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Network Working Group                                         F. DawsonRequest for Comments: 2447                                        LotusCategory: Standards Track                                    S. Mansour                                                               Netscape                                                          S. Silverberg                                                              Microsoft                                                          November 1998iCalendar Message-Based Interoperability Protocol(iMIP)Status of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document, [iMIP], specifies a binding from the iCalendar   Transport-independent Interoperability Protocol (iTIP) to Internet   email-based transports. Calendaring entries defined by the iCalendar   Object Model [iCAL] are composed using constructs from [RFC-822],   [RFC-2045], [RFC-2046], [RFC-2047], [RFC-2048] and [RFC-2049].   This document is based on discussions within the Internet Engineering   Task Force (IETF) Calendaring and Scheduling (CALSCH) working group.   More information about the IETF CALSCH working group activities can   be found on the IMC web site athttp://www.imc.org, the IETF web site   athttp://www.ietf.org/html.charters/calsch-charter.html. Refer to   the references within this document for further information on how to   access these various documents.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998Table of Contents1 INTRODUCTION........................................................21.1 RELATED MEMOS ...................................................21.2 FORMATTING CONVENTIONS ..........................................31.3 TERMINOLOGY .....................................................42 MIME MESSAGE FORMAT BINDING.........................................42.1 MIME MEDIA TYPE .................................................42.2 SECURITY ........................................................42.2.1 Authorization ...............................................42.2.2 Authentication ..............................................52.2.3 Confidentiality .............................................52.3 [RFC-822] ADDRESSES .............................................52.4 CONTENT TYPE ....................................................52.5 CONTENT-TRANSFER-ENCODING .......................................62.6 CONTENT-DISPOSITION .............................................63 SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS.............................................74 EXAMPLES............................................................84.1 SINGLE COMPONENT WITH AN ATTACH PROPERTY ........................84.2 USING MULTIPART ALTERNATIVE FOR LOW FIDELITY CLIENTS ............84.3 SINGLE COMPONENT WITH AN ATTACH PROPERTY AND INLINE ATTACHMENT ..94.4 MULTIPLE SIMILAR COMPONENTS ....................................104.5 MULTIPLE MIXED COMPONENTS ......................................114.6 DETAILED COMPONENTS WITH AN ATTACH PROPERTY ....................135 RECOMMENDED PRACTICES..............................................145.1 USE OF CONTENT AND MESSAGE IDS .................................146 BIBLIOGRAPHY.......................................................157 AUTHORS' ADDRESSES.................................................168 FULL COPYRIGHT STATEMENT...........................................181 Introduction   This binding document provides the transport specific information   necessary convey iCalendar Transport-independent Interoperability   Protocol (iTIP) over MIME as defined in [RFC-822] and [RFC-2045].1.1 Related Memos   Implementers will need to be familiar with several other memos that,   along with this memo, form a framework for Internet calendaring and   scheduling standards.   This document, [iMIP], specifies an Internet email binding for iTIP.   [iCAL] - specifies a core specification of objects, data types,   properties and property parameters;Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   [iTIP] - specifies an interoperability protocol for scheduling   between different implementations;   This memo does not attempt to repeat the specification of concepts or   definitions from these other memos. Where possible, references are   made to the memo that provides for the specification of these   concepts or definitions.1.2 Formatting Conventions   The mechanisms defined in this memo are defined in prose. In order to   refer to elements of the calendaring and scheduling model, core   object or interoperability protocol defined in [iCAL] and [iTIP] some   formatting conventions have been used.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY" and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC-2119].   Calendaring and scheduling roles are referred to in quoted-strings of   text with the first character of each word in upper case. For   example, "Organizer" refers to a role of a "Calendar User" within the   scheduling protocol defined by [iTIP].   Calendar components defined by [iCAL] are referred to with   capitalized, quoted-strings of text. All calendar components start   with the letter "V". For example, "VEVENT" refers to the event   calendar component, "VTODO" refers to the to-do calendar component   and "VJOURNAL" refers to the daily journal calendar component.   Scheduling methods defined by [iTIP] are referred to with   capitalized, quoted-strings of text. For example, "REQUEST" refers to   the method for requesting a scheduling calendar component be created   or modified, "REPLY" refers to the method a recipient of a request   uses to update their status with the "Organizer" of the calendar   component.   Properties defined by [iCAL] are referred to with capitalized,   quoted-strings of text, followed by the word "property". For example,   "ATTENDEE" property refers to the iCalendar property used to convey   the calendar address of a calendar user.   Property parameters defined by [iCAL] are referred to with lower   case, quoted-strings of text, followed by the word "parameter". For   example, "value" parameter refers to the iCalendar property parameter   used to override the default data type for a property value.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19981.3 Terminology   The email terms used in this memo are defined in [RFC-822] and [RFC-   2045]. The calendaring and scheduling terms used in this memo are   defined in [iCAL] and [iTIP].2 MIME Message Format Binding   This section defines the message binding to the MIME electronic mail   transport.   The sections below refer to the "originator" and the "respondent" of   an iMIP message. Typically, the originator is the "Organizer" of an   event.  The respondent is an "Attendee" of the event.   The [RFC-822] "Reply-To" header typically contains the email address   of the originator or respondent of an event. However, this cannot be   guaranteed as Mail User Agents (MUA) are not required to enforce iMIP   semantics.2.1 MIME Media Type   A MIME entity containing content information formatted according to   this document will be referenced as a "text/calendar" content type.   It is assumed that this content type will be transported through a   MIME electronic mail transport.2.2 Security   This section addresses several aspects of security including   Authentication, Authorization and Confidentiality. Authentication and   confidentiality can be achieved using [RFC-1847] that specifies the   Security Multiparts for MIME. This framework defines new content   types and subtypes of multipart: signed and encrypted. Each contains   two body parts: one for the protected data and another for the   control information necessary to remove the protection.2.2.1 Authorization   In [iTIP] messages, only the "Organizer" is authorized to modify or   cancel calendar entries they organize. That is, spoof@xyz.com is not   allowed to modify or cancel a meeting that was organized by   a@example.com. Furthermore, only the respondent has the authorization   to indicate their status to the "Organizer". That is, the "Organizer"   must ignore an [iTIP] message from spoof@xyz.com that declines a   meeting invitation for b@example.com.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   Implementations of iMIP SHOULD verify the authenticity of the creator   of an iCalendar object before taking any action. The methods for   doing this are presented later in this document.   [RFC-1847] Message flow in iTIP supports someone working on behalf of   a "Calendar User" through use of the "sent-by" parameter that is   associated with the "ATTENDEE" and "ORGANIZER" properties. However,   there is no mechanism to verify whether or not a "Calendar User" has   authorized someone to work on their behalf. It is left to   implementations to provide mechanisms for the "Calendar Users" to   make that decision.2.2.2 Authentication   Authentication can be performed using an implementation of [RFC-1847]   "multipart/signed" that supports public/private key certificates.   Authentication is possible only on messages that have been signed.   Authenticating an unsigned message may not be reliable.2.2.3 Confidentiality   To ensure confidentiality using iMIP implementations should utilize   [RFC-1847]-compliant encryption. The protocol does not restrict a   "Calendar User Agent" (CUA) from forwarding iCalendar objects to   other users or agents.2.3 [RFC-822] Addresses   The calendar address specified within the "ATTENDEE" property in an   iCalendar object MUST be a fully qualified, [RFC-822] address   specification for the corresponding "Organizer" or "Attendee" of the   "VEVENT" or "VTODO".   Because [iTIP] does not preclude "Attendees" from forwarding   "VEVENTS" or "VTODOS" to others, the [RFC-822] "Sender" value may not   equal that of the "Organizer". Additionally, the "Organizer" or   "Attendee" cannot be reliably inferred by the [RFC-822] "Sender" or   "Reply-to" values of an iMIP message. The relevant address MUST be   ascertained by opening the "text/calendar" MIME body part and   examining the "ATTENDEE" and "ORGANIZER" properties.2.4 Content Type   A MIME body part containing content information that conforms to this   document MUST have an [RFC-2045] "Content-Type" value of   "text/calendar". The [RFC-2045] "Content-Type" header field must also   include the type parameter "method". The value MUST be the same as   the value of the "METHOD" calendar property within the iCalendarDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   object.  This means that a MIME message containing multiple iCalendar   objects with different method values must be further encapsulated   with a "multipart/mixed" MIME entity. This will allow each of the   iCalendar objects to be encapsulated within their own "text/calendar"   MIME entity.   A "charset" parameter MUST be present if the iCalendar object   contains characters that are not part of the US-ASCII character set.   [RFC-2046] discusses the selection of an appropriate "charset" value.   The optional "component" parameter defines the iCalendar component   type contained within the iCalendar object.   The following is an example of this header field with a value that   indicates an event message.        Content-Type:text/calendar; method=request; charset=UTF-8;              component=vevent   The "text/calendar" content type allows for the scheduling message   type to be included in a MIME message with other content information   (i.e., "multipart/mixed") or included in a MIME message with a   clear-text, human-readable form of the scheduling message (i.e.,   "multipart/alternative").   In order to permit the information in the scheduling message to be   understood by MIME user agents (UA) that do not support the   "text/calendar" content type, scheduling messages SHOULD be sent with   an alternative, human-readable form of the information.2.5 Content-Transfer-Encoding   Note that the default character set for iCalendar objects is UTF-8. A   transfer encoding SHOULD be used for iCalendar objects containing any   characters that are not part of the US-ASCII character set.2.6 Content-Disposition   The handling of a MIME part should be based on its [RFC-2045]   "Content-Type". However, this is not guaranteed to work in all   environments. Some environments handle MIME attachments based on   their file type or extension. To operate correctly in these   environments, implementations may wish to include a "Content-   Disposition" property to define a file name.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19983 Security Considerations   The security threats that applications must address when implementing   iTIP are detailed in [iTIP]. Two spoofing threats are identified:   Spoofing the "Organizer", and Spoofing an "Attendee". To address   these threats, the originator of an iCalendar object must be   authenticated by a recipient. Once authenticated, a determination can   be made as to whether or not the originator is authorized to perform   the requested operation. Compliant applications MUST support signing   and encrypting text/calendar attachments using a mechanism based on   Security Multiparts for MIME [RFC-1847] to facilitate the   authentication the originator of the iCalendar object.   Implementations MAY provide a means for users to disable signing and   encrypting. The steps are described below:   1. The iCalendar object MUST be signed by the "Organizer" sending an   update or the "Attendee" sending a reply.   2. Using the [RFC-1847]-compliant security mechanism, determine who   signed the iCalendar object. This is the "signer". Note that the   signer is not necessarily the person sending an e-mail message since   an e-mail message can be forwarded.   3. Correlate the signer to an "ATTENDEE" property in the iCalendar   object. If the signer cannot be correlated to an "ATTENDEE" property,   ignore the message.   4. Determine whether or not the "ATTENDEE" is authorized to perform   the operation as defined by [iTIP]. If the conditions are not met,   ignore the message.   5. If all the above conditions are met, the message can be processed.   To address the confidentiality security threats, signed iMIP messages   SHOULD be encrypted by a mechanism based on Security Multiparts for   MIME [RFC-1847].   It is possible to receive iMIP messages sent by someone working on   behalf of another "Calendar User". This is determined by examining   the "sent-by" parameter in the relevant "ORGANIZER" or "ATTENDEE"   property.  [iCAL] and [iTIP] provide no mechanism to verify that a   "Calendar User" has authorized someone else to work on their behalf.   To address this security issue, implementations MUST provide   mechanisms for the "Calendar Users" to make that decision before   applying changes from someone working on behalf of a "Calendar User".Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19984 Examples4.1 Single Component With An ATTACH Property   This minimal message shows how an iCalendar object references an   attachment. The attachment is accessible via its URL.   From: sman@netscape.com   To: stevesil@microsoft.com   Subject: Phone Conference   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   METHOD:REQUEST   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:mailto:sman@netscape.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:mailto:sman@netscape.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES:mailto:stevesil@microsoft.com   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970701T210000Z   DTEND:19970701T230000Z   SUMMARY:Phone Conference   DESCRIPTION:Please review the attached document.   UID:calsvr.example.com-873970198738777   ATTACH:ftp://ftp.bar.com/pub/docs/foo.doc   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR4.2 Using Multipart Alternative for Low Fidelity Clients   This example shows how a client can emit a multipart message that   includes both a plain text version as well as the full iCalendar   object.  Clients that do not support text/calendar will still be   capable of rendering the plain text representation.   From: foo1@example.com   To: foo2@example.com   Subject: Phone Conference   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type: multipart/alternative;boundary="01BD3665.3AF0D360"   --01BD3665.3AF0D360   Content-Type: text/plain;charset=us-asciiDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   This is an alternative representation of a TEXT/CALENDAR MIME Object   When: 7/1/1997 10:00AM PDT - 7/1/97 10:30AM PDT   Where:   Organizer: foo1@example.com   Summary: Phone Conference   --01BD3665.3AF0D360   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   METHOD:REQUEST   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES;TYPE=INDIVIDUAL:mailto:foo2@example.com   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970701T170000Z   DTEND:19970701T173000Z   SUMMARY:Phone Conference   UID:calsvr.example.com-8739701987387771   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR   --01BD3665.3AF0D3604.3 Single Component With An ATTACH Property and Inline Attachment   This example shows how a message containing an iCalendar object   references an attached document. The reference is made using a   Content-id (CID). Thus, the iCalendar object and the document are   packaged in a multipart/related encapsulation.   From: foo1@example.com   To: foo2@example.com   Subject: Phone Conference   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="boundary-example-1";                 type=text/calendar   --boundary-example-1Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="event.vcs"   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   METHOD:REQUEST   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES;TYPE=INDIVIDUAL:mailto:foo2@example.com   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970701T180000Z   DTEND:19970701T183000Z   SUMMARY:Phone Conference   UID:calsvr.example.com-8739701987387771   ATTACH:cid:123456789@example.com   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR   --boundary-example-1   Content-Type: application/msword; name="FieldReport.doc"   Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64   Content-Disposition: inline; filename="FieldReport.doc"   Content-ID: <123456789@example.com>   0M8R4KGxGuEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAPgADAP7/CQAGAAAAAAAAAAABAAAARAAAAAAA   AAAAEAAAQAAAAAEAAAD+////AAAAAEUAAAD/////////////////////////////////   --boundary-example-1--4.4 Multiple Similar Components   Multiple iCalendar components of the same type can be included in the   iCalendar object when the METHOD is the same for each component.   From: foo1@example.com   To: foo2@example.com   Subject: Summer Company Holidays   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=PUBLISH; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="event.vcs"Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DESKTOPCALENDAR//EN   METHOD:PUBLISH   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:MAILTO:FOO1@EXAMPLE.COM   DTSTAMP:19970611T150000Z   DTSTART:19970701T150000Z   DTEND:19970701T230000Z   SUMMARY:Company Picnic   DESCRIPTION:Food and drink will be provided   UID:CALSVR.EXAMPLE.COM-873970198738777-1   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:MAILTO:FOO1@EXAMPLE.COM   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970715T150000Z   DTEND:19970715T230000Z   SUMMARY:Company Bowling Tournament   DESCRIPTION:We have 10 lanes reserved   UID:CALSVR.EXAMPLE.COM-873970198738777-2   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR4.5 Multiple Mixed Components   Different component types must be encapsulated in separate iCalendar   objects.   From: foo1@example.com   To: foo2@example.com   Subject: Phone Conference   Mime-Version: 1.0   Content-Type:multipart/mixed;boundary="--FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C"   This is a multi-part message in MIME format.   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="event1.vcs"Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   METHOD:REQUEST   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES;TYPE=INDIVIDUAL:mailto:foo2@example.com   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970701T210000Z   DTEND:19970701T230000Z   SUMMARY:Phone Conference   DESCRIPTION:Discuss what happened at the last meeting   UID:calsvr.example.com-8739701987387772   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII   Content-Transfer-Encoding:7bit   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="todo1.vcs"   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   METHOD:REQUEST   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VTODO   DUE:19970701T090000-0700   ORGANIZER:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:mailto:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES:mailto:foo2@example.com   SUMMARY:Phone Conference   DESCRIPTION:Discuss a new location for the company picnic   UID:calsvr.example.com-td-8739701987387773   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:NEEDS ACTION   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2CDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19984.6 Detailed Components With An ATTACH Property   This example shows the format of a message containing a group meeting   between three individuals. The multipart/related encapsulation is   used because the iCalendar object contains an ATTACH property that   uses a CID to reference the attachment.   From: foo1@example.com   MIME-Version: 1.0   To: foo2@example.com,foo3@example.com   Subject: REQUEST - Phone Conference   Content-Type:multipart/related;boundary="--FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C"   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C   Content-Type: multipart/alternative;                 boundary="--00FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C00"   ----00FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C00   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   When: 7/1/1997 10:00PM PDT- 7/1/97 10:30 PM PDT   Where:   Organizer: foo1@example.com   Summary: Let's discuss the attached document   ----00FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C00   Content-Type:text/calendar; method=REQUEST; charset=US-ASCII;                    Component=vevent   Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit   Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="event.vcs"   BEGIN:VCALENDAR   PRODID:-//ACME/DesktopCalendar//EN   PROFILE:REQUEST   PROFILE-VERSION:1.0   VERSION:2.0   BEGIN:VEVENT   ORGANIZER:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;ROLE=CHAIR;ATTSTAT=ACCEPTED:foo1@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES;TYPE=INDIVIDUAL:mailto:foo2@example.com   ATTENDEE;RSVP=YES;TYPE=INDIVIDUAL:mailto:foo3@example.com   DTSTAMP:19970611T190000Z   DTSTART:19970621T170000Z   DTEND:199706211T173000Z   SUMMARY:Let's discuss the attached document   UID:calsvr.example.com-873970198738777-8aaDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   ATTACH:cid:calsvr.example.com-12345aaa   SEQUENCE:0   STATUS:CONFIRMED   END:VEVENT   END:VCALENDAR   ----00FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C00   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C   Content-Type: application/msword; name="FieldReport.doc"   Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64   Content-Disposition: inline; filename="FieldReport.doc"   Content-ID: <calsvr.example.com-12345aaa>   R0lGODdhTAQZAJEAAFVVVd3d3e4AAP///ywAAAAATAQZAAAC/5yPOSLhD6OctNqLs94XqAG   4kiW5omm6sq27gvH8kzX9o1y+s73/g8MCofEovGITCoxKMbyCR16cNSq9YrNarfcrvdriIH   5LL5jE6rxc3G+v2cguf0uv2Oz+v38L7/DxgoOKjURnjIIbe3yNjo+AgZWYVIWWl5iZnJY6J.   ----FEE3790DC7E35189CA67CE2C5 Recommended Practices   This section outlines a series of recommended practices when using a   messaging transport to exchange iCalendar objects.5.1 Use of Content and Message IDs   The [iCAL] specification makes frequent use of the URI for data types   in properties such as "DESCRIPTION", "ATTACH", "CONTACT" and others.   Two forms of URIs are Message ID (MID) and Content ID (CID). These   are defined in [RFC-2111]. Although [RFC-2111] allows referencing   messages or MIME body parts in other MIME entities or stores, it is   strongly recommended that iMIP implementations include all referenced   messages and body parts in a single MIME entity. Simply put, if an   iCalendar object contains CID or MID references to other messages or   body parts, implementations should ensure that these messages and/or   body parts are transmitted with the iCalendar object. If they are not   there is no guarantee that the receiving "CU" will have the access or   the authorization to view those objects.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19986 Bibliography   [CHST]     Character Sets,ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/character-sets   [iCAL]     Dawson, F. and D. Stenerson, "Internet Calendaring and              Scheduling Core Object Specification - iCalendar",RFC2445, November 1998.   [iTIP]     Silverberg, S., Mansour, S., Dawson, F. and R. Hopson,              "iCalendar Transport-Independent Interoperability Protocol              (iTIP): Scheduling Events, Busy Time, To-dos and Journal              Entries",RFC 2446, November 1998.   [RFC-822]  Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet              Text Messages", STD 11,RFC 822, August 1982.   [RFC-1847] Galvin, J., Murphy, S., Crocker, S. and N. Freed,              "Security Multiparts for MIME: Multipart/Signed and              Multipart/Encrypted",RFC 1847, October 1995.   [RFC-2045] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail              Extensions (MIME) - Part One: Format of Internet Message              Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.   [RFC-2046] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail              Extensions (MIME) - Part Two: Media Types",RFC 2046,              November 1996.   [RFC-2047] Moore, K., "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) -              Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text",RFC 2047, November 1996.   [RFC-2048] Freed, N., Klensin, J. and J. Postel, "Multipurpose              Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) - Part Four: Registration              Procedures",RFC 2048, January 1997.   [RFC-2111] Levinson, E., "Content-ID and Message-ID Uniform Resource              Locators",RFC 2111, March 1997.   [RFC-2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19987 Authors' Addresses   The following address information is provided in a vCard v3.0,   Electronic Business Card, format.   BEGIN:VCARD   VERSION:3.0   N:Dawson;Frank   FN:Frank Dawson   ORG:Lotus Development Corporation   ADR;TYPE=WORK,POSTAL,PARCEL:;;6544 Battleford    Drive;Raleigh;NC;27613-3502;USA   TEL;TYPE=WORK,MSG:+1-919-676-9515   TEL;TYPE=WORK,FAX:+1-919-676-9564   EMAIL;TYPE=INTERNET:fdawson@earthlink.net   URL:http://home.earthlink.net/~fdawson   END:VCARD   BEGIN:VCARD   VERSION:3.0   N:Mansour;Steve   FN:Steve Mansour   ORG:Netscape Communications Corporation   ADR;TYPE=WORK,POSTAL,PARCEL:;;501 East Middlefield Road;Mountain    View;CA;94043;USA   TEL;TYPE=WORK,MSG:+1-650-937-2378   TEL;TYPE=WORK,FAX:+1-650-937-2103   EMAIL;TYPE=INTERNET:sman@netscape.com   END:VCARD   BEGIN:VCARD   VERSION:3.0   N:Silverberg;Steve   FN:Steve Silverberg   ORG:Microsoft Corporation   ADR;TYPE=WORK,POSTAL,PARCEL:;;One Microsoft Way;    Redmond;WA;98052-6399;USA   TEL;TYPE=WORK,MSG:+1-425-936-9277   TEL;TYPE=WORK,FAX:+1-425-936-8019   EMAIL;TYPE=INTERNET:stevesil@Microsoft.com   END:VCARDDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 1998   The iCalendar Object is a result of the work of the Internet   Engineering Task Force Calendaring and scheduling Working Group. The   chairmen of that working group are:   BEGIN:VCARD   VERSION:3.0   N:Ganguly;Anik   FN:Anik Ganguly   ORG:Open Text Inc.   ADR;TYPE=WORK,POSTAL,PARCEL:;Suite 101;38777 West Six Mile Road;    Livonia;MI;48152;USA   TEL;TYPE=WORK,MSG:+1-734-542-5955   EMAIL;TYPE=INTERNET:ganguly@acm.org   END:VCARD   BEGIN:VCARD   VERSION:3.0   N:Moskowitz;Robert   FN:Robert Moskowitz   EMAIL;TYPE=INTERNET:rgm-ietf@htt-consult.com   END:VCARDDawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 2447                          iMIP                     November 19988.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Dawson, et. al.             Standards Track                    [Page 18]

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