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RFC3191 - Minimal GSTN address format in Internet Mail

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group C. Allocchio

Request for Comments: 3191 GARR-Italy

Obsoletes: 2303 October 2001

Updates: 2846

Category: Standards Track

Minimal GSTN address format in Internet Mail

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.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This memo describes a simple method of encoding Global Switched

Telephone Network (GSTN) addresses (commonly called "telephone

numbers") in the local-part of Internet email addresses, along with

an extension mechanism to allow encoding of additional standard

attributes needed for email gateways to GSTN-based services.

1. IntrodUCtion

As with all Internet mail addresses, the left-hand-side (local-part)

of an address generated according to this specification, is not to be

interpreted except by an MTA that handles messages for the domain

given in the right-hand-side.

Since the very first e-mail to GSTN services gateway appeared, a

number of different methods to specify a GSTN address as an e-mail

address have been used by implementors. Several objectives for this

methods have been identified, like to enable an e-mail user to Access

GSTN services from his/her e-mail interface, to allow some kind of

"GSTN over e-mail service" transport (possibly reducing the costs of

GSTN long distance transmissions) while using the existing e-mail

infrastructure.

This memo describes the MINIMAL addressing method to encode GSTN

addresses into e-mail addresses and the standard extension mechanism

to allow definition of further standard elements. The opposite

problem, i.e., to allow a traditional numeric-only GSTN device user

to access the e-mail transport service, is not discussed here.

The IANA registration templates which MUST be used to register any

standard element defined according to this specification are given in

the "IANA Considerations" chapter (section 7 of this document).

All implementations supporting this GSTN over e-mail service MUST

support as a minimum the specification described in this document.

The generic complex case of converting the entirety of GTSN

addressing into e-mail is out of scope in this minimal specification.

1.1 Terminology and Syntax conventions

In this document the formal definitions are described using ABNF

syntax, as defined into [7]. This memo also uses some of the "CORE

DEFINITIONS" defined in "APPENDIX A - CORE" of that document. The

exact meaning of the capitalized Words

"MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD",

"SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", "OPTIONAL"

is defined in reference [6].

In this document the following new terms are also defined:

I-pstn device:

a device which has an Internet domain name and it is able to

communicate either directly or indirectly with the GSTN

network;

mta-I-pstn:

the Internet domain name which identifies uniquely an I-pstn

device over the Internet;

pstn-email:

the complete Internet e-mail address structure which is used to

transport a GSTN address over the Internet e-mail service.

2. Minimal GSTN address

The minimal specification of a GSTN address within an e-mail address

is as follows:

pstn-address = pstn-mbox [ qualif-type1 ]

pstn-mbox = service-selector "=" global-phone

service-selector = 1*( DIGIT / ALPHA / "-" )

; note that SP (space) is not allowed in

; service-selector.

; service-selector MUST be handled as a case

; INSENSITIVE string by implementations.

Other specifications adopting the "pstn-address" definition MUST

define and register with IANA a unique case insensitive

"service-selector" element to identify the specific messaging service

involved.

These specifications and registrations MUST also define which minimal

"qualif-type1" extensions, if any, MUST be supported for the

specified messaging service.

Implementations confirming to this minimal requirements specification

are allowed to ignore any other non-minimal extensions address

element which is present in the "pstn-address". However, conforming

implementations MUST preserve all "qualif-type1" address elements

they receive.

The generic "qualif-type1" element is defined as:

qualif-type1 = "/" keyword "=" string

keyword = 1*( DIGIT / ALPHA / "-" )

; note that SP (space) is not allowed in keyword

string = PCHAR

; note that printable characters are %x20-7E

As such, all "pstn-address" extension elements MUST be defined in the

"qualif-type1" form at the time of registration with IANA.

2.1 Minimal "global-phone" definition

The purpose of global-phone element is to represent standard E.164

numeric addresses [10] within a syntax for electronic mail addressing

that is compliant with standard e-mail specifications given in [1]

and [2].

The minimal supported syntax for global-phone element is as follows:

global-phone = "+" 1*( DIGIT / written-sep )

written-sep = ( "-" / "." )

The use of other dialing schemes for GSTN numbers (like private

numbering plans or local dialing conventions) is also allowed.

However, this does not preclude nor remove the mandatory requirement

for support to the "global-phone" syntax within the minimal GSTN

address format.

Any other dialing schemes MUST NOT use the leading "+" defined here

between the "=" sign and the dialing string. The "+" sign is

strictly reserved for the standard "global-phone" syntax.

Note:

The specification of alternate dialing schemas is out of scope for

this minimal specification.

This document also permits the use of written-sep elements in order

to improve human readability of GSTN e-mail addresses. The

written-sep are elements which can be placed between dial elements

such as digits etc.

Implementors' note:

Use of the written-sep elements is allowed, but not recommended

for transmission. Any occurrences of written-sep elements in a

pstn-mbox MUST be ignored by all conformant implementations.

2.2 The minimal "pstn-address" examples

Some examples of minimal pstn-address are:

VOICE=+3940226338

FAX=+12027653000/T33S=6377

SMS=+33-1-88335215

Note:

these examples are given as illustrations only; they do not

necessarily represent valid pstn-addresses.

3. The e-mail address of the I-pstn device: mta-I-pstn

An "I-pstn device" has, among its characteristics, a unique Internet

domain name which identifies it on the Internet. Within Internet

mail, this is the Right Hand Side (RHS) part of the address, i.e.,

the part on the right of the "@" sign. For purposes of this document

we will call this "mta-I-pstn"

mta-I-pstn = domain

For "domain" strings used in SMTP transmissions, the string MUST

conform to the requirements of that standards <domain> specifications

[1], [3]. For "domain" strings used in message content headers, the

string MUST conform to the requirements of the relevant standards

[2], [3].

Note:

the use of "domain names" or "domain literals" is permitted in

addresses in both the SMTP envelope and message header fields.

4. The pstn-email

The complete structure used to transfer a minimal GSTN address over

the Internet e-mail transport system is called "pstn-email". This

object is a an e-mail address which conforms to [2] and [3]

"addr-spec" syntax, with structure refinements which allows the GSTN

number to be identified.

pstn-email = ["""] ["/"] pstn-address ["/"] ["""] "@" mta-I-pstn

Implementors' note:

The optional "/" characters can result from translations from

other transport gateways (such as some X.400 gateways) which have

included the "/" as an optional element. Implementations MUST

accept the optional slashes but SHOULD NOT generate them.

Gateways are allowed to strip them off when converting to Internet

mail addressing. The relevant standard [2], [3] define exactly

when the optional "quotes" characters surrounding the entire local

part (i.e., the part on the left of the "@" character into the

pstn-email) MUST be added.

4.1 Multiple subaddresses

There are some instances in GSTN applications where multiple

subaddresses are used. On the other hand in e-mail practice a

separate and unique e-mail address is always used for each recipient.

In the event a particular GSTN service requires multiple subaddresses

(in any form defined by the standard specification for that GSTN

service) that are associated with the same "pstn-mbox", then the use

of multiple "pstn-email" elements is REQUIRED.

Implementors' note:

The UA may accept multiple subaddress elements for the same

global-phone, but it MUST generate multiple "pstn-mbox" elements

when submitting the message to the MTA.

4.2 Some examples of minimal "pstn-email" addresses

Some examples of minimal pstn-email addresses follows:

VOICE=+3940226338@worldvoice.com

FAX=+1.202.7653000/T33S=6377@faxserv.org

/SMS=+33-1-88335215/@telecom.com

Note:

these examples are given as illustrations only; they do not

necessarily represent valid pstn-addresses.

5. Conclusions

This proposal creates a minimal standard encoding for GSTN addresses

within the global e-mail transport system. It also defines the

standard extension mechanism to be used to introduce new elements for

GSTN addresses.

The proposal is consistent with existing e-mail standards. Each

specific GSTN service using this proposal MUST define and register

with IANA its own "service-selector" specification and MUST define

and register the eventual other "qualif-type1" elements needed for

its specific application. An example of such an application is

contained in reference [13].

6. Security Considerations

This document specifies a means by which GSTN addresses can be

encoded into e-mail addresses. Since e-mail routing is determined by

Domain Name System (DNS) data, a successful attack to DNS could

disseminate tampered information, which causes e-mail messages to be

diverted via some MTA or Gateway where the security of the software

has been compromised.

There are several means by which an attacker might be able to deliver

incorrect mail routing information to a client. These include: (a)

compromise of a DNS server, (b) generating a counterfeit response to

a client's DNS query, (c) returning incorrect "additional

information" in response to an unrelated query. Clients SHOULD

ensure that mail routing is based only on authoritative answers.

Once DNS Security mechanisms [5] become more widely deployed, clients

SHOULD employ those mechanisms to verify the authenticity and

integrity of mail routing records.

7. IANA Considerations

As the service-selector and qualif-type1 elements values are

extensible, they MUST be registered with IANA.

To register a service-selector or a qualif-type1 element, the

registration form templates given in 7.1 and 7.2 MUST be used. Any

new registration MUST fulfill the "Specification Required" criteria,

as defined in RFC2434, section 2 [16]:

"Specification Required - Values and their meaning MUST be

documented in an RFCor other permanent and readily available

reference, in sufficient detail so that interoperability between

independent implementations is possible."

IANA MUST NOT accept registrations which are not supplemented by a

Specification as defined above and which are not fully specified

according to the template forms given in 7.1 and 7.2. In case of

need for further consultation about accepting a new registration,

IANA SHOULD refer to the Application Area Director to be directed to

the appropriate "eXPert" individual or IETF Working Group.

After successful registration, IANA should publish the registered new

element in the appropriate on-line IANA WEB site, and include it into

the updates of the "Assigned Numbers" RFCseries.

This section (including 7.1 and 7.2) updates the ones contained in

[15].

7.1 IANA Registration form template for new values of GSTN

address service-selector

To: IANA@iana.org

Subject: Registration of new values for the GSTN address

service-selector specifier "foo"

service-selector name:

foo

Description of Use:

foo - ("foo" is a fictional new service-selector used in this

template as an example, it is to be replaced with the new value

being registered. Include a short description of the use of the

new value here. This MUST include reference to Standard Track

RFCs and eventually to other Standard Bodies documents for the

complete description; the use of the value must be defined

completely enough for independent implementation).

Security Considerations:

(Any additional security considerations that may be introduced by

use of the new service-selector parameter should be defined here

or in the reference Standards Track RFCs)

Person & email address to contact for further information:

(fill in contact information)

INFORMATION TO THE SUBMITTER:

The accepted registrations will be listed in the "Assigned

Numbers" series of RFCs. The information in the registration form

is freely distributable.

7.2 IANA Registration form template for new values of GSTN

address qualif-type1 keyword and value

To: IANA@iana.org

Subject: Registration of new values for the GSTN address

qualif-type1 element "bar"

qualif-type1 "keyword" name:

bar

qualif-type1 "value" ABNF definition:

abnf - ("abnf" MUST define the ABNF form of the qualif-type1

value. The ABNF specification MUST be self-contained, using as

basic elements the tokens given in specification [4]. To avoid

any duplication (when appropriate), it MUST also use any already

registered non-basic token from other qualif-type1 elements, i.e.,

it MUST use the same non-basic token name and then repeat its

identical ABNF definition from basic tokens.

Description of Use:

bar - ("bar" is a fictional description for a new qualif-type1

element used in this template as an example. It is to be replaced

by the real description of qualif-type1 element being registered.

Include a short description of the use of the new qualif-type1

here. This MUST include reference to Standards Track RFCs and

eventually to other Standard Bodies documents for the complete

description; the use of the value MUST be defined completely

enough for independent implementation.)

Use Restriction:

(If the new qualif-type1 elements is meaningful only for a

specific set of service-element, you MUST specify here the list of

allowed service-element types. If there is no restriction, then

specify the keyword "none")

Security Considerations:

(Any additional security considerations that may be introduced by

use of the new service-selector parameter should be defined here

or in the reference Standards Track RFCs)

Person & email address to contact for further information:

(fill in contact information)

INFORMATION TO THE SUBMITTER:

The accepted registrations will be listed in the "Assigned

Numbers" series of RFCs. The information in the registration form

is freely distributable.

8. Changes from RFC2303 specification

Although there are no technical or major changes from RFC2303

specification, this section briefly describes where updates and

clarifications were introduced:

- considering the case that telephony systems do not conform any

more to the "single/few" Public Operator paradigm, the old

definition "PSTN - Public Switched Telephone Network" was changed

into the more adequate "GSTN - Global Switched Telephone Network"

one. However, in order to remain consistent with the previous

specification, the ABNF variables names were not changed.

- it was made clear that "GSTN addresses" correspond, in common

language, to "telephone numbers" and that the "global-phone" is a

representation of E.164 numeric addresses;

- an explicit list of "new terms" with explanations was added to

section 1.1;

- the fact that any other specification adopting the "pstn-address"

definition MUST register with IANA the new "service-selector" and

"qualif-type1" elements was made explicit throughout the document;

the relevant mechanism to be used was added in section 7 "IANA

considerations" (including the IANA Registration form templates);

this is also consistent with RFC2846;

- in section 2.1 the use and meaning of "written-sep" was clarified;

- in section 4., the quoting rules of the "pstn-address" and their

practical use was made explicit both in the definition of

pstn-email" and in the Implementors' note;

- section 4.1 was updated to clarify how to generate "pstn-email"

when more than one subaddress is used;

- the Author's Address was updated;

- the References list was updated to include RFC2846 and RFC2434.

9. Author's Address

Claudio Allocchio

INFN-GARR

c/o Sincrotrone Trieste

SS 14 Km 163.5 Basovizza

I 34012 Trieste

Italy

RFC2822: Claudio.Allocchio@garr.it

X.400: C=it;A=garr;P=garr;S=Allocchio;G=Claudio;

Phone: +39 040 3758523

Fax: +39 040 3758565

10. References

[1] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC821,

August 1982.

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

Messages", STD 11, RFC822, August 1982.

[3] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet hosts - application and

support", STD 3, RFC1123, October 1989.

[4] Malamud, C. and M. Rose, "Principles of Operation for the

TPC.INT Subdomain: Remote Printing -- Technical Procedures", RFC

1528, October 1993.

[5] Eastlake, D. and C. Kaufman, "Domain Name System Security

Extensions", RFC2065, January 1997.

[6] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement

Levels", BCP 14, RFC2119, March 1997.

[7] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax

Specifications", RFC2234, November 1997.

[8] ITU F.401 - Message Handling Services: Naming and Addressing for

Public Message Handling Service; recommendation F.401 (August

1992).

[9] ITU F.423 - Message Handling Services: Intercommunication

Between the Interpersonal Messaging Service and the Telefax

Service; recommendation F.423 (August 1992).

[10] ITU E.164 - The International Public Telecommunication Numbering

Plan E.164/I.331 (May 1997).

[11] ITU T.33 - Facsimile routing utilizing the subaddress;

recommendation T.33 (July 1996).

[12] ETSI I-ETS 300,380 - Universal Personal Telecommunication (UPT):

Access Devices Dual Tone Multi Frequency (DTMF) sender for

acoustical coupling to the microphone of a handset telephone

(March 1995).

[13] Allocchio, C., "Minimal FAX address format in Internet Mail",

RFC3192, October 2001.

[14] Kille, S., "MIXER (Mime Internet X.400 Enhanced Relay): Mapping

between X.400 and RFC822/MIME", RFC2156, January 1998.

[15] Allocchio, C. "GSTN address element extensions in e-mail

services", RFC2846, June 2000.

[16] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA

Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC2434, October 1998.

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2001). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to

others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it

or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published

and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any

kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are

included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this

document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing

the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other

Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of

developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for

copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be

followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than

English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be

revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING

TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING

BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION

HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF

MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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