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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                         M. StecherRequest for Comments: 4496                              Secure ComputingCategory: Informational                                        A. Barbir                                                                  Nortel                                                                May 2006Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) SMTP Use CasesStatus 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) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   The Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) framework is application   agnostic.  Application-specific adaptations extend that framework.   This document describes OPES SMTP use cases and deployment scenarios   in preparation for SMTP adaptation with OPES.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Terminology .....................................................23. Brief Overview of SMTP Architecture .............................33.1. Operation Flow of an OPES SMTP System ......................43.1.1. OPES SMTP Example ...................................54. OPES/SMTP Use Cases .............................................64.1. Security Filters Applied to Email Messages .................64.2. Spam Filter ................................................74.3. Logging and Reporting Filters ..............................84.4. Access Control Filters .....................................84.5. Secure Email Handling ......................................84.6. Email Format Normalization .................................84.7. Mail Rerouting and Address Rewriting .......................94.8. Block Email during SMTP Dialog .............................94.9. Convert Attachments to HTTP Links ..........................95. Security Considerations ........................................106. References .....................................................106.1. Normative References ......................................106.2. Informative References ....................................10   Acknowledgements ..................................................11Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 20061.  Introduction   The Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) architecture [1] enables   cooperative application services (OPES services) between a data   provider, a data consumer, and zero or more OPES processors.  The   application services under consideration analyze and possibly   transform application-level messages exchanged between the data   provider and the data consumer.  The OPES processor can distribute   the responsibility of service execution by communicating and   collaborating with one or more remote callout servers.   The execution of such services is governed by a set of rules   installed on the OPES processor.  The rule evaluation can trigger the   execution of service applications local to the OPES processor or on a   remote callout server.   Use cases for OPES based on HTTP [8] are described in [2].  This work   focuses on OPES for SMTP [7] use cases, whereby additional use cases   and enhancements to the types of OPES services defined in [2] are   provided.   In SMTP, the OPES processor may be any agent participating in SMTP   exchanges, including a Mail Submission Agent (MSA), a Mail Transfer   Agent (MTA), a Mail Delivery Agent (MDA), and a Mail User Agent   (MUA).  This document focuses on use cases in which the OPES   processor is a MTA.   SMTP is a store-and-forward protocol.  Current email filtering   systems either operate during the SMTP exchange or on messages that   have already been received, after the SMTP connection has been closed   (for example, in an MTA's message queue).   This work focuses on SMTP-based services that want to modify command   values or want to block SMTP commands.  In order to block a command,   the service will provide an error message that the MTA should use in   response to the command it received.  An OPES MTA will be involved in   SMTP command modification and command satisfaction, analogous to   request modification and request satisfaction from HTTP [8].2.  Terminology   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [6].  When used with   the normative meanings, these key words will be all uppercase.   Occurrences of these words in lowercase comprise normal prose usage,   with no normative implications.Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 20063.  Brief Overview of SMTP Architecture   The SMTP design, taken fromRFC 2821 [7], is shown in Figure 1.  When   an SMTP client has a message to transmit, it establishes a two-way   transmission channel to an SMTP server.  The responsibility of an   SMTP client is to transfer mail messages to one or more SMTP servers,   or report its failure to do so.                  +----------+                +----------+      +------+    |          |                |          |      | User |<-->|          |      SMTP      |          |      +------+    |  Client  |Commands/Replies| Server   |      +------+    |   SMTP   |<-------------->|  SMTP    |    +------+      | File |<-->|          |    and Mail    |          |<-->| File |      |System|    |          |                |          |    |System|      +------+    +----------+                +----------+    +------+                   SMTP client                SMTP server                           Figure 1: SMTP Design   In some cases, the domain name(s) transferred to, or determined by,   an SMTP client will identify the final destination(s) of the mail   message.  In other cases, the domain name determined will identify an   intermediate destination through which those mail messages are to be   relayed.   An SMTP server may be either the ultimate destination or an   intermediate "relay" or "gateway" (that is, it may transport the   message further using some protocol other than SMTP or using again   SMTP and then acting as an SMTP client).   SMTP commands are generated by the SMTP client and sent to the SMTP   server.  SMTP responses are sent from the SMTP server to the SMTP   client in response to the commands.  SMTP message transfer can occur   in a single connection between the original SMTP sender and the final   SMTP recipient, or it can occur in a series of hops through   intermediary systems.  SMTP clients and servers exchange commands and   responses and eventually the mail message body.   Figure 2 expands on the mail flow in an SMTP system.  Further   information about the architecture of email in the Internet may be   found in [9].Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006   +-------+  +---------+      +---------+      +--------+  +-------+   |mail  M|  |M mail  M| SMTP |M mail  M| SMTP |M mail M|  |M mail |   |clnt  U|--|S srvr  T|------|T gway  T|------|T srvr D|--|U clnt |   |      A|  |A       A|      |A       A|      |A      A|  |A      |   +-------+  +---------+      +---------+      +--------+  +-------+                      Figure 2: Expanded SMTP Flow   In this work, the OPES processor may be any agent that is   participating in SMTP exchanges, including an MSA, MTA, MDA, and MUA.   However, this document focuses on use cases in which the OPES   processor uses the SMTP protocol or one of the protocols derived from   SMTP Message Submission (SUBMIT) [10] and the Local Mail Transfer   Protocol (LMTP) [11]).3.1.  Operation Flow of an OPES SMTP System   In this work, an MTA is the OPES processor device that sits in the   data stream of the SMTP protocol.  The OPES processor gets enhanced   by an OCP (OPES callout protocol) [3] client that allows it to vector   out data to the callout server.  The filtering functionality is on   the callout server.   A client (a mail user) starts with an email client program (MUA).   The user sends email to an outgoing email server.  In the email   server, there is an MSA (mail submission agent) that is waiting to   receive email from the user.  The MSA uses an MTA within the same   server to forward the user email to other domains.  (Communication   between the MUA and MSA may be via SMTP, SUBMIT [10], or something   else such as MAPI).   The MTA in the user email server may directly contact the email   server of the recipient or may use other intermediate email gateways.   The sending email server and all intermediate gateway MTAs usually   communicate using SMTP.  Communication with the destination email   server usually uses SMTP or its derivative, LMTP [11].   In the destination email server, a mail delivery agent (MDA) may   deliver the email to the recipient's mailbox.  The email client   program of the recipient might use a different protocol (such as the   Post Office Protocol version 3 (POP3) or IMAP) to access the mailbox   and retrieve/read the messages.Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006   +-------+  +---------+      +---------+      +--------+  +-------+   |mail  M|  |M mail  M| SMTP |M mail  M| SMTP |M mail M|  |M mail |   |clnt  U|--|S srvr  T|------|T gway  T|------|T srvr D|--|U clnt |   |      A|  |A       A|      |A       A|      |A      A|  |A      |   +-------+  +---------+      +---------+      +--------+  +-------+                   |                |                |                   | OCP            | OCP            | OCP                   |                |                |              +----------+     +----------+     +----------+              |  callout |     |  callout |     |  callout |              |  server  |     |  server  |     |  server  |              +----------+     +----------+     +----------+                         Figure 3: OPES SMTP Flow   From Figure 3, the MTA (the OPES processor) is either receiving or   sending an email (or both) within an email server/gateway.  An OPES   processor might be the sender's SMTP server, the destination SMTP   server, or any intermediate SMTP gateway.  (Which building block   belongs to which authoritative domain is an important question but   different from deployment to deployment.)  Note that this figure   shows multiple OPES deployment options in a typical chain of mail   servers and gateways with different roles as MSA, MTA, and MDA; the   OPES standard case, however, will only have a single OPES processor   and a single callout server in the message flow.3.1.1.  OPES SMTP Example   A typical (minimum) SMTP dialog between two OPES SMTP processors   (MTA) will consist of the following (C: means client, S: means   server):      S: 220 mail.example.com Sample ESMTP MAIL Service, Version: 1.2      ready at Thu, 20 Jan 2005 11:24:40+0100      C: HELO [192.0.2.138]      S: 250 mail.example.com Hello [192.0.2.138]      C: MAIL FROM:<steve@example.org>      S: 250 2.1.0 steve@example.org....Sender OK      C: RCPT TO:<paul@example.com>      S: 250 2.1.5 paul@example.com      C: DATA      S: 354 Start mail input; end with "CRLF"."CRLF"      C: From: steve@example.org      C: To: sandra@example.com      C: Subject: Test      C:      C: Hi, this is a test!      C: .Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006      S: 250 2.6.0 "MAIL0m4b1f@mail.example.com" Queued mail for      delivery      C: QUIT      S: 221 2.0.0 mail.example.com Service closing transmission channel   The client (C:) is issuing SMTP commands and the server (S:) is   generating responses.  All responses start with a status code and   then some text.  At minimum, 4 commands are needed to send an email.   Together, all commands and responses to send a single email message   form "the dialog".  The mail message body is the data sent after the   "DATA" command.  An OPES processor could see that as command   modification.   If a callout service wants to adapt the email message body, it is   mainly interested in this part of the dialog:      From: steve@example.org      To: sandra@example.com      Subject: Test      Hi, this is a test!   The callout service may need to examine values of previous commands   of the same dialog.  For example, the callout service needs to   examine the value of the RCPT command (it is "paul@example.com"),   which is different from the "sandra@example.com" that the email   client displays in the visible "To" field.  That might be an   important fact for some filters such as spam filters (Section 4.2).4.  OPES/SMTP Use Cases   In principle, all filtering that is deployed at SMTP gateways today   and tomorrow defines use cases for OPES callout filtering.  An   OCP/SMTP callout protocol will enable an SMTP gateway to vector out   (parts of) an SMTP message or parts of the SMTP dialog to a callout   server that is then performing actions on behalf of the gateway.   (OCP/SMTP would be a profile defined for OCP analogous to the   OCP/HTTP profile [4] that has been defined earlier.)   Here is a collection of some typical use cases describing different   filtering areas and different actions caused by those filters.4.1.  Security Filters Applied to Email Messages   These filters concentrate on the email message body and usually   filter the email sections one by one.  Email sections (attachments)   that violate the security policy (e.g., because they contain a virusStecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006   or contain an unwanted mime type) define an event that can cause a   combination of different actions to be performed:   o  The attachment is replaced by an error message.   o  The email is marked by inserting a warning into the subject or the      email body.   o  An additional header is added for post-processing steps.   o  The email storage is advised to put the email into quarantine.   o  Notifications are sent to sender, recipients, and/or      administrators.   o  The incident is reported to other tools such as intrusion      detection applications.   These kinds of filters usually do not require working with elements   of the SMTP dialog other than the email message body.  An exception   to this is the need to map email senders and recipients to different   security sub-policies that are used for a particular message.  A   security filter may therefore require receiving the information of   the RCPT TO and MAIL FROM commands as meta data with the email   message body it examines.4.2.  Spam Filter   Next to security filters, spam filters are probably the most wanted   filtering application today.  Spam filters use several methods.  They   concentrate most on the email message body (that also includes the   email headers), but many of these filters are also interested in the   values of the other SMTP commands in order to compare the SMTP   sender/recipients with the visible From/To fields.  They may even   want to get the source IP of the connected SMTP client as meta   information to verify this against lists of open relays, known   spammers, etc.   These are typical actions that could be performed when a message has   been classified as spam:   o  Add a mark to the subject of the email.   o  Add an additional header for post-processing steps.   o  The email storage is advised to put the email into a spam queue.   o  The email is rejected or returned to the sender.Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 20064.3.  Logging and Reporting Filters   The nature of these kinds of filters is not to modify the email   message.  Depending on what is being logged or reported on, the   filter may need access to any part of the SMTP dialog.  Most wanted   is the sender and recipient information.  Depending on the ability of   the OPES processor to pre-calculate and transfer information about   the message body, the callout filter may want to see the email   message body itself or just that meta info; an example is the email   size.  This information would be typical logging and reporting   information that is easy for the SMTP gateway to calculate although   not a direct parameter of the SMTP dialog.  Transferring the complete   email message body only because the callout server wants to calculate   its size would be a waste of network resources.4.4.  Access Control Filters   These filters operate on the values of the MAIL FROM and RCPT TO   commands of the SMTP dialog.  They run an access control policy to   determine whether a sender is currently allowed to send a message to   the given recipients.  The values of HELO/EHLO, AUTH, and STARTTLS   commands may also be applied.  The result of this filter has a direct   influence on the SMTP response that the OPES processor has to send to   its peer for the filtered SMTP command.4.5.  Secure Email Handling   Filters of this kind can support an email gateway to centrally encode   and decode email, and to set and to verify email signatures.  They   will therefore modify the email message body to encrypt, decrypt,   verify, or sign the message, or use an action as specified in the   "Security Filter" (Section 4.1) section if the decryption or   signature verification fails.   Sending the SMTP sender and recipient information as meta data to   these filters is mission critical because these filters may not trust   the information found in the header section of the email message   body.4.6.  Email Format Normalization   SMTP messages may be sent with an illegal or uncommon format; this   may have happened by a buggy SMTP application or on purpose in order   to exploit vulnerabilities of other products.  A normalization filter   can correct the email format.  The format correction can be done for   the email body and for the value of other SMTP commands.  An example   for the email body format correction would be a strange length of   UUencoded lines or unusual names of MIME sections.  Command valuesStecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006   may be analysed against buffer overflow exploits; a rewrite will not   always be possible in this case (cannot simply rewrite an email   address that is very long) but will require that the callout server   tells the OPES processor to send an error response in reply to such a   command.4.7.  Mail Rerouting and Address Rewriting   A corporation with multiple locations may want to deploy a central   gateway that receives all email messages for all employees and then   determines at which location the mail storage of the employee   resides.  The callout server will then need the RCPT TO command value   and it will look up the location in the corporate directory service.   It then tells either the OPES processor where the next SMTP server is   (i.e., the next SMTP server to connect to) or it rewrites the   recipient address; in the first case, the SMTP servers at the   different locations accept emails of the same domain as the central   gateway does; in the second case, the other locations will probably   use the sublocation of the original domain (joe@example.org ->   joe@fr.example.org or joe@de.example.org).4.8.  Block Email during SMTP Dialog   In a first step, the callout server will check the sender and   recipient information that was transmitted in the SMTP dialog; that   information again maps to a policy that will deny all messages either   from that sender or to that recipient, or it checks the body of the   email and classifies it (maybe just by looking for some words in the   subject or by doing in-depth content analysis), which can then also   lead to the decision to deny the message.   Unlike previous examples, this use case wants to deny the email while   the SMTP dialog is still active, i.e., before the OPES processor   finally accepted the message.  Depending on the exact policy, the   error response should then be sent in reply to the MAIL FROM, RCPT   TO, or DATA command.4.9.  Convert Attachments to HTTP Links   This use case will only modify the email message body without any   other influence on the SMTP dialogs, mail routing, etc.  Larger   sections (attachments) are removed from the email, and the content is   stored on a web server.  A link to that new URL is then added into   the text of a first section that is likely to be displayed by an   email client.  Storing the attachments onto the web server is not in   the scope of the OPES/SMTP scenario and needs to be implemented by   the callout server.Stecher & Barbir             Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 20065.  Security Considerations   Application-independent security considerations are documented in   application-agnostic OPES specifications [5].  This document contains   only use cases and defines no protocol operations.  Security   considerations for protocols that appear in these use cases are   documented in the corresponding protocol specifications.   Use case "Secure Email Handling" (Section 4.5) is special in this   regard because it requires the extension of the end-to-end encryption   model and a secure handling of private cryptographic keys when   creating digital signatures or when decrypting messages.  Both are   out of scope of OPES protocol specifications.  An implementation of   such a service raises security issues (such as availability and   storage of cryptographic keys) that must be addressed regardless of   whether the implementation happens within an MTA or within an OPES   callout server.6.  References6.1.  Normative References   [1]  Barbir, A., Penno, R., Chen, R., Hofmann, M., and H. Orman, "An        Architecture for Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES)",RFC 3835,        August 2004.   [2]  Barbir, A., Burger, E., Chen, R., McHenry, S., Orman, H., and R.        Penno, "Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) Use Cases and        Deployment Scenarios",RFC 3752, April 2004.   [3]  Rousskov, A., "Open Pluggable Edge Services (OPES) Callout        Protocol (OCP) Core",RFC 4037, March 2005.   [4]  Rousskov, A. and M. Stecher, "HTTP Adaptation with Open        Pluggable Edge Services (OPES)",RFC 4236, November 2005.   [5]  Barbir, A., Batuner, O., Srinivas, B., Hofmann, M., and H.        Orman, "Security Threats and Risks for Open Pluggable Edge        Services (OPES)",RFC 3837, August 2004.   [6]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.6.2.  Informative References   [7]  Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol",RFC 2821, April        2001.Stecher & Barbir             Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006   [8]  Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H., Masinter, L.,        Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --        HTTP/1.1",RFC 2616, June 1999.   [9]  Crocker, D.,"Internet Mail Architecture", Work in Progress,        March 2005.   [10] Gellens, R. and J. Klensin, "Message Submission",RFC 2476,        December 1998.   [11] Myers, J., "Local Mail Transfer Protocol",RFC 2033, October        1996.Acknowledgements   Many thanks to everybody who provided input for the use case   examples, namely, jfc and Markus Hofmann.  Thanks also for the   discussion and feedback given on the OPES mailing list.Authors' Addresses   Martin Stecher   Secure Computing Corporation   Vattmannstr. 3   33100 Paderborn   Germany   EMail: martin.stecher@webwasher.com   URI:http://www.securecomputing.com/   Abbie Barbir   Nortel   3500 Carling Avenue   Ottawa, Ontario   CA   Phone: +1 613 763 5229   EMail: abbieb@nortel.comStecher & Barbir             Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4496                  OPES SMTP Use Cases                   May 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   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 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.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Stecher & Barbir             Informational                     [Page 12]

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