Simple Mail Access Protocol
The Simple Mail Access Protocol (SMAP)[1] is an application layer Internet protocol for accessing e-mail stored on a server. It was introduced as part of the Courier suite, with the goal of creating a simpler and more capable alternative to IMAP.
As of 2005, SMAP is still considered experimental, and is only supported by the Courier server and Cone client.
Features
- MIME attachments can be transmitted in their raw, decoded form. This allows large base64-encoded attachments to be transmitted without the 4:3 inflation that base64 encoding usually incurs.[2]
- Support for sending outgoing e-mails through the SMAP connection, instead of using a separate SMTP connection to the server. An outgoing message only needs to be transmitted once to both send it and save a copy to a server-side folder.
- Unicode folder names, with native support for hierarchy.
- SMAP clients and servers can fall back to IMAP if the peer does not support SMAP.
gollark: What webstuff?
gollark: Have you read the potatOS privacy policy, by any chance?
gollark: This is ridiculous, *somehow* the slow bit appears to be it doing a query using a column *with an index* to get *one row* which executes in *less time than the thing measures* if I run it manually.
gollark: Also, and this is very æ, it's still actually quite slow somehow.
gollark: But I can't tell if it's an actual bug or just because they have a slightly different dataset.
References
- Wang, Xiao Lei (2005). "Performance evaluations for multimedia applications over PR-SCTP" (PDF). University of British Columbia. pp. xii. Retrieved December 1, 2012.
- "SMAP". Retrieved December 1, 2012.
External links
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