate for audio.

           If format conversion is done,  it  is  STRONGLY  RECOMMENDED
           that some kind of trace information (probably in the form of
           a Received header field) should be added  to  a  message  to
           document the conversion that has been performed.

           Some people have expressed concerns,  or  even  the  opinion
           that  conversions  should  never be done.  To accomodate the
           desires of those who dislike the idea  of  automatic  format
           conversion.   For  this  reason,  it  is suggested that such
           transformations be generally restricted to  gateways  rather
           than  general  message transport services, and that services
           which perform such conversions  should  be  sensitive  to  a
           header field that indicates that the sender does not wish to
           have any such conversions performed.  A suggested value  for
           this header field is:

           Content-Conversion: prohibited

           User agents that wish to explicitly indicate  a  willingness
           for such conversions to be performed may use:

           Content-Conversion: permitted

           However,  this  will  be  the  default  assumption  of  many
           gateways,  so  this  header field is not strictly necessary.
           It also should be noted  that  such  control  of  conversion
           would only be available to the sender, rather than to any of
           the recipients.















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           RFC 1344           MIME and Mail Gateways          June 1992


         Robust Encoding of Data

           In addition to all the  reasons  given  above  for  possible
           transformation  of  body data, it will sometimes be the case
           that a gateway can tell that the body data, as  given,  will
           not  robustly  survive  the  next  step  of  transport.  For
           example, mail crossing an ASCII-to-EBCDIC gateway will  lose
           information  if certain characters are used.  In such cases,
           a gateway can make the data more robust simply  by  applying
           one of the MIME Content-Transfer-Encoding algorithms (base64
           or quoted-printable) to the body or body  part.   This  will
           generally  be  a  loss-less transformation, but care must be
           taken  to  ensure  that  the  resulting  message  is   MIME-
           conformant  if  the inital message was not.  (For example, a
           MIME-Version header field may need to be added.)

         User-oriented concerns

           If a gateway is going to perform major transformations on  a
           mail  message,  such as translating image formats or mapping
           between included data and external-reference data, it  seems
           inevitable that there will be situations in which users will
           object to these transformations.  This is, in large part, an
           implementation  issue,  but  it  seems  advisable,  wherever
           possible, to provide a mechanism whereby users can  specify,
           to  the  transport  system,  whether  or  not they want such
           services performed automatically on their behalf. The use of
           the  "Content-Conversion"  header field, as mentioned above,
           is suggested for this purpose, since it  it  least  provides
           some control by the sender, if not the recipient.

         References

           [RFC-1341]    Borenstein,   N.,   and   N.   Freed,    "MIME
           (Multipurpose  Internet  Mail  Extensions):  Mechanisms  for
           Specifying and Describing the  Format  of  Internet  Message
           Bodies", RFC 1341, Bellcore, June, 1992.

         Security Considerations

           Security issues are not  discussed in this memo.

         Author's Address

           Nathaniel S. Borenstein
           MRE 2D-296, Bellcore
           445 South St.
           Morristown, NJ 07962-1910

           Email: [email protected]
           Phone: +1 201 829 4270
           Fax:  +1 201 829 7019





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