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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                          E. BurgerRequest for Comments: 5442                                    ConsultantCategory: Informational                                       G. Parsons                                                         Nortel Networks                                                              March 2009LEMONADE Architecture - Supporting Open Mobile Alliance (OMA)Mobile Email (MEM) Using Internet MailStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2009 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents in effect on the date of   publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights   and restrictions with respect to this document.   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Abstract   This document specifies the architecture for mobile email, as   described by the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA), using Internet Mail   protocols.  This architecture was an important consideration for much   of the work of the LEMONADE (Enhancements to Internet email to   Support Diverse Service Environments) working group in the IETF.   This document also describes how the LEMONADE architecture meets   OMA's requirements for their Mobile Email (MEM) service.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. OMA Mobile Email (MEM) ..........................................22.1. OMA MEM Requirements .......................................22.2. OMA MEM Architecture .......................................32.2.1. OMA MEM Logical Architecture ........................32.2.2. OMA MEM Deployment Issues ...........................42.3. OMA MEM Technical Specification ............................63. IETF LEMONADE Architecture ......................................6      3.1. Relationship between the OMA MEM and LEMONADE Logical           Architectures ..............................................7      3.2. LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with           non-LEMONADE-Compliant Servers .............................9           3.2.1. LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with                  non-LEMONADE IMAP Servers ...........................9           3.2.2. LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with non-IMAP                  Servers ............................................104. Filters and Server-to-Client Notifications and LEMONADE ........115. Security Considerations ........................................136. Acknowledgements ...............................................137. Informative References .........................................131.  Introduction   This document describes the architecture of OMA Mobile Email (MEM)   using Internet Mail protocols defined by the IETF.  The LEMONADE   working group has enhanced many of these protocols for use in the   mobile environment.  The LEMONADE profile [PROFILE] and its revision,   [PROFILE-bis], summarize such protocols and protocol use.  This   document shows how the OMA MEM Requirements document [MEM-req], OMA   MEM Architecture [MEM-arch], and OMA MEM Technical Specification   [MEM-ts] relate to the work of LEMONADE in the IETF.2.  OMA Mobile Email (MEM)   The OMA Mobile Email (MEM) sub-working group has spent some time   studying the requirements and architecture of mobile email.  IETF   LEMONADE has been liaising with them and has based much of its   Internet Mail enhancements on their input.  This section summarizes   the output of the OMA.2.1.  OMA MEM Requirements   The OMA MEM activity collected a set of use cases and derived   requirements for a Mobile Email (MEM) enabler.  The OMA MEM   Requirements document [MEM-req] summarizes this work.  Some   requirements relate to email protocols, some involve other OMABurger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009   technologies outside the scope of the IETF, and some relate to   implementations and normative interoperability statements for clients   and servers.2.2.  OMA MEM Architecture   This section introduces the OMA MEM Architecture.2.2.1.  OMA MEM Logical Architecture   The OMA MEM activity has derived a logical architecture from the   requirements and use cases described in [MEM-req].  A simplification   for illustrative purposes is shown in Figure 1, where arrows indicate   content flows.                       __________                      | Other    |                  +---| Mobile   |<--+                  |   | Enablers |   |                  |   |__________|   |                  |ME-4              |ME-3                 _v____           ___v____        ________                |      |ME-1     |        |      |        |                | MEM  |-------->|  MEM   |  I2  |  Email |                |Client|     ME-2| Server |<---->| Server |                |______|<--------|________|      |________|                                     ^                                     |ME-5                                     |               Figure 1: Basic OMA MEM Logical Architecture   Figure 1 identifies the following elements:   o  The MEM client that implements the client-side functionality of      the OMA Mobile Email enabler.  It is also responsible for      providing the mobile email user experience and interface to the      user and storing the email and data to be sent to the MEM server      when not connected.   o  The MEM server that implements the server-side functionality of      the OMA Mobile Email (MEM) enabler.   o  The MEM protocol between the MEM client and MEM server.  It is      responsible for all the in-band data exchanges that take place      between the MEM client and server in order to update the MEMBurger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009      client with email server changes and the email server with changes      in the MEM client, and in order to send new email from the email      server.   o  Other OMA enablers that are needed to directly support the Mobile      Email enabler.  They are out of the scope of the IETF but may      include support for:      *  Client provisioning and management for over-the-air         installation of the MEM client on the device, provisioning of         the client settings, and revocation of client privileges.      *  Messaging enablers for out-of-band notification, where out-of-         band notifications that are server-to-client event exchanges         are not transported by the MEM protocol but via other channels.      *  Billing, charging, and so on.   OMA identifies different interfaces:   o  ME-1: MEM client interface to interact via the MEM protocol with      the MEM server.   o  ME-2: Corresponding interface of the MEM server.   o  ME-3: Out-of-band MEM server interfaces; for example, to support      generation of server-to-client notifications.   o  ME-4: Out-of-band MEM client interfaces (e.g., to receive server-      to-client notifications).   o  ME-5: Interface for management of MEM enabler server settings,      user preferences, and filters, globally and per account.   The MEM server enables an email server.  In a particular   implementation, the email server may be packaged with (internal to   it) the MEM server or be a separate component.  In such cases,   interfaces to the email server are out of scope of the OMA MEM   specifications.  In the present document, we focus on the case where   the backend consists of IETF IMAP and SUBMIT servers.  However, we   also discuss the relationship to other cases.  The I2 interface is an   OMA notation to designate protocol / interfaces that are not   specified by the MEM enabler but may be standardized elsewhere.2.2.2.  OMA MEM Deployment Issues   The OMA MEM Architecture document [MEM-arch] further identifies   deployment models.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 20092.2.2.1.  OMA MEM Proxy   The OMA MEM Architecture document [MEM-arch] identifies OMA MEM   server proxies as server components that may be deployed ahead of   firewalls to facilitate firewall traversal.2.2.2.2.  OMA MEM Deployment Cases   OMA MEM identifies that each component (MEM client, MEM servers,   other enablers, and the email server) may be deployed in different   domains, possibly separated by firewalls and other network   intermediaries.  MEM proxies may be involved in front of a firewall   that protects the MEM server domain.   OMA MEM targets support of configurations where:   o  All components are within the same domain, such as in a mobile      operator.   o  The MEM client and other enablers are in the mobile operator      domain, there is a MEM proxy, and the MEM server and email server      are in the domain of the email service provider.   o  The MEM client and other enablers as well as a MEM proxy are in      the mobile operator domain, and the MEM server and email server      are in the domain of the email service provider.   o  The MEM client and other enablers are in the mobile operator      domain, a MEM proxy is in a third-party service provider domain,      and the MEM server and email server are in the domain of the email      service provider.   o  The MEM client, other enabler, and MEM server are in the mobile      operator domain, and the email server is in the domain of the      email service provider.   o  The MEM client and other enablers are in the mobile operator      domain, the MEM server is in a third-party service provider      domain, and the email server is in the domain of the email service      provider.   The email service provider can be a third-party service provider, a   network service provider, or an enterprise email service.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 20092.3.  OMA MEM Technical Specification   The OMA MEM activity will conclude with a specification for a Mobile   Email (MEM) enabler.  The ongoing work is in the OMA MEM Technical   Specification [MEM-ts].  LEMONADE is a basis for the mechanism.   However, some additional details that are outside the scope of the   IETF will also be included.   OMA provides ways to perform provisioning via OMA client provisioning   and device management.  Other provisioning specifications are   available (e.g., SMS based).   OMA provides enablers to support out-of-band notification mechanisms,   filter specifications (such as XDM), and remote deactivate devices,   and to perform other non-Internet activities.3.  IETF LEMONADE Architecture   This section introduces the LEMONADE Architecture.   The IETF LEMONADE activity has derived a LEMONADE profile   [PROFILE-bis] with the logical architecture represented in Figure 2,   where arrows indicate content flows.                            ______________                           |              |                  _________| Notification |                 |         | Mechanism    |                 |         |______________|                 |Notif.              ^                 |Protocol            |                 |                 ___|______                 |                |          |                 _____               __v__    IMAP      | LEMONADE |      ESMTP     |     |              |     |<----------->| IMAP     |<---------------| MTA |              | MUA |-            | Store    |                |_____|              |_____| \           |__________|                       \               |                        \              |URLAUTH                         \SUBMIT       |                          \        ____v_____                           \      |          |                 _____                            \     | LEMONADE |      ESMTP     |     |                             ---->| Submit   |--------------->| MTA |                                  | Server   |                |_____|                                  |__________|                  Figure 2: LEMONADE logical architectureBurger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009   The LEMONADE profile [PROFILE] assumes:   o  IMAP protocol [RFC3501], including LEMONADE profile extensions      [PROFILE].   o  SUBMIT protocol [RFC4409], including LEMONADE profile extensions.   o  LEMONADE profile compliant IMAP store connected to an MTA (Mail      Transfer Agent) via the ESMTP [EMAIL].   o  LEMONADE profile compliant submit server connected to an MTA,      often via the ESMTP.   o  Out-of-band server-to-client notifications relying on external      notification mechanisms (and notification protocols) that may be      out of the scope of the LEMONADE profile.   o  LEMONADE-aware MUA (Mail User Agent).  While use of out-of-band      notification is described in the LEMONADE profile, support for the      underlying notifications mechanisms/protocols is out of the scope      of the LEMONADE specifications.   Further details on the IETF email protocol stack and architecture can   be found in [MAIL].3.1.  Relationship between the OMA MEM and LEMONADE Logical      Architectures   Figure 3 illustrates the mapping of the IETF LEMONADE logical   architecture on the OMA MEM logical architecture.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009                          _____________________                         | Other_Mob. Enablers |                         | |--------------|    |                  _________| Notification |    |                 |       | | Mechanism    |    |                 |       | |______________|    |                 |Notif. |____________^________|                 |Protocol      ______|__________            ME-4 |             |   ___|_ME-3_    |              ___|____         |  |          |   |         _____             | __v__ |  IMAP   |  | LEMONADE |   |  ESMTP |     |             ||     |<----------->| IMAP     |<-----------| MTA |             || MUA ||   ME-2a |  | Store    |   |        |_____|             ||_____||\ME-1    |  |__________|   |             | MEM   | \       |       |         |             | Client|  \      |       |URLAUTH  |             |_______|   \SUBMIT       |         |                          \    |   ____v_____    |                           \   |  |          |   |         _____                            \  |  | LEMONADE |   |  ESMTP |     |                             ---->| Submit   |----------->| MTA |                         ME-2b |  | Server   |   |        |_____|                               |  |__________|   |                               |MEM        Email |                               |Server     Server|                               |_________________|                                        ^                                        |ME-5                                        |            Figure 3: Mapping of LEMONADE Logical Architecture                   onto the OMA MEM Logical Architecture   As described inSection 3, the LEMONADE profile assumes LEMONADE   profile compliant IMAP stores and SUBMIT servers.  Because the   LEMONADE profile extends the IMAP store and the SUBMIT server, the   mobile enablement of email provided by the LEMONADE profile is   directly provided in these servers.  Mapping to the OMA MEM logical   architecture for the case considered and specified by the LEMONADE   profile, we logically combine the MEM server and email server.   However, in LEMONADE we split them logically into a distinct LEMONADE   message store and a LEMONADE SUBMIT server.  ME-2 consists of two   interfaces.  ME-2a is IMAP extended according to the LEMONADE   profile.  ME-2b is SUBMIT extended according to the LEMONADE profile.   The MUA is part of the MEM client.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009   The external notifications mechanism is part of the OMA enablers   specified by the OMA.3.2.  LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with non-LEMONADE-Compliant      Servers   The OMA MEM activity is not limited to enabling LEMONADE-compliant   servers.  It explicitly identifies the need to support other   backends.  This is, of course, outside the scope of the IETF LEMONADE   activity.3.2.1.  LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with non-LEMONADE IMAP Servers   Figure 4 illustrates the case of IMAP servers that are not LEMONADE-   compliant.  In such case, the I2 interface between the MEM server   components and the IMAP store and SUBMIT server are IMAP and SUBMIT   without LEMONADE extensions.   It is important to note the realizations are of a schematic nature   and do not dictate actual implementation.  For example, one could   envision collocating the LEMONADE MEM enabler server and the submit   server shown in Figure 4 in a single instantiation of the   implementation.  Likewise, we consciously label the LEMONADE MEM   enabler as neither an IMAP proxy nor an IMAP back-to-back user agent.   LEMONADE leaves the actual implementation to the developer.Burger & Parsons             Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009                 ______________                |              |       _________| Notification |      |         | Mechanism    |      |         |______________|      |Notif.            ^      |Protocol          |      |               ___|______          _____________      |              | LEMONADE |        |             |        _____    __v__    IMAP    | MEM      |  IMAP  |NON-LEMONADE | ESMTP |     |   |     |<--------->|Enabler   |<------>|IMAP         |<----->| MTA |   | MUA |\   ME-2a  | Server   |        |Store        |       |_____|   |_____| \         |__________|        |_____________|            \             |             \            |URLAUTH              \SUBMIT     |               \      ____v_____          _____________                \    |          |        |             |        _____                 \   | LEMONADE | SUBMIT |NON-LEMONADE | ESMTP |     |                  -->|  MEM     |        |Submit       |       |     |                     | Enabler  |------->|Server       |------>| MTA |              ME-2b  | Server   |        |             |       |_____|                     |__________|        |_____________|       Figure 4: Architecture to Support Non-LEMONADE IMAP Servers             with a LEMONADE Realization of an OMA MEM Enabler3.2.2.  LEMONADE Realization of OMA MEM with non-IMAP Servers   Figure 5 illustrates the cases where the message store and submit   servers are not IMAP store or submit servers.  They may be Post   Office Protocol (POP3) servers or other proprietary message stores.Burger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009                 ______________                |              |       _________| Notification |      |         | Mechanism    |      |         |______________|      |Notif.            ^      |Protocol          |      |               ___|______          _____________      |              | LEMONADE |        |             |        _____    __v__    IMAP    | MEM      |    I2  |Proprietary  | ESMTP |     |   |     |<--------->|Enabler   |<------>|Message      |<----->| MTA |   | MUA |\   ME-2a  | Server   |        |Store        |       |_____|   |_____| \         |__________|        |_____________|            \             |             \            |URLAUTH              \SUBMIT     |               \      ____v_____          _____________                \    |          |        |             |        _____                 \   | LEMONADE |    I2  |Proprietary  | ESMTP |     |                  -->| MEM      |        |Submit       |       |     |                     | Enabler  |------->|Server       |------>| MTA |              ME-2b  | Server   |        |             |       |_____|                     |__________|        |_____________|    Figure 5: Architecture to Support Non-IMAP Servers with a LEMONADE                      Realization of OMA MEM Enabler   I2 designates proprietary adapters to the backends.4.  Filters and Server-to-Client Notifications and LEMONADE   OMA MEM Requirements [MEM-req] and Architecture [MEM-arch] emphasize   the need to provide mechanisms for server-to-client notifications of   email events and filtering.  Figure 6 illustrates how notification   and filtering works in the LEMONADE profile [PROFILE].Burger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009                   ______________                  |              |         _________| Notification |        |         | Mechanism    |        |         |______________|        |Notif.              ^        |Protocol -------\  _|__        |   ______|    ___\>|NF|____        |  |          |     ----    |                 _____      __v__|   IMAP   |__  LEMONADE |___   ESMTP   __|     |     |     |<-------->|VF| IMAP     |DF |<--------|AF| MTA |     | MUA |\   ME-2a |--  Store    |---           --|_____|     |_____| \        |_____________| ^            \_\_______________|_______|               \              |URLAUTH                \SUBMIT       |                 \        ____v_____                  \      |          |                 _____                   \     | LEMONADE |      ESMTP     |     |                    ---->| Submit   |--------------->| MTA |                ME-2b    | Server   |                |_____|                         |__________|      Figure 6: Filtering Mechanism Defined in LEMONADE Architecture   In Figure 6, we define four categories of filters:   o  AF: Administrative Filters - The email service provider usually      sets administrative filters.  The user typically does not      configure AF.  AF applies policies covering content filtering,      virus protection, spam filtering, etc.   o  DF: Deposit Filters - Filters that are executed on deposit of new      emails.  They can be defined as SIEVE filters [SIEVE].  They can      include vacation notices [RFC5230].  As SIEVE filters, one can      administer them using the SIEVE management protocol [MANAGESIEVE].   o  VF: View Filters - Filters that define which emails are visible to      the MUA.  View filters can be performed via IMAP using the      facilities described in [NOTIFICATIONS].   o  NF: Notification Filters - Filters that define for what email      server event an out-of-band notification is sent to the client, as      described in [NOTIFICATIONS].   Refer to the aforementioned references for implementation and   management of the respective filters.Burger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 20095.  Security Considerations   We note there are security risks associated with:   o  Out-of-band notifications   o  Server configuration by client   o  Client configuration by server   o  Presence of MEM proxy servers   o  Presence of MEM servers as intermediaries   o  Measures to address the need to traverse firewalls   We refer the reader to the relevant Internet Mail, IMAP, SUBMIT, and   Lemonade documents for how we address these issues.6.  Acknowledgements   The authors acknowledge and appreciate the work and comments of the   IETF LEMONADE working group and the OMA MEM working group.  We   extracted the contents of this document from sections of   [PROFILE-bis] by Stephane Maes, Alexey Melnikov, and Dave Cridland,   as well as sections of [NOTIFICATIONS] by Stephane Maes and Ray   Cromwell.7.  Informative References   [EMAIL]          Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol",RFC 5321, October 2008.   [MAIL]           Crocker, D.,"Internet Mail Architecture", Work                    in Progress, October 2008.   [MANAGESIEVE]    Melnikov, A. and T. Martin, "A Protocol for Remotely                    Managing Sieve Scripts", Work in Progress,                    January 2009.   [MEM-arch]       Open Mobile Alliance, "Mobile Email Architecture                    Document", OMA,http://member.openmobilealliance.org/ftp/public_documents/mwg/MEM/Permanent_documents/                    OMA-AD-Mobile_Email-V1_0_0-20070614-D.zip,                    June 2007.Burger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009   [MEM-req]        Open Mobile Alliance, "Mobile Email Requirements                    Document", OMA,http://www.openmobilealliance.org/,                    Oct 2005.   [MEM-ts]         Open Mobile Alliance, "Mobile Email Technical                    Specification", OMA, Work in Progress,http://www.openmobilealliance.org/, Oct 2007.   [NOTIFICATIONS]  Gellens, R. and S. Maes, "Lemonade Notifications                    Architecture", Work in Progress, July 2008.   [PROFILE]        Maes, S. and A. Melnikov, "Internet Email to Support                    Diverse Service Environments (Lemonade) Profile",RFC 4550, June 2006.   [PROFILE-bis]    Cridland, D., Melnikov, A., and S. Maes, "The                    Lemonade Profile", Work in Progress, September 2008.   [RFC3501]        Crispin, M., "INTERNET MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL -                    VERSION 4rev1",RFC 3501, March 2003.   [RFC4409]        Gellens, R. and J. Klensin, "Message Submission for                    Mail",RFC 4409, April 2006.   [RFC5230]        Showalter, T. and N. Freed, "Sieve Email Filtering:                    Vacation Extension",RFC 5230, January 2008.   [SIEVE]          Guenther, P. and T. Showalter, "Seive: An Email                    Filtering Language",RFC 5228, January 2008.Burger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5442                 LEMONADE Architecture                March 2009Authors' Addresses   Eric W. Burger   Consultant   New Hampshire   USA   Phone:   Fax:   +1 530-267-7447   EMail: eburger@standardstrack.com   URI:http://www.standardstrack.com   Glenn Parsons   Nortel Networks   3500 Carling Avenue   Ottawa, ON  K2H 8E9   Canada   Phone: +1 613 763 7582   EMail: gparsons@nortel.comBurger & Parsons             Informational                     [Page 15]

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