Internet Draft A. Melnikov Document: draft-melnikov-imap-ext-abnf Isode Ltd. Expires: July 2006 Cyrus Daboo January 2006 Collected extensions to IMAP4 ABNF draft-melnikov-imap-ext-abnf-07 Status of this Memo By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. A revised version of this draft document will be submitted to the RFC editor as a Standard Track RFC for the Internet Community. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested, and should be sent to ietf-imapext@imc.org and/or lemonade@ietf.org. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Abstract Over years many documents from IMAPEXT and LEMONADE working groups, as well as many individual documents have added syntactic extensions to many base IMAP commands described in RFC 3501. For ease of reference this document collects most of such ABNF changes in one place. This document also suggest a set of standard patterns for adding options and extensions to several existing IMAP commands defined in RFC 3501. The patterns provide for compatibility between existing and future extensions. This document updates ABNF in RFC 3501, RFC 2342, RFC 2088, RFC 3502 and RFC 3516. It also includes part of the errata to RFC 3501. This document doesn't specify any semantic changes to the listed RFCs. Table of Contents 1. Introduction and Conventions Used 3 1.1 Purpose of this document 3 1.2 Conventions Used in this document 4 2. IMAP ABNF extensions 4 2.1 Optional parameters with the SELECT/EXAMINE commands 4 2.2 Extended CREATE command 5 2.3 Extended RENAME command 6 2.4 Extensions to FETCH and UID FETCH Commands 6 2.5 Extensions to STORE and UID STORE Commands 7 2.6 Extensions to SEARCH Command 8 2.7 Extensions to APPEND Command 9 3. Formal Syntax 9 4. Security Considerations 14 5. IANA Considerations 15 6. References 15 6.1 Normative References 15 7. Acknowledgments 16 8. Authors' Addresses 16 9. Full Copyright Statement 16 10. Intellectual Property 17 11. Appendix A. Editorial. 17 11.1 Change Log 18 1. Introduction and Conventions Used 1.1 Purpose of this document This document serves several purposes: 1. rationalize and generalize ABNF for some existing IMAP extensions; 2. collect the ABNF in one place in order to minimize cross references between documents; 3. define building blocks for future extensions so that they can be used together in a compatible way. It is expected that a future revision of this document gets incorporated into a revision of RFC 3501. This document updates ABNF in RFC 3501, RFC 2088, RFC 3502 and RFC 3516. It also includes part of the errata to RFC 3501. This document doesn't specify any semantic changes to the listed RFCs. The ABNF in section 6 of RFC 2342 got rewritten to conform to the ABNF syntax as defined in RFC 4234 and to reference new non- terminals from RFC 3501. It was also restructured to allow for better readability. There were no changes "on the wire". Section 2 extends ABNF for SELECT, EXAMINE, CREATE, RENAME, FETCH /UID FETCH, STORE/UID STORE, SEARCH and APPEND commands in a consistent manner. Extensions to all the commands but APPEND have the same structure. Extensibility for the APPEND command was done slightly differently in order to preserve backward compatibility with existing extensions. Section 2 also defines a new ESEARCH response which purpose is to define a better version of the SEARCH response defined in RFC 3501. Section 3 defines the collected ABNF that replaces pieces of ABNF in the aforementioned RFCs. The collected ABNF got generalized to allow for easier future extensibility. 1.2 Conventions Used in this document In examples, "C:" and "S:" indicate lines sent by the client and server respectively. The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", and "MAY" in this document are to be interpreted as defined in "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels" [KEYWORDS]. <> 2. IMAP ABNF extensions This section is not normative. It provides some background on the intended use of different extensions and it gives some guidance about how future extensions should extend the described commands. 2.1 Optional parameters with the SELECT/EXAMINE commands This documents adds the ability to include one or more parameters with the IMAP SELECT (section 6.3.1 of [IMAP4]) or EXAMINE (section 6.3.2 of [IMAP4]) commands, to turn on or off certain standard behaviours, or to add new optional behaviours required for a particular extension. There are two possible modes of operation: o A global state change where a single use of the optional parameter will affect the session state from that time on, irrespective of subsequent SELECT/EXAMINE commands. o A per-mailbox state change that will affect the session only for the duration of the new selected state. A subsequent SELECT/ EXAMINE without the optional parameter will cancel its effect for the newly selected mailbox. Optional parameters to the SELECT or EXAMINE commands are added as a parenthesised list of attribute/value pairs, and appear after the mailbox name in the standard SELECT or EXAMINE command. The order of individual parameters is arbitrary. A parameter value is optional and may consist of atoms, strings or lists in a specific order. If the parameter value is present, it always appears in parentheses (*). Any parameter not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. Example: C: a SELECT INBOX (ANNOTATE) S: ... S: a OK SELECT complete In the above example, a single parameter is used with the SELECT command. Example: C: a EXAMINE INBOX (ANNOTATE RESPONSES ("UID Responses") CONDSTORE) S: ... S: a OK EXAMINE complete In the above example, three parameters are used with the EXAMINE command. The second parameter consists of two items: an atom "RESPONSES" followed by a quoted string. Example: C: a SELECT INBOX (BLURDYBLOOP) S: a BAD Unknown parameter in SELECT command In the above example, a parameter not supported by the server is used. This results in the BAD response from the server. (*) - if a parameter has a mandatory value, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the parameter value does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.2 Extended CREATE command Arguments: mailbox name OPTIONAL list of CREATE parameters Responses: no specific responses for this command Result: OK - create completed NO - create failure: can not create mailbox with that name BAD - argument(s) invalid This documents adds the ability to include one or more parameters with the IMAP CREATE command (see section 6.3.3 of [IMAP4]), to turn on or off certain standard behaviour, or to add new optional behaviours required for a particular extension. No CREATE parameters are defined in this document. Optional parameters to the CREATE command are added as a parenthesised list of attribute/value pairs after the mailbox name. The order of individual parameters is arbitrary. A parameter value is optional and may consist of atoms, strings or lists in a specific order. If the parameter value is present, it always appears in parentheses (*). Any parameter not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. (*) - if a parameter has a mandatory value, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the parameter value does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.3 Extended RENAME command Arguments: existing mailbox name new mailbox name OPTIONAL list of RENAME parameters Responses: no specific responses for this command Result: OK - rename completed NO - rename failure: can not rename mailbox with that name, can not rename to mailbox with that name, etc. BAD - argument(s) invalid This documents adds the ability to include one or more parameters with the IMAP RENAME command (see section 6.3.5 of [IMAP4]), to turn on or off certain standard behaviour, or to add new optional behaviours required for a particular extension. No RENAME parameters are defined in this document. Optional parameters to the RENAME command are added as a parenthesised list of attribute/value pairs after the new mailbox name. The order of individual parameters is arbitrary. A parameter value is optional and may consist of atoms, strings or lists in a specific order. If the parameter value is present, it always appears in parentheses (*). Any parameter not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. (*) - if a parameter has a mandatory value, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the parameter value does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.4 Extensions to FETCH and UID FETCH Commands Arguments: sequence set message data item names or macro OPTIONAL fetch modifiers Responses: untagged responses: FETCH Result: OK - fetch completed NO - fetch error: can not fetch that data BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid This document extends the syntax of the FETCH and UID FETCH commands (see section 6.4.5 of [IMAP4]) to include optional FETCH modifiers. No fetch modifiers are defined in this document. The order of individual modifiers is arbitrary. Each modified is an attribute/value pair. A modifier value is optional and may consist of atoms and/or strings and/or lists in a specific order. If the modifier value is present, it always appears in parentheses (*). Any modifiers not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. (*) - if a modifier has a mandatory value, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the modifier value does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.5 Extensions to STORE and UID STORE Commands Arguments: message set OPTIONAL store modifiers message data item name value for message data item Responses: untagged responses: FETCH Result: OK - store completed NO - store error: can not store that data BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid This document extends the syntax of the STORE and UID STORE commands (see section 6.4.6 of [IMAP4]) to include optional STORE modifiers. No store modifiers are defined in this document. The order of individual modifiers is arbitrary. Each modified is an attribute/value pair. A modifier value is optional and may consist of atoms and/or strings and/or lists in a specific order. If the modifier value is present, it always appears in parentheses (*). Any modifiers not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. (*) - if a modifier has a mandatory value, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the modifier value does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.6 Extensions to SEARCH Command 2.6.1 Extended SEARCH command Arguments: OPTIONAL result specifier OPTIONAL [CHARSET] specification searching criteria (one or more) Responses: REQUIRED untagged response: SEARCH (*) Result: OK - search completed NO - search error: can not search that [CHARSET] or criteria BAD - command unknown or arguments invalid This section updates definition of the SEARCH command described in section 6.4.4 of [IMAP4]. The SEARCH command is extended to allow for result options. This document does not define any result options. The order of individual options is arbitrary. Individual options may contain parameters enclosed in parentheses (**). If an option has parameters, they consist of atoms and/or strings and/or lists in a specific order. Any options not defined by extensions that the server supports must be rejected with a BAD response. (*) - An extension to the SEARCH command may require another untagged response, or no untagged response to be returned. Section 2.6.2 defines a new ESEARCH untagged response, that replaces the SEARCH untagged response. Note that for a given extended SEARCH command the SEARCH and ESEARCH responses SHOULD be mutually exclusive, i.e. only one of them should be returned. (**) - if an option has a mandatory parameter, which can always be represented as a number or a sequence-set, the option parameter does not need the enclosing (). See ABNF for more details. 2.6.2 ESEARCH untagged response Contents: one or more search-return-data pairs The ESEARCH response SHOULD be sent as a result of an extended SEARCH or UID SEARCH command specified in section 2.6.1. The ESEARCH response starts with an optional search correlator. If it is missing then the response was not caused by a particular IMAP command, whereas if it is present it contains the tag of the command that caused the response to be returned. The search correlator is followed by an optional UID indicator. If this indicator is present, all data in the ESEARCH response refers to UIDs, otherwise all returned data refers to message numbers. The rest of the ESEARCH response contains one or more search data pairs. Each pair starts with unique return item name, followed by a space and the corresponding data. Search data pairs may be returned in any order. Unless specified otherwise by an extension, any return item name SHOULD appear only once in an ESEARCH response. Example: S: * ESEARCH UID COUNT 5 ALL 4:19,21,28 Example: S: * ESEARCH (TAG "a567") UID COUNT 5 ALL 4:19,21,28 Example: S: * ESEARCH COUNT 5 ALL 1:17,21 2.7 Extensions to APPEND Command The IMAP BINARY extension [BINARY] extends the APPEND command to allow a client to append data containing NULs by using the syntax. The ABNF was rewritten to allow for easier extensibility by IMAP extensions. This document hasn't specified any semantical changes to the [BINARY] extension. In addition, the non-terminal "literal8" defined in [BINARY] got extended to allow for non-syncronizing literals if both [BINARY] and [LITERAL+] extensions are supported by the server. The IMAP MULTIAPPEND extension [MULTIAPPEND] extends the APPEND command to allow a client to append multiple messages atomically. This document defines a common syntax for the APPEND command that takes into considerations syntactic extensions defined by both [BINARY] and [MULTIAPPEND] extensions. 3. Formal Syntax The following syntax specification uses the Augmented Backus-Naur Form (ABNF) notation as specified in [ABNF]. Non-terminals referenced but not defined below are as defined by [IMAP4]. Except as noted otherwise, all alphabetic characters are case- insensitive. The use of upper or lower case characters to define token strings is for editorial clarity only. Implementations MUST accept these strings in a case-insensitive fashion. append = "APPEND" SP mailbox 1*append-message ;; only a single append-message may appear ;; if MULTIAPPEND [MULTIAPPEND] capability ;; is not present append-message = append-opts SP append-data append-ext = append-ext-name SP append-ext-value ;; This non-terminal define extensions to ;; to message metadata. append-ext-name = tagged-ext-label append-ext-value= tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. append-data = literal / literal8 / append-data-ext append-data-ext = tagged-ext ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions, ;; i.e. a mandatory label followed ;; by parameters. append-opts = [SP flag-list] [SP date-time] *(SP append-ext) ;; message metadata charset = atom / quoted ;; Exact syntax is defined in [CHARSET]. create = "CREATE" SP mailbox [create-params] ;; Use of INBOX gives a NO error. create-params = SP "(" create-param *( SP create-param) ")" create-param-name = tagged-ext-label create-param = create-param-name [SP create-param-value] create-param-value= tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. esearch-response = "ESEARCH" [search-correlator] [SP "UID"] *(SP search-return-data) ;; Note that SEARCH and ESEARCH responses ;; SHOULD be mutually exclusive, ;; i.e. only one of the response types ;; should be ;; returned as a result of a command. examine = "EXAMINE" SP mailbox [select-params] ;; modifies the original IMAP EXAMINE command ;; to accept optional parameters fetch = "FETCH" SP sequence-set SP ("ALL" / "FULL" / "FAST" / fetch-att / "(" fetch-att *(SP fetch-att) ")") [fetch-modifiers] ;; modifies the original IMAP4 FETCH command to ;; accept optional modifiers fetch-modifiers = SP "(" fetch-modifier *(SP fetch-modifier) ")" fetch-modifier = fetch-modifier-name [ SP fetch-modif-params ] fetch-modif-params = tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. fetch-modifier-name = tagged-ext-label literal8 = "~{" number ["+"] "}" CRLF *OCTET ;; A string that might contain NULs. ;; represents the number of OCTETs ;; in the response string. ;; The "+" is only allowed when both LITERAL+ ;; and BINARY extensions are supported ;; by the server. mailbox-data =/ Namespace-Response / esearch-response Namespace = nil / "(" 1*Namespace-Descr ")" Namespace-Command = "NAMESPACE" Namespace-Descr = "(" string SP (DQUOTE QUOTED-CHAR DQUOTE / nil) *(Namespace-Response-Extension) ")" Namespace-Response-Extension = SP string SP "(" string *(SP string) ")" Namespace-Response = "NAMESPACE" SP Namespace SP Namespace SP Namespace ;; This response is currently only allowed ;; if the IMAP server supports [RFC 2342]. ;; The first Namespace is the Personal Namespace(s) ;; The second Namespace is the Other Users' Namespace(s) ;; The third Namespace is the Shared Namespace(s) rename = "RENAME" SP mailbox SP mailbox [rename-params] ;; Use of INBOX as a destination gives ;; a NO error, unless rename-params ;; is not empty. rename-params = SP "(" rename-param *( SP rename-param) ")" rename-param = rename-param-name [SP rename-param-value] rename-param-name = tagged-ext-label rename-param-value= tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. response-data = "*" SP response-payload CRLF response-payload= resp-cond-state / resp-cond-bye / mailbox-data / message-data / capability-data search = "SEARCH" [search-return-opts] search-program search-correlator = SP "(" "TAG" SP tag-string ")" search-program = [SP "CHARSET" SP charset] 1*(SP search-key) ;; CHARSET argument to SEARCH MUST be ;; registered with IANA. search-return-data = search-modifier-name SP search-return-value ;; Note that not every SEARCH return option ;; is required to have the corresponding ;; ESEARCH return data. search-return-opts = SP "RETURN" SP "(" [search-return-opt *(SP search-return-opt)] ")" search-return-opt = search-modifier-name [SP search-mod-params] search-return-value = tagged-ext-val ;; Data for the returned search option. ;; A single "nz-number"/"number" value ;; can be returned as an atom (i.e. without ;; quoting). A sequence-set can be returned ;; as an atom as well. search-modifier-name = tagged-ext-label search-mod-params = tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. select = "SELECT" SP mailbox [select-params] ;; modifies the original IMAP SELECT command to ;; accept optional parameters select-params = SP "(" select-param *(SP select-param) ")" select-param = select-param-name [SP select-param-value] ;; a parameter to SELECT may contain one or ;; more atoms and/or strings and/or lists. select-param-name= tagged-ext-label select-param-value= tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. status-att-list = status-att-val *(SP status-att-val) ;; Redefines status-att-list from RFC 3501. ;; status-att-val is defined in RFC 3501 errata status-att-val = ("MESSAGES" SP number) / ("RECENT" SP number) / ("UIDNEXT" SP nz-number) / ("UIDVALIDITY" SP nz-number) / ("UNSEEN" SP number) ;; Extensions to the STATUS responses ;; should extend this production. ;; Extensions should use the generic ;; syntax defined by tagged-ext. store = "STORE" SP sequence-set [store-modifiers] SP store-att-flags ;; extend [IMAP4] STORE command syntax ;; to allow for optional store-modifiers store-modifiers = SP "(" store-modifier *(SP store-modifier) ")" store-modifier = store-modifier-name [SP store-modif-params] store-modif-params = tagged-ext-val ;; This non-terminal shows recommended syntax ;; for future extensions. store-modifier-name = tagged-ext-label tag-string = string ;; tag of the command that caused ;; the ESEARCH response, sent as ;; a string. tagged-ext = tagged-ext-label SP tagged-ext-val ;; recommended overarching syntax for ;; extensions tagged-ext-label = tagged-label-fchar *tagged-label-char ;; Is a valid RFC 3501 "atom". tagged-label-fchar = ALPHA / "-" / "_" / "." tagged-label-char = tagged-label-fchar / DIGIT / ":" tagged-ext-comp = astring / tagged-ext-comp *(SP tagged-ext-comp) / "(" tagged-ext-comp ")" ;; Extensions that follow this general ;; syntax should use nstring instead of ;; astring when appropriate in the context ;; of the extension. ;; Note that a message set or a "number" ;; can always be represented as an "atom". ;; An URL should be represented as ;; a "quoted" string. tagged-ext-simple = sequence-set / number tagged-ext-val = tagged-ext-simple / "(" [tagged-ext-comp] ")" 4. Security Considerations This document updates ABNF in RFC 3501, RFC 2342, RFC 2088, RFC 3502 and RFC 3516. The updated documents must be consulted for security considerations for the extensions that they define. As a protocol gets more complex, parser bugs become more common including buffer overflow, denial of service and other common security coding errors. To the extent this document makes the parser more complex, it makes this situation worse. To this extent this document makes the parser more consistent and thus simpler, the situation is improved. The impact will depend on how many deployed IMAP extensions are consistent with this document. Implementers are encouraged to take care of these issues when extending existing implementations. Future IMAP extensions should strive for consistency and simplicity to the greatest extent possible. Extensions to IMAP commands that are permitted in NOT AUTHENTICATED state are more sensitive to these security issues due to the larger possible attacker community prior to authentication, and the fact that some IMAP servers run with elevated privileges in that state. This document does not extend any commands permitted in NOT AUTHENTICATED state. Future IMAP extensions to commands permitted in NOT AUTHENTICATED state should favor simplicity over consistency or extensibility. 5. IANA Considerations This document doesn't define any new IMAP extension, so no action from IANA is required. 6. References 6.1 Normative References [KEYWORDS] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997. [IMAP4] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol - Version 4rev1", RFC 3501, University of Washington, March 2003. [ABNF] Crocker, D. (Ed.) and P. Overell , "Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", RFC 4234, October 2005. [CHARSET] Freed, N. and J. Postel, "IANA Character Set Registration Procedures", RFC 2978, October 2000. [MULTIAPPEND] Crispin, M., "Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - MULTIAPPEND Extension", RFC 3502, March 2003. [NAMESPACE] Gahrns, M. and C. Newman, "IMAP4 Namespace", RFC 2342, May 1998. [LITERAL+] Myers, J., "IMAP4 non-synchronizing literals", RFC 2088, January 1997. [BINARY] Nerenberg, L., "IMAP4 Binary Content Extension", RFC 3516, April 2003 7. Acknowledgments This documents is based on ideas proposed by Pete Resnick, Mark Crispin, Ken Murchison, Philip Guenther, Randall Gellens and Lyndon Nerenberg. However all errors and omissions must be attributed to the authors of the document. Thanks to Philip Guenther, Dave Cridland, Mark Crispin, Chris Newman, Elwyn Davies and Barry Leiba for comments and corrections. literal8 syntax was taken from RFC 3516. 8. Authors' Addresses Alexey Melnikov Isode Limited 5 Castle Business Village 36 Station Road Hampton, Middlesex, TW12 2BX UK Email: Alexey.Melnikov@isode.com Cyrus Daboo EMail: cyrus@daboo.name 9. Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006). This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights. This document and the information contained herein are provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM 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. 10. Intellectual Property The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in this document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79. Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at http://www.ietf.org/ipr. The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf- ipr@ietf.org. Acknowledgement Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the Internet Society. 11. Appendix A. Editorial. 11.1 Change Log 00 Initial Revision. 01 Added Cyrus as co-author. Added BINARY literals. Added section about APPEND. Clarified that the order of all parameters/modifiers is arbitrary. Unrecognized SELECT/EXAMINE parameter should cause the BAD, not the NO response. 02 Updated boilerplate. Extended SEARCH modifiers to be consistent with STORE modifiers. Rewrote FETCH modifier syntax for consistency. 03 Updated as per comments from Philip (ABNF suggestions, in particular addition of response-data; normative language). Incorporated RFC 3501 ABNF errata from Mark. Added extensions to CREATE and RENAME commands. Updated ABNF to use consistent grammer for all extension elements (this changed ABNF for SELECT/EXAMINE and FETCH). 04 Added ESEARCH response. Added search-program from IMAP URL. Removed the partition parameter from CREATE/RENAME. Added NAMESPACE command/response. 05 Added non-synchronizing literals (RFC 2088). Clarified generic syntax for STATUS responses. 06 Updated reference to ABNF. Made CREATE/RENAME/SELECT parameter values optional (for consistency with other parameters and to make examples valid), but if a value is present, it must be in (), unless it is a number or a sequence. Updated description of CREATE/RENAME/SELECT parameters to match ABNF. Disallow a single astring parameter with not parentheses. Defined append-ext to be "atom SP value". Added a missing reference to RFC 3516. Added missing leading space in the search-return-opts non-terminal. Rewrote ABNF for STORE and FETCH options for consistency with others. Added Security Considerations, courtesy of Chris Newman. Added new non-terminal for charset (from Mark Crispin's RFC 3501 errata). Describe exact syntax for future extensions (as per IETF LC comment from Mark Crispin).