TOC 
YAM Working GroupJ. Klensin
Internet-Draft 
Intended status: InformationalB. Leiba
Expires: May 16, 2010Huawei Technologies
 November 12, 2009


Preliminary Evaluation of RFC5321, Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), for advancement from Draft Standard to Full Standard by the YAM Working Group
draft-ietf-yam-5321bis-smtp-pre-evaluation-00.txt

Abstract

This memo is a preliminary evaluation of RFC 5321, Simple Mail Transfer Protocol for advancement from Draft to Full Standard. It has been prepared by the The Yet Another Mail Working Group.

THIS INTERNET DRAFT IS NOT MEANT TO BE PUBLISHED AS AN RFC, BUT IS WRITTEN TO FACILITATE DISCUSSION WITH THE IESG.

Status of this Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

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Table of Contents

1.  Introduction
    1.1.  Note to RFC Editor
2.  Preliminary Evaluation
    2.1.  Document
    2.2.  Time in Place
    2.3.  Implementation and Operational Experience
    2.4.  Proposed Changes
    2.5.  Non-Changes
    2.6.  Downward references
    2.7.  IESG Feedback
3.  IANA Considerations
4.  Security Considerations
5.  Acknowledgments
6.  References
    6.1.  Normative References
    6.2.  Informative References
§  Authors' Addresses




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1.  Introduction

A preliminary evaluation has been made of Simple Mail Tranfer Protocol (Klensin, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” October 2008.) [RFC5321] by the Yet Another Mail (YAM) Working Group for advancing it from Draft to Full Standard. The YAM WG requests feedback from the IESG on this decision.



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1.1.  Note to RFC Editor

This Internet-Draft is not meant to be published as an RFC. It is written to facilitate processing within the IESG.



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2.  Preliminary Evaluation



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2.1.  Document

Title:
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
Link:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5321



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2.2.  Time in Place

RFC2026:
"A specification shall remain at the Draft Standard level for at least four (4) months, or until at least one IETF meeting has occurred."
Published:
October 2008



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2.3.  Implementation and Operational Experience

RFC2026:
"significant implementation and successful operational experience ... characterized by a high degree of technical maturity and by a generally held belief that the specified protocol or service provides significant benefit to the Internet community."
Confidence level:
Very high.

Electronic mail (historically known as "netmail" before "email" came into common use) has been in active use in the Internet community since the early 1970s. Although many small adjustments and clarifications have been made, the basic transport protocol that is now used has been changed in only two important ways since the publication of RFC 821 in August 1982. One of those changes was the introduction of DNS-based mail routing with the MX record with RFC 974 in January 1986 (with some small clarifications in RFC 1123 in October 1979). The second was the introduction of a model for negotiating optional services with RFC 1425 in February 1993.

While many mail systems over the years have relied more on the robustness of receiving systems in the face of deviations (or creative interpretations of RFC 821 language in spite of changes and clarifications over the last 27 years), the DRUMS WG work that produced RFC 2821 (Klensin, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” April 2001.) [RFC2821] in April 2001 was largely an update to clarify various provisions. With the exception of a very few edge-case clarifications and changes in requirements levels, systems that conform to the combination of RFC 821 (Postel, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” August 1982.) [RFC0821] and RFC 1869 (Klensin, J., Freed, N., Rose, M., Stefferud, E., and D. Crocker, “SMTP Service Extensions,” November 1995.) [RFC1869] (both Full Standards) conform to RFC 5321. Those differences represented existing practice when RFC 5321 was written and have been well-tested and widely deployed.



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2.4.  Proposed Changes

The YAM WG proposes making the following changes in a revision:

Terminology:
There has been ongoing controversy about the terminology in RFC 5321 and especially changes made between 821 and 2821 or between 2821 and 5321. While we assume that 5321 is adequate, the WG will review terminology as appropriate and may make some adjustments.
Metalanguage:
During and after IETF Last Call on 5321, some suggestions were made about how to make metalanguage productions easier to find and connect. A complete rewrite or restructuring of the metalanguage should be avoided on the grounds that it would carry a very high risk of introducing errors. Instead, resources and tools permitting (significant manual work is now required), the revised document will contain an index to productions and where they are defined.
Normative References:
RFC 5321 is worded in a way that makes some references normative that are not strictly required to be. The WG will consider whether rewording to make such references informative is appropriate.



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2.5.  Non-Changes

The YAM WG discussed and chose not to make the following changes:

  1. Complete revision, rearrangement, or reformatting of metalanguage (see #2 above).
  2. Any extensions that would violate the rules for Full Standard or otherwise require revisiting the approved interoperability report for RFC 5321.
  3. A number of extensions and changes that would have imposed significant new requirements on SMTP, or that would have implied incompatible changes, were proposed during both the DRUMS WG period and during the discussions that led to RFC 5321. In each case, the authors were advised to prepare a specific Internet-Draft describing the change, convince the community to progress it to Proposed Standard, and then implement and deploy the change quickly enough to "catch up" with the progress that started with RFC 2821. The notion was that those changes could then be integrated with the progression at the same maturity level. It is important to note that, independent of any constraints imposed by the YAM charter design, none of those proposals have appeared and been progressed even to IETF Last Call.



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2.6.  Downward references

At Full Standard, the following references would be downward references:

RFC 5322 if 5322bis is not progressed simultaneously with 5321bis. (This is not expected to happen.)
RFC 4291, IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture.
RFC 3848, ESMTP and LMTP Transmission Types Registration. Note that it is possible to rephrase RFC 5321bis to avoid this normative reference and the WG will consider doing that.


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2.7.  IESG Feedback

The YAM WG requests feedback from the IESG on this decision. In particular:



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3.  IANA Considerations

This document contains no IANA actions.



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4.  Security Considerations

This document requests IESG feedback. There are no security considerations.



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5.  Acknowledgments

This document was prepared from a template supplied by Subramanian Moonesamy.

Some of the information provided in this document, but not provided in the RFC 1652 evaluation (http://www.ietf.org/id/draft-ietf-yam-rfc1652bis-pre-evaluation-00.txt), was inspired by brief discussions with Pasi Eronen and Subramanian Moonesamy during IETF 76.



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6.  References



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6.1. Normative References

[RFC5321] Klensin, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” RFC 5321, October 2008 (TXT).


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6.2. Informative References

[RFC0821] Postel, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” STD 10, RFC 821, August 1982 (TXT).
[RFC1869] Klensin, J., Freed, N., Rose, M., Stefferud, E., and D. Crocker, “SMTP Service Extensions,” STD 10, RFC 1869, November 1995 (TXT).
[RFC2821] Klensin, J., “Simple Mail Transfer Protocol,” RFC 2821, April 2001 (TXT).


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Authors' Addresses

  John C Klensin
  1770 Massachusetts Ave, Ste 322
  Cambridge, MA 02140
  USA
Phone:  +1 617 245 1457
Email:  john+ietf@jck.com
  
  Barry Leiba
  Huawei Technologies
Phone:  +1 646 827 0648
Email:  barryleiba@computer.org
URI:  http://internetmessagingtechnology.org/