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Network Working Group J. Degener
Request for Comments: 5173 P. Guenther
Updates: 5229 Sendmail, Inc.
Category: Standards Track April 2008
Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension
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 document defines a new command for the "Sieve" email filtering
language that tests for the occurrence of one or more strings in the
body of an email message.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 1]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
1. Introduction
The "body" test checks for the occurrence of one or more strings in
the body of an email message. Such a test was initially discussed
for the [SIEVE] base document, but was subsequently removed because
it was thought to be too costly to implement.
Nevertheless, several server vendors have implemented some form of
the "body" test.
This document reintroduces the "body" test as an extension, and
specifies its syntax and semantics.
2. Conventions Used in This Document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [KEYWORDS].
Conventions for notations are as in [SIEVE] Section 1.1, including
the use of the "Usage:" label for the definition of text and tagged
argument syntax.
The rules for interpreting the grammar are defined in [SIEVE] and
inherited by this specification. In particular, readers of this
document are reminded that according to [SIEVE] Sections 2.6.2 and
2.6.3, optional arguments such as COMPARATOR and MATCH-TYPE can
appear in any order.
3. Capability Identifier
The capability string associated with the extension defined in this
document is "body".
4. Test body
Usage: "body" [COMPARATOR] [MATCH-TYPE] [BODY-TRANSFORM]
<key-list: string-list>
The body test matches content in the body of an email message, that
is, anything following the first empty line after the header. (The
empty line itself, if present, is not considered to be part of the
body.)
The COMPARATOR and MATCH-TYPE keyword parameters are defined in
[SIEVE]. As specified in Sections 2.7.1 and 2.7.3 of [SIEVE], the
default COMPARATOR is "i;ascii-casemap" and the default MATCH-TYPE is
":is".
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 2]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
The BODY-TRANSFORM is a keyword parameter that governs how a set of
strings to be matched against are extracted from the body of the
message. If a message consists of a header only, not followed by an
empty line, then that set is empty and all "body" tests return false,
including those that test for an empty string. (This is similar to
how the "header" test always fails when the named header fields
aren't present.) Otherwise, the transform must be followed as
defined below in Section 5.
Note that the transformations defined here do *not* match against
each line of the message independently, so the strings will usually
contain CRLFs. How these can be matched is governed by the
comparator and match-type. For example, with the default comparator
of "i;ascii-casemap", they can be included literally in the key
strings, or be matched with the "*" or "?" wildcards of the :matches
match-type, or be skipped with :contains.
5. Body Transform
Prior to matching content in a message body, "transformations" can be
applied that filter and decode certain parts of the body. These
transformations are selected by a "BODY-TRANSFORM" keyword parameter.
Usage: ":raw"
/ ":content" <content-types: string-list>
/ ":text"
The default transformation is :text.
5.1. Body Transform ":raw"
The ":raw" transform matches against the entire undecoded body of a
message as a single item.
If the specified body-transform is ":raw", the [MIME] structure of
the body is irrelevant. The implementation MUST NOT remove any
transfer encoding from the message, MUST NOT refuse to filter
messages with syntactic errors (unless the environment it is part of
rejects them outright), and MUST treat multipart boundaries or the
MIME headers of enclosed body parts as part of the content being
matched against, instead of MIME structures to interpret.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 3]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
Example:
require "body";
# This will match a message containing the literal text
# "MAKE MONEY FAST" in body parts (ignoring any
# content-transfer-encodings) or MIME headers other than
# the outermost RFC 2822 header.
if body :raw :contains "MAKE MONEY FAST" {
discard;
}
5.2. Body Transform ":content"
If the body transform is ":content", the MIME parts that have the
specified content types are matched against independently.
If an individual content type begins or ends with a '/' (slash) or
contains multiple slashes, then it matches no content types.
Otherwise, if it contains a slash, then it specifies a full
<type>/<subtype> pair, and matches only that specific content type.
If it is the empty string, all MIME content types are matched.
Otherwise, it specifies a <type> only, and any subtype of that type
matches it.
The search for MIME parts matching the :content specification is
recursive and automatically descends into multipart and
message/rfc822 MIME parts. All MIME parts with matching types are
searched for the key strings. The test returns true if any
combination of a searched MIME part and key-list argument match.
If the :content specification matches a multipart MIME part, only the
prologue and epilogue sections of the part will be searched for the
key strings, treating the entire prologue and the entire epilogue as
separate strings; the contents of nested parts are only searched if
their respective types match the :content specification.
If the :content specification matches a message/rfc822 MIME part,
only the header of the nested message will be searched for the key
strings, treating the header as a single string; the contents of the
nested message body parts are only searched if their content type
matches the :content specification.
For other MIME types, the entire part will be searched as a single
string.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 4]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
(Matches against container types with an empty match string can be
useful as tests for the existence of such parts.)
Example:
From: Whomever
To: Someone
Date: Whenever
Subject: whatever
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=outer
& This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
&
--outer
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=inner
& This is a nested multi-part message in MIME format.
&
--inner
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
$ Hello
$
--inner
Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii"
% <html><body>Hello</body></html>
%
--inner--
&
& This is the end of the inner MIME multipart.
&
--outer
Content-Type: message/rfc822
! From: Someone Else
! Subject: hello request
$ Please say Hello
$
--outer--
&
& This is the end of the outer MIME multipart.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 5]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
In the above example, the '&', '$', '%', and '!' characters at the
start of a line are used to illustrate what portions of the example
message are used in tests:
- the lines starting with '&' are the ones that are tested when a
'body :content "multipart" :contains "MIME"' test is executed.
- the lines starting with '$' are the ones that are tested when a
'body :content "text/plain" :contains "Hello"' test is executed.
- the lines starting with '%' are the ones that are tested when a
'body :content "text/html" :contains "Hello"' test is executed.
- the lines starting with '$' or '%' are the ones that are tested
when a 'body :content "text" :contains "Hello"' test is executed.
- the lines starting with '!' are the ones that are tested when a
'body :content "message/rfc822" :contains "Hello"' test is
executed.
Comparisons are performed on octets. Implementations decode the
content-transfer-encoding and convert text to [UTF-8] as input to the
comparator. MIME parts that cannot be decoded and converted MAY be
treated as plain US-ASCII, omitted, or processed according to local
conventions. A NUL octet (character zero) SHOULD NOT cause early
termination of the content being compared against. Implementations
MUST support the "quoted-printable", "base64", "7bit", "8bit", and
"binary" content transfer encodings. Implementations MUST be capable
of converting to UTF-8 the US-ASCII, ISO-8859-1, and the US-ASCII
subset of ISO-8859-* character sets.
Each matched part is matched against independently: search
expressions MUST NOT match across MIME part boundaries. MIME headers
of the containing part MUST NOT be included in the data.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 6]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
Example:
require ["body", "fileinto"];
# Save any message with any text MIME part that contains the
# words "missile" or "coordinates" in the "secrets" folder.
if body :content "text" :contains ["missile", "coordinates"] {
fileinto "secrets";
}
# Save any message with an audio/mp3 MIME part in
# the "jukebox" folder.
if body :content "audio/mp3" :contains "" {
fileinto "jukebox";
}
5.3. Body Transform ":text"
The ":text" body transform matches against the results of an
implementation's best effort at extracting UTF-8 encoded text from a
message.
It is unspecified whether this transformation results in a single
string or multiple strings being matched against. All the text
extracted from a given non-container MIME part MUST be in the same
string.
In simple implementations, :text MAY be treated the same as :content
"text".
Sophisticated implementations MAY strip mark-up from the text prior
to matching, and MAY convert media types other than text to text
prior to matching.
(For example, they may be able to convert proprietary text editor
formats to text or apply optical character recognition algorithms to
image data.)
Example:
require ["body", "fileinto"];
# Save messages mentioning the project schedule in the
# project/schedule folder.
if body :text :contains "project schedule" {
fileinto "project/schedule";
}
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 7]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
6. Interaction with Other Sieve Extensions
Any extension that extends the grammar for the COMPARATOR or MATCH-
TYPE nonterminals will also affect the implementation of "body".
Wildcard expressions used with "body" are exempt from the side
effects described in [VARIABLES]. That is, they MUST NOT set match
variables (${1}, ${2}...) to the input values corresponding to
wildcard sequences in the matched pattern. However, if the extension
is present, variable references in the key strings or content type
strings are evaluated as described in this document.
7. IANA Considerations
The following template specifies the IANA registration of the Sieve
extension specified in this document:
To: iana@iana.org
Subject: Registration of new Sieve extension
Capability name: body
Description: Provides a test for matching against the
body of the message being processed
RFC number: RFC 5173
Contact Address: The Sieve discussion list
<ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>
8. Security Considerations
The system MUST be sized and restricted in such a manner that even
malicious use of body matching does not deny service to other users
of the host system.
Filters relying on string matches in the raw body of an email message
may be more general than intended. Text matches are no replacement
for a spam, virus, or other security related filtering system.
9. Acknowledgments
This document has been revised in part based on comments and
discussions that took place on and off the SIEVE mailing list.
Thanks to Cyrus Daboo, Ned Freed, Bob Johannessen, Simon Josefsson,
Mark E. Mallett, Chris Markle, Alexey Melnikov, Ken Murchison, Greg
Shapiro, Tim Showalter, Nigel Swinson, Dowson Tong, and Christian
Vogt for reviews and suggestions.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 8]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[MIME] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.
[SIEVE] Guenther, P., Ed., and T. Showalter, Ed., "Sieve: An
Email Filtering Language", RFC 5228, January 2008.
[UTF-8] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of ISO
10646", STD 63, RFC 3629, November 2003.
10.2. Informative References
[VARIABLES] Homme, K., "Sieve Email Filtering: Variables Extension",
RFC 5229, January 2008.
Authors' Addresses
Jutta Degener
5245 College Ave, Suite #127
Oakland, CA 94618
EMail: jutta@pobox.com
Philip Guenther
Sendmail, Inc.
6425 Christie Ave, 4th Floor
Emeryville, CA 94608
EMail: guenther@sendmail.com
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 9]
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RFC 5173 Sieve Email Filtering: Body Extension April 2008
Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).
This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
retain all their rights.
This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND
THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Intellectual Property
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
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attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at
ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
Degener & Guenther Standards Track [Page 10]
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