RFC 1615 (rfc1615) - Page 2 of 17
Migrating from X
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1615 Migrating from X.400(84) to X.400(88) May 1994
Appendix D - Abbreviations 16
Authors' Addresses 17
1. New Functionality
Apart from the greater maturity of the standard and the fact that it
makes proper use of the Presentation Layer, the principal features of
most use to the European R&D world in X.400(88) not contained in
X.400(84) are:
- A powerful mechanism for arbitrarily nested Distribution
Lists including the ability for DL owners to control access
to their lists and to control the destination of nondelivery
reports. The current endemic use of DLs in the research
community makes this a fundamental requirement.
- The Message Store (MS) and its associated protocol, P7. The
Message Store provides a server for remote User Agents (UAs)
on Workstations and PCs enabling messages to be held for
their recipient, solving the problems of non-continuous
availability and variability of network addresses of such
UAs. It provides powerful selection mechanisms allowing the
user to select messages from the store to be transferred to
the workstation/PC. This facility is not catered for
adequately by the P3 protocol of X.400(84) and provides a
major incentive for transition.
- Use of X.500 Directories. Support for use of Directory Names
in MHS will allow a transition from use of O/R Addresses to
Directory Names when X.500 Directories become widespread,
thus removing the need for users to know about MHS
topological addressing components.
- The provision of message Security services including
authentication, confidentiality, integrity and non-
repudiation as well as secure access between MHS components
may be important for a section of the research community.
- Redirection of messages, both by the recipient if
temporarily unable to receive them, and by the originator in
the event of failure to deliver to the intended recipient.
- Use of additional message body encodings such as ISO 8613
ODA (Office Document Architecture) reformattable documents or
proprietary word processor formats.
Houttuin & Craigie