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rfc 2142 - MAILBOX NAMES FOR COMMON SERVICES, ROLES AND FUNCTIONS

Last post 04-02-2007, 23:31 by Peter Strömblad. 0 replies.
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  •  04-02-2007, 23:31

    rfc 2142 - MAILBOX NAMES FOR COMMON SERVICES, ROLES AND FUNCTIONS

    Network Working Group                                        D. Crocker
    Request for Comments: 2142                     Internet Mail Consortium
    Category: Standards Track                                      May 1997


                                 MAILBOX NAMES FOR
                       COMMON SERVICES, ROLES AND FUNCTIONS

    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

       This specification enumerates and describes Internet mail addresses
       (mailbox name @ host reference) to be used when contacting personnel
       at an organization.  Mailbox names are provided for both operations
       and business functions.  Additional mailbox names and aliases are not
       prohibited, but organizations which support email exchanges with the
       Internet are encouraged to support AT LEAST each mailbox name for
       which the associated function exists within the organization.

    1.  RATIONALE AND SCOPE

       Various Internet documents have specified mailbox names to be used
       when reaching the operators of the new service; for example, [RFC822
       6.3, C.6] requires the presence of a <
    POSTMASTER@domain> mailbox name
       on all hosts that have an SMTP server.  Other protocols have defacto
       standards for well known mailbox names, such as <
    USENET@domain> for
       NNTP (see [RFC977]), and <
    WEBMASTER@domain> for HTTP (see [HTTP]).
       Defacto standards also exist for well known mailbox names which have
       nothing to do with a particular protocol, e.g., <
    ABUSE@domain> and
       <
    TROUBLE@domain>.

       The purpose of this memo is to aggregate and specify the basic set of
       mailbox names which organizations need to support.  Most
       organizations do not need to support the full set of mailbox names
       defined here, since not every organization will implement the all of
       the associated services.  However, if a given service is offerred,
       then the associated mailbox name(es) must be supported, resulting in
       delivery to a recipient appropriate for the referenced service or
       role.

     

     

    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 1]

    RFC 2142                     Mailbox Names                      May 1997


       If a host is not configured to accept mail directly, but it
       implements a service for which this specification defines a mailbox
       name, that host must have an MX RR set (see [RFC974]) and the mail
       exchangers specified by this RR set must recognize the referenced
       host's domain name as "local" for the purpose of accepting mail bound
       for the defined mailbox name.  Note that this is true even if the
       advertised domain name is not the same as the host's domain name; for
       example, if an NNTP server's host name is DATA.RAMONA.VIX.COM yet it
       advertises the domain name VIX.COM in its "Path:" headers, then mail
       must be deliverable to both <
    USENET@VIX.COM> and
       <
    USENET@DATA.RAMONA.VIX.COM>, even though these addresses might be
       delivered to different final destinations.

       The scope of a well known mailbox name is its domain name.  Servers
       accepting mail on behalf of a domain must accept and correctly
       process mailbox names for that domain, even if the server, itself,
       does not support the associated service.  So, for example, if an NNTP
       server advertises the organization's top level domain in "Path:"
       headers (see [RFC977]) the mail exchangers for that top level domain
       must accept mail to <
    USENET@domain> even if the mail exchanger hosts
       do not, themselves, serve the NNTP protocol.

    2.  INVARIANTS

       For well known names that are not related to specific protocols, only
       the organization's top level domain name are required to be valid.
       For example, if an Internet service provider's domain name is
       COMPANY.COM, then the <
    ABUSE@COMPANY.COM> address must be valid and
       supported, even though the customers whose activity generates
       complaints use hosts with more specific domain names like
       SHELL1.COMPANY.COM.  Note, however, that it is valid and encouraged
       to support mailbox names for sub-domains, as appropriate.

       Mailbox names must be recognized independent of character case.  For
       example, POSTMASTER, postmaster, Postmaster, PostMaster, and even
       PoStMaStEr are to be treated the same, with delivery to the same
       mailbox.

       Implementations of these well known names need to take account of the
       expectations of the senders who will use them.  Sending back an
       automatic mail acknowledgement is usually helpful (though we suggest
       caution against the possibility of "duelling mail robots" and the
       resulting mail loops).

     

     

     


    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 2]

    RFC 2142                     Mailbox Names                      May 1997


    3.  BUSINESS-RELATED MAILBOX NAMES

       These names are related to an organization's line-of-business
       activities.  The INFO name is often tied to an autoresponder, with a
       range of standard files available.

       MAILBOX        AREA                USAGE
       -----------    ----------------    ---------------------------
       INFO           Marketing           Packaged information about the
                                          organization, products, and/or
                                          services, as appropriate
       MARKETING      Marketing           Product marketing and
                                          marketing communications
       SALES          Sales               Product purchase information
       SUPPORT        Customer Service    Problems with product or
                                          service


    4.  NETWORK OPERATIONS MAILBOX NAMES

       Operations addresses are intended to provide recourse for customers,
       providers and others who are experiencing difficulties with the
       organization's Internet service.

       MAILBOX        AREA                USAGE
       -----------    ----------------    ---------------------------
       ABUSE          Customer Relations  Inappropriate public behaviour
       NOC            Network Operations  Network infrastructure
       SECURITY       Network Security    Security bulletins or queries


    5.  SUPPORT MAILBOX NAMES FOR SPECIFIC INTERNET SERVICES

       For major Internet protocol services, there is a mailbox defined for
       receiving queries and reports.  (Synonyms are included, here, due to
       their extensive installed base.)

       MAILBOX        SERVICE             SPECIFICATIONS
       -----------    ----------------    ---------------------------
       POSTMASTER     SMTP                [RFC821], [RFC822]
       HOSTMASTER     DNS                 [RFC1033-RFC1035]
       USENET         NNTP                [RFC977]
       NEWS           NNTP                Synonym for USENET
       WEBMASTER      HTTP                [RFC 2068]
       WWW            HTTP                Synonym for WEBMASTER
       UUCP           UUCP                [RFC976]
       FTP            FTP                 [RFC959]

     


    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 3]

    RFC 2142                     Mailbox Names                      May 1997


    6.  MAILING LIST ADMINISTRATION MAILBOX

       Mailing lists have an administrative mailbox name to which add/drop
       requests and other meta-queries can be sent.

       For a mailing list whose submission mailbox name is:

          <LIST@DOMAIN>

       there MUST be the administrative mailbox name:

          <LIST-REQUEST@DOMAIN>

       Distribution List management software, such as MajorDomo and
       Listserv, also have a single mailbox name associated with the
       software on that system -- usually the name of the software -- rather
       than a particular list on that system.  Use of such mailbox names
       requires participants to know the type of list software employed at
       the site.  This is problematic.  Consequently:

          LIST-SPECIFIC (-REQUEST) MAILBOX NAMES ARE REQUIRED,
          INDEPENDENT OF THE AVAILABILITY OF GENERIC LIST SOFTWARE
          MAILBOX NAMES.

    7.  DOMAIN NAME SERVICE ADMINISTRATION MAILBOX

       In DNS (see [RFC1033], [RFC1034] and [RFC1035]), the Start Of
       Authority record (SOA RR) has a field for specifying the mailbox name
       of the zone's administrator.

       This field must be a simple word without metacharacters (such as "%"
       or "!" or "::"), and a mail alias should be used on the relevant mail
       exchanger hosts to direct zone administration mail to the appropriate
       mailbox.

       For simplicity and regularity, it is strongly recommended that the
       well known mailbox name HOSTMASTER always be used
       <
    HOSTMASTER@domain>.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 4]

    RFC 2142                     Mailbox Names                      May 1997


    8.  AUTONOMOUS SYSTEM MAILBOX

       Several Internet registries implement mailing lists for Autonomous
       System contacts.  So, for example, mail sent to <
    AS3557@RA.NET> will
       at the time of this writing reach the technical contact for
       Autonomous System 3557 in the BGP4 (see [RFC1654], [RFC1655] and
       [RFC1656]).

       Not all Autonomous Systems are registered with all registries,
       however, and so undeliverable mailbox names under this scheme should
       be treated as an inconvenience rather than as an error or a standards
       violation.

    9.  SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

       Denial of service attacks (flooding a mailbox with junk) will be
       easier after this document becomes a standard, since more systems
       will support the same set of mailbox names.

    10. REFERENCES

       [RFC821] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC
       821, Information Sciences Institute, August 1982.

       [RFC822] Crocker, D., "Standard for the format of ARPA Internet text
       messages", STD 11, RFC 822, University of Delaware, August 1982.

       [RFC959] Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer Protocol (FTP)",
       STD 9, RFC 959, Information Sciences Institute, October 1985.

       [RFC974] Partridge, C., "Mail routing and the domain system", STD 14,
       RFC 974, CSNET CIC BBN Laboratories Inc, January 1986.

       [RFC976] Horton, M., "UUCP mail interchange format standard", RFC
       976, Bell Laboratories, February 1986.

       [RFC977] Kantor, B., et al, "Network News Transfer Protocol: A
       Proposed Standard for the Stream-Based Transmission of News", RFC
       977, University of California, February 1986.

       [RFC1033] Lottor, M., "Domain administrators operations guide", RFC
       1033, SRI International, November 1987.

       [RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities",
       STD 13, RFC 1035, USC/Information Sciences Institute, November 1987.

     

     


    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 5]

    RFC 2142                     Mailbox Names                      May 1997


       [RFC1035] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and
       Specification" STD 13, RFC 1035, USC/Information Sciences Institute,
       November 1987.

       [RFC1654] Rekhter, Y., et al, "A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP- 4)",
       RFC 1654, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., July 1994.

       [RFC1655] Rekhter, Y., et al, "Application of the Border Gateway
       Protocol in the Internet", RFC 1655, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM
       Corp., July 1994.

       [RFC1656] Traina, P., "BGP-4 Protocol Document Roadmap and
       Implementation Experience", RFC 1656, cisco Systems, July 1994.

       [HTTP] Berners-Lee, T., et al, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol --
       HTTP/1.0", RFC 1945, May 1996.

    11. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       This specification derived from an earlier draft written by Paul
       Vixie.  Thanks to Stan Barber, Michael Dillon, James Aldridge, J.  D.
       Falk, Peter Kaminski, Brett Watson, Russ Wright, Neal McBurnett, and
       Ed Morin for their comments on that draft.

    12. AUTHOR'S ADDRESS

       Dave Crocker
       Internet Mail Consortium
       127 Segre Ave.
       Santa Cruz, CA

       Phone: +1 408 246 8253
       EMail:
    dcrocker@imc.org

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Crocker                     Standards Track                     [Page 6]


    Kind regards / Peter
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