When Exchange 2000 sends messages in 7-bit encoding,
there has been little or no encoding of the message. The characters in
the message are all in the US-ASCII range.
� | 7-Bit data 7-bit data refers to data that is represented by relatively
short lines with 998 octets or less between Carriage Return Line Feed (CRLF)
line separation sequences. Octets with decimal values greater than 127 are
not permitted, and neither are "NULL" octets (octets with a decimal equivalent of 0).
|
� | CRLF The Carriage Return (CR) (decimal value 13) and Line Feed
(LF) (decimal value 10) octets occur only as part of CRLF line separation
sequences. |
� | UTF-7 UTF-7 encodes Unicode characters as US-ASCII octets,
together with shift sequences to encode characters outside that range. For
this purpose, one of the characters in the US-ASCII character set is reserved
for use as a "shift" character. |
When Exchange Server sends messages to SMTP gateways and computers that
cannot handle the whole US-ASCII character set (for example, Extended Binary
Coded Decimal Interchange Code [EBCDIC] gateways), UTF-7 is used to encode
characters in the US-ASCII character set in a format that all mail systems
can accept. An example of this process occurs when reports are sent, such as non-delivery
reports (NDRs).
Exchange Server 5.5 sends a message using 7-bit encoding if
all the characters in the message are in the US-ASCII range. In Exchange
2000, the server encodes a message as 7-bit if character sets from the
following code pages or character sets are used to compose the e-mail message:
ISO-22022-KR
SHIFT-JIS
UTF7