Brad Knowles wrote: >At 12:54 PM -0700 2004-09-19, Mark Sapiro wrote: > >> It appears that RFC 2822 (Internet Message Format) allows anything in a >> domain-literal which "is interpreted as the literal Internet address >> of the particular host", but that RFC 2821 (SMTP) does not allow a >> domain-literal to be used at all and is more restrictive than RFC 2822 >> on other forms of domains as well. > > RFC 2821 is used for envelope addresses in the SMTP dialog, 2822 >is used for header addresses. If MTAs want bizarre characters in the >recipient addresses, they need to make sure that they get used only >in the headers and not the envelope. Where you run into problems is >where an address in one format is inappropriately used in the other.
Thanks for the clarification Brad. I had missed that concept. The crux here seems to be that since subscribed addresses are ultimately going to end up as envelope to addresses, they need to meet the requirements that RFC 2821 places on the content of RCPT commands, namely they must not contain non-ascii characters or ascii control characters. -- Mark Sapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan _______________________________________________ Mailman-Developers mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-developers Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/mailman-developers/archive%40jab.org
