Internet Message Access Protocol - ANNOTATE Extension
RFC 5257, “Internet Message Access Protocol - ANNOTATE Extension”, is an Experimental document published in June 2008 by C. Daboo, R. Gellens. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
The ANNOTATE extension to the Internet Message Access Protocol permits clients and servers to maintain "meta data" for messages, or individual message parts, stored in a mailbox on the server. For example, this can be used to attach comments and other useful information to a message. It is also possible to attach annotations to specific parts of a message, so that, for example, they could be marked as seen, or important, or a comment added.
Note that this document was the product of a WG that had good consensus on how to approach the problem. Nevertheless, the WG felt it did not have enough information on implementation and deployment hurdles to meet all of the requirements of a Proposed Standard. The IETF solicits implementations and implementation reports in order to make further progress.
Implementers should be aware that this specification may change in an incompatible manner when going to Proposed Standard status. However, any incompatible changes will result in a new capability name being used to prevent problems with any deployments of the experimental extension. This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.
What “Experimental” means
Describes a specification that is part of a research or development effort, published so the community can gain experience with it.
The canonical text of RFC 5257 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 5256 Internet Message Access Protocol - SORT and THREAD Extensions
- RFC 5258 Internet Message Access Protocol version 4 - LIST Command Extensions
- RFC 5255 Internet Message Access Protocol Internationalization
- RFC 5259 Internet Message Access Protocol - CONVERT Extension
- RFC 5254 Requirements for Multi-Segment Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge
- RFC 5260 Sieve Email Filtering: Date and Index Extensions
- RFC 5253 Applicability Statement for Layer 1 Virtual Private Network Basic Mode
- RFC 5261 An Extensible Markup Language Patch Operations Framework Utilizing XML Path Language Selectors