Internet-Draft | Email Snooze | July 2023 |
Murchison, et al. | Expires 11 January 2024 | [Page] |
This document describes the "snooze" extensions to IMAP, JMAP for Mail, and the Sieve Email Filtering Language. The "snooze" extensions give these protocols the ability to postpone the appearance of an email message in a target mailbox until a later point in time.¶
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Users are not always ready, willing, or able to read and respond to email messages at the time of their arrival. Sometimes it is desirable to have messages appear in a mailbox at a more convenient time for the user to act upon them.¶
This document defines extensions to the Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) [RFC9051], The JSON Meta Application Protocol (JMAP) for Mail [RFC8621], and the Sieve Email Filtering Language [RFC5228] that enable postponing the appearance of a message in a target mailbox until a later point in time, also known as "snoozing" a message.¶
The IMAP and JMAP extensions allow for snoozing messages that are already present in the mailstore. The Sieve extension allows for snoozing a message at the time of final delivery.¶
A "snoozed" message is one that the user wants put into a less obtrusive location for a fixed time. When that time is reached, the messaged is "awakened" back into higher visibility.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
The extensions defined in this specification use the following procedure for snoozing and awakening messages:¶
The message is assigned three meta-data items:¶
The SNOOZE extension is present in any IMAP implementation that returns "SNOOZE" as one of the supported capabilities to the CAPABILITY command.¶
Users may create a mailbox with an attribute of \Snoozed (Section 9.5), having the sole purpose of holding snoozed emails. This mailbox is exposed over JMAP as having the "snoozed" role.¶
Implementations are REQUIRED to enforce the following restrictions on the \Snoozed mailbox:¶
This extends the first form of the UID command (see [RFC9051], Section 6.4.9) to add the SNOOZE command defined above as a valid argument.¶
The SNOOZE command takes two mandatory arguments: a message set (sequence numbers for SNOOZE, UIDs for UID SNOOZE) and a date/time string (awaken time); and three optional arguments: a named target mailbox, a list of flags to be added to the awakened messages, and a list of flags to be removed from the awakened messages. Each message included in the set is moved (as per [RFC9051], Section 6.4.9) from the selected mailbox to the mailbox having the \Snoozed attribute. Additionally, the awaken time, any target mailbox name, and any flag lists are stored as "snoozed" meta-data on the messages. This process appears to the client as a single action and has the same effect for each message as this sequence (using syntax from [RFC5257], Section 4.5):¶
At the awaken time, each message is moved from the \Snoozed mailbox into the target mailbox, and any updates are made to the message flags. If no target mailbox was specified or it is inaccessible, then the message is moved into the user's INBOX. and has the same effect for each message as this sequence:¶
Because of the similarity of SNOOZE to MOVE, extensions that affect MOVE affect SNOOZE in the same way. Response codes listed in [RFC9051], Section 7.1, as well as those defined by extensions, are sent as indicated for MOVE.¶
Servers supporting ANNOTATE [RFC5257] MAY expose the "snoozed" meta-data on messages as a read-only shared /snoozed (Section 9.5) entry. The value of the /snoozed entry MUST be a JSON string in the form of a snoozeDetails object (Section 4.2).¶
The following syntax specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation as specified in [RFC5234]. [RFC9051] defines the non-terminals "capability", "command-select", "sequence-set", "mailbox", "date-time", and "flag-list".¶
Except as noted otherwise, all alphabetic characters are case insensitive. The use of upper or lower case characters to define token strings is for editorial clarity only. Implementations MUST accept these strings in a case-insensitive fashion.¶
capability =/ "SNOOZE" command-select =/ snooze snooze = "SNOOZE" SP sequence-set SP date-time [ SP "+FLAGS" SP flag-list ] [ SP "-FLAGS" SP flag-list ] [ SP mailbox ] uid = "UID" SP (copy / move / fetch / search / store / uid-expunge / snooze)¶
The capabilities object is returned as part of the JMAP Session object; see [RFC8620], Section 2. Servers supporting this specification MUST add a property named "urn:ietf:params:jmap:mail:snooze" to the capabilities object. The value of this property is an empty object in both the JMAP session "capabilities" property and an account's "accountCapabilities" property.¶
Users may create a mailbox with a role of "snoozed", having the sole purpose of holding snoozed emails. This mailbox is exposed over IMAP as having the \Snoozed (Section 9.5) attribute.¶
The Email [RFC8621], Section 4.1 object gains a new property:¶
snoozed:
SnoozeDetails|null
(immutable)¶
If in the mailbox with role snoozed, this Email will be moved from there according to the details in this object. Otherwise, this is a record of when it was snoozed in the past.¶
A SnoozeDetails object has the following properties:¶
until:
UTCDate
¶
The time at which to move the message out of the "snoozed" mailbox.¶
moveToMailboxId:
String
(optional)¶
If set and a valid mailbox id for the user, this is where the Email will be moved at the awaken time. Otherwise, the Email will be moved to the user's inbox.¶
setKeywords:
String[Boolean]
(optional)¶
If set, when the message is awakened it will also have
keywords modified. The keys of the object are the
keyword names.
Names that map to true
are keywords to be
added.
Names that map to false
are keywords to remove.¶
The snoozed property has the following rules and restrictions:¶
When setting snoozed to a non-null value in an Email/set method:¶
Otherwise, if adding the Email to multiple mailboxes, set the SnoozeDetails on the copy in:¶
If neither apply, reject the create/update with an invalidProperties error.¶
Sieve implementations that support this extension have an identifier of "snooze" for use with the capability mechanism.¶
Conventions for notations are as in Section 1.1 of [RFC5228], including use of the "Usage:" label for the definition of action and tagged arguments syntax.¶
Usage: snooze *AWAKEN-OPTIONS <times: string-list>¶
The AWAKEN-OPTIONS argument is defined here in ABNF [RFC5234] syntax so that it can be modified by other extensions.¶
AWAKEN-OPTIONS = MAILBOX / WEEKDAYS / TZID ; each option MUST NOT appear more than once ; however, per Section 2.6.2 of RFC 5228, ; the tagged arguments in AWAKEN-OPTIONS ; may appear in any order MAILBOX = ":mailbox" string WEEKDAYS = ":weekdays" string-list TZID = ":tzid" string¶
The "snooze" action cancels the implicit keep and postpones delivery of the message into the specified mailbox at a later point in time.¶
The snooze action is semantically equivalent to a delayed fileinto action (see Section 4.1 of [RFC5228]). The arguments of the snooze action specify when, where, and how the awakened message will be filed.¶
Implementations MUST snooze and awaken messages per Section 2. Specifically, a Sieve interpreter whose mailstore is accessible via IMAP and/or JMAP MUST utilize a "snoozed" mailbox per Sections Section 3 and Section 4 respectively.¶
The optional :mailbox argument is used to specify the target mailbox that the message will be filed into when it is awakened. It is equivalent to the mailbox argument of the fileinto action (see Section 4.1 of [RFC5228]).¶
If :mailbox is omitted, or if the specified mailbox doesn't exist at the time of awakening, the message will be filed into the user's main mailbox. For instance, in an implementation where an IMAP server is running scripts on behalf of the user at time of delivery, the user's "INBOX" would be the implicit target for awakening messages.¶
The required times argument, along with the optional :tzid and :weekdays arguments, are used to specify when a snoozed message will be awakened. Each time is specified in "hh:mm:ss" format and is interpreted as the local time in the time zone specified by the :tzid argument.¶
The value of the :tzid argument MUST be a time zone identifier from the IANA Time Zone Database [tzdb]. If :tzid is omitted, the time zone of the Sieve interpreter is used.¶
The :weekdays argument specifies the set of days on which the specified set of times apply. Each day of the week is expressed as an integer between "0" and "6". "0" is Sunday, "1" is Monday, etc. This syntax matches that of the "weekday" date-part argument to the date test extension (see Section 4.2 of [RFC5260]). If :weekdays is omitted, the set of times applies to every day of the week.¶
The combination of the weekdays and times form a chronological list of awaken times. When a message is snoozed, it is assigned the next future awaken time in the list. If a message is snoozed on a day with no awaken times, or after the last awaken time on a given day, the first awaken time on the next available day is used.¶
If the local time in the specified time zone occurs more than once (daylight saving to standard time transition), the first occurrence of the specified time value is used. If the local time in the specified time zone does not occur (standard to daylight saving time transition), the specified time value is interpreted using the UTC offset prior to the transition.¶
The following examples show, given the specified snooze action and a set of message arrival times, the corresponding times at which the message would be awakened and filed.¶
The following example shows awaken times rolling into the next day or week. Note that 2020-07-30 falls on a Thursday.¶
require "snooze"; snooze :weekdays ["1", "3", "5", "2", "4"] :tzid "Australia/Melbourne" ["12:00:00", "08:00:00", "16:00:00"];¶
Arrival (UTC) | Arrival (Melbourne) | Awaken (Melbourne) |
---|---|---|
2020-07-30T00:00:00Z | --07-30T10:00:00+10 | --07-30T12:00:00+10 |
2020-07-30T04:00:00Z | --07-30T14:00:00+10 | --07-30T16:00:00+10 |
2020-07-30T08:00:00Z | --07-30T18:00:00+10 | --07-31T08:00:00+10 |
2020-07-31T12:00:00Z | --07-31T22:00:00+10 | --08-03T08:00:00+10 |
2020-08-01T16:00:00Z | --08-02T02:00:00+10 | --08-03T08:00:00+10 |
The following example shows awaken times falling before, during, and after a daylight saving to standard time transition. Note that the transition occurs at 2020-11-01T02:00:00-04.¶
require "snooze"; snooze :tzid "America/New_York" "01:30:00";¶
Arrival (UTC) | Arrival (New York) | Awaken (New York) |
---|---|---|
2020-11-01T05:00:00Z | --11-01T01:00:00-04 | --11-01T01:30:00-04 |
2020-11-01T06:00:00Z | --11-01T01:00:00-05 | --11-02T01:30:00-05 |
2020-11-01T07:00:00Z | --11-01T02:00:00-05 | --11-02T01:30:00-05 |
The following example shows awaken times falling before, during, and after a standard to daylight saving time transition. Note that the transition occurs at 2021-03-14T02:00:00-05.¶
require "snooze"; snooze :tzid "America/New_York" "02:30:00";¶
Arrival (UTC) | Arrival (New York) | Awaken (New York) |
---|---|---|
2021-03-13T06:30:00Z | --03-13T01:30:00-05 | --03-13T02:30:00-05 |
2021-03-14T06:30:00Z | --03-14T01:30:00-05 | --03-14T03:30:00-04 |
2021-03-14T07:30:00Z | --03-14T03:30:00-04 | --03-15T02:30:00-04 |
Some tagged arguments defined in extensions to the fileinto action can be used together with the snooze action. The sections below describe these interactions. Tagged arguments in future extensions to the fileinto action need to describe their interaction with the snooze extension, if any.¶
When any fileinto extension arguments are used with the snooze extension, the corresponding extension MUST be enabled, and the arguments are defined to have the same syntax, semantics, and treatment as they do with the fileinto action.¶
When the "imap4flags" [RFC5232] extension is enabled in a script, two additional tagged arguments are added to "snooze" that allow manipulating the set of flags on a snoozed message.¶
AWAKEN-OPTIONS /= ADDFLAGS / REMOVEFLAGS ADDFLAGS = ":addflags" string-list REMOVEFLAGS = ":removeflags" string-list¶
The optional :addflags and :removeflags arguments are used to specify which IMAP [RFC9051] flags should be added to and/or removed from the set of IMAP flags present on the snoozed message at the time of awakening. Note the set of IMAP flags present at the time of awakening may be the empty set.¶
If the "setflag" and/or "addflag" actions have been used to store IMAP flags in the imap4flags internal variable, the Sieve interpreter MUST use the current value of the internal variable as the set of flags to associate with the message when storing it into the "snoozed" mailbox.¶
This document doesn't dictate how the Sieve interpreter will set the IMAP flags. In particular, the Sieve interpreter may work as an IMAP client or may have direct access to the mailstore.¶
The general requirements for flag handling specified in Section 2 of [RFC5232] MUST be followed.¶
The following example leverages the Date [RFC5260], Relational [RFC5231], and Imap4flags [RFC5232] extensions to snooze messages received after business hours until the following work day. Note that the message is marked as important when it is snoozed, and will be marked as unread when it is awakened.¶
require ["snooze", "imap4flags", "date", "relational"]; if anyof(header :is "from" "boss@example.com", currentdate :is "weekday" "0", currentdate :is "weekday" "6", currentdate :value "ge" "hour" "17") { setflag "\\Important"; snooze :removeflags "\\Seen" :weekdays ["1". "2", "3", "4", "5"] :tzid "American/New_York", "09:00"; }¶
This document extends the definition of the ":create" [RFC5490] tagged argument so that it can be used with the snooze action.¶
AWAKEN-OPTIONS /= CREATE CREATE = ":create" ; MUST NOT be appear unless MAILBOX also appears¶
If the optional ":create" argument is specified with snooze, it instructs the Sieve interpreter to create the target mailbox, if needed, before attempting to file the awakened message into the target mailbox.¶
This document extends the definition of the ":specialuse" [RFC8579] tagged argument so that it can be used with the snooze action.¶
AWAKEN-OPTIONS /= SPECIAL-USE SPECIAL-USE = ":specialuse" string¶
If the optional ":specialuse" argument is specified with snooze, it instructs the Sieve interpreter to check whether a mailbox exists with the specific special-use flag assigned to it. If such a mailbox exists, the awakened message is filed into the special-use mailbox. Otherwise, the awakened message is filed into the target mailbox.¶
If both the optional ":specialuse" and ":create" arguments are specified with snooze, the Sieve interpreter is instructed to create the target mailbox per Section 4.1 of [RFC8579], if needed.¶
This document extends the definition of the ":mailboxid" [RFC9042] tagged argument so that it can be used with the snooze action.¶
AWAKEN-OPTIONS /= MAILBOXID MAILBOXID = ":mailboxid" string¶
If the optional ":mailboxid" argument is specified with snooze, it instructs the Sieve interpreter to check whether a mailbox exists in the user's personal namespace [RFC2342] with the specified MAILBOXID [RFC8474]. If such a mailbox exists, the awakened message is filed into that mailbox. Otherwise, the awakened message is filed into the target mailbox.¶
It is an error to specify both ":mailboxid" and ":specialuse" in the same snooze action.¶
< RFC Editor: before publication please remove this section and the reference to [RFC7942] >¶
This section records the status of known implementations of the protocol defined by this specification at the time of posting of this Internet-Draft, and is based on a proposal described in [RFC7942]. The description of implementations in this section is intended to assist the IETF in its decision processes in progressing drafts to RFCs. Please note that the listing of any individual implementation here does not imply endorsement by the IETF. Furthermore, no effort has been spent to verify the information presented here that was supplied by IETF contributors. This is not intended as, and must not be construed to be, a catalog of available implementations or their features. Readers are advised to note that other implementations may exist.¶
According to [RFC7942], "this will allow reviewers and working groups to assign due consideration to documents that have the benefit of running code, which may serve as evidence of valuable experimentation and feedback that have made the implemented protocols more mature. It is up to the individual working groups to use this information as they see fit".¶
The open source Cyrus Server project is a highly scalable enterprise mail system which supports IMAP, JMAP, and Sieve email filtering at the point of final delivery. This production level implementation supports all of the requirements described in this document. This implementation is freely distributable under a BSD style license from Computing Services at Carnegie Mellon University.¶
Security considerations are discussed in [RFC5228], [RFC5232], [RFC8579], and [RFC9042].¶
It is believed that this extension doesn't introduce any additional security concerns.¶
It is believed that this extension doesn't introduce any privacy considerations beyond those in [RFC5228].¶
This document defines the following new JMAP capability to be added to the registry defined in Section 9.4 of [RFC8620] and located here: https://www.iana.org/assignments/jmap/jmap.xhtml#jmap-capabilities¶
IANA are requested to add a capability to the JMAP Capabilities registry:¶
IANA are requested to add "SNOOZE" to the IMAP Capabilities registry, https://www.iana.org/assignments/imap4-capabilities¶
This document defines the following new Sieve extension to be added to the registry defined in Section 6.2 of [RFC5228] and located here: https://www.iana.org/assignments/sieve-extensions/sieve-extensions.xhtml#sieve-extensions¶
IANA are requested to add a capability to the Sieve Extensions registry:¶
This document defines the following new Sieve action to be added to the registry defined in Section 3.1 of [I-D.ietf-extra-sieve-action-registry].¶
IANA are requested to add an action to the Sieve Action registry:¶
This document defines the following new IMAP mailbox name attribute to be added to the registry defined in Section 6.2 of [RFC8457] and located here: https://www.iana.org/assignments/imap-mailbox-name-attributes/imap-mailbox-name-attributes.xhtml#imap-mailbox-name-attributes¶
IANA are requested to add an attribute to the IMAP Mailbox Name Attribute registry:¶
This document defines the following new IMAP annotation entry to be added to the registry defined in Section 6 of [RFC5257] and located here: https://www.iana.org/assignments/imap-annotate-extension/imap-annotate-extension.xhtml#imap-annotate-extension-entries¶
The authors would like to thank the following individuals for contributing their ideas and support for writing this specification: Ned Freed, Barry Leiba, Alexey Melnikov, and Pete Resnick.¶