RFC 1648 (rfc1648) - Page 2 of 4
Postmaster Convention for X
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1648 X.400 Postmaster Convention July 1994
addresses, and these email domains are a logical extension of the RFC
822 Internet. It is impossible to tell by inspecting a user's
address whether the user receives RFC 822 mail or X.400 mail.
Since these addresses appear to be standard RFC 822 addresses, mail
managers, mailing list managers, host administrators, and users
expect to be able to simply send mail to "postmaster@domain" and
having the message be delivered to a responsible party. When an RFC
1327 mapping rule exists, the X.400 address element corresponding to
the left-hand-side "postmaster" is "Surname=Postmaster" (both 1984
and 1988). However, neither the X.400 protocols, North America X.400
Implementor's Agreements [7], nor the other regional X.400
implementor's agreements require that "Surname=Postmaster" and
"CommonName=Postmaster" be supported. (Supporting these addresses is
recommended in X.400 (1988)).
For mapped X.400 domains which do not support the postmaster
address(es), this means that an address such as ""
might be valid, yet mail to the corresponding address
"" fails. This is frustrating for remote
administrators and users, and can prevent operational problems from
being communicated and resolved. In this case, the desired seamless
integration of the Internet RFC 822 mail world and the mapped X.400
domain has not been achieved.
The X.400 mail managers participating in the Cosine MHS Project
discussed this problem in a meeting in June 1992 [8]. The discussion
recognized the need for supporting the postmaster address at any
level of the address hierarchy where these are user addresses.
However, the group only required supporting the postmaster address
down to certain levels of the O/R Address tree. This approach solved
part of the problem, but not all of it. A more complete solution is
required.
3. Proposed Solution
To fully achieve the desired seamless integration of email domains
for which RFC 1327 mapping rules have been defined, the following
convention must be followed,
If there are any valid addresses of the form "user@domain", then
the address "postmaster@domain" must also be valid.
To express this in terms of X.400: For every X.400 domain for which
an RFC 1327 mapping rule exists, if any address of the form
Surname=User;
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