March 1979

IEN: 85
RFC: 753






                      INTERNET MESSAGE PROTOCOL



                          Jonathan B. Postel

















                              March 1979




                    Information Sciences Institute
                  University of Southern California
                          4676 Admiralty Way
                  Marina del Rey, California  90291

                            (213) 822-1511


< INC-PROJECT, MAIL-MAR-79.NLS.38, >, 31-Mar-79 19:50 JBP ;;;;






















































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March 1979
                                              Internet Message Protocol



                          TABLE OF CONTENTS

   PREFACE ........................................................ iii

1.  INTRODUCTION ..................................................... 1

 1.1.  Motivation ................................................... 1
 1.2.  Scope ........................................................ 1
 1.3.  The Internetwork Environment ................................. 2
 1.4.  Operation .................................................... 2
 1.5.  Interfaces ................................................... 3

2.  FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION ........................................... 5

 2.1.  Relation to Other Protocols .................................. 5
 2.2.  Terminology  ................................................. 5
 2.3.  Assumptions .................................................. 6
 2.4.  General Specification ........................................ 7
 2.5.  Mechanisms .................................................. 11

3.  DETAILED SPECIFICATION .......................................... 13

 3.1.  Overview of Message Structure ............................... 13
 3.2.  Data Elements ............................................... 13
 3.3.  Message Objects ............................................. 16
 3.4.  Command ..................................................... 23
 3.5.  Document .................................................... 31
 3.6.  Message Structure ........................................... 33
 3.7.  MPM Organization ............................................ 36
 3.8.  Interfaces .................................................. 39

4.  EXAMPLES & SCENARIOS ............................................ 41

 Example 1:  Message Format ........................................ 41
 Example 2:  Delivery and Acknowledgment ........................... 43

GLOSSARY ............................................................ 49

REFERENCES .......................................................... 51

APPENDICES .......................................................... 53










Postel                                                          [Page i]


                                                             March 1979
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[Page ii]                                                         Postel


March 1979
                                              Internet Message Protocol



                               PREFACE



This is the first edition of this specification and should be treated as
a request for comments, advice, and suggestions.  A great deal of prior
work has been done on computer aided message systems and some of this is
listed in the reference section.  This specification was shaped by many
discusions with members of the ARPA research community, and others
interested in the development of computer aided message systems.  This
document was prepared as part of the ARPA sponsored Internetwork
Concepts Research Project at ISI, with the assistance of Greg Finn, Alan
Katz, Paul Mockapetris, and Mamie Chew.

                                                             Jon Postel




































Postel                                                        [Page iii]


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[Page iv]                                                         Postel


March 1979
IEN: 85                                                        J. Postel
RFC: 753                                                         USC-ISI
                                                             March 1979




                      INTERNET MESSAGE PROTOCOL



                           1.  INTRODUCTION

This document describes an internetwork message system.  The system is
designed to transmit messages between message processing modules
according to formats and procedures specified in this document.  The
message processing modules are processes in host computers.  Message
processing modules are located in different networks and together
constitute an internetwork message delivery system.

This document is intended to provide all the information necessary to
implement a compatible cooperating module of this internetwork message
system.

1.1.  Motivation

 As computer supported message processing activities grow on individual
 host computers and in networks of computers, there is a natural desire
 to provide for the interconnection and interworking of such systems.
 This specification describes the formats and procedures of a general
 purpose internetwork message system, which can be used as a standard
 for the interconnection of individual message systems, or as a message
 system in its own right.

 We also provide for the communication of data items beyond the scope
 of contemporary message systems.  Messages can include typed segments
 which could represent drawings, or facsimile images, or digitized
 speech.  One can imagine message stations equipped with speakers and
 microphones (or telephone hand sets) where the body of a message or a
 portion of it is recorded digitized speech.  The output terminal could
 include a graphics display, and the message might present a drawing on
 the display, and verbally (via the speaker) describe certain features
 of the drawing.  This specification provides basic data elements for
 the transmission of structured binary data, as well as providing for
 text transmission.

1.2.  Scope

 The Internet Message Protocol is intended to be used for the
 transmission of messages between networks.  It may also be used for
 the local message system of a network or host.  This specification was
 developed in the context of the ARPA work on the interconnection of
 networks, but it is anticipated that it has a more general scope.


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Introduction



 The focus here is on the internal mechanisms to transmit messages,
 rather than the external interface to users.  It is assumed that a
 number of user interface programs will exist.  These will be both new
 programs designed to work with system and old programs designed to
 work with earlier systems.

1.3.  The Internetwork Environment

 The internetwork message environment consists of processes which run
 in hosts which are connected to networks which are interconnected by
 gateways.  Each individual network consists of many different hosts.
 The networks are tied together through gateways.  The gateways are
 essentially hosts on two (or more) networks and are not assumed to
 have much storage capacity or to "know" which hosts are on the
 networks to which they are attached [5].

1.4.  Operation

 The model of operation is that this protocol is implemented in a
 process.  Such a process is called a Message Processing Module or MPM.
 The MPMs exchange messages by establishing full duplex communication
 and sending the messages in a fixed format described in this document.
 The MPM may also communicate other information by means of commands
 described here.

 A message is formed by a user interacting with a User Interface
 Program or UIP.  The user may utilize several commands to create
 various fields of the message and may invoke an editor program to
 correct or format some or all of the message.  Once the user is
 satisfied with the messages it is "sent" by placing it in a data
 structure shared with the MPM.

 The MPM discovers the unprocessed input data (either by a specific
 request or by a general background search), examines it, and using
 routing tables determines which outgoing link to use.  The destination
 may be another user on this host, a user on another host in this
 network, or a user in another network.

 In the first case, another user on this host, the MPM places the
 message in a data structure shared with the destination user, where
 that user's UIP will look for incoming messages.

 In the second case, the user on another host in this network, the MPM
 transmits the message to the MPM on that host.  That MPM then repeats
 the routing decision, and discovering the destination is local to it,
 places the messages in the data structure shared with the destination
 user.



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                                                           Introduction



 In the third case, the user on a host in another network, the MPM
 transmits the messages to an MPM in that network if it knows how to
 establish a connection directly to it, otherwise the MPM transmits the
 message to an MPM that is "closer" to the destination.  An MPM might
 not know of direct connections to MPMs in all other networks, but it
 must be able to select a next MPM to handle the message for each
 possible destination network.

 A MPM might know a way to establish direct connections to each of a
 few MPMs in other nearby networks, and send all other messages to a
 particular big brother MPM that has a wider knowledge of the internet
 environment.

 A individual network's message system may be quite different from the
 internet message system.  In this case, intranet messages will be
 delivered using the network's own message system.  If a message is
 addressed outside the network, it is given to a MPM which then sends
 it through the appropriate gateways via internet procedures and format
 to (or toward) the MPM in the destination network.  Eventually, the
 message gets to a MPM on the network of the recipient of the message.
 The message is then sent via the local message system to that host.

 When local message protocols are used, special conversion programs are
 required to transform local messages to internet format when they are
 going out, and to transform internet messages to local format when
 they come into the local environment.  Such transformations are
 potentially information lossy.  The internet message format attempts
 to provide features to capture all the information any local message
 system might use.  However, a particular local message system is
 unlikely to have features equivalent to all the possible features of
 the internet message system.  Thus, in some cases the transformation
 of an internet message to a local message discard of some of the
 information.  For example, if an internet message carrying mixed text
 and speech data in the body is to be delivered in a local system which
 only carries text, the speech data may be replaced by the text string
 "There was some speech here".  Such discarding of information is to be
 avoided when at all possible, and to be defered as long as possible,
 still the possibility remains, that in some cases, it is the only
 reasonable thing to do.

1.5.  Interfaces

 The MPM calls on a reliable communication procedure to communicate
 with other MPMs.  This is a Transport Level protocol such as the TCP
 [20].  The interface to such a procedure conventionally provides calls
 to open and close connections, send and receive data on a connection,
 and some means to signal and be notified of special conditions (i.e.,
 interrupts).


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 The MPM receives input and produces output through data structures
 that are produced and consumed respectively by user interface (or
 other) programs.















































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                      2.  FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION

2.1.  Terminology

 The basic unit transferred between networks is called a message.  A
 message is made up of a transaction identifier (a number which
 uniquely identifies the message), a command list (which contains the
 necessary information for delivery), and the document list.  The
 document list consists of a header and a body, which contains the
 actual data of the message.

 For a personal letter the document body corresponds to the contents
 the a letter, the document header corresponds to the the address and
 return address on the envelope.

 For an inter-office memo the document body corresponds to the text,
 the document header corresponds to the header of the memo.

 The commands correspond to the information used by the Post Office or
 the mail room to route the letter or memo.

 The messages are routed by a process called the message processing
 module or MPM.  Messages are created and consumed by User Interface
 Programs (UIPs) in conjunction with users.

 Please see the Glossary section for a more complete list of
 terminology.

2.2.  Assumptions

 The following assumptions are made about the internetwork environment:

 It is in general not known what format intranet addresses will assume.
 Since no standard addressing scheme would suit all networks, it is
 safe to assume there will be several and that they will change with
 time.  Thus, frequent software modification throughout all internet
 MPMs would be required if such MPMs were to know about the formats on
 many networks.  Therefore, each MPM which handles internet messages is
 required to know only the minimum necessary to deliver them.

 We require each MPM to know completely only the addressing format of
 its own network.  In addition, the MPM must be able to select an
 output link for each message addressed to another network or host.
 This does not preclude more intelligent behavior on the part of a
 given MPM, but at least this minimum is necessary.  Each network has a
 unique name and number.

 Each MPM will have a unique internet address.  This feature will



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Functional Description



 enable every MPM to place a unique "handling-stamp" on a message which
 passes through it en-route to delivery.

2.3.  General Specification

 There are several aspects to a distributed service to be specified.
 First there is the service to be provided, that is, the
 characteristics of the service as seen by its users.  Second there is
 the service it uses, that is, the characteristics it assumes to be
 provided by some lower level service.  And, third there is the
 protocol used between the modules of the distributed service.

      User                                          User
         \                                          /
          \                                        /
           \                                      /
        --+----------------------------------------+-- Service
          !   \                                /   ! Interface
          !  +--------+                +--------+  !
          !  ! Module ! <--Protocol--> ! Module !  !
          !  +--------+                +--------+  !
          !        \                       /       !
          !        +-----------------------+       !
          !        ! Communication Service !       !
          !        +-----------------------+       !
          !                                        !
          +----------------------------------------+

                           Message Service

                              Figure 1.

 The User/Message Service Interface

   The service the message delivery system provides is to accept
   messages conforming to a specified format and to attempt to deliver
   those messages, and to report on the success or failure of the
   delivery attempt.  This service is provided in the context of an
   interconnected system of networks, and may involve relaying a
   message through several intermediate MPMs utilizing different
   communication services.

 The Message/Communication Service Interface

   The message delivery system calls on a communication service to
   transfer information from one MPM to another.  There may be
   different communication services used between different pairs of



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                                                 Functional Description



   MPMs, though all communication services must meet the following
   service characteristics.

   It is assumed that the communication service provides a reliable two
   way data stream.  Such a data stream can usually be obtained in
   computer networks from the transport level protocol, for example,
   the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) [20].  In any case the
   properties the communication service must provide are:

     o  Logical connections for two way simultaneous data flow of
        arbitrary data (i.e., no forbidden codes).  Data is delivered
        in the order sent with no gaps.

     o  Simple commands to open and close the connections, and to send
        and receive data on the connections.

     o  A way to signal and be notified "out-of-band" (such as TCP's
        urgent) is available so that some messages can be labeled "more
        important" than others.

     o  Controlled flow of data so that data is not transmitted faster
        that the receiver chooses to consume it (on the average).

     o  Transmission errors are corrected without user notification or
        involvement.  Complete breakdown on communication is reported
        to the user.

 The Message-Message Protocol

   The protocol used between the distributed modules of the message
   delivery system, that is, the MPMs is a small set of commands which
   convey requests and replies.  These commands are encoded in a highly
   structured and rigidly specified format.

2.4.  Mechanisms

 MPMs are processes which use some communication service.  A pair of
 MPMs which can communicate reside in a common interprocess
 communication environment.  A MPM might exist in two (or more)
 interprocess communication environments, and such an MPM might act to
 relay messages between MPMs in the environments.









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    User                                                    User
      \                                                      /
       \                                                    /
        \                                                  /
     +---------------------------------------------------------+
     !    \                                              /     !
     !  +-----+                +-----+                +-----+  !
     !  ! MPM ! <--Protocol--> ! MPM ! <--Protocol--> ! MPM !  !
     !  +-----+                +-----+                +-----+  !
     !     !                    /   \                    !     !
     !  +-----------------------+   +-----------------------+  !
     !  !Communication Service A!   !Communication Service B!  !
     !  +-----------------------+   +-----------------------+  !
     !                                                         !
     +---------------------------------------------------------+

                Message Service with Internal Relaying

                              Figure 2.

 The transfer of data between UIPs and MPMs is conceived of as the
 exchange of data structures which encode messages.  The transfer of
 data between MPMs is also in terms of the transmission of structured
 data.


























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                                                 Functional Description



                   +-----+     DATA       +-----+
            USER-->! UIP !-->STRUCTURES-->! MPM !-->other
                   +-----+    +-----+     +-----+    MPMs
                              !     !
                              !  +-----+
                              +--!     !
                                 !  +-----+
                                 +--!     !
                                    !     !
                                    +-----+

                    +-----+     DATA       +-----+
            other-->! MPM !-->STRUCTURES-->! UIP !-->USER
            MPMs    +-----+    +-----+     +-----+
                               !     !
                               !  +-----+
                               +--!     !
                                  !  +-----+
                                  +--!     !
                                     !     !
                                     +-----+

                             Message Flow

                              Figure 3.

 In the following, a message will be described as a structured data
 object represented in a particular kind of typed data elements.  This
 is how a message is presented when transmitted between MPMs or
 exchanged between an MPM and a UIP.  Internal to a MPM (or a UIP), a
 message may be represented in any convenient form.  As the following
 figure shows, when a message is ready for transmission, it moves from
 the processing routines to be encoded in the typed data elements and
 then to a data compression routine, and is finally transmitted.  On
 the receiving side, the message is first decompressed then decoded
 from the data element representation to the local representation for
 the processing routines.













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         +------------------------------------------------+
         !                                                !
         !  processing      DATA         DATA             !
         !  routines   ---> ENCODER ---> COMPRESSOR --->  !
         !                                                !
         +------------------------------------------------+
                            Send MPM

         +------------------------------------------------+
         !                                                !
         !      DATA              DATA         processing !
         ! ---> DECOMPRESSOR ---> DECODER ---> routines   !
         !                                                !
         +------------------------------------------------+
                           Receive MPM

                            Detailed View

                              Figure 4.































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                                                 Functional Description



2.5.  Relation to Other Protocols

 The following diagram illustrates the place of the message protocol in
 the protocol hierarchy:


  +------+ +-----+ +-------+ +-----+     +-----+
  !Telnet! ! FTP ! !Message! !Voice! ... !     ! Application Level
  +------+ +-----+ +-------+ +-----+     +-----+
          \   !   /             !           !
           +-----+           +-----+     +-----+
           ! TCP !           ! RTP ! ... !     ! Host Level
           +-----+           +-----+     +-----+
              !                 !           !
             +-------------------------------+
             !       Internet Protocol       !   Gateway Level
             +-------------------------------+
                             !
                +---------------------------+
                !   Local Network Protocol  !    Network Level
                +---------------------------+
                             !



                        Protocol Relationships

                              Figure 5.

 The message protocol interfaces on one side to user interface programs
 and on the other side to a reliable transport protocol such as TCP.



















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                      3.  DETAILED SPECIFICATION

The presentation of the information in this section is difficult since
everything depends on everything, and since this is a linear media it
has to come in some order.  In this attempt, a very brief overview of
the message structure is given, then a radical switch is made to
defining the basic building blocks, and finally using the building
blocks to reach the overall structure again.

3.1.  Overview of Message Structure

 In general a message is composed of three parts:  the identification,
 the command, and the document.  Each part is in turn composed of
 message objects.

 The identification part is composed of a transaction number assigned
 by the originating MPM, and the internet host number of that MPM.

 The command part is composed of  an operation type, an operation code,
 an argument list, an error list, the destination mailbox, and a stamp.
 The stamp is a list of the MPMs that have handled this message.

 The document part is composed of a header and a body.  The message
 delivery system does not depend on the contents of the document part,
 but this specification does make some recommendations for the document
 header.

 The following sections define the representation of a message as a
 structured object composed of other objects.  Objects in turn are
 represented using a set of basic data elements.

3.2.  Data Elements

 The data elements defined here are similar to the data structure and
 encoding used in NSW [18].

 Each of the diagrams which follow represent a sequence of octets.
 Field boundaries are denoted by the "!" character, octet boundaries by
 the "+" character. The diagrams are presented in left to right order.
 Each element begins with a one octet code.











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Specification




 Code  Type          Representation
 ----  ----          --------------


                     +------+
   0  No Operation   !  1   !
                     +------+


                     +------+------+------+------+------
   1  Padding        !  0   !     octet count    ! Data ...
                     +------+------+------+------+------


                     +------+------+
   2  Boolean        !  2   ! 1/0  !
                     +------+------+


                     +------+------+------+
   3  Index          !  3   !     Data    !
                     +------+------+------+


                     +------+------+------+------+------+
   4  Integer        !  4   !            Data           !
                     +------+------+------+------+------+


                     +------+------+------+------+------
   5  Bit String     !  5   !      bit count     ! Data ...
                     +------+------+------+------+------


                     +------+------+------+------+------
   6  Text String    !  6   !     octet count    !  Data ...
                     +------+------+------+------+------


                     +------+------+------+------+------+------+-----
   7  List           !  7   !     octet count    !  item count ! Data
                     +------+------+------+------+------+------+-----


                     +------+------+------+------+------
   8  Proplist       !  8   !     octet count    ! Data ...
                     +------+------+------+------+------


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                                                          Specification



 Element code 0 (NOP) is an empty data element used for padding when it
 is necessary. It is ignored.

 Element code 1 (PAD) is used to transmit large amounts of data with a
 message for test or padding purposes.  No action is taken with this
 data but the count of dummy octets must be correct to indicate the
 next element code.

 Element code 2 (BOOLEAN) is a boolean data element which has the value
 1 for True and 0 for False.

 Element code 3 (INDEX) is a 16-bit unsigned integer datum. Element
 code 3 occupies only 3 octets.

 Element code 4 (INTEGER) is a signed 32-bit integer datum. This will
 always occupy five octets.  Representation is two's complement.

 Element code 5 (BITSTR) is a bit string element for binary data.  The
 bit string is padded on the right with zeros to fill out the last
 octet if the bit string does not end on an octet boundary.  This data
 type must have the bit-count in the two octet count field instead of
 the number of octets.

 Element code 6 (TEXT) is used for the representation of text.  Seven
 bit ASCII characters are used, right justified in the octet.  The high
 order bit in the octet is zero.

 Element code 7 (LIST) can be used to create structures composed of
 other elements.  The item-count contains the number of elements which
 follow.  Any element may be used including List itself.  The octet
 count specifies the number of octets in the whole list.  A null or
 empty List, one with no elements, has an item-count of zero (0).


















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Specification



 Element code 8 (PROPLIST) is the Property-List element.  It has the
 following form:


   +------+------+------+------+------+
   !   8  !     octet          ! pair !
   !      !           count    ! count!
   +------+------+------+------+------+
                        +------+------+------+---------+---------+
                        ! name !    value    ! name    ! value   !
            repeated    ! count!    count    !      ...!      ...!
                        +------+------+------+---------+---------+

 The Property-List structure consists of a set of unordered name/value
 pairs.  The pairs are a one octet name count and a two octet value
 count followed by the name and value strings.  The counts specify the
 length in octets of the name and value strings.  Each string has a
 length in octets which agrees with its respective count.  The count of
 octets until the next pair in the property list is  1 + 2 + name count
 + value count octets.  The entire Property-List is of course equal in
 length to the octet count of the element itself.  Immediately
 following the octet count for the entire element is a one octet pair
 count field which contains the total number of name/value pairs in the
 Proplist.

3.3.  Message Objects

 In the composition of messages we use a set of objects such as
 address, or date.  These objects are encoded in the basic data
 elements.  The message objects are built of data elements.

 While data elements are typed, message objects are not.  This is
 because messages are structured to the extent that only one kind of
 message object may occur in any position of a message structure.

 The following is a list of some of the objects used in messages.  The
 object descriptions are grouped by the section of the message in which
 they normally occur.












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                                                          Specification



 Identification

   Internet Host Number (ihn)

     This identifies a host in the internetwork environment.  When used
     as a part of tid, it identifies the originating host of a message.
     The ihn is a 32 bit number, the higher order 8 bits identify the
     network, and the lower order 24 bits identify the host on that
     network.

     INTEGER

   Transaction Identifier (tid)

     This is the transaction identifier associated with a particular
     command.  It is a list of the transaction number and the internet
     host number of the originating host.

     LIST ( tn , ihn )

   Transaction Number (tn)

     This is a number which is uniquely associated with this
     transaction by  the originating host.  It identifies the
     transaction.  (A transaction is a message and acknowledgment, this
     is discussed in more detail in later sections.)  A tn must be
     unique for the time which the message (a request or reply)
     containing it could be active in the network.

     INDEX

 Command

   Address

     This is very similar to Mailbox in that it also is the "address"
     of a user.  However, Address is intended to contain the minimum
     information necessary for delivery, and no more.

     PROPLIST ( --- )

   Answer

     A yes (true) or no (false) answer to a question.

     BOOLEAN




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Specification



   Arguments

     This is the argument to many of the operations.  It consists of a
     List of different data types.  The List will have form and data
     relevant with the particular operation.

     LIST ( --- )

   Command-Type

     Gives the type of a command (e.g., request, reply, alarm).

     INDEX

   Error-List

     The error list contains information concerning an error which has
     occured.  It is a List comprised of the two objects error-class
     and error-string.

     LIST ( error class, error string )

   Error-Class

     A code for the class of the error.

     INDEX

   Error-String

     A text string explaining the error.

     TEXT

   How-Delivered

     A comment on the delivery of a messages, for instance a message
     could be delivered, forwarded, or turned over to general delivery.

     LIST ( TEXT )










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                                                          Specification



   Mailbox

     This is the "address" of a user of the internetwork mail system.
     Mailbox contains information such as net, host, location, and
     local user-id of the recipient of the message.  Some information
     contained in Mailbox may not be necessary for delivery.

     As an example, when one sends a message to someone for the first
     time, he may include many items which are not necessary simply to
     insure delivery.  However, once he gets a reply to this message,
     the reply could contain an Address (as opposed to Mailbox) which
     the user will use from then on.

       A mailbox is a PROPLIST.  A mailbox might contain the following
       name-value pairs:

         name    element  description
         ----    -------  -----------
         IA      INTEGER  internet address
         NET     TEXT     network name
         HOST    TEXT     host name
         USER    TEXT     user name
         CITY    TEXT     city
         COUNTRY TEXT     country
         STATE   TEXT     state
         ZIP     TEXT     zip code
         PHONE   TEXT     phone number

     PROPLIST ( --- )

   Operation

     This names the operation or procedure to be performed.

     TEXT

   Options

     REGULAR for normal delivery, FORWARD for message forwarding,
     GENDEL for general delivery, or other options which may be defined
     later.

     LIST ( TEXT, ... )







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Specification



   Reasons

     These could be mailbox does not exist, mailbox full, etc.

     LIST ( TEXT )

   Stamp

     Each MPM that handles the message must add a unique identifier
     (ihn, see above) to the list.  This will prevent messages from
     being sent back and forth through the internet mail system without
     eventually either being delivered or returned to the sender.

     LIST ( ihn, ihn, ... )

   Trail

     When a message is sent through the internetwork environment, it
     acquires a list of MPMs that have handled the message in "Stamp".
     This list is then carried as "Trail" upon reply or acknowledgment
     of that message. More simply, requests and replies always have a
     "Stamp" and each MPM adds its ihn to this "Stamp."  Replies, in
     addition, have a "Trail" which is the complete "Stamp" of the
     original message.

     LIST ( ihn, ihn, ... )

   Type

     The command type, e.g., request or reply.

     INDEX

 Document

   In this section, we define some objects useful in message document
   headers.  The ones we use are taken from the current ARPANET message
   syntax standard [6,8].

   CC

     When copies of a message are sent to others in addition to the
     addresses in the To object, those to whom the copies are sent will
     have their addresses recorded here.  CC will be a single TEXT
     element.

     TEXT



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                                              Internet Message Protocol
                                                          Specification



   Date

     The date and time are represented according to the International
     Standards Organization (ISO) recommendations [13,14,15].  Taken
     together the ISO recommendations 2014, 3307, and 4031 result in
     the following representation of the date and time:

       yyyy-mm-dd-hh:mm:ss,fff+hh:mm

     Where yyyy is the 4 digit year, mm is the two digit month, dd is
     the two digit day, hh is the two digit hour in 24 hour time, mm is
     the two digit minute, ss is the two digit second, and fff is the
     decimal fraction of the second.  To this basic date and time is
     appended the offset from Greenwich as plus or minus hh hours and
     mm minutes.

     TEXT

   Document-Body

     The document body will contain that portion of the message
     commonly thought of as the text portion.  It will be composed of a
     list of elements.  This will allow transmission of data other than
     pure text if such capabilities are needed.  We can, for instance,
     envision digital voice communication through the transmission of
     BITSTR element, or transmission of graphic data, etc.  Information
     regarding control of such features could be included in the header
     for cooperating sites, or in the body itself but such protocols
     would depend upon agreement among those sites involved.  It is
     expected of course that the majority of messages will contain body
     portions comprised of TEXT elements.

     LIST ( --- )

   Document-Header

     The document header contains the memo header presented to the
     user.  In principle this may be of any style or structure.  In
     this specification it is recommended that a PROPLIST be used and
     that the name-value pairs correspond to the header fields of
     RFC 733 [6].

     PROPLIST ( --- )







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Specification



   From

     The From is meant to be the name of the author of a document.  It
     will be one TEXT element.

     TEXT

   Reply-To

     Sometimes it will be desired to direct the replies of a message to
     some address other than the From or the Sender.  In such a case
     the Reply-To object can be used.

     TEXT

   Sender

     The Sender will contain the address of the individual who sent the
     message. In some cases this is NOT the same as the author of the
     message. Under such a condition, the author should be specified in
     the From object.  The Sender is a single TEXT element.

     TEXT

   Subject

     The subject of the message.

     TEXT

   To

     To identifies the addressees of the message.  The To object is one
     TEXT element.

     TEXT














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                                                          Specification



3.4.  Command

 This section describes the commands which processes in the internet
 message system can use to communicate.  Several aspects of the command
 structure are based on the NSW Transaction Protocol [19].  The
 commands come in pairs, with each request having a corresponding
 reply.

  A command is a list:

   LIST ( mailbox, stamp, type, operation, arguments, error-list )

 The arguments are described generally here and more specifically, if
 necessary, in the description of each command.

   mailbox:  PROPLIST

     This is the "to" specification of the message.  Mailbox takes the
     form of a property list of general information, some of which is
     the essential information for delivery, and some of which could be
     extra information which may be helpful for delivery.  Mailbox is
     different from address in that address is a very specific list
     without extra information.

   stamp:  LIST ( INTEGER, ...  )

     This is a list of the MPMs that have handled the message.  Each
     MPM must add its 32 bit Internet Host Number (ihn) to the LIST.

   type: INDEX

     type=1 a REQUEST operation.

     type=2 a REPLY operation.

     type=3 an ALARM operation. (A high priority message.)

     type=4 a RESPONSE to an alarm operation.

   operation: TEXT

     Operation is the name of the operation or procedure to be
     performed.  This string must be interpreted in an upper/lower case
     independent manner.






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Specification



   arguments: LIST

     This is a list of arguments to the above operation.

   error-list:  LIST

     If message is type 1 or 3 (a request or an alarm):

       LIST ( )  (a zero length list)

     If message is a type 2 or 4 (a response or response to alarm)

       LIST ( error-class, error-string ) indicates what,if any, error
       occured

     error-class: INDEX

       =0: indicates success, no error
       =1: partial results returned.
         This error class is used when several steps are performed by
         one operation and some of them fail.
       =2: failure, resources unavailable.
       =3: failure, user error.
       =4: failure, MPM error. Recoverable.
       =5: failure, MPM error. Fatal.
       =6: User abort requested

     error-string: TEXT

       This is a human readable character string describing the error.

   Possible errors:

             error-string                  error-class

     No errors                                  0
     Command not implemented                    2
     Syntax error, command unrecognized         3
     Syntax error, in arguments                 3
     Server error, try again later              4
     No service available                       5
     User requested abort                       6








[Page 24]                                                         Postel


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                                              Internet Message Protocol
                                                          Specification



 command:  DELIVER

   type:  1

   function:  Sends message to a mailbox

   reply:  The reply is ACKNOWLEDGE

   arguments:  LIST ( options )

     options:  one or more of the following

       "REGULAR"  regular delivery

       "FORWARD"  message forwarding

       "GENDEL"   general delivery

       other options which may be defined later

   argument structure:

     LIST ( LIST ( TEXT, ... ))



























Postel                                                         [Page 25]


                                                             March 1979
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Specification



 command:  ACKNOWLEDGE

   type:  2

   function:  reply to DELIVER

   arguments: LIST ( tid, trail, answer, reasons, how-delivered )

     tid:  tid of the originating message

     trail:   the stamp from the deliver command

     answer:  yes if delivered successfully,
              no if error in delivery.

     reasons:  if the answer is yes, the reason is "ok", if the answer
     is no the reason could be one of "no such user", "no such host",
     "no such network", "address ambiguous", or a similar response

     how-delivered:  one or more of the following:

       "FORWARD"  message was accepted for forwarding

       "GENDEL"   message was accepted for general delivery

       "ACCEPT"   message was accepted for normal delivery

       other types of delivery may be defined later

   argument structure:

     LIST ( LIST ( INDEX, INTEGER ),
            LIST ( INTEGER, ...  ),
            BOOLEAN,
            LIST ( TEXT ),
            LIST ( TEXT ))














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                                              Internet Message Protocol
                                                          Specification



 command:  PROBE

   type:  1

   function:  finds out if specified mailbox (specified in mailbox of
   the command) exists at a host

   reply:  the reply is RESPONSE

   arguments:  LIST ( --none-- )

   argument structure:

     LIST ( )




































Postel                                                         [Page 27]


                                                             March 1979
Internet Message Protocol
Specification



 command:  RESPONSE

   type:  2

   function:  reply to PROBE

   arguments:  LIST ( tid, trail, answer, address OR reasons )

     tid:  the tid which came from the originating PROBE

     trail:  the stamp which came from the originating PROBE

     answer:  Yes if mailbox found, or no for invalid mailbox

     if answer is yes the fourth argument is address
     if answer is no it is reasons

     address:  a specific address in the network

     reasons:  a reason why mailbox is invalid

       Possible reasons include:

         "Mailbox doesn't exist"

         "Mailbox full"

         "Mailbox has moved, try this new location", address

           address is a new address to try

   argument structure:

     if answer is yes

       LIST ( LIST ( INDEX, INTEGER ),
              LIST ( INTEGER, ... ),
              BOOLEAN,
              PROPLIST )

     if answer is no

       LIST ( LIST ( INDEX, INTEGER ),
              LIST ( INTEGER, ... ),
              BOOLEAN,
              LIST ( TEXT ))




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                                              Internet Message Protocol
                                                          Specification



   command:  CANCEL

     type:  3

     function:  abort request for specified transaction

     reply:  The reply is CANCELED

     arguments:  LIST ( tid )

       tid of transaction to be cancelled

     argument structure:

       LIST ( LIST ( INDEX, INTEGER ))



































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Specification



   command:  CANCELED

     type:  4

     function:  reply to CANCEL

     arguments:  LIST ( tid, trail, answer )

       tid:  tid of transaction to be cancelled

       trail:  the stamp of the CANCEL command

       answer:  yes if the command was canceled, no if not.

     argument structure:

       LIST ( LIST ( INDEX, INTEGER ),
              LIST ( INTEGER, ... ),
              BOOLEAN )































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                                                          Specification



 To summarize again, a command consists of a LIST of the following
 objects:

   name        element
   ----        -------
   mailbox     PROPLIST
   stamp       LIST ( INTEGER, ... )
   type        INDEX
   operation   TEXT
   arguments   LIST ( --- )
   error       LIST ( INDEX, TEXT )

3.5.  Document

 The actual document follows the command list.  It contains a header
 which usually contains such information as From, To, Date, CC, etc.;
 and the actual body of the message.  The message delivery system does
 not depend on the document.  The following section should be taken as
 a recommendation for common practice, not as a requirement.

 Document Header

   For the same reason that it is impossible to for see the many forms
   that intranet addresses will take, standardizing of document headers
   would also be a mistake. The approach we suggest is to lay the
   groundwork for a set of basic document header functions and provide
   for enough extensibility to allow nets to add whatever header
   features they desire.  Features added in this fashion, however, may
   not be understood by other networks.  It is suggested that subset
   defined here be implemented by all networks.

   This subset is taken from the current ARPANET standard for message
   headers in the text oriented computer message system [6,8].

   The document header will precede the document body portion of the
   message and will consist of a proplist data element.  The document
   header is meant to be used by individual networks to tailor the
   header to suit their individual needs.  As an example, consider the
   ARPA network.  Typically, the receiver's name is taken to be his
   network address.  It often prints in the document header in just
   that form: Frank@SITEX.  Such a salutation is unacceptable in some
   more formal modes of communication.  Some network might choose to
   place into header proplist the name-value pair ("SALUTATION:", "Mr.
   Frank Hacker").  Upon receipt of the message, the document handling
   program would then be able to scan the header proplist looking for
   such a pair and so be able to correctly address the recipient by
   name instead of by network address.  However, other networks or



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Specification



   sites within the network may not understand such specific
   information.  Under such a condition it should be ignored.

   The minimum header is a PROPLIST of the following name-value pairs:

     Name     Value
     ----     -----
     DATE     TEXT
     FROM     TEXT

   A normal header is a PROPLIST containing the following name-value
   pairs:

     Name     Value
     ----     -----
     DATE     TEXT
     SENDER   TEXT
     FROM     TEXT
     TO       TEXT
     CC       TEXT
     SUBJECT  TEXT

 Document Body

   The Body of the message is just a sequence of data elements which
   contains the actual document.  Much of the time this will be a
   single TEXT element, but for some applications other data elements
   may be utilized.

   LIST ( --- )




















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                                                          Specification



3.6.  Message Structure

 An internet message is composed of three parts.  The first is the tid
 which identifies the transaction; the second is the Command List; and
 the third part is the Document List, which is itself comprised of a
 Document-Header and a Document-Body.

 When shipped between two MPMs, a message will take the form of a LIST:

   Message is:

     LIST ( tid, Command-List, Document-List )

   It is convenient to batch several messages together shipping them as
   a unit from one MPM to another.  Such a group of messages is called
   a message-bag.

   A message-bag will be a LIST of Messages, each Message is of the
   form described above.

     Thus, a message-bag is:

       LIST ( Message1, Message2, ... )

 Message Sharing

   When messages are batched for delivery, it may often be the case
   that the same Document will be sent to more than one recipient.
   Since the Document portion can usually be expected to be the major
   parts of the message, much repeated data would be sent if a copy of
   the Mail for each recipient were to be shipped in the message-bag.

   To avoid this redundancy, messages are assembled in the message-bag
   so that actual data appears first and references to it appear later
   in the message-bag.  Since each message has a unique tid, the
   references will indicate the tid of the actual data.  In this sense,
   all references to copied data may be thought of as pointing earlier
   in the message-bag.  The data to be retrieved can be thought of as
   indexed by tid.  Note that the semantics require such references to
   point to data already seen.

   When a portion is Shared, that portion is determined by its position
   within a message, i.e., if the Command list was to be Shared, then
   its position within a Message would contain the tid of the message
   already seen whose Command list was identical to it.  The same is
   true of the Document Header and the Document Body.  Only a complete
   Command, Header, or Body may be Shared, never a partial one.



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Specification



   If an encryption scheme is used, that portion of the message which
   is encrypted can not be shared.  This is due to the fact that
   encrypting keys will be specific between two individuals.

 Internal Message Organization

   The tid

     This is the transaction identifier.  It is assigned by the
     originating MPM.

   The Command List

     The command-list is a LIST which contains two elements, content
     and command.

     Content is one item of element type INDEX.  If content=0, the item
     is not shared and the next element of the LIST is the command.  If
     content=1 the item is shared.  In this case, the second element
     will contain the tid of the command to share from.  The tid must
     be of a prior message in the current message-bag.  Other values of
     content may be defined later for different data structures.

     Thus, command-list is:

       LIST ( content, tid )       if content=1

     Or,

       LIST ( content, command )    if content=0

     content is:

       INDEX     which is 0 if there is no sharing
                   and is 1 if sharing occurs

     tid is:

       the tid of the message to be shared from

     command is:

       LIST ( mailbox, stamp, type, operation, arguments, error-list )

   The document-list

     The document portion of an internet message is optional and when
     present is comprised of a LIST containing two elements:


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                                                          Specification



       document-list is:

         LIST ( header-list, body-list )

     While either the header-list or the body-list may be shared, both
     elements must appear in the m.

   The document-header

     The header-list will be a List which will always contain two
     elements.  The first element will be content to indicate whether
     or not the header is to be shared.  The second element will either
     be the tid of the header to be copied (if content=1) or it will be
     the document-header (which is a PROPLIST) containing the actual
     header information (if content=0). The tid must point to a
     document-header already seen in the message-bag.

     The header-list is either:

       LIST ( content, tid )                if content=1

     Or,

       LIST ( content, document-header )     if content=0

     document-header is:

       PROPLIST which contains header information

   The document-body

     The body-list will be a LIST of two elements.  The first element
     will again be content, indicating whether or not the body is to be
     shared.  If it is shared, the second element will be tid
     indicating which body to copy.  This tid must be of a message
     already seen in the message-bag.  If content indicates no sharing,
     then the second item is a document-body.

     body-list is:

       LIST ( content, tid )           if content=1

     Or,

       LIST ( content, document-body )  if content=0





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Specification



     document-body is:

       LIST ( items comprising the body ... )

 Message Fields

   message := ( tid, command-list, document-list )

   tid := ( tn, ihn )

   command-list := ( content, command )

   command := ( mailbox, stamp, type, operation,
                arguments, error-list )

   document-list := ( header-list, body-list )

   header-list := ( content, document-header )

   body-list := ( content, document-body )

3.7.  MPM Organization

 Introduction

   The heart of the internet message system is the MPM which is
   responsible for routing and delivering message between the networks.
   Each network must have at least one MPM.  These MPMs are connected
   together, and internet mail is always transferred along channels
   between them.  The system interfaces with the already existent local
   message system.

   Since the local network message system may be very different from
   the internet system, special programs may be necessary to convert
   incoming internet messages to the local format.  Likewise, messages
   outgoing to other networks may be converted to the internet format.

 The MPM

   Messages in the internet mail system are shipped in "bags," each bag
   containing one or more messages.  Each bag is addressed to a
   specific MPM and contains messages for the hosts on that MPM's
   network.

   Each MPM is expected to implement functions which will allow it to
   deliver local messages it receives and to forward non-local ones to
   other MPMs presumably closer to the message's destination.



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                                                          Specification



   Loosely, each MPM can be separated into five components:

     1--Acceptor

       Receives incoming Message-Bags, from other MPMs, from UIPs, or
       from conversion programs.

     2--Message-Bag Processor

       Splits a Bag into these three portions:

         a.    Local Host Messages
         b.    Local Net Messages
         c.    Foreign Net Messages

     3--Local Net Delivery

       Delivers local net and local host messages, may call on
       conversion program.

     4--Foreign Net Router

       Creation of new Message-Bags for forwarding to other MPMs,
       determines route.

     5--Foreign Net Shipper

       Activates foreign shipping channels and ships Message-Bag to
       foreign MPMs. Performs data compression while shipping bags.

   All of these components can be thought of as independent.  Of the
   five, the Acceptor, the Local-Net Delivery, and the Message-Bag
   Processor are fully self-contained and communicate with each other
   only through a queue, the Bag-Input Queue.  The function of the
   Acceptor is to await incoming Message-Bags and to insert them into
   the Bag-Input Queue.

   That queue is the input to the Message-Bag Processor component which
   will separate and deliver suitable portions of the Message-Bags it
   retrieves from the queue to one of three queues:

     a.    Local-Host Queue
     b.    Local-Net Queue
     c.    Foreign Net Queue

   When a MPM decides to forward a message to another MPM, it must add
   its own identification (i.e., its ihn) to the stamp field of the
   command.  The stamp then becomes a record of the route the message


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Specification



   has taken.  An MPM should examine the stamp field to see if the
   message is in a routing loop.  Some commands require the return of
   the stamp as a trail in the matching reply command.

   All of these queues have as elements complete Message-Bags (some of
   which may have been portions of the original Bag).

   The Local-Host and Local-Net queues serve as input to the Local-Net
   Delivery process.  This component is responsible for delivering
   messages to its local host and other hosts on its local net to which
   it is connected.  It must be capable of handling whatever error
   conditions the local net might return, including the ability to
   retransmit.  It may call on conversion program to reformat the
   messages into a form the local protocol will accept.  This will
   probably involve such things as copying shared information.

   The other two processes are more closely coupled.  The Foreign Net
   Router takes its input Bags from the Foreign Net Queue.  From the
   internal information it contains, it determines which one of the
   MPMs to which it is connected should receive the Bag.

   It then places the Bag along with the routing information into the
   Shippable Mail Queue.  The Foreign Net Shipper retrieves it from
   that queue and transmits it across a channel to the intended foreign
   MPM.

   The Foreign Net Router should be capable of receiving external input
   to its routing information table.  This may come from the Foreign
   Net Shipper in the case of a channel going down, requiring a
   decision to either postpone delivery or to determine a new route.

   The Router is responsible for maintaining sufficient topological
   information to determine where to forward any incoming Message-Bag.
   Decisions concerning the return of undeliverable Bags are made by
   the Router.

   It should be stressed here that message delivery should be reliable.
   In the event that delivery is impossible, the message should be
   returned to the sender along with information regarding the reason
   for not delivering it.

 Implementation Recommendations

   Transaction numbers can be assigned sequentially with wrap around
   when the highest value is reached.  This should ensure that no
   message with a particular transaction number from this source is in
   the network when another instance of this transaction number is
   chosen.


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                                                          Specification



3.8.  Interfaces

 User Interface

   It is assumed that the interface between the MPM and the UIP
   provides for passing data structures which represent the document
   portion of the message.  In addition this interface must pass the
   delivery address information (which becomes the information in the
   mailbox field of the command).  It is weakly assumed that the
   information is passed between the UIP and the MPM via shared files,
   but this is not the only possible mechanism.  These two processes
   may be more strongly coupled (e.g., by sharing memory), or less
   strongly coupled (e.g., by communicating via logical channels).

 Communication Interface

   It is assumed here that the MPM use an underlying communication
   system, and TCP [20] has been taken as the model.  Again, this is
   not intended to limit the implementation choices, other forms of
   interprocess communication are allowed and other types of physical
   interconnection are permitted.  One might even use dial telephone
   calls to interconnect MPMs (using suitable protocols to provide
   reliable communication).



























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                       4.  EXAMPLES & SCENARIOS

Example 1:  Message Format

 Suppose we want to send the following message:

   Date: 1979-03-29-11:46-08:00
   From: Jon Postel <Postel@ISIB>
   Subject: Meeting Thursday
   To: Dave Crocker <DCrocker@Rand-Unix>
   CC: Mamie

   Dave:

   Please mark your calendar for our meeting Thursday at 3 pm.

   --jon.

 It will be encoded in the structured format.  The following will
 present successive steps in the top down generation of this message.

   1.  message

   2.  ( tid, command-list, document-list )

   3.  ( ( tn, ihn ),
       ( content, command ),
       ( header-list, body-list ) )

   4.  ( ( tn, ihn ),
         ( content,
           ( mailbox, stamp, type, operation,
             arguments, error-list ) ),
         ( ( content, document-header ),
           ( content, document-body ) ) )

   5.  ( ( 37, 167772404 ),
       ( 0, (
              ( IA: 167772359, NET: arpa, HOST: rand-unix,
                USER: DCrocker ),
              ( 167772404 ),
              1
              DELIVER
              ( ( REGULAR ) ),
              ( ) ) ),
       ( ( 0, (
                Date: 1979-03-29-11:46-08:00
                From: Jon Postel <Postel@ISIB>
                Subject: Meeting Thursday


Postel                                                         [Page 41]


                                                             March 1979
Internet Message Protocol
Examples & Scenarios



                To: Dave Crocker <DCrocker@Rand-Unix>
                CC: Mamie ) ),
         ( 0, ( Dave:

                Please mark your calendar for our meeting
                Thursday at 3 pm.

                --jon. ) ) ) )


   6.  LIST( LIST( INDEX=37, INTEGER=167772404 ),
             LIST( INDEX=0,
   command         LIST( PROPLIST( IA: 167772359,
                                   NET: arpa,
   mailbox                         HOST: rand-unix,
                                   USER: DCrocker ),
   stamp                 LIST( INTEGER=167772404 ),
   type                  INDEX=1
   operation             TEXT="DELIVER"
   arguments             LIST( LIST( TEXT="REGULAR" )),
   error-list            LIST( ) ) ),
             LIST( LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-header       PROPLIST(
                           DATE: 1979-03-29-11:46-08:00
                           FROM: Jon Postel <Postel@ISIB>
                           SUBJECT: Meeting Thursday
                           TO: Dave Crocker <DCrocker@Rand-Unix>
                           CC: Mamie ) ),
                   LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-body         LIST( TEXT=
                           "Dave:

                           Please mark your calendar for
                           our meeting Thursday at 3 pm.

                           --jon." ) ) ) )














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March 1979
                                              Internet Message Protocol
                                                   Examples & Scenarios



Example 2:  Delivery and Acknowledgment

 The following is four views of the message of example 1 during the
 successive transmission from the origination MPM, through a relay MPM,
 to the destination MPM, and the return of the acknowledgment, through
 a relay MPM, to the originating MPM.

 +-----------------------------------------------------------------+
 !                          1         2                            !
 ! sending --> originating --> relay --> destination --> receiving !
 !   user          MPM          MPM          MPM            user   !
 !                                                                 !
 !                          4         3                            !
 !             originating <-- relay <-- destination               !
 !                 MPM          MPM          MPM                   !
 +-----------------------------------------------------------------+

                          Transmission Path

                              Figure 6.






























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Examples & Scenarios



 1.  Between the originating MPM and the relay MPM.

       LIST( LIST( INDEX=37, INTEGER=167772404 ),
             LIST( INDEX=0,
   command         LIST( PROPLIST( IA: 167772359,
                                   NET: arpa,
   mailbox                         HOST: rand-unix,
                                   USER: DCrocker ),
   stamp                 LIST( INTEGER=167772404 ),
   type                  INDEX=1
   operation             TEXT="DELIVER"
   arguments             LIST( LIST( TEXT="REGULAR" )),
   error-list            LIST( ) ) ),
             LIST( LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-header       PROPLIST(
                           DATE: 1979-03-29-11:46-08:00
                           FROM: Jon Postel <Postel@ISIB>
                           SUBJECT: Meeting Thursday
                           TO: Dave Crocker <DCrocker@Rand-Unix>
                           CC: Mamie ) ),
                   LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-body         LIST( TEXT=
                           "Dave:

                           Please mark your calendar for
                           our meeting Thursday at 3 pm.

                           --jon." ) ) ) )

     The originating MPM sends the message of example 1 to a relay MPM.




















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                                                   Examples & Scenarios



 2.  Between the relay MPM and the destination MPM.

       LIST( LIST( INDEX=37, INTEGER=167772404 ),
             LIST( INDEX=0,
   command         LIST( PROPLIST( IA: 167772359,
                                   NET: arpa,
   mailbox                         HOST: rand-unix,
                                   USER: DCrocker ),
   stamp                 LIST( INTEGER=167772404,
                               INTEGER=167772246 ),
   type                  INDEX=1
   operation             TEXT="DELIVER"
   arguments             LIST( LIST( TEXT="REGULAR" )),
   error-list            LIST( ) ) ),
             LIST( LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-header       PROPLIST(
                           DATE: 1979-03-29-11:46-08:00
                           FROM: Jon Postel <Postel@ISIB>
                           SUBJECT: Meeting Thursday
                           TO: Dave Crocker <DCrocker@Rand-Unix>
                           CC: Mamie ) ),
                   LIST( INDEX=0,
   document-body         LIST( TEXT=
                           "Dave:

                           Please mark your calendar for
                           our meeting Thursday at 3 pm.

                           --jon." ) ) ) )

     The relay MPM adds its ihn to the stamp, but otherwise the message
     is unchanged.


















Postel                                                         [Page 45]


                                                             March 1979
Internet Message Protocol
Examples & Scenarios



 3.  Between the destination MPM and the relay MPM.

       LIST( LIST( INDEX=1993, INTEGER=167772359 ),
             LIST( INDEX=0,
   command         LIST( PROPLIST( IA: 167772404,
   mailbox                         USER: *MPM* ),
   stamp                 LIST( INTEGER=167772359 ),
   type                  INDEX=2
   operation             TEXT="ACKNOWLEDGE"
   arguments             LIST( LIST( INDEX=37,
    tid                              INTEGER=167772404 ),
                               LIST( INTEGER=167772404,
    trail                            INTEGER=167772246,
                                     INTEGER=167772359 ),
    answer                     BOOLEAN=TRUE,
    reason                     LIST( TEXT="OK" ),
    how-delivered              LIST( TEXT="ACCEPT" ) ),
   error-list            LIST( INDEX=0,
                               TEXT="No Errors") ),
   document  LIST( ) )

     The destination MPM delivers the message to the user's UIP, and
     composes an acknowledgment.  The acknowledgment is addressed to
     the originating MPM.  Note that the trail is the stamp of the
     incoming message plus the ihn of the destination MPM.

























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                                                   Examples & Scenarios



 4.  Between the relay MPM and the originating MPM.

       LIST( LIST( INDEX=1993, INTEGER=167772359 ),
             LIST( INDEX=0,
   command         LIST( PROPLIST( IA: 167772404,
   mailbox                         USER: *MPM* ),
   stamp                 LIST( INTEGER=167772359
                               INTEGER=167772246),
   type                  INDEX=2
   operation             TEXT="ACKNOWLEDGE"
   arguments             LIST( LIST( INDEX=37,
    tid                              INTEGER=167772404 ),
                               LIST( INTEGER=167772404,
    trail                            INTEGER=167772246,
                                     INTEGER=167772359 ),
    answer                     BOOLEAN=TRUE,
    reason                     LIST( TEXT="OK" ),
    how-delivered              LIST( TEXT="ACCEPT" ) ),
   error-list            LIST( INDEX=0,
                               TEXT="No Errors") ),
   document  LIST( ) )

     The relay MPM adds its ihn to the stamp and forwards the
     acknowledgment.


























Postel                                                         [Page 47]


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[Page 48]                                                         Postel


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                                              Internet Message Protocol



                               GLOSSARY



1822
         BBN Report 1822, "The Specification of the Interconnection of
         a Host and an IMP".  The specification of interface between a
         host and the ARPANET.

Command List
         The part of a message used by the MPMs to determine the
         processing action to be taken.

datagram
         A logical unit of data, in particular an internet datagram is
         the unit of data transfered between the internet module and a
         higher level module.

Destination
         The destination address, an internet header datagram protocol
         field.

Document List
         The part of the message created by or delivered to a user.

header
         Control information at the beginning of a message, segment,
         datagram, packet or block of data.

IMP
         The Interface Message Processor, the packet switch of the
         ARPANET.

Internet Address
         A four octet (32 bit) source or destination address consisting
         of a Network field and a Local Address field.

internet datagram
         The unit of data exchanged between a pair of internet modules
         (includes the internet header).

Local Address
         The address of a host within a network.  The actual mapping of
         an internet local address on to the host addresses in a
         network is quite general, allowing for many to one mappings.






Postel                                                         [Page 49]


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Internet Message Protocol
Glossary



message
         The unit of information transmitted between users of message
         systems.  As transmitted between MPMs a message consists of a
         Transaction Identifier, a Command List, and a Document List.

module
         An implementation, usually in software, of a protocol or other
         procedure.

MPM
         A Message Processing Module, the process which implements this
         internet message protocol.

octet
         An eight bit byte.

Rest
         The 3 octet (24 bit) local address portion of an Internet
         Address.

RTP
         Real Time Protocol:  A host-to-host protocol for communication
         of time critical information.

Source
         The source address, an internet header field.

TCP
         Transmission Control Protocol:  A host-to-host protocol for
         reliable communication in internetwork environments.

Transaction Identifier
         The unique identifier of a message.

Type of Service
         An internet datagram protocol header field which indicates the
         type (or quality) of service for this internet packet.

UIP
         A User Interface Program, a program which presents message
         data to a user and accepts message data from a user.  A
         program which interacts with the user in the composition and
         examination of messages.

XNET
         A cross-net debugging protocol.




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                                              Internet Message Protocol



                              REFERENCES



[1]   Barber, D., and J. Laws, "A Basic Mail Scheme for EIN," INWG 192,
     February 1979.

[2]   Bhushan, A., K. Progran, R. Tomlinson, and J. White,
     "Standardizing Network Mail Headers," RFC 561, NIC 18516, 5
     September 1973.

[3]   Bolt Beranek and Newman, "Specification for the Interconnection of
     a Host and an IMP," BBN Technical Report 1822, May 1978 (Revised).

[4]   Braaten, O., "Introduction to a Mail Protocol," Norwegian
     Computing Center, INWG 180, August 1978.

[5]   Cerf, V., "The Catenet Model for Internetworking," Information
     Processing Techniques Office, Defense Advanced Research Projects
     Agency, IEN 48, July 1978.

[6]   Crocker, D., J. Vittal, K. Progran, and D. Henderson, "Standard
     for the Format of ARPA Network Text Messages," RFC 733, NIC 41952,
     21 November 1977.

[7]   Crocker, D., E. Szurkowski, and D. Farber, "Components of a
     Channel-independent Memo Transmission System," Department of
     Electrical Engineering, University of Delaware,, February 1979.

[8]   Feinler, E. and J. Postel, eds., "ARPANET Protocol Handbook,"
     NIC 7104, for the Defense Communications Agency by the Network
     Information Center of SRI International, Menlo Park, California,
     Revised January 1978.

[9]   Harrenstien, K., "Field Addressing," ARPANET Message, SRI
     International, October 1977.

[10]  Haverty, J., "MSDTP -- Message Services Data Transmission
     Protocol," RFC 713, NIC 34739, April 1976.

[11]  Haverty, J., "Thoughts on Interactions in Distributed Services,"
     RFC 722, NIC 36806, 16 September 1976.

[12]  Haverty, J., D. Henderson, and D. Oestreicher, "Proposed
     Specification of an Inter-site Message Protocol," 8 July 1975.

[13]  ISO-2014, "Writing of calendar dates in all-numeric form,"
     Recommendation 2014, International Organization for
     Standardization, 1975.


Postel                                                         [Page 51]


                                                             March 1979
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References



[14]  ISO-3307, "Information Interchange -- Representations of time of
     the day," Recommendation 3307, International Organization for
     Standardization, 1975.

[15]  ISO-4031, "Information Interchange -- Representation of local time
     differentials," Recommendation 4031, International Organization
     for Standardization, 1978.

[16]  Myer, T., and D. Henderson, "Message Transmission Protocol,"
     RFC 680, NIC 32116, 30 April 1975.

[17]  Postel, J.  "Internetwork Datagram Protocol, Version 4," USC
     Information Sciences Institute, IEN 80, February 1979.

[18]  Postel, J.  "NSW Data Representation (NSWB8)," IEN 39, May 1978.

[19]  Postel, J.  "NSW Transaction Protocol (NSWTP)," IEN 38, May 1978.

[20]  Postel, J.  "Transmission Control Protocol, TCP, Version 4," USC
     Information Sciences Institute, IEN 81, February 1979.

[21]  Postel, J., "Assigned Numbers," RFC 750, NIC 45500,
     26 September 1978.

[22]  Postel, J., "Message System Transition Plan," JBP 64,
     USC-Information Sciences Institute, February 1979.

[23]  Rivest, R. L.  "A Method for Obtaining Digital Signatures and
     Public-Key Cryptosystems"  Communications of the ACM, Vol. 21,
     Number 2, February 1978.

[24]  Shoch, J., "A Note On Inter-Network Naming, Addressing, and
     Routing," Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, IEN 19, January 1978.

[25]  Thomas, R., "Providing Mail Services for NSW Users," BBN NSW
     Working Note 24, Bolt Beranek and Newman, October 1978.

[26]  White, J., "A Proposed Mail Protocol," RFC 524, NIC 17140, 13 June
     1973.

[27]  White, J., "Description of a Multi-Host Journal," NIC 23144,
     30 May 1974.

[28]  White, J., "Journal Subscription Service," NIC 23143, 28 May 1974.






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                              APPENDICES

A.  Encryption

 It would be straightforward to add the capability to have the document
 portion of messages either wholly or partially encrypted.  The
 approach is to define an additional basic data element to carry
 encrypted data.  The data within this element could be composed of
 other elements, but that could only be perceived after the data was
 decrypted.


                     +------+------+------+------+-------
   9  Encrypt        !  9   !     octet count    ! Data ...
                     +------+------+------+------+--------

 Element code 9 (ENCRYPT) is Encrypt.  The format is the one octet type
 code, the three octet type count, and count octets of data.  Use of
 this element indicates that the data it contains is encrypted. The
 encryption scheme is yet to be decided but will probably be the Public
 Key Encryption technique [23] due to the capacity for coded
 signatures.

 To process this, the user is asked for the appropriate key the first
 time an encryption block is seen for a particular message.  The
 encrypted data is then decrypted.  The data thus revealed will be in
 the form of complete data type fields.  Encryption cannot occur over a
 partial field.  The revealed data is then processed normally.

 Note that there is no reason why all fields of a document could not be
 encrypted including all document header information such as From,
 Date, etc.



















Postel                                                         [Page 53]


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Internet Message Protocol
Appendices



B.  Data Compression

 When message-bags are shipped between MPMs the data should be
 compressed according to the following scheme:

   shipping-unit := compression-type message-bag

   compression-type := A one octet compression type indicator.

     compression-type value   description
     ----------------------   -----------
                0             no compression used
                1             basic compression

   basic compression

     This basic compression procedure is the same as that defined for
     use with the ARPANET FTP [8].  Three types of compression-units
     may be formed, sequence-units, replication-units, and
     filler-units.  The data is formed into a series of
     compression-units independent of the structure or object and
     element boundaries.

     sequence-unit

       A sequence-unit is a one octet flag and count followed by that
       many data octets.

         +-+-------+--------+--------+----
         !0!   n   !     n data octets ...
         +-+-------+--------+--------+----

       The flag and count octet has its high order bit zero and the
       remaining bits indicate the count (in the range 0 to 127) of
       following data octets.

     replication-unit

       A replication-unit is a one octet flag and count followed by one
       data octet, which is to be replicated count times.

         +--+------+--------+
         !10!   n  !   data !
         +--+------+--------+

       The flag and count octet has its high order two bits equal
       one-zero and the remaining six bits indicate the count (in the
       range 0 to 63) of number of time to replicate the data octet.


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                                                             Appendices



     filler-unit

       A filler-unit is a one octet flag and count, indicating that a
       filler octet is to be inserted count times.

         +--+------+
         !11!   n  !
         +--+------+

       The flag and count octet has its high order two bits equal
       one-one and the remaining six bits indicate the count (in the
       range 0 to 63) of number of time to insert the filler octet.

       The filler octet is zero, the octet with all bits zero.




































Postel                                                         [Page 55]


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