The RFC Archive
 The RFC Archive   RFC 784   « Jump to any RFC number directly 
 RFC Home
Full RFC Index
Recent RFCs
RFC Standards
Best Current Practice
RFC Errata
1 April RFC



IETF RFC 784

Mail Transfer Protocol: ISI TOPS20 implementation

Last modified on Thursday, October 15th, 1992

Permanent link to RFC 784
Search GitHub Wiki for RFC 784
Show other RFCs mentioning RFC 784


                                                                        
Network Working Group                                         S. Sluizer
Request for Comments: 784                                      J. Postel
                                                                     ISI
                                                               July 1981

                        MAIL TRANSFER PROTOCOL:
                       ISI TOPS20 IMPLEMENTATION


We are creating an implementation of MTP for TOPS20.  The programs are
written in BLISS-10.  This implementation supports the MTP user and
server functions using both TCP and NCP transport services, and provides
interfaces to other mail delivery mechanisms.

The transport services (NCP, TCP, etc.), are used to establish
communication between MTP sender and MTP receiver programs.  These
communication paths will be called channels in the rest of this memo.

Our model of operation is that mail sources will create mail files in
user directories.  The mail sources are both user mail composition
programs (like Hermes, MM, SNDMSG), and system network mail receiving
programs which accept mail from various input channels.  The mail files
are processed by a background program which dispatches mail to various
output channels.  There is also a user version of the dispatcher to send
mail at once (provided the necessary channel is available).

To take advantage of MTP's multi-recipient feature, the mail consists of
two files.  The first is a control file which contains the delivery
information and a pointer to the second file.  The second file contains
the mail data (including the RFC 733 header) to be delivered.

The reason for using two files is that the control information must be
modified as the mail is processed while the mail data only needs to be
read (although the file is eventually deleted or renamed).  For example,
a message may be sent to different recipients via different channels.
If one of the channels is not available, the control file must be
modified to mark or delete the recipients to whom the mail has been sent
and keep the recipient information available for those recipients not
yet sent.  In a a future implementation of the dispatcher, the control
information may be moved to a master table in its data area to optimally
schedule output channel use.

The dispatcher makes its decision about how to send mail to each
recipient by consulting a table that indicates for each host its ability
to accept mail via (1) MTP on TCP, (2) MTP on NCP, or (3) FTP on NCP
(i.e., the old way).  There is also a table for other cases (e.g.,
delivery to hosts in England via another mail transmission system
created by UCL).






Sluizer & Postel                                                Page [1]


July 1981 RFC 784 ISI TOPS20 Implementation The individual pieces of this system are: 1. MTP receiver for TCP. 2. MTP receiver for NCP. 3. Dispatcher. 4. MTP sender for TCP. 5. MTP sender for NCP. 6. Mail composition programs (MM, HERMES, MSG, SNDMSG, ...). 7. User mailbox files. 8. Pending Mail files. 9. Other Mail sources. 10. Other Mail sinks. 11. Host Mail Capability table. 12. Host special processing tables. We are building 1 through 5, hope that others will adapt 6 to this system (a version of MM has been adapted at ISI), using the existing 7, defining and using 8, providing interfaces for 9 and 10 as requested, and creating and using 11 and 12. Page [2] Sluizer & Postel

RFC 784 July 1981 Mail Transfer Protocol +-----+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ | MTP | | MTP | | USER | |OTHER | | TCP | | NCP | | MAIL | |MAIL | | RCV | | RCV | | PGM | |SOURCE| +-----+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ | | | | | | | | | | | | v v v v +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ | | | | | | | | Pending +----+ | +----+ | +----+ | +----+ | Files | |-+ | |-+ | |-+ | |-+ | | | | | | | | +----+ +----+ +----+ +----+ \ | | / \ | | / \ | | / v v v v +------------------+ TABLES | | +----+ | DISPATCHER |<----->| |---+ | | | | | +------------------+ +----+ | / / \ \ +----+ / / \ \ / / \ \ v v v v +-----+ +-----+ +-------+ +-----+ | MTP | | MTP | | LOCAL | |OTHER| | TCP | | NCP | |MAILBOX| |MAIL | | SND | | SND | | FILES | |SINK | +-----+ +-----+ +-------+ +-----+ Note that current implementation the dispatcher and the senders for MTP-on-TCP and MTP-on-TCP are combined in one program. Sluizer & Postel Page [3]

Mail Transfer Protocol: ISI TOPS20 implementation RFC TOTAL SIZE: 5856 bytes PUBLICATION DATE: Thursday, October 15th, 1992 LEGAL RIGHTS: The IETF Trust (see BCP 78)


RFC-ARCHIVE.ORG

© RFC 784: The IETF Trust, Thursday, October 15th, 1992
© the RFC Archive, 2024, RFC-Archive.org
Maintainer: J. Tunnissen

Privacy Statement