RFC 1838 (rfc1838) - Page 2 of 8
Use of the X
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1838 RFC 822/X.400 Mapping by X.500 August 1995
An alternative approach which is not taken is to locate the
information in the routing subtrees. The benefits of this
would be:
o It is the "natural" location, and will also help to
ensure correct administrative authority for a mapping
definition.
o The tree will usually be accessed for routing, and so it
will be efficient for addresses which are being routed.
This is not done, as the benefits of the approach proposed
are greater.
There are three mappings, which are represented by two subtrees
located under:
OU=X.400/RFC 822 Mapping, O=Internet
These subtree roots are of object class subtree, and use the
mechanism for representing subtrees defined in [4].
X.400 to RFC 822 This table gives the equivalence mapping from X.400
to RFC 822. There is an O/R Address tree under this. An example
entry is:
PRMD=UK.AC, ADMD=Gold 400, C=GB, CN=X.400 to RFC 822,
OU=X.400/RFC 822 Mapping, O=Internet
RFC 822 to X.400 There is a domain tree under this. This table holds
the equivalence mapping from RFC 822 to X.400, and the gateway
mapping defined in RFC 1327. An example entry is:
DomainComponent=ISODE, DomainComponent=COM,
CN=RFC 822 to X.400,
OU=X.400/RFC 822 Mapping, O=Internet
The values of the table mapping are defined by use of two new object
classes, as specified in Figure 1. The objects give pointers to the
mapped components.
Kille Experimental