RFC 1341 - MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions): Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies

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 Network Working Group N. Borenstein, Bellcore
 Request for Comments: 1341 N. Freed, Innosoft
 June 1992
 
 
 
 MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions):
 
 
 Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing
 the Format of Internet Message Bodies
 
 
 Status of this Memo
 
 This RFC specifies an IAB standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions
 for improvements. Please refer to the current edition of
 the "IAB Official Protocol Standards" for the
 standardization state and status of this protocol.
 Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
 
 Abstract
 
 RFC 822 defines a message representation protocol which
 specifies considerable detail about message headers, but
 which leaves the message content, or message body, as flat
 ASCII text. This document redefines the format of message
 bodies to allow multi-part textual and non-textual message
 bodies to be represented and exchanged without loss of
 information. This is based on earlier work documented in
 RFC 934 and RFC 1049, but extends and revises that work.
 Because RFC 822 said so little about message bodies, this
 document is largely orthogonal to (rather than a revision
 of) RFC 822.
 
 In particular, this document is designed to provide
 facilities to include multiple objects in a single message,
 to represent body text in character sets other than US-
 ASCII, to represent formatted multi-font text messages, to
 represent non-textual material such as images and audio
 fragments, and generally to facilitate later extensions
 defining new types of Internet mail for use by cooperating
 mail agents.
 
 This document does NOT extend Internet mail header fields to
 permit anything other than US-ASCII text data. It is
 recognized that such extensions are necessary, and they are
 the subject of a companion document [RFC -1342].
 
 A table of contents appears at the end of this document.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page i]

  1 Introduction
 
 Since its publication in 1982, RFC 822 [RFC-822] has defined
 the standard format of textual mail messages on the
 Internet. Its success has been such that the RFC 822 format
 has been adopted, wholly or partially, well beyond the
 confines of the Internet and the Internet SMTP transport
 defined by RFC 821 [RFC-821]. As the format has seen wider
 use, a number of limitations have proven increasingly
 restrictive for the user community.
 
 RFC 822 was intended to specify a format for text messages.
 As such, non-text messages, such as multimedia messages that
 might include audio or images, are simply not mentioned.
 Even in the case of text, however, RFC 822 is inadequate for
 the needs of mail users whose languages require the use of
 character sets richer than US ASCII [US-ASCII]. Since RFC
 822 does not specify mechanisms for mail containing audio,
 video, Asian language text, or even text in most European
 languages, additional specifications are needed
 
 One of the notable limitations of RFC 821/822 based mail
 systems is the fact that they limit the contents of
 electronic mail messages to relatively short lines of
 seven-bit ASCII. This forces users to convert any non-
 textual data that they may wish to send into seven-bit bytes
 representable as printable ASCII characters before invoking
 a local mail UA (User Agent, a program with which human
 users send and receive mail). Examples of such encodings
 currently used in the Internet include pure hexadecimal,
 uuencode, the 3-in-4 base 64 scheme specified in RFC 1113,
 the Andrew Toolkit Representation [ATK], and many others.
 
 The limitations of RFC 822 mail become even more apparent as
 gateways are designed to allow for the exchange of mail
 messages between RFC 822 hosts and X.400 hosts. X.400 [X400]
 specifies mechanisms for the inclusion of non-textual body
 parts within electronic mail messages. The current
 standards for the mapping of X.400 messages to RFC 822
 messages specify that either X.400 non-textual body parts
 should be converted to (not encoded in) an ASCII format, or
 that they should be discarded, notifying the RFC 822 user
 that discarding has occurred. This is clearly undesirable,
 as information that a user may wish to receive is lost.
 Even though a user's UA may not have the capability of
 dealing with the non-textual body part, the user might have
 some mechanism external to the UA that can extract useful
 information from the body part. Moreover, it does not allow
 for the fact that the message may eventually be gatewayed
 back into an X.400 message handling system (i.e., the X.400
 message is "tunneled" through Internet mail), where the
 non-textual information would definitely become useful
 again.
 
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 This document describes several mechanisms that combine to
 solve most of these problems without introducing any serious
 incompatibilities with the existing world of RFC 822 mail.
 In particular, it describes:
 
 1. A MIME-Version header field, which uses a version number
 to declare a message to be conformant with this
 specification and allows mail processing agents to
 distinguish between such messages and those generated
 by older or non-conformant software, which is presumed
 to lack such a field.
 
 2. A Content-Type header field, generalized from RFC 1049
 [RFC-1049], which can be used to specify the type and
 subtype of data in the body of a message and to fully
 specify the native representation (encoding) of such
 data.
 
 2.a. A "text" Content-Type value, which can be used to
 represent textual information in a number of
 character sets and formatted text description
 languages in a standardized manner.
 
 2.b. A "multipart" Content-Type value, which can be
 used to combine several body parts, possibly of
 differing types of data, into a single message.
 
 2.c. An "application" Content-Type value, which can be
 used to transmit application data or binary data,
 and hence, among other uses, to implement an
 electronic mail file transfer service.
 
 2.d. A "message" Content-Type value, for encapsulating
 a mail message.
 
 2.e An "image" Content-Type value, for transmitting
 still image (picture) data.
 
 2.f. An "audio" Content-Type value, for transmitting
 audio or voice data.
 
 2.g. A "video" Content-Type value, for transmitting
 video or moving image data, possibly with audio as
 part of the composite video data format.
 
 3. A Content-Transfer-Encoding header field, which can be
 used to specify an auxiliary encoding that was applied
 to the data in order to allow it to pass through mail
 transport mechanisms which may have data or character
 set limitations.
 
 4. Two optional header fields that can be used to further
 describe the data in a message body, the Content-ID and
 Content-Description header fields.
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 MIME has been carefully designed as an extensible mechanism,
 and it is expected that the set of content-type/subtype
 pairs and their associated parameters will grow
 significantly with time. Several other MIME fields, notably
 including character set names, are likely to have new values
 defined over time. In order to ensure that the set of such
 values is developed in an orderly, well-specified, and
 public manner, MIME defines a registration process which
 uses the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) as a
 central registry for such values. Appendix F provides
 details about how IANA registration is accomplished.
 
 Finally, to specify and promote interoperability, Appendix A
 of this document provides a basic applicability statement
 for a subset of the above mechanisms that defines a minimal
 level of "conformance" with this document.
 
 HISTORICAL NOTE: Several of the mechanisms described in
 this document may seem somewhat strange or even baroque at
 first reading. It is important to note that compatibility
 with existing standards AND robustness across existing
 practice were two of the highest priorities of the working
 group that developed this document. In particular,
 compatibility was always favored over elegance.
 
 2 Notations, Conventions, and Generic BNF Grammar
 
 This document is being published in two versions, one as
 plain ASCII text and one as PostScript. The latter is
 recommended, though the textual contents are identical. An
 Andrew-format copy of this document is also available from
 the first author (Borenstein).
 
 Although the mechanisms specified in this document are all
 described in prose, most are also described formally in the
 modified BNF notation of RFC 822. Implementors will need to
 be familiar with this notation in order to understand this
 specification, and are referred to RFC 822 for a complete
 explanation of the modified BNF notation.
 
 Some of the modified BNF in this document makes reference to
 syntactic entities that are defined in RFC 822 and not in
 this document. A complete formal grammar, then, is obtained
 by combining the collected grammar appendix of this document
 with that of RFC 822.
 
 The term CRLF, in this document, refers to the sequence of
 the two ASCII characters CR (13) and LF (10) which, taken
 together, in this order, denote a line break in RFC 822
 mail.
 
 The term "character set", wherever it is used in this
 document, refers to a coded character set, in the sense of
 ISO character set standardization work, and must not be
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 misinterpreted as meaning "a set of characters."
 
 The term "message", when not further qualified, means either
 the (complete or "top-level") message being transferred on a
 network, or a message encapsulated in a body of type
 "message".
 
 The term "body part", in this document, means one of the
 parts of the body of a multipart entity. A body part has a
 header and a body, so it makes sense to speak about the body
 of a body part.
 
 The term "entity", in this document, means either a message
 or a body part. All kinds of entities share the property
 that they have a header and a body.
 
 The term "body", when not further qualified, means the body
 of an entity, that is the body of either a message or of a
 body part.
 
 Note : the previous four definitions are clearly circular.
 This is unavoidable, since the overal structure of a MIME
 message is indeed recursive.
 
 In this document, all numeric and octet values are given in
 decimal notation.
 
 It must be noted that Content-Type values, subtypes, and
 parameter names as defined in this document are case-
 insensitive. However, parameter values are case-sensitive
 unless otherwise specified for the specific parameter.
 
 FORMATTING NOTE: This document has been carefully formatted
 for ease of reading. The PostScript version of this
 document, in particular, places notes like this one, which
 may be skipped by the reader, in a smaller, italicized,
 font, and indents it as well. In the text version, only the
 indentation is preserved, so if you are reading the text
 version of this you might consider using the PostScript
 version instead. However, all such notes will be indented
 and preceded by "NOTE:" or some similar introduction, even
 in the text version.
 
 The primary purpose of these non-essential notes is to
 convey information about the rationale of this document, or
 to place this document in the proper historical or
 evolutionary context. Such information may be skipped by
 those who are focused entirely on building a compliant
 implementation, but may be of use to those who wish to
 understand why this document is written as it is.
 
 For ease of recognition, all BNF definitions have been
 placed in a fixed-width font in the PostScript version of
 this document.
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 3 The MIME-Version Header Field
 
 Since RFC 822 was published in 1982, there has really been
 only one format standard for Internet messages, and there
 has been little perceived need to declare the format
 standard in use. This document is an independent document
 that complements RFC 822. Although the extensions in this
 document have been defined in such a way as to be compatible
 with RFC 822, there are still circumstances in which it
 might be desirable for a mail-processing agent to know
 whether a message was composed with the new standard in
 mind.
 
 Therefore, this document defines a new header field, "MIME-
 Version", which is to be used to declare the version of the
 Internet message body format standard in use.
 
 Messages composed in accordance with this document MUST
 include such a header field, with the following verbatim
 text:
 
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 
 The presence of this header field is an assertion that the
 message has been composed in compliance with this document.
 
 Since it is possible that a future document might extend the
 message format standard again, a formal BNF is given for the
 content of the MIME-Version field:
 
 MIME-Version := text
 
 Thus, future format specifiers, which might replace or
 extend "1.0", are (minimally) constrained by the definition
 of "text", which appears in RFC 822.
 
 Note that the MIME-Version header field is required at the
 top level of a message. It is not required for each body
 part of a multipart entity. It is required for the embedded
 headers of a body of type "message" if and only if the
 embedded message is itself claimed to be MIME-compliant.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 4 The Content-Type Header Field
 
 The purpose of the Content-Type field is to describe the
 data contained in the body fully enough that the receiving
 user agent can pick an appropriate agent or mechanism to
 present the data to the user, or otherwise deal with the
 data in an appropriate manner.
 
 HISTORICAL NOTE: The Content-Type header field was first
 defined in RFC 1049. RFC 1049 Content-types used a simpler
 and less powerful syntax, but one that is largely compatible
 with the mechanism given here.
 
 The Content-Type header field is used to specify the nature
 of the data in the body of an entity, by giving type and
 subtype identifiers, and by providing auxiliary information
 that may be required for certain types. After the type and
 subtype names, the remainder of the header field is simply a
 set of parameters, specified in an attribute/value notation.
 The set of meaningful parameters differs for the different
 types. The ordering of parameters is not significant.
 Among the defined parameters is a "charset" parameter by
 which the character set used in the body may be declared.
 Comments are allowed in accordance with RFC 822 rules for
 structured header fields.
 
 In general, the top-level Content-Type is used to declare
 the general type of data, while the subtype specifies a
 specific format for that type of data. Thus, a Content-Type
 of "image/xyz" is enough to tell a user agent that the data
 is an image, even if the user agent has no knowledge of the
 specific image format "xyz". Such information can be used,
 for example, to decide whether or not to show a user the raw
 data from an unrecognized subtype -- such an action might be
 reasonable for unrecognized subtypes of text, but not for
 unrecognized subtypes of image or audio. For this reason,
 registered subtypes of audio, image, text, and video, should
 not contain embedded information that is really of a
 different type. Such compound types should be represented
 using the "multipart" or "application" types.
 
 Parameters are modifiers of the content-subtype, and do not
 fundamentally affect the requirements of the host system.
 Although most parameters make sense only with certain
 content-types, others are "global" in the sense that they
 might apply to any subtype. For example, the "boundary"
 parameter makes sense only for the "multipart" content-type,
 but the "charset" parameter might make sense with several
 content-types.
 
 An initial set of seven Content-Types is defined by this
 document. This set of top-level names is intended to be
 substantially complete. It is expected that additions to
 the larger set of supported types can generally be
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 accomplished by the creation of new subtypes of these
 initial types. In the future, more top-level types may be
 defined only by an extension to this standard. If another
 primary type is to be used for any reason, it must be given
 a name starting with "X-" to indicate its non-standard
 status and to avoid a potential conflict with a future
 official name.
 
 In the Extended BNF notation of RFC 822, a Content-Type
 header field value is defined as follows:
 
 Content-Type := type "/" subtype *[";" parameter]
 
 type := "application" / "audio"
 / "image" / "message"
 / "multipart" / "text"
 / "video" / x-token
 
 x-token := <The two characters "X-" followed, with no
 intervening white space, by any token>
 
 subtype := token
 
 parameter := attribute "=" value
 
 attribute := token
 
 value := token / quoted-string
 
 token := 1*<any CHAR except SPACE, CTLs, or tspecials>
 
 tspecials := "(" / ")" / "<" / ">" / "@" ; Must be in
 / "," / ";" / ":" / "\" / <"> ; quoted-string,
 / "/" / "[" / "]" / "?" / "." ; to use within
 / "=" ; parameter values
 
 Note that the definition of "tspecials" is the same as the
 RFC 822 definition of "specials" with the addition of the
 three characters "/", "?", and "=".
 
 Note also that a subtype specification is MANDATORY. There
 are no default subtypes.
 
 The type, subtype, and parameter names are not case
 sensitive. For example, TEXT, Text, and TeXt are all
 equivalent. Parameter values are normally case sensitive,
 but certain parameters are interpreted to be case-
 insensitive, depending on the intended use. (For example,
 multipart boundaries are case-sensitive, but the "access-
 type" for message/External-body is not case-sensitive.)
 
 Beyond this syntax, the only constraint on the definition of
 subtype names is the desire that their uses must not
 conflict. That is, it would be undesirable to have two
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 different communities using "Content-Type:
 application/foobar" to mean two different things. The
 process of defining new content-subtypes, then, is not
 intended to be a mechanism for imposing restrictions, but
 simply a mechanism for publicizing the usages. There are,
 therefore, two acceptable mechanisms for defining new
 Content-Type subtypes:
 
 1. Private values (starting with "X-") may be
 defined bilaterally between two cooperating
 agents without outside registration or
 standardization.
 
 2. New standard values must be documented,
 registered with, and approved by IANA, as
 described in Appendix F. Where intended for
 public use, the formats they refer to must
 also be defined by a published specification,
 and possibly offered for standardization.
 
 The seven standard initial predefined Content-Types are
 detailed in the bulk of this document. They are:
 
 text -- textual information. The primary subtype,
 "plain", indicates plain (unformatted) text. No
 special software is required to get the full
 meaning of the text, aside from support for the
 indicated character set. Subtypes are to be used
 for enriched text in forms where application
 software may enhance the appearance of the text,
 but such software must not be required in order to
 get the general idea of the content. Possible
 subtypes thus include any readable word processor
 format. A very simple and portable subtype,
 richtext, is defined in this document.
 multipart -- data consisting of multiple parts of
 independent data types. Four initial subtypes
 are defined, including the primary "mixed"
 subtype, "alternative" for representing the same
 data in multiple formats, "parallel" for parts
 intended to be viewed simultaneously, and "digest"
 for multipart entities in which each part is of
 type "message".
 message -- an encapsulated message. A body of
 Content-Type "message" is itself a fully formatted
 RFC 822 conformant message which may contain its
 own different Content-Type header field. The
 primary subtype is "rfc822". The "partial"
 subtype is defined for partial messages, to permit
 the fragmented transmission of bodies that are
 thought to be too large to be passed through mail
 transport facilities. Another subtype,
 "External-body", is defined for specifying large
 bodies by reference to an external data source.
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 image -- image data. Image requires a display device
 (such as a graphical display, a printer, or a FAX
 machine) to view the information. Initial
 subtypes are defined for two widely-used image
 formats, jpeg and gif.
 audio -- audio data, with initial subtype "basic".
 Audio requires an audio output device (such as a
 speaker or a telephone) to "display" the contents.
 video -- video data. Video requires the capability to
 display moving images, typically including
 specialized hardware and software. The initial
 subtype is "mpeg".
 application -- some other kind of data, typically
 either uninterpreted binary data or information to
 be processed by a mail-based application. The
 primary subtype, "octet-stream", is to be used in
 the case of uninterpreted binary data, in which
 case the simplest recommended action is to offer
 to write the information into a file for the user.
 Two additional subtypes, "ODA" and "PostScript",
 are defined for transporting ODA and PostScript
 documents in bodies. Other expected uses for
 "application" include spreadsheets, data for
 mail-based scheduling systems, and languages for
 "active" (computational) email. (Note that active
 email entails several securityconsiderations,
 which are discussed later in this memo,
 particularly in the context of
 application/PostScript.)
 
 Default RFC 822 messages are typed by this protocol as plain
 text in the US-ASCII character set, which can be explicitly
 specified as "Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii".
 If no Content-Type is specified, either by error or by an
 older user agent, this default is assumed. In the presence
 of a MIME-Version header field, a receiving User Agent can
 also assume that plain US-ASCII text was the sender's
 intent. In the absence of a MIME-Version specification,
 plain US-ASCII text must still be assumed, but the sender's
 intent might have been otherwise.
 
 RATIONALE: In the absence of any Content-Type header field
 or MIME-Version header field, it is impossible to be certain
 that a message is actually text in the US-ASCII character
 set, since it might well be a message that, using the
 conventions that predate this document, includes text in
 another character set or non-textual data in a manner that
 cannot be automatically recognized (e.g., a uuencoded
 compressed UNIX tar file). Although there is no fully
 acceptable alternative to treating such untyped messages as
 "text/plain; charset=us-ascii", implementors should remain
 aware that if a message lacks both the MIME-Version and the
 Content-Type header fields, it may in practice contain
 almost anything.
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 It should be noted that the list of Content-Type values
 given here may be augmented in time, via the mechanisms
 described above, and that the set of subtypes is expected to
 grow substantially.
 
 When a mail reader encounters mail with an unknown Content-
 type value, it should generally treat it as equivalent to
 "application/octet-stream", as described later in this
 document.
 
 5 The Content-Transfer-Encoding Header Field
 
 Many Content-Types which could usefully be transported via
 email are represented, in their "natural" format, as 8-bit
 character or binary data. Such data cannot be transmitted
 over some transport protocols. For example, RFC 821
 restricts mail messages to 7-bit US-ASCII data with 1000
 character lines.
 
 It is necessary, therefore, to define a standard mechanism
 for re-encoding such data into a 7-bit short-line format.
 This document specifies that such encodings will be
 indicated by a new "Content-Transfer-Encoding" header field.
 The Content-Transfer-Encoding field is used to indicate the
 type of transformation that has been used in order to
 represent the body in an acceptable manner for transport.
 
 Unlike Content-Types, a proliferation of Content-Transfer-
 Encoding values is undesirable and unnecessary. However,
 establishing only a single Content-Transfer-Encoding
 mechanism does not seem possible. There is a tradeoff
 between the desire for a compact and efficient encoding of
 largely-binary data and the desire for a readable encoding
 of data that is mostly, but not entirely, 7-bit data. For
 this reason, at least two encoding mechanisms are necessary:
 a "readable" encoding and a "dense" encoding.
 
 The Content-Transfer-Encoding field is designed to specify
 an invertible mapping between the "native" representation of
 a type of data and a representation that can be readily
 exchanged using 7 bit mail transport protocols, such as
 those defined by RFC 821 (SMTP). This field has not been
 defined by any previous standard. The field's value is a
 single token specifying the type of encoding, as enumerated
 below. Formally:
 
 Content-Transfer-Encoding := "BASE64" / "QUOTED-PRINTABLE" /
 "8BIT" / "7BIT" /
 "BINARY" / x-token
 
 These values are not case sensitive. That is, Base64 and
 BASE64 and bAsE64 are all equivalent. An encoding type of
 7BIT requires that the body is already in a seven-bit mail-
 ready representation. This is the default value -- that is,
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT" is assumed if the
 Content-Transfer-Encoding header field is not present.
 
 The values "8bit", "7bit", and "binary" all imply that NO
 encoding has been performed. However, they are potentially
 useful as indications of the kind of data contained in the
 object, and therefore of the kind of encoding that might
 need to be performed for transmission in a given transport
 system. "7bit" means that the data is all represented as
 short lines of US-ASCII data. "8bit" means that the lines
 are short, but there may be non-ASCII characters (octets
 with the high-order bit set). "Binary" means that not only
 may non-ASCII characters be present, but also that the lines
 are not necessarily short enough for SMTP transport.
 
 The difference between "8bit" (or any other conceivable
 bit-width token) and the "binary" token is that "binary"
 does not require adherence to any limits on line length or
 to the SMTP CRLF semantics, while the bit-width tokens do
 require such adherence. If the body contains data in any
 bit-width other than 7-bit, the appropriate bit-width
 Content-Transfer-Encoding token must be used (e.g., "8bit"
 for unencoded 8 bit wide data). If the body contains binary
 data, the "binary" Content-Transfer-Encoding token must be
 used.
 
 NOTE: The distinction between the Content-Transfer-Encoding
 values of "binary," "8bit," etc. may seem unimportant, in
 that all of them really mean "none" -- that is, there has
 been no encoding of the data for transport. However, clear
 labeling will be of enormous value to gateways between
 future mail transport systems with differing capabilities in
 transporting data that do not meet the restrictions of RFC
 821 transport.
 
 As of the publication of this document, there are no
 standardized Internet transports for which it is legitimate
 to include unencoded 8-bit or binary data in mail bodies.
 Thus there are no circumstances in which the "8bit" or
 "binary" Content-Transfer-Encoding is actually legal on the
 Internet. However, in the event that 8-bit or binary mail
 transport becomes a reality in Internet mail, or when this
 document is used in conjunction with any other 8-bit or
 binary-capable transport mechanism, 8-bit or binary bodies
 should be labeled as such using this mechanism.
 
 NOTE: The five values defined for the Content-Transfer-
 Encoding field imply nothing about the Content-Type other
 than the algorithm by which it was encoded or the transport
 system requirements if unencoded.
 
 Implementors may, if necessary, define new Content-
 Transfer-Encoding values, but must use an x-token, which is
 a name prefixed by "X-" to indicate its non-standard status,
 
 
 
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  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 e.g., "Content-Transfer-Encoding: x-my-new-encoding".
 However, unlike Content-Types and subtypes, the creation of
 new Content-Transfer-Encoding values is explicitly and
 strongly discouraged, as it seems likely to hinder
 interoperability with little potential benefit. Their use
 is allowed only as the result of an agreement between
 cooperating user agents.
 
 If a Content-Transfer-Encoding header field appears as part
 of a message header, it applies to the entire body of that
 message. If a Content-Transfer-Encoding header field
 appears as part of a body part's headers, it applies only to
 the body of that body part. If an entity is of type
 "multipart" or "message", the Content-Transfer-Encoding is
 not permitted to have any value other than a bit width
 (e.g., "7bit", "8bit", etc.) or "binary".
 
 It should be noted that email is character-oriented, so that
 the mechanisms described here are mechanisms for encoding
 arbitrary byte streams, not bit streams. If a bit stream is
 to be encoded via one of these mechanisms, it must first be
 converted to an 8-bit byte stream using the network standard
 bit order ("big-endian"), in which the earlier bits in a
 stream become the higher-order bits in a byte. A bit stream
 not ending at an 8-bit boundary must be padded with zeroes.
 This document provides a mechanism for noting the addition
 of such padding in the case of the application Content-Type,
 which has a "padding" parameter.
 
 The encoding mechanisms defined here explicitly encode all
 data in ASCII. Thus, for example, suppose an entity has
 header fields such as:
 
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
 Content-transfer-encoding: base64
 
 This should be interpreted to mean that the body is a base64
 ASCII encoding of data that was originally in ISO-8859-1,
 and will be in that character set again after decoding.
 
 The following sections will define the two standard encoding
 mechanisms. The definition of new content-transfer-
 encodings is explicitly discouraged and should only occur
 when absolutely necessary. All content-transfer-encoding
 namespace except that beginning with "X-" is explicitly
 reserved to the IANA for future use. Private agreements
 about content-transfer-encodings are also explicitly
 discouraged.
 
 Certain Content-Transfer-Encoding values may only be used on
 certain Content-Types. In particular, it is expressly
 forbidden to use any encodings other than "7bit", "8bit", or
 "binary" with any Content-Type that recursively includes
 other Content-Type fields, notably the "multipart" and
 
 
 
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 "message" Content-Types. All encodings that are desired for
 bodies of type multipart or message must be done at the
 innermost level, by encoding the actual body that needs to
 be encoded.
 
 NOTE ON ENCODING RESTRICTIONS: Though the prohibition
 against using content-transfer-encodings on data of type
 multipart or message may seem overly restrictive, it is
 necessary to prevent nested encodings, in which data are
 passed through an encoding algorithm multiple times, and
 must be decoded multiple times in order to be properly
 viewed. Nested encodings add considerable complexity to
 user agents: aside from the obvious efficiency problems
 with such multiple encodings, they can obscure the basic
 structure of a message. In particular, they can imply that
 several decoding operations are necessary simply to find out
 what types of objects a message contains. Banning nested
 encodings may complicate the job of certain mail gateways,
 but this seems less of a problem than the effect of nested
 encodings on user agents.
 
 NOTE ON THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CONTENT-TYPE AND CONTENT-
 TRANSFER-ENCODING: It may seem that the Content-Transfer-
 Encoding could be inferred from the characteristics of the
 Content-Type that is to be encoded, or, at the very least,
 that certain Content-Transfer-Encodings could be mandated
 for use with specific Content-Types. There are several
 reasons why this is not the case. First, given the varying
 types of transports used for mail, some encodings may be
 appropriate for some Content-Type/transport combinations and
 not for others. (For example, in an 8-bit transport, no
 encoding would be required for text in certain character
 sets, while such encodings are clearly required for 7-bit
 SMTP.) Second, certain Content-Types may require different
 types of transfer encoding under different circumstances.
 For example, many PostScript bodies might consist entirely
 of short lines of 7-bit data and hence require little or no
 encoding. Other PostScript bodies (especially those using
 Level 2 PostScript's binary encoding mechanism) may only be
 reasonably represented using a binary transport encoding.
 Finally, since Content-Type is intended to be an open-ended
 specification mechanism, strict specification of an
 association between Content-Types and encodings effectively
 couples the specification of an application protocol with a
 specific lower-level transport. This is not desirable since
 the developers of a Content-Type should not have to be aware
 of all the transports in use and what their limitations are.
 
 NOTE ON TRANSLATING ENCODINGS: The quoted-printable and
 base64 encodings are designed so that conversion between
 them is possible. The only issue that arises in such a
 conversion is the handling of line breaks. When converting
 from quoted-printable to base64 a line break must be
 converted into a CRLF sequence. Similarly, a CRLF sequence
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 13]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 in base64 data should be converted to a quoted-printable
 line break, but ONLY when converting text data.
 
 NOTE ON CANONICAL ENCODING MODEL: There was some
 confusion, in earlier drafts of this memo, regarding the
 model for when email data was to be converted to canonical
 form and encoded, and in particular how this process would
 affect the treatment of CRLFs, given that the representation
 of newlines varies greatly from system to system. For this
 reason, a canonical model for encoding is presented as
 Appendix H.
 
 5.1 Quoted-Printable Content-Transfer-Encoding
 
 The Quoted-Printable encoding is intended to represent data
 that largely consists of octets that correspond to printable
 characters in the ASCII character set. It encodes the data
 in such a way that the resulting octets are unlikely to be
 modified by mail transport. If the data being encoded are
 mostly ASCII text, the encoded form of the data remains
 largely recognizable by humans. A body which is entirely
 ASCII may also be encoded in Quoted-Printable to ensure the
 integrity of the data should the message pass through a
 character-translating, and/or line-wrapping gateway.
 
 In this encoding, octets are to be represented as determined
 by the following rules:
 
 Rule #1: (General 8-bit representation) Any octet,
 except those indicating a line break according to the
 newline convention of the canonical form of the data
 being encoded, may be represented by an "=" followed by
 a two digit hexadecimal representation of the octet's
 value. The digits of the hexadecimal alphabet, for this
 purpose, are "0123456789ABCDEF". Uppercase letters must
 be
 used when sending hexadecimal data, though a robust
 implementation may choose to recognize lowercase
 letters on receipt. Thus, for example, the value 12
 (ASCII form feed) can be represented by "=0C", and the
 value 61 (ASCII EQUAL SIGN) can be represented by
 "=3D". Except when the following rules allow an
 alternative encoding, this rule is mandatory.
 
 Rule #2: (Literal representation) Octets with decimal
 values of 33 through 60 inclusive, and 62 through 126,
 inclusive, MAY be represented as the ASCII characters
 which correspond to those octets (EXCLAMATION POINT
 through LESS THAN, and GREATER THAN through TILDE,
 respectively).
 
 Rule #3: (White Space): Octets with values of 9 and 32
 MAY be represented as ASCII TAB (HT) and SPACE
 characters, respectively, but MUST NOT be so
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 14]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 represented at the end of an encoded line. Any TAB (HT)
 or SPACE characters on an encoded line MUST thus be
 followed on that line by a printable character. In
 particular, an "=" at the end of an encoded line,
 indicating a soft line break (see rule #5) may follow
 one or more TAB (HT) or SPACE characters. It follows
 that an octet with value 9 or 32 appearing at the end
 of an encoded line must be represented according to
 Rule #1. This rule is necessary because some MTAs
 (Message Transport Agents, programs which transport
 messages from one user to another, or perform a part of
 such transfers) are known to pad lines of text with
 SPACEs, and others are known to remove "white space"
 characters from the end of a line. Therefore, when
 decoding a Quoted-Printable body, any trailing white
 space on a line must be deleted, as it will necessarily
 have been added by intermediate transport agents.
 
 Rule #4 (Line Breaks): A line break in a text body
 part, independent of what its representation is
 following the canonical representation of the data
 being encoded, must be represented by a (RFC 822) line
 break, which is a CRLF sequence, in the Quoted-
 Printable encoding. If isolated CRs and LFs, or LF CR
 and CR LF sequences are allowed to appear in binary
 data according to the canonical form, they must be
 represented using the "=0D", "=0A", "=0A=0D" and
 "=0D=0A" notations respectively.
 
 Note that many implementation may elect to encode the
 local representation of various content types directly.
 In particular, this may apply to plain text material on
 systems that use newline conventions other than CRLF
 delimiters. Such an implementation is permissible, but
 the generation of line breaks must be generalized to
 account for the case where alternate representations of
 newline sequences are used.
 
 Rule #5 (Soft Line Breaks): The Quoted-Printable
 encoding REQUIRES that encoded lines be no more than 76
 characters long. If longer lines are to be encoded with
 the Quoted-Printable encoding, 'soft' line breaks must
 be used. An equal sign as the last character on a
 encoded line indicates such a non-significant ('soft')
 line break in the encoded text. Thus if the "raw" form
 of the line is a single unencoded line that says:
 
 Now's the time for all folk to come to the aid of
 their country.
 
 This can be represented, in the Quoted-Printable
 encoding, as
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 15]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Now's the time =
 for all folk to come=
 to the aid of their country.
 
 This provides a mechanism with which long lines are
 encoded in such a way as to be restored by the user
 agent. The 76 character limit does not count the
 trailing CRLF, but counts all other characters,
 including any equal signs.
 
 Since the hyphen character ("-") is represented as itself in
 the Quoted-Printable encoding, care must be taken, when
 encapsulating a quoted-printable encoded body in a multipart
 entity, to ensure that the encapsulation boundary does not
 appear anywhere in the encoded body. (A good strategy is to
 choose a boundary that includes a character sequence such as
 "=_" which can never appear in a quoted-printable body. See
 the definition of multipart messages later in this
 document.)
 
 NOTE: The quoted-printable encoding represents something of
 a compromise between readability and reliability in
 transport. Bodies encoded with the quoted-printable
 encoding will work reliably over most mail gateways, but may
 not work perfectly over a few gateways, notably those
 involving translation into EBCDIC. (In theory, an EBCDIC
 gateway could decode a quoted-printable body and re-encode
 it using base64, but such gateways do not yet exist.) A
 higher level of confidence is offered by the base64
 Content-Transfer-Encoding. A way to get reasonably reliable
 transport through EBCDIC gateways is to also quote the ASCII
 characters
 
 !"#$@[\]^`{|}~
 
 according to rule #1. See Appendix B for more information.
 
 Because quoted-printable data is generally assumed to be
 line-oriented, it is to be expected that the breaks between
 the lines of quoted printable data may be altered in
 transport, in the same manner that plain text mail has
 always been altered in Internet mail when passing between
 systems with differing newline conventions. If such
 alterations are likely to constitute a corruption of the
 data, it is probably more sensible to use the base64
 encoding rather than the quoted-printable encoding.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 16]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 5.2 Base64 Content-Transfer-Encoding
 
 The Base64 Content-Transfer-Encoding is designed to
 represent arbitrary sequences of octets in a form that is
 not humanly readable. The encoding and decoding algorithms
 are simple, but the encoded data are consistently only about
 33 percent larger than the unencoded data. This encoding is
 based on the one used in Privacy Enhanced Mail applications,
 as defined in RFC 1113. The base64 encoding is adapted
 from RFC 1113, with one change: base64 eliminates the "*"
 mechanism for embedded clear text.
 
 A 65-character subset of US-ASCII is used, enabling 6 bits
 to be represented per printable character. (The extra 65th
 character, "=", is used to signify a special processing
 function.)
 
 NOTE: This subset has the important property that it is
 represented identically in all versions of ISO 646,
 including US ASCII, and all characters in the subset are
 also represented identically in all versions of EBCDIC.
 Other popular encodings, such as the encoding used by the
 UUENCODE utility and the base85 encoding specified as part
 of Level 2 PostScript, do not share these properties, and
 thus do not fulfill the portability requirements a binary
 transport encoding for mail must meet.
 
 The encoding process represents 24-bit groups of input bits
 as output strings of 4 encoded characters. Proceeding from
 left to right, a 24-bit input group is formed by
 concatenating 3 8-bit input groups. These 24 bits are then
 treated as 4 concatenated 6-bit groups, each of which is
 translated into a single digit in the base64 alphabet. When
 encoding a bit stream via the base64 encoding, the bit
 stream must be presumed to be ordered with the most-
 significant-bit first. That is, the first bit in the stream
 will be the high-order bit in the first byte, and the eighth
 bit will be the low-order bit in the first byte, and so on.
 
 Each 6-bit group is used as an index into an array of 64
 printable characters. The character referenced by the index
 is placed in the output string. These characters, identified
 in Table 1, below, are selected so as to be universally
 representable, and the set excludes characters with
 particular significance to SMTP (e.g., ".", "CR", "LF") and
 to the encapsulation boundaries defined in this document
 (e.g., "-").
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 17]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Table 1: The Base64 Alphabet
 
 Value Encoding Value Encoding Value Encoding Value
 Encoding
 0 A 17 R 34 i 51 z
 1 B 18 S 35 j 52 0
 2 C 19 T 36 k 53 1
 3 D 20 U 37 l 54 2
 4 E 21 V 38 m 55 3
 5 F 22 W 39 n 56 4
 6 G 23 X 40 o 57 5
 7 H 24 Y 41 p 58 6
 8 I 25 Z 42 q 59 7
 9 J 26 a 43 r 60 8
 10 K 27 b 44 s 61 9
 11 L 28 c 45 t 62 +
 12 M 29 d 46 u 63 /
 13 N 30 e 47 v
 14 O 31 f 48 w (pad) =
 15 P 32 g 49 x
 16 Q 33 h 50 y
 
 The output stream (encoded bytes) must be represented in
 lines of no more than 76 characters each. All line breaks
 or other characters not found in Table 1 must be ignored by
 decoding software. In base64 data, characters other than
 those in Table 1, line breaks, and other white space
 probably indicate a transmission error, about which a
 warning message or even a message rejection might be
 appropriate under some circumstances.
 
 Special processing is performed if fewer than 24 bits are
 available at the end of the data being encoded. A full
 encoding quantum is always completed at the end of a body.
 When fewer than 24 input bits are available in an input
 group, zero bits are added (on the right) to form an
 integral number of 6-bit groups. Output character positions
 which are not required to represent actual input data are
 set to the character "=". Since all base64 input is an
 integral number of octets, only the following cases can
 arise: (1) the final quantum of encoding input is an
 integral multiple of 24 bits; here, the final unit of
 encoded output will be an integral multiple of 4 characters
 with no "=" padding, (2) the final quantum of encoding input
 is exactly 8 bits; here, the final unit of encoded output
 will be two characters followed by two "=" padding
 characters, or (3) the final quantum of encoding input is
 exactly 16 bits; here, the final unit of encoded output will
 be three characters followed by one "=" padding character.
 
 Care must be taken to use the proper octets for line breaks
 if base64 encoding is applied directly to text material that
 has not been converted to canonical form. In particular,
 text line breaks should be converted into CRLF sequences
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 18]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 prior to base64 encoding. The important thing to note is
 that this may be done directly by the encoder rather than in
 a prior canonicalization step in some implementations.
 
 NOTE: There is no need to worry about quoting apparent
 encapsulation boundaries within base64-encoded parts of
 multipart entities because no hyphen characters are used in
 the base64 encoding.
 
 6 Additional Optional Content- Header Fields
 
 6.1 Optional Content-ID Header Field
 
 In constructing a high-level user agent, it may be desirable
 to allow one body to make reference to another.
 Accordingly, bodies may be labeled using the "Content-ID"
 header field, which is syntactically identical to the
 "Message-ID" header field:
 
 Content-ID := msg-id
 
 Like the Message-ID values, Content-ID values must be
 generated to be as unique as possible.
 
 6.2 Optional Content-Description Header Field
 
 The ability to associate some descriptive information with a
 given body is often desirable. For example, it may be useful
 to mark an "image" body as "a picture of the Space Shuttle
 Endeavor." Such text may be placed in the Content-
 Description header field.
 
 Content-Description := *text
 
 The description is presumed to be given in the US-ASCII
 character set, although the mechanism specified in [RFC-
 1342] may be used for non-US-ASCII Content-Description
 values.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 19]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7 The Predefined Content-Type Values
 
 This document defines seven initial Content-Type values and
 an extension mechanism for private or experimental types.
 Further standard types must be defined by new published
 specifications. It is expected that most innovation in new
 types of mail will take place as subtypes of the seven types
 defined here. The most essential characteristics of the
 seven content-types are summarized in Appendix G.
 
 7.1 The Text Content-Type
 
 The text Content-Type is intended for sending material which
 is principally textual in form. It is the default Content-
 Type. A "charset" parameter may be used to indicate the
 character set of the body text. The primary subtype of text
 is "plain". This indicates plain (unformatted) text. The
 default Content-Type for Internet mail is "text/plain;
 charset=us-ascii".
 
 Beyond plain text, there are many formats for representing
 what might be known as "extended text" -- text with embedded
 formatting and presentation information. An interesting
 characteristic of many such representations is that they are
 to some extent readable even without the software that
 interprets them. It is useful, then, to distinguish them,
 at the highest level, from such unreadable data as images,
 audio, or text represented in an unreadable form. In the
 absence of appropriate interpretation software, it is
 reasonable to show subtypes of text to the user, while it is
 not reasonable to do so with most nontextual data.
 
 Such formatted textual data should be represented using
 subtypes of text. Plausible subtypes of text are typically
 given by the common name of the representation format, e.g.,
 "text/richtext".
 
 7.1.1 The charset parameter
 
 A critical parameter that may be specified in the Content-
 Type field for text data is the character set. This is
 specified with a "charset" parameter, as in:
 
 Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 Unlike some other parameter values, the values of the
 charset parameter are NOT case sensitive. The default
 character set, which must be assumed in the absence of a
 charset parameter, is US-ASCII.
 
 An initial list of predefined character set names can be
 found at the end of this section. Additional character sets
 may be registered with IANA as described in Appendix F,
 although the standardization of their use requires the usual
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 20]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 IAB review and approval. Note that if the specified
 character set includes 8-bit data, a Content-Transfer-
 Encoding header field and a corresponding encoding on the
 data are required in order to transmit the body via some
 mail transfer protocols, such as SMTP.
 
 The default character set, US-ASCII, has been the subject of
 some confusion and ambiguity in the past. Not only were
 there some ambiguities in the definition, there have been
 wide variations in practice. In order to eliminate such
 ambiguity and variations in the future, it is strongly
 recommended that new user agents explicitly specify a
 character set via the Content-Type header field. "US-ASCII"
 does not indicate an arbitrary seven-bit character code, but
 specifies that the body uses character coding that uses the
 exact correspondence of codes to characters specified in
 ASCII. National use variations of ISO 646 [ISO-646] are NOT
 ASCII and their use in Internet mail is explicitly
 discouraged. The omission of the ISO 646 character set is
 deliberate in this regard. The character set name of "US-
 ASCII" explicitly refers to ANSI X3.4-1986 [US-ASCII] only.
 The character set name "ASCII" is reserved and must not be
 used for any purpose.
 
 NOTE: RFC 821 explicitly specifies "ASCII", and references
 an earlier version of the American Standard. Insofar as one
 of the purposes of specifying a Content-Type and character
 set is to permit the receiver to unambiguously determine how
 the sender intended the coded message to be interpreted,
 assuming anything other than "strict ASCII" as the default
 would risk unintentional and incompatible changes to the
 semantics of messages now being transmitted. This also
 implies that messages containing characters coded according
 to national variations on ISO 646, or using code-switching
 procedures (e.g., those of ISO 2022), as well as 8-bit or
 multiple octet character encodings MUST use an appropriate
 character set specification to be consistent with this
 specification.
 
 The complete US-ASCII character set is listed in [US-ASCII].
 Note that the control characters including DEL (0-31, 127)
 have no defined meaning apart from the combination CRLF
 (ASCII values 13 and 10) indicating a new line. Two of the
 characters have de facto meanings in wide use: FF (12) often
 means "start subsequent text on the beginning of a new
 page"; and TAB or HT (9) often (though not always) means
 "move the cursor to the next available column after the
 current position where the column number is a multiple of 8
 (counting the first column as column 0)." Apart from this,
 any use of the control characters or DEL in a body must be
 part of a private agreement between the sender and
 recipient. Such private agreements are discouraged and
 should be replaced by the other capabilities of this
 document.
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 21]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 NOTE: Beyond US-ASCII, an enormous proliferation of
 character sets is possible. It is the opinion of the IETF
 working group that a large number of character sets is NOT a
 good thing. We would prefer to specify a single character
 set that can be used universally for representing all of the
 world's languages in electronic mail. Unfortunately,
 existing practice in several communities seems to point to
 the continued use of multiple character sets in the near
 future. For this reason, we define names for a small number
 of character sets for which a strong constituent base
 exists. It is our hope that ISO 10646 or some other
 effort will eventually define a single world character set
 which can then be specified for use in Internet mail, but in
 the advance of that definition we cannot specify the use of
 ISO 10646, Unicode, or any other character set whose
 definition is, as of this writing, incomplete.
 
 The defined charset values are:
 
 US-ASCII -- as defined in [US-ASCII].
 
 ISO-8859-X -- where "X" is to be replaced, as
 necessary, for the parts of ISO-8859 [ISO-
 8859]. Note that the ISO 646 character sets
 have deliberately been omitted in favor of
 their 8859 replacements, which are the
 designated character sets for Internet mail.
 As of the publication of this document, the
 legitimate values for "X" are the digits 1
 through 9.
 
 Note that the character set used, if anything other than
 US-ASCII, must always be explicitly specified in the
 Content-Type field.
 
 No other character set name may be used in Internet mail
 without the publication of a formal specification and its
 registration with IANA as described in Appendix F, or by
 private agreement, in which case the character set name must
 begin with "X-".
 
 Implementors are discouraged from defining new character
 sets for mail use unless absolutely necessary.
 
 The "charset" parameter has been defined primarily for the
 purpose of textual data, and is described in this section
 for that reason. However, it is conceivable that non-
 textual data might also wish to specify a charset value for
 some purpose, in which case the same syntax and values
 should be used.
 
 In general, mail-sending software should always use the
 "lowest common denominator" character set possible. For
 example, if a body contains only US-ASCII characters, it
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 22]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 should be marked as being in the US-ASCII character set, not
 ISO-8859-1, which, like all the ISO-8859 family of character
 sets, is a superset of US-ASCII. More generally, if a
 widely-used character set is a subset of another character
 set, and a body contains only characters in the widely-used
 subset, it should be labeled as being in that subset. This
 will increase the chances that the recipient will be able to
 view the mail correctly.
 
 7.1.2 The Text/plain subtype
 
 The primary subtype of text is "plain". This indicates
 plain (unformatted) text. The default Content-Type for
 Internet mail, "text/plain; charset=us-ascii", describes
 existing Internet practice, that is, it is the type of body
 defined by RFC 822.
 
 7.1.3 The Text/richtext subtype
 
 In order to promote the wider interoperability of simple
 formatted text, this document defines an extremely simple
 subtype of "text", the "richtext" subtype. This subtype was
 designed to meet the following criteria:
 
 1. The syntax must be extremely simple to parse,
 so that even teletype-oriented mail systems can
 easily strip away the formatting information and
 leave only the readable text.
 
 2. The syntax must be extensible to allow for new
 formatting commands that are deemed essential.
 
 3. The capabilities must be extremely limited, to
 ensure that it can represent no more than is
 likely to be representable by the user's primary
 word processor. While this limits what can be
 sent, it increases the likelihood that what is
 sent can be properly displayed.
 
 4. The syntax must be compatible with SGML, so
 that, with an appropriate DTD (Document Type
 Definition, the standard mechanism for defining a
 document type using SGML), a general SGML parser
 could be made to parse richtext. However, despite
 this compatibility, the syntax should be far
 simpler than full SGML, so that no SGML knowledge
 is required in order to implement it.
 
 The syntax of "richtext" is very simple. It is assumed, at
 the top-level, to be in the US-ASCII character set, unless
 of course a different charset parameter was specified in the
 Content-type field. All characters represent themselves,
 with the exception of the "<" character (ASCII 60), which is
 used to mark the beginning of a formatting command.
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 23]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Formatting instructions consist of formatting commands
 surrounded by angle brackets ("<>", ASCII 60 and 62). Each
 formatting command may be no more than 40 characters in
 length, all in US-ASCII, restricted to the alphanumeric and
 hyphen ("-") characters. Formatting commands may be preceded
 by a forward slash or solidus ("/", ASCII 47), making them
 negations, and such negations must always exist to balance
 the initial opening commands, except as noted below. Thus,
 if the formatting command "<bold>" appears at some point,
 there must later be a "</bold>" to balance it. There are
 only three exceptions to this "balancing" rule: First, the
 command "<lt>" is used to represent a literal "<" character.
 Second, the command "<nl>" is used to represent a required
 line break. (Otherwise, CRLFs in the data are treated as
 equivalent to a single SPACE character.) Finally, the
 command "<np>" is used to represent a page break. (NOTE:
 The 40 character limit on formatting commands does not
 include the "<", ">", or "/" characters that might be
 attached to such commands.)
 
 Initially defined formatting commands, not all of which will
 be implemented by all richtext implementations, include:
 
 Bold -- causes the subsequent text to be in a bold
 font.
 Italic -- causes the subsequent text to be in an italic
 font.
 Fixed -- causes the subsequent text to be in a fixed
 width font.
 Smaller -- causes the subsequent text to be in a
 smaller font.
 Bigger -- causes the subsequent text to be in a bigger
 font.
 Underline -- causes the subsequent text to be
 underlined.
 Center -- causes the subsequent text to be centered.
 FlushLeft -- causes the subsequent text to be left
 justified.
 FlushRight -- causes the subsequent text to be right
 justified.
 Indent -- causes the subsequent text to be indented at
 the left margin.
 IndentRight -- causes the subsequent text to be
 indented at the right margin.
 Outdent -- causes the subsequent text to be outdented
 at the left margin.
 OutdentRight -- causes the subsequent text to be
 outdented at the right margin.
 SamePage -- causes the subsequent text to be grouped,
 if possible, on one page.
 Subscript -- causes the subsequent text to be
 interpreted as a subscript.
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 24]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Superscript -- causes the subsequent text to be
 interpreted as a superscript.
 Heading -- causes the subsequent text to be interpreted
 as a page heading.
 Footing -- causes the subsequent text to be interpreted
 as a page footing.
 ISO-8859-X (for any value of X that is legal as a
 "charset" parameter) -- causes the subsequent text
 to be interpreted as text in the appropriate
 character set.
 US-ASCII -- causes the subsequent text to be
 interpreted as text in the US-ASCII character set.
 Excerpt -- causes the subsequent text to be interpreted
 as a textual excerpt from another source.
 Typically this will be displayed using indentation
 and an alternate font, but such decisions are up
 to the viewer.
 Paragraph -- causes the subsequent text to be
 interpreted as a single paragraph, with
 appropriate paragraph breaks (typically blank
 space) before and after.
 Signature -- causes the subsequent text to be
 interpreted as a "signature". Some systems may
 wish to display signatures in a smaller font or
 otherwise set them apart from the main text of the
 message.
 Comment -- causes the subsequent text to be interpreted
 as a comment, and hence not shown to the reader.
 No-op -- has no effect on the subsequent text.
 lt -- <lt> is replaced by a literal "<" character. No
 balancing </lt> is allowed.
 nl -- <nl> causes a line break. No balancing </nl> is
 allowed.
 np -- <np> causes a page break. No balancing </np> is
 allowed.
 
 Each positive formatting command affects all subsequent text
 until the matching negative formatting command. Such pairs
 of formatting commands must be properly balanced and nested.
 Thus, a proper way to describe text in bold italics is:
 
 <bold><italic>the-text</italic></bold>
 
 or, alternately,
 
 <italic><bold>the-text</bold></italic>
 
 but, in particular, the following is illegal
 richtext:
 
 <bold><italic>the-text</bold></italic>
 
 NOTE: The nesting requirement for formatting commands
 imposes a slightly higher burden upon the composers of
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 25]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 richtext bodies, but potentially simplifies richtext
 displayers by allowing them to be stack-based. The main
 goal of richtext is to be simple enough to make multifont,
 formatted email widely readable, so that those with the
 capability of sending it will be able to do so with
 confidence. Thus slightly increased complexity in the
 composing software was deemed a reasonable tradeoff for
 simplified reading software. Nonetheless, implementors of
 richtext readers are encouraged to follow the general
 Internet guidelines of being conservative in what you send
 and liberal in what you accept. Those implementations that
 can do so are encouraged to deal reasonably with improperly
 nested richtext.
 
 Implementations must regard any unrecognized formatting
 command as equivalent to "No-op", thus facilitating future
 extensions to "richtext". Private extensions may be defined
 using formatting commands that begin with "X-", by analogy
 to Internet mail header field names.
 
 It is worth noting that no special behavior is required for
 the TAB (HT) character. It is recommended, however, that, at
 least when fixed-width fonts are in use, the common
 semantics of the TAB (HT) character should be observed,
 namely that it moves to the next column position that is a
 multiple of 8. (In other words, if a TAB (HT) occurs in
 column n, where the leftmost column is column 0, then that
 TAB (HT) should be replaced by 8-(n mod 8) SPACE
 characters.)
 
 Richtext also differentiates between "hard" and "soft" line
 breaks. A line break (CRLF) in the richtext data stream is
 interpreted as a "soft" line break, one that is included
 only for purposes of mail transport, and is to be treated as
 white space by richtext interpreters. To include a "hard"
 line break (one that must be displayed as such), the "<nl>"
 or "<paragraph> formatting constructs should be used. In
 general, a soft line break should be treated as white space,
 but when soft line breaks immediately follow a <nl> or a
 </paragraph> tag they should be ignored rather than treated
 as white space.
 
 Putting all this together, the following "text/richtext"
 body fragment:
 
 <bold>Now</bold> is the time for
 <italic>all</italic> good men
 <smaller>(and <lt>women>)</smaller> to
 <ignoreme></ignoreme> come
 
 to the aid of their
 <nl>
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 26]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 beloved <nl><nl>country. <comment> Stupid
 quote! </comment> -- the end
 
 represents the following formatted text (which will, no
 doubt, look cryptic in the text-only version of this
 document):
 
 Now is the time for all good men (and <women>) to
 come to the aid of their
 beloved
 
 country. -- the end
 
 Richtext conformance: A minimal richtext implementation is
 one that simply converts "<lt>" to "<", converts CRLFs to
 SPACE, converts <nl> to a newline according to local newline
 convention, removes everything between a <comment> command
 and the next balancing </comment> command, and removes all
 other formatting commands (all text enclosed in angle
 brackets).
 
 NOTE ON THE RELATIONSHIP OF RICHTEXT TO SGML: Richtext is
 decidedly not SGML, and must not be used to transport
 arbitrary SGML documents. Those who wish to use SGML
 document types as a mail transport format must define a new
 text or application subtype, e.g., "text/sgml-dtd-whatever"
 or "application/sgml-dtd-whatever", depending on the
 perceived readability of the DTD in use. Richtext is
 designed to be compatible with SGML, and specifically so
 that it will be possible to define a richtext DTD if one is
 needed. However, this does not imply that arbitrary SGML
 can be called richtext, nor that richtext implementors have
 any need to understand SGML; the description in this
 document is a complete definition of richtext, which is far
 simpler than complete SGML.
 
 NOTE ON THE INTENDED USE OF RICHTEXT: It is recognized that
 implementors of future mail systems will want rich text
 functionality far beyond that currently defined for
 richtext. The intent of richtext is to provide a common
 format for expressing that functionality in a form in which
 much of it, at least, will be understood by interoperating
 software. Thus, in particular, software with a richer
 notion of formatted text than richtext can still use
 richtext as its basic representation, but can extend it with
 new formatting commands and by hiding information specific
 to that software system in richtext comments. As such
 systems evolve, it is expected that the definition of
 richtext will be further refined by future published
 specifications, but richtext as defined here provides a
 platform on which evolutionary refinements can be based.
 
 IMPLEMENTATION NOTE: In some environments, it might be
 impossible to combine certain richtext formatting commands,
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 27]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 whereas in others they might be combined easily. For
 example, the combination of <bold> and <italic> might
 produce bold italics on systems that support such fonts, but
 there exist systems that can make text bold or italicized,
 but not both. In such cases, the most recently issued
 recognized formatting command should be preferred.
 
 One of the major goals in the design of richtext was to make
 it so simple that even text-only mailers will implement
 richtext-to-plain-text translators, thus increasing the
 likelihood that multifont text will become "safe" to use
 very widely. To demonstrate this simplicity, an extremely
 simple 35-line C program that converts richtext input into
 plain text output is included in Appendix D.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 28]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.2 The Multipart Content-Type
 
 In the case of multiple part messages, in which one or more
 different sets of data are combined in a single body, a
 "multipart" Content-Type field must appear in the entity's
 header. The body must then contain one or more "body parts,"
 each preceded by an encapsulation boundary, and the last one
 followed by a closing boundary. Each part starts with an
 encapsulation boundary, and then contains a body part
 consisting of header area, a blank line, and a body area.
 Thus a body part is similar to an RFC 822 message in syntax,
 but different in meaning.
 
 A body part is NOT to be interpreted as actually being an
 RFC 822 message. To begin with, NO header fields are
 actually required in body parts. A body part that starts
 with a blank line, therefore, is allowed and is a body part
 for which all default values are to be assumed. In such a
 case, the absence of a Content-Type header field implies
 that the encapsulation is plain US-ASCII text. The only
 header fields that have defined meaning for body parts are
 those the names of which begin with "Content-". All other
 header fields are generally to be ignored in body parts.
 Although they should generally be retained in mail
 processing, they may be discarded by gateways if necessary.
 Such other fields are permitted to appear in body parts but
 should not be depended on. "X-" fields may be created for
 experimental or private purposes, with the recognition that
 the information they contain may be lost at some gateways.
 
 The distinction between an RFC 822 message and a body part
 is subtle, but important. A gateway between Internet and
 X.400 mail, for example, must be able to tell the difference
 between a body part that contains an image and a body part
 that contains an encapsulated message, the body of which is
 an image. In order to represent the latter, the body part
 must have "Content-Type: message", and its body (after the
 blank line) must be the encapsulated message, with its own
 "Content-Type: image" header field. The use of similar
 syntax facilitates the conversion of messages to body parts,
 and vice versa, but the distinction between the two must be
 understood by implementors. (For the special case in which
 all parts actually are messages, a "digest" subtype is also
 defined.)
 
 As stated previously, each body part is preceded by an
 encapsulation boundary. The encapsulation boundary MUST NOT
 appear inside any of the encapsulated parts. Thus, it is
 crucial that the composing agent be able to choose and
 specify the unique boundary that will separate the parts.
 
 All present and future subtypes of the "multipart" type must
 use an identical syntax. Subtypes may differ in their
 semantics, and may impose additional restrictions on syntax,
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 29]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 but must conform to the required syntax for the multipart
 type. This requirement ensures that all conformant user
 agents will at least be able to recognize and separate the
 parts of any multipart entity, even of an unrecognized
 subtype.
 
 As stated in the definition of the Content-Transfer-Encoding
 field, no encoding other than "7bit", "8bit", or "binary" is
 permitted for entities of type "multipart". The multipart
 delimiters and header fields are always 7-bit ASCII in any
 case, and data within the body parts can be encoded on a
 part-by-part basis, with Content-Transfer-Encoding fields
 for each appropriate body part.
 
 Mail gateways, relays, and other mail handling agents are
 commonly known to alter the top-level header of an RFC 822
 message. In particular, they frequently add, remove, or
 reorder header fields. Such alterations are explicitly
 forbidden for the body part headers embedded in the bodies
 of messages of type "multipart."
 
 7.2.1 Multipart: The common syntax
 
 All subtypes of "multipart" share a common syntax, defined
 in this section. A simple example of a multipart message
 also appears in this section. An example of a more complex
 multipart message is given in Appendix C.
 
 The Content-Type field for multipart entities requires one
 parameter, "boundary", which is used to specify the
 encapsulation boundary. The encapsulation boundary is
 defined as a line consisting entirely of two hyphen
 characters ("-", decimal code 45) followed by the boundary
 parameter value from the Content-Type header field.
 
 NOTE: The hyphens are for rough compatibility with the
 earlier RFC 934 method of message encapsulation, and for
 ease of searching for the boundaries in some
 implementations. However, it should be noted that multipart
 messages are NOT completely compatible with RFC 934
 encapsulations; in particular, they do not obey RFC 934
 quoting conventions for embedded lines that begin with
 hyphens. This mechanism was chosen over the RFC 934
 mechanism because the latter causes lines to grow with each
 level of quoting. The combination of this growth with the
 fact that SMTP implementations sometimes wrap long lines
 made the RFC 934 mechanism unsuitable for use in the event
 that deeply-nested multipart structuring is ever desired.
 
 Thus, a typical multipart Content-Type header field might
 look like this:
 
 Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 30]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 boundary=gc0p4Jq0M2Yt08jU534c0p
 
 This indicates that the entity consists of several parts,
 each itself with a structure that is syntactically identical
 to an RFC 822 message, except that the header area might be
 completely empty, and that the parts are each preceded by
 the line
 
 --gc0p4Jq0M2Yt08jU534c0p
 
 Note that the encapsulation boundary must occur at the
 beginning of a line, i.e., following a CRLF, and that that
 initial CRLF is considered to be part of the encapsulation
 boundary rather than part of the preceding part. The
 boundary must be followed immediately either by another CRLF
 and the header fields for the next part, or by two CRLFs, in
 which case there are no header fields for the next part (and
 it is therefore assumed to be of Content-Type text/plain).
 
 NOTE: The CRLF preceding the encapsulation line is
 considered part of the boundary so that it is possible to
 have a part that does not end with a CRLF (line break).
 Body parts that must be considered to end with line breaks,
 therefore, should have two CRLFs preceding the encapsulation
 line, the first of which is part of the preceding body part,
 and the second of which is part of the encapsulation
 boundary.
 
 The requirement that the encapsulation boundary begins with
 a CRLF implies that the body of a multipart entity must
 itself begin with a CRLF before the first encapsulation line
 -- that is, if the "preamble" area is not used, the entity
 headers must be followed by TWO CRLFs. This is indeed how
 such entities should be composed. A tolerant mail reading
 program, however, may interpret a body of type multipart
 that begins with an encapsulation line NOT initiated by a
 CRLF as also being an encapsulation boundary, but a
 compliant mail sending program must not generate such
 entities.
 
 Encapsulation boundaries must not appear within the
 encapsulations, and must be no longer than 70 characters,
 not counting the two leading hyphens.
 
 The encapsulation boundary following the last body part is a
 distinguished delimiter that indicates that no further body
 parts will follow. Such a delimiter is identical to the
 previous delimiters, with the addition of two more hyphens
 at the end of the line:
 
 --gc0p4Jq0M2Yt08jU534c0p--
 
 There appears to be room for additional information prior to
 the first encapsulation boundary and following the final
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 31]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 boundary. These areas should generally be left blank, and
 implementations should ignore anything that appears before
 the first boundary or after the last one.
 
 NOTE: These "preamble" and "epilogue" areas are not used
 because of the lack of proper typing of these parts and the
 lack of clear semantics for handling these areas at
 gateways, particularly X.400 gateways.
 
 NOTE: Because encapsulation boundaries must not appear in
 the body parts being encapsulated, a user agent must
 exercise care to choose a unique boundary. The boundary in
 the example above could have been the result of an algorithm
 designed to produce boundaries with a very low probability
 of already existing in the data to be encapsulated without
 having to prescan the data. Alternate algorithms might
 result in more 'readable' boundaries for a recipient with an
 old user agent, but would require more attention to the
 possibility that the boundary might appear in the
 encapsulated part. The simplest boundary possible is
 something like "---", with a closing boundary of "-----".
 
 As a very simple example, the following multipart message
 has two parts, both of them plain text, one of them
 explicitly typed and one of them implicitly typed:
 
 From: Nathaniel Borenstein <nsb@bellcore.com>
 To: Ned Freed <ned@innosoft.com>
 Subject: Sample message
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="simple
 boundary"
 
 This is the preamble. It is to be ignored, though it
 is a handy place for mail composers to include an
 explanatory note to non-MIME compliant readers.
 --simple boundary
 
 This is implicitly typed plain ASCII text.
 It does NOT end with a linebreak.
 --simple boundary
 Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 This is explicitly typed plain ASCII text.
 It DOES end with a linebreak.
 
 --simple boundary--
 This is the epilogue. It is also to be ignored.
 
 The use of a Content-Type of multipart in a body part within
 another multipart entity is explicitly allowed. In such
 cases, for obvious reasons, care must be taken to ensure
 that each nested multipart entity must use a different
 boundary delimiter. See Appendix C for an example of nested
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 32]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 multipart entities.
 
 The use of the multipart Content-Type with only a single
 body part may be useful in certain contexts, and is
 explicitly permitted.
 
 The only mandatory parameter for the multipart Content-Type
 is the boundary parameter, which consists of 1 to 70
 characters from a set of characters known to be very robust
 through email gateways, and NOT ending with white space.
 (If a boundary appears to end with white space, the white
 space must be presumed to have been added by a gateway, and
 should be deleted.) It is formally specified by the
 following BNF:
 
 boundary := 0*69<bchars> bcharsnospace
 
 bchars := bcharsnospace / " "
 
 bcharsnospace := DIGIT / ALPHA / "'" / "(" / ")" / "+" /
 "_"
 / "," / "-" / "." / "/" / ":" / "=" / "?"
 
 Overall, the body of a multipart entity may be specified as
 follows:
 
 multipart-body := preamble 1*encapsulation
 close-delimiter epilogue
 
 encapsulation := delimiter CRLF body-part
 
 delimiter := CRLF "--" boundary ; taken from Content-Type
 field.
 ; when content-type is
 multipart
 ; There must be no space
 ; between "--" and boundary.
 
 close-delimiter := delimiter "--" ; Again, no space before
 "--"
 
 preamble := *text ; to be ignored upon
 receipt.
 
 epilogue := *text ; to be ignored upon
 receipt.
 
 body-part = <"message" as defined in RFC 822,
 with all header fields optional, and with the
 specified delimiter not occurring anywhere in
 the message body, either on a line by itself
 or as a substring anywhere. Note that the
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 33]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 semantics of a part differ from the semantics
 of a message, as described in the text.>
 
 NOTE: Conspicuously missing from the multipart type is a
 notion of structured, related body parts. In general, it
 seems premature to try to standardize interpart structure
 yet. It is recommended that those wishing to provide a more
 structured or integrated multipart messaging facility should
 define a subtype of multipart that is syntactically
 identical, but that always expects the inclusion of a
 distinguished part that can be used to specify the structure
 and integration of the other parts, probably referring to
 them by their Content-ID field. If this approach is used,
 other implementations will not recognize the new subtype,
 but will treat it as the primary subtype (multipart/mixed)
 and will thus be able to show the user the parts that are
 recognized.
 
 7.2.2 The Multipart/mixed (primary) subtype
 
 The primary subtype for multipart, "mixed", is intended for
 use when the body parts are independent and intended to be
 displayed serially. Any multipart subtypes that an
 implementation does not recognize should be treated as being
 of subtype "mixed".
 
 7.2.3 The Multipart/alternative subtype
 
 The multipart/alternative type is syntactically identical to
 multipart/mixed, but the semantics are different. In
 particular, each of the parts is an "alternative" version of
 the same information. User agents should recognize that the
 content of the various parts are interchangeable. The user
 agent should either choose the "best" type based on the
 user's environment and preferences, or offer the user the
 available alternatives. In general, choosing the best type
 means displaying only the LAST part that can be displayed.
 This may be used, for example, to send mail in a fancy text
 format in such a way that it can easily be displayed
 anywhere:
 
 From: Nathaniel Borenstein <nsb@bellcore.com>
 To: Ned Freed <ned@innosoft.com>
 Subject: Formatted text mail
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=boundary42
 
 
 --boundary42
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
 
 ...plain text version of message goes here....
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 34]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 --boundary42
 Content-Type: text/richtext
 
 .... richtext version of same message goes here ...
 --boundary42
 Content-Type: text/x-whatever
 
 .... fanciest formatted version of same message goes here
 ...
 --boundary42--
 
 In this example, users whose mail system understood the
 "text/x-whatever" format would see only the fancy version,
 while other users would see only the richtext or plain text
 version, depending on the capabilities of their system.
 
 In general, user agents that compose multipart/alternative
 entities should place the body parts in increasing order of
 preference, that is, with the preferred format last. For
 fancy text, the sending user agent should put the plainest
 format first and the richest format last. Receiving user
 agents should pick and display the last format they are
 capable of displaying. In the case where one of the
 alternatives is itself of type "multipart" and contains
 unrecognized sub-parts, the user agent may choose either to
 show that alternative, an earlier alternative, or both.
 
 NOTE: From an implementor's perspective, it might seem more
 sensible to reverse this ordering, and have the plainest
 alternative last. However, placing the plainest alternative
 first is the friendliest possible option when
 mutlipart/alternative entities are viewed using a non-MIME-
 compliant mail reader. While this approach does impose some
 burden on compliant mail readers, interoperability with
 older mail readers was deemed to be more important in this
 case.
 
 It may be the case that some user agents, if they can
 recognize more than one of the formats, will prefer to offer
 the user the choice of which format to view. This makes
 sense, for example, if mail includes both a nicely-formatted
 image version and an easily-edited text version. What is
 most critical, however, is that the user not automatically
 be shown multiple versions of the same data. Either the
 user should be shown the last recognized version or should
 explicitly be given the choice.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 35]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.2.4 The Multipart/digest subtype
 
 This document defines a "digest" subtype of the multipart
 Content-Type. This type is syntactically identical to
 multipart/mixed, but the semantics are different. In
 particular, in a digest, the default Content-Type value for
 a body part is changed from "text/plain" to
 "message/rfc822". This is done to allow a more readable
 digest format that is largely compatible (except for the
 quoting convention) with RFC 934.
 
 A digest in this format might, then, look something like
 this:
 
 From: Moderator-Address
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Subject: Internet Digest, volume 42
 Content-Type: multipart/digest;
 boundary="---- next message ----"
 
 
 ------ next message ----
 
 From: someone-else
 Subject: my opinion
 
 ...body goes here ...
 
 ------ next message ----
 
 From: someone-else-again
 Subject: my different opinion
 
 ... another body goes here...
 
 ------ next message ------
 
 7.2.5 The Multipart/parallel subtype
 
 This document defines a "parallel" subtype of the multipart
 Content-Type. This type is syntactically identical to
 multipart/mixed, but the semantics are different. In
 particular, in a parallel entity, all of the parts are
 intended to be presented in parallel, i.e., simultaneously,
 on hardware and software that are capable of doing so.
 Composing agents should be aware that many mail readers will
 lack this capability and will show the parts serially in any
 event.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 36]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.3 The Message Content-Type
 
 It is frequently desirable, in sending mail, to encapsulate
 another mail message. For this common operation, a special
 Content-Type, "message", is defined. The primary subtype,
 message/rfc822, has no required parameters in the Content-
 Type field. Additional subtypes, "partial" and "External-
 body", do have required parameters. These subtypes are
 explained below.
 
 NOTE: It has been suggested that subtypes of message might
 be defined for forwarded or rejected messages. However,
 forwarded and rejected messages can be handled as multipart
 messages in which the first part contains any control or
 descriptive information, and a second part, of type
 message/rfc822, is the forwarded or rejected message.
 Composing rejection and forwarding messages in this manner
 will preserve the type information on the original message
 and allow it to be correctly presented to the recipient, and
 hence is strongly encouraged.
 
 As stated in the definition of the Content-Transfer-Encoding
 field, no encoding other than "7bit", "8bit", or "binary" is
 permitted for messages or parts of type "message". The
 message header fields are always US-ASCII in any case, and
 data within the body can still be encoded, in which case the
 Content-Transfer-Encoding header field in the encapsulated
 message will reflect this. Non-ASCII text in the headers of
 an encapsulated message can be specified using the
 mechanisms described in [RFC-1342].
 
 Mail gateways, relays, and other mail handling agents are
 commonly known to alter the top-level header of an RFC 822
 message. In particular, they frequently add, remove, or
 reorder header fields. Such alterations are explicitly
 forbidden for the encapsulated headers embedded in the
 bodies of messages of type "message."
 
 7.3.1 The Message/rfc822 (primary) subtype
 
 A Content-Type of "message/rfc822" indicates that the body
 contains an encapsulated message, with the syntax of an RFC
 822 message.
 
 7.3.2 The Message/Partial subtype
 
 A subtype of message, "partial", is defined in order to
 allow large objects to be delivered as several separate
 pieces of mail and automatically reassembled by the
 receiving user agent. (The concept is similar to IP
 fragmentation/reassembly in the basic Internet Protocols.)
 This mechanism can be used when intermediate transport
 agents limit the size of individual messages that can be
 sent. Content-Type "message/partial" thus indicates that
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 37]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 the body contains a fragment of a larger message.
 
 Three parameters must be specified in the Content-Type field
 of type message/partial: The first, "id", is a unique
 identifier, as close to a world-unique identifier as
 possible, to be used to match the parts together. (In
 general, the identifier is essentially a message-id; if
 placed in double quotes, it can be any message-id, in
 accordance with the BNF for "parameter" given earlier in
 this specification.) The second, "number", an integer, is
 the part number, which indicates where this part fits into
 the sequence of fragments. The third, "total", another
 integer, is the total number of parts. This third subfield
 is required on the final part, and is optional on the
 earlier parts. Note also that these parameters may be given
 in any order.
 
 Thus, part 2 of a 3-part message may have either of the
 following header fields:
 
 Content-Type: Message/Partial;
 number=2; total=3;
 id="oc=jpbe0M2Yt4s@thumper.bellcore.com";
 
 Content-Type: Message/Partial;
 id="oc=jpbe0M2Yt4s@thumper.bellcore.com";
 number=2
 
 But part 3 MUST specify the total number of parts:
 
 Content-Type: Message/Partial;
 number=3; total=3;
 id="oc=jpbe0M2Yt4s@thumper.bellcore.com";
 
 Note that part numbering begins with 1, not 0.
 
 When the parts of a message broken up in this manner are put
 together, the result is a complete RFC 822 format message,
 which may have its own Content-Type header field, and thus
 may contain any other data type.
 
 Message fragmentation and reassembly: The semantics of a
 reassembled partial message must be those of the "inner"
 message, rather than of a message containing the inner
 message. This makes it possible, for example, to send a
 large audio message as several partial messages, and still
 have it appear to the recipient as a simple audio message
 rather than as an encapsulated message containing an audio
 message. That is, the encapsulation of the message is
 considered to be "transparent".
 
 When generating and reassembling the parts of a
 message/partial message, the headers of the encapsulated
 message must be merged with the headers of the enclosing
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 38]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 entities. In this process the following rules must be
 observed:
 
 (1) All of the headers from the initial enclosing
 entity (part one), except those that start with
 "Content-" and "Message-ID", must be copied, in
 order, to the new message.
 
 (2) Only those headers in the enclosed message
 which start with "Content-" and "Message-ID" must
 be appended, in order, to the headers of the new
 message. Any headers in the enclosed message
 which do not start with "Content-" (except for
 "Message-ID") will be ignored.
 
 (3) All of the headers from the second and any
 subsequent messages will be ignored.
 
 For example, if an audio message is broken into two parts,
 the first part might look something like this:
 
 X-Weird-Header-1: Foo
 From: Bill@host.com
 To: joe@otherhost.com
 Subject: Audio mail
 Message-ID: id1@host.com
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Content-type: message/partial;
 id="ABC@host.com";
 number=1; total=2
 
 X-Weird-Header-1: Bar
 X-Weird-Header-2: Hello
 Message-ID: anotherid@foo.com
 Content-type: audio/basic
 Content-transfer-encoding: base64
 
 ... first half of encoded audio data goes here...
 
 and the second half might look something like this:
 
 From: Bill@host.com
 To: joe@otherhost.com
 Subject: Audio mail
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Message-ID: id2@host.com
 Content-type: message/partial;
 id="ABC@host.com"; number=2; total=2
 
 ... second half of encoded audio data goes here...
 
 Then, when the fragmented message is reassembled, the
 resulting message to be displayed to the user should look
 something like this:
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 39]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 X-Weird-Header-1: Foo
 From: Bill@host.com
 To: joe@otherhost.com
 Subject: Audio mail
 Message-ID: anotherid@foo.com
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Content-type: audio/basic
 Content-transfer-encoding: base64
 
 ... first half of encoded audio data goes here...
 ... second half of encoded audio data goes here...
 
 It should be noted that, because some message transfer
 agents may choose to automatically fragment large messages,
 and because such agents may use different fragmentation
 thresholds, it is possible that the pieces of a partial
 message, upon reassembly, may prove themselves to comprise a
 partial message. This is explicitly permitted.
 
 It should also be noted that the inclusion of a "References"
 field in the headers of the second and subsequent pieces of
 a fragmented message that references the Message-Id on the
 previous piece may be of benefit to mail readers that
 understand and track references. However, the generation of
 such "References" fields is entirely optional.
 
 7.3.3 The Message/External-Body subtype
 
 The external-body subtype indicates that the actual body
 data are not included, but merely referenced. In this case,
 the parameters describe a mechanism for accessing the
 external data.
 
 When a message body or body part is of type
 "message/external-body", it consists of a header, two
 consecutive CRLFs, and the message header for the
 encapsulated message. If another pair of consecutive CRLFs
 appears, this of course ends the message header for the
 encapsulated message. However, since the encapsulated
 message's body is itself external, it does NOT appear in the
 area that follows. For example, consider the following
 message:
 
 Content-type: message/external-body; access-
 type=local-file;
 name=/u/nsb/Me.gif
 
 Content-type: image/gif
 
 THIS IS NOT REALLY THE BODY!
 
 The area at the end, which might be called the "phantom
 body", is ignored for most external-body messages. However,
 it may be used to contain auxilliary information for some
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 40]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 such messages, as indeed it is when the access-type is
 "mail-server". Of the access-types defined by this
 document, the phantom body is used only when the access-type
 is "mail-server". In all other cases, the phantom body is
 ignored.
 
 The only always-mandatory parameter for message/external-
 body is "access-type"; all of the other parameters may be
 mandatory or optional depending on the value of access-type.
 
 ACCESS-TYPE -- One or more case-insensitive words,
 comma-separated, indicating supported access
 mechanisms by which the file or data may be
 obtained. Values include, but are not limited to,
 "FTP", "ANON-FTP", "TFTP", "AFS", "LOCAL-FILE",
 and "MAIL-SERVER". Future values, except for
 experimental values beginning with "X-", must be
 registered with IANA, as described in Appendix F .
 
 In addition, the following two parameters are optional for
 ALL access-types:
 
 EXPIRATION -- The date (in the RFC 822 "date-time"
 syntax, as extended by RFC 1123 to permit 4 digits
 in the date field) after which the existence of
 the external data is not guaranteed.
 
 SIZE -- The size (in octets) of the data. The
 intent of this parameter is to help the recipient
 decide whether or not to expend the necessary
 resources to retrieve the external data.
 
 PERMISSION -- A field that indicates whether or
 not it is expected that clients might also attempt
 to overwrite the data. By default, or if
 permission is "read", the assumption is that they
 are not, and that if the data is retrieved once,
 it is never needed again. If PERMISSION is "read-
 write", this assumption is invalid, and any local
 copy must be considered no more than a cache.
 "Read" and "Read-write" are the only defined
 values of permission.
 
 The precise semantics of the access-types defined here are
 described in the sections that follow.
 
 7.3.3.1 The "ftp" and "tftp" access-types
 
 An access-type of FTP or TFTP indicates that the message
 body is accessible as a file using the FTP [RFC-959] or TFTP
 [RFC-783] protocols, respectively. For these access-types,
 the following additional parameters are mandatory:
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 41]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 NAME -- The name of the file that contains the
 actual body data.
 
 SITE -- A machine from which the file may be
 obtained, using the given protocol
 
 Before the data is retrieved, using these protocols, the
 user will generally need to be asked to provide a login id
 and a password for the machine named by the site parameter.
 
 In addition, the following optional parameters may also
 appear when the access-type is FTP or ANON-FTP:
 
 DIRECTORY -- A directory from which the data named
 by NAME should be retrieved.
 
 MODE -- A transfer mode for retrieving the
 information, e.g. "image".
 
 7.3.3.2 The "anon-ftp" access-type
 
 The "anon-ftp" access-type is identical to the "ftp" access
 type, except that the user need not be asked to provide a
 name and password for the specified site. Instead, the ftp
 protocol will be used with login "anonymous" and a password
 that corresponds to the user's email address.
 
 7.3.3.3 The "local-file" and "afs" access-types
 
 An access-type of "local-file" indicates that the actual
 body is accessible as a file on the local machine. An
 access-type of "afs" indicates that the file is accessible
 via the global AFS file system. In both cases, only a
 single parameter is required:
 
 NAME -- The name of the file that contains the
 actual body data.
 
 The following optional parameter may be used to describe the
 locality of reference for the data, that is, the site or
 sites at which the file is expected to be visible:
 
 SITE -- A domain specifier for a machine or set of
 machines that are known to have access to the data
 file. Asterisks may be used for wildcard matching
 to a part of a domain name, such as
 "*.bellcore.com", to indicate a set of machines on
 which the data should be directly visible, while a
 single asterisk may be used to indicate a file
 that is expected to be universally available,
 e.g., via a global file system.
 
 7.3.3.4 The "mail-server" access-type
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 42]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 The "mail-server" access-type indicates that the actual body
 is available from a mail server. The mandatory parameter
 for this access-type is:
 
 SERVER -- The email address of the mail server
 from which the actual body data can be obtained.
 
 Because mail servers accept a variety of syntax, some of
 which is multiline, the full command to be sent to a mail
 server is not included as a parameter on the content-type
 line. Instead, it may be provided as the "phantom body"
 when the content-type is message/external-body and the
 access-type is mail-server.
 
 Note that MIME does not define a mail server syntax.
 Rather, it allows the inclusion of arbitrary mail server
 commands in the phantom body. Implementations should
 include the phantom body in the body of the message it sends
 to the mail server address to retrieve the relevant data.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 43]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.3.3.5 Examples and Further Explanations
 
 With the emerging possibility of very wide-area file
 systems, it becomes very hard to know in advance the set of
 machines where a file will and will not be accessible
 directly from the file system. Therefore it may make sense
 to provide both a file name, to be tried directly, and the
 name of one or more sites from which the file is known to be
 accessible. An implementation can try to retrieve remote
 files using FTP or any other protocol, using anonymous file
 retrieval or prompting the user for the necessary name and
 password. If an external body is accessible via multiple
 mechanisms, the sender may include multiple parts of type
 message/external-body within an entity of type
 multipart/alternative.
 
 However, the external-body mechanism is not intended to be
 limited to file retrieval, as shown by the mail-server
 access-type. Beyond this, one can imagine, for example,
 using a video server for external references to video clips.
 
 If an entity is of type "message/external-body", then the
 body of the entity will contain the header fields of the
 encapsulated message. The body itself is to be found in the
 external location. This means that if the body of the
 "message/external-body" message contains two consecutive
 CRLFs, everything after those pairs is NOT part of the
 message itself. For most message/external-body messages,
 this trailing area must simply be ignored. However, it is a
 convenient place for additional data that cannot be included
 in the content-type header field. In particular, if the
 "access-type" value is "mail-server", then the trailing area
 must contain commands to be sent to the mail server at the
 address given by NAME@SITE, where NAME and SITE are the
 values of the NAME and SITE parameters, respectively.
 
 The embedded message header fields which appear in the body
 of the message/external-body data can be used to declare the
 Content-type of the external body. Thus a complete
 message/external-body message, referring to a document in
 PostScript format, might look like this:
 
 From: Whomever
 Subject: whatever
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 Message-ID: id1@host.com
 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=42
 
 
 --42
 Content-Type: message/external-body;
 name="BodyFormats.ps";
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 44]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 site="thumper.bellcore.com";
 access-type=ANON-FTP;
 directory="pub";
 mode="image";
 expiration="1991年6月14日 19:13:14 -0400 (EDT)"
 
 Content-type: application/postscript
 
 --42
 Content-Type: message/external-body;
 name="/u/nsb/writing/rfcs/RFC-XXXX.ps";
 site="thumper.bellcore.com";
 access-type=AFS
 expiration="1991年6月14日 19:13:14 -0400 (EDT)"
 
 Content-type: application/postscript
 
 --42
 Content-Type: message/external-body;
 access-type=mail-server
 server="listserv@bogus.bitnet";
 expiration="1991年6月14日 19:13:14 -0400 (EDT)"
 
 Content-type: application/postscript
 
 get rfc-xxxx doc
 
 --42--
 
 Like the message/partial type, the message/external-body
 type is intended to be transparent, that is, to convey the
 data type in the external body rather than to convey a
 message with a body of that type. Thus the headers on the
 outer and inner parts must be merged using the same rules as
 for message/partial. In particular, this means that the
 Content-type header is overridden, but the From and Subject
 headers are preserved.
 
 Note that since the external bodies are not transported as
 mail, they need not conform to the 7-bit and line length
 requirements, but might in fact be binary files. Thus a
 Content-Transfer-Encoding is not generally necessary, though
 it is permitted.
 
 Note that the body of a message of type "message/external-
 body" is governed by the basic syntax for an RFC 822
 message. In particular, anything before the first
 consecutive pair of CRLFs is header information, while
 anything after it is body information, which is ignored for
 most access-types.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 45]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.4 The Application Content-Type
 
 The "application" Content-Type is to be used for data which
 do not fit in any of the other categories, and particularly
 for data to be processed by mail-based uses of application
 programs. This is information which must be processed by an
 application before it is viewable or usable to a user.
 Expected uses for Content-Type application include mail-
 based file transfer, spreadsheets, data for mail-based
 scheduling systems, and languages for "active"
 (computational) email. (The latter, in particular, can pose
 security problems which should be understood by
 implementors, and are considered in detail in the discussion
 of the application/PostScript content-type.)
 
 For example, a meeting scheduler might define a standard
 representation for information about proposed meeting dates.
 An intelligent user agent would use this information to
 conduct a dialog with the user, and might then send further
 mail based on that dialog. More generally, there have been
 several "active" messaging languages developed in which
 programs in a suitably specialized language are sent through
 the mail and automatically run in the recipient's
 environment.
 
 Such applications may be defined as subtypes of the
 "application" Content-Type. This document defines three
 subtypes: octet-stream, ODA, and PostScript.
 
 In general, the subtype of application will often be the
 name of the application for which the data are intended.
 This does not mean, however, that any application program
 name may be used freely as a subtype of application. Such
 usages must be registered with IANA, as described in
 Appendix F.
 
 7.4.1 The Application/Octet-Stream (primary) subtype
 
 The primary subtype of application, "octet-stream", may be
 used to indicate that a body contains binary data. The set
 of possible parameters includes, but is not limited to:
 
 NAME -- a suggested name for the binary data if
 stored as a file.
 
 TYPE -- the general type or category of binary
 data. This is intended as information for the
 human recipient rather than for any automatic
 processing.
 
 CONVERSIONS -- the set of operations that have
 been performed on the data before putting it in
 the mail (and before any Content-Transfer-Encoding
 that might have been applied). If multiple
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 46]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 conversions have occurred, they must be separated
 by commas and specified in the order they were
 applied -- that is, the leftmost conversion must
 have occurred first, and conversions are undone
 from right to left. Note that NO conversion
 values are defined by this document. Any
 conversion values that that do not begin with "X-"
 must be preceded by a published specification and
 by registration with IANA, as described in
 Appendix F.
 
 PADDING -- the number of bits of padding that were
 appended to the bitstream comprising the actual
 contents to produce the enclosed byte-oriented
 data. This is useful for enclosing a bitstream in
 a body when the total number of bits is not a
 multiple of the byte size.
 
 The values for these attributes are left undefined at
 present, but may require specification in the future. An
 example of a common (though UNIX-specific) usage might be:
 
 Content-Type: application/octet-stream;
 name=foo.tar.Z; type=tar;
 conversions="x-encrypt,x-compress"
 
 However, it should be noted that the use of such conversions
 is explicitly discouraged due to a lack of portability and
 standardization. The use of uuencode is particularly
 discouraged, in favor of the Content-Transfer-Encoding
 mechanism, which is both more standardized and more portable
 across mail boundaries.
 
 The recommended action for an implementation that receives
 application/octet-stream mail is to simply offer to put the
 data in a file, with any Content-Transfer-Encoding undone,
 or perhaps to use it as input to a user-specified process.
 
 To reduce the danger of transmitting rogue programs through
 the mail, it is strongly recommended that implementations
 NOT implement a path-search mechanism whereby an arbitrary
 program named in the Content-Type parameter (e.g., an
 "interpreter=" parameter) is found and executed using the
 mail body as input.
 
 7.4.2 The Application/PostScript subtype
 
 A Content-Type of "application/postscript" indicates a
 PostScript program. The language is defined in
 [POSTSCRIPT]. It is recommended that Postscript as sent
 through email should use Postscript document structuring
 conventions if at all possible, and correctly.
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 47]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 The execution of general-purpose PostScript interpreters
 entails serious security risks, and implementors are
 discouraged from simply sending PostScript email bodies to
 "off-the-shelf" interpreters. While it is usually safe to
 send PostScript to a printer, where the potential for harm
 is greatly constrained, implementors should consider all of
 the following before they add interactive display of
 PostScript bodies to their mail readers.
 
 The remainder of this section outlines some, though probably
 not all, of the possible problems with sending PostScript
 through the mail.
 
 Dangerous operations in the PostScript language include, but
 may not be limited to, the PostScript operators deletefile,
 renamefile, filenameforall, and file. File is only
 dangerous when applied to something other than standard
 input or output. Implementations may also define additional
 nonstandard file operators; these may also pose a threat to
 security. Filenameforall, the wildcard file search
 operator, may appear at first glance to be harmless. Note,
 however, that this operator has the potential to reveal
 information about what files the recipient has access to,
 and this information may itself be sensitive. Message
 senders should avoid the use of potentially dangerous file
 operators, since these operators are quite likely to be
 unavailable in secure PostScript implementations. Message-
 receiving and -displaying software should either completely
 disable all potentially dangerous file operators or take
 special care not to delegate any special authority to their
 operation. These operators should be viewed as being done by
 an outside agency when interpreting PostScript documents.
 Such disabling and/or checking should be done completely
 outside of the reach of the PostScript language itself; care
 should be taken to insure that no method exists for
 reenabling full-function versions of these operators.
 
 The PostScript language provides facilities for exiting the
 normal interpreter, or server, loop. Changes made in this
 "outer" environment are customarily retained across
 documents, and may in some cases be retained semipermanently
 in nonvolatile memory. The operators associated with exiting
 the interpreter loop have the potential to interfere with
 subsequent document processing. As such, their unrestrained
 use constitutes a threat of service denial. PostScript
 operators that exit the interpreter loop include, but may
 not be limited to, the exitserver and startjob operators.
 Message-sending software should not generate PostScript that
 depends on exiting the interpreter loop to operate. The
 ability to exit will probably be unavailable in secure
 PostScript implementations. Message-receiving and
 -displaying software should, if possible, disable the
 ability to make retained changes to the PostScript
 environment. Eliminate the startjob and exitserver commands.
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 48]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 If these commands cannot be eliminated, at least set the
 password associated with them to a hard-to-guess value.
 
 PostScript provides operators for setting system-wide and
 device-specific parameters. These parameter settings may be
 retained across jobs and may potentially pose a threat to
 the correct operation of the interpreter. The PostScript
 operators that set system and device parameters include, but
 may not be limited to, the setsystemparams and setdevparams
 operators. Message-sending software should not generate
 PostScript that depends on the setting of system or device
 parameters to operate correctly. The ability to set these
 parameters will probably be unavailable in secure PostScript
 implementations. Message-receiving and -displaying software
 should, if possible, disable the ability to change system
 and device parameters. If these operators cannot be
 disabled, at least set the password associated with them to
 a hard-to-guess value.
 
 Some PostScript implementations provide nonstandard
 facilities for the direct loading and execution of machine
 code. Such facilities are quite obviously open to
 substantial abuse. Message-sending software should not
 make use of such features. Besides being totally hardware-
 specific, they are also likely to be unavailable in secure
 implementations of PostScript. Message-receiving and
 -displaying software should not allow such operators to be
 used if they exist.
 
 PostScript is an extensible language, and many, if not most,
 implementations of it provide a number of their own
 extensions. This document does not deal with such extensions
 explicitly since they constitute an unknown factor.
 Message-sending software should not make use of nonstandard
 extensions; they are likely to be missing from some
 implementations. Message-receiving and -displaying software
 should make sure that any nonstandard PostScript operators
 are secure and don't present any kind of threat.
 
 It is possible to write PostScript that consumes huge
 amounts of various system resources. It is also possible to
 write PostScript programs that loop infinitely. Both types
 of programs have the potential to cause damage if sent to
 unsuspecting recipients. Message-sending software should
 avoid the construction and dissemination of such programs,
 which is antisocial. Message-receiving and -displaying
 software should provide appropriate mechanisms to abort
 processing of a document after a reasonable amount of time
 has elapsed. In addition, PostScript interpreters should be
 limited to the consumption of only a reasonable amount of
 any given system resource.
 
 Finally, bugs may exist in some PostScript interpreters
 which could possibly be exploited to gain unauthorized
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 49]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 access to a recipient's system. Apart from noting this
 possibility, there is no specific action to take to prevent
 this, apart from the timely correction of such bugs if any
 are found.
 
 7.4.3 The Application/ODA subtype
 
 The "ODA" subtype of application is used to indicate that a
 body contains information encoded according to the Office
 Document Architecture [ODA] standards, using the ODIF
 representation format. For application/oda, the Content-
 Type line should also specify an attribute/value pair that
 indicates the document application profile (DAP), using the
 key word "profile". Thus an appropriate header field might
 look like this:
 
 Content-Type: application/oda; profile=Q112
 
 Consult the ODA standard [ODA] for further information.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 50]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 7.5 The Image Content-Type
 
 A Content-Type of "image" indicates that the bodycontains an
 image. The subtype names the specific image format. These
 names are case insensitive. Two initial subtypes are "jpeg"
 for the JPEG format, JFIF encoding, and "gif" for GIF format
 [GIF].
 
 The list of image subtypes given here is neither exclusive
 nor exhaustive, and is expected to grow as more types are
 registered with IANA, as described in Appendix F.
 
 7.6 The Audio Content-Type
 
 A Content-Type of "audio" indicates that the body contains
 audio data. Although there is not yet a consensus on an
 "ideal" audio format for use with computers, there is a
 pressing need for a format capable of providing
 interoperable behavior.
 
 The initial subtype of "basic" is specified to meet this
 requirement by providing an absolutely minimal lowest common
 denominator audio format. It is expected that richer
 formats for higher quality and/or lower bandwidth audio will
 be defined by a later document.
 
 The content of the "audio/basic" subtype is audio encoded
 using 8-bit ISDN u-law [PCM]. When this subtype is present,
 a sample rate of 8000 Hz and a single channel is assumed.
 
 7.7 The Video Content-Type
 
 A Content-Type of "video" indicates that the body contains a
 time-varying-picture image, possibly with color and
 coordinated sound. The term "video" is used extremely
 generically, rather than with reference to any particular
 technology or format, and is not meant to preclude subtypes
 such as animated drawings encoded compactly. The subtype
 "mpeg" refers to video coded according to the MPEG standard
 [MPEG].
 
 Note that although in general this document strongly
 discourages the mixing of multiple media in a single body,
 it is recognized that many so-called "video" formats include
 a representation for synchronized audio, and this is
 explicitly permitted for subtypes of "video".
 
 7.8 Experimental Content-Type Values
 
 A Content-Type value beginning with the characters "X-" is a
 private value, to be used by consenting mail systems by
 mutual agreement. Any format without a rigorous and public
 definition must be named with an "X-" prefix, and publicly
 specified values shall never begin with "X-". (Older
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 51]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 versions of the widely-used Andrew system use the "X-BE2"
 name, so new systems should probably choose a different
 name.)
 
 In general, the use of "X-" top-level types is strongly
 discouraged. Implementors should invent subtypes of the
 existing types whenever possible. The invention of new
 types is intended to be restricted primarily to the
 development of new media types for email, such as digital
 odors or holography, and not for new data formats in
 general. In many cases, a subtype of application will be
 more appropriate than a new top-level type.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 52]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Summary
 
 Using the MIME-Version, Content-Type, and Content-Transfer-
 Encoding header fields, it is possible to include, in a
 standardized way, arbitrary types of data objects with RFC
 822 conformant mail messages. No restrictions imposed by
 either RFC 821 or RFC 822 are violated, and care has been
 taken to avoid problems caused by additional restrictions
 imposed by the characteristics of some Internet mail
 transport mechanisms (see Appendix B). The "multipart" and
 "message" Content-Types allow mixing and hierarchical
 structuring of objects of different types in a single
 message. Further Content-Types provide a standardized
 mechanism for tagging messages or body parts as audio,
 image, or several other kinds of data. A distinguished
 parameter syntax allows further specification of data format
 details, particularly the specification of alternate
 character sets. Additional optional header fields provide
 mechanisms for certain extensions deemed desirable by many
 implementors. Finally, a number of useful Content-Types are
 defined for general use by consenting user agents, notably
 text/richtext, message/partial, and message/external-body.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 53]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Acknowledgements
 
 This document is the result of the collective effort of a
 large number of people, at several IETF meetings, on the
 IETF-SMTP and IETF-822 mailing lists, and elsewhere.
 Although any enumeration seems doomed to suffer from
 egregious omissions, the following are among the many
 contributors to this effort:
 
 Harald Tveit Alvestrand Timo Lehtinen
 Randall Atkinson John R. MacMillan
 Philippe Brandon Rick McGowan
 Kevin Carosso Leo Mclaughlin
 Uhhyung Choi Goli Montaser-Kohsari
 Cristian Constantinof Keith Moore
 Mark Crispin Tom Moore
 Dave Crocker Erik Naggum
 Terry Crowley Mark Needleman
 Walt Daniels John Noerenberg
 Frank Dawson Mats Ohrman
 Hitoshi Doi Julian Onions
 Kevin Donnelly Michael Patton
 Keith Edwards David J. Pepper
 Chris Eich Blake C. Ramsdell
 Johnny Eriksson Luc Rooijakkers
 Craig Everhart Marshall T. Rose
 Patrik Faeltstroem Jonathan Rosenberg
 Erik E. Fair Jan Rynning
 Roger Fajman Harri Salminen
 Alain Fontaine Michael Sanderson
 James M. Galvin Masahiro Sekiguchi
 Philip Gladstone Mark Sherman
 Thomas Gordon Keld Simonsen
 Phill Gross Bob Smart
 James Hamilton Peter Speck
 Steve Hardcastle-Kille Henry Spencer
 David Herron Einar Stefferud
 Bruce Howard Michael Stein
 Bill Janssen Klaus Steinberger
 Olle Jaernefors Peter Svanberg
 Risto Kankkunen James Thompson
 Phil Karn Steve Uhler
 Alan Katz Stuart Vance
 Tim Kehres Erik van der Poel
 Neil Katin Guido van Rossum
 Kyuho Kim Peter Vanderbilt
 Anders Klemets Greg Vaudreuil
 John Klensin Ed Vielmetti
 Valdis Kletniek Ryan Waldron
 Jim Knowles Wally Wedel
 Stev Knowles Sven-Ove Westberg
 Bob Kummerfeld Brian Wideen
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 54]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Pekka Kytolaakso John Wobus
 Stellan Lagerstr.m Glenn Wright
 Vincent Lau Rayan Zachariassen
 Donald Lindsay David Zimmerman
 The authors apologize for any omissions from this list,
 which are certainly unintentional.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 55]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix A -- Minimal MIME-Conformance
 
 The mechanisms described in this document are open-ended.
 It is definitely not expected that all implementations will
 support all of the Content-Types described, nor that they
 will all share the same extensions. In order to promote
 interoperability, however, it is useful to define the
 concept of "MIME-conformance" to define a certain level of
 implementation that allows the useful interworking of
 messages with content that differs from US ASCII text. In
 this section, we specify the requirements for such
 conformance.
 
 A mail user agent that is MIME-conformant MUST:
 
 1. Always generate a "MIME-Version: 1.0" header
 field.
 
 2. Recognize the Content-Transfer-Encoding header
 field, and decode all received data encoded with
 either the quoted-printable or base64
 implementations. Encode any data sent that is
 not in seven-bit mail-ready representation using
 one of these transformations and include the
 appropriate Content-Transfer-Encoding header
 field, unless the underlying transport mechanism
 supports non-seven-bit data, as SMTP does not.
 
 3. Recognize and interpret the Content-Type
 header field, and avoid showing users raw data
 with a Content-Type field other than text. Be
 able to send at least text/plain messages, with
 the character set specified as a parameter if it
 is not US-ASCII.
 
 4. Explicitly handle the following Content-Type
 values, to at least the following extents:
 
 Text:
 -- Recognize and display "text" mail
 with the character set "US-ASCII."
 -- Recognize other character sets at
 least to the extent of being able
 to inform the user about what
 character set the message uses.
 -- Recognize the "ISO-8859-*" character
 sets to the extent of being able to
 display those characters that are
 common to ISO-8859-* and US-ASCII,
 namely all characters represented
 by octet values 0-127.
 -- For unrecognized subtypes, show or
 offer to show the user the "raw"
 version of the data. An ability at
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 56]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 least to convert "text/richtext" to
 plain text, as shown in Appendix D,
 is encouraged, but not required for
 conformance.
 Message:
 --Recognize and display at least the
 primary (822) encapsulation.
 Multipart:
 -- Recognize the primary (mixed)
 subtype. Display all relevant
 information on the message level
 and the body part header level and
 then display or offer to display
 each of the body parts
 individually.
 -- Recognize the "alternative" subtype,
 and avoid showing the user
 redundant parts of
 multipart/alternative mail.
 -- Treat any unrecognized subtypes as if
 they were "mixed".
 Application:
 -- Offer the ability to remove either of
 the two types of Content-Transfer-
 Encoding defined in this document
 and put the resulting information
 in a user file.
 
 5. Upon encountering any unrecognized Content-
 Type, an implementation must treat it as if it had
 a Content-Type of "application/octet-stream" with
 no parameter sub-arguments. How such data are
 handled is up to an implementation, but likely
 options for handling such unrecognized data
 include offering the user to write it into a file
 (decoded from its mail transport format) or
 offering the user to name a program to which the
 decoded data should be passed as input.
 Unrecognized predefined types, which in a MIME-
 conformant mailer might still include audio,
 image, or video, should also be treated in this
 way.
 
 A user agent that meets the above conditions is said to be
 MIME-conformant. The meaning of this phrase is that it is
 assumed to be "safe" to send virtually any kind of
 properly-marked data to users of such mail systems, because
 such systems will at least be able to treat the data as
 undifferentiated binary, and will not simply splash it onto
 the screen of unsuspecting users. There is another sense
 in which it is always "safe" to send data in a format that
 is MIME-conformant, which is that such data will not break
 or be broken by any known systems that are conformant with
 RFC 821 and RFC 822. User agents that are MIME-conformant
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 57]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 have the additional guarantee that the user will not be
 shown data that were never intended to be viewed as text.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 58]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix B -- General Guidelines For Sending Email Data
 
 Internet email is not a perfect, homogeneous system. Mail
 may become corrupted at several stages in its travel to a
 final destination. Specifically, email sent throughout the
 Internet may travel across many networking technologies.
 Many networking and mail technologies do not support the
 full functionality possible in the SMTP transport
 environment. Mail traversing these systems is likely to be
 modified in such a way that it can be transported.
 
 There exist many widely-deployed non-conformant MTAs in the
 Internet. These MTAs, speaking the SMTP protocol, alter
 messages on the fly to take advantage of the internal data
 structure of the hosts they are implemented on, or are just
 plain broken.
 
 The following guidelines may be useful to anyone devising a
 data format (Content-Type) that will survive the widest
 range of networking technologies and known broken MTAs
 unscathed. Note that anything encoded in the base64
 encoding will satisfy these rules, but that some well-known
 mechanisms, notably the UNIX uuencode facility, will not.
 Note also that anything encoded in the Quoted-Printable
 encoding will survive most gateways intact, but possibly not
 some gateways to systems that use the EBCDIC character set.
 
 (1) Under some circumstances the encoding used for
 data may change as part of normal gateway or user
 agent operation. In particular, conversion from
 base64 to quoted-printable and vice versa may be
 necessary. This may result in the confusion of
 CRLF sequences with line breaks in text body
 parts. As such, the persistence of CRLF as
 something other than a line break should not be
 relied on.
 
 (2) Many systems may elect to represent and store
 text data using local newline conventions. Local
 newline conventions may not match the RFC822 CRLF
 convention -- systems are known that use plain CR,
 plain LF, CRLF, or counted records. The result is
 that isolated CR and LF characters are not well
 tolerated in general; they may be lost or
 converted to delimiters on some systems, and hence
 should not be relied on.
 
 (3) TAB (HT) characters may be misinterpreted or
 may be automatically converted to variable numbers
 of spaces. This is unavoidable in some
 environments, notably those not based on the ASCII
 character set. Such conversion is STRONGLY
 DISCOURAGED, but it may occur, and mail formats
 should not rely on the persistence of TAB (HT)
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 59]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 characters.
 
 (4) Lines longer than 76 characters may be wrapped
 or truncated in some environments. Line wrapping
 and line truncation are STRONGLY DISCOURAGED, but
 unavoidable in some cases. Applications which
 require long lines should somehow differentiate
 between soft and hard line breaks. (A simple way
 to do this is to use the quoted-printable
 encoding.)
 
 (5) Trailing "white space" characters (SPACE, TAB
 (HT)) on a line may be discarded by some transport
 agents, while other transport agents may pad lines
 with these characters so that all lines in a mail
 file are of equal length. The persistence of
 trailing white space, therefore, should not be
 relied on.
 
 (6) Many mail domains use variations on the ASCII
 character set, or use character sets such as
 EBCDIC which contain most but not all of the US-
 ASCII characters. The correct translation of
 characters not in the "invariant" set cannot be
 depended on across character converting gateways.
 For example, this situation is a problem when
 sending uuencoded information across BITNET, an
 EBCDIC system. Similar problems can occur without
 crossing a gateway, since many Internet hosts use
 character sets other than ASCII internally. The
 definition of Printable Strings in X.400 adds
 further restrictions in certain special cases. In
 particular, the only characters that are known to
 be consistent across all gateways are the 73
 characters that correspond to the upper and lower
 case letters A-Z and a-z, the 10 digits 0-9, and
 the following eleven special characters:
 
 "'" (ASCII code 39)
 "(" (ASCII code 40)
 ")" (ASCII code 41)
 "+" (ASCII code 43)
 "," (ASCII code 44)
 "-" (ASCII code 45)
 "." (ASCII code 46)
 "/" (ASCII code 47)
 ":" (ASCII code 58)
 "=" (ASCII code 61)
 "?" (ASCII code 63)
 
 A maximally portable mail representation, such as
 the base64 encoding, will confine itself to
 relatively short lines of text in which the only
 meaningful characters are taken from this set of
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 60]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 73 characters.
 
 Please note that the above list is NOT a list of recommended
 practices for MTAs. RFC 821 MTAs are prohibited from
 altering the character of white space or wrapping long
 lines. These BAD and illegal practices are known to occur
 on established networks, and implementions should be robust
 in dealing with the bad effects they can cause.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 61]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix C -- A Complex Multipart Example
 
 What follows is the outline of a complex multipart message.
 This message has five parts to be displayed serially: two
 introductory plain text parts, an embedded multipart
 message, a richtext part, and a closing encapsulated text
 message in a non-ASCII character set. The embedded
 multipart message has two parts to be displayed in parallel,
 a picture and an audio fragment.
 
 MIME-Version: 1.0
 From: Nathaniel Borenstein <nsb@bellcore.com>
 Subject: A multipart example
 Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
 boundary=unique-boundary-1
 
 This is the preamble area of a multipart message.
 Mail readers that understand multipart format
 should ignore this preamble.
 If you are reading this text, you might want to
 consider changing to a mail reader that understands
 how to properly display multipart messages.
 --unique-boundary-1
 
 ...Some text appears here...
 [Note that the preceding blank line means
 no header fields were given and this is text,
 with charset US ASCII. It could have been
 done with explicit typing as in the next part.]
 
 --unique-boundary-1
 Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
 
 This could have been part of the previous part,
 but illustrates explicit versus implicit
 typing of body parts.
 
 --unique-boundary-1
 Content-Type: multipart/parallel;
 boundary=unique-boundary-2
 
 
 --unique-boundary-2
 Content-Type: audio/basic
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
 
 ... base64-encoded 8000 Hz single-channel
 u-law-format audio data goes here....
 
 --unique-boundary-2
 Content-Type: image/gif
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: Base64
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 62]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 ... base64-encoded image data goes here....
 
 --unique-boundary-2--
 
 --unique-boundary-1
 Content-type: text/richtext
 
 This is <bold><italic>richtext.</italic></bold>
 <nl><nl>Isn't it
 <bigger><bigger>cool?</bigger></bigger>
 
 --unique-boundary-1
 Content-Type: message/rfc822
 
 From: (name in US-ASCII)
 Subject: (subject in US-ASCII)
 Content-Type: Text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
 Content-Transfer-Encoding: Quoted-printable
 
 ... Additional text in ISO-8859-1 goes here ...
 
 --unique-boundary-1--
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 63]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix D -- A Simple Richtext-to-Text Translator in C
 
 One of the major goals in the design of the richtext subtype
 of the text Content-Type is to make formatted text so simple
 that even text-only mailers will implement richtext-to-
 plain-text translators, thus increasing the likelihood that
 multifont text will become "safe" to use very widely. To
 demonstrate this simplicity, what follows is an extremely
 simple 44-line C program that converts richtext input into
 plain text output:
 
 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <ctype.h>
 main() {
 int c, i;
 char token[50];
 
 while((c = getc(stdin)) != EOF) {
 if (c == '<') {
 for (i=0; (i<49 && (c = getc(stdin)) != '>'
 && c != EOF); ++i) {
 token[i] = isupper(c) ? tolower(c) : c;
 }
 if (c == EOF) break;
 if (c != '>') while ((c = getc(stdin)) !=
 '>'
 && c != EOF) {;}
 if (c == EOF) break;
 token[i] = '0円';
 if (!strcmp(token, "lt")) {
 putc('<', stdout);
 } else if (!strcmp(token, "nl")) {
 putc('\n', stdout);
 } else if (!strcmp(token, "/paragraph")) {
 fputs("\n\n", stdout);
 } else if (!strcmp(token, "comment")) {
 int commct=1;
 while (commct > 0) {
 while ((c = getc(stdin)) != '<'
 && c != EOF) ;
 if (c == EOF) break;
 for (i=0; (c = getc(stdin)) != '>'
 && c != EOF; ++i) {
 token[i] = isupper(c) ?
 tolower(c) : c;
 }
 if (c== EOF) break;
 token[i] = NULL;
 if (!strcmp(token, "/comment")) --
 commct;
 if (!strcmp(token, "comment"))
 ++commct;
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 64]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 }
 } /* Ignore all other tokens */
 } else if (c != '\n') putc(c, stdout);
 }
 putc('\n', stdout); /* for good measure */
 }
 It should be noted that one can do considerably better than
 this in displaying richtext data on a dumb terminal. In
 particular, one can replace font information such as "bold"
 with textual emphasis (like *this* or _T_H_I_S_). One can
 also properly handle the richtext formatting commands
 regarding indentation, justification, and others. However,
 the above program is all that is necessary in order to
 present richtext on a dumb terminal.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 65]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix E -- Collected Grammar
 
 This appendix contains the complete BNF grammar for all the
 syntax specified by this document.
 
 By itself, however, this grammar is incomplete. It refers
 to several entities that are defined by RFC 822. Rather
 than reproduce those definitions here, and risk
 unintentional differences between the two, this document
 simply refers the reader to RFC 822 for the remaining
 definitions. Wherever a term is undefined, it refers to the
 RFC 822 definition.
 
 attribute := token
 
 body-part = <"message" as defined in RFC 822,
 with all header fields optional, and with the
 specified delimiter not occurring anywhere in
 the message body, either on a line by itself
 or as a substring anywhere.>
 
 boundary := 0*69<bchars> bcharsnospace
 
 bchars := bcharsnospace / " "
 
 bcharsnospace := DIGIT / ALPHA / "'" / "(" / ")" / "+" /
 "_"
 / "," / "-" / "." / "/" / ":" / "=" / "?"
 
 close-delimiter := delimiter "--"
 
 Content-Description := *text
 
 Content-ID := msg-id
 
 Content-Transfer-Encoding := "BASE64" / "QUOTED-
 PRINTABLE" /
 "8BIT" / "7BIT" /
 "BINARY" / x-token
 
 Content-Type := type "/" subtype *[";" parameter]
 
 delimiter := CRLF "--" boundary ; taken from Content-Type
 field.
 ; when content-type is
 multipart
 ; There should be no space
 ; between "--" and boundary.
 
 encapsulation := delimiter CRLF body-part
 
 epilogue := *text ; to be ignored upon
 receipt.
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 66]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 MIME-Version := 1*text
 
 multipart-body := preamble 1*encapsulation close-delimiter
 epilogue
 
 parameter := attribute "=" value
 
 preamble := *text ; to be ignored upon
 receipt.
 
 subtype := token
 
 token := 1*<any CHAR except SPACE, CTLs, or tspecials>
 
 tspecials := "(" / ")" / "<" / ">" / "@" ; Must be in
 / "," / ";" / ":" / "\" / <"> ; quoted-string,
 / "/" / "[" / "]" / "?" / "." ; to use within
 / "=" ; parameter values
 
 
 type := "application" / "audio" ; case-
 insensitive
 / "image" / "message"
 / "multipart" / "text"
 / "video" / x-token
 
 value := token / quoted-string
 
 x-token := <The two characters "X-" followed, with no
 intervening white space, by any token>
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 67]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix F -- IANA Registration Procedures
 
 MIME has been carefully designed to have extensible
 mechanisms, and it is expected that the set of content-
 type/subtype pairs and their associated parameters will grow
 significantly with time. Several other MIME fields, notably
 character set names, access-type parameters for the
 message/external-body type, conversions parameters for the
 application type, and possibly even Content-Transfer-
 Encoding values, are likely to have new values defined over
 time. In order to ensure that the set of such values is
 developed in an orderly, well-specified, and public manner,
 MIME defines a registration process which uses the Internet
 Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) as a central registry for
 such values.
 
 In general, parameters in the content-type header field are
 used to convey supplemental information for various content
 types, and their use is defined when the content-type and
 subtype are defined. New parameters should not be defined
 as a way to introduce new functionality.
 
 In order to simplify and standardize the registration
 process, this appendix gives templates for the registration
 of new values with IANA. Each of these is given in the form
 of an email message template, to be filled in by the
 registering party.
 
 F.1 Registration of New Content-type/subtype Values
 
 Note that MIME is generally expected to be extended by
 subtypes. If a new fundamental top-level type is needed,
 its specification should be published as an RFC or
 submitted in a form suitable to become an RFC, and be
 subject to the Internet standards process.
 
 To: IANA@isi.edu
 Subject: Registration of new MIME content-type/subtype
 
 MIME type name:
 
 (If the above is not an existing top-level MIME type,
 please explain why an existing type cannot be used.)
 
 MIME subtype name:
 
 Required parameters:
 
 Optional parameters:
 
 Encoding considerations:
 
 Security considerations:
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 68]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Published specification:
 
 (The published specification must be an Internet RFC or
 RFC-to-be if a new top-level type is being defined, and
 must be a publicly available specification in any
 case.)
 
 Person & email address to contact for further
 information:
 F.2 Registration of New Character Set Values
 
 To: IANA@isi.edu
 Subject: Registration of new MIME character set value
 
 MIME character set name:
 
 Published specification:
 
 (The published specification must be an Internet RFC or
 RFC-to-be or an international standard.)
 
 Person & email address to contact for further
 information:
 
 F.3 Registration of New Access-type Values for
 Message/external-body
 
 To: IANA@isi.edu
 Subject: Registration of new MIME Access-type for
 Message/external-body content-type
 
 MIME access-type name:
 
 Required parameters:
 
 Optional parameters:
 
 Published specification:
 
 (The published specification must be an Internet RFC or
 RFC-to-be.)
 
 Person & email address to contact for further
 information:
 
 
 F.4 Registration of New Conversions Values for Application
 
 To: IANA@isi.edu
 Subject: Registration of new MIME Conversions value
 for Application content-type
 
 MIME Conversions name:
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 69]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Published specification:
 
 (The published specification must be an Internet RFC or
 RFC-to-be.)
 
 Person & email address to contact for further
 information:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 70]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix G -- Summary of the Seven Content-types
 
 Content-type: text
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: plain, richtext
 
 Important Parameters: charset
 
 Encoding notes: quoted-printable generally preferred if an
 encoding is needed and the character set is mostly an
 ASCII superset.
 
 Security considerations: Rich text formats such as TeX and
 Troff often contain mechanisms for executing arbitrary
 commands or file system operations, and should not be
 used automatically unless these security problems have
 been addressed. Even plain text may contain control
 characters that can be used to exploit the capabilities
 of "intelligent" terminals and cause security
 violations. User interfaces designed to run on such
 terminals should be aware of and try to prevent such
 problems.
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: multipart
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: mixed, alternative,
 digest, parallel.
 
 Important Parameters: boundary
 
 Encoding notes: No content-transfer-encoding is permitted.
 
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: message
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: rfc822, partial,
 external-body
 
 Important Parameters: id, number, total
 
 Encoding notes: No content-transfer-encoding is permitted.
 
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: application
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: octet-stream,
 postscript, oda
 
 Important Parameters: profile
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 71]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Encoding notes: base64 generally preferred for octet-stream
 or other unreadable subtypes.
 
 Security considerations: This type is intended for the
 transmission of data to be interpreted by locally-installed
 programs. If used, for example, to transmit executable
 binary programs or programs in general-purpose interpreted
 languages, such as LISP programs or shell scripts, severe
 security problems could result. In general, authors of
 mail-reading agents are cautioned against giving their
 systems the power to execute mail-based application data
 without carefully considering the security implications.
 While it is certainly possible to define safe application
 formats and even safe interpreters for unsafe formats, each
 interpreter should be evaluated separately for possible
 security problems.
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: image
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: jpeg, gif
 
 Important Parameters: none
 
 Encoding notes: base64 generally preferred
 
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: audio
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: basic
 
 Important Parameters: none
 
 Encoding notes: base64 generally preferred
 
 ________________________________________________________________
 
 Content-type: video
 
 Subtypes defined by this document: mpeg
 
 Important Parameters: none
 
 Encoding notes: base64 generally preferred
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 72]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Appendix H -- Canonical Encoding Model
 
 
 
 There was some confusion, in earlier drafts of this memo,
 regarding the model for when email data was to be converted
 to canonical form and encoded, and in particular how this
 process would affect the treatment of CRLFs, given that the
 representation of newlines varies greatly from system to
 system. For this reason, a canonical model for encoding is
 presented below.
 
 The process of composing a MIME message part can be modelled
 as being done in a number of steps. Note that these steps
 are roughly similar to those steps used in RFC1113:
 
 Step 1. Creation of local form.
 
 The body part to be transmitted is created in the system's
 native format. The native character set is used, and where
 appropriate local end of line conventions are used as well.
 The may be a UNIX-style text file, or a Sun raster image, or
 a VMS indexed file, or audio data in a system-dependent
 format stored only in memory, or anything else that
 corresponds to the local model for the representation of
 some form of information.
 
 Step 2. Conversion to canonical form.
 
 The entire body part, including "out-of-band" information
 such as record lengths and possibly file attribute
 information, is converted to a universal canonical form.
 The specific content type of the body part as well as its
 associated attributes dictate the nature of the canonical
 form that is used. Conversion to the proper canonical form
 may involve character set conversion, transformation of
 audio data, compression, or various other operations
 specific to the various content types.
 
 For example, in the case of text/plain data, the text must
 be converted to a supported character set and lines must be
 delimited with CRLF delimiters in accordance with RFC822.
 Note that the restriction on line lengths implied by RFC822
 is eliminated if the next step employs either quoted-
 printable or base64 encoding.
 
 Step 3. Apply transfer encoding.
 
 A Content-Transfer-Encoding appropriate for this body part
 is applied. Note that there is no fixed relationship
 between the content type and the transfer encoding. In
 particular, it may be appropriate to base the choice of
 base64 or quoted-printable on character frequency counts
 which are specific to a given instance of body part.
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 73]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Step 4. Insertion into message.
 
 The encoded object is inserted into a MIME message with
 appropriate body part headers and boundary markers.
 
 It is vital to note that these steps are only a model; they
 are specifically NOT a blueprint for how an actual system
 would be built. In particular, the model fails to account
 for two common designs:
 
 1. In many cases the conversion to a canonical
 form prior to encoding will be subsumed into the
 encoder itself, which understands local formats
 directly. For example, the local newline
 convention for text bodyparts might be carried
 through to the encoder itself along with knowledge
 of what that format is.
 
 2. The output of the encoders may have to pass
 through one or more additional steps prior to
 being transmitted as a message. As such, the
 output of the encoder may not be compliant with
 the formats specified by RFC822. In particular,
 once again it may be appropriate for the
 converter's output to be expressed using local
 newline conventions rather than using the standard
 RFC822 CRLF delimiters.
 
 Other implementation variations are conceivable as well.
 The only important aspect of this discussion is that the
 resulting messages are consistent with those produced by the
 model described here.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 74]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 References
 
 [US-ASCII] Coded Character Set--7-Bit American Standard Code
 for Information Interchange, ANSI X3.4-1986.
 
 [ATK] Borenstein, Nathaniel S., Multimedia Applications
 Development with the Andrew Toolkit, Prentice-Hall, 1990.
 
 [GIF] Graphics Interchange Format (Version 89a), Compuserve,
 Inc., Columbus, Ohio, 1990.
 
 [ISO-2022] International Standard--Information Processing--
 ISO 7-bit and 8-bit coded character sets--Code extension
 techniques, ISO 2022:1986.
 
 [ISO-8859] Information Processing -- 8-bit Single-Byte Coded
 Graphic Character Sets -- Part 1: Latin Alphabet No. 1, ISO
 8859-1:1987. Part 2: Latin alphabet No. 2, ISO 8859-2,
 1987. Part 3: Latin alphabet No. 3, ISO 8859-3, 1988. Part
 4: Latin alphabet No. 4, ISO 8859-4, 1988. Part 5:
 Latin/Cyrillic alphabet, ISO 8859-5, 1988. Part 6:
 Latin/Arabic alphabet, ISO 8859-6, 1987. Part 7:
 Latin/Greek alphabet, ISO 8859-7, 1987. Part 8:
 Latin/Hebrew alphabet, ISO 8859-8, 1988. Part 9: Latin
 alphabet No. 5, ISO 8859-9, 1990.
 
 [ISO-646] International Standard--Information Processing--
 ISO 7-bit coded character set for information interchange,
 ISO 646:1983.
 
 [MPEG] Video Coding Draft Standard ISO 11172 CD, ISO
 IEC/TJC1/SC2/WG11 (Motion Picture Experts Group), May, 1991.
 
 [ODA] ISO 8613; Information Processing: Text and Office
 System; Office Document Architecture (ODA) and Interchange
 Format (ODIF), Part 1-8, 1989.
 
 [PCM] CCITT, Fascicle III.4 - Recommendation G.711, Geneva,
 1972, "Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) of Voice Frequencies".
 
 [POSTSCRIPT] Adobe Systems, Inc., PostScript Language
 Reference Manual, Addison-Wesley, 1985.
 
 [X400] Schicker, Pietro, "Message Handling Systems, X.400",
 Message Handling Systems and Distributed Applications, E.
 Stefferud, O-j. Jacobsen, and P. Schicker, eds., North-
 Holland, 1989, pp. 3-41.
 
 [RFC-783] Sollins, K.R. TFTP Protocol (revision 2). June,
 1981, MIT, RFC-783.
 
 [RFC-821] Postel, J.B. Simple Mail Transfer Protocol.
 August, 1982, USC/Information Sciences Institute, RFC-821.
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 75]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 [RFC-822] Crocker, D. Standard for the format of ARPA
 Internet text messages. August, 1982, UDEL, RFC-822.
 
 [RFC-934] Rose, M.T.; Stefferud, E.A. Proposed standard
 for message encapsulation. January, 1985, Delaware
 and NMA, RFC-934.
 
 [RFC-959] Postel, J.B.; Reynolds, J.K. File Transfer
 Protocol. October, 1985, USC/Information Sciences
 Institute, RFC-959.
 
 [RFC-1049] Sirbu, M.A. Content-Type header field for
 Internet messages. March, 1988, CMU, RFC-1049.
 
 [RFC-1113] Linn, J. Privacy enhancement for Internet
 electronic mail: Part I - message encipherment and
 authentication procedures. August, 1989, IAB Privacy Task
 Force, RFC-1113.
 
 [RFC-1154] Robinson, D.; Ullmann, R. Encoding header field
 for Internet messages. April, 1990, Prime Computer,
 Inc., RFC-1154.
 
 [RFC-1342] Moore, Keith, Representation of Non-Ascii Text in
 Internet Message Headers. June, 1992, University of
 Tennessee, RFC-1342.
 
 Security Considerations
 
 Security issues are discussed in Section 7.4.2 and in
 Appendix G. Implementors should pay special attention to
 the security implications of any mail content-types that can
 cause the remote execution of any actions in the recipient's
 environment. In such cases, the discussion of the
 applicaton/postscript content-type in Section 7.4.2 may
 serve as a model for considering other content-types with
 remote execution capabilities.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 76]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 Authors' Addresses
 
 For more information, the authors of this document may be
 contacted via Internet mail:
 
 Nathaniel S. Borenstein
 MRE 2D-296, Bellcore
 445 South St.
 Morristown, NJ 07962-1910
 
 Phone: +1 201 829 4270
 Fax: +1 201 829 7019
 Email: nsb@bellcore.com
 
 
 Ned Freed
 Innosoft International, Inc.
 250 West First Street
 Suite 240
 Claremont, CA 91711
 
 Phone: +1 714 624 7907
 Fax: +1 714 621 5319
 Email: ned@innosoft.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page 77]

  RFC 1341MIME: Multipurpose Internet Mail ExtensionsJune 1992
 
 
 
 
 
 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
 
 Please discard this page and place the following table of
 contents after the title page.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page i]

  Table of Contents
 
 
 1 Introduction....................................... 1
 2 Notations, Conventions, and Generic BNF Grammar.... 3
 3 The MIME-Version Header Field...................... 5
 4 The Content-Type Header Field...................... 6
 5 The Content-Transfer-Encoding Header Field......... 10
 5.1 Quoted-Printable Content-Transfer-Encoding......... 14
 5.2 Base64 Content-Transfer-Encoding................... 17
 6 Additional Optional Content- Header Fields......... 19
 6.1 Optional Content-ID Header Field................... 19
 6.2 Optional Content-Description Header Field.......... 19
 7 The Predefined Content-Type Values................. 20
 7.1 The Text Content-Type.............................. 20
 7.1.1 The charset parameter.............................. 20
 7.1.2 The Text/plain subtype............................. 23
 7.1.3 The Text/richtext subtype.......................... 23
 7.2 The Multipart Content-Type......................... 29
 7.2.1 Multipart: The common syntax...................... 30
 7.2.2 The Multipart/mixed (primary) subtype.............. 34
 7.2.3 The Multipart/alternative subtype.................. 34
 7.2.4 The Multipart/digest subtype....................... 36
 7.2.5 The Multipart/parallel subtype..................... 36
 7.3 The Message Content-Type........................... 37
 7.3.1 The Message/rfc822 (primary) subtype............... 37
 7.3.2 The Message/Partial subtype........................ 37
 7.3.3 The Message/External-Body subtype.................. 40
 7.4 The Application Content-Type....................... 46
 7.4.1 The Application/Octet-Stream (primary) subtype..... 46
 7.4.2 The Application/PostScript subtype................. 47
 7.4.3 The Application/ODA subtype........................ 50
 7.5 The Image Content-Type............................. 51
 7.6 The Audio Content-Type............................. 51
 7.7 The Video Content-Type............................. 51
 7.8 Experimental Content-Type Values................... 51
 Summary............................................ 53
 Acknowledgements................................... 54
 Appendix A -- Minimal MIME-Conformance............. 56
 Appendix B -- General Guidelines For Sending Email Data59
 Appendix C -- A Complex Multipart Example.......... 62
 Appendix D -- A Simple Richtext-to-Text Translator in C64
 Appendix E -- Collected Grammar.................... 66
 Appendix F -- IANA Registration Procedures......... 68
 F.1 Registration of New Content-type/subtype Values..68
 F.2 Registration of New Character Set Values...... 69
 F.3 Registration of New Access-type Values for Message/external-body69
 F.4 Registration of New Conversions Values for Application69
 Appendix G -- Summary of the Seven Content-types... 71
 Appendix H -- Canonical Encoding Model............. 73
 References......................................... 75
 Security Considerations............................ 76
 Authors' Addresses................................. 77
 
 
 
  Borenstein & Freed [Page ii]

  Borenstein & Freed [Page iii]
 

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