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PROPOSED STANDARD
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Network Working Group                                   A. Melnikov, Ed.Request for Comments: 5092                                    Isode Ltd.Obsoletes:2192                                                C. NewmanUpdates:4467                                           Sun MicrosystemsCategory: Standards Track                                  November 2007IMAP URL SchemeStatus 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.Abstract   IMAP (RFC 3501) is a rich protocol for accessing remote message   stores.  It provides an ideal mechanism for accessing public mailing   list archives as well as private and shared message stores.  This   document defines a URL scheme for referencing objects on an IMAP   server.   This document obsoletesRFC 2192.  It also updatesRFC 4467.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................33. IMAP userinfo Component (iuserinfo) .............................43.1. IMAP Mailbox Naming Scope ..................................43.2. IMAP User Name and Authentication Mechanism ................43.3. Limitations of enc-user ....................................64. IMAP Server .....................................................75. Lists of Messages ...............................................76. A Specific Message or Message Part ..............................86.1. URLAUTH Authorized URL .....................................96.1.1. Concepts ............................................96.1.1.1. URLAUTH ....................................96.1.1.2. Mailbox Access Key .........................96.1.1.3. Authorized Access Identifier ...............96.1.1.4. Authorization Mechanism ...................106.1.1.5. Authorization Token .......................106.1.2. URLAUTH Extensions to IMAP URL .....................107. Relative IMAP URLs .............................................117.1. absolute-path References ..................................127.2. relative-path References ..................................128. Internationalization Considerations ............................139. Examples .......................................................139.1. Examples of Relative URLs .................................1610. Security Considerations .......................................16      10.1. Security Considerations Specific to URLAUTH Authorized            URL ......................................................1711. ABNF for IMAP URL Scheme ......................................1712. IANA Considerations ...........................................2112.1. IANA Registration of imap: URI Scheme ....................2113. References ....................................................2213.1. Normative References .....................................2213.2. Informative References ...................................23Appendix A. Sample Code............................................24Appendix B. List of Changes sinceRFC 2192.........................30Appendix C. List of Changes sinceRFC 4467.........................31Appendix D. Acknowledgments........................................311.  Introduction   The IMAP URL scheme is used to designate IMAP servers, mailboxes,   messages, MIME bodies [MIME], and search programs on Internet hosts   accessible using the IMAP protocol over TCP.   The IMAP URL follows the common Internet scheme syntax as defined in   [URI-GEN].  If :<port> is omitted, the port defaults to 143 (as   defined in Section 2.1 of [IMAP4]).Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   An absolute IMAP URL takes one of the following forms:      imap://<iserver>[/]      imap://<iserver>/<enc-mailbox>[<uidvalidity>][?<enc-search>]      imap://<iserver>/<enc-mailbox>[<uidvalidity>]<iuid>       [<isection>][<ipartial>][<iurlauth>]   The first form is used to refer to an IMAP server (seeSection 4),   the second form refers to the contents of a mailbox or a set of   messages resulting from a search (seeSection 5), and the final form   refers to a specific message or message part, and possibly a byte   range in that part (seeSection 6).  If [URLAUTH] extension is   supported, then the final form can have the <iurlauth> component (seeSection 6.1 for more details).   The <iserver> component common to all types of absolute IMAP URLs has   the following syntax expressed in ABNF [ABNF]:      [iuserinfo "@"] host [ ":" port ]   The <iserver> component is the same as "authority" defined in   [URI-GEN].  The syntax and uses of the <iuserinfo> ("IMAP userinfo   component") are described in detail inSection 3.  The syntax of   <host> and <port> is described in [URI-GEN].2.  Conventions Used in This Document   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 inRFC 2119 [KEYWORDS].   This document references many productions from [URI-GEN].  When the   document needs to emphasize IMAP URI-specific differences from [URI-   GEN] (i.e., for parts of IMAP URIs that have more restricted syntax   than generic URIs), it uses a non-terminal i<foo> to define an IMAP-   specific version of the non-terminal <foo> from [URI-GEN].   Note that the ABNF syntax shown inSection 11 is normative.  Sections   2-6 may use a less formal syntax that does not necessarily match the   normative ABNF shown inSection 11.  If there are any differences   between the syntax shown in Sections2-6 andSection 11, then the   syntax shown inSection 11 must be treated as authoritative.  Non-   syntax requirements included in Sections2-6 are, of course,   normative.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 20073.  IMAP userinfo Component (iuserinfo)   The <iuserinfo> component conforms to the generic syntax of   <userinfo> defined in [URI-GEN].  It has the following syntax   expressed in ABNF [ABNF]:      enc-user [iauth] / [enc-user] iauth   The meaning of the different parts is described in subsections of   this section.3.1.  IMAP Mailbox Naming Scope   The "enc-user" part of the "iuserinfo" component, if present, denotes   mailbox naming scope.  If it is absent, the IMAP URL can only   reference mailboxes with globally unique names, i.e., mailboxes with   names that don't change depending on the user the client   authenticated as to the IMAP server.  Note that not all IMAP   implementations support globally unique names.   For example, a personal mailbox described by the following URL   <imap://michael@example.org/INBOX> is most likely different from a   personal mailbox described by <imap://bester@example.org/INBOX>, even   though both URLs use the same mailbox name.3.2.  IMAP User Name and Authentication Mechanism   The userinfo component (see [URI-GEN]) of an IMAP URI may contain an   IMAP user name (a.k.a. authorization identity [SASL], "enc-user")   and/or an authentication mechanism. (Note that the "enc-user" also   defines a mailbox naming scope as described inSection 3.1).  The   IMAP user name and the authentication mechanism are used in the   "LOGIN" or "AUTHENTICATE" commands after making the connection to the   IMAP server.   If no user name and no authentication mechanism are supplied, the   client MUST authenticate as anonymous to the server.  If the server   advertises AUTH=ANONYMOUS IMAP capability, the client MUST use the   AUTHENTICATE command with ANONYMOUS [ANONYMOUS] SASL mechanism.  If   SASL ANONYMOUS is not available, the (case-insensitive) user name   "anonymous" is used with the "LOGIN" command and the Internet email   address of the end user accessing the resource is supplied as the   password.  The latter option is given in order to provide for   interoperability with deployed servers.   Note that, as described inRFC 3501, the "LOGIN" command MUST NOT be   used when the IMAP server advertises the LOGINDISABLED capability.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   An authentication mechanism (as used by the IMAP AUTHENTICATE   command) can be expressed by adding ";AUTH=<enc-auth-type>" to the   end of the user name in an IMAP URL.  When such an <enc-auth-type> is   indicated, the client SHOULD request appropriate credentials from   that mechanism and use the "AUTHENTICATE" command instead of the   "LOGIN" command.  If no user name is specified, one MUST be obtained   from the mechanism or requested from the user/configuration as   appropriate.   The string ";AUTH=*" indicates that the client SHOULD select an   appropriate authentication mechanism.  (Though the '*' character in   this usage is not strictly a delimiter, it is being treated like a   sub-delim [URI-GEN] in this instance.  It MUST NOT be percent-encoded   in this usage, as ";AUTH=%2A" will not match this production.)  It   MAY use any mechanism listed in the response to the CAPABILITY   command (or CAPABILITY response code) or use an out-of-band security   service resulting in a PREAUTH connection.  If no user name is   specified and no appropriate authentication mechanisms are available,   the client SHOULD fall back to anonymous login as described above.   The behavior prescribed in this section allows a URL that grants   read-write access to authorized users and read-only anonymous access   to other users.   If a user name is included with no authentication mechanism, then   ";AUTH=*" is assumed.   Clients must take care when resolving a URL that requires or requests   any sort of authentication, since URLs can easily come from untrusted   sources.  Supplying authentication credentials to the wrong server   may compromise the security of the user's account; therefore, the   program resolving the URL should meet at least one of the following   criteria in this case:   1) The URL comes from a trusted source, such as a referral server      that the client has validated and trusts according to site policy.      Note that user entry of the URL may or may not count as a trusted      source, depending on the experience level of the user and site      policy.   2) Explicit local site policy permits the client to connect to the      server in the URL.  For example, a company example.com may have a      site policy to trust all IMAP server names ending in example.com,      whereas such a policy would be unwise for example.edu where random      students can set up IMAP servers.   3) The user confirms that connecting to that domain name with the      specified credentials and/or mechanism is permitted.  For example,      when using "LOGIN" or SASL PLAIN with Transport Layer SecurityMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007      (TLS), the IMAP URL client presents a dialog box "Is it OK to send      your password to server "example.com"?  Please be aware the owners      of example.com will be able to reuse your password to connect to      other servers on your behalf".   4) A mechanism is used that validates the server before passing      potentially compromising client credentials.  For example, a site      has a designated TLS certificate used to certify site-trusted IMAP      server certificates, and this has been configured explicitly into      the IMAP URL client.  Another example is use of a Simple      Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) mechanism such as      DIGEST-MD5 [DIGEST-MD5], which supports mutual authentication.   5) An authentication mechanism is used that will not reveal any      information to the server that could be used to compromise future      connections.  Examples are SASL ANONYMOUS [ANONYMOUS] or GSSAPI      [GSSAPI].   URLs that do not include a user name but include an authentication   mechanism (";AUTH=<mech>") must be treated with extra care, since for   some <mech>s they are more likely to compromise the user's primary   account.  A URL containing ";AUTH=*" must also be treated with extra   care since it might fall back on a weaker security mechanism.   Finally, clients are discouraged from using a plaintext password as a   fallback with ";AUTH=*" unless the connection has strong encryption.   A program interpreting IMAP URLs MAY cache open connections to an   IMAP server for later reuse.  If a URL contains a user name, only   connections authenticated as that user may be reused.  If a URL does   not contain a user name or authentication mechanism, then only an   anonymous connection may be reused.   Note that if unsafe or reserved characters such as " " (space) or ";"   are present in the user name or authentication mechanism, they MUST   be percent-encoded as described in [URI-GEN].3.3.  Limitations of enc-user   As per Sections3.1 and3.2 of this document, the IMAP URI enc-user   has two purposes:      1) It provides context for user-specific mailbox paths such as         "INBOX" (Section 3.1).      2) It specifies that resolution of the URL requires logging in as         that user and limits use of that URL to only that user (Section3.2).Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   An obvious limitation of using the same field for both purposes is   that the URL can be resolved only by the mailbox owner.  In order to   avoid this restriction, implementations should use globally unique   mailbox names (seeSection 3.1) whenever possible.      Note: There is currently no general way in IMAP of learning a      globally unique name for a mailbox.  However, by looking at the      NAMESPACE [NAMESPACE] command result, it is possible to determine      whether or not a mailbox name is globally unique.   The URLAUTH component overrides the second purpose of the enc-user in   the IMAP URI and by default permits the URI to be resolved by any   user permitted by the <access> identifier.  URLAUTH and <access>   identifier are described inSection 6.1.4.  IMAP Server   An IMAP URL referring to an IMAP server has the following form:      imap://<iserver>[/]   This URL type is frequently used to describe a location of an IMAP   server, both in referrals and in configuration.  It may optionally   contain the <iuserinfo> component (see Sections3 and11).  A program   interpreting this URL would issue the standard set of commands it   uses to present a view of the content of the IMAP server, as visible   to the user described by the "enc-user" part of the <iuserinfo>   component, if the "enc-user" part is specified.5.  Lists of Messages   An IMAP URL referring to a list of messages has the following form:      imap://<iserver>/<enc-mailbox>[<uidvalidity>][?<enc-search>]   The <enc-mailbox> field is used as the argument to the IMAP4 "SELECT"   or "EXAMINE" command.  Note that if unsafe or reserved characters   such as " " (space), ";", or "?" are present in <enc-mailbox>, they   MUST be percent-encoded as described in [URI-GEN].   The <uidvalidity> field is optional.  If it is present, it MUST be   the same as the value of IMAP4 UIDVALIDITY response code at the time   the URL was created.  This MUST be used by the program interpreting   the IMAP URL to determine if the URL is stale.  If the IMAP URL is   stale, then the program should behave as if the corresponding mailbox   doesn't exist.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   Note that the <uidvalidity> field is a modifier to the <enc-mailbox>,   i.e., it is considered a part of the last "component" (as used in   [URI-GEN]) of the <enc-mailbox>.  This is significant during relative   URI resolution.   The "?<enc-search>" field is optional.  If it is not present, the   program interpreting the URL will present the entire content of the   mailbox.   If the "?<enc-search>" field is present, the program interpreting the   URL should use the contents of this field as arguments following an   IMAP4 SEARCH command.  These arguments are likely to contain unsafe   characters such as " " (space) (which are likely to be present in the   <enc-search>).  If unsafe characters are present, they MUST be   percent-encoded as described in [URI-GEN].   Note that quoted strings and non-synchronizing literals [LITERAL+]   are allowed in the <enc-search> content; however, synchronizing   literals are not allowed, as their presence would effectively mean   that the agent interpreting IMAP URLs needs to parse an <enc-search>   content, find all synchronizing literals, and perform proper command   continuation request handling (see Sections4.3 and7 of [IMAP4]).6.  A Specific Message or Message Part   An IMAP URL referring to a specific message or message part has the   following form:      imap://<iserver>/<enc-mailbox>[<uidvalidity>]<iuid>      [<isection>][<ipartial>][<iurlauth>]   The <enc-mailbox> and [uidvalidity] are as defined inSection 5   above.   If <uidvalidity> is present in this form, it SHOULD be used by the   program interpreting the URL to determine if the URL is stale.   The <iuid> refers to an IMAP4 message Unique Identifier (UID), and it   SHOULD be used as the <set> argument to the IMAP4 "UID FETCH"   command.   The <isection> field is optional.  If not present, the URL refers to   the entire Internet message as returned by the IMAP command "UID   FETCH <uid> BODY.PEEK[]".  If present, the URL refers to the object   returned by a "UID FETCH <uid> BODY.PEEK[<section>]" command.  The   type of the object may be determined by using a "UID FETCH <uid>   BODYSTRUCTURE" command and locating the appropriate part in theMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   resulting BODYSTRUCTURE.  Note that unsafe characters in [isection]   MUST be percent-encoded as described in [URI-GEN].   The <ipartial> field is optional.  If present, it effectively appends   "<<partial-range>>" to the end of the UID FETCH BODY.PEEK[<section>]   command constructed as described in the previous paragraph.  In other   words, it allows the client to request a byte range of the   message/message part.   The <iurlauth> field is described in detail inSection 6.1.6.1.  URLAUTH Authorized URL   URLAUTH authorized URLs are only supported by an IMAP server   advertising the URLAUTH IMAP capability [URLAUTH].6.1.1.  Concepts6.1.1.1.  URLAUTH   URLAUTH is a component, appended at the end of a URL, that conveys   authorization to access the data addressed by that URL.  It contains   an authorized access identifier, an authorization mechanism name, and   an authorization token.  The authorization token is generated from   the URL, the authorized access identifier, authorization mechanism   name, and a mailbox access key.      Note: This specification only allows for the URLAUTH component in      IMAP URLs describing a message or its part.6.1.1.2.  Mailbox Access Key   The mailbox access key is an unpredictable, random string.  To ensure   unpredictability, the random string with at least 128 bits of entropy   is generated by software or hardware (not by the human user).   Each user has a table of mailboxes and an associated mailbox access   key for each mailbox.  Consequently, the mailbox access key is per-   user and per-mailbox.  In other words, two users sharing the same   mailbox each have a different mailbox access key for that mailbox,   and each mailbox accessed by a single user also has a different   mailbox access key.6.1.1.3.  Authorized Access Identifier   The authorized <access> identifier restricts use of the URLAUTH   authorized URL to certain users authorized on the server, as   described inSection 6.1.2.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 20076.1.1.4.  Authorization Mechanism   The authorization mechanism is the algorithm by which the URLAUTH is   generated and subsequently verified, using the mailbox access key.6.1.1.5.  Authorization Token   The authorization token is a deterministic string of at least 128   bits that an entity with knowledge of the secret mailbox access key   and URL authorization mechanism can use to verify the URL.6.1.2.  URLAUTH Extensions to IMAP URL   A specific message or message part IMAP URL can optionally contain   ";EXPIRE=<datetime>" and/or ";URLAUTH=<access>:<mech>:<token>".   When ";EXPIRE=<datetime>" is used, this indicates the latest date and   time that the URL is valid.  After that date and time, the URL has   expired and server implementations MUST reject the URL.  If   ";EXPIRE=<datetime>" is not used, the URL has no expiration, but can   still be revoked using the RESETKEY command [URLAUTH].   The URLAUTH takes the form ";URLAUTH=<access>:<mech>:<token>", and it   MUST be at the end of the URL.  It is composed of three parts.  The   <access> portion provides the authorized access identifiers that may   constrain the operations and users that are permitted to use this   URL.  The <mech> portion provides the authorization mechanism used by   the IMAP server to generate the authorization token that follows.   The <token> portion provides the authorization token, which can be   generated using the GENURLAUTH command [URLAUTH].   The "submit+" <access> identifier prefix, followed by a userid,   indicates that only a userid authorized as a message submission   entity on behalf of the specified userid is permitted to use this   URL.  The IMAP server does not validate the specified userid but does   validate that the IMAP session has an authorization identity that is   authorized as a message submission entity.  The authorized message   submission entity MUST validate the userid prior to contacting the   IMAP server.   The "user+" <access> identifier prefix, followed by a userid,   indicates that use of this URL is limited to IMAP sessions that are   logged in as the specified userid (that is, have authorization   identity as that userid).      Note: If a SASL mechanism that provides both authorization and      authentication identifiers is used to authenticate to the IMAP      server, the "user+" <access> identifier MUST match theMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007      authorization identifier.  If the SASL mechanism can't transport      the authorization identifier, the "user+" <access> identifier MUST      match the authorization identifier derived from the authentication      identifier (see [SASL]).   The "authuser" <access> identifier indicates that use of this URL is   limited to authenticated IMAP sessions that are logged in as any   non-anonymous user (that is, have authorization identity as a non-   anonymous user) of that IMAP server.  To restate this: use of this   type of URL is prohibited to anonymous IMAP sessions, i.e., any   URLFETCH command containing this type of URL issued in an anonymous   session MUST return NIL in the URLFETCH response.   The "anonymous" <access> identifier indicates that use of this URL is   not restricted by session authorization identity; that is, any IMAP   session in authenticated or selected state (as defined in [IMAP4]),   including anonymous sessions, may issue a URLFETCH [URLAUTH] using   this URL.   The authorization token is represented as an ASCII-encoded   hexadecimal string, which is used to authorize the URL.  The length   and the calculation of the authorization token depend upon the   mechanism used, but in all cases, the authorization token is at least   128 bits (and therefore at least 32 hexadecimal digits).   Example:      <imap://joe@example.com/INBOX/;uid=20/;section=1.2;urlauth=      submit+fred:internal:91354a473744909de610943775f92038>7.  Relative IMAP URLs   Relative IMAP URLs are permitted and are resolved according to the   rules defined in [URI-GEN].  In particular, in IMAP URLs parameters   (such as ";uid=" or ";section=") are treated as part of the normal   path with respect to relative URL resolution.   [URI-GEN] defines four forms of relative URLs: <inetwork-path>,   <iabsolute-path>, <irelative-path>, and <ipath-empty>.  Their syntax   is defined inSection 11.   A relative reference that begins with two slash characters is termed   a network-path reference (<inetwork-path>); such references are   rarely used, because in most cases they can be replaced with an   equivalent absolute URL.  A relative reference that begins with a   single slash character is termed an absolute-path reference   (<iabsolute-path>; see alsoSection 7.1).  A relative reference that   does not begin with a slash character is termed a relative-pathMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   reference (<irelative-path>; see alsoSection 7.2).  The final form   is <ipath-empty>, which is "same-document reference" (see Section 4.4   of [URI-GEN]).   The following observations about relative URLs are important:   The <iauth> grammar element (which is a part of <iuserinfo>, which   is, in turn, a part of <iserver>; seeSection 3) is considered part   of the user name for purposes of resolving relative IMAP URLs.  This   means that unless a new user name/server specification is included in   the relative URL, the authentication mechanism is inherited from the   base IMAP URL.   URLs always use "/" as the hierarchy delimiter for the purpose of   resolving paths in relative URLs.  IMAP4 permits the use of any   hierarchy delimiter in mailbox names.  For this reason, relative   mailbox paths will only work if the mailbox uses "/" as the hierarchy   delimiter.  Relative URLs may be used on mailboxes that use other   delimiters, but in that case, the entire mailbox name MUST be   specified in the relative URL or inherited as a whole from the base   URL.   If an IMAP server allows for mailbox names starting with "./" or   "../", ending with "/." or "/..", or containing sequences "/../" or   "/./", then such mailbox names MUST be percent-encoded as described   in [URI-GEN].  Otherwise, they would be misinterpreted as dot-   segments (see Section 3.3 of [URI-GEN]), which are processed   specially during the relative path resolution process.7.1.  absolute-path References   A relative reference that begins with a single slash character is   termed an absolute-path reference (see Section 4.2 of [URI-GEN]).  If   an IMAP server permits mailbox names with a leading "/", then the   leading "/" MUST be percent-encoded as described in [URI-GEN].   Otherwise, the produced absolute-path reference URI will be   misinterpreted as a network-path reference [URI-GEN] described by the   <inetwork-path> non-terminal.7.2.  relative-path References   A relative reference that does not begin with a slash character is   termed a relative-path reference [URI-GEN].  Implementations MUST NOT   generate or accept relative-path IMAP references.   See also Section 4.2 of [URI-GEN] for restrictions on relative-path   references.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 20078.  Internationalization Considerations   IMAP4,Section 5.1.3 [IMAP4] includes a convention for encoding non-   US-ASCII characters in IMAP mailbox names.  Because this convention   is private to IMAP, it is necessary to convert IMAP's encoding to one   that can be more easily interpreted by a URL display program.  For   this reason, IMAP's modified UTF-7 encoding for mailboxes MUST be   converted to UTF-8 [UTF-8].  Since 8-bit octets are not permitted in   URLs, the UTF-8 octets are percent-encoded as required by the URL   specification [URI-GEN], Section 2.1.  Sample code is included inAppendix A to demonstrate this conversion.   IMAP user names are UTF-8 strings and MUST be percent-encoded as   required by the URL specification [URI-GEN], Section 2.1.   Also note that IMAP SEARCH criteria can contain non-US-ASCII   characters.  8-bit octets in those strings MUST be percent-encoded as   required by the URL specification [URI-GEN], Section 2.1.9.  Examples   The following examples demonstrate how an IMAP4 client program might   translate various IMAP4 URLs into a series of IMAP4 commands.   Commands sent from the client to the server are prefixed with "C:",   and responses sent from the server to the client are prefixed with   "S:".   The URL:      <imap://minbari.example.org/gray-council;UIDVALIDITY=385759045/;      UID=20/;PARTIAL=0.1024>   may result in the following client commands and server responses:      <connect to minbari.example.org, port 143>      S: * OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 STARTTLS AUTH=ANONYMOUS] Welcome      C: A001 AUTHENTICATE ANONYMOUS      S: +      C: c2hlcmlkYW5AYmFieWxvbjUuZXhhbXBsZS5vcmc=      S: A001 OK Welcome sheridan@babylon5.example.org      C: A002 SELECT gray-council      <client verifies the UIDVALIDITY matches>      C: A003 UID FETCH 20 BODY.PEEK[]<0.1024>   The URL:      <imap://psicorp.example.org/~peter/%E6%97%A5%E6%9C%AC%E8%AA%9E/      %E5%8F%B0%E5%8C%97>Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   may result in the following client commands:      <connect to psicorp.example.org, port 143>      S: * OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 STARTTLS AUTH=CRAM-MD5] Welcome      C: A001 LOGIN ANONYMOUS bester@psycop.psicorp.example.org      C: A002 SELECT ~peter/&ZeVnLIqe-/&U,BTFw-      <commands the client uses for viewing the contents of       the mailbox>   The URL:      <imap://;AUTH=GSSAPI@minbari.example.org/gray-council/;uid=20/      ;section=1.2>   may result in the following client commands:      <connect to minbari.example.org, port 143>      S: * OK Greetings      C: A000 CAPABILITY      S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 STARTTLS AUTH=GSSAPI      S: A000 OK      C: A001 AUTHENTICATE GSSAPI      <authentication exchange>      C: A002 SELECT gray-council      C: A003 UID FETCH 20 BODY.PEEK[1.2]   If the following relative URL is located in that body part:      <;section=1.4>   this could result in the following client commands:      C: A004 UID FETCH 20 (BODY.PEEK[1.2.MIME]            BODY.PEEK[1.MIME]            BODY.PEEK[HEADER.FIELDS (Content-Location)])      <Client looks for Content-Location headers in       result.  If no such headers, then it does the following>      C: A005 UID FETCH 20 BODY.PEEK[1.4]   The URL:      <imap://;AUTH=*@minbari.example.org/gray%20council?      SUBJECT%20shadows>Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   could result in the following:      <connect to minbari.example.org, port 143>      S: * OK Welcome      C: A001 CAPABILITY      S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 AUTH=DIGEST-MD5      S: A001 OK      C: A002 AUTHENTICATE DIGEST-MD5      <authentication exchange>      S: A002 OK user lennier authenticated      C: A003 SELECT "gray council"      ...      C: A004 SEARCH SUBJECT shadows      S: * SEARCH 8 10 13 14 15 16      S: A004 OK SEARCH completed      C: A005 FETCH 8,10,13:16 ALL      ...   In the example above, the client has implementation-dependent   choices.  The authentication mechanism could be anything, including   PREAUTH.  The final FETCH command could fetch more or less   information about the messages, depending on what it wishes to   display to the user.   The URL:      <imap://john;AUTH=*@minbari.example.org/babylon5/personel?      charset%20UTF-8%20SUBJECT%20%7B14+%7D%0D%0A%D0%98%D0%B2%      D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%B0>   shows that 8-bit data can be sent using non-synchronizing literals   [LITERAL+].  This could result in the following:      <connect to minbari.example.org, port 143>      S: * OK Hi there      C: A001 CAPABILITY      S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 LITERAL+ AUTH=DIGEST-MD5      S: A001 OK      C: A002 AUTHENTICATE DIGEST-MD5      <authentication exchange>      S: A002 OK user john authenticated      C: A003 SELECT babylon5/personel      ...      C: A004 SEARCH CHARSET UTF-8 SUBJECT {14+}      C: XXXXXXXXXXXXXX      S: * SEARCH 7 10 12      S: A004 OK SEARCH completed      C: A005 FETCH 7,10,12 ALLMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007      ...   where XXXXXXXXXXXXXX is 14 bytes of UTF-8 encoded data as specified   in the URL above.9.1.  Examples of Relative URLs   The following absolute-path reference      </foo/;UID=20/..>   is the same as      </foo>   That is, both of them reference the mailbox "foo" located on the IMAP   server described by the corresponding Base URI.   The following relative-path reference      <;UID=20>   references a message with UID in the mailbox specified by the Base   URI.   The following edge case example demonstrates that the ;UIDVALIDITY=   modifier is a part of the mailbox name as far as relative URI   resolution is concerned:      <..;UIDVALIDITY=385759045/;UID=20>   In this example, ".." is not a dot-segment [URI-GEN].10.  Security Considerations   Security considerations discussed in the IMAP specification [IMAP4]   and the URI specification [URI-GEN] are relevant.  Security   considerations related to authenticated URLs are discussed inSection3.2 of this document.   Many email clients store the plaintext password for later use after   logging into an IMAP server.  Such clients MUST NOT use a stored   password in response to an IMAP URL without explicit permission from   the user to supply that password to the specified host name.   Clients resolving IMAP URLs that wish to achieve data confidentiality   and/or integrity SHOULD use the STARTTLS command (if supported by theMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   server) before starting authentication, or use a SASL mechanism, such   as GSSAPI, that provides a confidentiality security layer.10.1.  Security Consideration Specific to URLAUTH Authorized URL   The "user+<userid>" <access> identifier limits resolution of that URL   to a particular userid, whereas the "submit+<userid>" <access>   identifier is more general and simply requires that the session be   authorized by a user that has been granted a "submit" role within the   authentication system.  Use of either of these mechanisms limits the   scope of the URL.  An attacker who cannot authenticate using the   appropriate credentials cannot make use of the URL.   The "authuser" and "anonymous" <access> identifiers do not have this   level of protection.  These access identifiers are primarily useful   for public export of data from an IMAP server, without requiring that   it be copied to a web or anonymous FTP server.   The decision to use the "authuser" <access> identifier should be made   with caution.  An "authuser" <access> identifier can be used by any   authorized user of the IMAP server; therefore, use of this access   identifier should be limited to content that may be disclosed to any   authorized user of the IMAP server.   The decision to use the "anonymous" <access> identifier should be   made with extreme caution.  An "anonymous" <access> identifier can be   used by anyone; therefore, use of this access identifier should be   limited to content that may be disclosed to anyone.11.  ABNF for IMAP URL Scheme   Formal syntax is defined using ABNF [ABNF], extending the ABNF rules   in Section 9 of [IMAP4].  Elements not defined here can be found in   [ABNF], [IMAP4], [IMAPABNF], or [URI-GEN].  Strings are not case   sensitive, and free insertion of linear white space is not permitted.   sub-delims-sh = "!" / "$" / "'" / "(" / ")" /                   "*" / "+" / ","                      ;; Same as [URI-GEN] sub-delims,                      ;; but without ";", "&" and "=".   uchar            = unreserved / sub-delims-sh / pct-encoded   achar            = uchar / "&" / "="                      ;; Same as [URI-GEN] 'unreserved / sub-delims /                      ;; pct-encoded', but ";" is disallowed.   bchar            = achar / ":" / "@" / "/"Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   enc-auth-type    = 1*achar                   ; %-encoded version of [IMAP4] "auth-type"   enc-mailbox      = 1*bchar                  ; %-encoded version of [IMAP4] "mailbox"   enc-search       = 1*bchar                           ; %-encoded version of [IMAPABNF]                           ; "search-program".  Note that IMAP4                           ; literals may not be used in                           ; a "search-program", i.e., only                           ; quoted or non-synchronizing                           ; literals (if the server supports                           ; LITERAL+ [LITERAL+]) are allowed.   enc-section      = 1*bchar                  ; %-encoded version of [IMAP4] "section-spec"   enc-user         = 1*achar                  ; %-encoded version of [IMAP4] authorization                  ; identity or "userid".   imapurl          = "imap://" iserver ipath-query               ; Defines an absolute IMAP URL   ipath-query      = ["/" [ icommand ]]                    ; Corresponds to "path-abempty [ "?" query ]"                    ; in [URI-GEN]   Generic syntax for relative URLs is defined in Section 4.2 of   [URI-GEN].  For ease of implementation, the relative IMAP URL syntax   is defined below:   imapurl-rel     = inetwork-path                     / iabsolute-path                     / irelative-path                     / ipath-empty   inetwork-path   = "//" iserver ipath-query               ; Corresponds to '"//" authority path-abempty               ; [ "?" query ]' in [URI-GEN]   iabsolute-path  = "/" [ icommand ]               ; icommand, if present, MUST NOT start with '/'.               ;               ; Corresponds to 'path-absolute [ "?" query ]'               ; in [URI-GEN]Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   irelative-path  = imessagelist /                     imsg-or-part               ; Corresponds to 'path-noscheme [ "?" query ]'               ; in [URI-GEN]   imsg-or-part    = ( imailbox-ref "/" iuid-only ["/" isection-only]                       ["/" ipartial-only] ) /                     ( iuid-only ["/" isection-only]                       ["/" ipartial-only] ) /                     ( isection-only ["/" ipartial-only] ) /                     ipartial-only   ipath-empty     = 0<pchar>                    ; Zero characters.                    ; The same-document reference.   The following three rules are only used in the presence of the IMAP   [URLAUTH] extension:   authimapurl     = "imap://" iserver "/" imessagepart                     ; Same as "imapurl" when "[icommand]" is                     ; "imessagepart"   authimapurlfull = authimapurl iurlauth                     ; Same as "imapurl" when "[icommand]" is                     ; "imessagepart iurlauth"   authimapurlrump = authimapurl iurlauth-rump   enc-urlauth     = 32*HEXDIG   iurlauth        = iurlauth-rump iua-verifier   iua-verifier    = ":" uauth-mechanism ":" enc-urlauth   iurlauth-rump   = [expire] ";URLAUTH=" access   access          = ("submit+" enc-user) / ("user+" enc-user) /                       "authuser" / "anonymous"   expire          = ";EXPIRE=" date-time                         ; date-time is defined in [DATETIME]   uauth-mechanism = "INTERNAL" / 1*(ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / ".")                        ; Case-insensitive.                        ; New mechanisms MUST be registered with IANA.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   iauth            = ";AUTH=" ( "*" / enc-auth-type )   icommand         = imessagelist /                      imessagepart [iurlauth]   imailbox-ref     = enc-mailbox [uidvalidity]   imessagelist     = imailbox-ref [ "?" enc-search ]                  ; "enc-search" is [URI-GEN] "query".   imessagepart     = imailbox-ref iuid [isection] [ipartial]   ipartial         = "/" ipartial-only   ipartial-only    = ";PARTIAL=" partial-range   isection         = "/" isection-only   isection-only    = ";SECTION=" enc-section   iserver          = [iuserinfo "@"] host [ ":" port ]                           ; This is the same as "authority" defined                           ; in [URI-GEN].  See [URI-GEN] for "host"                           ; and "port" definitions.   iuid             = "/" iuid-only   iuid-only        = ";UID=" nz-number                  ; See [IMAP4] for "nz-number" definition   iuserinfo        = enc-user [iauth] / [enc-user] iauth                                ; conforms to the generic syntax of                                ; "userinfo" as defined in [URI-GEN].   partial-range    = number ["." nz-number]                  ; partial FETCH.  The first number is                           ; the offset of the first byte,                           ; the second number is the length of                           ; the fragment.   uidvalidity      = ";UIDVALIDITY=" nz-number                       ; See [IMAP4] for "nz-number" definitionMelnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 200712.  IANA Considerations   IANA has updated the "imap" definition in the "Uniform Resource   Identifier scheme registry" to point to this document.   The registration template (as per [URI-REG]) is specified inSection12.1 of this document.12.1.  IANA Registration of imap: URI Scheme   This section provides the information required to register the imap:   URI scheme.   URI scheme name: imap   Status: permanent   URI scheme syntax:      SeeSection 11 of [RFC5092].   URI scheme semantics:      The imap: URI scheme is used to designate IMAP servers, mailboxes,      messages, MIME bodies [MIME] and their parts, and search programs      on Internet hosts accessible using the IMAP protocol.      There is no MIME type associated with this URI.   Encoding considerations:      SeeSection 8 of [RFC5092].   Applications/protocols that use this URI scheme name:      The imap: URI is intended to be used by applications that might      need access to an IMAP mailstore.  Such applications may include      (but are not limited to) IMAP-capable web browsers; IMAP clients      that wish to access a mailbox, message, or edit a message on the      server using [CATENATE]; [SUBMIT] clients and servers that are      requested to assemble a complete message on submission using      [BURL].   Interoperability considerations:      A widely deployed IMAP client Netscape Mail (and possibly      Mozilla/Thunderbird/Seamonkey) uses a different imap: scheme      internally.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   Security considerations:      See Security Considerations (Section 10) of [RFC5092].   Contact:      Alexey Melnikov <alexey.melnikov@isode.com>   Author/Change controller:      IESG   References:      [RFC5092] and [IMAP4].13. References13.1.  Normative References   [KEYWORDS]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [IMAP4]      Crispin, M., "INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL - VERSION                4rev1",RFC 3501, March 2003.   [IMAPABNF]   Melnikov, A. and C. Daboo, "Collected Extensions to                IMAP4 ABNF",RFC 4466, April 2006.   [ABNF]       Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for                Syntax Specifications: ABNF",RFC 4234, October 2005.   [MIME]       Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail                Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message                Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.   [URI-GEN]    Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and L. Masinter, "Uniform                Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66,RFC3986, January 2005.   [UTF-8]      Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO                10646", STD 63,RFC 3629, November 2003.   [NAMESPACE]  Gahrns, M. and C. Newman, "IMAP4 Namespace",RFC 2342,                May 1998.   [LITERAL+]   Myers, J., "IMAP4 non-synchronizing literals",RFC 2088,                January 1997.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007   [ANONYMOUS]  Zeilenga, K., "Anonymous Simple Authentication and                Security Layer (SASL) Mechanism",RFC 4505, June 2006.   [DATETIME]   Klyne, G. and C. Newman, "Date and Time on the Internet:                Timestamps",RFC 3339, July 2002.   [URLAUTH]    Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) -                URLAUTH Extension",RFC 4467, May 2006.13.2.  Informative References   [SUBMIT]     Gellens, R. and J. Klensin, "Message Submission for                Mail",RFC 4409, April 2006.   [BURL]       Newman, C., "Message Submission BURL Extension",RFC4468, May 2006.   [CATENATE]   Resnick, P., "Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP)                CATENATE Extension",RFC 4469, April 2006.   [SASL]       Melnikov, A., Ed., and K. Zeilenga, Ed., "Simple                Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)",RFC 4422,                June 2006.   [GSSAPI]     Melnikov, A., Ed., "The Kerberos V5 ("GSSAPI") Simple                Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) Mechanism",RFC4752, November 2006.   [DIGEST-MD5] Leach, P. and C. Newman, "Using Digest Authentication as                a SASL Mechanism",RFC 2831, May 2000.   [URI-REG]    Hansen, T., Hardie, T., and L. Masinter, "Guidelines and                Registration Procedures for New URI Schemes",BCP 115,RFC 4395, February 2006.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007Appendix A.  Sample Code   Here is sample C source code to convert between URL paths and IMAP   mailbox names, taking into account mapping between IMAP's modified   UTF-7 [IMAP4] and hex-encoded UTF-8, which is more appropriate for   URLs.  This code has not been rigorously tested nor does it   necessarily behave reasonably with invalid input, but it should serve   as a useful example.  This code just converts the mailbox portion of   the URL and does not deal with parameters, query, or server   components of the URL./* Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).  This version of   sample C code is part of RFC XXXX; see the RFC itself   for full legal notices.   Regarding this sample C code (or any portion of it), the authors   make no guarantees and are not responsible for any damage   resulting from its use.  The authors grant irrevocable permission   to anyone to use, modify, and distribute it in any way that does   not diminish the rights of anyone else to use, modify, and   distribute it, provided that redistributed derivative works do   not contain misleading author or version information.   Derivative works need not be licensed under similar terms. */#include <stdio.h>#include <string.h>/* hexadecimal lookup table */static const char hex[] = "0123456789ABCDEF";#define XX 127/* * Table for decoding hexadecimal in %encoding */static const char index_hex[256] = {    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,     0, 1, 2, 3,  4, 5, 6, 7,  8, 9,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,10,11,12, 13,14,15,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,10,11,12, 13,14,15,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,    XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX, XX,XX,XX,XX,};#define HEXCHAR(c)  (index_hex[(unsigned char)(c)])/* "gen-delims" excluding "/" but including "%" */#define GENERAL_DELIMS_NO_SLASH     ":?#[]@" "%"/* "gen-delims" (excluding "/", but including "%")   plus subset of "sub-delims" */#define GENERAL_UNSAFE_NO_SLASH     GENERAL_DELIMS_NO_SLASH ";&=+"#define OTHER_UNSAFE                " \"<>\\^`{|}"/* URL unsafe printable characters */static const char mailbox_url_unsafe[] = GENERAL_UNSAFE_NO_SLASH                                         OTHER_UNSAFE;/* UTF7 modified base64 alphabet */static const char base64chars[] =  "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+,";#define UNDEFINED 64/* UTF16 definitions */#define UTF16MASK   0x03FFUL#define UTF16SHIFT  10#define UTF16BASE   0x10000UL#define UTF16HIGHSTART   0xD800UL#define UTF16HIGHEND     0xDBFFUL#define UTF16LOSTART     0xDC00UL#define UTF16LOEND  0xDFFFUL/* Convert an IMAP mailbox to a URL path *  dst needs to have roughly 4 times the storage space of src *    Hex encoding can triple the size of the input *    UTF-7 can be slightly denser than UTF-8 *     (worst case: 8 octets UTF-7 becomes 9 octets UTF-8) */void MailboxToURL(char *dst, char *src){    unsigned char c, i, bitcount;    unsigned long ucs4, utf16, bitbuf;    unsigned char base64[256], utf8[6];    /* initialize modified base64 decoding table */Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007    memset(base64, UNDEFINED, sizeof (base64));    for (i = 0; i < sizeof (base64chars); ++i) {     base64[(int) base64chars[i]] = i;    }    /* loop until end of string */    while (*src != '\0') {     c = *src++;     /* deal with literal characters and &- */     if (c != '&' || *src == '-') {         /* NB: There are no "URL safe" characters after the '~' */         if (c < ' ' || c > '~' ||             strchr(mailbox_url_unsafe, c) != NULL) {          /* hex encode if necessary */          dst[0] = '%';          dst[1] = hex[c >> 4];          dst[2] = hex[c & 0x0f];          dst += 3;         } else {          /* encode literally */          *dst++ = c;         }         /* skip over the '-' if this is an &- sequence */         if (c == '&') ++src;     } else {        /* convert modified UTF-7 -> UTF-16 -> UCS-4 -> UTF-8 -> HEX */         bitbuf = 0;         bitcount = 0;         ucs4 = 0;         while ((c = base64[(unsigned char) *src]) != UNDEFINED) {          ++src;          bitbuf = (bitbuf << 6) | c;          bitcount += 6;          /* enough bits for a UTF-16 character? */          if (bitcount >= 16) {              bitcount -= 16;              utf16 = (bitcount ? bitbuf >> bitcount                             : bitbuf) & 0xffff;              /* convert UTF16 to UCS4 */              if                    (utf16 >= UTF16HIGHSTART && utf16 <= UTF16HIGHEND) {               ucs4 = (utf16 - UTF16HIGHSTART) << UTF16SHIFT;               continue;              } else if                    (utf16 >= UTF16LOSTART && utf16 <= UTF16LOEND) {               ucs4 += utf16 - UTF16LOSTART + UTF16BASE;              } else {Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007               ucs4 = utf16;              }              /* convert UTF-16 range of UCS4 to UTF-8 */              if (ucs4 <= 0x7fUL) {               utf8[0] = (unsigned char) ucs4;               i = 1;              } else if (ucs4 <= 0x7ffUL) {               utf8[0] = 0xc0 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 >> 6);               utf8[1] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 & 0x3f);               i = 2;              } else if (ucs4 <= 0xffffUL) {               utf8[0] = 0xe0 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 >> 12);               utf8[1] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) ((ucs4 >> 6) & 0x3f);               utf8[2] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 & 0x3f);               i = 3;              } else {               utf8[0] = 0xf0 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 >> 18);               utf8[1] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) ((ucs4 >> 12) & 0x3f);               utf8[2] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) ((ucs4 >> 6) & 0x3f);               utf8[3] = 0x80 | (unsigned char) (ucs4 & 0x3f);               i = 4;              }              /* convert utf8 to hex */              for (c = 0; c < i; ++c) {               dst[0] = '%';               dst[1] = hex[utf8[c] >> 4];               dst[2] = hex[utf8[c] & 0x0f];               dst += 3;              }          }         }         /* skip over trailing '-' in modified UTF-7 encoding */         if (*src == '-') ++src;     }    }    /* terminate destination string */    *dst = '\0';}/* Convert hex coded UTF-8 URL path to modified UTF-7 IMAP mailbox *  dst should be about twice the length of src to deal with non-hex *  coded URLs */int URLtoMailbox(char *dst, char *src){    unsigned int utf8pos = 0;    unsigned int utf8total, i, c, utf7mode, bitstogo, utf16flag;    unsigned long ucs4 = 0, bitbuf = 0;Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007    utf7mode = 0; /* is the output UTF7 currently in base64 mode? */    utf8total = 0; /* how many octets is the current input UTF-8 char;                      0 == between characters */    bitstogo = 0; /* bits that need to be encoded into base64; if                     bitstogo != 0 then utf7mode == 1 */    while ((c = (unsigned char)*src) != '\0') {     ++src;     /* undo hex-encoding */     if (c == '%' && src[0] != '\0' && src[1] != '\0') {         c = HEXCHAR(src[0]);         i = HEXCHAR(src[1]);         if (c == XX || i == XX) {             return 0;         } else {             c = (char)((c << 4) | i);         }         src += 2;     }     /* normal character? */     if (c >= ' ' && c <= '~') {         /* switch out of UTF-7 mode */         if (utf7mode) {          if (bitstogo) {          *dst++ = base64chars[(bitbuf << (6 - bitstogo)) & 0x3F];          }          *dst++ = '-';          utf7mode = 0;          bitstogo = bitbuf = 0;         }         *dst++ = c;         /* encode '&' as '&-' */         if (c == '&') {          *dst++ = '-';         }         continue;     }     /* switch to UTF-7 mode */     if (!utf7mode) {         *dst++ = '&';         utf7mode = 1;     }     /* Encode US-ASCII characters as themselves */     if (c < 0x80) {         ucs4 = c;         utf8total = 1;     } else if (utf8total) {         /* this is a subsequent octet of a multi-octet character */         /* save UTF8 bits into UCS4 */Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007         ucs4 = (ucs4 << 6) | (c & 0x3FUL);         if (++utf8pos < utf8total) {          continue;         }     } else {         /* this is the first octet of a multi-octet character */         utf8pos = 1;         if (c < 0xE0) {          utf8total = 2;          ucs4 = c & 0x1F;         } else if (c < 0xF0) {          utf8total = 3;          ucs4 = c & 0x0F;         } else {          /* NOTE: can't convert UTF8 sequences longer than 4 */          utf8total = 4;          ucs4 = c & 0x03;         }         continue;     }     /* Finished with UTF-8 character.  Make sure it isn't an        overlong sequence.  If it is, return failure. */     if ((ucs4 < 0x80 && utf8total > 1) ||         (ucs4 < 0x0800 && utf8total > 2) ||         (ucs4 < 0x00010000 && utf8total > 3) ||         (ucs4 < 0x00200000 && utf8total > 4) ||         (ucs4 < 0x04000000 && utf8total > 5) ||         (ucs4 < 0x80000000 && utf8total > 6)) {         return 0;     }     /* loop to split ucs4 into two utf16 chars if necessary */     utf8total = 0;     do {         if (ucs4 >= UTF16BASE) {                ucs4 -= UTF16BASE;          bitbuf = (bitbuf << 16) | ((ucs4 >> UTF16SHIFT)                            + UTF16HIGHSTART);          ucs4 = (ucs4 & UTF16MASK) + UTF16LOSTART;          utf16flag = 1;         } else {          bitbuf = (bitbuf << 16) | ucs4;          utf16flag = 0;         }         bitstogo += 16;         /* spew out base64 */         while (bitstogo >= 6) {          bitstogo -= 6;          *dst++ = base64chars[(bitstogo ? (bitbuf >> bitstogo)Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007                               : bitbuf)                         & 0x3F];         }     } while (utf16flag);    }    /* if in UTF-7 mode, finish in ASCII */    if (utf7mode) {     if (bitstogo) {         *dst++ = base64chars[(bitbuf << (6 - bitstogo)) & 0x3F];     }     *dst++ = '-';    }    /* tie off string */    *dst = '\0';    return 1;}Appendix B.  List of Changes sinceRFC 2192   Updated boilerplate, list of editor's, etc.   Updated references.   Updated ABNF not to use _, to use SP instead of SPACE, etc.   Updated example domains to use example.org.   Fixed ABNF error in "imessagelist" non-terminal.   Updated ABNF, due to changes inRFC 3501,RFC 4466, andRFC 3986.   Renamed "iuserauth" non-terminal to <iuserinfo>.   Clarified that the userinfo component describes both authorization   identity and mailbox naming scope.   Allow for non-synchronizing literals in "enc-search".   Added "ipartial" specifier that denotes a partial FETCH.   Moved URLAUTH text fromRFC 4467 to this document.   Updated ABNF for the whole server to allow missing trailing "/"   (e.g., "imap://imap.example.com" is now valid and is the same as   "imap://imap.example.com/").   Clarified how relative-path references are constructed.   Added more examples demonstrating relative-path references.   Added rules for relative URLs and restructured ABNF as the result.   Removed text on use of relative URLs in MHTML.   Added examples demonstrating security considerations when resolving   URLs.   Recommend usage of STARTTLS/SASL security layer to protect   confidential data.   Removed some advices about connection reuse that were incorrect.   Removed URLs referencing a list of mailboxes, as this feature   hasn't seen any deployments.   Clarified that user name "anonymous" is case-insensitive.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007Appendix C.  List of Changes sinceRFC 4467   Renamed <mechanism> to <uauth-mechanism>.  Restructured ABNF.Appendix D.  Acknowledgments   Text describing URLAUTH was lifted from [URLAUTH] by Mark Crispin.   Stephane H. Maes contributed some ideas to this document; he also   co-edited early versions of this document.   The editors would like to thank Mark Crispin, Ken Murchison, Ted   Hardie, Zoltan Ordogh, Dave Cridland, Kjetil Torgrim Homme, Lisa   Dusseault, Spencer Dawkins, Filip Navara, Shawn M. Emery, Sam   Hartman, Russ Housley, and Lars Eggert for the time they devoted to   reviewing this document and/or for the comments received.Authors' Addresses   Chris Newman (Author/Editor)   Sun Microsystems   3401 Centrelake Dr., Suite 410   Ontario, CA 91761   EMail: chris.newman@sun.com   Alexey Melnikov (Editor)   Isode Limited   5 Castle Business Village   36 Station Road   Hampton, Middlesex   TW12 2BX, UK   EMail: Alexey.Melnikov@isode.com   URI:http://www.melnikov.ca/Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 5092                    IMAP URL Scheme                November 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM 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.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Melnikov & Newman           Standards Track                    [Page 32]

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