-
"Support for Sieve in Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP4)", Barry Leiba, 11-Jul-09. ( bytes)
- Sieve defines an email filtering language that can, in principle,
plug into any point in the processing of an email message. As
defined in the base specification, it plugs into mail delivery. This
document defines how Sieve can plug into points in the IMAP protocol
where messages are created or changed, adding the option of user-
defined or installation-defined filtering (or, with Sieve extensions,
features such as notifications).Note
This document defines extensions to IMAP and Sieve. For now, it is
the work of the Lemonade Working Group (Enhancements to Internet
email to support diverse service environments), but it will be moved
to the Sieve working group at some point.
1. Discussion of this document should be taken to the Sieve mailing
list at mailto:ietf-mta-filters@imc.org
2. Subscription requests can be sent to
mailto:ietf-mta-filters-request@imc.org?body=subscribe (send an
email message with the word "subscribe" in the body).
3. A WWW archive of back messages is available at
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/sieve/index.html
4. Older messages, which were posted to the lemonade mailing list,
are archived at
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/lemonade/index.html
-
"Lemonade Notifications Architecture", Randall Gellens, Stephane Maes, 8-Jul-08. ( bytes)
- This document discusses how to provide notification and filtering
mechanisms to mail stores to meet Lemonade goals.
This document also discusses the use of server to server
notifications, and how server to server notifications fit into an
architecture which provides server to client notifications.
Gellens
[page 1]
Expires January 2009
Internet Draft
Lemonade Notifications Architecture
July 2008
-
"The Lemonade Profile", Dave Cridland, Alexey Melnikov, Stephane Maes, 23-Feb-09. ( bytes)
- This document describes a profile (a set of required extensions,
restrictions and usage modes), dubbed Lemonade, of the IMAP, mail
submission and Sieve protocols. This profile allows clients
(especially those that are constrained in memory, bandwidth,
processing power, or other areas) to efficiently use IMAP and
Submission to access and submit mail. This includes the ability to
forward received mail without needing to download and upload the
mail, to optimize submission and to efficiently resynchronize in case
of loss of connectivity with the server.
The Lemonade profile relies upon several extensions to IMAP and Mail
Submission protocols.
-
"Streaming Internet Messaging Attachments", Neil Cook, 3-Jun-09. ( bytes)
- This document describes a method for streaming multimedia attachments
received by a resource constrained and/or mobile device from an IMAP
server. It allows such clients, which often have limits in storage
space and bandwidth, to play video and audio e-mail content.
The document describes a profile for making use of the URLAUTH
authorized IMAP URLs (RFC 5092), the Network Announcement SIP Media
Service (RFC 4240), and the Media Server Control Markup Language (RFC
5022).
IETF Secretariat - Please send questions, comments, and/or
suggestions to ietf-web@ietf.org.
Return to Internet-Draft directory.
Return to IETF home page.