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RFC2164 - Use of an X.500/LDAP directory to support MIXER address mapping

发布: 2007-6-23 14:09 | 作者:   | 来源:   | 查看: 13次 | 进入软件测试论坛讨论

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  Network Working Group S. Kille
Request for Comments: 2164 Isode Ltd.
Obsoletes: 1838 January 1998
Category: Standards Track

Use of an X.500/LDAP directory to support MIXER address mapping

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.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.

1 MIXER X.400/RFC822 Mappings

MIXER (RFC2156) defines an algorithm for use of a set of global
mapping between X.400 and RFC822 addresses [4]. This specification
defines how to represent and maintain these mappings (MIXER
Conformant Global Address Mappings of MCGAMs) in an X.500 or LDAP
directory. Mechanisms for representing OR Address and Domain
hierarchies within the DIT are defined in [5, 2]. These techniques
are used to define two independent subtrees in the DIT, which contain
the mapping information. The benefits of this approach are:

1. The mapping information is kept in a clearly defined area which
can be widely replicated in an efficient manner. The tree is
constrained to hold only information needed to support the
mapping. This is important as gateways need good access to the
entire mapping.

2. It facilitates migration from a table-based approach.

3. It handles the issues of "missing components" in a natural
manner.

An alternative approach which is not taken is to locate the
information in the routing subtrees. The benefits of this
would be:

o It is the "natural" location, and will also help to
ensure correct administrative authority for a mapping
definition.

o The tree will usually be accessed for routing, and so it
will be efficient for addresses which are being routed.

This is not done, as the benefits of the approach proposed are
greater.

MCGAMs are global. A MIXER gateway may use any set of MCGAMs. A key
use of the directory is to enable MIXER gateways to share MCGAMs and
to share the effort of maintaining and publishing MCGAMs. This
specification and MIXER also recognise that there is not a single
unique location for publication of all MCGAMs. This specification
allows for multiple sets of MCGAMs to be published. Each set of
MCGAMs is published under a single part of the directory. There are
four mappings, which are represented by two subtrees located under
any part of the DIT. For the examples the location defined below is
used:

OU=MIXER MCGAMs, O=Zydeco Plc, C=GB

These subtree roots are of object class subtree, and use the
mechanism for representing subtrees defined in [1].

X.400 to RFC822 This table gives the equivalence mapping from X.400
to RFC822. There is an OR Address tree under this. An example
entry is:

PRMD=Isode, ADMD=Mailnet, C=FI, CN=X.400 to RFC822,
OU=MIXER MCGAMs, O=Zydeco Plc, C=GB

RFC822 to X.400 There is a domain tree under this. This table holds
the equivalence mapping from RFC822 to X.400, and the gateway
mapping defined in RFC1327. An example entry is:

DomainComponent=ISODE, DomainComponent=COM,
CN=RFC822 to X.400,
OU=MIXER MCGAMs, O=Zydeco Plc, C=GB

The values of the table mapping are defined by use of two new object
classes, as specified in Figure 1. The objects give pointers to the
mapped components.

2 Omitted Components

In MIXER, it is possible to have omitted components in OR Addresses
on either side of the mapping. A mechanism to represent such omitted
components is defined in Figure 2. The attribute at-or-address-
component-type is set to the X.500 attribute type associated with the
omitted component (e.g.,

rFC822ToX400Mapping OBJECT-CLASS ::= {
SUBCLASS OF {domain-component}
MAY CONTAIN {
associatedORAddress|
associatedX400Gateway}
ID oc-rfc822-to-x400-mapping}

x400ToRFC822Mapping OBJECT-CLASS ::= {
SUBCLASS OF {top}
MAY CONTAIN { 10
associatedDomain|
associatedInternetGateway}
ID oc-x400-to-rfc822-mapping}

associatedORAddress ATTRIBUTE ::= {
SUBTYPE OF distinguishedName
SINGLE VALUE
ID at-associated-or-address}

20
associatedX400Gateway ATTRIBUTE ::= {
SUBTYPE OF mhs-or-addresses
MULTI VALUE
ID at-associated-x400-gateway}

associatedDomain ATTRIBUTE ::= {
SUBTYPE OF name
WITH SYNTAX caseIgnoreIA5String
SINGLE VALUE
ID at-associated-domain} 30

associatedInternetGateway ATTRIBUTE ::= {
SUBTYPE OF name
WITH SYNTAX caseIgnoreIA5String
MULTI VALUE
ID at-associated-internet-gateway}

Figure 1: Object Classes for MIXER mappings

omittedORAddressComponent OBJECT-CLASS ::=
SUBCLASS OF {top}
MUST Contain {
oRAddressComponentType
}
ID oc-omitted-or-address-component}

oRAddressComponentType ATTRIBUTE ::= {
SUBTYPE OF objectIdentifier 10
SINGLE VALUE
ID at-or-address-component-type}

Figure 2: Omitted OR Address Component

at-prmd-name). This mechanism is for use only within the X.400 to
RFC822 subtree and for the at-associated-or-address attribute.

3 Mapping from X.400 to RFC822

As an example, consider the mapping from the OR Address:

P=Isode; A=Mailnet; C=FI

This would be keyed by the directory entry:

PRMD=Isode, ADMD=Mailnet, C=FI, CN=X.400 to RFC822,
OU=MIXER MCGAMs, O=Zydeco Plc, C=GB

and return the mapping from the associatedDomain attribute, which
gives the domain which this OR address maps to. This attribute is
used to define authoritative mappings, which are placed in the open
community tree. The manager of an MCGAM shall make the appropriate
entry.

The Internet gateway mapping defined in MIXER[4] is provided by the
associatedInternetGateway attribute. This value may identify
multiple possible associated gateways. This information is looked up
at the same time as mapped OR addresses. In effect, this provides a
fallback mapping, which is found if there is no equivalence mapping.
Because of the nature of the mapping an OR Address will map to either
a gateway or a domain, but not both. Thus, there shall never be both

an associatedDomain and associatedInternetGateway attribute present
in the same entry. Functionally, mapping takes place exactly
according to MIXER. The longest match is found by the following
algorithm.

1. Take the OR Address, and derive a directory name. This will be
the OR Address as far as the lowest OU.

2. Look up the entire name derived from the MIXER key in the in the
X.400 to RFC822 subtree. This lookup will either succeed, or it
will fail and indicate the longest possible match, which can then
be looked up.

3. Check for an associatedDomain or associatedInternetGateway
attribute in the matched entry.

The mapping can always be achieved with two lookups. Because of the
availability of aliases, some of the table mappings may be
simplified. In addition, the directory can support mapping from
addresses using the numeric country codes.

4 Mapping from RFC822 to X.400

There is an analogous structure for mappings in the reverse
direction. The domain hierarchy is represented in the DIT according
to RFC1279. The domain:

ISODE.COM

Is represented in the DIT as:

DomainComponent=ISODE, DomainComponent=COM, CN=RFC822 to X.400,
OU=MIXER MCGAMs, O=Zydeco Plc, C=GB

This has associated with it the attribute associatedORAddress encoded
as a distinguished name with a value: PRMD=Isode, ADMD=Mailnet, C=FI

The X.400 gateway mapping defined in MIXER[4] is provided by the
associatedX400Gateway attribute. This value may identify multiple
possible associated gateways. This information is looked up at the
same time as mapped OR addresses. In effect, this provides a
fallback mapping, which is found if there is no equivalence mapping.
Because of the nature of the mapping a domain will map to either a
gateway or a domain, but not both. Thus, there shall never be both
an associatedX400Gateway and associatedORAddress attribute present in
the same entry. Functionally, mapping takes place exactly according
to MIXER. The longest match is found by the following algorithm.

1. Derive a directory name from the domain part of the RFC822
address.

2. Look up this name in the RFC822 to X.400 subtree to find the
mapped value (either associatedORAddress or
associatedX400Gateway.). If the lookup fails, the error will
indicate the longest match, which can then be looked up.

If associatedORAddress is found, this will define the mapped OR
Address. The mapping can always be achieved with two lookups. If an
associatedX400Gateway is present, the address in question will be
encoded as a domain defined attribute, relative to the OR Address
defined by this attribute. If multiple associatedX400Gateway
attributes are found, the MTA may select the one it chooses to use.

Because of the availability of aliases, some of the table mappings
may be simplified. In addition, the directory can support mapping
from addresses using the numeric country codes.

5 Gateway Selection of MCGAMs

The directory information to support identification of MCGAMs is
given in Figure 3. A MIXER gateway simply identifies the an ordered
lists of MCGAM collections that it will use for lookup. These are
referenced by name. A gateway is not required to use any MCGAMs.
Where MCGAMs are accessed from multiple sources, it is recommended
that all of the sources be accessed in order to determine the MCGAM
which gives the

mixerGateway OBJECT-CLASS ::=
KIND auxiliary
SUBCLASS OF {mhs-message-transfer-agent}
MUST Contain {
mcgamTables
}
ID oc-mixer-gateway}

mcgamTables ATTRIBUTE ::= { 10
WITH SYNTAX SEQUENCE OF DistinguishedName
SINGLE VALUE
ID at-mcgam-tables}

Figure 3: Object Classes for MCGAM selection

best match.

6 Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements for work on this document are given in [3].

References

[1] Kille, S., "Representing tables and subtrees in the X.500
directory", RFC1837, August 1995.

[2] Kille, S., "Representing the O/R Address hierarchy in the X.500
directory information tree," RFC1836, August 1995.

[3] Kille, S., " X.400-MHS use of the X.500 directory to support
X.400-MHS routing," RFC1801, June 1995.

[4] Kille, S., "MIXER (Mime Internet X.400 Enhanced Relay):
Mapping between X.400 and RFC822/MIME," RFC2156, January 1998.

[5] Kille, S., Wahl, M., Grimsatd, A., Huber, R., and S. Sataluri,
"Using Domains in LDAP/X.500 Distinguished Names", RFC2247,
January 1998.

7 Security Considerations

This document specifies a means by which the X.500/LDAP directory
service can direct the translation between X.400 and Internet mail
addresses. This can indirectly affect the routing of messages across
a gateway between X.400 and Internet Mail. A succesful attack on
this service could cause incorrect translation of an originator
address (thus "forging" the originator address), or incorrect
translation of a recipient address (thus directing the mail to an
unauthorized recipient, or making it appear to an authorized
recipient, that the message was intended for recipients other than
those chosen by the originator). When cryptographic authentication
is available for directory responses, clients shall employ those
mechanisms to verify the authenticity and integrity of those
responses.

8 Author's Address

Steve Kille
Isode Ltd.
The Dome
The Square
Richmond
TW9 1DT
England

Phone: +44-181-332-9091
Internet EMail: S.Kille@ISODE.COM

A Object Identifier Assignment

mhs-ds OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {iso(1) org(3) dod(6) internet(1) private(4)
enterprises(1) isode-consortium (453) mhs-ds (7)}

mapping OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {mhs-ds 4}

oc OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {mapping 1}
at OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {mapping 2}

oc-rfc822-to-x400-mapping OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {oc 1} 10
oc-x400-to-rfc822-mapping OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {oc 2}
oc-omitted-or-address-component OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {oc 3}
oc-mixer-gateway ::= {oc 4}

at-associated-or-address OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {at 6}
at-associated-x400-gateway OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {at 3}
at-associated-domain OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {at 4}
at-or-address-component-type OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {at 7}
at-associated-internet-gateway OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= {at 8}
at-mcgam-tables ::= {at 9} 20

Figure 4: Object Identifier Assignment

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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.

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