The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you send a message that contains an attachment over a 1984 X.400 connection to a foreign message transfer agent (MTA) that uses Boldon James manifest encoding, the attachment name may not appear in the message when it is received. The attachment itself is transferred successfully, but the attachment's name, date, and time are not. When you receive a message over this connection, the attachment name may be changed to Att.dat or a similar generic name. CAUSE
By default, Microsoft Exchange Server does not create Boldon James
manifests for attachments. When you send a message that contains an
attachment over an X.400 connection that uses this type of encoding,
information about the attachment is not encoded into a manifest.
Therefore, the foreign MTA does not receive this information.
STATUS
This is a design limitation of the 1984 X.400 specification that Boldon
James manifest encoding is designed to overcome. Although the creation and
decoding of manifests are not officially supported by the X.400
specification, Microsoft has enhanced the Microsoft Exchange Server 5.0
MTA to support this feature.
S E R V P A C K MORE INFORMATIONThe 1984 X.400 specification provides poor support for encoding attachment information, resulting in multiple proprietary attachment encoding schemes. Boldon James manifest encoding is a method of encoding attachments in which an additional attachment, referred to as a manifest, is included with the message. The manifest provides information about the original attachment, including the attachment name.
Keywords : kbbug5.00 kbfix5.00.sp2 XCON |
Last Reviewed: March 12, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |