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Network Working Group                                       Marc A. ElvyRequest for Comments: 915                             Harvard University                                                             Rudy Nedved                                              Carnegie-Mellon University                                                           December 1984NETWORK MAIL PATH SERVICESTATUS OF THIS MEMO   This RFC proposes a new service for the ARPA-Internet community and   requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.  Distribution   of this memo is unlimited.INTRODUCTION   The network mail path service fills the current need of people to   determine mailbox addresses for hosts that are not part of the   ARPA-Internet but can be reached by one or more relay hosts that have   Unix To Unix Copy (UUCP) mail, CSNET mail, MAILNET mail, BITNET mail,   etc.   Anyone can use the service if they have TCP/TELNET to one of the   hosts with a mail path server.DISCUSSION   Currently many hosts that are not connected to the ARPA-Internet   network can send mail to and receive mail from the ARPA-Internet   community.  The ARPA-Internet community sends mail using mailbox   addresses of the form "user@host" or "local-part@domain" [1,5].  In   an effort to provide service to hosts not connected directly to the   ARPA-Internet, mail maintainers have used the feature that the   "local-part" of the mailbox address is locally interpreted to imbed   specially encoded mail routing or relaying information.  These   encoded mailbox addresses have a variety of forms and have become   common practice. For example:      demco%ucb-ean.cdn%ubc.csnet@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA      "Rudy.Nedved%CMCCTE@CARNEGIE.MAILNET"@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA      ihnp4!cmucsg!ern@UT-SALLY.ARPA      mss.dartmouth@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA      nedved%CMCCTF.BITNET@WISCVM.ARPA   It is important that people be able to communicate, but it is clear   from the rampant confusion and frustration that something must beElvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 1]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service   provided to make it easier for people to address mail to   non-ARPA-Internet hosts.  The result, for a variety of reasons, has   been the work and development of the Domain Name system and   facilities [2,3,7,9], and it is expected to make mailbox addresses   be as simple as the current ARPA-Internet mailbox format (e.g.,   "user@domain").   How do people discover the special encoded addresses for   non-ARPA-Internet host mailboxes until the domain name system is   working and covering the majority of hosts in the mail world?  The   proposed solution to this problem is to provide a network service for   the ARPA-Internet and a mail service for the non-ARPA-Internet hosts   that, given a host and an optional addressing system or communication   protocol or some other piece of information, supplies the mailbox   address format for sending mail to that host.  For example,   "nedved@Carnegie.MAILNET" would be translated by the server to   "nedved%Carnegie.MAILNET@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA". This memo covers the   proposed network service.DOCUMENT CONVENTIONS   Unless otherwise noted, all numbers are in decimal.   The term "host", as used in this document, describes one computer   system which may have more than one name associated with it. It may   have a name for each network or mail connection it supports and may   have several nicknames or aliases for the computer and/or for each   set of network names that the computer has acquired.OVERVIEW   The network service is a connection based application on TCP [4].  A   server listens for TCP connections on the assigned port of 117 [8].   It responds to the connection with a coded greeting message and waits   for a command line. For each command line sent to the server, the   server will respond with a coded message.  The special command QUIT   causes the server to respond with a coded closing message and closes   the connection.Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 2]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path ServiceDESIGN GOALS   One of the goals is to provide the service to as many ARPA-Internet   hosts as possible. In the current ARPA-Internet, experience has shown   that software people first implement TELNET/TCP [6] before any other   network application or protocol. Therefore, it is a sub-goal that   people be able to access the service using available programs (with   minimal modifications) that implement TELNET/TCP.  Therefore,   TELNET/TCP on port 117 will work correctly.  The server understands   TELNET options but refuses all option negotiations that disagree with   the NVT characteristics defined by the TELNET protocol (see [6]),   does not echo, and expects command lines to end with <CRLF> (ASCII   code 13 (octal 15) followed by code 10 (octal 12)).  Character   echoing and line editing is expected to be handled by the user host   for the benefit of the user.   Mail systems and other programs are also expected to be able to   access and understand the service.  Each command reply can have   multiple line responses with text understandable by the novice user.   Each command is encoded so as to make it easy for a program to parse   the lines and extract interesting information, such as whether the   operation was successful.THE PROTOCOL   Given the developing nature of the protocol and its intent, the   command lines are composed of a command (case ignored) followed by   white space, the argument(s) and a <CRLF>. The white space is   required if any arguments are supplied but the arguments are   optional.  White space following the command and any optional   arguments are ignored.      <cmdline> := <cmd> [<WS> <args>] [<WS>] <CRLF>      <WS> := [<WS>] <WS> | <TAB> | <SPACE>   Coded response lines have the rigid format of a 3-digit decimal code   followed by a space or a dash followed by text composed of characters   within the ASCII range 32 to 126 (octal 40 to 176) with <CRLF> at the   end of the line.  The dash after the 3-digit code indicates at least   one more response line will be supplied while the space indicates the   current response line is the last one.      <rspline> := <digit><digit><digit><cont><rtext><CRLF>      <cont> := <SPACE> | "-"Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 3]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service      <rtext> := ASCII characters in the range 32 to 126.   Some of the successful response text to certain commands have rigid   formats so programs can extract path information. The commands that   have format restrictions are clearly noted and the response format is   documented with the command.   The response codes are in the range from 200 to 599 inclusively. The   following paragraphs provide the break down for each digit.   The first, most significant, digit is the success indicator. It   breaks down into the simple success and total failure responses but   includes the ability to communicate a temporary failure condition and   the need for further information that has worked so well for SMTP [5]   and other similiar protocols.  The codes are:      2xx  Positive reply.      3xx  Intermedate reply. Positive acknowlegement but more           information is neccessary.      4xx  Temporary error. Try again later.      5xx  Permanent error. Do not retry.   The second digit is used to classify the response to provide a flavor   for certain types of success. The flavor is apparent in providing the   response on whether a host name is known by a domain name server or   not. The codes are:      x0x  Command related response.      x1x  Connection related response.      x2x  Database related response.      x3x  Domain transition related response.      x4x  Data added response.      x5x  Data deleted response.      x6x  Data modified response.Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 4]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path ServiceBASIC IMPLEMENTATION   The minimum implementation is the support of three commands: HELP,   PATH and QUIT. The HELP command provides some level of documentation   and possibly lists the known addressing or communication protocols.   The PATH command takes as a required argument a user name or id   followed by a "@", followed by a domain style host name whose domain   components may be an addressing protocol, a communication   environment, or an unofficial or colloquial domain.      S: (server listens on port 117)      U: (user connects to port 117)      S: 210-Welcome to the CMU network mail path service.      S: 210 Type 'HELP' for help.      U: help      S: 200-The server currently knows about the following mail worlds:      S: 200-    BITNET,UUCP,CSNET,.AC.UK,EARNET,JANET,CDNNET      S: 200-Use the PATH command with "user@host.world" to get the      S: 200 ARPA-Internet mail address.      U: path root@inria.uucp      S: 220 philabs!mcvax!inria!root@SEISMO.ARPA      U: quit      S: 211 Bye bye.      S: (server closes connection)DETAILED PROTOCOL DESCRIPTION   The protocol is designed to provide a flexible but conservative   mechanism for providing responses and adding experimental or extended   commands.      <user connects to server>         The server responds with a message indicating the status of the         server and optional information.            210  Greeting message indicating the server is ready.            410  The server is down for some unknown reason for a short                 time.            510  The server is unavailable.      HELP [<arg>]         The server can respond with general help information about the         server, about the specific topic described by "arg", or it canElvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 5]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service         indicate that something is temporarily wrong with the HELP         facility.  It is strongly recomended that the general HELP         command documentation be implemented and expanded.            200  General or specific documentation given.            220  Documentation given from a database.            421  Service temporarily unavailable.            501  Command not implemented or topic not known.      PATH <user>@<host>         The server normally responds with either the mail path that         will work for the given mailbox address or indicates the domain         style host name is unknown. If the database is in transition or         inconsistent, a temporary or permanent error can be supplied.            220  Rigid format route given.            230  Rigid format route given. Domain servers should be                 used.            420  Database problems. Try again later.            501  Invalid argument form or null argument given.            520  No such host found in database.            521  Host name is ambiguous.      When a route is supplied with the 2xx success responses. It has a      fixed format with a one-line response. The format is as follows:         <3-digit-code><SP><local-part>@<domain><CRLF>      The "local-part" and "domain" components are defined under the      SMTP protocol [5] and are intended to be used over SMTP      connections.      QUIT         Respond and close the server down.            211  Close the connection down.Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 6]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service   One special code is reserved and is used for a special case. The code   is 412 and is sent when the server has been waiting for a response   for more then 2 minutes and has decided to timeout the connection.   After the "412 <timeout msg>" is sent, the server may close or   possibly abort the connection.   Because of the somewhat experimental nature of the server, additional   commands are expected to be added as they become needed. No   restrictions are placed on the names of these experimental commands   other then the must not conflict with the basic commands and are not   allowed to be abbreviated (i.e., "SEAR" can not be used for   "SEARCH").PATH COMMAND ARGUMENTS   It is important to understand that the server is an aid to users that   may have minimal amount of information about the host. Therefore the   PATH command takes domain style host names that may be complete or   incomplete specifications for the host and may be common or   colloquial domain names. The servers look through the entire database   for anything that matches and try to find the best answer   disregarding any local domain information.  If several hosts have the   same nickname or alias and lack distinguishing domain components, the   server returns an error response containing all of the hosts found.   Some implementation may even break down the host name and indicate in   error messages that even though it did not find the host, it found   something else that might be what the user wanted.MAIL PATH SERVICE AND DOMAINS   As mentioned previously, the mail path service is not intended to be   a replacement or a parallel service to the domain name system.  It is   a stop gap measure and, when most of the domain name system is in   place, will probably be disabled on some or most of the hosts with   the service.   Mail systems should check the domain name servers for the specified   host before trying a mail path server. The mail path servers should   be modified when one or more domain servers are in place to check if   a host is part of the domain system and to generate an error or an   indication (but still include the path information) if a host is   found to be a part of the domain system.   The names used by the mail path servers have no official standing in   the ARPA-Internet community and have colloquial origins. The domain   name components are based on the adminstrative entities involved   whereas many of the current unofficial common domain style names forElvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 7]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service   non-ARPA-Internet hosts are based on the protocol used, the relay   host used, or some acronym that someone dreamed up.  Only a few of   the current domain style names that are privately in use are expected   to be used by the ARPA-Internet community when the domain name   service is in use by the majority of the ARPA-Internet community.CAVEATS   The greatest problem with the new service, as implemented, is that it   reports paths from the service host rather than from the user's host.   This is due to the nature of software.  It would be more convenient   if it reported a correct path from the caller's host, but this would   require a different method of database management (a method which   could quickly compute the path from the caller's machine or a machine   which would be willing to keep updated databases for each host (which   is impractical)).   Two minor problems exist with the database used by the software. Many   relay hosts exist in several different protocol or addressing name   spaces but under different names. The current software cross   referencing for the multiple protocol relay hosts is done by hand,   but, given the seeming reliability of these relay hosts, the problem   does not appear to be significant.  The second problem is that the   data should be collected from the actual relay hosts to ensure   correctness, but in many cases this is impossible.EXAMPLES   Find a route to CMU-CC-TE in the CARNEGIE part of MAILNET for user id   EN0C:      S: (server listens on port 117)      U: (user connects to port 117)      S: 210-Welcome to the CMU network mail path service      S: 210 Type 'HELP' for help.      U: path EN0C@CMU-CC-TE.CARNEGIE.MAILNET      S: 220 EN0C%CMU-CC-TE%CARNEGIE.MAILNET@MIT-MULTICS.ARPA      U: quit      S: 211 Bye bye.      S: (server closes connection)Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 8]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path Service   Find a route to a host which has an unknown addressing system or   communication protocol and for which the name may be an alias:      S: (server listens on port 117)      U: (user connects to port 117)      S: 210-Welcome to the CMU network mail path service      S: 210 Type 'HELP' for help.      U: path mss@dartvax      S: 220 mss%dartmouth@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA      U: quit      S: 211 Bye bye.      S: (server closes connection)   Find a route to a host that is known by a very long domain style name   but is not in the current ARPA-Internet host tables:      S: (server listens on port 117)      U: (user connects to port 117)      S: 210-Welcome to the CMU network mail path service      S: 210 Type 'HELP' for help.      U: path rob@vax1.cent.lanc.ac.uk      S: 220 rob%vax1.cent.lanc@UCL-CS.ARPA      U: quit      S: 211 Bye bye.      S: (server closes connection)   Find a route to a host without any additional information and the   name is discovered to be ambiguous:      S: (server listens on port 117)      U: (user connects to port 117)      S: 210-Welcome to the CMU network mail path service      S: 210 Type 'HELP' for help.      U: path brad@pitt      S: 521-Several hosts found under the name of 'pitt', try one of:      S: 521-brad@pitt.UUCP      S: 521-brad@pitt.CSNET      U: path brad@pitt.CSNET      S: 220 brad%pitt@CSNET-RELAY.ARPA      U: quit      S: 211 Bye bye.      S: (server closes connection)Elvy & Nedved                                                   [Page 9]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path ServiceACKNOWLEDGEMENTS   The original protocol was documented by Marc Elvy for a server that   he and Alan Langerman built.  The server used the pathalias software   created by Steve Bellovin, as modified by Peter Honeyman and Robert   T. Morris, to maintain the host to host connection database.  The   software provided a way for people to make sense out of the jungle of   UUCP hosts. The Info-Nets@MIT-MC mailing list, created and maintained   by Robert Krawitz, made the CMU and Harvard mail path projects aware   of each other and the people on the list provided many of the mail   relay databases that are in use by the mail path servers.  The   original server may be accessed through TCP port 117 on harvard.arpa   -- the "pathto" program that runs under 4.2BSD UNIX may be obtained   as a front end to the server fromRFC915@HARVARD.ARPA.   The current protocol scope was changed by Rudy Nedved to cover   BITNET, CSNET, MAILNET and other "mail networks" and further refined   by Marc Elvy, Alan Langerman and others.   Comments should be sent toRFC-915@HARVARD.ARPA or mailed (via the   U.S.  Postal Service) to:      Marc A. Elvy      108 Aiken Computation Laboratory      33 Oxford Street      Harvard University      Cambridge, MA 02138      (617) 495-5849      Rudy Nedved      Department of Computer Science      Carnegie-Mellon University      Schenley Park      Pittsburgh, PA 15213      (412) 578-7685Elvy & Nedved                                                  [Page 10]

RFC 915                                                       Month YearNetwork Mail Path ServiceREFERENCES   [1]   Crocker, D. "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text         Messages".RFC 822, Department of Electrical Engineering,         University of Delaware, August, 1982.   [2]   Mockapetris, P. "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities".RFC 882, USC/Information Sciences Institute, Novemeber, 1983.   [3]   Mockapetris, P. "Domain Names - Implementation Specification".RFC 883, USC/Information Sciences Institute, Novemeber, 1983.   [4]   Postel, J. "Transmission Control Protocol- DARPA Internet         Program Protocol Specification".RFC 793, USC/Information         Sciences Institute, September, 1981.   [5]   Postel, J. "Simple Mail Transfer Prootcol".RFC 821,         USC/Information Sciences Institute, August, 1982.   [6]   Postel, J., and J. Reynolds. "Telnet Protocol Specification".RFC 854, USC/Information Sciences Institute, May, 1983.   [7]   Postel, J. "Domain Name System Implementation Schedule".RFC 897, USC/Information Sciences Institute, Feburary, 1984.   [8]   Reynolds, J., and J. Postel. "Assigned Numbers".RFC 923,         USC/Information Sciences Institute, October, 1984.   [9]   Su, Z., and Postel, J. "The Domain Naming Convention for         Internet User Applications".RFC 819, SRI International,         August, 1982.Elvy & Nedved                                                  [Page 11]

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