- Simon Brereton <simon.brereton@buongiorno.com>:
On 3 November 2011 17:01, Stephan Bosch <stephan@rename-it.nl> wrote:
On 11/3/2011 9:42 PM, Simon Brereton wrote:
Hi
Could someone explain to me the difference between LOGIN and PLAIN? I've been googling for a while, but haven't found anything.
The LOGIN SASL mechanism is an obsolete plain text mechanism. It is documented here:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-murchison-sasl-login-00
Some clients still support it, but I would not recommend using it when PLAIN or a better SASL mechanism is also available at both ends. The PLAIN mechanism is documented here:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4616
The main technical difference between the two is that the PLAIN mechanism transfers both username and password in a single SASL interaction, where LOGIN needs two. The PLAIN mechanism also provides support for having an authorization id different from the authentication id, allowing for master user login for example.
Thanks to both of you. Can I bet that Outlook doesn't support anything but plain?
Outlook > 2007 LOGIN, NTLM Outlook 2010 > LOGIN, NTLM2, DIGEST-MD5
I'm not sure I've ever heard of a client supporting other than Evolution supporting MD5 passwords..
Two come to mind: mutt, Thunderbird However DIGEST-MD5 has been marked deprecated this summer.
p@rick
-- state of mind ()
Franziskanerstraße 15 Telefon +49 89 3090 4664 81669 München Telefax +49 89 3090 4666
Amtsgericht München Partnerschaftsregister PR 563