The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSThe use of ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) as X.400 bodypart for the X.400 message text sent by Microsoft Exchange Server may result in this bodypart not being recognized by MTAs such as Digital's MAILbus 400. Therefore, no further processing, such as conversion can occur on this message. On the MAILbus 400 side this may result in error message similar to the following: (Please see the More Information section for the complete error log). Eventually, a non-delivery report (NDR) will be sent back to Microsoft Exchange Server. CAUSEThe encoding used by Microsoft Exchange Server for the ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) bodypart lacks the escape sequence needed to invoke the G0 subset of the ISO Latin 1 character set. WORKAROUNDDo not use the ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) bodypart if the remote message transfer agent (MTA) is not able to decode the message without errors as sent by Microsoft Exchange Server. STATUSMicrosoft has confirmed this to be a problem in Microsoft Exchange Server version 4.0. This problem has been corrected in the latest U.S. Service Pack for Microsoft Exchange Server version 4.0. For information on obtaining the Service Pack, query on the following word in the Microsoft Knowledge Base (without the spaces): S E R V P A C KMicrosoft has confirmed this to be a problem in Microsoft Exchange Server version 5.0. This problem has been corrected in the latest U.S. Service Pack for Microsoft Exchange Server version 5.0. For information on obtaining the Service Pack, query on the following word in the Microsoft Knowledge Base (without the spaces): S E R V P A C K MORE INFORMATIONForeign MTAs may expect the ISO-8859-1 body part invoked, using four additional characters before the actual content (1b 28 42 0f). These four characters shall contain the escape sequence invoking the G0 subset of the ISO Latin 1 set. ISO/IEC 10021-7 Annex B, B.2 defines the General Text (extended) Bodypart. It refers to the G0 character set designators as follows: The defaults for the G0 and C0 character set designators are those assumed as designated and invoked by the ASN.1 Basic Encoding Rules (ISO 8825) for a General String.The Latin-1 character set itself is defined in ISO 8859-1 and also defines the Escape sequences as follows: ISO 8859-1, 8 Designation of the character set When required by other coding standards, for example ISO 2022 or ISO 4873, the following pair of escape sequences shall be used: ESC 02/08 04/02 ESC 02/13 04/01 to designate the G0 and the G1 sets, respectively. According to ISO 2022, the character SPACE does not require designation.ITU' s 1988 X series of recommendations also known as the Blue Book refer to these character set designators as follows: Rec. X.209, 23.5: 23.5 The octet string shall contain the octets specified in ISO 2022 for encodings in an 8-bit environment, using the escape sequence and character codings registered in accordance with ISO 2375. ..."The following is a sample of a resulting error as generated by Digital' s MAILbus 400:
MAILbus 400 is manufactured by Digital Equipment Corp., a vendor independent of Microsoft; we make no warranty, implied or otherwise, regarding this product's performance or reliability. Additional query words:
Keywords : kbusage kbbug4.00 kbbug5.00 XCON kbfix5.00.sp1 |
Last Reviewed: March 25, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |