Patent Publication Number: US-5627997-A

Title: Method and system for converting computer mail messages using an extensible set of conversion routines

Description:
TECHNICAL FIELD 
     The invention relates generally to a method and system for processing computer mail messages, and, more specifically, to a method and system for converting the format of computer mail messages using a dynamic set of conversion routines. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     In a computer mail system, also known as an electronic mail system, a user may send messages to other users. The user to whom a message is sent is called the addressee of the message. Messages may contain text, or data in any other form. Messages sent within a computer mail system are typically transported across a computer network. 
     In order to enable the exchange of message between a larger number of users, two computer mail systems may be connected by a gateway. A gateway is a software facility that executes on a computer connected to both of the computer networks that each transport messages for one of the mail systems. FIG. 1 is a high-level block diagram of two mail systems connected by a conventional gateway. The gateway preferably operates on a computer system 100 which contains network connection 105 and network connection 106. Network connection 105 connects the computer system 100 to a first network 111. The first network 111 also connects to computer system 120 and computer system 130 via network connection 125 and network connection 135 respectively. The computer systems connected by the first network 111 comprise the first mail system 110. Similarly, a second mail system 160 is comprised of the computer systems connected by network 161. The computer systems connected by network 161 include computer system 100 via network connection 106, computer system 170 via network connection 176, and computer system 180 via network connection 186. 
     Gateways pass messages from an originating mail system to a receiving mail system, doing any necessary conversion from message formats used by the originating mail system to those used by the receiving mail system. Because mail systems are usually somewhat proprietary, a particular type of message may be formatted in one format for one mail system and in a different format for a different mail system. For example, in messages of some types, one mail system might use the American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) in the message, while another mail system might use the Extended Binary Code Decimal Interchange Code (EBCDIC) to represent each character of text. 
     In early mail systems, users sent messages of only one type, containing a block of undifferentiated text whose contents are not divided into portions having special significance. This made gateway message format conversion straightforward, as a typical gateway required only two different conversion routines (&#34;converters&#34;): one to translate an undifferentiated text messages from the format for a first mail system to the format for a second mail system, and one to translate from the format for the second mail system to the format for the first mail system. These converters are usually incorporated directly into the gateway by statically linking their code with the gateway&#39;s code. 
     In order to accommodate different, more specialized kinds of message content, new message types are now regularly being developed. Existing message types include notes with diverse contents, administrative messages such as non-delivery reports, electronic forms, and a variety of scheduling messages. In order for an existing gateway to convert messages of each newly developed type, the gateway must be rewritten to incorporate two new converters (i.e., a separate converter for converting messages traveling through the gateway in each direction). This rewriting of existing gateways has important disadvantages. First, because gateways are in most cases proprietary software products, only the original developers of a gateway have the information (most notably the original source code) necessary to rewrite the gateway. This prevents mail system administrators who administer gateways from themselves adding converters that they develop. Further, once the gateway is rewritten, the entire gateway must be distributed to any customers desiring to use the new converters. It is expensive to original developers of a gateway to have to redistribute the entire gateway, and it is a laborious process for a mail system administrator to install and configure an entire updated gateway. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     It is an object of the invention to provide a method and system in a computer system for converting the format of a computer mail message using a dynamic set of conversion routines. 
     It is another object of the invention to provide a method and system in a computer system for passing a computer mail message from a first computer mail system to a second computer mail system and performing any necessary format conversion using an expandable set of conversion routines. 
     It is a further object of the invention to provide a method and system in a computer system for efficiently converting the format of a computer mail message using two levels of selection to select the appropriate conversion routine. 
     These and other objects, which will become apparent as the invention is more fully described below, are provided by a method and system for converting the format of computer mail messages using a dynamic set of conversion routines. In a preferred embodiment, a message format conversion engine uses an updatable registry to access an extensible set of available conversion routines. The registry contains selection information and invocation information for each of the available conversion routines. The selection information in each case describes the classes of messages that the conversion routine is potentially capable of converting. The invocation information comprises information necessary to invoke the conversion routine. When a message is submitted to the conversion engine, the engine reads the selection information stored in the registry. The engine then uses the read selection information to select one of the available conversion routines likely to be capable of converting the message. The engine reads the invocation information stored in the registry for the selected conversion routine and uses it to invoke the selected conversion routine to convert the format of the message. In a further preferred embodiment, the conversion engine invokes the selected conversion routine in two stages. The engine first invokes a query method of a selected conversion routine, which indicates whether the selected conversion routine is actually capable of converting the message. If the invocation of the query method indicates that the selected conversion routine is actually capable of converting the message, then the engine invokes a convert method of the selected conversion routine in order to convert the format of the message. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIG. 1 is a high-level block diagram of two mail systems connected by a conventional gateway. 
     FIG. 2 is a high-level block diagram of the general-purpose computer system upon which the gateway and a dynamic converter set conversion engine preferably operate. 
     FIG. 3 is a tree diagram showing a tree representing a sample set of message classes. 
     FIG. 4 is a flow diagram showing the steps performed by the engine in order to process a message traveling through the gateway. 
     FIG. 5 is a flow diagram showing the steps performed by the engine in order to convert the message. 
     FIG. 6 is a data block diagram showing sample contents of the registry and illustrating the relationship between the registry and converters. 
     FIG. 7 is a data block diagram showing the addition of the new converter. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     In a preferred embodiment, the present invention provides a method and system for converting computer mail messages (&#34;messages&#34;) using a dynamic set of conversion routines (i.e., the conversion routines that are members of the set may change over time). In a preferred embodiment, a computer mail system gateway (&#34;gateway&#34;) passes messages from an originating mail system to a receiving mail system. The gateway uses a dynamic converter set conversion engine (&#34;engine&#34;) to convert each messages from a format supported by the originating mail system into a format supported by the receiving mail system. The engine is a software facility that governs the conversion of messages from one format to another. The engine applies conversion routines (&#34;converters&#34;) that are identified by querying a converter registry (&#34;registry&#34;). The registry is an updatable list of all of the converters that are available to the engine, and contains selection and invocation information for each available converter. Because the registry is updatable, a new converter may be easily added to the registry for use by the engine at any time without significant disruption of any existing converters. The ability to add a new converter permits the gateway to be easily expanded to convert a wider variety of messages. When processing a message, the engine uses the selection information stored in the registry to select one or more converters that are potentially capable of converting the message. The engine then uses the invocation information stored in the registry to invoke one or more of the selected converters to convert the message into a proper format. 
     Converters are each preferably comprised of two executable methods, a Query method and a Convert method. Converters are invoked in two stages, by first invoking the Query method and then invoking the Convert method, as discussed below. The engine preferably uses the invocation information to invoke a Query method of each selected converter in turn. The Query method of each converter indicates whether that converter can actually convert the message. The first time an invoked Query method indicates that its converter is actually capable of converting the message, the engine uses the &#34;related&#34; or &#34;referenced&#34; invocation information to invoke a Convert method of that converter. When invoked, the Convert method actually converts the message. Query methods and Convert methods can preferably reside in any accessible dynamic link library (&#34;DLL&#34;), which permits new converters to be made available to the engine by either adding them to an existing DLL or creating a new DLL to contain them. As a result, the code for these methods consumes scarce memory only while the code is being used. 
     In a preferred embodiment, the Convert methods of certain converters are designed to invoke a user-supplied conversion routine, permitting novice users who are unfamiliar with DLLs to design their own converters for use by the gateway. In a further preferred embodiment, certain Convert methods may process the message in some other way than converting it into another message. For instance, if the purpose of a particular message is to update a database in the receiving mail system, a Convert method with access to the database could update the database in place of actually converting the message. 
     FIG. 2 is a high-level block diagram of the general-purpose computer system upon which the gateway and conversion engine preferably operate. The computer system 200 corresponds to computer system 100 in FIG. 1, and contains a central processing unit (&#34;CPU&#34;) 201, a computer memory (&#34;memory&#34;) 202, and input/output devices 203. Among the input/output devices is a storage device 204, such as a hard disk drive, and two network connections 205 and 206. Each network connection provides access to the network that carries traffic for one of the two mail systems connected by the gateway as described above. The gateway 207 and conversion engine 208, as well as other associated programs, preferably reside in the memory 202 and execute on the CPU 201. The registry and converters are preferably stored in the storage device 204, but may also be stored in the memory 202 or in a storage device connected to another computer system and accessed using one of the network connections. 
     The class of a received message, which determines the order in which converters are invoked. Message classes are arranged in a message class hierarchy, which can be represented by a class tree diagram. FIG. 3 is a tree diagram showing a tree representing a sample set of message classes. The tree is composed of nine nodes 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, and 309. Each node represents a hierarchical class that can be used to characterize the contents of a message. The top node 301 is the root node of the tree. The class represented by the root node is no-class, and is general enough to encompass any message, i.e., all messages are a member of this class. Node 301 has two children, node 302 which represents an admin class for administrative messages directed to automated administrative agents and node 303 which represents a mail class for messages directed to users. Node 302 has one child, node 304 representing an admin.dir --  update class for messages that transmit automatic user directory update transactions. Node 303 has two children, node 305 representing a mail.ndr class for messages containing non-delivery reports and node 306 representing a mail.sched class for messages containing scheduling communications. Node 306 has three children, node 307 representing a mail.sched.mtg 13  request class for requesting meetings, node 308 representing a mail.sched.mtg --  accept class for accepting meetings, and node 309 representing a mail.sched.mtg --  reject class for rejecting meetings. 
     If a first node can be reached from a second node by traveling exclusively upward through the tree, the first node is a &#34;predecessor&#34; of the second node, and the second node is a &#34;descendant&#34; of the first node. If the node representing a first class is a predecessor of a node representing a second class, the first class is said to be a &#34;superclass&#34; of the second class. This means that every message that is a member of the second class is also a member of the first class. Conversely, the second class is said to be a &#34;subclass&#34; of the first class. The second class is also &#34;more specialized&#34; than the first class. If no converters for the class attributed to a message are actually able to convert the message, the engine invokes the Query methods of converters for successive superclasses of the class attributed to the message. 
     When a user of the first mail system, known as the sender, addresses a message to a user of the second mail system, known as the receiver, the sender&#39;s mail program detects that the receiver&#39;s address is in the second mail system, and routes the message to the gateway. FIG. 4 is a flow diagram showing the steps performed by the engine in order to process a message traveling through the gateway. In step 401, the engine determines the direction in which the message is traveling through the gateway. As an example, if a message is traveling from the first mail system to the second mail system, the engine determines that the message is traveling in the 1 direction. Similarly, if a message is traveling from the second mail system to the first mail system, the engine determines that the message is traveling in the 2 direction. In step 402, the engine determines which class in the class tree best describes the contents of the message, i.e., the class of which the message is a member. In many cases, the mail program used by the message&#39;s sender knows the correct class for the message and includes a tag line like the following identifying it in the message&#39;s header: 
     
         ______________________________________                                    
message.sub.-- type: mail.ndr                                             
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     In this case, the engine attributes the class mail.ndr to the message. In other cases, the sending program is unaware of the messages correct class or omits including a header line. In such cases, the engine may either attribute the no-class class to the message, or endeavor to attribute a more specialized class based on an analysis of the message. Attributing a more specialized class based on an analysis of the message requires that the engine contain code for attributing the class that is capable of distinguishing between messages of different classes. As an example, the engine might search for a string commonly present in a non-delivery reports (e.g., &#34;Returned mail: User unknown&#34;) and, if it finds this string, attribute the class mail.ndr to the message. For example, the engine uses the above methods to attribute the class mail.ndr and the 2 direction to a sample non-delivery report message traveling from the second mail system to the first mail system. This example is used to further clarify the behavior of the engine in the discussion that follows. 
     After the engine attributes a class and direction to the message, it attempts to convert it in step 403. FIG. 5 is a flow diagram showing the steps performed by the engine in order to convert the message. In step 501, the engine uses selection information stored in the registry, whose implementation is discussed in detail below, to identify converters that are potentially capable of converting the message. Step 501 involves querying the registry for converters that convert messages of the class attributed to the message or a superclass thereof, in the same direction that the message is traveling. 
     FIG. 6 is a data block diagram showing sample contents of the registry and illustrating the relationship between the registry and converters. The registry 600 contains information about available converters. Specifically, for each converter, the registry contains (a) a class 601 characterizing the types of messages that the converter is potentially capable of converting; (b) a conversion direction 602 indicating whether the converter converts messages passing from a first mail system to a second mail system (1) or messages passing from the second mail system to the first mail system (2); (c) an invocation reference 603 to the Query method of the converter; and (d) an invocation reference 604 to the Convert method of the converter. This registry 600 contains the above information for each of three sample converters 606, 607, and 608. For example, converter 608 converts messages of class mail, shown as node 303 in the message class tree of FIG. 3, traveling in the 1 direction. Converter methods are stored in method modules 610 and 620. Method module 610 is composed of four methods, 611, 612, 613, and 614. Method module 620 is composed of two methods, 621 and 622. In the example, querying the sample registry shown in FIG. 6 for mail.ndr messages traveling in the 2 direction, step 501 yields only converter 608 for mail messages traveling in the 2 direction. Note that the registry does not contain any converters for mail.ndr messages traveling in the 2 direction. 
     Each method module is preferably a DLL. The DLLs are preferably stored in the storage device until one of their methods is invoked using the invocation information. Upon invocation of one of its methods, a DLL is loaded into memory. After execution of the method concludes, the DLL may either be removed from memory or retained for later use (cached). Each invocation reference (&#34;reference&#34;) stored in the registry is preferably comprised of a DLL identity and an entry point into the DLL. For example, the Query reference for converter 608 would contain the filename of the 620 DLL, &#34;converters2.dll&#34;, and the first entry point. 
     Returning to FIG. 5, the engine identifies converters that convert messages of the class attributed to, the message or subclass thereof, in the same direction that the message is traveling in step 501 by searching for converters having the correct direction and having a class that begins with the class attributed to the message. In step 502, if the Query method of any of the converters identified in step 501 has not yet been invoked, then the engine continues at step 503 to select one of them, else the engine fails to convert the message. In step 503, the engine selects one of the identified converters not yet selected. All of the converters identified in step 501 can convert messages of the class attributed to the message or a superclass thereof. In order to try converters in the order of their likely suitability to convert the message, the engine preferably selects a converter whose selection information contains the closest class to the attributed class in the class tree. In the example, the engine selects the only converter identified, converter 608 for mail messages traveling in the 2 direction. 
     In step 504, the engine uses the invocation information stored in the registry for the selected converter to invoke the Query method for the converter. This invocation is known as &#34;dereferencing&#34; the reference to the Query method stored in the registry. The Query method determines whether the converter is actually capable of converting the message by checking to see whether any dependencies the converter has on anticipated contents of the original message are satisfied by the message that is being processed. For example, if a Convert method translates from ASCII to EBCDIC, the associated Query method determines whether the message that is being processed is actually in ASCII. That is, the Query method preferably checks to make sure that the character values for the message are within the acceptable range for ASCII character values. When the Query method returns, it passes back a ream code indicating whether the converter is actually capable of converting the message. In the example, the Query method of converter 608 returns a success return code. In step 505, if the return code indicates that the Query method succeeded and the converter is actually capable of converting the message, then the engine continues at step 506, else the engine continues at step 502 to select another identified converter if any remain. In step 506, the engine uses the invocation information stored in the registry for the selected converter to invoke the Convert method for the converter. This invocation is known as dereferencing the reference to the Convert method stored in the registry. In the example, the engine invokes the convert method for converter 608. 
     If the characters in mail messages are stored in EBCDIC in the second mail system and in ASCII in the first mail system, then the following pseudocode represents the Convert code for converter 608 stored in method 622: 
     
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for each character in original message                                    
translate the character from EBCDIC to ASCII                              
insert translated character in converted message                          
return success                                                            
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     When the Convert method returns, it passes back a return code. In step 507, if the return code indicates that the Convert method successfully converted the message, then the engine succeeds at converting the message, else the engine fails at converting the message. In the case of the example, the Convert method returns a success return code, indicating that the Convert method of converter 608 was able to convert the non-delivery report by converting all of its characters from EBCDIC to ASCII. 
     While this conversion has succeeded, non-delivery reports may require additional conversion not performed by converter 608. For example, programs that receive non-delivery reports on the behalf of users in the first mail system may expect to read a special tag line in the header of each non-delivery report indicating the subject of the message that was not delivered, of the form: 
     
         ______________________________________                                    
non-delivered.sub.-- subject: &lt;subject&gt;                                   
______________________________________                                    
 
    
     Unless this tag line appears in the original non-delivery reports sent from the second mail system, it does not appear in the converted non-delivery reports generated by converter 608. In order to satisfy the expectation of receiving programs, a converter provider, such as the mail system administrator or the mail system provider, adds a new converter to the gateway to specifically handle non-delivery reports traveling in the 2 direction. The new converter must (a) convert the characters from EBCDIC to ASCII and (b) find the non-delivered subject in the original message (the remainder of the second line of the original message beginning with the string &#34;Subject:&#34;) and use it to generate a non-delivered subject tag line in the header of the converted message. 
     The converter provider first codes the Query and Convert methods for the new converter. Pseudocode for the Query method would determine whether a non-delivered subject can be discerned from the original message: 
     
         ______________________________________                                    
go to beginning of message                                                
find &#34;Subject: &#34;                                                          
if find &#34;Subject: &#34; fails then return failure                             
        else return success                                               
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     Pseudocode for the Convert method (a) converts the characters from EBCDIC to ASCII and (b) finds the non-delivered subject in the original message (the remainder of the second line of the original message beginning with the string &#34;Subject:&#34;) and uses the non-delivered subject to generate a non-delivered subject tag line in the header of the converted message: 
     
         ______________________________________                                    
for each character in original message                                    
translate the character from EBCDIC to ASCII                              
insert translated character in converted message                          
go to beginning of original message                                       
find &#34;Subject: &#34;                                                          
find &#34;Subject: &#34;                                                          
store remainder of line                                                   
create new line in header of converted message                            
insert &#34;non-delivered.sub.-- subject: &#34; in new line                       
insert stored text in new line                                            
return success                                                            
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     The converter provider stores compiled code for the methods of the new converter in an accessible DLL. The converter provider then adds an entry to the register for the new converter. FIG. 7 is a data block diagram showing the addition of the new converter. A new method module 730, named &#34;converters3.dll,&#34; has been added, and contains the Query method 731 and the Convert method 732 for the new converter. A new row corresponding to the new converter 709 has been added to the registry, containing the class mail.ndr, the direction 2, and references to the Query and Convert methods of the new converter. 
     If, at this point, the gateway receives another non-delivery report traveling to the first mail system, the engine performs the steps shown in FIG. 5 again. In step 501, the engine identifies converters 708 and 709 as potentially capable of converting the message. In step 503, the engine selects the 709 converter first, as its class, mail.ndr, is the closest to (in fact, the same as) the attributed class of the message, mail.ndr. In step 504, the engine invokes the Query method of converter 709, which returns success, indicating the 709 converter is actually capable of converting the message. In step 506, the engine invokes the Convert method of converter 709, which translates the message to ASCII, generates the required non-delivered subject tag line, and returns success. The foregoing is an example of how the indirection used by the engine in selecting converters permits the gateway to be easily expanded to perform new conversions. 
     While this invention has been shown and described with reference to preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes or modifications in form and detail may be made without departing from the scope of the invention.