Sieve Working Group | A. Melnikov |
Internet-Draft | Isode Limited |
Intended status: Standards Track | Q. Sun |
Expires: January 26, 2012 | B. Leiba |
K. Li | |
Huawei Technologies | |
July 25, 2011 |
Sieve Extension for converting messages before delivery
draft-ietf-sieve-convert-02
This document describes how IMAP CONVERT can be used within Sieve to transform messages before final delivery.
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The IMAP CONVERT extension [RFC5259] adds an IMAP command for performing client-controlled conversions on whole messages or their body parts. This document defines a similar extension to the Sieve mail filtering language [RFC5228], which reuses the conversion parameters and framework established by IMAP CONVERT.
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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Conventions for notations are as in Sieve [RFC5228] section 1.1, including the use of ABNF [RFC5234].
The "convert" action specifies that body parts with "quoted-from-mime-type" MIME type be converted to "quoted-to-mime-type" MIME type using conversion parameters specified in "transcoding-params". Each conversion parameter value has the following syntax: "<transcoding-param>=<transcoding-param-value>", where <transcoding-param> and <transcoding-param-value> are defined in CONVERT [RFC5259]. Messages that don't have any body parts with the "quoted-from-mime-type" MIME type are not affected by the conversion.
The "convert" action can be used with Sieve MIME Part Tests [RFC5703], in the case that some, but not all of the body parts need to be converted, or where different body parts might require different conversions. When the "convert" action appears in a "foreverypart" loop, it applies only to the body part being processed, and not to any other body parts (see Section 3.2 for an example).
When the "convert" action appears outside a "foreverypart" loop, the conversion applies equally to all body parts -- that is, all body parts that have the "quoted-from-mime-type" are converted, using the same transcoding parameters.
Implementations ought to defer any actual conversion until the final resolution of other actions, to avoid doing conversions unnecessarily in cases where the message is not retained (such as where the resolution is "discard").
Whether the actual conversion has been done yet or not, a "convert" action effectively changes the message, and all subsequent actions, including any other "convert" actions, apply to the changed message. The "convert" action does not affect the applicability of other actions; any action that was applicable before the "convert" is equally applicable to the changed message afterward.
When a disposition-type action, such as "fileinto" or "redirect", is encountered, the state of the message with respect to conversions is "locked in" for that disposition-type action. Whether the implementation performs the action at that point or batches it for later, it MUST perform the action on the message as it stood at the time, and MUST NOT include subsequent conversions encountered later in the script processing. Therefore, the sequence "convert, fileinto, convert, fileinto" will store two different versions of the message: the first "fileinto" uses only the first conversion, while the second uses both. See Section 3.4 for an example of how this can be used.
Convert actions are cumulative, and each conversion operates on the message as it stands after all prior conversions. See the fourth block of Section 3.4 for an example of how this might be tricky.
Because the implicit keep, if it is in effect, acts on the final state of the message, all conversions are performed before any implicit keep.
In the following example, all "image/tiff" body parts of the message are converted to "image/jpeg" with image resolution of 320x240 pixels. The converted message is then subject to the implicit keep.
require ["convert"]; convert "image/tiff" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "320" "pix-y" "240";
In the following example, all "image/tiff" body parts of the message are converted to "image/jpeg", as in Example 1. Those messages are then filed into a mailbox called "INBOX.pics". Other messages (those with no image/tiff body parts) are subject to the implicit keep, and have not been converted.
require ["mime", "fileinto", "convert"]; if header :mime :anychild :contenttype "Content-Type" "image/tiff" { convert "image/tiff" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "320" "pix-y" "240"; fileinto "INBOX.pics"; }
In the following example, only "image/tiff" body parts with a Content-Disposition of "inline" are converted. Matching parts that are larger than 500 kilobytes are converted using an image resolution of 640x480 pixels, and those smaller are converted to 320x240 pixels. The message disposition is not changed, so the implicit keep will be in effect unless something else in the script changes that.
require ["mime", "foreverypart", "fileinto", "convert"]; foreverypart { if header :mime :param "filename" :contains "Content-Disposition" "inline" { if size :over "500K" { convert "image/tiff" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "640" "pix-y" "480"; } else { convert "image/tiff" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "320" "pix-y" "240"; } } } [... script continues ...]
The following example shows some tricky interactions between multiple "convert" actions and other disposition-type actions.
require ["mime", "foreverypart", "fileinto", "redirect" "convert"]; # The first "if" block will convert all image/tiff body parts # to 640x480 jpegs, and will file the message # into the "INBOX.pics" mailbox as converted at this point. if header :mime :anychild :contenttype "Content-Type" "image/tiff" { convert "image/tiff" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "640" "pix-y" "480"; fileinto "INBOX.pics"; } # The second block, the "foreverypart" loop, will convert all # inline jpegs to 320x240 resolution... including any tiff body # parts that had been converted in the first block, above. # Therefore, any tiff that had been converted to a 640x480 jpeg # will be re-converted to a 320x240 jpeg here if its # Content-Disposition is specified as "inline". foreverypart { if header :mime :param "filename" :contains "Content-Disposition" "inline" { convert "image/jpeg" "image/jpeg" "pix-x" "320" "pix-y" "240"; } } # The third block will take any message that contains a header # field called "Mobile-Link" and redirect it to the user's # mobile address. The redirected message will include both # conversions above, from block one and block two. if exists "Mobile-Link" { redirect "joe@mobile.example.com"; } # The fourth block will file the message into "Tiff" if it # contains any tiff body parts. But because of the earlier # conversion (in the first block), there will never be any # tiff body parts, so this "fileinto" will never happen. if header :mime :anychild :contenttype "Content-Type" "image/tiff" { fileinto "Tiff"; } # Now, at the end of the script processing, the Sieve # processor will perform an implicit keep if none of # the "fileinto" and "redirect" actions were taken. # The kept message will include any conversions that # were done (that is, any from the second block).
Security considerations given in IMAP CONVERT [RFC5259] and Sieve [RFC5228] are relevant to this document. There are no additional security considerations resulting from combining the two.
IANA is requested to add the following registration to the Sieve Extensions registry, as defined in RFC 5228:
The authors also want to thank all who have contributed key insight and extensively reviewed and discussed the concepts of CONVERT.
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |
[RFC5228] | Guenther, P. and T. Showalter, "Sieve: An Email Filtering Language", RFC 5228, January 2008. |
[RFC5234] | Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008. |
[RFC5259] | Melnikov, A. and P. Coates, "Internet Message Access Protocol - CONVERT Extension", RFC 5259, July 2008. |
[RFC5703] | Hansen, T. and C. Daboo, "Sieve Email Filtering: MIME Part Tests, Iteration, Extraction, Replacement, and Enclosure", RFC 5703, October 2009. |