Network Working Group F. Wancho
Request for Comments:
1153 WSMR
April 1990
Digest Message Format
Status of this Memo
This memo describes the de facto standard Digest Message Format.
This is an elective experimental protocol. Distribution of this memo
is unlimited.
Background
High traffic volume large mailing lists began to appear on the net in
the mid-70s. The moderators of those lists developed a digest
message format to enclose several messages into one composite message
for redistribution to the mailing list addressees. This format
reduces the mailer load in proportion to the number of messages
contained within a digest message, and conserves network bandwidth by
reducing the size of the headers of the enclosed messages.
This RFC documents the digest message format so that others may
follow this format in creating (digestifying) and separating
(undigestifying) digest messages to maintain compatibility with the
programs expecting this de facto standard. Any editorial functions
performed at the discretion of a digest moderator, such as discarding
submissions, editing content to correct spelling and punctuation
errors, inserting comments, and reformatting paragraphs to conform to
width conventions are beyond the scope of this memo.
This memo describes the de facto standard Digest Message Format. It
is not meant to supersede nor replace the generic message
encapsulation format described in
RFC 934. It merely documents a
particular message encapsulation format that existed well before
RFC 934 was published and continues to be the format of choice for digest
messages.
Description
A digest message is a conventional message consisting of a header and
body conforming to
RFC 822 as clarified in
RFC 1123. There is no
fixed size. Limitations may exist in intermediate mail gateways
which restrict the size. The typical digest size is 15,000
characters.
The header of a digest message should identify the digest in the