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linelength
) The SMTP specification allows for lines of text containing up to 1000 bytes. However, some transports may impose more severe restrictions on line length. For example, while the MAIL-11 transport over DECnet supports lines of any length, the access to this transport provided by the VMS MAIL foreign protocol interface limits lines to 255 characters or less.
The linelength
keyword provides a mechanism for limiting the maximum permissible
message line length on a channel by channel basis. Messages queued to a
given channel with lines longer than the limit specified for that
channel will be encoded automatically. The various encodings available
in PMDF always result in a reduction of line length to fewer than 80
characters. The original message may be recovered after such encoding
is done by applying an appropriate decoding filter. (In many cases PMDF
MAIL and other MIME-aware user agents are able to detect that such
decoding is necessary and perform it automatically.)
Note that encoding can only reduce line lengths to fewer than 80 characters. For this reason specification of line length values less than 80 may not actually produce lines with lengths that comply with the stated restriction.
Note also that linelength
causes encoding of data so as to do "soft" line wrapping for
transport purposes. The encoding is normally decoded at the receiving
side so that the original "long" lines are recovered. For
"hard" line wrapping, see instead the "Record,Text"
CHARSET-CONVERSION; Chapter 6.
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