RFC 2161 Network Working Group H. Alvestrand Request for Comments: 2161 UNINETT Category: Experimental January 1998 A MIME Body Part for ODA Status of this Memo This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved. Table of Contents Status of this Memo ........................................ 1 1 Introduction .............................................. 1 1.1 The Application/ODA MIME content-type ................... 1 1.2 ODA - application/oda ................................... 2 2 Security Considerations ................................... 3 3 References ................................................ 4 4 Author's Address .......................................... 4 5 Full Copyright Statement .................................. 5 1. Introduction This document contains the definitions, originally contained in RFC 1495 and RFC 1341, on how to carry ODA in MIME, and how to translate it to its X.400 representation. 1.1. The Application/ODA MIME content-type The "ODA" subtype of application is used to indicate that a body contains information encoded according to the Office Document Architecture [ODA] standards, using the ODIF representation format. For application/oda, the Content-Type line should also specify an attribute/value pair that indicates the document application profile (DAP), using the key word "profile", and the document class, using the keyword "class". For the keyword "class", the values "formatted", "processable" and "formatted-processable" are legal values. Alvestrand Experimental [Page 1] RFC 2161 A MIME Body Part for ODA January 1998 Thus an appropriate header field might look like this: Content-Type: application/oda; profile=Q112; class=formatted Consult the ODA standard [T.411] for further information. The Base64 content-transfer-encoding is appropriate for carrying ODA. 1.2. ODA - application/oda X.400 Body Part: ODA MIME Content-Type: application/oda Conversion: None Comments: The ODA body part is defined in the CCITT document T.411 [T.411], appendix E, section E.2, "ODA identification in the P2 protocol of MHS" An abbreviated version of its ASN.1 definition is: oda-body-part EXTENDED-BODY-PART-TYPE PARAMETERS OdaBodyPartParameters DATA OdaData ::= id-et-oda OdaBodyPartParameters ::= SET { document-application-profile [0] OBJECT IDENTIFIER document-architecture-class [1] INTEGER { formatted (0) processable (1) formatted-processable(2)}} id-et-oda OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { 2 8 1 0 1 } Mapping from X.400 to MIME, the following is done: The Parameters.document-application-profile is mapped onto the MIME parameter "profile" according to the table below. Profile OBJECT IDENTIFIER Q112 { iso (1) identified-organization (3) ewos (16) eg (2) oda (6) profile (0) q112 (1) } Alvestrand Experimental [Page 2] RFC 2161 A MIME Body Part for ODA January 1998 The Parameters.document-architecture-class is mapped onto the MIME parameter "class" according to the table below. String Integer formatted formatted(0) processable processable(1) formatted-processable formatted-processable(2) NOTE: This parameter is not defined in RFC 1341. The body of the MIME content-type is the Data part of the ODA body part. When mapping from MIME to X.400, the following steps are done: The Parameters.document-application-profile and Parameters.document- architecture-class are set from the tables above. If any of the parameters are missing, the values for Q112 and formatted-processable are used. It is an option for the gateway implementor to try to access them from inside the document, where they are defined as document-profile.document-characteristics.document-architecture-class document-profile.document-characteristics.document-application- profile Gateways are NOT required to do this, since the document- characteristics are optional parameters. If a gateway does not, it simply uses the defaulting rules defined above. The OBJECT IDENTIFIERs for the document application profile and for ODA {2 8 0 0} must be added to the Encoded Information Types parameter of the message envelope. 2. Security Considerations ODA body parts have the natural propensity of complex structures that it is hard to find out what the parts are capable of. Moreover, ODA is an extensible architecture, where new content portions may be added at any time, so that the threats posed by this body part may change over time. However, no security risks related to ODA are known at this time. Alvestrand Experimental [Page 3] RFC 2161 A MIME Body Part for ODA January 1998 3. References [MIME] Freed, N., and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996. [T.411] CCITT Recommendation T.411 (1988), Open Document Architecture (ODA) and Interchange Format, Introduction and General Principles. 4. Author's Address Harald Tveit Alvestrand UNINETT Postboks 6883 Elgeseter N-7002 TRONDHEIM Phone: +47 73 59 70 94 EMail: Harald.T.Alvestrand@uninett.no Alvestrand Experimental [Page 4] RFC 2161 A MIME Body Part for ODA January 1998 5. Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved. 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