X-Git-Url: https://git.distorted.org.uk/~mdw/adns/blobdiff_plain/c6826df6bf398abfdfb42cdc034341588c8b141d..b2a4fdb534b74781b07222437b4d0822b8c79004:/src/adns.h diff --git a/src/adns.h b/src/adns.h index e808ae0..ae84974 100644 --- a/src/adns.h +++ b/src/adns.h @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ /* * * This file is - * Copyright (C) 1997-1999 Ian Jackson + * Copyright (C) 1997-2000 Ian Jackson * * It is part of adns, which is * Copyright (C) 1997-2000 Ian Jackson @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ * Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. * * - * $Id: adns.h,v 1.81 2000/09/17 00:24:24 ian Exp $ + * $Id: adns.h,v 1.83 2000/09/17 01:56:18 ian Exp $ */ #ifndef ADNS_H_INCLUDED @@ -151,12 +151,6 @@ typedef enum { * names) will be quoted, as \X if it is a printing ASCII character or * \DDD otherwise. * - * (The characters which will be unquoted are the printing 7-bit ASCII - * characters except the punctuation characters " ( ) @ ; $ \ - - * I.e. unquoted characters are alphanumerics, and the following - * punctuation characters: ! # % ^ & * - _ = + [ ] { } - * * If the query goes via a CNAME then the canonical name (ie, the * thing that the CNAME record refers to) is usually allowed to * contain any characters, which will be quoted as above. With @@ -179,20 +173,33 @@ typedef enum { * header field. The particular format used is that if the mailbox * requires quoting according to the rules in RFC822 then the * local-part is quoted in double quotes, which end at the next - * unescaped double quote. (\ is the escape char, and is doubled, and - * is used to escape only \ and ".) Otherwise the local-part is - * presented as-is. In any case this is followed by an @ and the - * domain. The domain will not contain any characters not legal in - * hostnames. adns will protect the application from local parts - * containing control characters - these appear to be legal according - * to RFC822 but are clearly a bad idea. + * unescaped double quote (\ is the escape char, and is doubled, and + * is used to escape only \ and "). If the local-part is legal + * without quoting according to RFC822, it is presented as-is. In any + * case the local-part is followed by an @ and the domain. The domain + * will not contain any characters not legal in hostnames. + * + * Unquoted local-parts may contain any printing 7-bit ASCII + * except the punctuation characters ( ) < > @ , ; : \ " [ ] + * I.e. they may contain alphanumerics, and the following + * punctuation characters: ! # % ^ & * - _ = + { } . + * + * adns will reject local parts containing control characters (byte + * values 0-31, 127-159, and 255) - these appear to be legal according + * to RFC822 (at least 0-127) but are clearly a bad idea. RFC1035 + * syntax does not make any distinction between a single RFC822 + * quoted-string containing full stops, and a series of quoted-strings + * separated by full stops; adns will return anything that isn't all + * valid atoms as a single quoted-string. RFC822 does not allow + * high-bit-set characters at all, but adns does allow them in + * local-parts, treating them as needing quoting. * * If you ask for the domain with _raw then _no_ checking is done * (even on the host part, regardless of adns_qf_quoteok_anshost), and * you just get the domain name in master file format. * * If no mailbox is supplied the returned string will be `.' in either - * caswe. + * case. */ typedef enum {