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Network Working Group                                           K. Homme
Request for Comments: 5229                            University of Oslo
Updates: 5228                                               January 2008
Category: Standards Track


               Sieve Email Filtering: Variables 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

   In advanced mail filtering rule sets, it is useful to keep state or
   configuration details across rules.  This document updates the Sieve
   filtering language (RFC 5228) with an extension to support variables.
   The extension changes the interpretation of strings, adds an action
   to store data in variables, and supplies a new test so that the value
   of a string can be examined.



























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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


1.  Introduction

   This is an extension to the Sieve language defined by [SIEVE].  It
   adds support for storing and referencing named data.  The mechanisms
   detailed in this document will only apply to Sieve scripts that
   include a require clause for the "variables" extension.  The require
   clauses themselves are not affected by this extension.

   Conventions for notations are as in [SIEVE] section 1.1, including
   use of [KEYWORDS] and [ABNF].  The grammar builds on the grammar of
   [SIEVE].  In this document, "character" means a character from the
   ISO 10646 coded character set [ISO10646], which may consist of
   multiple octets coded in [UTF-8], and "variable" is a named reference
   to data stored or read back using the mechanisms of this extension.

2.  Capability Identifier

   The capability string associated with the extension defined in this
   document is "variables".

3.  Interpretation of Strings

   This extension changes the semantics of quoted-string, multi-line-
   literal and multi-line-dotstuff found in [SIEVE] to enable the
   inclusion of the value of variables.

   When a string is evaluated, substrings matching variable-ref SHALL be
   replaced by the value of variable-name.  Only one pass through the
   string SHALL be done.  Variable names are case insensitive, so "foo"
   and "FOO" refer to the same variable.  Unknown variables are replaced
   by the empty string.

      variable-ref        =  "${" [namespace] variable-name "}"
      namespace           =  identifier "." *sub-namespace
      sub-namespace       =  variable-name "."
      variable-name       =  num-variable / identifier
      num-variable        =  1*DIGIT

   Examples:
      "&%${}!"     => unchanged, as the empty string is an illegal
                      identifier
      "${doh!}"    => unchanged, as "!" is illegal in identifiers

      The variable "company" holds the value "ACME".  No other variables
      are set.

      "${full}"         => the empty string
      "${company}"      => "ACME"



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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


      "${BAD${Company}" => "${BADACME"
      "${President, ${Company} Inc.}"
                        => "${President, ACME Inc.}"

   The expanded string MUST use the variable values that are current
   when control reaches the statement the string is part of.

   Strings where no variable substitutions take place are referred to as
   constant strings.  Future extensions may specify that passing non-
   constant strings as arguments to its actions or tests is an error.

   Namespaces are meant for future extensions that make internal state
   available through variables.  These variables SHOULD be put in a
   namespace whose first component is the same as its capability string.
   Such extensions SHOULD state which, if any, of the variables in its
   namespace are modifiable with the "set" action.

   References to namespaces without a prior require statement for the
   relevant extension MUST cause an error.

   Tests or actions in future extensions may need to access the
   unexpanded version of the string argument and, e.g., do the expansion
   after setting variables in its namespace.  The design of the
   implementation should allow this.

3.1.  Quoting and Encoded Characters

   The semantics of quoting using backslash are not changed: backslash
   quoting is resolved before doing variable substitution.  Similarly,
   encoded character processing (see Section 2.4.2.4 of [SIEVE]) is
   performed before doing variable substitution, but after quoting.

   Examples:
      "${fo\o}"  => ${foo}  => the expansion of variable foo.
      "${fo\\o}" => ${fo\o} => illegal identifier => left verbatim.
      "\${foo}"  => ${foo}  => the expansion of variable foo.
      "\\${foo}" => \${foo} => a backslash character followed by the
                               expansion of variable foo.

      If it is required to include a character sequence such as
      "${beep}" verbatim in a text literal, the user can define a
      variable to circumvent expansion to the empty string.

   Example:
      set "dollar" "$";
      set "text" "regarding ${dollar}{beep}";





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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


   Example:
      require ["encoded-character", "variables"];
      set "name" "Ethelbert"
      if header :contains "Subject" "dear${hex:20 24 7b 4e}ame}" {
          # the test string is "dear Ethelbert"
      }

3.2.  Match Variables

   A "match variable" has a name consisting only of decimal digits and
   has no namespace component.

   The decimal value of the match variable name will index the list of
   matching strings from the most recently evaluated successful match of
   type ":matches".  The list is empty if no match has been successful.

       Note: Extra leading zeroes are allowed and ignored.

   The list will contain one string for each wildcard ("?" and "*") in
   the match pattern.  Each string holds the substring from the source
   value that the corresponding wildcard expands to, possibly the empty
   string.  The wildcards match as little as possible (non-greedy
   matching).

   The first string in the list has index 1.  If the index is out of
   range, the empty string will be substituted.  Index 0 contains the
   matched part of the source value.

   The interpreter MUST short-circuit tests, i.e., not perform more
   tests than necessary to find the result.  Evaluation order MUST be
   left to right.  If a test has two or more list arguments, the
   implementation is free to choose which to iterate over first.

   An extension describing a new match type (e.g., [REGEX]) MAY specify
   that match variables are set as a side effect when the match type is
   used in a script that has enabled the "variables" extension.

   Example:

      require ["fileinto", "variables"];

      if header :matches "List-ID" "*<*@*" {
          fileinto "INBOX.lists.${2}"; stop;
      }







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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


      # Imagine the header
      # Subject: [acme-users] [fwd] version 1.0 is out
      if header :matches "Subject" "[*] *" {
          # ${1} will hold "acme-users",
          # ${2} will hold "[fwd] version 1.0 is out"
          fileinfo "INBOX.lists.${1}"; stop;
      }

      # Imagine the header
      # To: coyote@ACME.Example.COM
      if address :matches ["To", "Cc"] ["coyote@**.com",
              "wile@**.com"] {
          # ${0} is the matching address
          # ${1} is always the empty string
          # ${2} is part of the domain name ("ACME.Example")
          fileinto "INBOX.business.${2}"; stop;
      } else {
          # Control wouldn't reach this block if any match was
          # successful, so no match variables are set at this
          # point.
      }

      if anyof (true, address :domain :matches "To" "*.com") {
          # The second test is never evaluated, so there are
          # still no match variables set.
          stop;
      }

4.  Action set

   Usage:    set [MODIFIER] <name: string> <value: string>

   The "set" action stores the specified value in the variable
   identified by name.  The name MUST be a constant string and conform
   to the syntax of variable-name.  Match variables cannot be set.  A
   namespace cannot be used unless an extension explicitly allows its
   use in "set".  An invalid name MUST be detected as a syntax error.

   Modifiers are applied on a value before it is stored in the variable.
   See the next section for details.

   Variables are only visible to the currently running script.  Note:
   Future extensions may provide different scoping rules for variables.

   Variable names are case insensitive.






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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


   Example:
      set "honorific"  "Mr";
      set "first_name" "Wile";
      set "last_name"  "Coyote";
      set "vacation" text:
      Dear ${HONORIFIC} ${last_name},
      I'm out, please leave a message after the meep.
      .
      ;

   "set" does not affect the implicit keep.  It is compatible with all
   actions defined in [SIEVE].

4.1.  Modifiers

   Usage:  ":lower" / ":upper" / ":lowerfirst" / ":upperfirst" /
           ":quotewildcard" / ":length"

   Modifier names are case insensitive.  Unknown modifiers MUST yield a
   syntax error.  More than one modifier can be specified, in which case
   they are applied according to this precedence list, largest value
   first:

                     +--------------------------------+
                     | Precedence     Modifier        |
                     +--------------------------------+
                     |     40         :lower          |
                     |                :upper          |
                     +--------------------------------+
                     |     30         :lowerfirst     |
                     |                :upperfirst     |
                     +--------------------------------+
                     |     20         :quotewildcard  |
                     +--------------------------------+
                     |     10         :length         |
                     +--------------------------------+

   It is an error to use two or more modifiers of the same precedence in
   a single "set" action.

   Examples:
      # The value assigned to the variable is printed after the arrow
      set "a" "juMBlEd lETteRS";             => "juMBlEd lETteRS"
      set :length "b" "${a}";                => "15"
      set :lower "b" "${a}";                 => "jumbled letters"
      set :upperfirst "b" "${a}";            => "JuMBlEd lETteRS"
      set :upperfirst :lower "b" "${a}";     => "Jumbled letters"
      set :quotewildcard "b" "Rock*";        => "Rock\*"



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4.1.1.  Modifier ":length"

   The value is the decimal number of characters in the expansion,
   converted to a string.

4.1.2.  Modifier ":quotewildcard"

   This modifier adds the necessary quoting to ensure that the expanded
   text will only match a literal occurrence if used as a parameter to
   :matches.  Every character with special meaning ("*", "?",  and "\")
   is prefixed with "\" in the expansion.

4.1.3.  Case Modifiers

   These modifiers change the letters of the text from upper to lower
   case or vice versa.  Characters other than "A"-"Z" and "a"-"z" from
   US-ASCII are left unchanged.

4.1.3.1.  Modifier ":upper"

   All lower case letters are converted to their upper case
   counterparts.

4.1.3.2.  Modifier ":lower"

   All upper case letters are converted to their lower case
   counterparts.

4.1.3.3.  Modifier ":upperfirst"

   The first character of the string is converted to upper case if it is
   a letter and set in lower case.  The rest of the string is left
   unchanged.

4.1.3.4.  Modifier ":lowerfirst"

   The first character of the string is converted to lower case if it is
   a letter and set in upper case.  The rest of the string is left
   unchanged.

5.  Test string

   Usage:  string [MATCH-TYPE] [COMPARATOR]
           <source: string-list> <key-list: string-list>

   The "string" test evaluates to true if any of the source strings
   matches any key.  The type of match defaults to ":is".




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   In the "string" test, both source and key-list are taken from the
   script, not the message, and whitespace stripping MUST NOT be done
   unless the script explicitly requests this through some future
   mechanism.

   Example:
      set "state" "${state} pending";
      if string :matches " ${state} " "* pending *" {
          # the above test always succeeds
      }

   The "relational" extension [RELATIONAL] adds a match type called
   ":count".  The count of a single string is 0 if it is the empty
   string, or 1 otherwise.  The count of a string list is the sum of the
   counts of the member strings.

6.  Implementation Limits

   An implementation of this document MUST support at least 128 distinct
   variables.  The supported length of variable names MUST be at least
   32 characters.  Each variable MUST be able to hold at least 4000
   characters.  Attempts to set the variable to a value larger than what
   the implementation supports SHOULD be reported as an error at
   compile-time if possible.  If the attempt is discovered during run-
   time, the value SHOULD be truncated, and it MUST NOT be treated as an
   error.

   Match variables ${1} through ${9} MUST be supported.  References to
   higher indices than those the implementation supports MUST be treated
   as a syntax error, which SHOULD be discovered at compile-time.

7.  Security Considerations

   When match variables are used, and the author of the script isn't
   careful, strings can contain arbitrary values controlled by the
   sender of the mail.

   Since values stored by "set" that exceed implementation limits are
   silently truncated, it's not appropriate to store large structures
   with security implications in variables.

   The introduction of variables makes advanced decision making easier
   to write, but since no looping construct is provided, all Sieve
   scripts will terminate in an orderly manner.

   Sieve filtering should not be relied on as a security measure against
   hostile mail messages.  Sieve is designed to do simple, mostly static
   tests, and is not suitable for use as a spam or virus checker, where



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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


   the perpetrator has a motivation to vary the format of the mail in
   order to avoid filtering rules.  See also [SPAMTEST].

8.  IANA Considerations

   The following template specifies the IANA registration of the
   variables Sieve extension specified in this document:

   To: iana@iana.org
   Subject: Registration of new Sieve extension

   Capability name: variables
   Description:     Adds support for variables to the Sieve filtering
                    language.
   RFC number:      RFC 5229
   Contact address: The Sieve discussion list <ietf-mta-filters@imc.org>

9.  Acknowledgments

   Thanks to Cyrus Daboo, Jutta Degener, Ned Freed, Lawrence Greenfield,
   Jeffrey Hutzelman, Mark E. Mallett, Alexey Melnikov, Peder Stray, and
   Nigel Swinson for valuable feedback.

10.  References

10.1.  Normative References

   [ABNF]       Crocker, D., Ed., and Overell, P., "Augmented BNF for
                Syntax Specifications: ABNF", RFC 4234, October 2005.

   [KEYWORDS]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [RELATIONAL] Segmuller, W. and B. Leiba, "Sieve Email Filtering:
                Relational Extension", RFC 5231, January 2008.

   [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 Unicode
                and ISO 10646", RFC 3629, November 2003.

10.2.  Informative References

   [ISO10646]   ISO/IEC, "Information Technology - Universal Multiple-
                Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) - Part 1: Architecture
                and Basic Multilingual Plane", May 1993, with
                amendments.



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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 2008


   [REGEX]      Murchison, K., "Sieve Email Filtering -- Regular
                Expression Extension", Work in Progress, February 2006.

   [SPAMTEST]   Daboo, C., "Sieve Email Filtering: Spamtest and
                Virustest Extensions", RFC 5235, January 2008.

Author's Address

   Kjetil T. Homme
   University of Oslo
   PO Box 1080
   0316 Oslo, Norway

   Phone: +47 9366 0091
   EMail: kjetilho@ifi.uio.no




































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RFC 5229               Sieve: Variables Extension           January 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.

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   "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
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   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

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   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
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   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at
   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.












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