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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:5229,5429,6785,9042Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                   P. Guenther, Ed.Request for Comments: 5228                                Sendmail, Inc.Obsoletes:3028                                        T. Showalter, Ed.Category: Standards Track                                   January 2008Sieve: An Email Filtering LanguageStatus 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   This document describes a language for filtering email messages at   time of final delivery.  It is designed to be implementable on either   a mail client or mail server.  It is meant to be extensible, simple,   and independent of access protocol, mail architecture, and operating   system.  It is suitable for running on a mail server where users may   not be allowed to execute arbitrary programs, such as on black box   Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) servers, as the base language   has no variables, loops, or ability to shell out to external   programs.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................41.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................41.2. Example Mail Messages ......................................52. Design ..........................................................62.1. Form of the Language .......................................62.2. Whitespace .................................................72.3. Comments ...................................................72.4. Literal Data ...............................................72.4.1. Numbers .............................................72.4.2. Strings .............................................82.4.2.1. String Lists ...............................92.4.2.2. Headers ....................................92.4.2.3. Addresses .................................10                  2.4.2.4. Encoding Characters Using                           "encoded-character" .......................102.5. Tests .....................................................112.5.1. Test Lists .........................................122.6. Arguments .................................................122.6.1. Positional Arguments ...............................122.6.2. Tagged Arguments ...................................122.6.3. Optional Arguments .................................132.6.4. Types of Arguments .................................132.7. String Comparison .........................................132.7.1. Match Type .........................................142.7.2. Comparisons across Character Sets ..................152.7.3. Comparators ........................................152.7.4. Comparisons against Addresses ......................162.8. Blocks ....................................................172.9. Commands ..................................................172.10. Evaluation ...............................................182.10.1. Action Interaction ................................182.10.2. Implicit Keep .....................................182.10.3. Message Uniqueness in a Mailbox ...................192.10.4. Limits on Numbers of Actions ......................192.10.5. Extensions and Optional Features ..................192.10.6. Errors ............................................202.10.7. Limits on Execution ...............................203. Control Commands ...............................................213.1. Control if ................................................213.2. Control require ...........................................223.3. Control stop ..............................................224. Action Commands ................................................234.1. Action fileinto ...........................................234.2. Action redirect ...........................................234.3. Action keep ...............................................244.4. Action discard ............................................25Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20085. Test Commands ..................................................265.1. Test address ..............................................265.2. Test allof ................................................275.3. Test anyof ................................................275.4. Test envelope .............................................275.5. Test exists ...............................................285.6. Test false ................................................285.7. Test header ...............................................295.8. Test not ..................................................295.9. Test size .................................................295.10. Test true ................................................306. Extensibility ..................................................306.1. Capability String .........................................316.2. IANA Considerations .......................................316.2.1. Template for Capability Registrations ..............326.2.2. Handling of Existing Capability Registrations ......326.2.3. Initial Capability Registrations ...................326.3. Capability Transport ......................................337. Transmission ...................................................338. Parsing ........................................................348.1. Lexical Tokens ............................................348.2. Grammar ...................................................368.3. Statement Elements ........................................369. Extended Example ...............................................3710. Security Considerations .......................................3811. Acknowledgments ...............................................3912. Normative References ..........................................3913. Informative References ........................................4014. Changes fromRFC 3028 .........................................41Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20081.  Introduction   This memo documents a language that can be used to create filters for   electronic mail.  It is not tied to any particular operating system   or mail architecture.  It requires the use of [IMAIL]-compliant   messages, but should otherwise generalize to many systems.   The language is powerful enough to be useful but limited in order to   allow for a safe server-side filtering system.  The intention is to   make it impossible for users to do anything more complex (and   dangerous) than write simple mail filters, along with facilitating   the use of graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for filter creation and   manipulation.  The base language was not designed to be Turing-   complete: it does not have a loop control structure or functions.   Scripts written in Sieve are executed during final delivery, when the   message is moved to the user-accessible mailbox.  In systems where   the Mail Transfer Agent (MTA) does final delivery, such as   traditional Unix mail, it is reasonable to filter when the MTA   deposits mail into the user's mailbox.   There are a number of reasons to use a filtering system.  Mail   traffic for most users has been increasing due to increased usage of   email, the emergence of unsolicited email as a form of advertising,   and increased usage of mailing lists.   Experience at Carnegie Mellon has shown that if a filtering system is   made available to users, many will make use of it in order to file   messages from specific users or mailing lists.  However, many others   did not make use of the Andrew system's FLAMES filtering language   [FLAMES] due to difficulty in setting it up.   Because of the expectation that users will make use of filtering if   it is offered and easy to use, this language has been made simple   enough to allow many users to make use of it, but rich enough that it   can be used productively.  However, it is expected that GUI-based   editors will be the preferred way of editing filters for a large   number of users.1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   In the sections of this document that discuss the requirements of   various keywords and operators, the following conventions have been   adopted.   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 [KEYWORDS].Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Each section on a command (test, action, or control) has a line   labeled "Usage:".  This line describes the usage of the command,   including its name and its arguments.  Required arguments are listed   inside angle brackets ("<" and ">").  Optional arguments are listed   inside square brackets ("[" and "]").  Each argument is followed by   its type, so "<key: string>" represents an argument called "key" that   is a string.  Literal strings are represented with double-quoted   strings.  Alternatives are separated with slashes, and parentheses   are used for grouping, similar to [ABNF].   In the "Usage:" line, there are three special pieces of syntax that   are frequently repeated, MATCH-TYPE, COMPARATOR, and ADDRESS-PART.   These are discussed in sections2.7.1,2.7.3, and2.7.4,   respectively.   The formal grammar for these commands is defined insection 8 and is   the authoritative reference on how to construct commands, but the   formal grammar does not specify the order, semantics, number or types   of arguments to commands, or the legal command names.  The intent is   to allow for extension without changing the grammar.1.2.  Example Mail Messages   The following mail messages will be used throughout this document in   examples.   Message A   -----------------------------------------------------------   Date: Tue, 1 Apr 1997 09:06:31 -0800 (PST)   From: coyote@desert.example.org   To: roadrunner@acme.example.com   Subject: I have a present for you   Look, I'm sorry about the whole anvil thing, and I really   didn't mean to try and drop it on you from the top of the   cliff.  I want to try to make it up to you.  I've got some   great birdseed over here at my place--top of the line   stuff--and if you come by, I'll have it all wrapped up   for you.  I'm really sorry for all the problems I've caused   for you over the years, but I know we can work this out.   --   Wile E. Coyote   "Super Genius"   coyote@desert.example.org   -----------------------------------------------------------Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Message B   -----------------------------------------------------------   From: youcouldberich!@reply-by-postal-mail.invalid   Sender: b1ff@de.res.example.com   To: rube@landru.example.com   Date:  Mon, 31 Mar 1997 18:26:10 -0800   Subject: $$$ YOU, TOO, CAN BE A MILLIONAIRE! $$$   YOU MAY HAVE ALREADY WON TEN MILLION DOLLARS, BUT I DOUBT   IT!  SO JUST POST THIS TO SIX HUNDRED NEWSGROUPS!  IT WILL   GUARANTEE THAT YOU GET AT LEAST FIVE RESPONSES WITH MONEY!   MONEY! MONEY! COLD HARD CASH!  YOU WILL RECEIVE OVER   $20,000 IN LESS THAN TWO MONTHS!  AND IT'S LEGAL!!!!!!!!!   !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111111111!!!!!!!11111111111!!1  JUST   SEND $5 IN SMALL, UNMARKED BILLS TO THE ADDRESSES BELOW!   -----------------------------------------------------------2.  Design2.1.  Form of the Language   The language consists of a set of commands.  Each command consists of   a set of tokens delimited by whitespace.  The command identifier is   the first token and it is followed by zero or more argument tokens.   Arguments may be literal data, tags, blocks of commands, or test   commands.   With the exceptions of strings and comments, the language is limited   to US-ASCII characters.  Strings and comments may contain octets   outside the US-ASCII range.  Specifically, they will normally be in   UTF-8, as specified in [UTF-8].  NUL (US-ASCII 0) is never permitted   in scripts, while CR and LF can only appear as the CRLF line ending.      Note: While this specification permits arbitrary octets to appear      in Sieve scripts inside strings and comments, this has made it      difficult to robustly handle Sieve scripts in programs that are      sensitive to the encodings used.  The "encoded-character"      capability (section 2.4.2.4) provides an alternative means of      representing such octets in strings using just US-ASCII      characters.  As such, the use of non-UTF-8 text in scripts should      be considered a deprecated feature that may be abandoned.   Tokens other than strings are considered case-insensitive.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20082.2.  Whitespace   Whitespace is used to separate tokens.  Whitespace is made up of   tabs, newlines (CRLF, never just CR or LF), and the space character.   The amount of whitespace used is not significant.2.3.  Comments   Two types of comments are offered.  Comments are semantically   equivalent to whitespace and can be used anyplace that whitespace is   (with one exception in multi-line strings, as described in the   grammar).   Hash comments begin with a "#" character that is not contained within   a string and continue until the next CRLF.   Example:  if size :over 100k { # this is a comment                discard;             }   Bracketed comments begin with the token "/*" and end with "*/"   outside of a string.  Bracketed comments may span multiple lines.   Bracketed comments do not nest.   Example:  if size :over 100K { /* this is a comment                this is still a comment */ discard /* this is a comment                */ ;             }2.4.  Literal Data   Literal data means data that is not executed, merely evaluated "as   is", to be used as arguments to commands.  Literal data is limited to   numbers, strings, and string lists.2.4.1.  Numbers   Numbers are given as ordinary decimal numbers.  As a shorthand for   expressing larger values, such as message sizes, a suffix of "K",   "M", or "G" MAY be appended to indicate a multiple of a power of two.   To be comparable with the power-of-two-based versions of SI units   that computers frequently use, "K" specifies kibi-, or 1,024 (2^10)   times the value of the number; "M" specifies mebi-, or 1,048,576   (2^20) times the value of the number; and "G" specifies gibi-, or   1,073,741,824 (2^30) times the value of the number [BINARY-SI].Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Implementations MUST support integer values in the inclusive range   zero to 2,147,483,647 (2^31 - 1), but MAY support larger values.   Only non-negative integers are permitted by this specification.2.4.2.  Strings   Scripts involve large numbers of string values as they are used for   pattern matching, addresses, textual bodies, etc.  Typically, short   quoted strings suffice for most uses, but a more convenient form is   provided for longer strings such as bodies of messages.   A quoted string starts and ends with a single double quote (the <">   character, US-ASCII 34).  A backslash ("\", US-ASCII 92) inside of a   quoted string is followed by either another backslash or a double   quote.  These two-character sequences represent a single backslash or   double quote within the value, respectively.   Scripts SHOULD NOT escape other characters with a backslash.   An undefined escape sequence (such as "\a" in a context where "a" has   no special meaning) is interpreted as if there were no backslash (in   this case, "\a" is just "a"), though that may be changed by   extensions.   Non-printing characters such as tabs, CRLF, and control characters   are permitted in quoted strings.  Quoted strings MAY span multiple   lines.  An unencoded NUL (US-ASCII 0) is not allowed in strings; seesection 2.4.2.4 for how it can be encoded.   As message header data is converted to [UTF-8] for comparison (seesection 2.7.2), most string values will use the UTF-8 encoding.   However, implementations MUST accept all strings that match the   grammar insection 8.  The ability to use non-UTF-8 encoded strings   matches existing practice and has proven to be useful both in tests   for invalid data and in arguments containing raw MIME parts for   extension actions that generate outgoing messages.   For entering larger amounts of text, such as an email message, a   multi-line form is allowed.  It starts with the keyword "text:",   followed by a CRLF, and ends with the sequence of a CRLF, a single   period, and another CRLF.  The CRLF before the final period is   considered part of the value.  In order to allow the message to   contain lines with a single dot, lines are dot-stuffed.  That is,   when composing a message body, an extra '.' is added before each line   that begins with a '.'.  When the server interprets the script, these   extra dots are removed.  Note that a line that begins with a dot   followed by a non-dot character is not interpreted as dot-stuffed;Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   that is, ".foo" is interpreted as ".foo".  However, because this is   potentially ambiguous, scripts SHOULD be properly dot-stuffed so such   lines do not appear.   Note that a hashed comment or whitespace may occur in between the   "text:" and the CRLF, but not within the string itself.  Bracketed   comments are not allowed here.2.4.2.1.  String Lists   When matching patterns, it is frequently convenient to match against   groups of strings instead of single strings.  For this reason, a list   of strings is allowed in many tests, implying that if the test is   true using any one of the strings, then the test is true.   For instance, the test 'header :contains ["To", "Cc"]   ["me@example.com", "me00@landru.example.com"]' is true if either a To   header or Cc header of the input message contains either of the email   addresses "me@example.com" or "me00@landru.example.com".   Conversely, in any case where a list of strings is appropriate, a   single string is allowed without being a member of a list: it is   equivalent to a list with a single member.  This means that the test   'exists "To"' is equivalent to the test 'exists ["To"]'.2.4.2.2.  Headers   Headers are a subset of strings.  In the Internet Message   Specification [IMAIL], each header line is allowed to have whitespace   nearly anywhere in the line, including after the field name and   before the subsequent colon.  Extra spaces between the header name   and the ":" in a header field are ignored.   A header name never contains a colon.  The "From" header refers to a   line beginning "From:" (or "From   :", etc.).  No header will match   the string "From:" due to the trailing colon.   Similarly, no header will match a syntactically invalid header name.   An implementation MUST NOT cause an error for syntactically invalid   header names in tests.   Header lines are unfolded as described in [IMAIL]section 2.2.3.   Interpretation of header data SHOULD be done according to [MIME3]section 6.2 (seesection 2.7.2 below for details).Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20082.4.2.3.  Addresses   A number of commands call for email addresses, which are also a   subset of strings.  When these addresses are used in outbound   contexts, addresses must be compliant with [IMAIL], but are further   constrained within this document.  Using the symbols defined in   [IMAIL], section 3, the syntax of an address is:   sieve-address = addr-spec                ; simple address                 / phrase "<" addr-spec ">" ; name & addr-spec   That is, routes and group syntax are not permitted.  If multiple   addresses are required, use a string list.  Named groups are not   permitted.   It is an error for a script to execute an action with a value for use   as an outbound address that doesn't match the "sieve-address" syntax.2.4.2.4.  Encoding Characters Using "encoded-character"   When the "encoded-character" extension is in effect, certain   character sequences in strings are replaced by their decoded value.   This happens after escape sequences are interpreted and dot-   unstuffing has been done.  Implementations SHOULD support "encoded-   character".   Arbitrary octets can be embedded in strings by using the syntax   encoded-arb-octets.  The sequence is replaced by the octets with the   hexadecimal values given by each hex-pair.   blank                = WSP / CRLF   encoded-arb-octets   = "${hex:" hex-pair-seq "}"   hex-pair-seq         = *blank hex-pair *(1*blank hex-pair) *blank   hex-pair             = 1*2HEXDIG   Where WSP and HEXDIG non-terminals are defined inAppendix B.1 of   [ABNF].   It may be inconvenient or undesirable to enter Unicode characters   verbatim, and for these cases the syntax encoded-unicode-char can be   used.  The sequence is replaced by the UTF-8 encoding of the   specified Unicode characters, which are identified by the hexadecimal   value of unicode-hex.   encoded-unicode-char = "${unicode:" unicode-hex-seq "}"   unicode-hex-seq      = *blank unicode-hex                          *(1*blank unicode-hex) *blank   unicode-hex          = 1*HEXDIGGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   It is an error for a script to use a hexadecimal value that isn't in   either the range 0 to D7FF or the range E000 to 10FFFF.  (The range   D800 to DFFF is excluded as those character numbers are only used as   part of the UTF-16 encoding form and are not applicable to the UTF-8   encoding that the syntax here represents.)      Note: Implementations MUST NOT raise an error for an out-of-range      Unicode value unless the sequence containing it is well-formed      according to the grammar.   The capability string for use with the require command is "encoded-   character".   In the following script, message B is discarded, since the specified   test string is equivalent to "$$$".   Example:  require "encoded-character";             if header :contains "Subject" "$${hex:24 24}" {                discard;             }   The following examples demonstrate valid and invalid encodings and   how they are handled:     "$${hex:40}"         -> "$@"     "${hex: 40 }"        -> "@"     "${HEX: 40}"         -> "@"     "${hex:40"           -> "${hex:40"     "${hex:400}"         -> "${hex:400}"     "${hex:4${hex:30}}"  -> "${hex:40}"     "${unicode:40}"      -> "@"     "${ unicode:40}"     -> "${ unicode:40}"     "${UNICODE:40}"      -> "@"     "${UnICoDE:0000040}" -> "@"     "${Unicode:40}"      -> "@"     "${Unicode:Cool}"    -> "${Unicode:Cool}"     "${unicode:200000}"  -> error     "${Unicode:DF01}     -> error2.5.  Tests   Tests are given as arguments to commands in order to control their   actions.  In this document, tests are given to if/elsif to decide   which block of code is run.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20082.5.1.  Test Lists   Some tests ("allof" and "anyof", which implement logical "and" and   logical "or", respectively) may require more than a single test as an   argument.  The test-list syntax element provides a way of grouping   tests as a comma-separated list in parentheses.   Example:  if anyof (not exists ["From", "Date"],                   header :contains "from" "fool@example.com") {                discard;             }2.6.  Arguments   In order to specify what to do, most commands take arguments.  There   are three types of arguments: positional, tagged, and optional.   It is an error for a script, on a single command, to use conflicting   arguments or to use a tagged or optional argument more than once.2.6.1.  Positional Arguments   Positional arguments are given to a command that discerns their   meaning based on their order.  When a command takes positional   arguments, all positional arguments must be supplied and must be in   the order prescribed.2.6.2.  Tagged Arguments   This document provides for tagged arguments in the style of   CommonLISP.  These are also similar to flags given to commands in   most command-line systems.   A tagged argument is an argument for a command that begins with ":"   followed by a tag naming the argument, such as ":contains".  This   argument means that zero or more of the next tokens have some   particular meaning depending on the argument.  These next tokens may   be literal data, but they are never blocks.   Tagged arguments are similar to positional arguments, except that   instead of the meaning being derived from the command, it is derived   from the tag.   Tagged arguments must appear before positional arguments, but they   may appear in any order with other tagged arguments.  For simplicity   of the specification, this is not expressed in the syntax definitionsGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   with commands, but they still may be reordered arbitrarily provided   they appear before positional arguments.  Tagged arguments may be   mixed with optional arguments.   Tagged arguments SHOULD NOT take tagged arguments as arguments.2.6.3.  Optional Arguments   Optional arguments are exactly like tagged arguments except that they   may be left out, in which case a default value is implied.  Because   optional arguments tend to result in shorter scripts, they have been   used far more than tagged arguments.   One particularly noteworthy case is the ":comparator" argument, which   allows the user to specify which comparator [COLLATION] will be used   to compare two strings, since different languages may impose   different orderings on UTF-8 [UTF-8] strings.2.6.4.  Types of Arguments   Abstractly, arguments may be literal data, tests, or blocks of   commands.  In this way, an "if" control structure is merely a command   that happens to take a test and a block as arguments and may execute   the block of code.   However, this abstraction is ambiguous from a parsing standpoint.   The grammar insection 8.2 presents a parsable version of this:   Arguments are string lists (string-lists), numbers, and tags, which   may be followed by a test or a test list (test-list), which may be   followed by a block of commands.  No more than one test or test list,   or more than one block of commands, may be used, and commands that   end with a block of commands do not end with semicolons.2.7.  String Comparison   When matching one string against another, there are a number of ways   of performing the match operation.  These are accomplished with three   types of matches: an exact match, a substring match, and a wildcard   glob-style match.  These are described below.   In order to provide for matches between character sets and case   insensitivity, Sieve uses the comparators defined in the Internet   Application Protocol Collation Registry [COLLATION].Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   However, when a string represents the name of a header, the   comparator is never user-specified.  Header comparisons are always   done with the "i;ascii-casemap" operator, i.e., case-insensitive   comparisons, because this is the way things are defined in the   message specification [IMAIL].2.7.1.  Match Type   Commands that perform string comparisons may have an optional match   type argument.  The three match types in this specification are   ":contains", ":is", and ":matches".   The ":contains" match type describes a substring match.  If the value   argument contains the key argument as a substring, the match is true.   For instance, the string "frobnitzm" contains "frob" and "nit", but   not "fbm".  The empty key ("") is contained in all values.   The ":is" match type describes an absolute match; if the contents of   the first string are absolutely the same as the contents of the   second string, they match.  Only the string "frobnitzm" is the string   "frobnitzm".  The empty key ("") only ":is" matches with the empty   value.   The ":matches" match type specifies a wildcard match using the   characters "*" and "?"; the entire value must be matched.  "*"   matches zero or more characters in the value and "?" matches a single   character in the value, where the comparator that is used (seesection 2.7.3) defines what a character is.  For example, the   comparators "i;octet" and "i;ascii-casemap" define a character to be   a single octet, so "?"  will always match exactly one octet when one   of those comparators is in use.  In contrast, a Unicode-based   comparator would define a character to be any UTF-8 octet sequence   encoding one Unicode character and thus "?" may match more than one   octet.  "?" and "*" may be escaped as "\\?" and "\\*" in strings to   match against themselves.  The first backslash escapes the second   backslash; together, they escape the "*".  This is awkward, but it is   commonplace in several programming languages that use globs and   regular expressions.   In order to specify what type of match is supposed to happen,   commands that support matching take optional arguments ":matches",   ":is", and ":contains".  Commands default to using ":is" matching if   no match type argument is supplied.  Note that these modifiers   interact with comparators; in particular, only comparators that   support the "substring match" operation are suitable for matching   with ":contains" or ":matches".  It is an error to use a comparator   with ":contains" or ":matches" that is not compatible with it.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   It is an error to give more than one of these arguments to a given   command.   For convenience, the "MATCH-TYPE" syntax element is defined here as   follows:   Syntax:   ":is" / ":contains" / ":matches"2.7.2.  Comparisons across Character Sets   Messages may involve a number of character sets.  In order for   comparisons to work across character sets, implementations SHOULD   implement the following behavior:      Comparisons are performed on octets.  Implementations convert text      from header fields in all charsets [MIME3] to Unicode, encoded as      UTF-8, as input to the comparator (seesection 2.7.3).      Implementations MUST be capable of converting US-ASCII, ISO-8859-      1, the US-ASCII subset of ISO-8859-* character sets, and UTF-8.      Text that the implementation cannot convert to Unicode for any      reason MAY be treated as plain US-ASCII (including any [MIME3]      syntax) or processed according to local conventions.  An encoded      NUL octet (character zero) SHOULD NOT cause early termination of      the header content being compared against.   If implementations fail to support the above behavior, they MUST   conform to the following:      No two strings can be considered equal if one contains octets      greater than 127.2.7.3.  Comparators   In order to allow for language-independent, case-independent matches,   the match type may be coupled with a comparator name.  The Internet   Application Protocol Collation Registry [COLLATION] provides the   framework for describing and naming comparators.   All implementations MUST support the "i;octet" comparator (simply   compares octets) and the "i;ascii-casemap" comparator (which treats   uppercase and lowercase characters in the US-ASCII subset of UTF-8 as   the same).  If left unspecified, the default is "i;ascii-casemap".   Some comparators may not be usable with substring matches; that is,   they may only work with ":is".  It is an error to try to use a   comparator with ":matches" or ":contains" that is not compatible with   it.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Sieve treats a comparator result of "undefined" the same as a result   of "no-match".  That is, this base specification does not provide any   means to directly detect invalid comparator input.   A comparator is specified by the ":comparator" option with commands   that support matching.  This option is followed by a string providing   the name of the comparator to be used.  For convenience, the syntax   of a comparator is abbreviated to "COMPARATOR", and (repeated in   several tests) is as follows:   Syntax:   ":comparator" <comparator-name: string>   So in this example,   Example:  if header :contains :comparator "i;octet" "Subject"                   "MAKE MONEY FAST" {                discard;             }   would discard any message with subjects like "You can MAKE MONEY   FAST", but not "You can Make Money Fast", since the comparator used   is case-sensitive.   Comparators other than "i;octet" and "i;ascii-casemap" must be   declared with require, as they are extensions.  If a comparator   declared with require is not known, it is an error, and execution   fails.  If the comparator is not declared with require, it is also an   error, even if the comparator is supported.  (Seesection 2.10.5.)   Both ":matches" and ":contains" match types are compatible with the   "i;octet" and "i;ascii-casemap" comparators and may be used with   them.   It is an error to give more than one of these arguments to a given   command.2.7.4.  Comparisons against Addresses   Addresses are one of the most frequent things represented as strings.   These are structured, and being able to compare against the local-   part or the domain of an address is useful, so some tests that act   exclusively on addresses take an additional optional argument that   specifies what the test acts on.   These optional arguments are ":localpart", ":domain", and ":all",   which act on the local-part (left side), the domain-part (right   side), and the whole address.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   If an address is not syntactically valid, then it will not be matched   by tests specifying ":localpart" or ":domain".   The kind of comparison done, such as whether or not the test done is   case-insensitive, is specified as a comparator argument to the test.   If an optional address-part is omitted, the default is ":all".   It is an error to give more than one of these arguments to a given   command.   For convenience, the "ADDRESS-PART" syntax element is defined here as   follows:   Syntax:   ":localpart" / ":domain" / ":all"2.8.  Blocks   Blocks are sets of commands enclosed within curly braces and supplied   as the final argument to a command.  Such a command is a control   structure: when executed it has control over the number of times the   commands in the block are executed.   With the commands supplied in this memo, there are no loops.  The   control structures supplied--if, elsif, and else--run a block either   once or not at all.2.9.  Commands   Sieve scripts are sequences of commands.  Commands can take any of   the tokens above as arguments, and arguments may be either tagged or   positional arguments.  Not all commands take all arguments.   There are three kinds of commands: test commands, action commands,   and control commands.   The simplest is an action command.  An action command is an   identifier followed by zero or more arguments, terminated by a   semicolon.  Action commands do not take tests or blocks as arguments.   The actions referenced in this document are:    - keep, to save the message in the default location    - fileinto, to save the message in a specific mailbox    - redirect, to forward the message to another address    - discard, to silently throw away the messageGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   A control command is a command that affects the parsing or the flow   of execution of the Sieve script in some way.  A control structure is   a control command that ends with a block instead of a semicolon.   A test command is used as part of a control command.  It is used to   specify whether or not the block of code given to the control command   is executed.2.10.  Evaluation2.10.1.  Action Interaction   Some actions cannot be used with other actions because the result   would be absurd.  These restrictions are noted throughout this memo.   Extension actions MUST state how they interact with actions defined   in this specification.2.10.2.  Implicit Keep   Previous experience with filtering systems suggests that cases tend   to be missed in scripts.  To prevent errors, Sieve has an "implicit   keep".   An implicit keep is a keep action (seesection 4.3) performed in   absence of any action that cancels the implicit keep.   An implicit keep is performed if a message is not written to a   mailbox, redirected to a new address, or explicitly thrown out.  That   is, if a fileinto, a keep, a redirect, or a discard is performed, an   implicit keep is not.   Some actions may be defined to not cancel the implicit keep.  These   actions may not directly affect the delivery of a message, and are   used for their side effects.  None of the actions specified in this   document meet that criteria, but extension actions may.   For instance, with any of the short messages offered above, the   following script produces no actions.   Example:  if size :over 500K { discard; }   As a result, the implicit keep is taken.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20082.10.3.  Message Uniqueness in a Mailbox   Implementations SHOULD NOT deliver a message to the same mailbox more   than once, even if a script explicitly asks for a message to be   written to a mailbox twice.   The test for equality of two messages is implementation-defined.   If a script asks for a message to be written to a mailbox twice, it   MUST NOT be treated as an error.2.10.4.  Limits on Numbers of Actions   Site policy MAY limit the number of actions taken and MAY impose   restrictions on which actions can be used together.  In the event   that a script hits a policy limit on the number of actions taken for   a particular message, an error occurs.   Implementations MUST allow at least one keep or one fileinto.  If   fileinto is not implemented, implementations MUST allow at least one   keep.2.10.5.  Extensions and Optional Features   Because of the differing capabilities of many mail systems, several   features of this specification are optional.  Before any of these   extensions can be executed, they must be declared with the "require"   action.   If an extension is not enabled with "require", implementations MUST   treat it as if they did not support it at all.  This protects scripts   from having their behavior altered by extensions that the script   author might not have even been aware of.   Implementations MUST NOT execute any Sieve script test or command   subsequent to "require" if one of the required extensions is   unavailable.      Note: The reason for this restriction is that prior experiences      with languages such as LISP and Tcl suggest that this is a      workable way of noting that a given script uses an extension.   Extensions that define actions MUST state how they interact with   actions discussed in the base specification.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20082.10.6.  Errors   In any programming language, there are compile-time and run-time   errors.   Compile-time errors are ones in syntax that are detectable if a   syntax check is done.   Run-time errors are not detectable until the script is run.  This   includes transient failures like disk full conditions, but also   includes issues like invalid combinations of actions.   When an error occurs in a Sieve script, all processing stops.   Implementations MAY choose to do a full parse, then evaluate the   script, then do all actions.  Implementations might even go so far as   to ensure that execution is atomic (either all actions are executed   or none are executed).   Other implementations may choose to parse and run at the same time.   Such implementations are simpler, but have issues with partial   failure (some actions happen, others don't).   Implementations MUST perform syntactic, semantic, and run-time checks   on code that is actually executed.  Implementations MAY perform those   checks or any part of them on code that is not reached during   execution.   When an error happens, implementations MUST notify the user that an   error occurred and which actions (if any) were taken, and do an   implicit keep.2.10.7.  Limits on Execution   Implementations may limit certain constructs.  However, this   specification places a lower bound on some of these limits.   Implementations MUST support fifteen levels of nested blocks.   Implementations MUST support fifteen levels of nested test lists.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20083.  Control Commands   Control structures are needed to allow for multiple and conditional   actions.3.1.  Control if   There are three pieces to if: "if", "elsif", and "else".  Each is   actually a separate command in terms of the grammar.  However, an   elsif or else MUST only follow an if or elsif.  An error occurs if   these conditions are not met.   Usage:   if <test1: test> <block1: block>   Usage:   elsif <test2: test> <block2: block>   Usage:   else <block3: block>   The semantics are similar to those of any of the many other   programming languages these control structures appear in.  When the   interpreter sees an "if", it evaluates the test associated with it.   If the test is true, it executes the block associated with it.   If the test of the "if" is false, it evaluates the test of the first   "elsif" (if any).  If the test of "elsif" is true, it runs the   elsif's block.  An elsif may be followed by an elsif, in which case,   the interpreter repeats this process until it runs out of elsifs.   When the interpreter runs out of elsifs, there may be an "else" case.   If there is, and none of the if or elsif tests were true, the   interpreter runs the else's block.   This provides a way of performing exactly one of the blocks in the   chain.   In the following example, both messages A and B are dropped.   Example:  require "fileinto";             if header :contains "from" "coyote" {                discard;             } elsif header :contains ["subject"] ["$$$"] {                discard;             } else {                fileinto "INBOX";             }Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   When the script below is run over message A, it redirects the message   to acm@example.com; message B, to postmaster@example.com; any other   message is redirected to field@example.com.   Example:  if header :contains ["From"] ["coyote"] {                redirect "acm@example.com";             } elsif header :contains "Subject" "$$$" {                redirect "postmaster@example.com";             } else {                redirect "field@example.com";             }   Note that this definition prohibits the "... else if ..." sequence   used by C.  This is intentional, because this construct produces a   shift-reduce conflict.3.2.  Control require   Usage:   require <capabilities: string-list>   The require action notes that a script makes use of a certain   extension.  Such a declaration is required to use the extension, as   discussed insection 2.10.5.  Multiple capabilities can be declared   with a single require.   The require command, if present, MUST be used before anything other   than a require can be used.  An error occurs if a require appears   after a command other than require.   Example:  require ["fileinto", "reject"];   Example:  require "fileinto";             require "vacation";3.3.  Control stop   Usage:   stop   The "stop" action ends all processing.  If the implicit keep has not   been cancelled, then it is taken.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20084.  Action Commands   This document supplies four actions that may be taken on a message:   keep, fileinto, redirect, and discard.   Implementations MUST support the "keep", "discard", and "redirect"   actions.   Implementations SHOULD support "fileinto".   Implementations MAY limit the number of certain actions taken (seesection 2.10.4).4.1.  Action fileinto   Usage:   fileinto <mailbox: string>   The "fileinto" action delivers the message into the specified   mailbox.  Implementations SHOULD support fileinto, but in some   environments this may be impossible.  Implementations MAY place   restrictions on mailbox names; use of an invalid mailbox name MAY be   treated as an error or result in delivery to an implementation-   defined mailbox.  If the specified mailbox doesn't exist, the   implementation MAY treat it as an error, create the mailbox, or   deliver the message to an implementation-defined mailbox.  If the   implementation uses a different encoding scheme than UTF-8 for   mailbox names, it SHOULD reencode the mailbox name from UTF-8 to its   encoding scheme.  For example, the Internet Message Access Protocol   [IMAP] uses modified UTF-7, such that a mailbox argument of "odds &   ends" would appear in IMAP as "odds &- ends".   The capability string for use with the require command is "fileinto".   In the following script, message A is filed into mailbox   "INBOX.harassment".   Example:  require "fileinto";             if header :contains ["from"] "coyote" {                fileinto "INBOX.harassment";             }4.2.  Action redirect   Usage:   redirect <address: string>   The "redirect" action is used to send the message to another user at   a supplied address, as a mail forwarding feature does.  The   "redirect" action makes no changes to the message body or existingGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   headers, but it may add new headers.  In particular, existing   Received headers MUST be preserved and the count of Received headers   in the outgoing message MUST be larger than the same count on the   message as received by the implementation.  (An implementation that   adds a Received header before processing the message does not need to   add another when redirecting.)   The message is sent back out with the address from the redirect   command as an envelope recipient.  Implementations MAY combine   separate redirects for a given message into a single submission with   multiple envelope recipients.  (This is not a Mail User Agent (MUA)-   style forward, which creates a new message with a different sender   and message ID, wrapping the old message in a new one.)   The envelope sender address on the outgoing message is chosen by the   sieve implementation.  It MAY be copied from the message being   processed.  However, if the message being processed has an empty   envelope sender address the outgoing message MUST also have an empty   envelope sender address.  This last requirement is imposed to prevent   loops in the case where a message is redirected to an invalid address   when then returns a delivery status notification that also ends up   being redirected to the same invalid address.   A simple script can be used for redirecting all mail:   Example:  redirect "bart@example.com";   Implementations MUST take measures to implement loop control,   possibly including adding headers to the message or counting Received   headers as specified in section 6.2 of [SMTP].  If an implementation   detects a loop, it causes an error.   Implementations MUST provide means of limiting the number of   redirects a Sieve script can perform.  Seesection 10 for more   details.   Implementations MAY ignore a redirect action silently due to policy   reasons.  For example, an implementation MAY choose not to redirect   to an address that is known to be undeliverable.  Any ignored   redirect MUST NOT cancel the implicit keep.4.3.  Action keep   Usage:   keep   The "keep" action is whatever action is taken in lieu of all other   actions, if no filtering happens at all; generally, this simply means   to file the message into the user's main mailbox.  This commandGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   provides a way to execute this action without needing to know the   name of the user's main mailbox, providing a way to call it without   needing to understand the user's setup or the underlying mail system.   For instance, in an implementation where the IMAP server is running   scripts on behalf of the user at time of delivery, a keep command is   equivalent to a fileinto "INBOX".   Example:  if size :under 1M { keep; } else { discard; }   Note that the above script is identical to the one below.   Example:  if not size :under 1M { discard; }4.4.  Action discard   Usage:   discard   Discard is used to silently throw away the message.  It does so by   simply canceling the implicit keep.  If discard is used with other   actions, the other actions still happen.  Discard is compatible with   all other actions.  (For instance, fileinto+discard is equivalent to   fileinto.)   Discard MUST be silent; that is, it MUST NOT return a non-delivery   notification of any kind ([DSN], [MDN], or otherwise).   In the following script, any mail from "idiot@example.com" is thrown   out.   Example:  if header :contains ["from"] ["idiot@example.com"] {                discard;             }   While an important part of this language, "discard" has the potential   to create serious problems for users: Students who leave themselves   logged in to an unattended machine in a public computer lab may find   their script changed to just "discard".  In order to protect users in   this situation (along with similar situations), implementations MAY   keep messages destroyed by a script for an indefinite period, and MAY   disallow scripts that throw out all mail.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20085.  Test Commands   Tests are used in conditionals to decide which part(s) of the   conditional to execute.   Implementations MUST support these tests: "address", "allof",   "anyof", "exists", "false", "header", "not", "size", and "true".   Implementations SHOULD support the "envelope" test.5.1.  Test address   Usage:   address [COMPARATOR] [ADDRESS-PART] [MATCH-TYPE]            <header-list: string-list> <key-list: string-list>   The "address" test matches Internet addresses in structured headers   that contain addresses.  It returns true if any header contains any   key in the specified part of the address, as modified by the   comparator and the match keyword.  Whether there are other addresses   present in the header doesn't affect this test; this test does not   provide any way to determine whether an address is the only address   in a header.   Like envelope and header, this test returns true if any combination   of the header-list and key-list arguments match and returns false   otherwise.   Internet email addresses [IMAIL] have the somewhat awkward   characteristic that the local-part to the left of the at-sign is   considered case sensitive, and the domain-part to the right of the   at-sign is case insensitive.  The "address" command does not deal   with this itself, but provides the ADDRESS-PART argument for allowing   users to deal with it.   The address primitive never acts on the phrase part of an email   address or on comments within that address.  It also never acts on   group names, although it does act on the addresses within the group   construct.   Implementations MUST restrict the address test to headers that   contain addresses, but MUST include at least From, To, Cc, Bcc,   Sender, Resent-From, and Resent-To, and it SHOULD include any other   header that utilizes an "address-list" structured header body.   Example:  if address :is :all "from" "tim@example.com" {                discard;             }Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20085.2.  Test allof   Usage:   allof <tests: test-list>   The "allof" test performs a logical AND on the tests supplied to it.   Example:  allof (false, false)  =>   false             allof (false, true)   =>   false             allof (true,  true)   =>   true   The allof test takes as its argument a test-list.5.3.  Test anyof   Usage:   anyof <tests: test-list>   The "anyof" test performs a logical OR on the tests supplied to it.   Example:  anyof (false, false)  =>   false             anyof (false, true)   =>   true             anyof (true,  true)   =>   true5.4.  Test envelope   Usage:   envelope [COMPARATOR] [ADDRESS-PART] [MATCH-TYPE]            <envelope-part: string-list> <key-list: string-list>   The "envelope" test is true if the specified part of the [SMTP] (or   equivalent) envelope matches the specified key.  This specification   defines the interpretation of the (case insensitive) "from" and "to"   envelope-parts.  Additional envelope-parts may be defined by other   extensions; implementations SHOULD consider unknown envelope parts an   error.   If one of the envelope-part strings is (case insensitive) "from",   then matching occurs against the FROM address used in the SMTP MAIL   command.  The null reverse-path is matched against as the empty   string, regardless of the ADDRESS-PART argument specified.   If one of the envelope-part strings is (case insensitive) "to", then   matching occurs against the TO address used in the SMTP RCPT command   that resulted in this message getting delivered to this user.  Note   that only the most recent TO is available, and only the one relevant   to this user.   The envelope-part is a string list and may contain more than one   parameter, in which case all of the strings specified in the key-list   are matched against all parts given in the envelope-part list.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Like address and header, this test returns true if any combination of   the envelope-part list and key-list arguments match and returns false   otherwise.   All tests against envelopes MUST drop source routes.   If the SMTP transaction involved several RCPT commands, only the data   from the RCPT command that caused delivery to this user is available   in the "to" part of the envelope.   If a protocol other than SMTP is used for message transport,   implementations are expected to adapt this command appropriately.   The envelope command is optional.  Implementations SHOULD support it,   but the necessary information may not be available in all cases.  The   capability string for use with the require command is "envelope".   Example:  require "envelope";             if envelope :all :is "from" "tim@example.com" {                discard;             }5.5.  Test exists   Usage:   exists <header-names: string-list>   The "exists" test is true if the headers listed in the header-names   argument exist within the message.  All of the headers must exist or   the test is false.   The following example throws out mail that doesn't have a From header   and a Date header.   Example:  if not exists ["From","Date"] {                discard;             }5.6.  Test false   Usage:   false   The "false" test always evaluates to false.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20085.7.  Test header   Usage:   header [COMPARATOR] [MATCH-TYPE]            <header-names: string-list> <key-list: string-list>   The "header" test evaluates to true if the value of any of the named   headers, ignoring leading and trailing whitespace, matches any key.   The type of match is specified by the optional match argument, which   defaults to ":is" if not specified, as specified insection 2.6.   Like address and envelope, this test returns true if any combination   of the header-names list and key-list arguments match and returns   false otherwise.   If a header listed in the header-names argument exists, it contains   the empty key ("").  However, if the named header is not present, it   does not match any key, including the empty key.  So if a message   contained the header           X-Caffeine: C8H10N4O2   these tests on that header evaluate as follows:           header :is ["X-Caffeine"] [""]         => false           header :contains ["X-Caffeine"] [""]   => true   Testing whether a given header is either absent or doesn't contain   any non-whitespace characters can be done using a negated "header"   test:           not header :matches "Cc" "?*"5.8.  Test not   Usage:   not <test1: test>   The "not" test takes some other test as an argument, and yields the   opposite result.  "not false" evaluates to "true" and "not true"   evaluates to "false".5.9.  Test size   Usage:   size <":over" / ":under"> <limit: number>   The "size" test deals with the size of a message.  It takes either a   tagged argument of ":over" or ":under", followed by a number   representing the size of the message.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   If the argument is ":over", and the size of the message is greater   than the number provided, the test is true; otherwise, it is false.   If the argument is ":under", and the size of the message is less than   the number provided, the test is true; otherwise, it is false.   Exactly one of ":over" or ":under" must be specified, and anything   else is an error.   The size of a message is defined to be the number of octets in the   [IMAIL] representation of the message.   Note that for a message that is exactly 4,000 octets, the message is   neither ":over" nor ":under" 4000 octets.5.10.  Test true   Usage:   true   The "true" test always evaluates to true.6.  Extensibility   New control commands, actions, and tests can be added to the   language.  Sites must make these features known to their users; this   document does not define a way to discover the list of extensions   supported by the server.   Any extensions to this language MUST define a capability string that   uniquely identifies that extension.  Capability string are case-   sensitive; for example, "foo" and "FOO" are different capabilities.   If a new version of an extension changes the functionality of a   previously defined extension, it MUST use a different name.   Extensions may register a set of related capabilities by registering   just a unique prefix for them.  The "comparator-" prefix is an   example of this.  The prefix MUST end with a "-" and MUST NOT overlap   any existing registrations.   In a situation where there is a script submission protocol and an   extension advertisement mechanism aware of the details of this   language, scripts submitted can be checked against the mail server to   prevent use of an extension that the server does not support.   Extensions MUST state how they interact with constraints defined insection 2.10, e.g., whether they cancel the implicit keep, and which   actions they are compatible and incompatible with.  Extensions MUST   NOT change the behavior of the "require" control command or alter the   interpretation of the argument to the "require" control.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Extensions that can submit new email messages or otherwise generate   new protocol requests MUST consider loop suppression, at least to   document any security considerations.6.1.  Capability String   Capability strings are typically short strings describing what   capabilities are supported by the server.   Capability strings beginning with "vnd." represent vendor-defined   extensions.  Such extensions are not defined by Internet standards or   RFCs, but are still registered with IANA in order to prevent   conflicts.  Extensions starting with "vnd." SHOULD be followed by the   name of the vendor and product, such as "vnd.acme.rocket-sled".   The following capability strings are defined by this document:   encoded-character The string "encoded-character" indicates that the               implementation supports the interpretation of               "${hex:...}" and "${unicode:...}" in strings.   envelope    The string "envelope" indicates that the implementation               supports the "envelope" command.   fileinto    The string "fileinto" indicates that the implementation               supports the "fileinto" command.   comparator- The string "comparator-elbonia" is provided if the               implementation supports the "elbonia" comparator.               Therefore, all implementations have at least the               "comparator-i;octet" and "comparator-i;ascii-casemap"               capabilities.  However, these comparators may be used               without being declared with require.6.2.  IANA Considerations   In order to provide a standard set of extensions, a registry is   maintained by IANA.  This registry contains both vendor-controlled   capability names (beginning with "vnd.") and IETF-controlled   capability names.  Vendor-controlled capability names may be   registered on a first-come, first-served basis, by applying to IANA   with the form in the following section.  Registration of capability   prefixes that do not begin with "vnd." REQUIRES a standards track or   IESG-approved experimental RFC.   Extensions designed for interoperable use SHOULD use IETF-controlled   capability names.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 20086.2.1.  Template for Capability Registrations   The following template is to be used for registering new Sieve   extensions with IANA.   To: iana@iana.org   Subject: Registration of new Sieve extension   Capability name: [the string for use in the 'require' statement]   Description:     [a brief description of what the extension adds                     or changes]   RFC number:      [for extensions published as RFCs]   Contact address: [email and/or physical address to contact for                     additional information]6.2.2.  Handling of Existing Capability Registrations   In order to bring the existing capability registrations in line with   the new template, IANA has modified each as follows:   1. The "capability name" and "capability arguments" fields have been      eliminated   2. The "capability keyword" field have been renamed to "Capability      name"   3. An empty "Description" field has been added   4. The "Standards Track/IESG-approved experimental RFC number" field      has been renamed to "RFC number"   5. The "Person and email address to contact for further information"      field should be renamed to "Contact address"6.2.3.  Initial Capability Registrations   This RFC updates the following entries in the IANA registry for Sieve   extensions.   Capability name: encoded-character   Description:     changes the interpretation of strings to allow                    arbitrary octets and Unicode characters to be                    represented using US-ASCII   RFC number:RFC 5228 (Sieve base spec)   Contact address: The Sieve discussion list <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>   Capability name: fileinto   Description:     adds the 'fileinto' action for delivering to a                    mailbox other than the default   RFC number:RFC 5228 (Sieve base spec)   Contact address: The Sieve discussion list <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   Capability name: envelope   Description:     adds the 'envelope' test for testing the message                    transport sender and recipient address   RFC number:RFC 5228 (Sieve base spec)   Contact address: The Sieve discussion list <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>   Capability name: comparator-* (anything starting with "comparator-")   Description:     adds the indicated comparator for use with the                    :comparator argument   RFC number:RFC 5228 (Sieve base spec) and [COLLATION]   Contact address: The Sieve discussion list <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>6.3.  Capability Transport   A method of advertising which capabilities an implementation supports   is difficult due to the wide range of possible implementations.  Such   a mechanism, however, should have the property that the   implementation can advertise the complete set of extensions that it   supports.7.  Transmission   The [MIME] type for a Sieve script is "application/sieve".   The registration of this type forRFC 2048 requirements is updated as   follows:    Subject: Registration of MIME media type application/sieve    MIME media type name: application    MIME subtype name: sieve    Required parameters: none    Optional parameters: none    Encoding considerations: Most Sieve scripts will be textual,       written in UTF-8.  When non-7bit characters are used,       quoted-printable is appropriate for transport systems       that require 7bit encoding.    Security considerations: Discussed insection 10 of this RFC.    Interoperability considerations: Discussed insection 2.10.5       of this RFC.    Published specification: this RFC.    Applications that use this media type: sieve-enabled mail      servers and clients    Additional information:      Magic number(s):      File extension(s): .siv .sieve      Macintosh File Type Code(s):Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008    Person & email address to contact for further information:       See the discussion list at ietf-mta-filters@imc.org.    Intended usage:       COMMON    Author/Change controller:       The SIEVE WG, delegated by the IESG.8.  Parsing   The Sieve grammar is separated into tokens and a separate grammar as   most programming languages are.  Additional rules are supplied here   for common arguments to various language facilities.8.1.  Lexical Tokens   Sieve scripts are encoded in UTF-8.  The following assumes a valid   UTF-8 encoding; special characters in Sieve scripts are all US-ASCII.   The following are tokens in Sieve:           - identifiers           - tags           - numbers           - quoted strings           - multi-line strings           - other separators   Identifiers, tags, and numbers are case-insensitive, while quoted   strings and multi-line strings are case-sensitive.   Blanks, horizontal tabs, CRLFs, and comments ("whitespace") are   ignored except as they separate tokens.  Some whitespace is required   to separate otherwise adjacent tokens and in specific places in the   multi-line strings.  CR and LF can only appear in CRLF pairs.   The other separators are single individual characters and are   mentioned explicitly in the grammar.   The lexical structure of sieve is defined in the following grammar   (as described in [ABNF]):   bracket-comment    = "/*" *not-star 1*STAR                        *(not-star-slash *not-star 1*STAR) "/"                          ; No */ allowed inside a comment.                          ; (No * is allowed unless it is the last                          ; character, or unless it is followed by a                          ; character that isn't a slash.)Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   comment            = bracket-comment / hash-comment   hash-comment       = "#" *octet-not-crlf CRLF   identifier         = (ALPHA / "_") *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_")   multi-line         = "text:" *(SP / HTAB) (hash-comment / CRLF)                        *(multiline-literal / multiline-dotstart)                        "." CRLF   multiline-literal  = [ octet-not-period *octet-not-crlf ] CRLF   multiline-dotstart = "." 1*octet-not-crlf CRLF                          ; A line containing only "." ends the                          ; multi-line.  Remove a leading '.' if                          ; followed by another '.'.   not-star           = CRLF / %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-29 / %x2B-FF                          ; either a CRLF pair, OR a single octet                          ; other than NUL, CR, LF, or star   not-star-slash     = CRLF / %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-29 / %x2B-2E /                        %x30-FF                          ; either a CRLF pair, OR a single octet                          ; other than NUL, CR, LF, star, or slash   number             = 1*DIGIT [ QUANTIFIER ]   octet-not-crlf     = %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-FF                          ; a single octet other than NUL, CR, or LF   octet-not-period   = %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-2D / %x2F-FF                          ; a single octet other than NUL,                          ; CR, LF, or period   octet-not-qspecial = %x01-09 / %x0B-0C / %x0E-21 / %x23-5B / %x5D-FF                          ; a single octet other than NUL,                          ; CR, LF, double-quote, or backslash   QUANTIFIER         = "K" / "M" / "G"   quoted-other       = "\" octet-not-qspecial                          ; represents just the octet-no-qspecial                          ; character.  SHOULD NOT be used   quoted-safe        = CRLF / octet-not-qspecial                          ; either a CRLF pair, OR a single octet other                          ; than NUL, CR, LF, double-quote, or backslashGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   quoted-special     = "\" (DQUOTE / "\")                          ; represents just a double-quote or backslash   quoted-string      = DQUOTE quoted-text DQUOTE   quoted-text        = *(quoted-safe / quoted-special / quoted-other)   STAR               = "*"   tag                = ":" identifier   white-space        = 1*(SP / CRLF / HTAB) / comment8.2.  Grammar   The following is the grammar of Sieve after it has been lexically   interpreted.  No whitespace or comments appear below.  The start   symbol is "start".   argument     = string-list / number / tag   arguments    = *argument [ test / test-list ]   block        = "{" commands "}"   command      = identifier arguments (";" / block)   commands     = *command   start        = commands   string       = quoted-string / multi-line   string-list  = "[" string *("," string) "]" / string                    ; if there is only a single string, the brackets                    ; are optional   test         = identifier arguments   test-list    = "(" test *("," test) ")"8.3.  Statement Elements   These elements are collected from the "Syntax" sections elsewhere in   this document, and are provided here in [ABNF] syntax so that they   can be modified by extensions.   ADDRESS-PART = ":localpart" / ":domain" / ":all"Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   COMPARATOR   = ":comparator" string   MATCH-TYPE   = ":is" / ":contains" / ":matches"9.  Extended Example   The following is an extended example of a Sieve script.  Note that it   does not make use of the implicit keep.    #    # Example Sieve Filter    # Declare any optional features or extension used by the script    #    require ["fileinto"];    #    # Handle messages from known mailing lists    # Move messages from IETF filter discussion list to filter mailbox    #    if header :is "Sender" "owner-ietf-mta-filters@imc.org"            {            fileinto "filter";  # move to "filter" mailbox            }    #    # Keep all messages to or from people in my company    #    elsif address :DOMAIN :is ["From", "To"] "example.com"            {            keep;               # keep in "In" mailbox            }    #    # Try and catch unsolicited email.  If a message is not to me,    # or it contains a subject known to be spam, file it away.    #    elsif anyof (NOT address :all :contains                   ["To", "Cc", "Bcc"] "me@example.com",                 header :matches "subject"                   ["*make*money*fast*", "*university*dipl*mas*"])            {            fileinto "spam";   # move to "spam" mailbox            }    else            {            # Move all other (non-company) mail to "personal"            # mailbox.            fileinto "personal";            }Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 200810.  Security Considerations   Users must get their mail.  It is imperative that whatever   implementations use to store the user-defined filtering scripts   protect them from unauthorized modification, to preserve the   integrity of the mail system.  An attacker who can modify a script   can cause mail to be discarded, rejected, or forwarded to an   unauthorized recipient.  In addition, it's possible that Sieve   scripts might expose private information, such as mailbox names, or   email addresses of favored (or disfavored) correspondents.  Because   of that, scripts SHOULD also be protected from unauthorized   retrieval.   Several commands, such as "discard", "redirect", and "fileinto",   allow for actions to be taken that are potentially very dangerous.   Use of the "redirect" command to generate notifications may easily   overwhelm the target address, especially if it was not designed to   handle large messages.   Allowing a single script to redirect to multiple destinations can be   used as a means of amplifying the number of messages in an attack.   Moreover, if loop detection is not properly implemented, it may be   possible to set up exponentially growing message loops.  Accordingly,   Sieve implementations:   (1) MUST implement facilities to detect and break message loops.  See       section 6.2 of [SMTP] for additional information on basic loop       detection strategies.   (2) MUST provide the means for administrators to limit the ability of       users to abuse redirect.  In particular, it MUST be possible to       limit the number of redirects a script can perform.       Additionally, if no use cases exist for using redirect to       multiple destinations, this limit SHOULD be set to 1.  Additional       limits, such as the ability to restrict redirect to local users,       MAY also be implemented.   (3) MUST provide facilities to log use of redirect in order to       facilitate tracking down abuse.   (4) MAY use script analysis to determine whether or not a given       script can be executed safely.  While the Sieve language is       sufficiently complex that full analysis of all possible scripts       is computationally infeasible, the majority of real-world scripts       are amenable to analysis.  For example, an implementation mightGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008       allow scripts that it has determined are safe to run unhindered,       block scripts that are potentially problematic, and subject       unclassifiable scripts to additional auditing and logging.   Allowing redirects at all may not be appropriate in situations where   email accounts are freely available and/or not trackable to a human   who can be held accountable for creating message bombs or other   abuse.   As with any filter on a message stream, if the Sieve implementation   and the mail agents 'behind' Sieve in the message stream differ in   their interpretation of the messages, it may be possible for an   attacker to subvert the filter.  Of particular note are differences   in the interpretation of malformed messages (e.g., missing or extra   syntax characters) or those that exhibit corner cases (e.g., NUL   octets encoded via [MIME3]).11.  Acknowledgments   This document has been revised in part based on comments and   discussions that took place on and off the SIEVE mailing list.   Thanks to Sharon Chisholm, Cyrus Daboo, Ned Freed, Arnt Gulbrandsen,   Michael Haardt, Kjetil Torgrim Homme, Barry Leiba, Mark E. Mallett,   Alexey Melnikov, Eric Rescorla, Rob Siemborski, and Nigel Swinson for   reviews and suggestions.12.  Normative References   [ABNF]      Crocker, D., Ed., and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for               Syntax Specifications: ABNF",RFC 4234, October 2005.   [COLLATION] Newman, C., Duerst, M., and A. Gulbrandsen, "Internet               Application Protocol Collation Registry",RFC 4790, March               2007.   [IMAIL]     Resnick, P., Ed., "Internet Message Format",RFC 2822,               April 2001.   [KEYWORDS]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [MIME]      Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail               Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message               Bodies",RFC 2045, November 1996.   [MIME3]     Moore, K., "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions)               Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII               Text",RFC 2047, November 1996.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008   [SMTP]      Klensin, J., Ed., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol",RFC2821, April 2001.   [UTF-8]     Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO               10646", STD 63,RFC 3629, November 2003.13.  Informative References   [BINARY-SI] "Standard IEC 60027-2: Letter symbols to be used in               electrical technology - Part 2: Telecommunications and               electronics", January 1999.   [DSN]       Moore, K. and G. Vaudreuil, "An Extensible Message Format               for Delivery Status Notifications",RFC 3464, January               2003.   [FLAMES]    Borenstein, N, and C. Thyberg, "Power, Ease of Use, and               Cooperative Work in a Practical Multimedia Message               System", Int. J.  of Man-Machine Studies, April, 1991.               Reprinted in Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and               Groupware, Saul Greenberg, editor, Harcourt Brace               Jovanovich, 1991.  Reprinted in Readings in Groupware and               Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, Ronald Baecker,               editor, Morgan Kaufmann, 1993.   [IMAP]      Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol - version               4rev1",RFC 3501, March 2003.   [MDN]       Hansen, T., Ed., and G. Vaudreuil, Ed., "Message               Disposition Notification",RFC 3798, May 2004.   [RFC3028]   Showalter, T., "Sieve: A Mail Filtering Language",RFC3028, January 2001.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 200814.  Changes fromRFC 3028   This following list is a summary of the changes that have been made   in the Sieve language base specification from [RFC3028].    1. Removed ban on tests having side-effects    2. Removed reject extension (will be specified in a separate RFC)    3. Clarified description of comparators to match [COLLATION], the       new base specification for them    4. Require stripping of leading and trailing whitespace in "header"       test    5. Clarified or tightened handling of many minor items, including:       - invalid [MIME3] encoding       - invalid addresses in headers       - invalid header field names in tests       - 'undefined' comparator result       - unknown envelope parts       - null return-path in "envelope" test    6. Capability strings are case-sensitive    7. Clarified that fileinto should reencode non-ASCII mailbox       names to match the mailstore's conventions    8. Errors in the ABNF were corrected    9. The references were updated and split into normative and       informative   10. Added encoded-character capability and deprecated (but did not       remove) use of arbitrary binary octets in Sieve scripts.   11. Updated IANA registration template, and added IANA       considerations to permit capability prefix registrations.   12. Added .sieve as a valid extension for Sieve scripts.Editors' Addresses   Philip Guenther   Sendmail, Inc.   6425 Christie St. Ste 400   Emeryville, CA 94608   EMail: guenther@sendmail.com   Tim Showalter   EMail: tjs@psaux.comGuenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 5228           Sieve: An Email Filtering Language       January 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   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.Guenther & Showalter        Standards Track                    [Page 42]

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