RFC 1428 (rfc1428) - Page 1 of 6
Transition of Internet Mail from Just-Send-8 to 8bit-SMTP/MIME
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
Network Working Group G. Vaudreuil
Request for Comments: 1428 CNRI
February 1993
Transition of Internet Mail from
Just-Send-8
to 8bit-SMTP/MIME
Status of this Memo
This RFC provides information for the Internet community. It does
not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is
unlimited.
Abstract
Protocols for extending SMTP to pass 8bit characters have been
defined [3] [4]. These protocols require that messages transported by
the extended SMTP are to be encoded in MIME [1] [2]. Before work
began on these protocols, several SMTP implementations adopted ad-hoc
mechanisms for sending 8bit data. It is desirable for the extended
SMTP environment and these ad hoc mechanisms interoperate. This
document outlines the problems in this environment and an approach to
minimizing the cost of transition from current usage of non-MIME 8bit
messages to MIME.
1. Terminology
RFC 821 defines a 7bit transport. A transport agent which does not
clear the high order bit upon receipt of octets with this bit set in
SMTP messages is called 8 bit transparent in this document. An
implementation of the general SMTP Extensions document [3] and the
8bit extensions protocol [4] which passes MIME messages using all 8
bits of an octet is called 8bit ESMTP. An implementation of extended
SMTP which does not accept 8bit characters is called 7bit ESMTP. A
gateway is defined to be a transport agent with User Agent authority
to alter or convert the content of a message.
2. The Problem
SMTP as defined in RFC 821 limits the sending of Internet Mail to
US-ASCII [5] characters. As the Internet has grown to include non-
English correspondents, the need to communicate with character sets
other than US-ASCII has prompted many vendors and users to extend
SMTP or RFC 822 to use non-ASCII character sets. Common approaches
are to send 7 bit national variant ISO 646 character sets over
current RFC 822/SMTP, to extend SMTP and RFC 822 to use 8bit ISO 8859
Vaudreuil