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RFC2060 - Internet Message Access Protocol - Version 4rev1

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group M. Crispin

Request for Comments: 2060 University of Washington

Obsoletes: 1730 December 1996

Category: Standards Track

INTERNET MESSAGE Access PROTOCOL - VERSION 4rev1

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

The Internet Message Access Protocol, Version 4rev1 (IMAP4rev1)

allows a client to access and manipulate electronic mail messages on

a server. IMAP4rev1 permits manipulation of remote message folders,

called "mailboxes", in a way that is functionally equivalent to local

mailboxes. IMAP4rev1 also provides the capability for an offline

client to resynchronize with the server (see also [IMAP-DISC]).

IMAP4rev1 includes operations for creating, deleting, and renaming

mailboxes; checking for new messages; permanently removing messages;

setting and clearing flags; [RFC-822] and [MIME-IMB] parsing;

searching; and selective fetching of message attributes, texts, and

portions thereof. Messages in IMAP4rev1 are accessed by the use of

numbers. These numbers are either message sequence numbers or unique

identifiers.

IMAP4rev1 supports a single server. A mechanism for accessing

configuration information to support multiple IMAP4rev1 servers is

discussed in [ACAP].

IMAP4rev1 does not specify a means of posting mail; this function is

handled by a mail transfer protocol sUCh as [SMTP].

IMAP4rev1 is designed to be upwards compatible from the [IMAP2] and

unpublished IMAP2bis protocols. In the course of the evolution of

IMAP4rev1, some ASPects in the earlier protocol have become obsolete.

Obsolete commands, responses, and data formats which an IMAP4rev1

implementation may encounter when used with an earlier implementation

are described in [IMAP-OBSOLETE].

Other compatibility issues with IMAP2bis, the most common variant of

the earlier protocol, are discussed in [IMAP-COMPAT]. A full

discussion of compatibility issues with rare (and presumed extinct)

variants of [IMAP2] is in [IMAP-HISTORICAL]; this document is

primarily of historical interest.

Table of Contents

IMAP4rev1 Protocol Specification .................................. 4

1. How to Read This Document ................................. 4

1.1. Organization of This Document ............................. 4

1.2. Conventions Used in This Document ......................... 4

2. Protocol Overview ......................................... 5

2.1. Link Level ................................................ 5

2.2. Commands and Responses .................................... 6

2.2.1. Client Protocol Sender and Server Protocol Receiver ....... 6

2.2.2. Server Protocol Sender and Client Protocol Receiver ....... 7

2.3. Message Attributes ........................................ 7

2.3.1. Message Numbers ........................................... 7

2.3.1.1. Unique Identifier (UID) Message Attribute ......... 7

2.3.1.2. Message Sequence Number Message Attribute ......... 9

2.3.2. Flags Message Attribute .................................... 9

2.3.3. Internal Date Message Attribute ........................... 10

2.3.4. [RFC-822] Size Message Attribute .......................... 11

2.3.5. Envelope Structure Message Attribute ...................... 11

2.3.6. Body Structure Message Attribute .......................... 11

2.4. Message Texts ............................................. 11

3. State and Flow Diagram .................................... 11

3.1. Non-Authenticated State ................................... 11

3.2. Authenticated State ....................................... 11

3.3. Selected State ............................................ 12

3.4. Logout State .............................................. 12

4. Data Formats .............................................. 12

4.1. Atom ...................................................... 13

4.2. Number .................................................... 13

4.3. String ..................................................... 13

4.3.1. 8-bit and Binary Strings .................................. 13

4.4. Parenthesized List ........................................ 14

4.5. NIL ....................................................... 14

5. Operational Considerations ................................ 14

5.1. Mailbox Naming ............................................ 14

5.1.1. Mailbox Hierarchy Naming .................................. 14

5.1.2. Mailbox Namespace Naming Convention ....................... 14

5.1.3. Mailbox International Naming Convention ................... 15

5.2. Mailbox Size and Message Status Updates ................... 16

5.3. Response when no Command in Progress ...................... 16

5.4. Autologout Timer .......................................... 16

5.5. Multiple Commands in Progress ............................. 17

6. Client Commands ........................................... 17

6.1. Client Commands - Any State ............................... 18

6.1.1. CAPABILITY Command ........................................ 18

6.1.2. NOOP Command .............................................. 19

6.1.3. LOGOUT Command ............................................ 20

6.2. Client Commands - Non-Authenticated State ................. 20

6.2.1. AUTHENTICATE Command ...................................... 21

6.2.2. LOGIN Command ............................................. 22

6.3. Client Commands - Authenticated State ..................... 22

6.3.1. SELECT Command ............................................ 23

6.3.2. EXAMINE Command ........................................... 24

6.3.3. CREATE Command ............................................ 25

6.3.4. DELETE Command ............................................ 26

6.3.5. RENAME Command ............................................ 27

6.3.6. SUBSCRIBE Command ......................................... 29

6.3.7. UNSUBSCRIBE Command ....................................... 30

6.3.8. LIST Command .............................................. 30

6.3.9. LSUB Command .............................................. 32

6.3.10. STATUS Command ............................................ 33

6.3.11. APPEND Command ............................................ 34

6.4. Client Commands - Selected State .......................... 35

6.4.1. CHECK Command ............................................. 36

6.4.2. CLOSE Command ............................................. 36

6.4.3. EXPUNGE Command ........................................... 37

6.4.4. SEARCH Command ............................................ 37

6.4.5. FETCH Command ............................................. 41

6.4.6. STORE Command ............................................. 45

6.4.7. COPY Command .............................................. 46

6.4.8. UID Command ............................................... 47

6.5. Client Commands - Experimental/Expansion .................. 48

6.5.1. X<atom> Command ........................................... 48

7. Server Responses .......................................... 48

7.1. Server Responses - Status Responses ....................... 49

7.1.1. OK Response ............................................... 51

7.1.2. NO Response ............................................... 51

7.1.3. BAD Response .............................................. 52

7.1.4. PREAUTH Response .......................................... 52

7.1.5. BYE Response .............................................. 52

7.2. Server Responses - Server and Mailbox Status .............. 53

7.2.1. CAPABILITY Response ....................................... 53

7.2.2. LIST Response .............................................. 54

7.2.3. LSUB Response ............................................. 55

7.2.4 STATUS Response ........................................... 55

7.2.5. SEARCH Response ........................................... 55

7.2.6. FLAGS Response ............................................ 56

7.3. Server Responses - Mailbox Size ........................... 56

7.3.1. EXISTS Response ........................................... 56

7.3.2. RECENT Response ........................................... 57

7.4. Server Responses - Message Status ......................... 57

7.4.1. EXPUNGE Response .......................................... 57

7.4.2. FETCH Response ............................................ 58

7.5. Server Responses - Command Continuation Request ........... 63

8. Sample IMAP4rev1 connection ............................... 63

9. Formal Syntax ............................................. 64

10. Author's Note ............................................. 74

11. Security Considerations ................................... 74

12. Author's Address .......................................... 75

Appendices ........................................................ 76

A. References ................................................ 76

B. Changes from RFC1730 ..................................... 77

C. Key Word Index ............................................ 79

IMAP4rev1 Protocol Specification

1. How to Read This Document

1.1. Organization of This Document

This document is written from the point of view of the implementor of

an IMAP4rev1 client or server. Beyond the protocol overview in

section 2, it is not optimized for someone trying to understand the

operation of the protocol. The material in sections 3 through 5

provides the general context and definitions with which IMAP4rev1

operates.

Sections 6, 7, and 9 describe the IMAP commands, responses, and

syntax, respectively. The relationships among these are such that it

is almost impossible to understand any of them separately. In

particular, do not attempt to deduce command syntax from the command

section alone; instead refer to the Formal Syntax section.

1.2. Conventions Used in This Document

In examples, "C:" and "S:" indicate lines sent by the client and

server respectively.

The following terms are used in this document to signify the

requirements of this specification.

1) MUST, or the adjective REQUIRED, means that the definition is

an absolute requirement of the specification.

2) MUST NOT that the definition is an absolute prohibition of the

specification.

3) SHOULD means that there may exist valid reasons in particular

circumstances to ignore a particular item, but the full

implications MUST be understood and carefully weighed before

choosing a different course.

4) SHOULD NOT means that there may exist valid reasons in

particular circumstances when the particular behavior is

acceptable or even useful, but the full implications SHOULD be

understood and the case carefully weighed before implementing

any behavior described with this label.

5) MAY, or the adjective OPTIONAL, means that an item is truly

optional. One vendor may choose to include the item because a

particular marketplace requires it or because the vendor feels

that it enhances the product while another vendor may omit the

same item. An implementation which does not include a

particular option MUST be prepared to interoperate with another

implementation which does include the option.

"Can" is used instead of "may" when referring to a possible

circumstance or situation, as opposed to an optional facility of

the protocol.

"User" is used to refer to a human user, whereas "client" refers

to the software being run by the user.

"Connection" refers to the entire sequence of client/server

interaction from the initial establishment of the network

connection until its termination. "Session" refers to the

sequence of client/server interaction from the time that a mailbox

is selected (SELECT or EXAMINE command) until the time that

selection ends (SELECT or EXAMINE of another mailbox, CLOSE

command, or connection termination).

Characters are 7-bit US-ASCII unless otherwise specified. Other

character sets are indicated using a "CHARSET", as described in

[MIME-IMT] and defined in [CHARSET]. CHARSETs have important

additional semantics in addition to defining character set; refer

to these documents for more detail.

2. Protocol Overview

2.1. Link Level

The IMAP4rev1 protocol assumes a reliable data stream such as

provided by TCP. When TCP is used, an IMAP4rev1 server listens on

port 143.

2.2. Commands and Responses

An IMAP4rev1 connection consists of the establishment of a

client/server network connection, an initial greeting from the

server, and client/server interactions. These client/server

interactions consist of a client command, server data, and a server

completion result response.

All interactions transmitted by client and server are in the form of

lines; that is, strings that end with a CRLF. The protocol receiver

of an IMAP4rev1 client or server is either reading a line, or is

reading a sequence of octets with a known count followed by a line.

2.2.1. Client Protocol Sender and Server Protocol Receiver

The client command begins an operation. Each client command is

prefixed with an identifier (typically a short alphanumeric string,

e.g. A0001, A0002, etc.) called a "tag". A different tag is

generated by the client for each command.

There are two cases in which a line from the client does not

represent a complete command. In one case, a command argument is

quoted with an octet count (see the description of literal in String

under Data Formats); in the other case, the command arguments require

server feedback (see the AUTHENTICATE command). In either case, the

server sends a command continuation request response if it is ready

for the octets (if appropriate) and the remainder of the command.

This response is prefixed with the token "+".

Note: If, instead, the server detected an error in the command, it

sends a BAD completion response with tag matching the command (as

described below) to reject the command and prevent the client from

sending any more of the command.

It is also possible for the server to send a completion response

for some other command (if multiple commands are in progress), or

untagged data. In either case, the command continuation request

is still pending; the client takes the appropriate action for the

response, and reads another response from the server. In all

cases, the client MUST send a complete command (including

receiving all command continuation request responses and command

continuations for the command) before initiating a new command.

The protocol receiver of an IMAP4rev1 server reads a command line

from the client, parses the command and its arguments, and transmits

server data and a server command completion result response.

2.2.2. Server Protocol Sender and Client Protocol Receiver

Data transmitted by the server to the client and status responses

that do not indicate command completion are prefixed with the token

"*", and are called untagged responses.

Server data MAY be sent as a result of a client command, or MAY be

sent unilaterally by the server. There is no syntactic difference

between server data that resulted from a specific command and server

data that were sent unilaterally.

The server completion result response indicates the success or

failure of the operation. It is tagged with the same tag as the

client command which began the operation. Thus, if more than one

command is in progress, the tag in a server completion response

identifies the command to which the response applies. There are

three possible server completion responses: OK (indicating success),

NO (indicating failure), or BAD (indicating protocol error such as

unrecognized command or command syntax error).

The protocol receiver of an IMAP4rev1 client reads a response line

from the server. It then takes action on the response based upon the

first token of the response, which can be a tag, a "*", or a "+".

A client MUST be prepared to accept any server response at all times.

This includes server data that was not requested. Server data SHOULD

be recorded, so that the client can reference its recorded copy

rather than sending a command to the server to request the data. In

the case of certain server data, the data MUST be recorded.

This topic is discussed in greater detail in the Server Responses

section.

2.3. Message Attributes

In addition to message text, each message has several attributes

associated with it. These attributes may be retrieved individually

or in conjunction with other attributes or message texts.

2.3.1. Message Numbers

Messages in IMAP4rev1 are accessed by one of two numbers; the unique

identifier and the message sequence number.

2.3.1.1. Unique Identifier (UID) Message Attribute

A 32-bit value assigned to each message, which when used with the

unique identifier validity value (see below) forms a 64-bit value

that is permanently guaranteed not to refer to any other message in

the mailbox. Unique identifiers are assigned in a strictly ascending

fashion in the mailbox; as each message is added to the mailbox it is

assigned a higher UID than the message(s) which were added

previously.

Unlike message sequence numbers, unique identifiers are not

necessarily contiguous. Unique identifiers also persist across

sessions. This permits a client to resynchronize its state from a

previous session with the server (e.g. disconnected or offline access

clients); this is discussed further in [IMAP-DISC].

Associated with every mailbox is a unique identifier validity value,

which is sent in an UIDVALIDITY response code in an OK untagged

response at mailbox selection time. If unique identifiers from an

earlier session fail to persist to this session, the unique

identifier validity value MUST be greater than the one used in the

earlier session.

Note: Unique identifiers MUST be strictly ascending in the mailbox

at all times. If the physical message store is re-ordered by a

non-IMAP agent, this requires that the unique identifiers in the

mailbox be regenerated, since the former unique identifers are no

longer strictly ascending as a result of the re-ordering. Another

instance in which unique identifiers are regenerated is if the

message store has no mechanism to store unique identifiers.

Although this specification recognizes that this may be

unavoidable in certain server environments, it STRONGLY ENCOURAGES

message store implementation techniques that avoid this problem.

Another cause of non-persistance is if the mailbox is deleted and

a new mailbox with the same name is created at a later date, Since

the name is the same, a client may not know that this is a new

mailbox unless the unique identifier validity is different. A

good value to use for the unique identifier validity value is a

32-bit representation of the creation date/time of the mailbox.

It is alright to use a constant such as 1, but only if it

guaranteed that unique identifiers will never be reused, even in

the case of a mailbox being deleted (or renamed) and a new mailbox

by the same name created at some future time.

The unique identifier of a message MUST NOT change during the

session, and SHOULD NOT change between sessions. However, if it is

not possible to preserve the unique identifier of a message in a

subsequent session, each subsequent session MUST have a new unique

identifier validity value that is larger than any that was used

previously.

2.3.1.2. Message Sequence Number Message Attribute

A relative position from 1 to the number of messages in the mailbox.

This position MUST be ordered by ascending unique identifier. As

each new message is added, it is assigned a message sequence number

that is 1 higher than the number of messages in the mailbox before

that new message was added.

Message sequence numbers can be reassigned during the session. For

example, when a message is permanently removed (expunged) from the

mailbox, the message sequence number for all subsequent messages is

decremented. Similarly, a new message can be assigned a message

sequence number that was once held by some other message prior to an

expunge.

In addition to accessing messages by relative position in the

mailbox, message sequence numbers can be used in mathematical

calculations. For example, if an untagged "EXISTS 11" is received,

and previously an untagged "8 EXISTS" was received, three new

messages have arrived with message sequence numbers of 9, 10, and 11.

Another example; if message 287 in a 523 message mailbox has UID

12345, there are exactly 286 messages which have lesser UIDs and 236

messages which have greater UIDs.

2.3.2. Flags Message Attribute

A list of zero or more named tokens associated with the message. A

flag is set by its addition to this list, and is cleared by its

removal. There are two types of flags in IMAP4rev1. A flag of

either type may be permanent or session-only.

A system flag is a flag name that is pre-defined in this

specification. All system flags begin with "\". Certain system

flags (\Deleted and \Seen) have special semantics described

elsewhere. The currently-defined system flags are:

\Seen Message has been read

\Answered Message has been answered

\Flagged Message is "flagged" for urgent/special attention

\Deleted Message is "deleted" for removal by later EXPUNGE

\Draft Message has not completed composition (marked as a

draft).

\Recent Message is "recently" arrived in this mailbox. This

session is the first session to have been notified

about this message; subsequent sessions will not see

\Recent set for this message. This flag can not be

altered by the client.

If it is not possible to determine whether or not

this session is the first session to be notified

about a message, then that message SHOULD be

considered recent.

If multiple connections have the same mailbox

selected simultaneously, it is undefined which of

these connections will see newly-arrives messages

with \Recent set and which will see it without

\Recent set.

A keyword is defined by the server implementation. Keywords do

not begin with "\". Servers MAY permit the client to define new

keywords in the mailbox (see the description of the

PERMANENTFLAGS response code for more information).

A flag may be permanent or session-only on a per-flag basis.

Permanent flags are those which the client can add or remove

from the message flags permanently; that is, subsequent sessions

will see any change in permanent flags. Changes to session

flags are valid only in that session.

Note: The \Recent system flag is a special case of a

session flag. \Recent can not be used as an argument in a

STORE command, and thus can not be changed at all.

2.3.3. Internal Date Message Attribute

The internal date and time of the message on the server. This is not

the date and time in the [RFC-822] header, but rather a date and time

which reflects when the message was received. In the case of

messages delivered via [SMTP], this SHOULD be the date and time of

final delivery of the message as defined by [SMTP]. In the case of

messages delivered by the IMAP4rev1 COPY command, this SHOULD be the

internal date and time of the source message. In the case of

messages delivered by the IMAP4rev1 APPEND command, this SHOULD be

the date and time as specified in the APPEND command description.

All other cases are implementation defined.

2.3.4. [RFC-822] Size Message Attribute

The number of octets in the message, as expressed in [RFC-822]

format.

2.3.5. Envelope Structure Message Attribute

A parsed representation of the [RFC-822] envelope information (not to

be confused with an [SMTP] envelope) of the message.

2.3.6. Body Structure Message Attribute

A parsed representation of the [MIME-IMB] body structure information

of the message.

2.4. Message Texts

In addition to being able to fetch the full [RFC-822] text of a

message, IMAP4rev1 permits the fetching of portions of the full

message text. Specifically, it is possible to fetch the [RFC-822]

message header, [RFC-822] message body, a [MIME-IMB] body part, or a

[MIME-IMB] header.

3. State and Flow Diagram

An IMAP4rev1 server is in one of four states. Most commands are

valid in only certain states. It is a protocol error for the client

to attempt a command while the command is in an inappropriate state.

In this case, a server will respond with a BAD or NO (depending upon

server implementation) command completion result.

3.1. Non-Authenticated State

In non-authenticated state, the client MUST supply authentication

credentials before most commands will be permitted. This state is

entered when a connection starts unless the connection has been pre-

authenticated.

3.2. Authenticated State

In authenticated state, the client is authenticated and MUST select a

mailbox to access before commands that affect messages will be

permitted. This state is entered when a pre-authenticated connection

starts, when acceptable authentication credentials have been

provided, or after an error in selecting a mailbox.

3.3. Selected State

In selected state, a mailbox has been selected to access. This state

is entered when a mailbox has been successfully selected.

3.4. Logout State

In logout state, the connection is being terminated, and the server

will close the connection. This state can be entered as a result of

a client request or by unilateral server decision.

+--------------------------------------+

initial connection and server greeting

+--------------------------------------+

(1) (2) (3)

VV

+-----------------+

non-authenticated

+-----------------+

(7) (4)

VV VV

+----------------+

authenticated <=++

+----------------+

(7) (5) (6)

VV

+--------+

selected==++

+--------+

(7)

VV VV VV VV

+--------------------------------------+

logout and close connection

+--------------------------------------+

(1) connection without pre-authentication (OK greeting)

(2) pre-authenticated connection (PREAUTH greeting)

(3) rejected connection (BYE greeting)

(4) successful LOGIN or AUTHENTICATE command

(5) successful SELECT or EXAMINE command

(6) CLOSE command, or failed SELECT or EXAMINE command

(7) LOGOUT command, server shutdown, or connection closed

4. Data Formats

IMAP4rev1 uses textual commands and responses. Data in IMAP4rev1 can

be in one of several forms: atom, number, string, parenthesized list,

or NIL.

4.1. Atom

An atom consists of one or more non-special characters.

4.2. Number

A number consists of one or more digit characters, and represents a

numeric value.

4.3. String

A string is in one of two forms: literal and quoted string. The

literal form is the general form of string. The quoted string form

is an alternative that avoids the overhead of processing a literal at

the cost of limitations of characters that can be used in a quoted

string.

A literal is a sequence of zero or more octets (including CR and LF),

prefix-quoted with an octet count in the form of an open brace ("{"),

the number of octets, close brace ("}"), and CRLF. In the case of

literals transmitted from server to client, the CRLF is immediately

followed by the octet data. In the case of literals transmitted from

client to server, the client MUST wait to receive a command

continuation request (described later in this document) before

sending the octet data (and the remainder of the command).

A quoted string is a sequence of zero or more 7-bit characters,

excluding CR and LF, with double quote (<">) characters at each end.

The empty string is represented as either "" (a quoted string with

zero characters between double quotes) or as {0} followed by CRLF (a

literal with an octet count of 0).

Note: Even if the octet count is 0, a client transmitting a

literal MUST wait to receive a command continuation request.

4.3.1. 8-bit and Binary Strings

8-bit textual and binary mail is supported through the use of a

[MIME-IMB] content transfer encoding. IMAP4rev1 implementations MAY

transmit 8-bit or multi-octet characters in literals, but SHOULD do

so only when the [CHARSET] is identified.

Although a BINARY body encoding is defined, unencoded binary strings

are not permitted. A "binary string" is any string with NUL

characters. Implementations MUST encode binary data into a textual

form such as BASE64 before transmitting the data. A string with an

excessive amount of CTL characters MAY also be considered to be

binary.

4.4. Parenthesized List

Data structures are represented as a "parenthesized list"; a sequence

of data items, delimited by space, and bounded at each end by

parentheses. A parenthesized list can contain other parenthesized

lists, using multiple levels of parentheses to indicate nesting.

The empty list is represented as () -- a parenthesized list with no

members.

4.5. NIL

The special atom "NIL" represents the non-existence of a particular

data item that is represented as a string or parenthesized list, as

distinct from the empty string "" or the empty parenthesized list ().

5. Operational Considerations

5.1. Mailbox Naming

The interpretation of mailbox names is implementation-dependent.

However, the case-insensitive mailbox name INBOX is a special name

reserved to mean "the primary mailbox for this user on this server".

5.1.1. Mailbox Hierarchy Naming

If it is desired to export hierarchical mailbox names, mailbox names

MUST be left-to-right hierarchical using a single character to

separate levels of hierarchy. The same hierarchy separator character

is used for all levels of hierarchy within a single name.

5.1.2. Mailbox Namespace Naming Convention

By convention, the first hierarchical element of any mailbox name

which begins with "#" identifies the "namespace" of the remainder of

the name. This makes it possible to disambiguate between different

types of mailbox stores, each of which have their own namespaces.

For example, implementations which offer access to USENET

newsgroups MAY use the "#news" namespace to partition the USENET

newsgroup namespace from that of other mailboxes. Thus, the

comp.mail.misc newsgroup would have an mailbox name of

"#news.comp.mail.misc", and the name "comp.mail.misc" could refer

to a different object (e.g. a user's private mailbox).

5.1.3. Mailbox International Naming Convention

By convention, international mailbox names are specified using a

modified version of the UTF-7 encoding described in [UTF-7]. The

purpose of these modifications is to correct the following problems

with UTF-7:

1) UTF-7 uses the "+" character for shifting; this conflicts with

the common use of "+" in mailbox names, in particular USENET

newsgroup names.

2) UTF-7's encoding is BASE64 which uses the "/" character; this

conflicts with the use of "/" as a popular hierarchy delimiter.

3) UTF-7 prohibits the unencoded usage of "\"; this conflicts with

the use of "\" as a popular hierarchy delimiter.

4) UTF-7 prohibits the unencoded usage of "~"; this conflicts with

the use of "~" in some servers as a home Directory indicator.

5) UTF-7 permits multiple alternate forms to represent the same

string; in particular, printable US-ASCII chararacters can be

represented in encoded form.

In modified UTF-7, printable US-ASCII characters except for "&"

represent themselves; that is, characters with octet values 0x20-0x25

and 0x27-0x7e. The character "&" (0x26) is represented by the two-

octet sequence "&-".

All other characters (octet values 0x00-0x1f, 0x7f-0xff, and all

Unicode 16-bit octets) are represented in modified BASE64, with a

further modification from [UTF-7] that "," is used instead of "/".

Modified BASE64 MUST NOT be used to represent any printing US-ASCII

character which can represent itself.

"&" is used to shift to modified BASE64 and "-" to shift back to US-

ASCII. All names start in US-ASCII, and MUST end in US-ASCII (that

is, a name that ends with a Unicode 16-bit octet MUST end with a "-

").

For example, here is a mailbox name which mixes English, Japanese,

and Chinese text: ~peter/mail/&ZeVnLIqe-/&U,BTFw-

5.2. Mailbox Size and Message Status Updates

At any time, a server can send data that the client did not request.

Sometimes, such behavior is REQUIRED. For example, agents other than

the server MAY add messages to the mailbox (e.g. new mail delivery),

change the flags of message in the mailbox (e.g. simultaneous access

to the same mailbox by multiple agents), or even remove messages from

the mailbox. A server MUST send mailbox size updates automatically

if a mailbox size change is observed during the processing of a

command. A server SHOULD send message flag updates automatically,

without requiring the client to request such updates explicitly.

Special rules exist for server notification of a client about the

removal of messages to prevent synchronization errors; see the

description of the EXPUNGE response for more detail.

Regardless of what implementation decisions a client makes on

remembering data from the server, a client implementation MUST record

mailbox size updates. It MUST NOT assume that any command after

initial mailbox selection will return the size of the mailbox.

5.3. Response when no Command in Progress

Server implementations are permitted to send an untagged response

(except for EXPUNGE) while there is no command in progress. Server

implementations that send such responses MUST deal with flow control

considerations. Specifically, they MUST either (1) verify that the

size of the data does not exceed the underlying transport's available

window size, or (2) use non-blocking writes.

5.4. Autologout Timer

If a server has an inactivity autologout timer, that timer MUST be of

at least 30 minutes' duration. The receipt of ANY command from the

client during that interval SHOULD suffice to reset the autologout

timer.

5.5. Multiple Commands in Progress

The client MAY send another command without waiting for the

completion result response of a command, subject to ambiguity rules

(see below) and flow control constraints on the underlying data

stream. Similarly, a server MAY begin processing another command

before processing the current command to completion, subject to

ambiguity rules. However, any command continuation request responses

and command continuations MUST be negotiated before any subsequent

command is initiated.

The exception is if an ambiguity would result because of a command

that would affect the results of other commands. Clients MUST NOT

send multiple commands without waiting if an ambiguity would result.

If the server detects a possible ambiguity, it MUST execute commands

to completion in the order given by the client.

The most obvious example of ambiguity is when a command would affect

the results of another command; for example, a FETCH of a message's

flags and a STORE of that same message's flags.

A non-obvious ambiguity occurs with commands that permit an untagged

EXPUNGE response (commands other than FETCH, STORE, and SEARCH),

since an untagged EXPUNGE response can invalidate sequence numbers in

a subsequent command. This is not a problem for FETCH, STORE, or

SEARCH commands because servers are prohibited from sending EXPUNGE

responses while any of those commands are in progress. Therefore, if

the client sends any command other than FETCH, STORE, or SEARCH, it

MUST wait for a response before sending a command with message

sequence numbers.

For example, the following non-waiting command sequences are invalid:

FETCH + NOOP + STORE

STORE + COPY + FETCH

COPY + COPY

CHECK + FETCH

The following are examples of valid non-waiting command sequences:

FETCH + STORE + SEARCH + CHECK

STORE + COPY + EXPUNGE

6. Client Commands

IMAP4rev1 commands are described in this section. Commands are

organized by the state in which the command is permitted. Commands

which are permitted in multiple states are listed in the minimum

permitted state (for example, commands valid in authenticated and

selected state are listed in the authenticated state commands).

Command arguments, identified by "Arguments:" in the command

descriptions below, are described by function, not by syntax. The

precise syntax of command arguments is described in the Formal Syntax

section.

Some commands cause specific server responses to be returned; these

are identified by "Responses:" in the command descriptions below.

See the response descriptions in the Responses section for

information on these responses, and the Formal Syntax section for the

precise syntax of these responses. It is possible for server data to

be transmitted as a result of any command; thus, commands that do not

specifically require server data specify "no specific responses for

this command" instead of "none".

The "Result:" in the command description refers to the possible

tagged status responses to a command, and any special interpretation

of these status responses.

6.1. Client Commands - Any State

The following commands are valid in any state: CAPABILITY, NOOP, and

LOGOUT.

6.1.1. CAPABILITY Command

Arguments: none

Responses: REQUIRED untagged response: CAPABILITY

Result: OK - capability completed

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The CAPABILITY command requests a listing of capabilities that the

server supports. The server MUST send a single untagged

CAPABILITY response with "IMAP4rev1" as one of the listed

capabilities before the (tagged) OK response. This listing of

capabilities is not dependent upon connection state or user. It

is therefore not necessary to issue a CAPABILITY command more than

once in a connection.

A capability name which begins with "AUTH=" indicates that the

server supports that particular authentication mechanism. All

such names are, by definition, part of this specification. For

example, the authorization capability for an experimental

"blurdybloop" authenticator would be "AUTH=XBLURDYBLOOP" and not

"XAUTH=BLURDYBLOOP" or "XAUTH=XBLURDYBLOOP".

Other capability names refer to extensions, revisions, or

amendments to this specification. See the documentation of the

CAPABILITY response for additional information. No capabilities,

beyond the base IMAP4rev1 set defined in this specification, are

enabled without explicit client action to invoke the capability.

See the section entitled "Client Commands -

Experimental/Expansion" for information about the form of site or

implementation-specific capabilities.

Example: C: abcd CAPABILITY

S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 AUTH=KERBEROS_V4

S: abcd OK CAPABILITY completed

6.1.2. NOOP Command

Arguments: none

Responses: no specific responses for this command (but see below)

Result: OK - noop completed

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The NOOP command always succeeds. It does nothing.

Since any command can return a status update as untagged data, the

NOOP command can be used as a periodic poll for new messages or

message status updates during a period of inactivity. The NOOP

command can also be used to reset any inactivity autologout timer

on the server.

Example: C: a002 NOOP

S: a002 OK NOOP completed

. . .

C: a047 NOOP

S: * 22 EXPUNGE

S: * 23 EXISTS

S: * 3 RECENT

S: * 14 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))

S: a047 OK NOOP completed

6.1.3. LOGOUT Command

Arguments: none

Responses: REQUIRED untagged response: BYE

Result: OK - logout completed

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The LOGOUT command informs the server that the client is done with

the connection. The server MUST send a BYE untagged response

before the (tagged) OK response, and then close the network

connection.

Example: C: A023 LOGOUT

S: * BYE IMAP4rev1 Server logging out

S: A023 OK LOGOUT completed

(Server and client then close the connection)

6.2. Client Commands - Non-Authenticated State

In non-authenticated state, the AUTHENTICATE or LOGIN command

establishes authentication and enter authenticated state. The

AUTHENTICATE command provides a general mechanism for a variety of

authentication techniques, whereas the LOGIN command uses the

traditional user name and plaintext password pair.

Server implementations MAY allow non-authenticated access to certain

mailboxes. The convention is to use a LOGIN command with the userid

"anonymous". A password is REQUIRED. It is implementation-dependent

what requirements, if any, are placed on the password and what access

restrictions are placed on anonymous users.

Once authenticated (including as anonymous), it is not possible to

re-enter non-authenticated state.

In addition to the universal commands (CAPABILITY, NOOP, and LOGOUT),

the following commands are valid in non-authenticated state:

AUTHENTICATE and LOGIN.

6.2.1. AUTHENTICATE Command

Arguments: authentication mechanism name

Responses: continuation data can be requested

Result: OK - authenticate completed, now in authenticated state

NO - authenticate failure: unsupported authentication

mechanism, credentials rejected

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid,

authentication exchange cancelled

The AUTHENTICATE command indicates an authentication mechanism,

such as described in [IMAP-AUTH], to the server. If the server

supports the requested authentication mechanism, it performs an

authentication protocol exchange to authenticate and identify the

client. It MAY also negotiate an OPTIONAL protection mechanism

for subsequent protocol interactions. If the requested

authentication mechanism is not supported, the server SHOULD

reject the AUTHENTICATE command by sending a tagged NO response.

The authentication protocol exchange consists of a series of

server challenges and client answers that are specific to the

authentication mechanism. A server challenge consists of a

command continuation request response with the "+" token followed

by a BASE64 encoded string. The client answer consists of a line

consisting of a BASE64 encoded string. If the client wishes to

cancel an authentication exchange, it issues a line with a single

"*". If the server receives such an answer, it MUST reject the

AUTHENTICATE command by sending a tagged BAD response.

A protection mechanism provides integrity and privacy protection

to the connection. If a protection mechanism is negotiated, it is

applied to all subsequent data sent over the connection. The

protection mechanism takes effect immediately following the CRLF

that concludes the authentication exchange for the client, and the

CRLF of the tagged OK response for the server. Once the

protection mechanism is in effect, the stream of command and

response octets is processed into buffers of ciphertext. Each

buffer is transferred over the connection as a stream of octets

prepended with a four octet field in network byte order that

represents the length of the following data. The maximum

ciphertext buffer length is defined by the protection mechanism.

Authentication mechanisms are OPTIONAL. Protection mechanisms are

also OPTIONAL; an authentication mechanism MAY be implemented

without any protection mechanism. If an AUTHENTICATE command

fails with a NO response, the client MAY try another

authentication mechanism by issuing another AUTHENTICATE command,

or MAY attempt to authenticate by using the LOGIN command. In

other words, the client MAY request authentication types in

decreasing order of preference, with the LOGIN command as a last

resort.

Example: S: * OK KerberosV4 IMAP4rev1 Server

C: A001 AUTHENTICATE KERBEROS_V4

S: + AmFYig==

C: BAcAQU5EUkVXLkNNVS5FRFUAOCAsho84kLN3/IJmrMG+25a4DT

+nZImJjnTNHJUtxAA+o0KPKfHEcAFs9a3CL5Oebe/ydHJUwYFd

WwuQ1MWiy6IesKvjL5rL9WjXUb9MwT9bpObYLGOKi1Qh

S: + or//EoAADZI=

C: DiAF5A4gA+oOIALuBkAAmw==

S: A001 OK Kerberos V4 authentication successful

Note: the line breaks in the first client answer are for editorial

clarity and are not in real authenticators.

6.2.2. LOGIN Command

Arguments: user name

password

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - login completed, now in authenticated state

NO - login failure: user name or password rejected

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The LOGIN command identifies the client to the server and carries

the plaintext password authenticating this user.

Example: C: a001 LOGIN SMITH SESAME

S: a001 OK LOGIN completed

6.3. Client Commands - Authenticated State

In authenticated state, commands that manipulate mailboxes as atomic

entities are permitted. Of these commands, the SELECT and EXAMINE

commands will select a mailbox for access and enter selected state.

In addition to the universal commands (CAPABILITY, NOOP, and LOGOUT),

the following commands are valid in authenticated state: SELECT,

EXAMINE, CREATE, DELETE, RENAME, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, LIST, LSUB,

STATUS, and APPEND.

6.3.1. SELECT Command

Arguments: mailbox name

Responses: REQUIRED untagged responses: FLAGS, EXISTS, RECENT

OPTIONAL OK untagged responses: UNSEEN, PERMANENTFLAGS

Result: OK - select completed, now in selected state

NO - select failure, now in authenticated state: no

such mailbox, can't access mailbox

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The SELECT command selects a mailbox so that messages in the

mailbox can be accessed. Before returning an OK to the client,

the server MUST send the following untagged data to the client:

FLAGS Defined flags in the mailbox. See the description

of the FLAGS response for more detail.

<n> EXISTS The number of messages in the mailbox. See the

description of the EXISTS response for more detail.

<n> RECENT The number of messages with the \Recent flag set.

See the description of the RECENT response for more

detail.

OK [UIDVALIDITY <n>]

The unique identifier validity value. See the

description of the UID command for more detail.

to define the initial state of the mailbox at the client.

The server SHOULD also send an UNSEEN response code in an OK

untagged response, indicating the message sequence number of the

first unseen message in the mailbox.

If the client can not change the permanent state of one or more of

the flags listed in the FLAGS untagged response, the server SHOULD

send a PERMANENTFLAGS response code in an OK untagged response,

listing the flags that the client can change permanently.

Only one mailbox can be selected at a time in a connection;

simultaneous access to multiple mailboxes requires multiple

connections. The SELECT command automatically deselects any

currently selected mailbox before attempting the new selection.

Consequently, if a mailbox is selected and a SELECT command that

fails is attempted, no mailbox is selected.

If the client is permitted to modify the mailbox, the server

SHOULD prefix the text of the tagged OK response with the

"[READ-WRITE]" response code.

If the client is not permitted to modify the mailbox but is

permitted read access, the mailbox is selected as read-only, and

the server MUST prefix the text of the tagged OK response to

SELECT with the "[READ-ONLY]" response code. Read-only access

through SELECT differs from the EXAMINE command in that certain

read-only mailboxes MAY permit the change of permanent state on a

per-user (as opposed to global) basis. Netnews messages marked in

a server-based .newsrc file are an example of such per-user

permanent state that can be modified with read-only mailboxes.

Example: C: A142 SELECT INBOX

S: * 172 EXISTS

S: * 1 RECENT

S: * OK [UNSEEN 12] Message 12 is first unseen

S: * OK [UIDVALIDITY 3857529045] UIDs valid

S: * FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Seen \Draft)

S: * OK [PERMANENTFLAGS (\Deleted \Seen \*)] Limited

S: A142 OK [READ-WRITE] SELECT completed

6.3.2. EXAMINE Command

Arguments: mailbox name

Responses: REQUIRED untagged responses: FLAGS, EXISTS, RECENT

OPTIONAL OK untagged responses: UNSEEN, PERMANENTFLAGS

Result: OK - examine completed, now in selected state

NO - examine failure, now in authenticated state: no

such mailbox, can't access mailbox

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The EXAMINE command is identical to SELECT and returns the same

output; however, the selected mailbox is identified as read-only.

No changes to the permanent state of the mailbox, including

per-user state, are permitted.

The text of the tagged OK response to the EXAMINE command MUST

begin with the "[READ-ONLY]" response code.

Example: C: A932 EXAMINE blurdybloop

S: * 17 EXISTS

S: * 2 RECENT

S: * OK [UNSEEN 8] Message 8 is first unseen

S: * OK [UIDVALIDITY 3857529045] UIDs valid

S: * FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Seen \Draft)

S: * OK [PERMANENTFLAGS ()] No permanent flags permitted

S: A932 OK [READ-ONLY] EXAMINE completed

6.3.3. CREATE Command

Arguments: mailbox name

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - create completed

NO - create failure: can't create mailbox with that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The CREATE command creates a mailbox with the given name. An OK

response is returned only if a new mailbox with that name has been

created. It is an error to attempt to create INBOX or a mailbox

with a name that refers to an extant mailbox. Any error in

creation will return a tagged NO response.

If the mailbox name is suffixed with the server's hierarchy

separator character (as returned from the server by a LIST

command), this is a declaration that the client intends to create

mailbox names under this name in the hierarchy. Server

implementations that do not require this declaration MUST ignore

it.

If the server's hierarchy separator character appears elsewhere in

the name, the server SHOULD create any superior hierarchical names

that are needed for the CREATE command to complete successfully.

In other words, an attempt to create "foo/bar/zap" on a server in

which "/" is the hierarchy separator character SHOULD create foo/

and foo/bar/ if they do not already exist.

If a new mailbox is created with the same name as a mailbox which

was deleted, its unique identifiers MUST be greater than any

unique identifiers used in the previous incarnation of the mailbox

UNLESS the new incarnation has a different unique identifier

validity value. See the description of the UID command for more

detail.

Example: C: A003 CREATE owatagusiam/

S: A003 OK CREATE completed

C: A004 CREATE owatagusiam/blurdybloop

S: A004 OK CREATE completed

Note: the interpretation of this example depends on whether "/"

was returned as the hierarchy separator from LIST. If "/" is the

hierarchy separator, a new level of hierarchy named "owatagusiam"

with a member called "blurdybloop" is created. Otherwise, two

mailboxes at the same hierarchy level are created.

6.3.4. DELETE Command

Arguments: mailbox name

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - delete completed

NO - delete failure: can't delete mailbox with that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The DELETE command permanently removes the mailbox with the given

name. A tagged OK response is returned only if the mailbox has

been deleted. It is an error to attempt to delete INBOX or a

mailbox name that does not exist.

The DELETE command MUST NOT remove inferior hierarchical names.

For example, if a mailbox "foo" has an inferior "foo.bar"

(assuming "." is the hierarchy delimiter character), removing

"foo" MUST NOT remove "foo.bar". It is an error to attempt to

delete a name that has inferior hierarchical names and also has

the \Noselect mailbox name attribute (see the description of the

LIST response for more details).

It is permitted to delete a name that has inferior hierarchical

names and does not have the \Noselect mailbox name attribute. In

this case, all messages in that mailbox are removed, and the name

will acquire the \Noselect mailbox name attribute.

The value of the highest-used unique identifier of the deleted

mailbox MUST be preserved so that a new mailbox created with the

same name will not reuse the identifiers of the former

incarnation, UNLESS the new incarnation has a different unique

identifier validity value. See the description of the UID command

for more detail.

Examples: C: A682 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "/" blurdybloop

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" foo

S: * LIST () "/" foo/bar

S: A682 OK LIST completed

C: A683 DELETE blurdybloop

S: A683 OK DELETE completed

C: A684 DELETE foo

S: A684 NO Name "foo" has inferior hierarchical names

C: A685 DELETE foo/bar

S: A685 OK DELETE Completed

C: A686 LIST "" *

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" foo

S: A686 OK LIST completed

C: A687 DELETE foo

S: A687 OK DELETE Completed

C: A82 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "." blurdybloop

S: * LIST () "." foo

S: * LIST () "." foo.bar

S: A82 OK LIST completed

C: A83 DELETE blurdybloop

S: A83 OK DELETE completed

C: A84 DELETE foo

S: A84 OK DELETE Completed

C: A85 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "." foo.bar

S: A85 OK LIST completed

C: A86 LIST "" %

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "." foo

S: A86 OK LIST completed

6.3.5. RENAME Command

Arguments: existing mailbox name

new mailbox name

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - rename completed

NO - rename failure: can't rename mailbox with that name,

can't rename to mailbox with that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The RENAME command changes the name of a mailbox. A tagged OK

response is returned only if the mailbox has been renamed. It is

an error to attempt to rename from a mailbox name that does not

exist or to a mailbox name that already exists. Any error in

renaming will return a tagged NO response.

If the name has inferior hierarchical names, then the inferior

hierarchical names MUST also be renamed. For example, a rename of

"foo" to "zap" will rename "foo/bar" (assuming "/" is the

hierarchy delimiter character) to "zap/bar".

The value of the highest-used unique identifier of the old mailbox

name MUST be preserved so that a new mailbox created with the same

name will not reuse the identifiers of the former incarnation,

UNLESS the new incarnation has a different unique identifier

validity value. See the description of the UID command for more

detail.

Renaming INBOX is permitted, and has special behavior. It moves

all messages in INBOX to a new mailbox with the given name,

leaving INBOX empty. If the server implementation supports

inferior hierarchical names of INBOX, these are unaffected by a

rename of INBOX.

Examples: C: A682 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "/" blurdybloop

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" foo

S: * LIST () "/" foo/bar

S: A682 OK LIST completed

C: A683 RENAME blurdybloop sarasoop

S: A683 OK RENAME completed

C: A684 RENAME foo zowie

S: A684 OK RENAME Completed

C: A685 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "/" sarasoop

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" zowie

S: * LIST () "/" zowie/bar

S: A685 OK LIST completed

C: Z432 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "." INBOX

S: * LIST () "." INBOX.bar

S: Z432 OK LIST completed

C: Z433 RENAME INBOX old-mail

S: Z433 OK RENAME completed

C: Z434 LIST "" *

S: * LIST () "." INBOX

S: * LIST () "." INBOX.bar

S: * LIST () "." old-mail

S: Z434 OK LIST completed

6.3.6. SUBSCRIBE Command

Arguments: mailbox

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - subscribe completed

NO - subscribe failure: can't subscribe to that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The SUBSCRIBE command adds the specified mailbox name to the

server's set of "active" or "subscribed" mailboxes as returned by

the LSUB command. This command returns a tagged OK response only

if the subscription is successful.

A server MAY validate the mailbox argument to SUBSCRIBE to verify

that it exists. However, it MUST NOT unilaterally remove an

existing mailbox name from the subscription list even if a mailbox

by that name no longer exists.

Note: this requirement is because some server sites may routinely

remove a mailbox with a well-known name (e.g. "system-alerts")

after its contents expire, with the intention of recreating it

when new contents are appropriate.

Example: C: A002 SUBSCRIBE #news.comp.mail.mime

S: A002 OK SUBSCRIBE completed

6.3.7. UNSUBSCRIBE Command

Arguments: mailbox name

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - unsubscribe completed

NO - unsubscribe failure: can't unsubscribe that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The UNSUBSCRIBE command removes the specified mailbox name from

the server's set of "active" or "subscribed" mailboxes as returned

by the LSUB command. This command returns a tagged OK response

only if the unsubscription is successful.

Example: C: A002 UNSUBSCRIBE #news.comp.mail.mime

S: A002 OK UNSUBSCRIBE completed

6.3..8. LIST Command

Arguments: reference name

mailbox name with possible wildcards

Responses: untagged responses: LIST

Result: OK - list completed

NO - list failure: can't list that reference or name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The LIST command returns a subset of names from the complete set

of all names available to the client. Zero or more untagged LIST

replies are returned, containing the name attributes, hierarchy

delimiter, and name; see the description of the LIST reply for

more detail.

The LIST command SHOULD return its data quickly, without undue

delay. For example, it SHOULD NOT go to excess trouble to

calculate \Marked or \Unmarked status or perform other processing;

if each name requires 1 second of processing, then a list of 1200

names would take 20 minutes!

An empty ("" string) reference name argument indicates that the

mailbox name is interpreted as by SELECT. The returned mailbox

names MUST match the supplied mailbox name pattern. A non-empty

reference name argument is the name of a mailbox or a level of

mailbox hierarchy, and indicates a context in which the mailbox

name is interpreted in an implementation-defined manner.

An empty ("" string) mailbox name argument is a special request to

return the hierarchy delimiter and the root name of the name given

in the reference. The value returned as the root MAY be null if

the reference is non-rooted or is null. In all cases, the

hierarchy delimiter is returned. This permits a client to get the

hierarchy delimiter even when no mailboxes by that name currently

exist.

The reference and mailbox name arguments are interpreted, in an

implementation-dependent fashion, into a canonical form that

represents an unambiguous left-to-right hierarchy. The returned

mailbox names will be in the interpreted form.

Any part of the reference argument that is included in the

interpreted form SHOULD prefix the interpreted form. It SHOULD

also be in the same form as the reference name argument. This

rule permits the client to determine if the returned mailbox name

is in the context of the reference argument, or if something about

the mailbox argument overrode the reference argument. Without

this rule, the client would have to have knowledge of the server's

naming semantics including what characters are "breakouts" that

override a naming context.

For example, here are some examples of how references and mailbox

names might be interpreted on a UNIX-based server:

Reference Mailbox Name Interpretation

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

~smith/Mail/ foo.* ~smith/Mail/foo.*

archive/ % archive/%

#news. comp.mail.* #news.comp.mail.*

~smith/Mail/ /usr/doc/foo /usr/doc/foo

archive/ ~fred/Mail/* ~fred/Mail/*

The first three examples demonstrate interpretations in the

context of the reference argument. Note that "~smith/Mail" SHOULD

NOT be transformed into something like "/u2/users/smith/Mail", or

it would be impossible for the client to determine that the

interpretation was in the context of the reference.

The character "*" is a wildcard, and matches zero or more

characters at this position. The character "%" is similar to "*",

but it does not match a hierarchy delimiter. If the "%" wildcard

is the last character of a mailbox name argument, matching levels

of hierarchy are also returned. If these levels of hierarchy are

not also selectable mailboxes, they are returned with the

\Noselect mailbox name attribute (see the description of the LIST

response for more details).

Server implementations are permitted to "hide" otherwise

accessible mailboxes from the wildcard characters, by preventing

certain characters or names from matching a wildcard in certain

situations. For example, a UNIX-based server might restrict the

interpretation of "*" so that an initial "/" character does not

match.

The special name INBOX is included in the output from LIST, if

INBOX is supported by this server for this user and if the

uppercase string "INBOX" matches the interpreted reference and

mailbox name arguments with wildcards as described above. The

criteria for omitting INBOX is whether SELECT INBOX will return

failure; it is not relevant whether the user's real INBOX resides

on this or some other server.

Example: C: A101 LIST "" ""

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" ""

S: A101 OK LIST Completed

C: A102 LIST #news.comp.mail.misc ""

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "." #news.

S: A102 OK LIST Completed

C: A103 LIST /usr/staff/jones ""

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" /

S: A103 OK LIST Completed

C: A202 LIST ~/Mail/ %

S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" ~/Mail/foo

S: * LIST () "/" ~/Mail/meetings

S: A202 OK LIST completed

6.3.9. LSUB Command

Arguments: reference name

mailbox name with possible wildcards

Responses: untagged responses: LSUB

Result: OK - lsub completed

NO - lsub failure: can't list that reference or name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The LSUB command returns a subset of names from the set of names

that the user has declared as being "active" or "subscribed".

Zero or more untagged LSUB replies are returned. The arguments to

LSUB are in the same form as those for LIST.

A server MAY validate the subscribed names to see if they still

exist. If a name does not exist, it SHOULD be flagged with the

\Noselect attribute in the LSUB response. The server MUST NOT

unilaterally remove an existing mailbox name from the subscription

list even if a mailbox by that name no longer exists.

Example: C: A002 LSUB "#news." "comp.mail.*"

S: * LSUB () "." #news.comp.mail.mime

S: * LSUB () "." #news.comp.mail.misc

S: A002 OK LSUB completed

6.3.10. STATUS Command

Arguments: mailbox name

status data item names

Responses: untagged responses: STATUS

Result: OK - status completed

NO - status failure: no status for that name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The STATUS command requests the status of the indicated mailbox.

It does not change the currently selected mailbox, nor does it

affect the state of any messages in the queried mailbox (in

particular, STATUS MUST NOT cause messages to lose the \Recent

flag).

The STATUS command provides an alternative to opening a second

IMAP4rev1 connection and doing an EXAMINE command on a mailbox to

query that mailbox's status without deselecting the current

mailbox in the first IMAP4rev1 connection.

Unlike the LIST command, the STATUS command is not guaranteed to

be fast in its response. In some implementations, the server is

obliged to open the mailbox read-only internally to obtain certain

status information. Also unlike the LIST command, the STATUS

command does not accept wildcards.

The currently defined status data items that can be requested are:

MESSAGES The number of messages in the mailbox.

RECENT The number of messages with the \Recent flag set.

UIDNEXT The next UID value that will be assigned to a new

message in the mailbox. It is guaranteed that this

value will not change unless new messages are added

to the mailbox; and that it will change when new

messages are added even if those new messages are

subsequently expunged.

UIDVALIDITY The unique identifier validity value of the

mailbox.

UNSEEN The number of messages which do not have the \Seen

flag set.

Example: C: A042 STATUS blurdybloop (UIDNEXT MESSAGES)

S: * STATUS blurdybloop (MESSAGES 231 UIDNEXT 44292)

S: A042 OK STATUS completed

6.3.11. APPEND Command

Arguments: mailbox name

OPTIONAL flag parenthesized list

OPTIONAL date/time string

message literal

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - append completed

NO - append error: can't append to that mailbox, error

in flags or date/time or message text

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The APPEND command appends the literal argument as a new message

to the end of the specified destination mailbox. This argument

SHOULD be in the format of an [RFC-822] message. 8-bit characters

are permitted in the message. A server implementation that is

unable to preserve 8-bit data properly MUST be able to reversibly

convert 8-bit APPEND data to 7-bit using a [MIME-IMB] content

transfer encoding.

Note: There MAY be exceptions, e.g. draft messages, in which

required [RFC-822] header lines are omitted in the message literal

argument to APPEND. The full implications of doing so MUST be

understood and carefully weighed.

If a flag parenthesized list is specified, the flags SHOULD be set in

the resulting message; otherwise, the flag list of the resulting

message is set empty by default.

If a date_time is specified, the internal date SHOULD be set in the

resulting message; otherwise, the internal date of the resulting

message is set to the current date and time by default.

If the append is unsuccessful for any reason, the mailbox MUST be

restored to its state before the APPEND attempt; no partial appending

is permitted.

If the destination mailbox does not exist, a server MUST return an

error, and MUST NOT automatically create the mailbox. Unless it is

certain that the destination mailbox can not be created, the server

MUST send the response code "[TRYCREATE]" as the prefix of the text

of the tagged NO response. This gives a hint to the client that it

can attempt a CREATE command and retry the APPEND if the CREATE is

successful.

If the mailbox is currently selected, the normal new mail actions

SHOULD occur. Specifically, the server SHOULD notify the client

immediately via an untagged EXISTS response. If the server does not

do so, the client MAY issue a NOOP command (or failing that, a CHECK

command) after one or more APPEND commands.

Example: C: A003 APPEND saved-messages (\Seen) {310}

C: Date: Mon, 7 Feb 1994 21:52:25 -0800 (PST)

C: From: Fred Foobar <foobar@Blurdybloop.COM>

C: Subject: afternoon meeting

C: To: mooch@owatagu.siam.edu

C: Message-Id: <B27397-0100000@Blurdybloop.COM>

C: MIME-Version: 1.0

C: Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

C:

C: Hello Joe, do you think we can meet at 3:30 tomorrow?

C:

S: A003 OK APPEND completed

Note: the APPEND command is not used for message delivery, because

it does not provide a mechanism to transfer [SMTP] envelope

information.

6.4. Client Commands - Selected State

In selected state, commands that manipulate messages in a mailbox are

permitted.

In addition to the universal commands (CAPABILITY, NOOP, and LOGOUT),

and the authenticated state commands (SELECT, EXAMINE, CREATE,

DELETE, RENAME, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, LIST, LSUB, STATUS, and

APPEND), the following commands are valid in the selected state:

CHECK, CLOSE, EXPUNGE, SEARCH, FETCH, STORE, COPY, and UID.

6.4.1. CHECK Command

Arguments: none

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - check completed

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The CHECK command requests a checkpoint of the currently selected

mailbox. A checkpoint refers to any implementation-dependent

housekeeping associated with the mailbox (e.g. resolving the

server's in-memory state of the mailbox with the state on its

disk) that is not normally executed as part of each command. A

checkpoint MAY take a non-instantaneous amount of real time to

complete. If a server implementation has no such housekeeping

considerations, CHECK is equivalent to NOOP.

There is no guarantee that an EXISTS untagged response will happen

as a result of CHECK. NOOP, not CHECK, SHOULD be used for new

mail polling.

Example: C: FXXZ CHECK

S: FXXZ OK CHECK Completed

6.4.2. CLOSE Command

Arguments: none

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - close completed, now in authenticated state

NO - close failure: no mailbox selected

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The CLOSE command permanently removes from the currently selected

mailbox all messages that have the \Deleted flag set, and returns

to authenticated state from selected state. No untagged EXPUNGE

responses are sent.

No messages are removed, and no error is given, if the mailbox is

selected by an EXAMINE command or is otherwise selected read-only.

Even if a mailbox is selected, a SELECT, EXAMINE, or LOGOUT

command MAY be issued without previously issuing a CLOSE command.

The SELECT, EXAMINE, and LOGOUT commands implicitly close the

currently selected mailbox without doing an expunge. However,

when many messages are deleted, a CLOSE-LOGOUT or CLOSE-SELECT

sequence is considerably faster than an EXPUNGE-LOGOUT or

EXPUNGE-SELECT because no untagged EXPUNGE responses (which the

client would probably ignore) are sent.

Example: C: A341 CLOSE

S: A341 OK CLOSE completed

6.4.3. EXPUNGE Command

Arguments: none

Responses: untagged responses: EXPUNGE

Result: OK - expunge completed

NO - expunge failure: can't expunge (e.g. permission

denied)

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The EXPUNGE command permanently removes from the currently

selected mailbox all messages that have the \Deleted flag set.

Before returning an OK to the client, an untagged EXPUNGE response

is sent for each message that is removed.

Example: C: A202 EXPUNGE

S: * 3 EXPUNGE

S: * 3 EXPUNGE

S: * 5 EXPUNGE

S: * 8 EXPUNGE

S: A202 OK EXPUNGE completed

Note: in this example, messages 3, 4, 7, and 11 had the

\Deleted flag set. See the description of the EXPUNGE

response for further explanation.

6.4.4. SEARCH Command

Arguments: OPTIONAL [CHARSET] specification

searching criteria (one or more)

Responses: REQUIRED untagged response: SEARCH

Result: OK - search completed

NO - search error: can't search that [CHARSET] or

criteria

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The SEARCH command searches the mailbox for messages that match

the given searching criteria. Searching criteria consist of one

or more search keys. The untagged SEARCH response from the server

contains a listing of message sequence numbers corresponding to

those messages that match the searching criteria.

When multiple keys are specified, the result is the intersection

(AND function) of all the messages that match those keys. For

example, the criteria DELETED FROM "SMITH" SINCE 1-Feb-1994 refers

to all deleted messages from Smith that were placed in the mailbox

since February 1, 1994. A search key can also be a parenthesized

list of one or more search keys (e.g. for use with the OR and NOT

keys).

Server implementations MAY exclude [MIME-IMB] body parts with

terminal content media types other than TEXT and MESSAGE from

consideration in SEARCH matching.

The OPTIONAL [CHARSET] specification consists of the word

"CHARSET" followed by a registered [CHARSET]. It indicates the

[CHARSET] of the strings that appear in the search criteria.

[MIME-IMB] content transfer encodings, and [MIME-HDRS] strings in

[RFC-822]/[MIME-IMB] headers, MUST be decoded before comparing

text in a [CHARSET] other than US-ASCII. US-ASCII MUST be

supported; other [CHARSET]s MAY be supported. If the server does

not support the specified [CHARSET], it MUST return a tagged NO

response (not a BAD).

In all search keys that use strings, a message matches the key if

the string is a substring of the field. The matching is case-

insensitive.

The defined search keys are as follows. Refer to the Formal

Syntax section for the precise syntactic definitions of the

arguments.

<message set> Messages with message sequence numbers

corresponding to the specified message sequence

number set

ALL All messages in the mailbox; the default initial

key for ANDing.

ANSWERED Messages with the \Answered flag set.

BCC <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

envelope structure's BCC field.

BEFORE <date> Messages whose internal date is earlier than the

specified date.

BODY <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

body of the message.

CC <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

envelope structure's CC field.

DELETED Messages with the \Deleted flag set.

DRAFT Messages with the \Draft flag set.

FLAGGED Messages with the \Flagged flag set.

FROM <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

envelope structure's FROM field.

HEADER <field-name> <string>

Messages that have a header with the specified

field-name (as defined in [RFC-822]) and that

contains the specified string in the [RFC-822]

field-body.

KEYWORD <flag> Messages with the specified keyword set.

LARGER <n> Messages with an [RFC-822] size larger than the

specified number of octets.

NEW Messages that have the \Recent flag set but not the

\Seen flag. This is functionally equivalent to

"(RECENT UNSEEN)".

NOT <search-key>

Messages that do not match the specified search

key.

OLD Messages that do not have the \Recent flag set.

This is functionally equivalent to "NOT RECENT" (as

opposed to "NOT NEW").

ON <date> Messages whose internal date is within the

specified date.

OR <search-key1> <search-key2>

Messages that match either search key.

RECENT Messages that have the \Recent flag set.

SEEN Messages that have the \Seen flag set.

SENTBEFORE <date>

Messages whose [RFC-822] Date: header is earlier

than the specified date.

SENTON <date> Messages whose [RFC-822] Date: header is within the

specified date.

SENTSINCE <date>

Messages whose [RFC-822] Date: header is within or

later than the specified date.

SINCE <date> Messages whose internal date is within or later

than the specified date.

SMALLER <n> Messages with an [RFC-822] size smaller than the

specified number of octets.

SUBJECT <string>

Messages that contain the specified string in the

envelope structure's SUBJECT field.

TEXT <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

header or body of the message.

TO <string> Messages that contain the specified string in the

envelope structure's TO field.

UID <message set>

Messages with unique identifiers corresponding to

the specified unique identifier set.

UNANSWERED Messages that do not have the \Answered flag set.

UNDELETED Messages that do not have the \Deleted flag set.

UNDRAFT Messages that do not have the \Draft flag set.

UNFLAGGED Messages that do not have the \Flagged flag set.

UNKEYWORD <flag>

Messages that do not have the specified keyword

set.

UNSEEN Messages that do not have the \Seen flag set.

Example: C: A282 SEARCH FLAGGED SINCE 1-Feb-1994 NOT FROM "Smith"

S: * SEARCH 2 84 882

S: A282 OK SEARCH completed

6.4.5. FETCH Command

Arguments: message set

message data item names

Responses: untagged responses: FETCH

Result: OK - fetch completed

NO - fetch error: can't fetch that data

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The FETCH command retrieves data associated with a message in the

mailbox. The data items to be fetched can be either a single atom

or a parenthesized list.

The currently defined data items that can be fetched are:

ALL Macro equivalent to: (FLAGS INTERNALDATE

RFC822.SIZE ENVELOPE)

BODY Non-extensible form of BODYSTRUCTURE.

BODY[<section>]<<partial>>

The text of a particular body section. The section

specification is a set of zero or more part

specifiers delimited by periods. A part specifier

is either a part number or one of the following:

HEADER, HEADER.FIELDS, HEADER.FIELDS.NOT, MIME, and

TEXT. An empty section specification refers to the

entire message, including the header.

Every message has at least one part number.

Non-[MIME-IMB] messages, and non-multipart

[MIME-IMB] messages with no encapsulated message,

only have a part 1.

Multipart messages are assigned consecutive part

numbers, as they occur in the message. If a

particular part is of type message or multipart,

its parts MUST be indicated by a period followed by

the part number within that nested multipart part.

A part of type MESSAGE/RFC822 also has nested part

numbers, referring to parts of the MESSAGE part's

body.

The HEADER, HEADER.FIELDS, HEADER.FIELDS.NOT, and

TEXT part specifiers can be the sole part specifier

or can be prefixed by one or more numeric part

specifiers, provided that the numeric part

specifier refers to a part of type MESSAGE/RFC822.

The MIME part specifier MUST be prefixed by one or

more numeric part specifiers.

The HEADER, HEADER.FIELDS, and HEADER.FIELDS.NOT

part specifiers refer to the [RFC-822] header of

the message or of an encapsulated [MIME-IMT]

MESSAGE/RFC822 message. HEADER.FIELDS and

HEADER.FIELDS.NOT are followed by a list of

field-name (as defined in [RFC-822]) names, and

return a subset of the header. The subset returned

by HEADER.FIELDS contains only those header fields

with a field-name that matches one of the names in

the list; similarly, the subset returned by

HEADER.FIELDS.NOT contains only the header fields

with a non-matching field-name. The field-matching

is case-insensitive but otherwise exact. In all

cases, the delimiting blank line between the header

and the body is always included.

The MIME part specifier refers to the [MIME-IMB]

header for this part.

The TEXT part specifier refers to the text body of

the message, omitting the [RFC-822] header.

Here is an example of a complex message

with some of its part specifiers:

HEADER ([RFC-822] header of the message)

TEXT MULTIPART/MIXED

1 TEXT/PLAIN

2 APPLICATION/OCTET-STREAM

3 MESSAGE/RFC822

3.HEADER ([RFC-822] header of the message)

3.TEXT ([RFC-822] text body of the message)

3.1 TEXT/PLAIN

3.2 APPLICATION/OCTET-STREAM

4 MULTIPART/MIXED

4.1 IMAGE/GIF

4.1.MIME ([MIME-IMB] header for the IMAGE/GIF)

4.2 MESSAGE/RFC822

4.2.HEADER ([RFC-822] header of the message)

4.2.TEXT ([RFC-822] text body of the message)

4.2.1 TEXT/PLAIN

4.2.2 MULTIPART/ALTERNATIVE

4.2.2.1 TEXT/PLAIN

4.2.2.2 TEXT/RICHTEXT

It is possible to fetch a substring of the

designated text. This is done by appending an open

angle bracket ("<"), the octet position of the

first desired octet, a period, the maximum number

of octets desired, and a close angle bracket (">")

to the part specifier. If the starting octet is

beyond the end of the text, an empty string is

returned.

Any partial fetch that attempts to read beyond the

end of the text is truncated as appropriate. A

partial fetch that starts at octet 0 is returned as

a partial fetch, even if this truncation happened.

Note: this means that BODY[]<0.2048> of a

1500-octet message will return BODY[]<0>

with a literal of size 1500, not BODY[].

Note: a substring fetch of a

HEADER.FIELDS or HEADER.FIELDS.NOT part

specifier is calculated after subsetting

the header.

The \Seen flag is implicitly set; if this causes

the flags to change they SHOULD be included as part

of the FETCH responses.

BODY.PEEK[<section>]<<partial>>

An alternate form of BODY[<section>] that does not

implicitly set the \Seen flag.

BODYSTRUCTURE The [MIME-IMB] body structure of the message. This

is computed by the server by parsing the [MIME-IMB]

header fields in the [RFC-822] header and

[MIME-IMB] headers.

ENVELOPE The envelope structure of the message. This is

computed by the server by parsing the [RFC-822]

header into the component parts, defaulting various

fields as necessary.

FAST Macro equivalent to: (FLAGS INTERNALDATE

RFC822.SIZE)

FLAGS The flags that are set for this message.

FULL Macro equivalent to: (FLAGS INTERNALDATE

RFC822.SIZE ENVELOPE BODY)

INTERNALDATE The internal date of the message.

RFC822 Functionally equivalent to BODY[], differing in the

syntax of the resulting untagged FETCH data (RFC822

is returned).

RFC822.HEADER Functionally equivalent to BODY.PEEK[HEADER],

differing in the syntax of the resulting untagged

FETCH data (RFC822.HEADER is returned).

RFC822.SIZE The [RFC-822] size of the message.

RFC822.TEXT Functionally equivalent to BODY[TEXT], differing in

the syntax of the resulting untagged FETCH data

(RFC822.TEXT is returned).

UID The unique identifier for the message.

Example: C: A654 FETCH 2:4 (FLAGS BODY[HEADER.FIELDS (DATE FROM)])

S: * 2 FETCH ....

S: * 3 FETCH ....

S: * 4 FETCH ....

S: A654 OK FETCH completed

6.4.6. STORE Command

Arguments: message set

message data item name

value for message data item

Responses: untagged responses: FETCH

Result: OK - store completed

NO - store error: can't store that data

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The STORE command alters data associated with a message in the

mailbox. Normally, STORE will return the updated value of the

data with an untagged FETCH response. A suffix of ".SILENT" in

the data item name prevents the untagged FETCH, and the server

SHOULD assume that the client has determined the updated value

itself or does not care about the updated value.

Note: regardless of whether or not the ".SILENT" suffix was

used, the server SHOULD send an untagged FETCH response if a

change to a message's flags from an external source is

observed. The intent is that the status of the flags is

determinate without a race condition.

The currently defined data items that can be stored are:

FLAGS <flag list>

Replace the flags for the message with the

argument. The new value of the flags are returned

as if a FETCH of those flags was done.

FLAGS.SILENT <flag list>

Equivalent to FLAGS, but without returning a new

value.

+FLAGS <flag list>

Add the argument to the flags for the message. The

new value of the flags are returned as if a FETCH

of those flags was done.

+FLAGS.SILENT <flag list>

Equivalent to +FLAGS, but without returning a new

value.

-FLAGS <flag list>

Remove the argument from the flags for the message.

The new value of the flags are returned as if a

FETCH of those flags was done.

-FLAGS.SILENT <flag list>

Equivalent to -FLAGS, but without returning a new

value.

Example: C: A003 STORE 2:4 +FLAGS (\Deleted)

S: * 2 FETCH FLAGS (\Deleted \Seen)

S: * 3 FETCH FLAGS (\Deleted)

S: * 4 FETCH FLAGS (\Deleted \Flagged \Seen)

S: A003 OK STORE completed

6.4.7. COPY Command

Arguments: message set

mailbox name

Responses: no specific responses for this command

Result: OK - copy completed

NO - copy error: can't copy those messages or to that

name

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The COPY command copies the specified message(s) to the end of the

specified destination mailbox. The flags and internal date of the

message(s) SHOULD be preserved in the copy.

If the destination mailbox does not exist, a server SHOULD return

an error. It SHOULD NOT automatically create the mailbox. Unless

it is certain that the destination mailbox can not be created, the

server MUST send the response code "[TRYCREATE]" as the prefix of

the text of the tagged NO response. This gives a hint to the

client that it can attempt a CREATE command and retry the COPY if

the CREATE is successful.

If the COPY command is unsuccessful for any reason, server

implementations MUST restore the destination mailbox to its state

before the COPY attempt.

Example: C: A003 COPY 2:4 MEETING

S: A003 OK COPY completed

6.4.8. UID Command

Arguments: command name

command arguments

Responses: untagged responses: FETCH, SEARCH

Result: OK - UID command completed

NO - UID command error

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

The UID command has two forms. In the first form, it takes as its

arguments a COPY, FETCH, or STORE command with arguments

appropriate for the associated command. However, the numbers in

the message set argument are unique identifiers instead of message

sequence numbers.

In the second form, the UID command takes a SEARCH command with

SEARCH command arguments. The interpretation of the arguments is

the same as with SEARCH; however, the numbers returned in a SEARCH

response for a UID SEARCH command are unique identifiers instead

of message sequence numbers. For example, the command UID SEARCH

1:100 UID 443:557 returns the unique identifiers corresponding to

the intersection of the message sequence number set 1:100 and the

UID set 443:557.

Message set ranges are permitted; however, there is no guarantee

that unique identifiers be contiguous. A non-existent unique

identifier within a message set range is ignored without any error

message generated.

The number after the "*" in an untagged FETCH response is always a

message sequence number, not a unique identifier, even for a UID

command response. However, server implementations MUST implicitly

include the UID message data item as part of any FETCH response

caused by a UID command, regardless of whether a UID was specified

as a message data item to the FETCH.

Example: C: A999 UID FETCH 4827313:4828442 FLAGS

S: * 23 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) UID 4827313)

S: * 24 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) UID 4827943)

S: * 25 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) UID 4828442)

S: A999 UID FETCH completed

6.5. Client Commands - Experimental/Expansion

6.5.1. X<atom> Command

Arguments: implementation defined

Responses: implementation defined

Result: OK - command completed

NO - failure

BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid

Any command prefixed with an X is an experimental command.

Commands which are not part of this specification, a standard or

standards-track revision of this specification, or an IESG-

approved experimental protocol, MUST use the X prefix.

Any added untagged responses issued by an experimental command

MUST also be prefixed with an X. Server implementations MUST NOT

send any such untagged responses, unless the client requested it

by issuing the associated experimental command.

Example: C: a441 CAPABILITY

S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 AUTH=KERBEROS_V4 XPIG-LATIN

S: a441 OK CAPABILITY completed

C: A442 XPIG-LATIN

S: * XPIG-LATIN ow-nay eaking-spay ig-pay atin-lay

S: A442 OK XPIG-LATIN ompleted-cay

7. Server Responses

Server responses are in three forms: status responses, server data,

and command continuation request. The information contained in a

server response, identified by "Contents:" in the response

descriptions below, is described by function, not by syntax. The

precise syntax of server responses is described in the Formal Syntax

section.

The client MUST be prepared to accept any response at all times.

Status responses can be tagged or untagged. Tagged status responses

indicate the completion result (OK, NO, or BAD status) of a client

command, and have a tag matching the command.

Some status responses, and all server data, are untagged. An

untagged response is indicated by the token "*" instead of a tag.

Untagged status responses indicate server greeting, or server status

that does not indicate the completion of a command (for example, an

impending system shutdown alert). For historical reasons, untagged

server data responses are also called "unsolicited data", although

strictly speaking only unilateral server data is truly "unsolicited".

Certain server data MUST be recorded by the client when it is

received; this is noted in the description of that data. Such data

conveys critical information which affects the interpretation of all

subsequent commands and responses (e.g. updates reflecting the

creation or destruction of messages).

Other server data SHOULD be recorded for later reference; if the

client does not need to record the data, or if recording the data has

no obvious purpose (e.g. a SEARCH response when no SEARCH command is

in progress), the data SHOULD be ignored.

An example of unilateral untagged server data occurs when the IMAP

connection is in selected state. In selected state, the server

checks the mailbox for new messages as part of command execution.

Normally, this is part of the execution of every command; hence, a

NOOP command suffices to check for new messages. If new messages are

found, the server sends untagged EXISTS and RECENT responses

reflecting the new size of the mailbox. Server implementations that

offer multiple simultaneous access to the same mailbox SHOULD also

send appropriate unilateral untagged FETCH and EXPUNGE responses if

another agent changes the state of any message flags or expunges any

messages.

Command continuation request responses use the token "+" instead of a

tag. These responses are sent by the server to indicate acceptance

of an incomplete client command and readiness for the remainder of

the command.

7.1. Server Responses - Status Responses

Status responses are OK, NO, BAD, PREAUTH and BYE. OK, NO, and BAD

may be tagged or untagged. PREAUTH and BYE are always untagged.

Status responses MAY include an OPTIONAL "response code". A response

code consists of data inside square brackets in the form of an atom,

possibly followed by a space and arguments. The response code

contains additional information or status codes for client software

beyond the OK/NO/BAD condition, and are defined when there is a

specific action that a client can take based upon the additional

information.

The currently defined response codes are:

ALERT The human-readable text contains a special alert

that MUST be presented to the user in a fashion

that calls the user's attention to the message.

NEWNAME Followed by a mailbox name and a new mailbox name.

A SELECT or EXAMINE is failing because the target

mailbox name no longer exists because it was

renamed to the new mailbox name. This is a hint to

the client that the operation can succeed if the

SELECT or EXAMINE is reissued with the new mailbox

name.

PARSE The human-readable text represents an error in

parsing the [RFC-822] header or [MIME-IMB] headers

of a message in the mailbox.

PERMANENTFLAGS Followed by a parenthesized list of flags,

indicates which of the known flags that the client

can change permanently. Any flags that are in the

FLAGS untagged response, but not the PERMANENTFLAGS

list, can not be set permanently. If the client

attempts to STORE a flag that is not in the

PERMANENTFLAGS list, the server will either reject

it with a NO reply or store the state for the

remainder of the current session only. The

PERMANENTFLAGS list can also include the special

flag \*, which indicates that it is possible to

create new keywords by attempting to store those

flags in the mailbox.

READ-ONLY The mailbox is selected read-only, or its access

while selected has changed from read-write to

read-only.

READ-WRITE The mailbox is selected read-write, or its access

while selected has changed from read-only to

read-write.

TRYCREATE An APPEND or COPY attempt is failing because the

target mailbox does not exist (as opposed to some

other reason). This is a hint to the client that

the operation can succeed if the mailbox is first

created by the CREATE command.

UIDVALIDITY Followed by a decimal number, indicates the unique

identifier validity value.

UNSEEN Followed by a decimal number, indicates the number

of the first message without the \Seen flag set.

Additional response codes defined by particular client or server

implementations SHOULD be prefixed with an "X" until they are

added to a revision of this protocol. Client implementations

SHOULD ignore response codes that they do not recognize.

7.1.1. OK Response

Contents: OPTIONAL response code

human-readable text

The OK response indicates an information message from the server.

When tagged, it indicates successful completion of the associated

command. The human-readable text MAY be presented to the user as

an information message. The untagged form indicates an

information-only message; the nature of the information MAY be

indicated by a response code.

The untagged form is also used as one of three possible greetings

at connection startup. It indicates that the connection is not

yet authenticated and that a LOGIN command is needed.

Example: S: * OK IMAP4rev1 server ready

C: A001 LOGIN fred blurdybloop

S: * OK [ALERT] System shutdown in 10 minutes

S: A001 OK LOGIN Completed

7.1.2. NO Response

Contents: OPTIONAL response code

human-readable text

The NO response indicates an operational error message from the

server. When tagged, it indicates unsuccessful completion of the

associated command. The untagged form indicates a warning; the

command can still complete successfully. The human-readable text

describes the condition.

Example: C: A222 COPY 1:2 owatagusiam

S: * NO Disk is 98% full, please delete unnecessary data

S: A222 OK COPY completed

C: A223 COPY 3:200 blurdybloop

S: * NO Disk is 98% full, please delete unnecessary data

S: * NO Disk is 99% full, please delete unnecessary data

S: A223 NO COPY failed: disk is full

7.1.3. BAD Response

Contents: OPTIONAL response code

human-readable text

The BAD response indicates an error message from the server. When

tagged, it reports a protocol-level error in the client's command;

the tag indicates the command that caused the error. The untagged

form indicates a protocol-level error for which the associated

command can not be determined; it can also indicate an internal

server failure. The human-readable text describes the condition.

Example: C: ...very long command line...

S: * BAD Command line too long

C: ...empty line...

S: * BAD Empty command line

C: A443 EXPUNGE

S: * BAD Disk crash, attempting salvage to a new disk!

S: * OK Salvage successful, no data lost

S: A443 OK Expunge completed

7.1.4. PREAUTH Response

Contents: OPTIONAL response code

human-readable text

The PREAUTH response is always untagged, and is one of three

possible greetings at connection startup. It indicates that the

connection has already been authenticated by external means and

thus no LOGIN command is needed.

Example: S: * PREAUTH IMAP4rev1 server logged in as Smith

7.1.5. BYE Response

Contents: OPTIONAL response code

human-readable text

The BYE response is always untagged, and indicates that the server

is about to close the connection. The human-readable text MAY be

displayed to the user in a status report by the client. The BYE

response is sent under one of four conditions:

1) as part of a normal logout sequence. The server will close

the connection after sending the tagged OK response to the

LOGOUT command.

2) as a panic shutdown announcement. The server closes the

connection immediately.

3) as an announcement of an inactivity autologout. The server

closes the connection immediately.

4) as one of three possible greetings at connection startup,

indicating that the server is not willing to accept a

connection from this client. The server closes the

connection immediately.

The difference between a BYE that occurs as part of a normal

LOGOUT sequence (the first case) and a BYE that occurs because of

a failure (the other three cases) is that the connection closes

immediately in the failure case.

Example: S: * BYE Autologout; idle for too long

7.2. Server Responses - Server and Mailbox Status

These responses are always untagged. This is how server and mailbox

status data are transmitted from the server to the client. Many of

these responses typically result from a command with the same name.

7.2.1. CAPABILITY Response

Contents: capability listing

The CAPABILITY response occurs as a result of a CAPABILITY

command. The capability listing contains a space-separated

listing of capability names that the server supports. The

capability listing MUST include the atom "IMAP4rev1".

A capability name which begins with "AUTH=" indicates that the

server supports that particular authentication mechanism.

Other capability names indicate that the server supports an

extension, revision, or amendment to the IMAP4rev1 protocol.

Server responses MUST conform to this document until the client

issues a command that uses the associated capability.

Capability names MUST either begin with "X" or be standard or

standards-track IMAP4rev1 extensions, revisions, or amendments

registered with IANA. A server MUST NOT offer unregistered or

non-standard capability names, unless such names are prefixed with

an "X".

Client implementations SHOULD NOT require any capability name

other than "IMAP4rev1", and MUST ignore any unknown capability

names.

Example: S: * CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 AUTH=KERBEROS_V4 XPIG-LATIN

7.2.2. LIST Response

Contents: name attributes

hierarchy delimiter

name

The LIST response occurs as a result of a LIST command. It

returns a single name that matches the LIST specification. There

can be multiple LIST responses for a single LIST command.

Four name attributes are defined:

\Noinferiors It is not possible for any child levels of

hierarchy to exist under this name; no child levels

exist now and none can be created in the future.

\Noselect It is not possible to use this name as a selectable

mailbox.

\Marked The mailbox has been marked "interesting" by the

server; the mailbox probably contains messages that

have been added since the last time the mailbox was

selected.

\Unmarked The mailbox does not contain any additional

messages since the last time the mailbox was

selected.

If it is not feasible for the server to determine whether the

mailbox is "interesting" or not, or if the name is a \Noselect

name, the server SHOULD NOT send either \Marked or \Unmarked.

The hierarchy delimiter is a character used to delimit levels of

hierarchy in a mailbox name. A client can use it to create child

mailboxes, and to search higher or lower levels of naming

hierarchy. All children of a top-level hierarchy node MUST use

the same separator character. A NIL hierarchy delimiter means

that no hierarchy exists; the name is a "flat" name.

The name represents an unambiguous left-to-right hierarchy, and

MUST be valid for use as a reference in LIST and LSUB commands.

Unless \Noselect is indicated, the name MUST also be valid as an

argument for commands, such as SELECT, that accept mailbox

names.

Example: S: * LIST (\Noselect) "/" ~/Mail/foo

7.2.3. LSUB Response

Contents: name attributes

hierarchy delimiter

name

The LSUB response occurs as a result of an LSUB command. It

returns a single name that matches the LSUB specification. There

can be multiple LSUB responses for a single LSUB command. The

data is identical in format to the LIST response.

Example: S: * LSUB () "." #news.comp.mail.misc

7.2.4 STATUS Response

Contents: name

status parenthesized list

The STATUS response occurs as a result of an STATUS command. It

returns the mailbox name that matches the STATUS specification and

the requested mailbox status information.

Example: S: * STATUS blurdybloop (MESSAGES 231 UIDNEXT 44292)

7.2.5. SEARCH Response

Contents: zero or more numbers

The SEARCH response occurs as a result of a SEARCH or UID SEARCH

command. The number(s) refer to those messages that match the

search criteria. For SEARCH, these are message sequence numbers;

for UID SEARCH, these are unique identifiers. Each number is

delimited by a space.

Example: S: * SEARCH 2 3 6

7.2.6. FLAGS Response

Contents: flag parenthesized list

The FLAGS response occurs as a result of a SELECT or EXAMINE

command. The flag parenthesized list identifies the flags (at a

minimum, the system-defined flags) that are applicable for this

mailbox. Flags other than the system flags can also exist,

depending on server implementation.

The update from the FLAGS response MUST be recorded by the client.

Example: S: * FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Seen \Draft)

7.3. Server Responses - Mailbox Size

These responses are always untagged. This is how changes in the size

of the mailbox are trasnmitted from the server to the client.

Immediately following the "*" token is a number that represents a

message count.

7.3.1. EXISTS Response

Contents: none

The EXISTS response reports the number of messages in the mailbox.

This response occurs as a result of a SELECT or EXAMINE command,

and if the size of the mailbox changes (e.g. new mail).

The update from the EXISTS response MUST be recorded by the

client.

Example: S: * 23 EXISTS

7.3.2. RECENT Response

Contents: none

The RECENT response reports the number of messages with the

\Recent flag set. This response occurs as a result of a SELECT or

EXAMINE command, and if the size of the mailbox changes (e.g. new

mail).

Note: It is not guaranteed that the message sequence numbers of

recent messages will be a contiguous range of the highest n

messages in the mailbox (where n is the value reported by the

RECENT response). Examples of situations in which this is not

the case are: multiple clients having the same mailbox open

(the first session to be notified will see it as recent, others

will probably see it as non-recent), and when the mailbox is

re-ordered by a non-IMAP agent.

The only reliable way to identify recent messages is to look at

message flags to see which have the \Recent flag set, or to do

a SEARCH RECENT.

The update from the RECENT response MUST be recorded by the

client.

Example: S: * 5 RECENT

7.4. Server Responses - Message Status

These responses are always untagged. This is how message data are

transmitted from the server to the client, often as a result of a

command with the same name. Immediately following the "*" token is a

number that represents a message sequence number.

7.4.1. EXPUNGE Response

Contents: none

The EXPUNGE response reports that the specified message sequence

number has been permanently removed from the mailbox. The message

sequence number for each successive message in the mailbox is

immediately decremented by 1, and this decrement is reflected in

message sequence numbers in subsequent responses (including other

untagged EXPUNGE responses).

As a result of the immediate decrement rule, message sequence

numbers that appear in a set of successive EXPUNGE responses

depend upon whether the messages are removed starting from lower

numbers to higher numbers, or from higher numbers to lower

numbers. For example, if the last 5 messages in a 9-message

mailbox are expunged; a "lower to higher" server will send five

untagged EXPUNGE responses for message sequence number 5, whereas

a "higher to lower server" will send successive untagged EXPUNGE

responses for message sequence numbers 9, 8, 7, 6, and 5.

An EXPUNGE response MUST NOT be sent when no command is in

progress; nor while responding to a FETCH, STORE, or SEARCH

command. This rule is necessary to prevent a loss of

synchronization of message sequence numbers between client and

server.

The update from the EXPUNGE response MUST be recorded by the

client.

Example: S: * 44 EXPUNGE

7.4.2. FETCH Response

Contents: message data

The FETCH response returns data about a message to the client.

The data are pairs of data item names and their values in

parentheses. This response occurs as the result of a FETCH or

STORE command, as well as by unilateral server decision (e.g. flag

updates).

The current data items are:

BODY A form of BODYSTRUCTURE without extension data.

BODY[<section>]<<origin_octet>>

A string expressing the body contents of the

specified section. The string SHOULD be

interpreted by the client according to the content

transfer encoding, body type, and subtype.

If the origin octet is specified, this string is a

substring of the entire body contents, starting at

that origin octet. This means that BODY[]<0> MAY

be truncated, but BODY[] is NEVER truncated.

8-bit textual data is permitted if a [CHARSET]

identifier is part of the body parameter

parenthesized list for this section. Note that

headers (part specifiers HEADER or MIME, or the

header portion of a MESSAGE/RFC822 part), MUST be

7-bit; 8-bit characters are not permitted in

headers. Note also that the blank line at the end

of the header is always included in header data.

Non-textual data such as binary data MUST be

transfer encoded into a textual form such as BASE64

prior to being sent to the client. To derive the

original binary data, the client MUST decode the

transfer encoded string.

BODYSTRUCTURE A parenthesized list that describes the [MIME-IMB]

body structure of a message. This is computed by

the server by parsing the [MIME-IMB] header fields,

defaulting various fields as necessary.

For example, a simple text message of 48 lines and

2279 octets can have a body structure of: ("TEXT"

"PLAIN" ("CHARSET" "US-ASCII") NIL NIL "7BIT" 2279

48)

Multiple parts are indicated by parenthesis

nesting. Instead of a body type as the first

element of the parenthesized list there is a nested

body. The second element of the parenthesized list

is the multipart subtype (mixed, digest, parallel,

alternative, etc.).

For example, a two part message consisting of a

text and a BASE645-encoded text attachment can have

a body structure of: (("TEXT" "PLAIN" ("CHARSET"

"US-ASCII") NIL NIL "7BIT" 1152 23)("TEXT" "PLAIN"

("CHARSET" "US-ASCII" "NAME" "cc.diff")

"<960723163407.20117h@cac.washington.edu>"

"Compiler diff" "BASE64" 4554 73) "MIXED"))

Extension data follows the multipart subtype.

Extension data is never returned with the BODY

fetch, but can be returned with a BODYSTRUCTURE

fetch. Extension data, if present, MUST be in the

defined order.

The extension data of a multipart body part are in

the following order:

body parameter parenthesized list

A parenthesized list of attribute/value pairs

[e.g. ("foo" "bar" "baz" "rag") where "bar" is

the value of "foo" and "rag" is the value of

"baz"] as defined in [MIME-IMB].

body disposition

A parenthesized list, consisting of a

disposition type string followed by a

parenthesized list of disposition

attribute/value pairs. The disposition type and

attribute names will be defined in a future

standards-track revision to [DISPOSITION].

body language

A string or parenthesized list giving the body

language value as defined in [LANGUAGE-TAGS].

Any following extension data are not yet defined in

this version of the protocol. Such extension data

can consist of zero or more NILs, strings, numbers,

or potentially nested parenthesized lists of such

data. Client implementations that do a

BODYSTRUCTURE fetch MUST be prepared to accept such

extension data. Server implementations MUST NOT

send such extension data until it has been defined

by a revision of this protocol.

The basic fields of a non-multipart body part are

in the following order:

body type

A string giving the content media type name as

defined in [MIME-IMB].

body subtype

A string giving the content subtype name as

defined in [MIME-IMB].

body parameter parenthesized list

A parenthesized list of attribute/value pairs

[e.g. ("foo" "bar" "baz" "rag") where "bar" is

the value of "foo" and "rag" is the value of

"baz"] as defined in [MIME-IMB].

body id

A string giving the content id as defined in

[MIME-IMB].

body description

A string giving the content description as

defined in [MIME-IMB].

body encoding

A string giving the content transfer encoding as

defined in [MIME-IMB].

body size

A number giving the size of the body in octets.

Note that this size is the size in its transfer

encoding and not the resulting size after any

decoding.

A body type of type MESSAGE and subtype RFC822

contains, immediately after the basic fields, the

envelope structure, body structure, and size in

text lines of the encapsulated message.

A body type of type TEXT contains, immediately

after the basic fields, the size of the body in

text lines. Note that this size is the size in its

content transfer encoding and not the resulting

size after any decoding.

Extension data follows the basic fields and the

type-specific fields listed above. Extension data

is never returned with the BODY fetch, but can be

returned with a BODYSTRUCTURE fetch. Extension

data, if present, MUST be in the defined order.

The extension data of a non-multipart body part are

in the following order:

body MD5

A string giving the body MD5 value as defined in

[MD5].

body disposition

A parenthesized list with the same content and

function as the body disposition for a multipart

body part.

body language

A string or parenthesized list giving the body

language value as defined in [LANGUAGE-TAGS].

Any following extension data are not yet defined in

this version of the protocol, and would be as

described above under multipart extension data.

ENVELOPE A parenthesized list that describes the envelope

structure of a message. This is computed by the

server by parsing the [RFC-822] header into the

component parts, defaulting various fields as

necessary.

The fields of the envelope structure are in the

following order: date, subject, from, sender,

reply-to, to, cc, bcc, in-reply-to, and message-id.

The date, subject, in-reply-to, and message-id

fields are strings. The from, sender, reply-to,

to, cc, and bcc fields are parenthesized lists of

address structures.

An address structure is a parenthesized list that

describes an electronic mail address. The fields

of an address structure are in the following order:

personal name, [SMTP] at-domain-list (source

route), mailbox name, and host name.

[RFC-822] group syntax is indicated by a special

form of address structure in which the host name

field is NIL. If the mailbox name field is also

NIL, this is an end of group marker (semi-colon in

RFC822 syntax). If the mailbox name field is

non-NIL, this is a start of group marker, and the

mailbox name field holds the group name phrase.

Any field of an envelope or address structure that

is not applicable is presented as NIL. Note that

the server MUST default the reply-to and sender

fields from the from field; a client is not

expected to know to do this.

FLAGS A parenthesized list of flags that are set for this

message.

INTERNALDATE A string representing the internal date of the

message.

RFC822 Equivalent to BODY[].

RFC822.HEADER Equivalent to BODY.PEEK[HEADER].

RFC822.SIZE A number expressing the [RFC-822] size of the

message.

RFC822.TEXT Equivalent to BODY[TEXT].

UID A number expressing the unique identifier of the

message.

Example: S: * 23 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) RFC822.SIZE 44827)

7.5. Server Responses - Command Continuation Request

The command continuation request response is indicated by a "+" token

instead of a tag. This form of response indicates that the server is

ready to accept the continuation of a command from the client. The

remainder of this response is a line of text.

This response is used in the AUTHORIZATION command to transmit server

data to the client, and request additional client data. This

response is also used if an argument to any command is a literal.

The client is not permitted to send the octets of the literal unless

the server indicates that it expects it. This permits the server to

process commands and reject errors on a line-by-line basis. The

remainder of the command, including the CRLF that terminates a

command, follows the octets of the literal. If there are any

additional command arguments the literal octets are followed by a

space and those arguments.

Example: C: A001 LOGIN {11}

S: + Ready for additional command text

C: FRED FOOBAR {7}

S: + Ready for additional command text

C: fat man

S: A001 OK LOGIN completed

C: A044 BLURDYBLOOP {102856}

S: A044 BAD No such command as "BLURDYBLOOP"

8. Sample IMAP4rev1 connection

The following is a transcript of an IMAP4rev1 connection. A long

line in this sample is broken for editorial clarity.

S: * OK IMAP4rev1 Service Ready

C: a001 login mrc secret

S: a001 OK LOGIN completed

C: a002 select inbox

S: * 18 EXISTS

S: * FLAGS (\Answered \Flagged \Deleted \Seen \Draft)

S: * 2 RECENT

S: * OK [UNSEEN 17] Message 17 is the first unseen message

S: * OK [UIDVALIDITY 3857529045] UIDs valid

S: a002 OK [READ-WRITE] SELECT completed

C: a003 fetch 12 full

S: * 12 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen) INTERNALDATE "17-Jul-1996 02:44:25 -0700"

RFC822.SIZE 4286 ENVELOPE ("Wed, 17 Jul 1996 02:23:25 -0700 (PDT)"

"IMAP4rev1 WG mtg summary and minutes"

(("Terry Gray" NIL "gray" "cac.washington.edu"))

(("Terry Gray" NIL "gray" "cac.washington.edu"))

(("Terry Gray" NIL "gray" "cac.washington.edu"))

((NIL NIL "imap" "cac.washington.edu"))

((NIL NIL "minutes" "CNRI.Reston.VA.US")

("John Klensin" NIL "KLENSIN" "INFOODS.MIT.EDU")) NIL NIL

"<B27397-0100000@cac.washington.edu>")

BODY ("TEXT" "PLAIN" ("CHARSET" "US-ASCII") NIL NIL "7BIT" 3028 92))

S: a003 OK FETCH completed

C: a004 fetch 12 body[header]

S: * 12 FETCH (BODY[HEADER] {350}

S: Date: Wed, 17 Jul 1996 02:23:25 -0700 (PDT)

S: From: Terry Gray <gray@cac.washington.edu>

S: Subject: IMAP4rev1 WG mtg summary and minutes

S: To: imap@cac.washington.edu

S: cc: minutes@CNRI.Reston.VA.US, John Klensin <KLENSIN@INFOODS.MIT.EDU>

S: Message-Id: <B27397-0100000@cac.washington.edu>

S: MIME-Version: 1.0

S: Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

S:

S: )

S: a004 OK FETCH completed

C: a005 store 12 +flags \deleted

S: * 12 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen \Deleted))

S: a005 OK +FLAGS completed

C: a006 logout

S: * BYE IMAP4rev1 server terminating connection

S: a006 OK LOGOUT completed

9. Formal Syntax

The following syntax specification uses the augmented Backus-Naur

Form (BNF) notation as specified in [RFC-822] with one exception; the

delimiter used with the "#" construct is a single space (SPACE) and

not one or more commas.

In the case of alternative or optional rules in which a later rule

overlaps an earlier rule, the rule which is listed earlier MUST take

priority. For example, "\Seen" when parsed as a flag is the \Seen

flag name and not a flag_extension, even though "\Seen" could be

parsed as a flag_extension. Some, but not all, instances of this

rule are noted below.

Except as noted otherwise, all alphabetic characters are case-

insensitive. The use of upper or lower case characters to define

token strings is for editorial clarity only. Implementations MUST

accept these strings in a case-insensitive fashion.

address ::= "(" addr_name SPACE addr_adl SPACE addr_mailbox

SPACE addr_host ")"

addr_adl ::= nstring

;; Holds route from [RFC-822] route-addr if

;; non-NIL

addr_host ::= nstring

;; NIL indicates [RFC-822] group syntax.

;; Otherwise, holds [RFC-822] domain name

addr_mailbox ::= nstring

;; NIL indicates end of [RFC-822] group; if

;; non-NIL and addr_host is NIL, holds

;; [RFC-822] group name.

;; Otherwise, holds [RFC-822] local-part

addr_name ::= nstring

;; Holds phrase from [RFC-822] mailbox if

;; non-NIL

alpha ::= "A" / "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F" / "G" / "H" /

"I" / "J" / "K" / "L" / "M" / "N" / "O" / "P" /

"Q" / "R" / "S" / "T" / "U" / "V" / "W" / "X" /

"Y" / "Z" /

"a" / "b" / "c" / "d" / "e" / "f" / "g" / "h" /

"i" / "j" / "k" / "l" / "m" / "n" / "o" / "p" /

"q" / "r" / "s" / "t" / "u" / "v" / "w" / "x" /

"y" / "z"

;; Case-sensitive

append ::= "APPEND" SPACE mailbox [SPACE flag_list]

[SPACE date_time] SPACE literal

astring ::= atom / string

atom ::= 1*ATOM_CHAR

ATOM_CHAR ::= <any CHAR except atom_specials>

atom_specials ::= "(" / ")" / "{" / SPACE / CTL / list_wildcards /

quoted_specials

authenticate ::= "AUTHENTICATE" SPACE auth_type *(CRLF base64)

auth_type ::= atom

;; Defined by [IMAP-AUTH]

base64 ::= *(4base64_char) [base64_terminal]

base64_char ::= alpha / digit / "+" / "/"

base64_terminal ::= (2base64_char "==") / (3base64_char "=")

body ::= "(" body_type_1part / body_type_mpart ")"

body_extension ::= nstring / number / "(" 1#body_extension ")"

;; Future expansion. Client implementations

;; MUST accept body_extension fields. Server

;; implementations MUST NOT generate

;; body_extension fields except as defined by

;; future standard or standards-track

;; revisions of this specification.

body_ext_1part ::= body_fld_md5 [SPACE body_fld_dsp

[SPACE body_fld_lang

[SPACE 1#body_extension]]]

;; MUST NOT be returned on non-extensible

;; "BODY" fetch

body_ext_mpart ::= body_fld_param

[SPACE body_fld_dsp SPACE body_fld_lang

[SPACE 1#body_extension]]

;; MUST NOT be returned on non-extensible

;; "BODY" fetch

body_fields ::= body_fld_param SPACE body_fld_id SPACE

body_fld_desc SPACE body_fld_enc SPACE

body_fld_octets

body_fld_desc ::= nstring

body_fld_dsp ::= "(" string SPACE body_fld_param ")" / nil

body_fld_enc ::= (<"> ("7BIT" / "8BIT" / "BINARY" / "BASE64"/

"QUOTED-PRINTABLE") <">) / string

body_fld_id ::= nstring

body_fld_lang ::= nstring / "(" 1#string ")"

body_fld_lines ::= number

body_fld_md5 ::= nstring

body_fld_octets ::= number

body_fld_param ::= "(" 1#(string SPACE string) ")" / nil

body_type_1part ::= (body_type_basic / body_type_msg / body_type_text)

[SPACE body_ext_1part]

body_type_basic ::= media_basic SPACE body_fields

;; MESSAGE subtype MUST NOT be "RFC822"

body_type_mpart ::= 1*body SPACE media_subtype

[SPACE body_ext_mpart]

body_type_msg ::= media_message SPACE body_fields SPACE envelope

SPACE body SPACE body_fld_lines

body_type_text ::= media_text SPACE body_fields SPACE body_fld_lines

capability ::= "AUTH=" auth_type / atom

;; New capabilities MUST begin with "X" or be

;; registered with IANA as standard or

;; standards-track

capability_data ::= "CAPABILITY" SPACE [1#capability SPACE] "IMAP4rev1"

[SPACE 1#capability]

;; IMAP4rev1 servers which offer RFC1730

;; compatibility MUST list "IMAP4" as the first

;; capability.

CHAR ::= <any 7-bit US-ASCII character except NUL,

0x01 - 0x7f>

CHAR8 ::= <any 8-bit octet except NUL, 0x01 - 0xff>

command ::= tag SPACE (command_any / command_auth /

command_nonauth / command_select) CRLF

;; Modal based on state

command_any ::= "CAPABILITY" / "LOGOUT" / "NOOP" / x_command

;; Valid in all states

command_auth ::= append / create / delete / examine / list / lsub /

rename / select / status / subscribe / unsubscribe

;; Valid only in Authenticated or Selected state

command_nonauth ::= login / authenticate

;; Valid only when in Non-Authenticated state

command_select ::= "CHECK" / "CLOSE" / "EXPUNGE" /

copy / fetch / store / uid / search

;; Valid only when in Selected state

continue_req ::= "+" SPACE (resp_text / base64)

copy ::= "COPY" SPACE set SPACE mailbox

CR ::= <ASCII CR, carriage return, 0x0D>

create ::= "CREATE" SPACE mailbox

;; Use of INBOX gives a NO error

CRLF ::= CR LF

CTL ::= <any ASCII control character and DEL,

0x00 - 0x1f, 0x7f>

date ::= date_text / <"> date_text <">

date_day ::= 1*2digit

;; Day of month

date_day_fixed ::= (SPACE digit) / 2digit

;; Fixed-format version of date_day

date_month ::= "Jan" / "Feb" / "Mar" / "Apr" / "May" / "Jun" /

"Jul" / "Aug" / "Sep" / "Oct" / "Nov" / "Dec"

date_text ::= date_day "-" date_month "-" date_year

date_year ::= 4digit

date_time ::= <"> date_day_fixed "-" date_month "-" date_year

SPACE time SPACE zone <">

delete ::= "DELETE" SPACE mailbox

;; Use of INBOX gives a NO error

digit ::= "0" / digit_nz

digit_nz ::= "1" / "2" / "3" / "4" / "5" / "6" / "7" / "8" /

"9"

envelope ::= "(" env_date SPACE env_subject SPACE env_from

SPACE env_sender SPACE env_reply_to SPACE env_to

SPACE env_cc SPACE env_bcc SPACE env_in_reply_to

SPACE env_message_id ")"

env_bcc ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

env_cc ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

env_date ::= nstring

env_from ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

env_in_reply_to ::= nstring

env_message_id ::= nstring

env_reply_to ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

env_sender ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

env_subject ::= nstring

env_to ::= "(" 1*address ")" / nil

examine ::= "EXAMINE" SPACE mailbox

fetch ::= "FETCH" SPACE set SPACE ("ALL" / "FULL" /

"FAST" / fetch_att / "(" 1#fetch_att ")")

fetch_att ::= "ENVELOPE" / "FLAGS" / "INTERNALDATE" /

"RFC822" [".HEADER" / ".SIZE" / ".TEXT"] /

"BODY" ["STRUCTURE"] / "UID" /

"BODY" [".PEEK"] section

["<" number "." nz_number ">"]

flag ::= "\Answered" / "\Flagged" / "\Deleted" /

"\Seen" / "\Draft" / flag_keyword / flag_extension

flag_extension ::= "\" atom

;; Future expansion. Client implementations

;; MUST accept flag_extension flags. Server

;; implementations MUST NOT generate

;; flag_extension flags except as defined by

;; future standard or standards-track

;; revisions of this specification.

flag_keyword ::= atom

flag_list ::= "(" #flag ")"

greeting ::= "*" SPACE (resp_cond_auth / resp_cond_bye) CRLF

header_fld_name ::= astring

header_list ::= "(" 1#header_fld_name ")"

LF ::= <ASCII LF, line feed, 0x0A>

list ::= "LIST" SPACE mailbox SPACE list_mailbox

list_mailbox ::= 1*(ATOM_CHAR / list_wildcards) / string

list_wildcards ::= "%" / "*"

literal ::= "{" number "}" CRLF *CHAR8

;; Number represents the number of CHAR8 octets

login ::= "LOGIN" SPACE userid SPACE password

lsub ::= "LSUB" SPACE mailbox SPACE list_mailbox

mailbox ::= "INBOX" / astring

;; INBOX is case-insensitive. All case variants of

;; INBOX (e.g. "iNbOx") MUST be interpreted as INBOX

;; not as an astring. Refer to section 5.1 for

;; further semantic details of mailbox names.

mailbox_data ::= "FLAGS" SPACE flag_list /

"LIST" SPACE mailbox_list /

"LSUB" SPACE mailbox_list /

"MAILBOX" SPACE text /

"SEARCH" [SPACE 1#nz_number] /

"STATUS" SPACE mailbox SPACE

"(" #<status_att number ")" /

number SPACE "EXISTS" / number SPACE "RECENT"

mailbox_list ::= "(" #("\Marked" / "\Noinferiors" /

"\Noselect" / "\Unmarked" / flag_extension) ")"

SPACE (<"> QUOTED_CHAR <"> / nil) SPACE mailbox

media_basic ::= (<"> ("APPLICATION" / "AUDIO" / "IMAGE" /

"MESSAGE" / "VIDEO") <">) / string)

SPACE media_subtype

;; Defined in [MIME-IMT]

media_message ::= <"> "MESSAGE" <"> SPACE <"> "RFC822" <">

;; Defined in [MIME-IMT]

media_subtype ::= string

;; Defined in [MIME-IMT]

media_text ::= <"> "TEXT" <"> SPACE media_subtype

;; Defined in [MIME-IMT]

message_data ::= nz_number SPACE ("EXPUNGE" /

("FETCH" SPACE msg_att))

msg_att ::= "(" 1#("ENVELOPE" SPACE envelope /

"FLAGS" SPACE "(" #(flag / "\Recent") ")" /

"INTERNALDATE" SPACE date_time /

"RFC822" [".HEADER" / ".TEXT"] SPACE nstring /

"RFC822.SIZE" SPACE number /

"BODY" ["STRUCTURE"] SPACE body /

"BODY" section ["<" number ">"] SPACE nstring /

"UID" SPACE uniqueid) ")"

nil ::= "NIL"

nstring ::= string / nil

number ::= 1*digit

;; Unsigned 32-bit integer

;; (0 <= n < 4,294,967,296)

nz_number ::= digit_nz *digit

;; Non-zero unsigned 32-bit integer

;; (0 < n < 4,294,967,296)

password ::= astring

quoted ::= <"> *QUOTED_CHAR <">

QUOTED_CHAR ::= <any TEXT_CHAR except quoted_specials> /

"\" quoted_specials

quoted_specials ::= <"> / "\"

rename ::= "RENAME" SPACE mailbox SPACE mailbox

;; Use of INBOX as a destination gives a NO error

response ::= *(continue_req / response_data) response_done

response_data ::= "*" SPACE (resp_cond_state / resp_cond_bye /

mailbox_data / message_data / capability_data)

CRLF

response_done ::= response_tagged / response_fatal

response_fatal ::= "*" SPACE resp_cond_bye CRLF

;; Server closes connection immediately

response_tagged ::= tag SPACE resp_cond_state CRLF

resp_cond_auth ::= ("OK" / "PREAUTH") SPACE resp_text

;; Authentication condition

resp_cond_bye ::= "BYE" SPACE resp_text

resp_cond_state ::= ("OK" / "NO" / "BAD") SPACE resp_text

;; Status condition

resp_text ::= ["[" resp_text_code "]" SPACE] (text_mime2 / text)

;; text SHOULD NOT begin with "[" or "="

resp_text_code ::= "ALERT" / "PARSE" /

"PERMANENTFLAGS" SPACE "(" #(flag / "\*") ")" /

"READ-ONLY" / "READ-WRITE" / "TRYCREATE" /

"UIDVALIDITY" SPACE nz_number /

"UNSEEN" SPACE nz_number /

atom [SPACE 1*<any TEXT_CHAR except "]">]

search ::= "SEARCH" SPACE ["CHARSET" SPACE astring SPACE]

1#search_key

;; [CHARSET] MUST be registered with IANA

search_key ::= "ALL" / "ANSWERED" / "BCC" SPACE astring /

"BEFORE" SPACE date / "BODY" SPACE astring /

"CC" SPACE astring / "DELETED" / "FLAGGED" /

"FROM" SPACE astring /

"KEYWORD" SPACE flag_keyword / "NEW" / "OLD" /

"ON" SPACE date / "RECENT" / "SEEN" /

"SINCE" SPACE date / "SUBJECT" SPACE astring /

"TEXT" SPACE astring / "TO" SPACE astring /

"UNANSWERED" / "UNDELETED" / "UNFLAGGED" /

"UNKEYWORD" SPACE flag_keyword / "UNSEEN" /

;; Above this line were in [IMAP2]

"DRAFT" /

"HEADER" SPACE header_fld_name SPACE astring /

"LARGER" SPACE number / "NOT" SPACE search_key /

"OR" SPACE search_key SPACE search_key /

"SENTBEFORE" SPACE date / "SENTON" SPACE date /

"SENTSINCE" SPACE date / "SMALLER" SPACE number /

"UID" SPACE set / "UNDRAFT" / set /

"(" 1#search_key ")"

section ::= "[" [section_text / (nz_number *["." nz_number]

["." (section_text / "MIME")])] "]"

section_text ::= "HEADER" / "HEADER.FIELDS" [".NOT"]

SPACE header_list / "TEXT"

select ::= "SELECT" SPACE mailbox

sequence_num ::= nz_number / "*"

;; * is the largest number in use. For message

;; sequence numbers, it is the number of messages

;; in the mailbox. For unique identifiers, it is

;; the unique identifier of the last message in

;; the mailbox.

set ::= sequence_num / (sequence_num ":" sequence_num) /

(set "," set)

;; Identifies a set of messages. For message

;; sequence numbers, these are consecutive

;; numbers from 1 to the number of messages in

;; the mailbox

;; Comma delimits individual numbers, colon

;; delimits between two numbers inclusive.

;; Example: 2,4:7,9,12:* is 2,4,5,6,7,9,12,13,

;; 14,15 for a mailbox with 15 messages.

SPACE ::= <ASCII SP, space, 0x20>

status ::= "STATUS" SPACE mailbox SPACE "(" 1#status_att ")"

status_att ::= "MESSAGES" / "RECENT" / "UIDNEXT" / "UIDVALIDITY" /

"UNSEEN"

store ::= "STORE" SPACE set SPACE store_att_flags

store_att_flags ::= (["+" / "-"] "FLAGS" [".SILENT"]) SPACE

(flag_list / #flag)

string ::= quoted / literal

subscribe ::= "SUBSCRIBE" SPACE mailbox

tag ::= 1*<any ATOM_CHAR except "+">

text ::= 1*TEXT_CHAR

text_mime2 ::= "=?" <charset> "?" <encoding> "?"

<encoded-text> "?="

;; Syntax defined in [MIME-HDRS]

TEXT_CHAR ::= <any CHAR except CR and LF>

time ::= 2digit ":" 2digit ":" 2digit

;; Hours minutes seconds

uid ::= "UID" SPACE (copy / fetch / search / store)

;; Unique identifiers used instead of message

;; sequence numbers

uniqueid ::= nz_number

;; Strictly ascending

unsubscribe ::= "UNSUBSCRIBE" SPACE mailbox

userid ::= astring

x_command ::= "X" atom <experimental command arguments>

zone ::= ("+" / "-") 4digit

;; Signed four-digit value of hhmm representing

;; hours and minutes west of Greenwich (that is,

;; (the amount that the given time differs from

;; Universal Time). Subtracting the timezone

;; from the given time will give the UT form.

;; The Universal Time zone is "+0000".

10. Author's Note

This document is a revision or rewrite of earlier documents, and

supercedes the protocol specification in those documents: RFC1730,

unpublished IMAP2bis.TXT document, RFC1176, and RFC1064.

11. Security Considerations

IMAP4rev1 protocol transactions, including electronic mail data, are

sent in the clear over the network unless privacy protection is

negotiated in the AUTHENTICATE command.

A server error message for an AUTHENTICATE command which fails due to

invalid credentials SHOULD NOT detail why the credentials are

invalid.

Use of the LOGIN command sends passwords in the clear. This can be

avoided by using the AUTHENTICATE command instead.

A server error message for a failing LOGIN command SHOULD NOT specify

that the user name, as opposed to the password, is invalid.

Additional security considerations are discussed in the section

discussing the AUTHENTICATE and LOGIN commands.

12. Author's Address

Mark R. Crispin

Networks and Distributed Computing

University of Washington

4545 15th Aveneue NE

Seattle, WA 98105-4527

Phone: (206) 543-5762

EMail: MRC@CAC.Washington.EDU

Appendices

A. References

[ACAP] Myers, J. "ACAP -- Application Configuration Access Protocol",

Work in Progress.

[CHARSET] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2,

RFC1700, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1994.

[DISPOSITION] Troost, R., and Dorner, S., "Communicating Presentation

Information in Internet Messages: The Content-Disposition Header",

RFC1806, June 1995.

[IMAP-AUTH] Myers, J., "IMAP4 Authentication Mechanism", RFC1731.

Carnegie-Mellon University, December 1994.

[IMAP-COMPAT] Crispin, M., "IMAP4 Compatibility with IMAP2bis", RFC

2061, University of Washington, November 1996.

[IMAP-DISC] Austein, R., "Synchronization Operations for Disconnected

IMAP4 Clients", Work in Progress.

[IMAP-HISTORICAL] Crispin, M. "IMAP4 Compatibility with IMAP2 and

IMAP2bis", RFC1732, University of Washington, December 1994.

[IMAP-MODEL] Crispin, M., "Distributed Electronic Mail Models in

IMAP4", RFC1733, University of Washington, December 1994.

[IMAP-OBSOLETE] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol -

Obsolete Syntax", RFC2062, University of Washington, November 1996.

[IMAP2] Crispin, M., "Interactive Mail Access Protocol - Version 2",

RFC1176, University of Washington, August 1990.

[LANGUAGE-TAGS] Alvestrand, H., "Tags for the Identification of

Languages", RFC1766, March 1995.

[MD5] Myers, J., and M. Rose, "The Content-MD5 Header Field", RFC

1864, October 1995.

[MIME-IMB] Freed, N., and N. Borenstein, "MIME (Multipurpose Internet

Mail Extensions) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC

2045, November 1996.

[MIME-IMT] Freed, N., and N. Borenstein, "MIME (Multipurpose

Internet Mail Extensions) Part Two: Media Types", RFC2046,

November 1996.

[MIME-HDRS] Moore, K., "MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions)

Part Three: Message Header Extensions for Non-ASCII Text", RFC

2047, November 1996.

[RFC-822] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text

Messages", STD 11, RFC822, University of Delaware, August 1982.

[SMTP] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10,

RFC821, USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1982.

[UTF-7] Goldsmith, D., and Davis, M., "UTF-7: A Mail-Safe

Transformation Format of Unicode", RFC1642, July 1994.

B. Changes from RFC1730

1) The STATUS command has been added.

2) Clarify in the formal syntax that the "#" construct can never

refer to multiple spaces.

3) Obsolete syntax has been moved to a separate document.

4) The PARTIAL command has been obsoleted.

5) The RFC822.HEADER.LINES, RFC822.HEADER.LINES.NOT, RFC822.PEEK, and

RFC822.TEXT.PEEK fetch attributes have been obsoleted.

6) The "<" origin "." size ">" suffix for BODY text attributes has

been added.

7) The HEADER, HEADER.FIELDS, HEADER.FIELDS.NOT, MIME, and TEXT part

specifiers have been added.

8) Support for Content-Disposition and Content-Language has been

added.

9) The restriction on fetching nested MULTIPART parts has been

removed.

10) Body part number 0 has been obsoleted.

11) Server-supported authenticators are now identified by

capabilities.

12) The capability that identifies this protocol is now called

"IMAP4rev1". A server that provides backwards support for RFC1730

SHOULD emit the "IMAP4" capability in addition to "IMAP4rev1" in its

CAPABILITY response. Because RFC-1730 required "IMAP4" to appear as

the first capability, it MUST listed first in the response.

13) A description of the mailbox name namespace convention has been

added.

14) A description of the international mailbox name convention has

been added.

15) The UID-NEXT and UID-VALIDITY status items are now called UIDNEXT

and UIDVALIDITY. This is a change from the IMAP STATUS

Work in Progress and not from RFC-1730

16) Add a clarification that a null mailbox name argument to the LIST

command returns an untagged LIST response with the hierarchy

delimiter and root of the reference argument.

17) Define terms such as "MUST", "SHOULD", and "MUST NOT".

18) Add a section which defines message attributes and more

thoroughly details the semantics of message sequence numbers, UIDs,

and flags.

19) Add a clarification detailing the circumstances when a client may

send multiple commands without waiting for a response, and the

circumstances in which ambiguities may result.

20) Add a recommendation on server behavior for DELETE and RENAME

when inferior hierarchical names of the given name exist.

21) Add a clarification that a mailbox name may not be unilaterally

unsubscribed by the server, even if that mailbox name no longer

exists.

22) Add a clarification that LIST should return its results quickly

without undue delay.

23) Add a clarification that the date_time argument to APPEND sets

the internal date of the message.

24) Add a clarification on APPEND behavior when the target mailbox is

the currently selected mailbox.

25) Add a clarification that external changes to flags should be

always announced via an untagged FETCH even if the current command is

a STORE with the ".SILENT" suffix.

26) Add a clarification that COPY appends to the target mailbox.

27) Add the NEWNAME response code.

28) Rewrite the description of the untagged BYE response to clarify

its semantics.

29) Change the reference for the body MD5 to refer to the proper RFC.

30) Clarify that the formal syntax contains rules which may overlap,

and that in the event of such an overlap the rule which occurs first

takes precedence.

31) Correct the definition of body_fld_param.

32) More formal syntax for capability_data.

33) Clarify that any case variant of "INBOX" must be interpreted as

INBOX.

34) Clarify that the human-readable text in resp_text should not

begin with "[" or "=".

35) Change MIME references to Draft Standard documents.

36) Clarify \Recent semantics.

37) Additional examples.

C. Key Word Index

+FLAGS <flag list> (store command data item) ............... 45

+FLAGS.SILENT <flag list> (store command data item) ........ 46

-FLAGS <flag list> (store command data item) ............... 46

-FLAGS.SILENT <flag list> (store command data item) ........ 46

ALERT (response code) ...................................... 50

ALL (fetch item) ........................................... 41

ALL (search key) ........................................... 38

ANSWERED (search key) ...................................... 38

APPEND (command) ........................................... 34

AUTHENTICATE (command) ..................................... 20

BAD (response) ............................................. 52

BCC <string> (search key) .................................. 38

BEFORE <date> (search key) ................................. 39

BODY (fetch item) .......................................... 41

BODY (fetch result) ........................................ 58

BODY <string> (search key) ................................. 39

BODY.PEEK[<section>]<<partial>> (fetch item) ............... 44

BODYSTRUCTURE (fetch item) ................................. 44

BODYSTRUCTURE (fetch result) ............................... 59

BODY[<section>]<<origin_octet>> (fetch result) ............. 58

BODY[<section>]<<partial>> (fetch item) .................... 41

BYE (response) ............................................. 52

Body Structure (message attribute) ......................... 11

CAPABILITY (command) ....................................... 18

CAPABILITY (response) ...................................... 53

CC <string> (search key) ................................... 39

CHECK (command) ............................................ 36

CLOSE (command) ............................................ 36

COPY (command) ............................................. 46

CREATE (command) ........................................... 25

DELETE (command) ........................................... 26

DELETED (search key) ....................................... 39

DRAFT (search key) ......................................... 39

ENVELOPE (fetch item) ...................................... 44

ENVELOPE (fetch result) .................................... 62

EXAMINE (command) .......................................... 24

EXISTS (response) .......................................... 56

EXPUNGE (command) .......................................... 37

EXPUNGE (response) ......................................... 57

Envelope Structure (message attribute) ..................... 11

FAST (fetch item) .......................................... 44

FETCH (command) ............................................ 41

FETCH (response) ........................................... 58

FLAGGED (search key) ....................................... 39

FLAGS (fetch item) ......................................... 44

FLAGS (fetch result) ....................................... 62

FLAGS (response) ........................................... 56

FLAGS <flag list> (store command data item) ................ 45

FLAGS.SILENT <flag list> (store command data item) ......... 45

FROM <string> (search key) ................................. 39

FULL (fetch item) .......................................... 44

Flags (message attribute) .................................. 9

HEADER (part specifier) .................................... 41

HEADER <field-name> <string> (search key) .................. 39

HEADER.FIELDS <header_list> (part specifier) ............... 41

HEADER.FIELDS.NOT <header_list> (part specifier) ........... 41

INTERNALDATE (fetch item) .................................. 44

INTERNALDATE (fetch result) ................................ 62

Internal Date (message attribute) .......................... 10

KEYWORD <flag> (search key) ................................ 39

Keyword (type of flag) ..................................... 10

LARGER <n> (search key) .................................... 39

LIST (command) ............................................. 30

LIST (response) ............................................ 54

LOGIN (command) ............................................ 22

LOGOUT (command) ........................................... 20

LSUB (command) ............................................. 32

LSUB (response) ............................................ 55

MAY (specification requirement term) ....................... 5

MESSAGES (status item) ..................................... 33

MIME (part specifier) ...................................... 42

MUST (specification requirement term) ...................... 4

MUST NOT (specification requirement term) .................. 4

Message Sequence Number (message attribute) ................ 9

NEW (search key) ........................................... 39

NEWNAME (response code) .................................... 50

NO (response) .............................................. 51

NOOP (command) ............................................. 19

NOT <search-key> (search key) .............................. 39

OK (response) .............................................. 51

OLD (search key) ........................................... 39

ON <date> (search key) ..................................... 39

OPTIONAL (specification requirement term) .................. 5

OR <search-key1> <search-key2> (search key) ................ 39

PARSE (response code) ...................................... 50

PERMANENTFLAGS (response code) ............................. 50

PREAUTH (response) ......................................... 52

Permanent Flag (class of flag) ............................. 10

READ-ONLY (response code) .................................. 50

READ-WRITE (response code) ................................. 50

RECENT (response) .......................................... 57

RECENT (search key) ........................................ 39

RECENT (status item) ....................................... 33

RENAME (command) ........................................... 27

REQUIRED (specification requirement term) .................. 4

RFC822 (fetch item) ........................................ 44

RFC822 (fetch result) ...................................... 63

RFC822.HEADER (fetch item) ................................. 44

RFC822.HEADER (fetch result) ............................... 62

RFC822.SIZE (fetch item) ................................... 44

RFC822.SIZE (fetch result) ................................. 62

RFC822.TEXT (fetch item) ................................... 44

RFC822.TEXT (fetch result) ................................. 62

SEARCH (command) ........................................... 37

SEARCH (response) .......................................... 55

SEEN (search key) .......................................... 40

SELECT (command) ........................................... 23

SENTBEFORE <date> (search key) ............................. 40

SENTON <date> (search key) ................................. 40

SENTSINCE <date> (search key) .............................. 40

SHOULD (specification requirement term) .................... 5

SHOULD NOT (specification requirement term) ................ 5

SINCE <date> (search key) .................................. 40

SMALLER <n> (search key) ................................... 40

STATUS (command) ........................................... 33

STATUS (response) .......................................... 55

STORE (command) ............................................ 45

SUBJECT <string> (search key) .............................. 40

SUBSCRIBE (command) ........................................ 29

Session Flag (class of flag) ............................... 10

System Flag (type of flag) ................................. 9

TEXT (part specifier) ...................................... 42

TEXT <string> (search key) ................................. 40

TO <string> (search key) ................................... 40

TRYCREATE (response code) .................................. 51

UID (command) .............................................. 47

UID (fetch item) ........................................... 44

UID (fetch result) ......................................... 63

UID <message set> (search key) ............................. 40

UIDNEXT (status item) ...................................... 33

UIDVALIDITY (response code) ................................ 51

UIDVALIDITY (status item) .................................. 34

UNANSWERED (search key) .................................... 40

UNDELETED (search key) ..................................... 40

UNDRAFT (search key) ....................................... 40

UNFLAGGED (search key) ..................................... 40

UNKEYWORD <flag> (search key) .............................. 40

UNSEEN (response code) ..................................... 51

UNSEEN (search key) ........................................ 40

UNSEEN (status item) ....................................... 34

UNSUBSCRIBE (command) ...................................... 30

Unique Identifier (UID) (message attribute) ................ 7

X<atom> (command) .......................................... 48

[RFC-822] Size (message attribute) ......................... 11

\Answered (system flag) .................................... 9

\Deleted (system flag) ..................................... 9

\Draft (system flag) ....................................... 9

\Flagged (system flag) ..................................... 9

\Marked (mailbox name attribute) ........................... 54

\Noinferiors (mailbox name attribute) ...................... 54

\Noselect (mailbox name attribute) ......................... 54

\Recent (system flag) ...................................... 10

\Seen (system flag) ........................................ 9

\Unmarked (mailbox name attribute) ......................... 54

 
 
 
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