Network Working Group                                        J. Houttuin
Request for Comments: 1615                              RARE Secretariat
RARE Technical Report: 9                                      J. Craigie
Category: Informational                               Joint Network Team
                                                               May 1994


                Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Scope

  In the context of a European pilot for an X.400(88) messaging
  service, this document compares such a service to its X.400(84)
  predecessor.  It is aimed at a technical audience with a knowledge of
  electronic mail in general and X.400 protocols in particular.

Abstract

  This document compares X.400(88) to X.400(84) and describes what
  problems can be anticipated in the migration, especially considering
  the migration from the existing X.400(84) infrastructure created by
  the COSINE MHS project to an X.400(88) infrastructure. It not only
  describes the technical complications, but also the effect the
  transition will have on the end users, especially concerning
  interworking between end users of the 84 and the 88 services.

Table of Contents

  1. New Functionality                                              2
  2. OSI Supporting Layers                                          3
  3. General Extension Mechanism                                    5
  4. Interworking                                                   5
     4.1. Mixed 84/88 Domains                                       5
     4.2. Generation of OR-Name Extensions from X.400(84)           6
     4.3. Distribution List Interworking with X.400(84)             8
     4.4. P2 Interworking                                          10
  5. Topology for Migration                                        11
  6. Conclusion                                                    12
  7. Security Considerations                                       13
  Appendix A - DL-expanded and Redirected Messages in X.400(84)    14
  Appendix B - Bibliography                                        14
  Appendix C - MHS Terminology                                     15



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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


  Appendix D - Abbreviations                                       16
  Authors' Addresses                                               17

1. New Functionality

  Apart from the greater maturity of the standard and the fact that it
  makes proper use of the Presentation Layer, the principal features of
  most use to the European R&D world in X.400(88) not contained in
  X.400(84) are:

   - A powerful mechanism for arbitrarily nested Distribution
     Lists including the ability for DL owners to control access
     to their lists and to control the destination of nondelivery
     reports. The current endemic use of DLs in the research
     community makes this a fundamental requirement.

   - The Message Store (MS) and its associated protocol, P7. The
     Message Store provides a server for remote User Agents (UAs)
     on Workstations and PCs enabling messages to be held for
     their recipient, solving the problems of non-continuous
     availability and variability of network addresses of such
     UAs. It provides powerful selection mechanisms allowing the
     user to select messages from the store to be transferred to
     the workstation/PC. This facility is not catered for
     adequately by the P3 protocol of X.400(84) and provides a
     major incentive for transition.

   - Use of X.500 Directories. Support for use of Directory Names
     in MHS will allow a transition from use of O/R Addresses to
     Directory Names when X.500 Directories become widespread,
     thus removing the need for users to know about MHS
     topological addressing components.

   - The provision of message Security services including
     authentication, confidentiality, integrity and non-
     repudiation as well as secure access between MHS components
     may be important for a section of the research community.

   - Redirection of messages, both by the recipient if
     temporarily unable to receive them, and by the originator in
     the event of failure to deliver to the intended recipient.

   - Use of additional message body encodings such as ISO 8613
     ODA (Office Document Architecture) reformattable documents or
     proprietary word processor formats.






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   - Physical Delivery services that cater for the delivery of an
     electronic message on a physical medium (such as paper)
     through the normal postal delivery services to a recipient
     who (presumably) does not use electronic mail.

   - The use of different body parts. In addition to the
     extensible externally defined body parts, the most common
     types are predefined in the standard.  In order to give end-
     users a real advantage as compared to other technologies, the
     following body-parts should be supported as a minimum:

        - IA5
        - Message
        - G3FAX
        - External
           - General Text
           - Others

     The last bullet should be interpreted as follows: all UAs
     should be configurable to use any type of externally defined
     body part, but as a minimum General Text can be generated and
     read.

   - The use of extended character sets, both in O/R addresses
     and in the General Text extended bodypart. As a minimum, the
     character sets as described in the European profiles will be
     supported. A management domain may choose as an internal
     matter which character sets it wants to support in
     generating, but all user agents must be able to copy (in
     local address books and in replies) any O/R address, even if
     it contains character sets it cannot interpret itself.

2. OSI Supporting Layers

  The development of OSI Upper Layer Architecture since 1984 allows the
  new MHS standards to sit on the complete OSI stack, unlike X.400(84).
  A new definition of the Reliable Transfer Service (RTS), ISO 9066,
  has a mode of operation, Normal-mode, which uses ACSE and the OSI
  Presentation Layer. It also defines another mode compatible with
  X.410(84) RTS that was intended only for interworking with X.400(84)
  systems.

  However, there are differences between the conformance requirements
  of ISO MOTIS and CCITT X.400(88) for mandatory support for the
  complete OSI stack. ISO specify use of Normal-mode RTS as a mandatory
  requirement with X.410-mode RTS as an additional option, whereas
  CCITT require X.410-mode and have Normal-mode optional. The ISO
  standard identifies three MTA types to provide options in RTS modes:



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   - MTA Type A supports only Normal-mode RTS, and provides
     interworking within a PRMD and with other PRMDs (conforming
     to ISO 10021), and with ADMDs which have complete
     implementations of X.400(88) or which conform to ISO 10021.

   - MTA Type B adds to the functionality of MTA type A the
     ability to interwork with ADMDs implementing only the minimal
     requirements of X.400(88), by requiring support for X.410-
     mode RTS in addition to Normal-mode.

   - MTA Type C adds to the functionality of MTA type B the
     ability to interwork with external X.400(84) Management
     Domains (MDs, i.e., PRMDs and ADMDs), by requiring support for
     downgrading (see 5.1) to the X.400(84) P1 protocol.

  The interworking between ISO and CCITT conformant systems is
  summarised in the following table:

                                     CCITT

                           X.400(84)       X.400(88)
                                        minimal   complete
                                         implementation

  ISO 10021/   MTA Type A     N            N         Y
  MOTIS        MTA Type B     N            Y         Y
               MTA Type C     Y            Y         Y

           Table 1: Interworking ISO <-> CCITT systems

  The RTS conformance difference would totally prevent interworking
  between the two versions of the standard if implementations never
  contained more than the minimum requirements for conformance, but in
  practice many 88 implementations will be extensions of 84 systems,
  and will thus support both modes of RTS. (At the moment we are aware
  of only one product that doesn't support Normal mode.)

  Both ISO and CCITT standards require P7 (and P3) to be supported
  directly over the Remote Operations Service (ROS), ISO 9072, and use
  Normal-mode presentation (and not X.410-mode). Both allow optionally
  ROS over RTS (in case the Transport Service doesn't provide an
  adequately reliable service), again using Normal-mode and not X.410-
  mode.

  CCITT made both Normal and X.410 mode mandatory in its X.400(92)
  version, and it is expected that the 94 version will have the X.410
  mode as an option only.




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3. General Extension Mechanism

  One of the major assets in ISO 10021/X.400(88) is the extension
  mechanism. This is used to carry most of the extensions defined in
  these standards, but its principal benefit will be in reducing the
  trauma of transitions to future versions of the standards. Provided
  that implementations of the 88 standards do not try to place
  restrictions on the values that may be present, any future extension
  will be relayed by these implementations when appropriate (i.e., when
  the extension is not critical), thus providing a painless migration
  to new versions of the standards.

4. Interworking

4.1. Mixed 84/88 Domains

  ISO 10021-6/X.419(88) defines rules for interworking with X.400(84),
  called downgrading. As X.400 specifies the interconnection of MDs,
  these rules define the actions necessary by an X.400(88) MD to
  communicate with an X.400(84) MD. The interworking rules thus apply
  at domain boundaries. Although it would not be difficult to extend
  these to rules to convert Internal Trace formats which might be
  thought a sufficient addition to allow mixed X.400(84)/X.400(88)
  domains, the problems involved in attempting to define mixed 84/88
  domains are not quite that simple.

  The principle problem is in precisely defining the standard that
  would be used between MTAs within an X.400(84) domain, as X.400(84)
  only defines the interconnection of MDs. In practice, MTA
  implementations either use X.400(84) unmodified, or X.400(84) with
  the addition of Internal Trace from the first MOTIS DIS (DIS 8883),
  or support MOTIS as defined in DIS 8505, DIS 8883, and DIS 9065. The
  second option is recommended in the NBS Implementors Agreements, and
  the third option is in conformance with the CEN/CENELEC MHS
  Functional Standard [1], which requires as a minimum tolerance of all
  "original MOTIS" protocol extensions. An 84 MD must decide which of
  these options it will adopt, and then require all its MTAs to adopt
  (or at least be compatible with) this choice. No doubt this is one of
  the reasons for the almost total absence currently of mixed- vendor
  X.400(84) MDs in the European R&D MHS community. The fact that none
  of these three options for communication between MTAs within a domain
  have any status within the standardisation bodies accounts for the
  absence from ISO 10021/X.400(88) of detailed rules for interworking
  within mixed 84/88 domains.

  Use of the first option, unmodified X.400(84), carries the danger of
  undetectable routing loops occurring. Although these can only occur
  if MTAs have inconsistent routing tables, the absence of standardised



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  methods of disseminating routing information makes this a possibility
  which if it occurred might cause severe disruption before being
  detected. The only addition to the interworking rules needed for this
  case is the deletion of Internal Trace when downgrading a message.

  Use of the second option, X.400(84) plus Internal Trace, allows the
  detection and prevention of routing loops. Details of the mapping
  between original-MOTIS Internal Trace and the Internal Trace of ISO
  10021 can be found in Annex A. This should be applied not only when
  downgrading from 88 to 84, but also in reverse when an 84 MPDU is
  received by the 84/88 Interworking MTA. If the 84 domain properly
  implements routing loop detection algorithms, then this will allow
  completely consistent reception of messages by an 84 recipient even
  after DL expansion or Redirection within that domain (but see also
  section 5.3).  Unfortunately, the first DIS MOTIS like X.400(84) left
  far too much to inference, so not all implementors may have
  understood that routing loop detection algorithms must only consider
  that part of the trace after the last redirection flag in the trace
  sequence.

  Use of the third option, tolerance of all original-MOTIS extensions,
  would in principle allow a still higher level of interworking between
  the 84 and 88 systems. However, no implementations are known which do
  more than relay the syntax of original-MOTIS extensions: there is no
  capability to generate these protocol elements or ability to
  correctly interpret their semantics.

  The choice between the first two options for mixed domains can be
  left to individual management domains. It has no impact on other
  domains provided the topology recommended in section 5 is adopted.

4.2. Generation of OR-Name Extensions from X.400(84)

  The interworking rules defined in DIS 10021-6/X.419 Annex B allow for
  delivery of 88 messages to 84 recipients, but do not make any 88
  extensions available to 84 originators. In general this is an
  adequate strategy. Most 88 extensions provide optional services or
  have sensible defaults. The exception to this is the OR-Name
  extensions. These fall into three categories: the new CommonName
  attribute; fifteen new attributes for addressing physical delivery
  recipients; and alternative Teletex (T.61) encodings for all
  attributes that were defined as Printable Strings. Without some
  mechanism to generate these attributes, 84 originators are unable to
  address 88 recipients with OR-Addresses containing these attributes.
  Such a mechanism is defined in RARE Technical Report 3 ([2]), "X.400
  1988 to 1984 downgrading".





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  Common-name appears likely to be a widely used attribute because it
  remedies a serious deficiency in the X.400(84) OR-Name: it provides
  an attribute suitable for naming Distribution Lists and roles, and
  even individuals where the constraints of the 84 personal-name
  structure are inappropriate or undesirable. As 84 originators will no
  doubt wish to be able to address 88 DLs (and roles), [2] defines a
  Domain Defined Attribute (DDA) to enable generation of common-name by
  84 originators. This consists of a DDA with its type set to "common-
  name" and its value containing the Printable String encoding to be
  set into the 88 common-name attribute.

  This requires that all European R&D MHS 88 MTAs capable of
  interworking with 84 systems shall be able to map the value of
  "common-name" DDA in OR-Names received from 84 systems to the 88
  standard attribute extension component common-name, and vice versa.

  X.400(84) originators will only be able to make use of this ability
  to address 88 common-name recipients if their system is capable of
  generating DDAs. Unfortunately, one of the many serious deficiencies
  with the CEN/CENELEC and CEPT 84 MHS Functional Standards ([1] and
  [3]), as originally published, is that this ability is not a
  requirement for all conformant systems. Thus if existing European R&D
  MHS X.400(84) users wish to be able to address a significant part of
  the ISO 10021/X.400(84) world they must explicitly ensure that their
  84 systems are capable of generating DDAs. However, this will be a
  requirement in the revised versions of ENV 41201 and ENV 41202, which
  are to be published soon. There is no alternative mechanism for
  providing this functionality to 84 users. It is estimated that
  currently 95% of all European R&D MHS users are able to generate
  DDAs.

  When messages are sent to both ISO 10021/X.400(88) and X.400(84)
  recipients outside the European R&D MHS community, this
  representation of common-name will not enable the external recipients
  to communicate directly unless their 84/88 interworking MTA also
  implements this mapping. However, use of this mapping within the
  European R&D MHS community has not reduced external connectivity, and
  provided RTR 3, RFC 1328 is universally implemented within this
  community it will enhance connectivity within the community.

  As for the new Physical Delivery address attributes in X.400(88), RTR
  3 (RFC1328) takes the following approach. A DDA with type "X400-88"
  is used, whose value is an std-or encoding of the address as defined
  in RARE Technical Report 2 ([4]), "Mapping between X.400(1988)/ISO
  10021 and RFC 822". This allows source routing through an appropriate
  gateway. Where the generated address is longer than 128 characters,
  up to three overflow DDAs are used: X400-C1; X400-C2; X400-C3. This
  solution is general, and does not require co-operation, i.e., it can



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  be implemented in the gateways only.

  Note that the two DDA solutions mentioned above have the undesirable
  property that the P2 heading will still contain the DDA form, unless
  content upgrading is also done. In order to shield the user from
  cryptic DDAs, such content upgrading is in general recommended, also
  for nested forwarded messages, even though the available standards
  and profiles do not dictate this.

4.3. Distribution List Interworking with X.400(84)

  Before all X.400(84) systems are upgraded to ISO 10021, the
  interaction of Distribution Lists with X.400(84) merits special
  attention as DLs are already widely used.

  Nothing, apart perhaps from the inability to generate the DL's OR-
  Address if the DL uses the common-name attribute, prevents an
  X.400(84) originator from submitting a message to a DL.

  X.400(84) users can also be members (i.e., recipients) of a DL.
  However, if the X.400(84) systems involved correctly implement
  routing loop detection, the X.400(84) recipient may not receive all
  messages sent to the DL. X.400(84) routing loop detection involves a
  recipient MD in scanning previous entries in a message's trace
  sequence for an occurrence of its own domain, and if such an entry is
  found the message is non-delivered. The new standards extend the
  trace information to contain flags to indicate DL-expansion and
  redirection, and re-define the routing loop detection algorithm to
  only examine trace elements from the last occurrence of either of
  these flags. Thus 88 systems allow a message to re-traverse an MD (or
  be relayed again by an MTA) after either DL-expansion or redirection.
  However, these flags cannot be included in X.400(84) trace, so are
  deleted on downgrading. Therefore the 84 DL recipient will receive
  all messages sent to the DL except those which had a common point in
  the path to the DL expansion point with the path from the expansion
  points to his UA. This common point is an MD in the case of a DL in
  another MD or an MTA in the case of a DL in the same MD. Although
  this is quite deterministic behaviour, the user is unlikely to
  understand it and instead regard it as erratic or inconsistent
  behaviour.

  Another problem with X.400(84) DL members will be that delivery and
  non-delivery reports will be sent back directly to the originator of
  a message, rather than routed through the hierarchy of DL expansion
  points where they could have been routed to the DL administrator
  instead of (or as well as) the originator.





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  No general solution to this problem has yet been devised, despite
  much thought from a number of experts. The nub of the problem is that
  changing the downgrading rules to enable 84 recipients to receive all
  such messages also allows the possibility of undetectable infinite DL
  or redirection looping where there is an 84 transit domain.

  A potential solution is to extend the DL expansion procedures to
  explicitly identify X.400(84) recipients and to treat them specially,
  at least by deleting all trace prior to the expansion point. This
  solution is only dangerous if another DL reached through an 84
  transit domain is inadvertently configured as an 84 recipient, when
  infinite looping could occur. It does however impose the problems of
  84 interworking into MHS components which need to know nothing even
  of the existence of X.400(84). It also requires changes to the
  Directory attribute mhs-dl-members to accommodate the indication that
  identifies the recipient as an X.400(84) user, unless European R&D
  MHS DLs are restricted to being implemented by local tables rather
  than making use of the Directory.

  A similar change would be required for Redirection. However, the
  change for Redirection would have substantially more impact as it
  would require European R&D MHS-specific MHS protocol extensions to
  identify the redirected recipient as an X.400(84) user. If the
  European R&D MHS adopts a reasonable quality of MHS(88) service, all
  its MTAs would be capable of Redirection and all UAs would be capable
  of requesting originator-specified-alternate-recipient and thus be
  required to incorporate these non-standard additions. A special
  European R&D MHS modification affecting all MTAs and UAs seems
  impractical, too!

  If the recommended European R&D MHS topology for MHS migration (See
  chapter 5) is adopted there will never be an X.400(84) transit domain
  (or MTA) between two ISO 10021 systems. This allows the deletion of
  trace prior to the last DL expansion or redirection to be performed
  as part of the downgrading, giving the X.400(84) user a consistent
  service. This solution has the advantage of only requiring changes at
  the convertors between X.400(84) and ISO 10021/X.400(88), where other
  European R&D MHS specific extensions have also been identified. A
  precise specification of this solution is given in Annex A.

  Finally, problems might occur because some X.400(84) MTAs could
  object to messages containing more than one recipient with the same
  extension-id (called originally-requested-recipient-number in the new
  standards), since this was not defined in X.400(84).  Note that
  X.400(84) only requires that all extension-id's be different at
  submission time, so 84 software that does not except messages with
  identical extension-id's for relaying or delivery must be considered
  broken.



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4.4. P2 Interworking

  RTR 3, RFC 1328 also defines the downgrading rules for P2 (IPM)
  interworking: The IPM service in X.400(1984) is usually provided by
  content type 2. In many cases, it will be useful for a gateway to
  downgrade P2 from content type 22 to 2. This will clearly need to be
  made dependent on the destination, as it is quite possible to carry
  content type 22 over P1(1984). The decision to make this downgrade
  will be on the basis of gateway configuration.

  When a gateway downgrades from 22 to 2, the following should be done:

   1. Strip any 1988 specific headings (language indication, and
      partial message indication).

   2. Downgrade all O/R addresses, as described in Section 3.

   3. If a directory name is present, there is no method to
      preserve the semantics within a 1984 O/R Address. However, it
      is possible to pass the information across, so that the
      information in the Distinguished Name can be informally
      displayed to the end user. This is done by appending a text
      representation of the Distinguished Name to the Free Form
      Name enclosed in round brackets. It is recommended that the
      "User Friendly Name" syntax is used to represent the
      Distinguished Name [5]. For example:

         (Steve Hardcastle-Kille, Computer Science,
         University College London, GB)

   4. The issue of body part downgrade is discussed in Section 6.

  Note that a message represented as content type 22 may have
  originated from [6]. The downgrade for this type of message can be
  improved. This is discussed in RTR 2, RFC 1327.

  Note that the newer EWOS/ETSI recommendations specify further rules
  for downgrading, which are not all completely compatible with the
  rules in RTR 3, RFC 1328. This paper does not state which set of
  rules is preferred for the European R&D MHS, it only states that a
  choice will have to be made.

  As the transition topology recommended for the European R&D MHS is to
  never use 84 transit systems between 88 systems, it is possible to
  improve on the P2 originator downgrading and resending scenario. The
  absence of 84 transit systems means that the necessity for a P1
  downgrade implies that the recipient is on an 84 system, and thus
  that it is better to downgrade 88 P2 contents to 84 P2 rather than to



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  relay it in the knowledge that it will not be delivered.

5. Topology for Migration

  Having decided that a transition from X.400(84) is appropriate, it is
  necessary to consider the degree of planning and co- ordination
  required to preserve interworking during the transition.

  It is assumed as a fundamental tenet that interworking must be
  preserved during the transition. This requires that one or more
  system in the European R&D MHS community must act as a protocol
  converter by implementing the rules for "Interworking with 1984
  Systems" listed in Annex B of ISO 10021-6/X.419.

  When downgrading from ISO 10021/X.400(88) to X.400(84) all extensions
  giving functionality beyond X.400(84) are discarded, or if a critical
  extension is present then downgrading fails and a non-delivery
  results. Thus, although it is possible to construct topologies of
  interconnected MTAs so that two 88 MTAs can only communicate by
  relaying through one or more 84 MTA, to maximise the quality of
  service which can be provided in the European R&D MHS community it is
  proposed that it require that no two European R&D MHS 88 MTAs shall
  need to communicate by relaying through a X.400(84) MTA. Furthermore,
  if this is extended to require that no two European R&D MHS 88 MTAs
  shall ever communicate by relaying through an X.400(84) MTA, then the
  European R&D MHS can provide enhanced interworking functionality to
  its X.400(84) users.

  If mixed vintage 88 and 84 Management Domains (MDs) are created, the
  routing loop detection rules, which specify that a message shall not
  re-enter an MD it has previously traversed, require that downgrading
  is performed within that mixed vintage MD. That MD therefore requires
  at least one MTA capable of downgrading from 88 to 84. It is unlikely
  that every MTA within an MD will be configured to act as an entry-
  point to that MD from other MDs. However, the proposed European R&D
  MHS migration topology requires that as soon as a domain has an 88
  MTA it shall also have an 88 entry point - this may, of course, be
  that same MTA.

  Even for MDs operating all the same MHS vintage internally, providing
  entry-points for both MHS vintages will give considerable advantage
  in maximising the connectivity to other MDs. Initially, it will be
  particularly important for 88 MDs to be able to communicate with 84
  only MDs, but as 88 becomes more widespread eventually the 84 MDs
  will become a minority for which the ability to support 88 will be
  important to maintain connectivity. For most practical MDs providing
  entry-points that implement options in the supporting layers will
  also be important. Support for at least the following is recommended



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  at MD entry-points:

   88-P1/Normal-mode RTS/CONS/X.25(84)
   88-P1/Normal-mode RTS/RFC1006/TCP/IP
   84-P1/X.25(80)
   84-P1/RFC1006/TCP/IP

  The above table omits layers where the choice is obvious (e.g.,
  Transport class zero), or where no choice exists (e.g., RTS for 84-
  P1).

  The requirement for no intermediate 84 systems does require that the
  European R&D MHS use direct PRMD to PRMD routing between 88 PRMDs at
  least until such time as all ADMDs will relay the 88 MHS protocols.

  Finally, in order to keep routing co-ordination overhead to a
  minimum, an important requirement for the migration strategy is that
  only one common set of routing procedures is used for both 84 and 88
  systems in the European R&D MHS.

6. Conclusion

   1. The transition from X.400(84) to ISO 10021/X.400(88) is
      worthwhile for the European R&D MHS, to provide:

         - P7 Message Store to support remote UAs.
         - Distribution Lists.
         - Support for Directory Names.
         - Standardised external Body Part types.
         - Redirection.
         - Security.
         - Future extensibility.
         - Physical Delivery.

   2. To minimise the number of transitions the European R&D MHS
      target should be ISO 10021 rather than CCITT X.400(88) -
      i.e., straight to use of the full OSI stack with Normal-mode
      RTS.

   3. To give a useful quality of service, the European R&D MHS
      should not use minimal 88 MTAs which relay the syntax but
      understand none of the semantics of extensions. In
      particular, all European R&D MHS 88 MTAs should generate
      reports containing extensions copied from the subject message
      and route reports through the DL expansion hierarchy where
      appropriate.





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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


   4. The European R&D MHS should carefully plan the transition so
      that it is never necessary to relay through an 84 system to
      provide connectivity between any two 88 systems.

   5. The European R&D MHS should consider the additional
      functionality that can be provided to X.400(84) users by
      adopting an enhanced specification of the interworking rules
      between X.400(84) and ISO 10021/X.400(88), and weigh this
      against the cost of building and maintaining its own
      convertors. The advantages to X.400(84) users are:

        - Ability to generate 88 common-name attribute, likely to
          be widely used for naming DLs.
        - Consistent reception of DL-expanded and Redirected
          messages.
        - Ability to receive extended 88 P2 contents
          automatically downgraded to 84 P2.

7. Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.






























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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


Appendix A - DL-expanded and Redirected Messages in X.400(84)

  This Annex provides an additional to the rules for "Interworking with
  1984 Systems" contained in Annex B of ISO 10021-6/X.419,  to give
  X.400(84) recipients consistent reception of messages  that have been
  expanded by a DL or redirected.  It is applicable  only if the
  transition topology for the European R&D MHS  recommended in section
  3 is adopted.

  Replace the first paragraph of B.2.3 by:

  If an other-actions element is present in any trace- information-
  elements, that other-actions element and all preceding trace-
  information-elements shall be deleted. If an other-actions element is
  present in any subject-intermediate-trace-information- elements, that
  other-actions element shall be deleted.

Appendix B - Bibliography

  [1] ENV 41201, "Private MHS UA and MTA: PRMD to PRMD", CEN/CENELEC,
      1988.

  [2] Kille, S., "X.400 1988 to 1984 downgrading", RTR 3, RFC 1328,
      University College London, May 1992.

  [3] ENV 41202, "Protocol for InterPersonal Messaging between MTAs
      accessing the Public MHS", CEPT, 1988.

  [4] Kille, S.  "Mapping between X.400(1988)/ISO 10021 and RFC 822",
      RTR 2, RFC 1327; University College London. May 1992.

  [5] Kille, S., "Using the OSI Directory to achieve User Friendly
      Naming", RFC 1484, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.

  [6] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text
      Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, University of Delaware, August 1982.

  [7] Craigie, J., "COSINE Study 8.2.2. Migration Strategy for
      X.400(84) to X.400(88)/MOTIS", Joint Network Team, 1988.

  [8] Craigie, J., "ISO 10021-X.400(88): A Tutorial for those familiar
      with X.400(84)", Computer Networks and ISDN systems 16, 153-160,
      North-Holland, 1988.

  [9] Manros, C.-U., "The X.400 Blue Book Companion", ISBN 1 871802 00
      8, Technology Appraisals Ltd, 1989.





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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


 [10] CCITT Recommendations X.400 - X.430, "Data Communication
      Networks: Message Handling Systems", CCITT Red Book, Vol. VIII -
      Fasc. VIII.7, Malaga-Torremolinos, 1984.

 [11] CCITT Recommendations X.400 - X.420 (ISO IS-10021), "Data
      Communication Networks: Message Handling Systems", CCITT Blue
      Book, Vol. VIII - Fasc. VIII.7, Melbourne, 1988.

Appendix C - MHS Terminology

  Message Handling is performed by four types of functional entity:
  User Agents (UAs) which enable the user to compose, send, receive,
  read and otherwise process messages; Message Transfer Agents (MTAs)
  which provide store-and-forward relaying services; Message Stores
  (MSs) which act on behalf of UAs located remotely from their
  associated MTA (e.g., UAs on PCs or workstations); and Access Units
  (AUs) which interface MHS to other communications media (e.g., Telex,
  Teletex, Fax, Postal Services). Each UA (and MS, and AU) is served by
  a single MTA, which provides that user's interface into the Message
  Transfer Service (MTS).

  Collections of MTAs (and their associated UAs, MSs and AUs) which are
  operated by or under the aegis of a single management authority are
  termed a Management Domain (MD). Two types of MD are defined: an
  ADMD, which provides a global public message relaying service
  directly or indirectly to all other ADMDs; and a PRMD operated by a
  private concern to serve its own users.

  A Message is comprised of an envelope and its contents. Apart from
  the MTS content-conversion service, the content is not examined or
  modified by the MTS which uses the envelope alone to provide the
  information required to convey the message to its destination.

  The MTS is the store-and-forward message relay service provided by
  the set of all MTAs. MTAs communicate with each other using the P1
  Message Transfer protocol.















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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


Appendix D - Abbreviations

     ACSE     Association Control Service Element
     ADMD     Administration Management Domain
     ASCII    American Standard Code for Information Exchange
     ASN.1    Abstract Syntax Notation One
     AU       Access Unit
     CCITT    Comite Consultatif International de Telegraphique et
              Telephonique
     CEN      Comite Europeen de Normalisation
     CENELEC  Comite Europeen de Normalisation Electrotechnique
     CEPT     Conference Europeene des Postes et Telecommunications
     CONS     Connection Oriented Network Service
     COSINE   Co-operation for OSI networking in Europe
     DL       Distribution List
     DIS      Draft International Standard
     EN       European Norm
     ENV      Draft EN, European functional standard
     IEC      International Electrotechnical Commission
     IPM      Inter-Personal Message
     IPMS     Inter-Personal Messaging Service
     IPN      Inter-Personal Notification
     ISO      International Organisation for Standardisation
     JNT      Joint Network Team (UK)
     JTC      Joint Technical Committee (ISO/IEC)
     MD       Management Domain (either an ADMD or a PRMD)
     MHS      Message Handling System
     MOTIS    Message-Oriented Text Interchange Systems
     MTA      Message Transfer Agent
     MTL      Message Transfer Layer
     MTS      Message Transfer System
     NBS      National Bureau of Standardization
     OSI      Open Systems Interconnection
     PRMD     Private Management Domain
     RARE     Reseaux Associes pour la Recherche Europeenne
     RFC      Request for Comments
     RTR      RARE Technical Report
     RTS      Reliable Transfer Service
     WG-MSG   RARE Working Group on Mail and Messaging












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RFC 1615         Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88)          May 1994


Authors' Addresses

  Jeroen Houttuin
  RARE Secretariat
  Singel 466-468
  NL-1017 AW Amsterdam
  Europe

  Phone: +31 20 6391131
  RFC 822: [email protected]
  X.400: C=NL;ADMD=400net;PRMD=surf;
  O=rare;S=houttuin;


  Jim Craigie
  Joint Network Team
  Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
  UK-OX11 OQX Chilton
  Didcot, Oxfordshire
  Europe

  Phone: +44 235 44 5539
  RFC 822: [email protected]
  X.400: C=GB;ADMD= ;PRMD=UK.AC;
  O=jnt;I=J;S=Craigie;


























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