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Hi Tom -

As for whether the client is busted, the strict definition of SMTP headers has <CRLF> as the delimiter, so <tabNL> _should_ be okay... I think. Technically, if the RFC indicates that <NL> alone is sufficient, then YOUR client may be busted, but I highly doubt that. I didn't see that possibility last time I scanned through it.

Well, the LF without the CR in my mailbox file could be the result of my server software storing it that way, since it is a Linux-based server. I would have to capture and examine the actual packets to find out for sure, and I'm not going to bother to do that.


The SMTP RFC requiring CRLF only applies to the transmission of the message. The local message store can be whatever the software wants to do.

Sure, I understand the Windows connection to <CRLF>; but if that were the cause, it would seem a LOT of e-mail would get screwed up, i.e., the behavior would be seen all over the world. In this case, I'm simply using Netscape Mail 7.1.

I think it's a matter of the CRLFtab appearing in the *subject* and your client software not expecting that and not handling it properly. You could use an editor to add a CRLFtab sequence in the middle of the subject of a normal message and see if it then looks strange.


I'm using a Windoze-based client. I just checked and the local message store for the client does have the LFs converted to CRLFs (since that's the standard for Windoze). My client software (Eudora) has no trouble with headers that wrap with CRLFtab or CRLFspaces, even in the subject.

--
Ken
http://www.ke9nr.net/
Opinions expressed are my own and do not necessarily represent the views of my employer or anyone in their right mind.



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