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- Network Working Group R. Hagens
- Request for Comments: 1649 Advanced Network & Services, Inc.
- Category: Informational A. Hansen
- UNINETT
- July 1994
-
-
- Operational Requirements for X.400 Management Domains
- in the GO-MHS Community
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
- does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- There are several large, operational X.400 services currently
- deployed. Many of the organizations in these services are connected
- to the Internet. A number of other Internet-connected organizations
- are beginning to operate internal X.400 services (for example, U.S.
- government organizations following U.S. GOSIP). The motivation for
- this document is to foster a Global Open Message Handling System
- (GO-MHS) Community that has full interoperability with the existing
- E-mail service based on RFC-822 (STD-11).
-
- The goal of this document is to unite regionally operated X.400
- services on the various continents into one GO-MHS Community (as seen
- from an end-user's point of view). Examples of such regional
- services are the COSINE MHS Service in Europe and the XNREN service
- in the U.S.
-
- A successful GO-MHS Community is dependent on decisions at both the
- national and international level. National X.400 service providers
- are responsible for the implementation of the minimum requirements
- defined in this document. In addition to these minimum requirements,
- national requirements may be defined by each national service
- provider.
-
- This document refers to other documents which are published as RFCs.
- These documents are [1], [2], [3], [4], [6] and [7] in the reference
- list.
-
- This document handles issues concerning X.400 1984 and X.400 1988 to
- 1984 downgrading. Issues concerning pure X.400 1988 are left for
- further study.
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- We are grateful to Allan Cargille and Lawrence Landweber for their
- input and guidance on this paper. This paper is also a product of
- discussions in the IETF X.400 Operations WG and the RARE WG-MSG
- (former RARE WG1 (on MHS)).
-
- 1.1. Terminology
-
- This document defines requirements, recommendations and conventions.
- Throughout the document, the following definitions apply: a
- requirement is specified with the word shall. A recommendation is
- specified with the word should. A convention is specified with the
- word might. Conventions are intended to make life easier for RFC-822
- systems that don't follow the host requirements.
-
- 1.2. Profiles
-
- Different communities have different profile requirements. The
- following is a list of such profiles.
-
- o U.S. GOSIP - unspecified version
- o ENV - 41201
- o UK GOSIP for X.400(88)
-
- In the case when mail traffic is going from the RFC-822 mail service
- to the GO-MHS Community, the automatic return of contents when mail
- is non-delivered should be requested by RFC 1327 gateways and should
- be supported at the MTA that generates the non-delivery report.
- However, it should be noted that this practice maximizes the cost
- associated with delivery reports.
-
- 2. Architecture of the GO-MHS Community
-
- In order to facilitate a coherent deployment of X.400 in the GO-MHS
- Community it is necessary to define, in general terms, the overall
- structure and organization of the X.400 service. This section is
- broken into several parts which discuss management domains, lower
- layer connectivity issues, and overall routing issues.
-
- The GO-MHS Community will operate as a single MHS community, as
- defined in reference [1].
-
- 2.1. Management Domains
-
- The X.400 model supports connectivity between communities with
- different service requirements; the architectural vehicle for this is
- a Management Domain. Management domains are needed when different
- administrations have different specific requirements. Two types of
- management domains are defined by the X.400 model: an Administration
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 2]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- Management Domain (ADMD) and a Private Management Domain (PRMD).
-
- Throughout the world in various countries there are different
- organizational policies for MDs. All of these policies are legal
- according to the X.400 standard. Currently, X.400 service providers
- in a country (inside or outside the GO-MHS Community), are organized
- as:
-
- a) One or several ADMDs.
- b) One or several PRMDs and with no ADMDs present in
- the country, or that are not connected to any ADMD.
- c) One or several PRMDs connected to one or several ADMDs.
-
- Or in combinations of a), b) and c). At this stage it is not
- possible to say which model is the most effective. Thus, the GO-MHS
- Community shall allow every model.
-
- 2.2. The RELAY-MTA
-
- The X.400 message routing decision process takes as input the
- destination O/R address and produces as output the name (and perhaps
- connection information) of the MTA who will take responsibility of
- delivering the message to the recipient. The X.400 store and forward
- model permits a message to pass through multiple MTAs. However, it
- is generally accepted that the most efficient path for a message to
- take is one where a direct connection is made from the originator to
- the recipient's MTA.
-
- Large scale deployment of X.400 in the GO-MHS Community will require
- a well deployed directory infrastructure to support routing. In the
- GO-MHS Community X.500 is considered to be the best protocol for such
- an infrastructure. In this environment, a routing decision can be
- made by searching the directory with a destination O/R address in
- order to obtain the name of the next hop MTA. This MTA may be a
- central entry point into an MD, or it may be the destination MTA
- within an MD.
-
- Deployment of X.400 without a well deployed Directory infrastructure,
- will require the use of static tables to store routing information.
- These tables (keyed on O/R addresses), will be used to map a
- destination O/R address to a next hop MTA. In order to facilitate
- efficient routing, one could build a table that contains information
- about every MTA in every MD. However, this table would be enormous
- and very dynamic, so this is not feasible in practice. Therefore, it
- is necessary to use the concept of a RELAY-MTA.
-
- The purpose of a RELAY-MTA is to act as a default entry point into an
- MD. The MTA that acts as a RELAY MTA for an MD shall be capable of
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 3]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- accepting responsibility for all messages that it receives that are
- destined for well-defined recipients in that MD.
-
- The use of a RELAY-MTA for routing is defined by reference [1].
- RELAY-MTAs in the GO-MHS Community shall route according to reference
- [1].
-
- 2.3. Lower Layer Stack Incompatibilities
-
- A requirement for successful operation of the GO-MHS Community is
- that all users can exchange messages. The GO-MHS Community is not
- dependent on the traditional TCP/IP lower layer protocol suite. A
- variety of lower layer suites are used as carriers of X.400 messages.
-
- For example, consider Figure 1.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------
- ! !
- ! PRMD A !
- ! -------------------- !
- ! ! o x ! !
- ! ! ! !
- ! ! o w ! !
- ! ! z ! !
- ! -------------------- !
- ! PRMD B !
- ! ------------------ !
- ! ! o o ! !
- ! PRMD C ! o ! !
- ! ------------------ ! o z ! !
- ! ! o ! ! ! !
- ! ! o x ! ------------------ !
- ! ! o w ! !
- ! ! o ! !
- ! ------------------ !
- ! !
- ! Key: Each character the in !
- ! the boxes illustrates an MTA. !
- ! !
- ! x: TP0/RFC1006/TCP RELAY-MTA !
- ! w: TP4/CLNP RELAY-MTA !
- ! z: TP0/CONS/X.25 RELAY-MTA !
- ! o: MTA !
- -----------------------------------------------------
-
- Figure 1: A Deployment Scenario
-
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 4]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- PRMD A has three RELAY-MTAs which collectively provide support for
- the TP0/CONS/X.25, TP0/RFC1006, and TP4/CLNS stacks. (Note: it is
- acceptable for a single RELAY-MTA to support more than one stack.
- Three RELAY-MTAs are shown in this figure for clarity.) Thus, PRMD A
- is reachable via these stacks. However, since PRMD B only supports
- the TP0/CONS/X.25 stack, it is not reachable from the TP0/RFC 1006 or
- the TP4/CLNS stack. PRMD C supports TP0/RFC1006 and TP4/CLNS. Since
- PRMD B and PRMD C do not share a common stack, how is a message from
- PRMD C to reach a recipient in PRMD B?
-
- One solution to this problem is to require that PRMD B implement a
- stack in common with PRMD C. However this may not be a politically
- acceptable answer to PRMD B.
-
- Another solution is to implement a transport service bridge (TSB)
- between TP0/RFC 1006 in PRMD C to TP0/CONS in PRMD B. This will
- solve the problem for PRMD C and B. However, the lack of coordinated
- deployment of TSB technology makes this answer alone unacceptable on
- an international scale.
-
- The solution to this problem is to define a coordinated mechanism
- that allows PRMD B to advertise to the world that it has made a
- bilateral agreement with PRMD A to support reachability to PRMD B
- from the TP0/RFC 1006 stack.
-
- This solution does not require that every MTA or MD directly support
- all stacks. However, it is a requirement that if a particular stack
- is not directly supported by an MD, the MD will need to make
- bilateral agreements with other MD(s) in order to assure that
- connectivity from that stack is available.
-
- Thus, in the case of Figure 1, PRMD B can make a bilateral agreement
- with PRMD A which provides for PRMD A to relay messages which arrive
- on either the TP4/CLNP stack or the TP0/RFC 1006 stack to PRMD B
- using the TP0/CONS stack.
-
- The policies described in reference [1] define this general purpose
- solution. It is a requirement that all MDs follow the rules and
- policies defined by reference [1].
-
- 3. Description of GO-MHS Community Policies
-
- A GO-MD is a Management Domain in the GO-MHS Community.
-
- The policies described in this section constitute a minimum set of
- common policies for GO-MDs. They are specified to ensure
- interoperability between:
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 5]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- - all GO-MDs.
- - all GO-MDs and the RFC-822 mail service (SMTP).
- - all GO-MDs and other X.400 service providers.
-
- 3.1. X.400 Address Registration
-
- An O/R address is a descriptive name for a UA that has certain
- characteristics that help the Service Providers to locate the UA.
- Every O/R address is an O/R name, but not every O/R name is an O/R
- address. This is explained in reference [5], chapter 3.1.
-
- Uniqueness of X.400 addresses shall be used to ensure end-user
- connectivity.
-
- Mailboxes shall be addressed according to the description of O/R
- names, Form 1, Variant 1 (see reference [5], chapter 3.3.2). The
- attributes shall be regarded as a hierarchy of:
-
- Country name (C)
- Administration domain name (ADMD)
- [Private domain name] (PRMD)
- [Organization name] (O)
- [Organizational Unit Names] (OUs)
- [Personal name] (PN)
- [Domain-defined attributes] (DDAs)
-
- Attributes enclosed in square brackets are optional. At least one of
- PRMD, O, OU and PN names shall be present in an O/R address. At least
- one of PN and DDA shall be present.
-
- In general a subordinate address element shall be unique within the
- scope of its immediately superior element. An exception is PRMD, see
- section 3.1.3. There shall exist registration authorities for each
- level, or mechanisms shall be available to ensure such uniqueness.
-
- 3.1.1. Country (C)
-
- The values of the top level element, Country, shall be defined by the
- set of two letter country codes, or numeric country codes in ISO
- 3166.
-
- 3.1.2. Administration Management Domain (ADMD)
-
- The values of the ADMD field are decided on a national basis. Every
- national decision made within the GO-MHS community shall be supported
- by a GO-MD.
-
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 6]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- 3.1.3. Private Management Domain (PRMD)
-
- The PRMD values should be unique within a country.
-
- 3.1.4. Organization (O)
-
- Organization values shall be unique within the context of the
- subscribed PRMD or ADMD if there is no PRMD. For clarification, the
- following situation is legal:
-
- 1) C=FI; ADMD=FUMAIL; O=FUNET.
- 2) C=FI; ADMD=FUMAIL; PRMD=NOKIA; O=FUNET.
-
- In this case 1) and 2) are different addreses. (Note that 2) at this
- point is a hypotethical address). O=FUNET is a subscriber both at
- ADMD=FUMAIL, 1), and at PRMD=NOKIA, 2).
-
- 3.1.5. Organizational Units (OUs)
-
- If used, a unique hierarchy of OUs shall be implemented. The top
- level OU is unique within the scope of the immediately superior
- address element (i.e., Organization, PRMD or ADMD). Use of multiple
- OUs may be confusing.
-
- 3.1.6. Given Name, Initials, Surname (G I S)
-
- Each Organization can define its own Given-names, Initials, and
- Surnames to be used within the Organization. In the cases when
- Surnames are not unique within an O or OU, the Given-name and/or
- Initial shall be used to identify the Originator/Recipient. In the
- rare cases when more than one user would have the same combination of
- G, I, S under the same O and/or OUs, each organization is free to
- find a practical solution, and provide the users with unique O/R
- addresses.
-
- Either one of Given-name or Initials should be used, not both.
- Periods shall not be used in Initials.
-
- To avoid problems with the mapping of the X.400 addresses to RFC-822
- addresses, the following rules might be used. ADMD, PRMD, O, and OU
- values should consist of characters drawn from the alphabet (A-Z),
- digits (0-9), and minus. Blank or Space characters should be
- avoided. No distinction is made between upper and lower case. The
- last character shall not be a minus sign or period. The first
- character should be either a letter or a digit (see reference [6] and
- [7]).
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- 3.1.7. Domain Defined Attributes (DDAs)
-
- The GO-MHS Community shall allow the use of domain defined
- attributes. Note: Support for DDAs is mandatory in the functional
- profiles, and all software must upgrade to support DDAs. The
- following DDAs shall be supported by a GO-MD:
-
- "RFC-822" - defined in reference [3].
-
- The following DDAs should be supported by a GO-MD:
-
- "COMMON" - defined in reference [2].
-
- 3.2. X.400 88 -> 84 Downgrading
-
- The requirements in reference [2] should be implemented in GO-MDs
-
- 3.3. X.400 / RFC-822 address mapping
-
- All GO-MHS Community end-users shall be reachable from all end-users
- in the RFC-822 mail service in the Internet (SMTP), and vice versa.
-
- The address mapping issue is split into two parts:
-
- 1) Specification of RFC-822 addresses seen from the X.400 world.
- 2) Specification of X.400 addresses seen from the RFC-822 world.
-
- The mapping of X.400 and RFC-822 addresses shall be performed
- according to reference [3].
-
- 3.3.1. Specification of RFC-822 Addresses seen from the X.400 World
-
- Two scenarios are described:
-
- A. The RFC-822 end-user belongs to an organization with no defined
- X.400 standard attribute address space.
- B. The RFC-822 end-user belongs to an organization with a defined
- X.400 standard attribute address space.
-
- Organizations belong to scenario B if their X.400 addresses are
- registered according to the requirements in section 3.1.
-
- 3.3.1.1. An Organization with a defined X.400 Address Space
-
- An RFC-822 address for an RFC-822 mail user in such an organization
- shall be in the same address space as a normal X.400 address for
- X.400 users in the same organization. RFC-822 addresses and X.400
- addresses are thus sharing the same address space. Example:
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 8]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- University of Wisconsin-Madison is registered under C=US;
- ADMD=Internet; PRMD=XNREN; with O=UW-Madison and they are using OU=cs
- to address end-users in the CS-department. The RFC-822 address for
- RFC-822 mail users in the same department is: user@cs.wisc.edu.
-
- An X.400 user in the GO-MHS Community will address the RFC-822 mail
- user at the CS-department with the X.400 address:
-
- C=US; ADMD=Internet; PRMD=xnren; O=UW-Madison; OU=cs; S=user;
-
- This is the same address space as is used for X.400 end-users in the
- same department.
-
- 3.3.1.2. An Organization with no defined X.400 Address Space
-
- RFC-822 addresses shall be expressed using X.400 domain defined
- attributes. The mechanism used to define the RFC-822 recipient will
- vary on a per-country basis.
-
- For example, in the U.S., a special PRMD named "Internet" is defined
- to facilitate the specification of RFC-822 addresses. An X.400 user
- can address an RFC-822 recipient in the U.S. by constructing an X.400
- address such as:
-
- C=us; ADMD=Internet; PRMD=Internet; DD.RFC-822=user(a)some.place.edu;
-
- The first part of this address:
-
- C=us; ADMD=Internet; PRMD=Internet;
-
- denotes the U.S. portion of the Internet community and not a specific
- "gateway". The 2nd part:
-
- DD.RFC-822=user(a)some.place.edu
-
- is the RFC-822 address of the RFC-822 mail user after substitution of
- non-printable characters according to reference [3]. The RFC-822
- address is placed in an X.400 Domain Defined Attribute of type RFC-
- 822 (DD.RFC-822).
-
- Each country is free to choose its own method of defining the RFC-822
- community. For example in Italy, an X.400 user would refer to an
- RFC-822 user as:
-
- C=IT; ADMD=MASTER400; DD.RFC-822=user(a)some.place.it
-
- In the UK, an X.400 user would refer to an RFC-822 user as:
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 9]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- C=GB; ADMD= ; PRMD=UK.AC; O=MHS-relay; DD.RFC-822=user(a)some.place.uk
-
- 3.3.2. Specification of X.400 Addresses seen from the RFC-822 World
-
- If an X.400 organization has a defined RFC-822 address space, RFC-822
- users will be able to address X.400 recipients in RFC-822/Internet
- terms. This means that the address of the X.400 user, seen from an
- RFC-822 user, will generally be of the form:
-
- Firstname.Lastname@some.place.edu
-
- where the some.place.edu is a registered Internet domain.
-
- This implies the necessity of maintaining and distributing address
- mapping tables to all participating RFC-1327 gateways. The mapping
- tables shall be globally consistent. Effective mapping table
- coordination procedures are needed.
-
- If an organization does not have a defined RFC-822 address space, an
- escape mapping (defined in reference [3]) shall be used. In this
- case, the address of the X.400 user, seen from an RFC-822 user, will
- be of the form:
-
- "/G=Firstname/S=Lastname/O=org name/PRMD=foo/ADMD=bar/C=us/"@
- some.gateway.edu
-
- Note that reference [7] specifies that quoted left-hand side
- addresses must be supported and that these addresses may be greater
- than 80 characters long.
-
- This escape mapping shall also be used for X.400 addresses which do
- not map cleanly to RFC-822 addresses.
-
- It is recommended that an organization with no defined RFC-822
- address space, should register RFC-822 domains at the appropriate
- registration entity for such registrations. This will minimize the
- number of addresses which must use the escape mapping.
-
- If the escape mapping is not used, RFC-822 users will not see the
- difference between an Internet RFC-822 address and an address in the
- GO-MHS Community. For example:
-
- The X.400 address:
-
- C=us; ADMD=ATTMail; PRMD=CDC; O=CPG; S=Lastname; G=Firstname;
-
- will from an RFC-822 user look like:
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 10]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- Firstname.Lastname@cpg.cdc.com
-
- 3.4. Routing Policy
-
- To facilitate routing in the GO-MHS Community before an X.500
- infrastructure is deployed, the following two documents, a RELAY-MTA
- document and a Domain document, are defined. These documents are
- formally defined in reference [1]. The use of these documents is
- necessary to solve the routing crisis that is present today. However,
- this is a temporary solution that will eventually be replaced by the
- use of X.500.
-
- The RELAY-MTA document will define the names of RELAY-MTAs and their
- associated connection data including selector values, NSAP addresses,
- supported protocol stacks, and supported X.400 protocol version(s).
-
- Each entry in the Domain document consists of a sub-tree hierarchy of
- an X.400 address, followed by a list of MTAs which are willing to
- accept mail for the address or provide a relay service for it. Each
- MTA name will be associated with a priority value. Collectively, the
- list of MTA names in the Domain document make the given address
- reachable from all protocol stacks. In addition, the list of MTAs may
- provide redundant paths to the address, so in this case, the priority
- value indicates the preferred path, or the preferred order in which
- alternative routes should be tried.
-
- The RELAY-MTA and Domain documents are coordinated by the group
- specified in the Community document. The procedures for document
- information gathering and distribution, are for further study.
-
- 3.5. Minimum Statistics/Accounting
-
- The following are not required for all MTAs. The information is
- provided as guidelines for MTA managers. This is helpful for
- observing service use and evaluating service performance.
-
- This section defines the data which should be kept by each MTA.
- There are no constraints on the encoding used to store the data
- (i.e., format).
-
- For each message/report passing the MTA, the following information
- should be collected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 11]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- The following fields should be collected.
-
- Date
- Time
- Priority
- Local MTA Name
- Size
-
- The following fields are conditionally collected.
-
- From MTA Name (fm)
- To MTA Name (tm)
- Delta Time (dt)
- Message-id (id)
-
- At least one of 'fm' and 'tm' should be present. If one of 'fm' and
- 'tm' is not present, 'id' should be present. If both 'fm' and 'tm'
- are present, then 'dt' indicates the number of minutes that the
- message was delayed in the MTA. If 'id' cannot be mapped locally
- because of log file formats, 'id' is not present and every message
- creates two lines: one with 'fm' empty and one with 'tm' empty. In
- this case, 'date' and 'time' in the first line represent the date and
- time the message entered the MTA. In the second line, they represent
- the date and time the message left the MTA.
-
- The following fields are optionally collected.
-
- From Domain (fd)
- To Domain (td)
-
- For route tracing, 'fd' and 'td' are useful. They represent X.400
- OU's, O, PRMD, ADMD and C and may be supplied up to any level of
- detail.
-
- 4. Community Document
-
- For the GO-MHS community there will exist one single COMMUNITY
- document containing basic information as defined in reference [1].
- First the contact information for the central coordination point can
- be found together with the addresses for the file server where all
- the documents are stored. It also lists network names and stacks to
- be used in the RELAY-MTA and DOMAIN documents. The GO-MHS community
- must agree on its own set of mandatory and optional networks and
- stacks.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hagens & Hansen [Page 12]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
-
-
- 5. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- 6. Authors' Addresses
-
- Robert Hagens
- Advanced Network & Services, Inc.
- 1875 Campus Commons Drive
- Suite 220
- Reston, VA 22091
- U.S.A.
-
- Phone: +1 703 758 7700
- Fax: +1 703 758 7717
- EMail: hagens@ans.net
- DDA.RFC-822=hagens(a)ans.net; P=INTERNET; C=US
-
-
- Alf Hansen
- UNINETT
- Elgesetergt. 10
- Postbox 6883, Elgeseter
- N-7002 Trondheim
- Norway
-
- Phone: +47 7359 2982
- Fax: +47 7359 6450
- EMail: Alf.Hansen@uninett.no
- G=Alf; S=Hansen; O=uninett; P=uninett; C=no
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- Hagens & Hansen [Page 13]
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- RFC 1649 X.400 Management in GO-MHS July 1994
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-
- References
-
- [1] Eppenberger, U., Routing Coordination for X.400 MHS-Services
- Within a Multi Protocol / Multi Network Environment, RFC 1465,
- SWITCH, May 1993.
-
- [2] Hardcastle-Kille, S., "X.400 1988 to 1984 downgrading, RFC 1328,
- University College London, May 1992.
-
- [3] Hardcastle-Kille, S., "Mapping between X.400(1988) / ISO 10021
- and RFC 822, RFC 1327, May 1992.
-
- [4] Cargille, A., "Postmaster Convention for X.400 Operations", RFC
- 1648, University of Wisconsin, July 1994.
-
- [5] International Telecommunications Union, CCITT. Data
- Communications Networks, Volume VIII, Message Handling Systems,
- ITU: Geneva 1985.
-
- [6] Harrenstien, K., Stahl, M., and E. Feinler, "DOD Internet Host
- Table Specification", RFC 952, SRI, October 1985.
-
- [7] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts -- Application and
- Support", STD 3, RFC 1123, USC/Information Sciences Institute,
- October 1989.
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