#!/bin/sh
#
# indexgen.sh -- generate current version of fetchmail home page.
#
goldvers="5.9.0"
goldname="5.9.0"
version=`sed -n
Note: if you are a stranded fetchmail.com user, we're sorry but
we have nothing to do with that site and cannot help you. It's just an
unfortunate coincidence of names.
Fetchmail is a full-featured, robust, well-documented
remote-mail retrieval and forwarding utility intended to be used over
on-demand TCP/IP links (such as SLIP or PPP connections). It supports
every remote-mail protocol now in use on the Internet: POP2, POP3,
RPOP, APOP, KPOP, all flavors of IMAP, ETRN, and ODMR. It can even
support IPv6 and IPSEC. Fetchmail retrieves mail from remote mail servers and forwards it via
SMTP, so it can then be be read by normal mail user agents such as mutt, elm(1) or BSD Mail.
It allows all your system MTA's filtering, forwarding, and aliasing
facilities to work just as they would on normal mail. Fetchmail offers better security than any other Unix remote-mail
client. It supports APOP, KPOP, OTP, Compuserve RPA, Microsoft NTLM,
and IMAP RFC1731 encrypted authentication methods including CRAM-MD5
to avoid sending passwords en clair. It can be configured to support
end-to-end encryption via tunneling with ssh, the Secure Shell. Fetchmail can be used as a POP/IMAP-to-SMTP gateway for an entire DNS
domain, collecting mail from a single drop box on an ISP and
SMTP-forwarding it based on header addresses. (We don't really
recommend this, though, as it may lose important envelope-header
information. ETRN or a UUCP connection is better.) Fetchmail can be started automatically and silently as a system daemon
at boot time. When running in this mode with a short poll interval,
it is pretty hard for anyone to tell that the incoming mail link is
not a full-time "push" connection. Fetchmail is easy to configure. You can edit its dotfile directly, or
use the interactive GUI configurator (fetchmailconf) supplied with the
fetchmail distribution. It is also directly supported in linuxconf
versions 1.16r8 and later. Fetchmail is fast and lightweight. It packs all its standard
features (POP3, IMAP, and ETRN support) in ${fetchmailsize}K of core on a
Pentium under Linux. Fetchmail is open-source
software. The openness of the sources is your strongest possible
assurance of quality and reliability. See the Fetchmail Feature List for more
about what fetchmail does. See the on-line manual page for
basics. See the HTML Fetchmail FAQ for
troubleshooting help. See the Fetchmail Design Notes
for discussion of some of the design choices in fetchmail. See the project's To-Do list for indications
of known problems and requested features. You can get any of the following leading-edge resources here: The detached GPG
signature for the binary tarball can be used to check it for
correctness, with the command MD5 checksums are available for these files; the
checksum file is cryptographically signed and can be verified with the
command:
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The fetchmail Home Page
What fetchmail does:
Where to find out more about fetchmail:
How to get fetchmail:
The detached GPG signature for the binary tarball can be used to check it for correctness, with the command
For differences between the leading-edge $version and gold $goldname versions, see the distribution NEWS file.
EOF fi cat >>index.html <The latest version of fetchmail is also carried in the Metalab remote mail tools directory.
There is a fetchmail-friends list for people who want to discuss fixes and improvements in fetchmail and help co-develop it. It's a MailMan list, which you can sign up for at fetchmail-friends@ccil.org. There is also an announcements-only list, fetchmail-announce@lists.ccil.org.
Note: before submitting a question to the list, please read the FAQ (especially item G3 on how to report bugs). We tend to get the same three newbie questions over and over again. The FAQ covers them like a blanket.
Fetchmail was written and is maintained by Eric S. Raymond. There are some designated backup maintainers (Rob Funk, David DeSimone aka Fuzzy Fox, Dave Bodenstab). Other backup maintainers may be added in the future, in order to ensure continued support should Eric S. Raymond drop permanently off the net for any reason.
I welcome your code contributions. But even if you don't write code, you can help fetchmail improve.
If you administer a site that runs a post-office server, you may be able help improve fetchmail by lending me a test account on your site. Note that I do not need a shell account for this purpose, just a maildrop. Nor am I interested in collecting maildrops per se -- what I'm collecting is different kinds of servers.
Before each release, I run a test harness that sends date-stamped test mail to each site on my regression-test list, then tries to retrieve it. Please take a look at my list of test servers. If you can lend me an account on a kind of server that is not already on this list, please do.
Fetchmail entered full production status with the 2.0.0 version in
November 1996 after about five months of evolution from the ancestral
Somewhere around a thousand people have participated on the fetchmail beta lists (at time of current release there were $subscribers on the friends and announce lists). While it's hard to count the users of open-source software, we can estimate based on (a) population figures at the WELL and other known fetchmail sites, (b) the size of the Linux-using ISP customer base, and (c) the volume of fetchmail-related talk on USENET. These estimates suggest that daily fetchmail users number well into the hundreds of thousands, and possibly over a million.
The fetchmail development project was a sociological experiment as well as a technical effort. I ran it as a test of some theories about why the Linux development model works.
I wrote a paper, The Cathedral And The Bazaar, about these theories and the project. I developed the line of analysis it suggested in two later essays. These papers became quite popular and (to my continuing astonishment) may have actually helped change the world. Chase the title link, above, for links to all three papers.
I have done some analysis on the information in the project NEWS file. You can view a statistical history showing levels of participation and release frequency over time.
Fetchmail is now sufficiently stable and effective that I'm getting very little pressure to fix things or add features. Development has slowed way down, release frequency has dropped off, and we're basically in maintainance mode.
Major changes or additions therefore seem unlikely until there are significant changes in or additions to the related protocol RFCs. One development that would stimulate a new release almost instantly is the deployment of a standard lightweight encrypted authentication method for IMAP sessions.
The fetchmail code was developed under Linux, but has also been extensively tested under 4.4BSD, SunOS, Solaris, AIX, and NEXTSTEP. It should be readily portable to other Unix variants (it requires only POSIX plus BSD sockets, and uses GNU autoconf).
Fetchmail is supported only for Unix by its official maintainers. However, it is reported to build and run correctly under BeOS, AmigaOS, Rhapsody, and QNX as well.
Jochen Hayek is developing a set of IMAP tools in Python that read your .fetchmailrc file and are designed to work with fetchmail. Jochen's tools can report selected header lines, or move incoming messages to named mailboxes based on the contents of headers.
Scott Bronson has written a fetchmail plugin (actually, a specialist MDA) called trestlemail that helps redirect multidrop mail.
Donncha O Caoihm has written a Perl script called install-sendmail that assists you in installing sendmail and fetchmail together/
Peter Hawkins has written a script called gotmail that can retrieve Hotmail. Another script, yosucker, can retrieve Yahoo webmail.
A hacker identifying himself simply as \`Steines' has written a filter which rewrites the to-line with a line which only includes receipients for a given domain and renames the old to-line. It also rewrites the domainpart of addresses if the offical domain is different to local domain. You can find it here.
If you use fetchmail and like it, here's a nifty fetchmail button you can put on your web page:
Thanks to Steve Matuszek for the graphic design. The hand in the button (and the larger top-of-page graphic) was actually derived from a color scan of the fetchmail author's hand.
There is a FTP mirror of the current sources and RPMs in Japan at ftp://ftp.win.ne.jp/pub/network/mail/fetchmail.
Fetchmail was DaveCentral's Best Of Linux winner for June 30 1999.
Fetchmail was a five-star Editor's Pick at Softlandindia.
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