Network Working Group M. Crispin Internet Draft: IMAP4 Compatibility University of Washington Document: internet-drafts/draft-ietf-imap-compat-00.txt June 1994 IMAP4 COMPATIBILITY WITH IMAP2 AND IMAP2BIS Status of this Memo This document is an Internet Draft. Internet Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas, and its Working Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet Drafts. Internet Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months. Internet Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is not appropriate to use Internet Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as a "working draft" or "work in progress". To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the id-abstracts.txt listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow Directories on ds.internic.net, nic.nordu.net, ftp.isi.edu, or munnari.oz.au. This is a draft document of the IETF IMAP Working Group. A revised version of this draft document will be submitted to the RFC editor as an Informational RFC for the Internet Community. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested, and should be sent to imap@CAC.Washington.EDU. This document will expire before 31 November 1994. This memo suggests methods by which IMAP4 client and server implementations can interoperate with software written for the earlier IMAP2 experimental specification and unpublished IMAP2bis specification. This memo is for informational use and does not constitute a standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Introduction This is a summary of hints and recommendations to enable an IMAP4 implementation to interoperate with implementations that conform to earlier specifications. None of these hints and recommendations are required by the IMAP4 specification; implementors must decide for themselves whether they want their implementation to fail if it encounters old software. Crispin [Page 1] RFC DRAFT June 20, 1994 IMAP4 has been designed to be upwards compatible with earlier specifications. For the most part, IMAP4 facilities that were not in earlier specifications should be invisible to clients unless the client asks for the facility. In some cases, older servers may support some of the capabilities listed as being "new in IMAP4" as experimental extensions to the IMAP2 protocol described in RFC 1176. This information may not be complete; it reflects current knowledge of server and client implementations as well as "folklore" acquired in the evolution of the protocol. Crispin [Page 2] RFC DRAFT June 20, 1994 IMAP4 client interoperability with old servers In general, a client should be able to discover whether an IMAP2 server supports a facility by trial-and-error; if an attempt to use a facility generates a BAD response, the client can assume that the server does not support the facility. A quick way to check whether a server implementation supports the IMAP4 specification is to try the CAPABILITY command. An OK response that includes the IMAP4 capability value indicates a server that supports IMAP4; a BAD response or one without the IMAP4 capability value indicates an older server. The following is a list of facilities that are only in IMAP4, and suggestions for how new clients might interoperate with old servers: CAPABILITY command A BAD response to this command indicates that the server implements IMAP2 (or IMAP2bis) and not IMAP4. AUTHENTICATE command. Use the LOGIN command. LSUB and LIST commands Try the RFC 1176 FIND command. * in a sequence Use the number of messages in the mailbox from the EXISTS unsolicited response. SEARCH extensions (character set, additional criteria) Reformulate the search request using only the searching options listed in search_old in the IMAP4 grammar. This may entail doing multiple searches to achieve the desired results. BODYSTRUCTURE fetch data item Try to fetch the non-extensible BODY data item. body section number 0 Fetch the entire message and extract the header. RFC822.HEADER.LINES and RFC822.HEADER.LINES.NOT fetch data items Use RFC822.HEADER and remove the unwanted information. BODY.PEEK[section], RFC822.PEEK, and RFC822.TEXT.PEEK fetch data items Use the corresponding non-PEEK versions and manually clear the \Seen flag as necessary. Crispin [Page 3] RFC DRAFT June 20, 1994 UID fetch data item and the UID commands No equivalent capabilitity exists in older servers. FLAGS.SILENT, +FLAGS.SILENT, and -FLAGS.SILENT store data items Use the corresponding non-SILENT versions and ignore the untagged FETCH responses which com eback. The following IMAP4 facilities were introduced in the experimental IMAP2bis revisions to RFC-1176, and may be present in a server that does not support the CAPABILITY command: CREATE, DELETE, and RENAME commands To test whether these commands are present, try a CREATE INBOX command. If the response is NO, these commands are supported by the server. If the response is BAD, they are not. Older servers without the CREATE capability may sup- port implicit creation of a mailbox by a COPY command with a non-existant name as the destination. APPEND command To test whether this command is present, try to append a zero-length stream to a mailbox name that is known not to exist (or at least, highly unlikely to exist) on the remote system. SUBSCRIBE and UNSUBSCRIBE commands Try the form of these commands with the optional MAILBOX keyword. EXAMINE command Use the SELECT command instead. flags and internal date argument to APPEND command Try the APPEND without any flag list and internal date argu- ments. BODY, BODY[section], and FULL fetch data items Use RFC822.TEXT and ALL instead. Server does not support MIME. PARTIAL command Use the appropriate FETCH command and ignore the unwanted data. IMAP4 client implementations must accept all responses and data for- mats documented in the IMAP4 specification, including those labeled Crispin [Page 4] RFC DRAFT June 20, 1994 as obsolete. This includes the COPY and STORE unsolicited responses and the old format of dates and times. In particular, client imple- mentations must not treat a date/time as a fixed format string; nor may they assume that the time begins at a particular octet. IMAP4 client implementations must not depend upon the presence of any server extensions that are not in the base IMAP4 specification. The experimental IMAP2bis version specified that the TRYCREATE spe- cial information token is sent as a separate unsolicited OK response instead of inside the NO response. The FIND BBOARDS, FIND ALL.BBOARDS, and BBOARD commands of RFC 1176 are removed from IMAP4. There is no equivalent to the bboard com- mands, which provided a separate namespace with implicit restrictions on what may be done in that namespace. Older server implementations may automatically create the destination mailbox on COPY if that mailbox does not already exist. This was how a new mailbox was created in older specifications. If the server does not support the CREATE command (see above for how to test for this), it will probably create a mailbox on COPY. Older server implementations may not preserve flags or internal dates on COPY. Some server implementations may not permit the preservation of certain flags on COPY or their setting with APPEND as site policy. Crispin [Page 5] RFC DRAFT June 20, 1994 IMAP4 server interoperability with old clients In general, there should be no interoperation problem between a server conforming to the IMAP4 specification and a well-written client that conforms to an earlier specification. Known problems are noted below: Poor wording in the description of the CHECK command in earlier specifications implied that a CHECK command is the way to get the current number of messages in the mailbox. This is incorrect. A CHECK command does not necessarily result in an EXISTS response. Clients must remember the most recent EXISTS value sent from the server, and should not generate unnecessary CHECK commands. An incompatibility exists with COPY in IMAP4. COPY in IMAP4 servers does not automatically create the destination mailbox if that mailbox does not already exist. This may cause problems with old clients that expect automatic mailbox creation in COPY. The PREAUTH unsolicited response is new in IMAP4. It is highly unlikely that an old client would ever see this response. The format of dates and times has changed due to the impending end of the century. Clients that fail to accept a four-digit year or a signed four-digit timezone value will not work properly with IMAP4. An incompatibility exists with the use of "\" in quoted strings. This is best avoided by using literals instead of quoted strings if "\" or <"> is embedded in the string. Security Considerations Security considerations ane not discussed in this memo. Author's Address: Mark R. Crispin Networks and Distributed Computing, JE-30 University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195 Phone: (206) 543-5762 EMail: MRC@CAC.Washington.EDU Crispin [Page 6]