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RFC1494 - Equivalences between 1988 X.400 and RFC-822 Message Bodies

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group H. Alvestrand

Request for Comments: 1494 SINTEF DELAB

S. Thompson

Soft*Switch, Inc.

August 1993

Equivalences between 1988 X.400 and RFC-822 Message Bodies

Status of this Memo

This RFCspecifies 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.

Table of Contents

1. IntrodUCtion ............................................. 2

2. Equivalence Table Definition ............................. 2

3. Generic conversions ...................................... 3

3.1. Byte copy .............................................. 3

3.2. Text Conversion ........................................ 3

3.3. Image Conversion ....................................... 3

3.4. Tunneling .............................................. 3

4. Conversion Table for known X.400 and MIME Types ......... 4

4.1. MIME to X.400 Table .................................... 4

4.2. X.400 to MIME Table .................................... 4

5. Newly defined X.400 Body Parts ........................... 5

5.1. Use of OBJECT IDENTIFIERs and ASN.1 MACROS ............. 5

5.2. The Generic MIME Extended Body Part .................... 6

5.3. The PostScript body part ............................... 7

5.4. The JPEG body part ..................................... 7

5.5. The GIF body part ...................................... 8

6. Newly defined MIME content-types ......................... 8

6.1. The application/x400-bp content-type ................... 8

6.2. The image/g3fax content-type ........................... 9

6.2.1. G3Fax Parameters ..................................... 9

6.2.2. Content Encoding ..................................... 10

6.3. The Application/ODA content-type ....................... 11

7. Equivalence Definitions ................................... 11

7.1. IA5Text - text/plain .................................... 11

7.2. GeneralText - text/plain (ISO-8859) ..................... 12

7.3. BilaterallyDefined - application/octet-stream .......... 13

7.4. ODA - application/oda ................................... 14

7.5. g3-facsimile - image/g3fax .............................. 15

7.6. application/postscript - postscript-body-part .......... 16

7.7. application/jpeg - jpeg-body-part ....................... 16

7.8. image/gif - gif-body-part ............................... 16

8. OID Assignments ........................................... 17

9. IANA Registration form for new mappings ................... 17

10. Security Considerations .................................. 18

11. Authors' Addresses ....................................... 18

12. References ............................................... 19

1. Introduction

This document is a companion to [1], which defines the principles

behind interworking between MIME-based RFC-822 mail and X.400 mail.

This document describes the content of the "IANA MHS/MIME Equivalence

table" referenced in the companion document, and defines the initial

configuration of this table. Mappings for new MIME content-types

and/or X.400 body part types should be registered with the IANA to

minimize redundancy and promote interoperability.

In MIME, the term "content-type" is used to refer to an information

object contained in the body of a message. In contrast, X.400 uses

the term "body part type." In this document, the term "body part" is

used to refer to either.

Please send comments to the MIME-MHS mailing list:

<mime-mhs@surfnet.nl>.

2. Equivalence Table Definition

For each MIME content-type/X.400 body part pair, the Equivalence

Table will contain an entry with the following sections:

X.400 Body Part

This section identifies the X.400 Body Part governed by this

Table entry. It includes any OBJECT IDENTIFIERs or other

parameters necessary to uniquely identify the Body Part.

MIME Content-Type

This section identifies the MIME content-type governed by this

Table entry. The MIME content-type named here must be

registered with the IANA.

Conversion Type

This section identifies the type of conversion applied. See the

section on Generic Conversions for an eXPlanation of the

possible values.

Comments (optional)

This section gives any additional commentary that might be

useful in understanding the mapping between the X.400 and MIME

representations.

The initial Equivalence Table entries in this document are described

using this convention. Any future submissions to the IANA should

follow this format.

3. Generic conversions

3.1. Byte copy

This is the trivial case, that is, no conversion at all. The byte

stream is simply copied between MIME and X.400.

This is the preferred conversion, since it is the simplest.

Implementors and vendors will be registering OBJECT IDENTIFIERs and

MIME content-types for their various objects. They are STRONGLY

ENCOURAGED to specify their content formats such that a gateway can

use Byte Copy to map between them.

Note that in some cases, it is necessary to define exactly which

ASN.1 construct to replace with the content of the MIME object.

3.2. Text Conversion

This type of conversion applies to text objects that cannot be mapped

using a simple Byte Copy. Conversion involves scanning and

reformatting the object. For example, the MIME and X.400 objects

might differ in their encoding of nonstandard characters, or line or

page breaks.

3.3. Image Conversion

This conversion type applies to raster images, like Group 3 Facsimile

or JPEG. Again, it differs from Byte Copy in that it involves

scanning reformatting the byte stream. It differs from Text

Conversion in that it is pixel- oriented, rather than character-

oriented.

3.4. Tunneling

This is not a conversion at all, but an encapsulation of the object.

This is the fallback conversion, used when no explicit mapping

applies.

4. Conversion Table for known X.400 and MIME Types

This section itemizes the equivalences for all currently known MIME

content-types and X.400 body parts.

4.1. MIME to X.400 Table

MIME content-type X.400 Body Part Section

----------------- ------------------ -------

text/plain

charset=us-ascii ia5-text 7.1

charset=iso-8859-x EBP - GeneralText 7.2

text/richtext no mapping defined 5.2

application/oda EBP - ODA 7.4

application/octet-stream bilaterally-defined 7.3

application/postscript EBP - mime-postscript-body 5.4, 7.6

image/g3fax g3-facsimile 6.2, 7.5

image/jpeg EBP - mime-jpeg-body 5.5, 7.7

image/gif EBP - mime-gif-body 5.6, 7.8

audio/basic no mapping defined 5.2

video/mpeg no mapping defined 5.2

Abbreviation: EBP - Extended Body Part

4.2. X.400 to MIME Table

Basic Body Parts

X.400 Basic Body Part MIME content-type Section

--------------------- -------------------- -------

ia5-text text/plain;charset=us-ascii 7.1

voice No Mapping Defined 6.1

g3-facsimile image/g3fax 6.2, 7.5

g4-class1 no mapping defined 6.1

teletex no mapping defined 6.1

videotex no mapping defined 6.1

encrypted no mapping defined 6.1

bilaterally-defined application/octet-stream 7.3

nationally-defined no mapping defined 6.1

externally-defined See Extended Body Parts 6.1

X.400 Extended Body Part MIME content-type Section

------------------------- -------------------- -------

GeneralText text/plain;charset=iso-8859-x 7.2

ODA application/oda 7.4

mime-postscript-body application/postscript 5.3, 7.6

mime-jpeg-body image/jpeg 5.4, 7.7

mime-gif-body image/gif 5.5, 7.8

5. Newly defined X.400 Body Parts

This section defines new X.400 Body Parts for the purposes of

interworking with MIME.

All new X.400 Body Parts defined here will be Extended Body Parts, as

defined in CCITT Recommendation X.420 [2].

5.1. Use of OBJECT IDENTIFIERs and ASN.1 MACROS

X.420 dictates that Extended Body Parts shall:

(1) use OBJECT IDENTIFIERs (OIDs) to uniquely identify

the contents, and

(2) be defined by using the ASN.1 Macro:

EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE MACRO::=

BEGIN

TYPE NOTATION ::= Parameters Data

VALUE NOTATION ::= value (VALUE OBJECT IDENTIFIER)

Parameters ::= "PARAMETERS" type "IDENTIFIED"

"BY" value(OBJECT IDENTIFIER)

empty;

Data ::= "DATA" type

END

To meet these requirements, this document uses the OID

mime-mhs-bodies

defined in [1], as the root OID for X.400 Extended Body Parts defined

for MIME interworking.

Each Extended Body Part contains Data and optional Parameters, each

being named by an OID. To this end, two OID suBTrees are defined

under mime-mhs-bodies, one for Data, and the other for Parameters:

mime-mhs-bp-data OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bodies 1 }

mime-mhs-bp-parameter OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bodies 2 }

All definitions of X.400 body parts submitted to the IANA for

registration must use the Extended Body Part Type macro for the

definition. See the next section for an example.

Lastly, the IANA will use the mime-mhs-bp-data and mime-mhs-bp-

parameter OIDs as root OIDs for any new MIME content-type/subtypes

that aren't otherwise registered in the Equivalence Table.

5.2. The Generic MIME Extended Body Part

The following X.400 Body Part is defined to carry any MIME content-

type for which there is no explicit IANA registered mapping.

mime-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE

PARAMETERS MimeParameters

IDENTIFIED BY mime-generic-parameters

DATA OCTET STRING

::= mime-generic-data

MimeParameters ::=

SEQUENCE {

content-type IA5String,

content-parameters SEQUENCE OF

SEQUENCE {

parameter IA5String,

parameter-value IA5String

}

-- from RFC-1327, sec. 5.1.12

other-header-fields RFC822FieldList

}

mime-generic-parameters OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-parameter 1 }

mime-generic-data OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 1 }

To convert the MIME content-type into the X.400 mime- body-part:

(1) Copy the "type/subtype" string from the MIME

Content-Type: header field into

MimeParameters.content-type

(2) For each "parameter=value" string in the MIME

Content-Type header field, create a

MimeParameters.content-parameters structure, and copy

the "parameter" string into MimeParameters.content-

parameters.parameter field and the "value" string

into the paired MimeParameters.content-

parameters.parameter-value field.

(3) Convert the MIME body part into its canonical form.

(See appendix H of RFC1341 [3] for a discussion

of canonical in this context.) Said another way,

reverse the transfer encoding to recover the original

byte stream.

(4) Copy the canonical byte stream into the mime-body-

part.data octet string.

(5) Remove the Content-type and the Content-transfer-

encoding header fields from the MIME body part's

RFC822 header.

(6) Any header fields starting with "Content-" in the

MIME body part is placed in the optional other-

header-fields structure. Note that this can only

occur when the MIME content-type occurs as part of a

"multipart" content-type.

The mapping from the X.400 mime-body-part to a MIME content-type is

the inverse of the above steps.

5.3. The PostScript body part

The following Extended Body Part is defined for PostScript data

streams. It has no parameters.

postscript-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE

DATA OCTET STRING

::= mime-postscript-body

mime-postscript-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 2 }

5.4. The JPEG body part

The following Extended Body Part is defined for JPEG data streams.

It has no parameters.

jpeg-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE

DATA OCTET STRING

::= mime-jpeg-body

mime-jpeg-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 3 }

5.5. The GIF body part

The following Extended Body Part is defined for GIF data streams. It

has no parameters.

gif-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE

DATA OCTET STRING

::= mime-gif-body

mime-gif-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 4 }

6. Newly defined MIME content-types

This section defines new MIME content-types for the purposes of

interworking with X.400.

6.1. The application/x400-bp content-type

This content-type is defined to carry any X.400(88) body part for

which there is no registered IANA mapping.

The content-type field is

application/x400-bp

The parameters are:

bp-type=<INTEGER or OBJECT IDENTIFIER>

The body contains the raw ASN.1 IPM.body octet stream, including the

initial tag octet.

If the body is a basic body part, the bp-type parameter is set to the

number of the body part's context-specific tag, that is, the tag of

the IPMS.Body.BodyPart component.

If the body is an Extended Body Part, the bp-type parameter is set to

the OBJECT IDENTIFIER from

IPMS.body.externally-defined.data.direct-reference

No attempt is made to turn the parameters of Extended Body Parts into

MIME parameters. (This task is the responsibility of the recipient's

UA).

For example, a basic VideotexBodyPart will have

Content-type=application/x400-bp; bp-type=6

whilst a Extended Videotex body part will have

Content-type=application/x400-bp; bp-type=2.6.1.4.5

application/x400-bp will need a content-transfer-encoding of base64

or quoted-printable when carried in 7-bit MIME. Since there is no

way to know beforehand the content, it is recommended to just inspect

the first 1 KByte or so of data and choose the one that seems to

produce the more compact encoding.

If this is not feasible, Base64 is recommended.

6.2. The image/g3fax content-type

This content-type is defined to carry G3 Facsimile byte streams.

In general, a G3Fax image contains 3 pieces of information:

(1) A set of flags indicating the particular coding

scheme. CCITT Recommendation T.30 defines how the

flags are transmitted over telephones. In this

medium, the flags are carried as parameters in the

MIME content-type header field.

(2) A structure that divides the bits into pages. CCITT

recommendation T.30 describes how to define page

boundaries. A page break algorithm is defined here

that is independent of how the image data is

conveyed.

(3) For each page, a sequence of bits that form the

encoding of the image. CCITT recommendation T.4

defines the bit image format. This is used without

change.

6.2.1. G3Fax Parameters

The following parameters are defined:

(1) page-length - possible values: A4, B4 and Unlimited

(2) page-width - possible values: A3, A4, B4

(3) encoding - possible values: 1-dimensional, 2-

dimensional, Uncompressed

(4) resolution - possible values: Fine, Coarse

(5) DCS - a bit string, represented in Base64.

(6) pages - an integer, giving the number of pages in the

document

If nothing is specified, the default parameter settings are:

page-length=A4

page-width=A4

encoding=1-dimensional

resolution=Coarse

It is possible (but misleading) to view the representation of these

values as single-bit flags. They correspond to the following bits of

the T.30 control string and X.400 G3FacsimileParameters:

Parameter T.30 bit X.400 bit

page-length=A4 no bit set

page-length=B4 19 21

page-length=Unlimited 20 20

page-width=A4 no bit set

page-width=A3 18 22

page-width=B4 17 23

encoding=1-dimensional no bit set

encoding=2-dimensional 16 8

encoding=Uncompressed 26 30

resolution=Coarse no bit set

resolution=Fine 15 9

The reason for the different bit numbers is that X.400 counts bits in

an octet from the MSB down to the LSB, while T.30 uses the opposite

numbering scheme.

If any bit but these are set in the Device Control String, the DCS

parameter should be supplied.

6.2.2. Content Encoding

X.400 defines the g3-facsimile data stream as a SEQUENCE of BIT

STRINGs. Each BIT STRING is a page of facsimile image data, encoded

as defined by Recommendation T.4. The following content encoding is

reversible between MIME and X.400 and ensures that page breaks are

honored in the MIME representation.

An EOL is defined as a bit sequence of

000000000001 (eleven zeroes and a one).

Each page of the message is delimited by a sequence of six (6) EOLs

that MUST start on a byte boundary. The image bit stream is padded

as needed to achieve this alignment.

Searching for the boundary is a matter of searching for the byte

sequence (HEX) 00 10 01 00 10 01 00 10 01, which cannot occur inside

the image.

See Section 7.5 for the algorithm on conversion between this encoding

and the X.400 encoding.

The Base64 content-transfer-encoding is appropriate for carrying this

content-type.

6.3. The Application/ODA content-type

The "ODA" subtype of application is used to indicate that a body

contains information encoded according to the Office Document

Architecture [4] 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", and the document class, using

the keyword "class".

For the keyword "class", the values "formatted", "processable" and

"formatted-processable" are legal values.

Thus an appropriate header field might look like this:

Content-Type: application/oda; profile=Q112;

class=formatted

Consult the ODA standard [4] for further information.

The Base64 content-transfer-encoding is appropriate for carrying ODA.

7. Equivalence Definitions

7.1. IA5Text - text/plain

X.400 Body Part: IA5Text

MIME Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

Conversion Type: Byte copy

Comments:

When mapping from X.400 to MIME, the "repertoire" parameter is

ignored.

When mapping from MIME to X.400, the "repertoire" parameter is set to

IA5 (5).

NOTE: The MIME Content-type headers are omitted, when mapping from

X.400 to MIME, if and only if the IA5Text body part is the only body

part in the IPMS.Body sequence.

NOTE: IA5Text specifies the "currency" symbol in position 2/4. This

is converted without comment to the "dollar" symbol, since the author

of this document has seen many documents in which the position was

intended to indicate "dollar" while he has not yet seen one in which

the "currency" symbol is intended.

(For reference: The T.50 (1988) recommendation, which defines IA5,

talks about ISO registered set number 2, while ASCII, using the

"dollar" symbol, is ISO registered set number 6. There are no other

differences.)

7.2. GeneralText - text/plain (ISO-8859)

X.400 Body Part: GeneralText; CharacterSets in

6,100,101,109,110,126,127,138,144,148

MIME Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-(1-9)

Conversion Type: Byte copy

Comments:

When mapping from X.400 to MIME, the character-set chosen from table

below according to the value of Parameters.CharacterSets.

When mapping from MIME to X.400, GeneralText is an Extended Body

Part, hence it requires an OID. The OID for the GeneralText body is

defined in [5], part 8, annex D, as {2 6 1 4 11}. The OID for the

parameters is {2 6 1 11 11}.

The Parameters.CharacterSets is set from table below according to the

value of "charset"

NOTE: The GeneralText body part is defined in ISO 10021-8 [5], and

NOT in the corresponding CCITT recommendation. Its parameters were

heavily modified in a defect report, and will be a SET OF INTEGER

(indicating the ISO registry numbers of all the used sets) in the

next version of the standard.

The following table lists the MIME character sets and the

corresponding ISO registry numbers. If no correspondence is found,

this conversion fails, and the generic body part approach is used.

MIME charset ISO IR numbers Comment

-----------------------------------------------

ISO-8859-1 6, 100 West European "8-bit ASCII"

ISO-8859-2 6, 101 East European

ISO-8859-3 6, 109 <regarded as obsolete>

ISO-8859-4 6, 110 <regarded as obsolete>

ISO-8859-5 6, 144 Cyrillic

ISO-8859-6 6, 127 Arabic

ISO-8859-7 6, 126 Greek

ISO-8859-8 6, 138 Hebrew

ISO-8859-8 6, 148 Other Latin-using languages

When converting from MIME to X.400, generate the correct OIDs for use

in the message envelope's Encoded Information Types by looking up the

ISO IR number in the above table, and then appending it to the id-

cs-eit-authority {1 0 10021 7 1 0} OID.

The escape sequences to designate and invoke the relevant character

sets in their proper positions must be added to the front of the

GeneralText character string.

7.3. BilaterallyDefined - application/octet-stream

X.400 Body Part: BilaterallyDefined

MIME Content-Type: Application/Octet-Stream (no parameters)

Conversion Type: Byte copy

Comments:

When mapping from MIME to X.400, if there are parameters present in

the Content-Type: header field, the conversion fails since the

BilaterallyDefined Body Part does not have any corresponding ASN.1

parameters.

DISCUSSION: The parameters "name" "type" and "conversions" are

advisory, but may in some cases give vital hints on the expected

handling of the file. The parameter "conversions" is not fully

defined, but it is expected that it will be useful, so we cannot drop

it and expect people to be satisfied.

The parameter "padding" changes the interpretation of the last byte

of the data, and so cannot be deleted.

An option is to prepend an IA5 body part that contains the parameter

text; this will aid unmodified readers, and can probably be made

reversible with suitable chicanery, but is it worth it????

Also, use of BilaterallyDefined Body Parts is specifically deprecated

in both 1988 and 1992 X.400. It is retained solely for backward

compatibility with 1984 systems. 1992 X.400 defines a File Transfer

Body Part to solve this problem (i.e. binary file transfer through

email). The standard and its regional profiles are not solid enough

yet to exploit as a solution for this problem.

7.4. ODA - application/oda

X.400 Body Part: ODA

MIME Content-Type: application/oda

Conversion Type: Byte copy

Comments:

The ODA body part is defined in the CCITT document T.411 [6],

appendix E, section E.2, "ODA identification in the P2 protocol of

MHS"

An abbreviated version of its ASN.1 definition is:

oda-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE

PARAMETERS OdaBodyPartParameters

DATA OdaData

::= id-et-oda

OdaBodyPartParameters ::= SET {

document-application-profile [0] OBJECT IDENTIFIER

document-architecture-class [1] INTEGER {

formatted (0)

processable (1)

formatted-processable(2)}}

id-et-oda OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { 2 8 1 0 1 }

Mapping from X.400 to MIME, the following is done:

The Parameters.document-application-profile is mapped onto the MIME

parameter "profile" according to the table below.

Profile OBJECT IDENTIFIER

Q112 { iso (1) identified-organization (3) ewos (16)

eg (2) oda (6) profile (0) q112 (1) }

The Parameters.document-architecture-class is mapped onto the MIME

parameter "class" according to the table below

String Integer

formatted formatted(0)

processable processable(1)

formatted-processable formatted-processable(2)

NOTE: This parameter is not defined in RFC1341.

The body of the MIME content-type is the Data part of the ODA body

part.

When mapping from MIME to X.400, the following steps are done:

The Parameters.document-application-profile and Parameters.document-

architecture-class are set from the tables above. If any of the

parameters are missing, the values for Q112 and formatted-processable

are used.

It is an option for the gateway implementor to try to Access them

from inside the document, where they are defined as

document-profile.document-characteristics.document-architecture-class

document-profile.document-characteristics.document-application-profile

Gateways are NOT required to do this, since the document-

characteristics are optional parameters. If a gateway does not, it

simply uses the defaulting rules defined above.

The OBJECT IDENTIFIERs for the document application profile and for

ODA {2 8 0 0} must be added to the Encoded Information Types

parameter of the message envelope.

7.5. g3-facsimile - image/g3fax

X.400 Body part: g3-facsimile

MIME Content-Type: image/g3fax

Conversion Type: nearly Byte copy

Comments:

The Parameters of the X.400 G3Fax body part are mapped to the

corresponding Parameters on the MIME Image/G3Fax body part and vice

versa. Note that:

(1) If fineResolution is not specified, pixels will be

twice as tall as they are wide

(2) If any bit not corresponding to a specially named

option is set in the G3Fax NonBasicParameters, the

"DCS" parameter must be used.

(3) Interworking is not guaranteed if any bit apart from

those specially named are used in the

NonBasicParameters

From X.400 to G3Fax, the body is created in the following way:

(1) Any trailing EOL markers on each bitstring is

removed. The bistring is padded to a byte boundary.

(2) 6 consecutive EOL markers are appended to each

bitstring.

(3) The padded bitstrings are concatenated together

An EOL marker is the bit sequence 000000000001 (11 zeroes and a one).

From G3Fax to X.400, the body is created in the following way:

(1) The body is split into bitstrings at each occurrence

of 6 consecutive EOL markers, and trailing EOLs and

padding are removed

(2) Each bitstring is made into an ASN.1 BITSTRING

(3) The bitstrings are made into an ASN.1 SEQUENCE, which

forms the body of the G3Fax body part.

7.6. application/postscript - postscript-body-part

X.400 Body Part: Extended Body Part, OID postscript-body-part

MIME Content-Type: application/postscript

Conversion Type: Byte Copy

7.7. application/jpeg - jpeg-body-part

X.400 Body Part: Extended Body Part, OID jpeg-body-part

MIME Content-Type: application/jpeg

Conversion Type: Byte Copy

7.8. image/gif - gif-body-part

X.400 Body Part: Extended Body Part, OID gif-body-part

MIME Content-Type: application/gif

Conversion Type: Byte Copy

8. OID Assignments

MIME-MHS-MAPPINGS DEFINITIONS ::= BEGIN

IMPORTS

mail, mime-mhs, mime-mhs-bodies

FROM MIME-MHS;

mime-mhs-bp-data OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bodies 1}

mime-mhs-bp-parameter OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bodies 2}

mime-generic-data OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 1}

mime-generic-parameters OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-parameter 1}

mime-postscript-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 2}

mime-jpeg-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 3}

mime-gif-body OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::=

{ mime-mhs-bp-data 4};

9. IANA Registration form for new mappings

To: IANA@isi.edu

Subject: Registration of new X.400/MIME content type mapping

MIME type name:

(this must have been registered previously with IANA)

X.400 body part:

X.400 Object Identifier for Data:

(If left empty, an OID will be assigned by IANA under

mime-mhs-bp-data)

X.400 Object Identifier for Parameters:

(If left empty, an OID will be assigned by IANA under

mime-mhs-bp-parameter. If it is not used, fill in the

words NOT USED.)

X.400 ASN.1 Syntax:

(must be an EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE macro, or reference to

a Basic body part type)

Conversion algorithm:

(must be defined completely enough for independent

implementation. It may be defined by reference to RFCs).

Person & email address to contact for further information:

INFORMATION TO THE SUBMITTER:

The accepted registrations will be listed in the "Assigned

Numbers" series of RFCs. The information in the

registration form is freely distributable.

10. Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

11. Authors' Addresses

Harald Tveit Alvestrand

SINTEF DELAB

N-7034 Trondheim

NORWAY

EMail: Harald.Alvestrand@delab.sintef.no

Steven J. Thompson

Soft*Switch, Inc.

640 Lee Road

Wayne, PA 19087

Phone: (215) 640-7556

EMail: sjt@gateway.ssw.com

12. References

[1] Alvestrand, H., Kille, S., Miles, R., Rose, M., and S. Thompson,

"Mapping between X.400 and RFC-822 Message Bodies", RFC1495,

SINTEF DELAB, ISODE Consortium, Soft*Switch, Inc, Dover Beach

Consulting, Inc., Soft*Switch, Inc., August 1993.

[2] CCITT Recommendation X.420 (1988), Interpersonal Messaging

System.

[3] Borenstein, N, and N. Freed, "MIME: Mechanisms for Specifying

and Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC1341,

Bellcore, Innosoft, June 1992.

[4] ISO 8613; Information Processing: Text and Office System; Office

Document Architecture (ODA) and Interchange Format (ODIF), Part

1-8, 1989.

[5] ISO/IEC International Standard 10021, Information technology -

Text Communication - Message-Oriented Text Interchange Systems

(MOTIS) (Parts 1 to 8).

[6] CCITT Recommendation T.411 (1988), Open Document Architecture

(ODA) and Interchange Format, Introduction and General

Principles.

[7] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text

Messages", STD 11, RFC822, UDEL, August 1982.

[8] Hardcastle-Kille, S., "Mapping between X.400(1988) / ISO 10021

and RFC-822", RFC1327, University College London, May 1992.

[9] CCITT Recommendation T.4, Standardization of Group 3 Facsimile

Apparatus for Document Transmission (1988).

[10] CCITT Recommendation T.30, Procedures For Document Facsimile

Transmission in the General Switched Telephone Network (1988).

[11] CCITT, Data Communication Networks - Message Handling Systems -

Recommendations X.400 - X.420 (1988 version).

[12] Alvestrand, H., "X.400 Use of Extended Character Sets", RFC

1502, SINTEF DELAB, August 1993.

 
 
 
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