pop3-rfc1939.txt (47018B)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Network Working Group J. Myers 8 Request for Comments: 1939 Carnegie Mellon 9 STD: 53 M. Rose 10 Obsoletes: 1725 Dover Beach Consulting, Inc. 11 Category: Standards Track May 1996 12 13 14 Post Office Protocol - Version 3 15 16 Status of this Memo 17 18 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the 19 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for 20 improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet 21 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state 22 and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. 23 24 Table of Contents 25 26 1. Introduction ................................................ 2 27 2. A Short Digression .......................................... 2 28 3. Basic Operation ............................................. 3 29 4. The AUTHORIZATION State ..................................... 4 30 QUIT Command ................................................ 5 31 5. The TRANSACTION State ....................................... 5 32 STAT Command ................................................ 6 33 LIST Command ................................................ 6 34 RETR Command ................................................ 8 35 DELE Command ................................................ 8 36 NOOP Command ................................................ 9 37 RSET Command ................................................ 9 38 6. The UPDATE State ............................................ 10 39 QUIT Command ................................................ 10 40 7. Optional POP3 Commands ...................................... 11 41 TOP Command ................................................. 11 42 UIDL Command ................................................ 12 43 USER Command ................................................ 13 44 PASS Command ................................................ 14 45 APOP Command ................................................ 15 46 8. Scaling and Operational Considerations ...................... 16 47 9. POP3 Command Summary ........................................ 18 48 10. Example POP3 Session ....................................... 19 49 11. Message Format ............................................. 19 50 12. References ................................................. 20 51 13. Security Considerations .................................... 20 52 14. Acknowledgements ........................................... 20 53 15. Authors' Addresses ......................................... 21 54 Appendix A. Differences from RFC 1725 .......................... 22 55 56 57 58 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 1] 59 60 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 61 62 63 Appendix B. Command Index ...................................... 23 64 65 1. Introduction 66 67 On certain types of smaller nodes in the Internet it is often 68 impractical to maintain a message transport system (MTS). For 69 example, a workstation may not have sufficient resources (cycles, 70 disk space) in order to permit a SMTP server [RFC821] and associated 71 local mail delivery system to be kept resident and continuously 72 running. Similarly, it may be expensive (or impossible) to keep a 73 personal computer interconnected to an IP-style network for long 74 amounts of time (the node is lacking the resource known as 75 "connectivity"). 76 77 Despite this, it is often very useful to be able to manage mail on 78 these smaller nodes, and they often support a user agent (UA) to aid 79 the tasks of mail handling. To solve this problem, a node which can 80 support an MTS entity offers a maildrop service to these less endowed 81 nodes. The Post Office Protocol - Version 3 (POP3) is intended to 82 permit a workstation to dynamically access a maildrop on a server 83 host in a useful fashion. Usually, this means that the POP3 protocol 84 is used to allow a workstation to retrieve mail that the server is 85 holding for it. 86 87 POP3 is not intended to provide extensive manipulation operations of 88 mail on the server; normally, mail is downloaded and then deleted. A 89 more advanced (and complex) protocol, IMAP4, is discussed in 90 [RFC1730]. 91 92 For the remainder of this memo, the term "client host" refers to a 93 host making use of the POP3 service, while the term "server host" 94 refers to a host which offers the POP3 service. 95 96 2. A Short Digression 97 98 This memo does not specify how a client host enters mail into the 99 transport system, although a method consistent with the philosophy of 100 this memo is presented here: 101 102 When the user agent on a client host wishes to enter a message 103 into the transport system, it establishes an SMTP connection to 104 its relay host and sends all mail to it. This relay host could 105 be, but need not be, the POP3 server host for the client host. Of 106 course, the relay host must accept mail for delivery to arbitrary 107 recipient addresses, that functionality is not required of all 108 SMTP servers. 109 110 111 112 113 114 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 2] 115 116 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 117 118 119 3. Basic Operation 120 121 Initially, the server host starts the POP3 service by listening on 122 TCP port 110. When a client host wishes to make use of the service, 123 it establishes a TCP connection with the server host. When the 124 connection is established, the POP3 server sends a greeting. The 125 client and POP3 server then exchange commands and responses 126 (respectively) until the connection is closed or aborted. 127 128 Commands in the POP3 consist of a case-insensitive keyword, possibly 129 followed by one or more arguments. All commands are terminated by a 130 CRLF pair. Keywords and arguments consist of printable ASCII 131 characters. Keywords and arguments are each separated by a single 132 SPACE character. Keywords are three or four characters long. Each 133 argument may be up to 40 characters long. 134 135 Responses in the POP3 consist of a status indicator and a keyword 136 possibly followed by additional information. All responses are 137 terminated by a CRLF pair. Responses may be up to 512 characters 138 long, including the terminating CRLF. There are currently two status 139 indicators: positive ("+OK") and negative ("-ERR"). Servers MUST 140 send the "+OK" and "-ERR" in upper case. 141 142 Responses to certain commands are multi-line. In these cases, which 143 are clearly indicated below, after sending the first line of the 144 response and a CRLF, any additional lines are sent, each terminated 145 by a CRLF pair. When all lines of the response have been sent, a 146 final line is sent, consisting of a termination octet (decimal code 147 046, ".") and a CRLF pair. If any line of the multi-line response 148 begins with the termination octet, the line is "byte-stuffed" by 149 pre-pending the termination octet to that line of the response. 150 Hence a multi-line response is terminated with the five octets 151 "CRLF.CRLF". When examining a multi-line response, the client checks 152 to see if the line begins with the termination octet. If so and if 153 octets other than CRLF follow, the first octet of the line (the 154 termination octet) is stripped away. If so and if CRLF immediately 155 follows the termination character, then the response from the POP 156 server is ended and the line containing ".CRLF" is not considered 157 part of the multi-line response. 158 159 A POP3 session progresses through a number of states during its 160 lifetime. Once the TCP connection has been opened and the POP3 161 server has sent the greeting, the session enters the AUTHORIZATION 162 state. In this state, the client must identify itself to the POP3 163 server. Once the client has successfully done this, the server 164 acquires resources associated with the client's maildrop, and the 165 session enters the TRANSACTION state. In this state, the client 166 requests actions on the part of the POP3 server. When the client has 167 168 169 170 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 3] 171 172 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 173 174 175 issued the QUIT command, the session enters the UPDATE state. In 176 this state, the POP3 server releases any resources acquired during 177 the TRANSACTION state and says goodbye. The TCP connection is then 178 closed. 179 180 A server MUST respond to an unrecognized, unimplemented, or 181 syntactically invalid command by responding with a negative status 182 indicator. A server MUST respond to a command issued when the 183 session is in an incorrect state by responding with a negative status 184 indicator. There is no general method for a client to distinguish 185 between a server which does not implement an optional command and a 186 server which is unwilling or unable to process the command. 187 188 A POP3 server MAY have an inactivity autologout timer. Such a timer 189 MUST be of at least 10 minutes' duration. The receipt of any command 190 from the client during that interval should suffice to reset the 191 autologout timer. When the timer expires, the session does NOT enter 192 the UPDATE state--the server should close the TCP connection without 193 removing any messages or sending any response to the client. 194 195 4. The AUTHORIZATION State 196 197 Once the TCP connection has been opened by a POP3 client, the POP3 198 server issues a one line greeting. This can be any positive 199 response. An example might be: 200 201 S: +OK POP3 server ready 202 203 The POP3 session is now in the AUTHORIZATION state. The client must 204 now identify and authenticate itself to the POP3 server. Two 205 possible mechanisms for doing this are described in this document, 206 the USER and PASS command combination and the APOP command. Both 207 mechanisms are described later in this document. Additional 208 authentication mechanisms are described in [RFC1734]. While there is 209 no single authentication mechanism that is required of all POP3 210 servers, a POP3 server must of course support at least one 211 authentication mechanism. 212 213 Once the POP3 server has determined through the use of any 214 authentication command that the client should be given access to the 215 appropriate maildrop, the POP3 server then acquires an exclusive- 216 access lock on the maildrop, as necessary to prevent messages from 217 being modified or removed before the session enters the UPDATE state. 218 If the lock is successfully acquired, the POP3 server responds with a 219 positive status indicator. The POP3 session now enters the 220 TRANSACTION state, with no messages marked as deleted. If the 221 maildrop cannot be opened for some reason (for example, a lock can 222 not be acquired, the client is denied access to the appropriate 223 224 225 226 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 4] 227 228 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 229 230 231 maildrop, or the maildrop cannot be parsed), the POP3 server responds 232 with a negative status indicator. (If a lock was acquired but the 233 POP3 server intends to respond with a negative status indicator, the 234 POP3 server must release the lock prior to rejecting the command.) 235 After returning a negative status indicator, the server may close the 236 connection. If the server does not close the connection, the client 237 may either issue a new authentication command and start again, or the 238 client may issue the QUIT command. 239 240 After the POP3 server has opened the maildrop, it assigns a message- 241 number to each message, and notes the size of each message in octets. 242 The first message in the maildrop is assigned a message-number of 243 "1", the second is assigned "2", and so on, so that the nth message 244 in a maildrop is assigned a message-number of "n". In POP3 commands 245 and responses, all message-numbers and message sizes are expressed in 246 base-10 (i.e., decimal). 247 248 Here is the summary for the QUIT command when used in the 249 AUTHORIZATION state: 250 251 QUIT 252 253 Arguments: none 254 255 Restrictions: none 256 257 Possible Responses: 258 +OK 259 260 Examples: 261 C: QUIT 262 S: +OK dewey POP3 server signing off 263 264 5. The TRANSACTION State 265 266 Once the client has successfully identified itself to the POP3 server 267 and the POP3 server has locked and opened the appropriate maildrop, 268 the POP3 session is now in the TRANSACTION state. The client may now 269 issue any of the following POP3 commands repeatedly. After each 270 command, the POP3 server issues a response. Eventually, the client 271 issues the QUIT command and the POP3 session enters the UPDATE state. 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 5] 283 284 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 285 286 287 Here are the POP3 commands valid in the TRANSACTION state: 288 289 STAT 290 291 Arguments: none 292 293 Restrictions: 294 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 295 296 Discussion: 297 The POP3 server issues a positive response with a line 298 containing information for the maildrop. This line is 299 called a "drop listing" for that maildrop. 300 301 In order to simplify parsing, all POP3 servers are 302 required to use a certain format for drop listings. The 303 positive response consists of "+OK" followed by a single 304 space, the number of messages in the maildrop, a single 305 space, and the size of the maildrop in octets. This memo 306 makes no requirement on what follows the maildrop size. 307 Minimal implementations should just end that line of the 308 response with a CRLF pair. More advanced implementations 309 may include other information. 310 311 NOTE: This memo STRONGLY discourages implementations 312 from supplying additional information in the drop 313 listing. Other, optional, facilities are discussed 314 later on which permit the client to parse the messages 315 in the maildrop. 316 317 Note that messages marked as deleted are not counted in 318 either total. 319 320 Possible Responses: 321 +OK nn mm 322 323 Examples: 324 C: STAT 325 S: +OK 2 320 326 327 328 LIST [msg] 329 330 Arguments: 331 a message-number (optional), which, if present, may NOT 332 refer to a message marked as deleted 333 334 335 336 337 338 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 6] 339 340 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 341 342 343 Restrictions: 344 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 345 346 Discussion: 347 If an argument was given and the POP3 server issues a 348 positive response with a line containing information for 349 that message. This line is called a "scan listing" for 350 that message. 351 352 If no argument was given and the POP3 server issues a 353 positive response, then the response given is multi-line. 354 After the initial +OK, for each message in the maildrop, 355 the POP3 server responds with a line containing 356 information for that message. This line is also called a 357 "scan listing" for that message. If there are no 358 messages in the maildrop, then the POP3 server responds 359 with no scan listings--it issues a positive response 360 followed by a line containing a termination octet and a 361 CRLF pair. 362 363 In order to simplify parsing, all POP3 servers are 364 required to use a certain format for scan listings. A 365 scan listing consists of the message-number of the 366 message, followed by a single space and the exact size of 367 the message in octets. Methods for calculating the exact 368 size of the message are described in the "Message Format" 369 section below. This memo makes no requirement on what 370 follows the message size in the scan listing. Minimal 371 implementations should just end that line of the response 372 with a CRLF pair. More advanced implementations may 373 include other information, as parsed from the message. 374 375 NOTE: This memo STRONGLY discourages implementations 376 from supplying additional information in the scan 377 listing. Other, optional, facilities are discussed 378 later on which permit the client to parse the messages 379 in the maildrop. 380 381 Note that messages marked as deleted are not listed. 382 383 Possible Responses: 384 +OK scan listing follows 385 -ERR no such message 386 387 Examples: 388 C: LIST 389 S: +OK 2 messages (320 octets) 390 S: 1 120 391 392 393 394 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 7] 395 396 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 397 398 399 S: 2 200 400 S: . 401 ... 402 C: LIST 2 403 S: +OK 2 200 404 ... 405 C: LIST 3 406 S: -ERR no such message, only 2 messages in maildrop 407 408 409 RETR msg 410 411 Arguments: 412 a message-number (required) which may NOT refer to a 413 message marked as deleted 414 415 Restrictions: 416 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 417 418 Discussion: 419 If the POP3 server issues a positive response, then the 420 response given is multi-line. After the initial +OK, the 421 POP3 server sends the message corresponding to the given 422 message-number, being careful to byte-stuff the termination 423 character (as with all multi-line responses). 424 425 Possible Responses: 426 +OK message follows 427 -ERR no such message 428 429 Examples: 430 C: RETR 1 431 S: +OK 120 octets 432 S: <the POP3 server sends the entire message here> 433 S: . 434 435 436 DELE msg 437 438 Arguments: 439 a message-number (required) which may NOT refer to a 440 message marked as deleted 441 442 Restrictions: 443 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 8] 451 452 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 453 454 455 Discussion: 456 The POP3 server marks the message as deleted. Any future 457 reference to the message-number associated with the message 458 in a POP3 command generates an error. The POP3 server does 459 not actually delete the message until the POP3 session 460 enters the UPDATE state. 461 462 Possible Responses: 463 +OK message deleted 464 -ERR no such message 465 466 Examples: 467 C: DELE 1 468 S: +OK message 1 deleted 469 ... 470 C: DELE 2 471 S: -ERR message 2 already deleted 472 473 474 NOOP 475 476 Arguments: none 477 478 Restrictions: 479 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 480 481 Discussion: 482 The POP3 server does nothing, it merely replies with a 483 positive response. 484 485 Possible Responses: 486 +OK 487 488 Examples: 489 C: NOOP 490 S: +OK 491 492 493 RSET 494 495 Arguments: none 496 497 Restrictions: 498 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 499 500 Discussion: 501 If any messages have been marked as deleted by the POP3 502 server, they are unmarked. The POP3 server then replies 503 504 505 506 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 9] 507 508 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 509 510 511 with a positive response. 512 513 Possible Responses: 514 +OK 515 516 Examples: 517 C: RSET 518 S: +OK maildrop has 2 messages (320 octets) 519 520 6. The UPDATE State 521 522 When the client issues the QUIT command from the TRANSACTION state, 523 the POP3 session enters the UPDATE state. (Note that if the client 524 issues the QUIT command from the AUTHORIZATION state, the POP3 525 session terminates but does NOT enter the UPDATE state.) 526 527 If a session terminates for some reason other than a client-issued 528 QUIT command, the POP3 session does NOT enter the UPDATE state and 529 MUST not remove any messages from the maildrop. 530 531 QUIT 532 533 Arguments: none 534 535 Restrictions: none 536 537 Discussion: 538 The POP3 server removes all messages marked as deleted 539 from the maildrop and replies as to the status of this 540 operation. If there is an error, such as a resource 541 shortage, encountered while removing messages, the 542 maildrop may result in having some or none of the messages 543 marked as deleted be removed. In no case may the server 544 remove any messages not marked as deleted. 545 546 Whether the removal was successful or not, the server 547 then releases any exclusive-access lock on the maildrop 548 and closes the TCP connection. 549 550 Possible Responses: 551 +OK 552 -ERR some deleted messages not removed 553 554 Examples: 555 C: QUIT 556 S: +OK dewey POP3 server signing off (maildrop empty) 557 ... 558 C: QUIT 559 560 561 562 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 10] 563 564 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 565 566 567 S: +OK dewey POP3 server signing off (2 messages left) 568 ... 569 570 7. Optional POP3 Commands 571 572 The POP3 commands discussed above must be supported by all minimal 573 implementations of POP3 servers. 574 575 The optional POP3 commands described below permit a POP3 client 576 greater freedom in message handling, while preserving a simple POP3 577 server implementation. 578 579 NOTE: This memo STRONGLY encourages implementations to support 580 these commands in lieu of developing augmented drop and scan 581 listings. In short, the philosophy of this memo is to put 582 intelligence in the part of the POP3 client and not the POP3 583 server. 584 585 TOP msg n 586 587 Arguments: 588 a message-number (required) which may NOT refer to to a 589 message marked as deleted, and a non-negative number 590 of lines (required) 591 592 Restrictions: 593 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state 594 595 Discussion: 596 If the POP3 server issues a positive response, then the 597 response given is multi-line. After the initial +OK, the 598 POP3 server sends the headers of the message, the blank 599 line separating the headers from the body, and then the 600 number of lines of the indicated message's body, being 601 careful to byte-stuff the termination character (as with 602 all multi-line responses). 603 604 Note that if the number of lines requested by the POP3 605 client is greater than than the number of lines in the 606 body, then the POP3 server sends the entire message. 607 608 Possible Responses: 609 +OK top of message follows 610 -ERR no such message 611 612 Examples: 613 C: TOP 1 10 614 S: +OK 615 616 617 618 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 11] 619 620 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 621 622 623 S: <the POP3 server sends the headers of the 624 message, a blank line, and the first 10 lines 625 of the body of the message> 626 S: . 627 ... 628 C: TOP 100 3 629 S: -ERR no such message 630 631 632 UIDL [msg] 633 634 Arguments: 635 a message-number (optional), which, if present, may NOT 636 refer to a message marked as deleted 637 638 Restrictions: 639 may only be given in the TRANSACTION state. 640 641 Discussion: 642 If an argument was given and the POP3 server issues a positive 643 response with a line containing information for that message. 644 This line is called a "unique-id listing" for that message. 645 646 If no argument was given and the POP3 server issues a positive 647 response, then the response given is multi-line. After the 648 initial +OK, for each message in the maildrop, the POP3 server 649 responds with a line containing information for that message. 650 This line is called a "unique-id listing" for that message. 651 652 In order to simplify parsing, all POP3 servers are required to 653 use a certain format for unique-id listings. A unique-id 654 listing consists of the message-number of the message, 655 followed by a single space and the unique-id of the message. 656 No information follows the unique-id in the unique-id listing. 657 658 The unique-id of a message is an arbitrary server-determined 659 string, consisting of one to 70 characters in the range 0x21 660 to 0x7E, which uniquely identifies a message within a 661 maildrop and which persists across sessions. This 662 persistence is required even if a session ends without 663 entering the UPDATE state. The server should never reuse an 664 unique-id in a given maildrop, for as long as the entity 665 using the unique-id exists. 666 667 Note that messages marked as deleted are not listed. 668 669 While it is generally preferable for server implementations 670 to store arbitrarily assigned unique-ids in the maildrop, 671 672 673 674 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 12] 675 676 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 677 678 679 this specification is intended to permit unique-ids to be 680 calculated as a hash of the message. Clients should be able 681 to handle a situation where two identical copies of a 682 message in a maildrop have the same unique-id. 683 684 Possible Responses: 685 +OK unique-id listing follows 686 -ERR no such message 687 688 Examples: 689 C: UIDL 690 S: +OK 691 S: 1 whqtswO00WBw418f9t5JxYwZ 692 S: 2 QhdPYR:00WBw1Ph7x7 693 S: . 694 ... 695 C: UIDL 2 696 S: +OK 2 QhdPYR:00WBw1Ph7x7 697 ... 698 C: UIDL 3 699 S: -ERR no such message, only 2 messages in maildrop 700 701 702 USER name 703 704 Arguments: 705 a string identifying a mailbox (required), which is of 706 significance ONLY to the server 707 708 Restrictions: 709 may only be given in the AUTHORIZATION state after the POP3 710 greeting or after an unsuccessful USER or PASS command 711 712 Discussion: 713 To authenticate using the USER and PASS command 714 combination, the client must first issue the USER 715 command. If the POP3 server responds with a positive 716 status indicator ("+OK"), then the client may issue 717 either the PASS command to complete the authentication, 718 or the QUIT command to terminate the POP3 session. If 719 the POP3 server responds with a negative status indicator 720 ("-ERR") to the USER command, then the client may either 721 issue a new authentication command or may issue the QUIT 722 command. 723 724 The server may return a positive response even though no 725 such mailbox exists. The server may return a negative 726 response if mailbox exists, but does not permit plaintext 727 728 729 730 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 13] 731 732 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 733 734 735 password authentication. 736 737 Possible Responses: 738 +OK name is a valid mailbox 739 -ERR never heard of mailbox name 740 741 Examples: 742 C: USER frated 743 S: -ERR sorry, no mailbox for frated here 744 ... 745 C: USER mrose 746 S: +OK mrose is a real hoopy frood 747 748 749 PASS string 750 751 Arguments: 752 a server/mailbox-specific password (required) 753 754 Restrictions: 755 may only be given in the AUTHORIZATION state immediately 756 after a successful USER command 757 758 Discussion: 759 When the client issues the PASS command, the POP3 server 760 uses the argument pair from the USER and PASS commands to 761 determine if the client should be given access to the 762 appropriate maildrop. 763 764 Since the PASS command has exactly one argument, a POP3 765 server may treat spaces in the argument as part of the 766 password, instead of as argument separators. 767 768 Possible Responses: 769 +OK maildrop locked and ready 770 -ERR invalid password 771 -ERR unable to lock maildrop 772 773 Examples: 774 C: USER mrose 775 S: +OK mrose is a real hoopy frood 776 C: PASS secret 777 S: -ERR maildrop already locked 778 ... 779 C: USER mrose 780 S: +OK mrose is a real hoopy frood 781 C: PASS secret 782 S: +OK mrose's maildrop has 2 messages (320 octets) 783 784 785 786 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 14] 787 788 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 789 790 791 APOP name digest 792 793 Arguments: 794 a string identifying a mailbox and a MD5 digest string 795 (both required) 796 797 Restrictions: 798 may only be given in the AUTHORIZATION state after the POP3 799 greeting or after an unsuccessful USER or PASS command 800 801 Discussion: 802 Normally, each POP3 session starts with a USER/PASS 803 exchange. This results in a server/user-id specific 804 password being sent in the clear on the network. For 805 intermittent use of POP3, this may not introduce a sizable 806 risk. However, many POP3 client implementations connect to 807 the POP3 server on a regular basis -- to check for new 808 mail. Further the interval of session initiation may be on 809 the order of five minutes. Hence, the risk of password 810 capture is greatly enhanced. 811 812 An alternate method of authentication is required which 813 provides for both origin authentication and replay 814 protection, but which does not involve sending a password 815 in the clear over the network. The APOP command provides 816 this functionality. 817 818 A POP3 server which implements the APOP command will 819 include a timestamp in its banner greeting. The syntax of 820 the timestamp corresponds to the `msg-id' in [RFC822], and 821 MUST be different each time the POP3 server issues a banner 822 greeting. For example, on a UNIX implementation in which a 823 separate UNIX process is used for each instance of a POP3 824 server, the syntax of the timestamp might be: 825 826 <process-ID.clock@hostname> 827 828 where `process-ID' is the decimal value of the process's 829 PID, clock is the decimal value of the system clock, and 830 hostname is the fully-qualified domain-name corresponding 831 to the host where the POP3 server is running. 832 833 The POP3 client makes note of this timestamp, and then 834 issues the APOP command. The `name' parameter has 835 identical semantics to the `name' parameter of the USER 836 command. The `digest' parameter is calculated by applying 837 the MD5 algorithm [RFC1321] to a string consisting of the 838 timestamp (including angle-brackets) followed by a shared 839 840 841 842 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 15] 843 844 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 845 846 847 secret. This shared secret is a string known only to the 848 POP3 client and server. Great care should be taken to 849 prevent unauthorized disclosure of the secret, as knowledge 850 of the secret will allow any entity to successfully 851 masquerade as the named user. The `digest' parameter 852 itself is a 16-octet value which is sent in hexadecimal 853 format, using lower-case ASCII characters. 854 855 When the POP3 server receives the APOP command, it verifies 856 the digest provided. If the digest is correct, the POP3 857 server issues a positive response, and the POP3 session 858 enters the TRANSACTION state. Otherwise, a negative 859 response is issued and the POP3 session remains in the 860 AUTHORIZATION state. 861 862 Note that as the length of the shared secret increases, so 863 does the difficulty of deriving it. As such, shared 864 secrets should be long strings (considerably longer than 865 the 8-character example shown below). 866 867 Possible Responses: 868 +OK maildrop locked and ready 869 -ERR permission denied 870 871 Examples: 872 S: +OK POP3 server ready <1896.697170952@dbc.mtview.ca.us> 873 C: APOP mrose c4c9334bac560ecc979e58001b3e22fb 874 S: +OK maildrop has 1 message (369 octets) 875 876 In this example, the shared secret is the string `tan- 877 staaf'. Hence, the MD5 algorithm is applied to the string 878 879 <1896.697170952@dbc.mtview.ca.us>tanstaaf 880 881 which produces a digest value of 882 883 c4c9334bac560ecc979e58001b3e22fb 884 885 8. Scaling and Operational Considerations 886 887 Since some of the optional features described above were added to the 888 POP3 protocol, experience has accumulated in using them in large- 889 scale commercial post office operations where most of the users are 890 unrelated to each other. In these situations and others, users and 891 vendors of POP3 clients have discovered that the combination of using 892 the UIDL command and not issuing the DELE command can provide a weak 893 version of the "maildrop as semi-permanent repository" functionality 894 normally associated with IMAP. Of course the other capabilities of 895 896 897 898 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 16] 899 900 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 901 902 903 IMAP, such as polling an existing connection for newly arrived 904 messages and supporting multiple folders on the server, are not 905 present in POP3. 906 907 When these facilities are used in this way by casual users, there has 908 been a tendency for already-read messages to accumulate on the server 909 without bound. This is clearly an undesirable behavior pattern from 910 the standpoint of the server operator. This situation is aggravated 911 by the fact that the limited capabilities of the POP3 do not permit 912 efficient handling of maildrops which have hundreds or thousands of 913 messages. 914 915 Consequently, it is recommended that operators of large-scale multi- 916 user servers, especially ones in which the user's only access to the 917 maildrop is via POP3, consider such options as: 918 919 * Imposing a per-user maildrop storage quota or the like. 920 921 A disadvantage to this option is that accumulation of messages may 922 result in the user's inability to receive new ones into the 923 maildrop. Sites which choose this option should be sure to inform 924 users of impending or current exhaustion of quota, perhaps by 925 inserting an appropriate message into the user's maildrop. 926 927 * Enforce a site policy regarding mail retention on the server. 928 929 Sites are free to establish local policy regarding the storage and 930 retention of messages on the server, both read and unread. For 931 example, a site might delete unread messages from the server after 932 60 days and delete read messages after 7 days. Such message 933 deletions are outside the scope of the POP3 protocol and are not 934 considered a protocol violation. 935 936 Server operators enforcing message deletion policies should take 937 care to make all users aware of the policies in force. 938 939 Clients must not assume that a site policy will automate message 940 deletions, and should continue to explicitly delete messages using 941 the DELE command when appropriate. 942 943 It should be noted that enforcing site message deletion policies 944 may be confusing to the user community, since their POP3 client 945 may contain configuration options to leave mail on the server 946 which will not in fact be supported by the server. 947 948 One special case of a site policy is that messages may only be 949 downloaded once from the server, and are deleted after this has 950 been accomplished. This could be implemented in POP3 server 951 952 953 954 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 17] 955 956 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 957 958 959 software by the following mechanism: "following a POP3 login by a 960 client which was ended by a QUIT, delete all messages downloaded 961 during the session with the RETR command". It is important not to 962 delete messages in the event of abnormal connection termination 963 (ie, if no QUIT was received from the client) because the client 964 may not have successfully received or stored the messages. 965 Servers implementing a download-and-delete policy may also wish to 966 disable or limit the optional TOP command, since it could be used 967 as an alternate mechanism to download entire messages. 968 969 9. POP3 Command Summary 970 971 Minimal POP3 Commands: 972 973 USER name valid in the AUTHORIZATION state 974 PASS string 975 QUIT 976 977 STAT valid in the TRANSACTION state 978 LIST [msg] 979 RETR msg 980 DELE msg 981 NOOP 982 RSET 983 QUIT 984 985 Optional POP3 Commands: 986 987 APOP name digest valid in the AUTHORIZATION state 988 989 TOP msg n valid in the TRANSACTION state 990 UIDL [msg] 991 992 POP3 Replies: 993 994 +OK 995 -ERR 996 997 Note that with the exception of the STAT, LIST, and UIDL commands, 998 the reply given by the POP3 server to any command is significant 999 only to "+OK" and "-ERR". Any text occurring after this reply 1000 may be ignored by the client. 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 18] 1011 1012 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 1013 1014 1015 10. Example POP3 Session 1016 1017 S: <wait for connection on TCP port 110> 1018 C: <open connection> 1019 S: +OK POP3 server ready <1896.697170952@dbc.mtview.ca.us> 1020 C: APOP mrose c4c9334bac560ecc979e58001b3e22fb 1021 S: +OK mrose's maildrop has 2 messages (320 octets) 1022 C: STAT 1023 S: +OK 2 320 1024 C: LIST 1025 S: +OK 2 messages (320 octets) 1026 S: 1 120 1027 S: 2 200 1028 S: . 1029 C: RETR 1 1030 S: +OK 120 octets 1031 S: <the POP3 server sends message 1> 1032 S: . 1033 C: DELE 1 1034 S: +OK message 1 deleted 1035 C: RETR 2 1036 S: +OK 200 octets 1037 S: <the POP3 server sends message 2> 1038 S: . 1039 C: DELE 2 1040 S: +OK message 2 deleted 1041 C: QUIT 1042 S: +OK dewey POP3 server signing off (maildrop empty) 1043 C: <close connection> 1044 S: <wait for next connection> 1045 1046 11. Message Format 1047 1048 All messages transmitted during a POP3 session are assumed to conform 1049 to the standard for the format of Internet text messages [RFC822]. 1050 1051 It is important to note that the octet count for a message on the 1052 server host may differ from the octet count assigned to that message 1053 due to local conventions for designating end-of-line. Usually, 1054 during the AUTHORIZATION state of the POP3 session, the POP3 server 1055 can calculate the size of each message in octets when it opens the 1056 maildrop. For example, if the POP3 server host internally represents 1057 end-of-line as a single character, then the POP3 server simply counts 1058 each occurrence of this character in a message as two octets. Note 1059 that lines in the message which start with the termination octet need 1060 not (and must not) be counted twice, since the POP3 client will 1061 remove all byte-stuffed termination characters when it receives a 1062 multi-line response. 1063 1064 1065 1066 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 19] 1067 1068 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 1069 1070 1071 12. References 1072 1073 [RFC821] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC 1074 821, USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1982. 1075 1076 [RFC822] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA-Internet Text 1077 Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, University of Delaware, August 1982. 1078 1079 [RFC1321] Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321, 1080 MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, April 1992. 1081 1082 [RFC1730] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol - Version 1083 4", RFC 1730, University of Washington, December 1994. 1084 1085 [RFC1734] Myers, J., "POP3 AUTHentication command", RFC 1734, 1086 Carnegie Mellon, December 1994. 1087 1088 13. Security Considerations 1089 1090 It is conjectured that use of the APOP command provides origin 1091 identification and replay protection for a POP3 session. 1092 Accordingly, a POP3 server which implements both the PASS and APOP 1093 commands should not allow both methods of access for a given user; 1094 that is, for a given mailbox name, either the USER/PASS command 1095 sequence or the APOP command is allowed, but not both. 1096 1097 Further, note that as the length of the shared secret increases, so 1098 does the difficulty of deriving it. 1099 1100 Servers that answer -ERR to the USER command are giving potential 1101 attackers clues about which names are valid. 1102 1103 Use of the PASS command sends passwords in the clear over the 1104 network. 1105 1106 Use of the RETR and TOP commands sends mail in the clear over the 1107 network. 1108 1109 Otherwise, security issues are not discussed in this memo. 1110 1111 14. Acknowledgements 1112 1113 The POP family has a long and checkered history. Although primarily 1114 a minor revision to RFC 1460, POP3 is based on the ideas presented in 1115 RFCs 918, 937, and 1081. 1116 1117 In addition, Alfred Grimstad, Keith McCloghrie, and Neil Ostroff 1118 provided significant comments on the APOP command. 1119 1120 1121 1122 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 20] 1123 1124 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 1125 1126 1127 15. Authors' Addresses 1128 1129 John G. Myers 1130 Carnegie-Mellon University 1131 5000 Forbes Ave 1132 Pittsburgh, PA 15213 1133 1134 EMail: jgm+@cmu.edu 1135 1136 1137 Marshall T. Rose 1138 Dover Beach Consulting, Inc. 1139 420 Whisman Court 1140 Mountain View, CA 94043-2186 1141 1142 EMail: mrose@dbc.mtview.ca.us 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 21] 1179 1180 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 1181 1182 1183 Appendix A. Differences from RFC 1725 1184 1185 This memo is a revision to RFC 1725, a Draft Standard. It makes the 1186 following changes from that document: 1187 1188 - clarifies that command keywords are case insensitive. 1189 1190 - specifies that servers must send "+OK" and "-ERR" in 1191 upper case. 1192 1193 - specifies that the initial greeting is a positive response, 1194 instead of any string which should be a positive response. 1195 1196 - clarifies behavior for unimplemented commands. 1197 1198 - makes the USER and PASS commands optional. 1199 1200 - clarified the set of possible responses to the USER command. 1201 1202 - reverses the order of the examples in the USER and PASS 1203 commands, to reduce confusion. 1204 1205 - clarifies that the PASS command may only be given immediately 1206 after a successful USER command. 1207 1208 - clarified the persistence requirements of UIDs and added some 1209 implementation notes. 1210 1211 - specifies a UID length limitation of one to 70 octets. 1212 1213 - specifies a status indicator length limitation 1214 of 512 octets, including the CRLF. 1215 1216 - clarifies that LIST with no arguments on an empty mailbox 1217 returns success. 1218 1219 - adds a reference from the LIST command to the Message Format 1220 section 1221 1222 - clarifies the behavior of QUIT upon failure 1223 1224 - clarifies the security section to not imply the use of the 1225 USER command with the APOP command. 1226 1227 - adds references to RFCs 1730 and 1734 1228 1229 - clarifies the method by which a UA may enter mail into the 1230 transport system. 1231 1232 1233 1234 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 22] 1235 1236 RFC 1939 POP3 May 1996 1237 1238 1239 - clarifies that the second argument to the TOP command is a 1240 number of lines. 1241 1242 - changes the suggestion in the Security Considerations section 1243 for a server to not accept both PASS and APOP for a given user 1244 from a "must" to a "should". 1245 1246 - adds a section on scaling and operational considerations 1247 1248 Appendix B. Command Index 1249 1250 APOP ....................................................... 15 1251 DELE ....................................................... 8 1252 LIST ....................................................... 6 1253 NOOP ....................................................... 9 1254 PASS ....................................................... 14 1255 QUIT ....................................................... 5 1256 QUIT ....................................................... 10 1257 RETR ....................................................... 8 1258 RSET ....................................................... 9 1259 STAT ....................................................... 6 1260 TOP ........................................................ 11 1261 UIDL ....................................................... 12 1262 USER ....................................................... 13 1263 1264 1265 1266 1267 1268 1269 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 1279 1280 1281 1282 1283 1284 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 Myers & Rose Standards Track [Page 23] 1291