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I try to respond to urgent bug reports in a timely way. But fetchmail is now pretty mature and I have many other projects, so I don't personally chase obscure or marginal problems. Help with any of these will be cheerfully accepted.
Feature request from "Ralf G. R. Bergs" POP3 can't presently distinguish a wedged or down server from an
authentication failure. Possible fix: after issuing a PASS command.
wait 300 (xx) seconds for a "-ERR" or a "+OK" . If nothing comes
back, retry at the next poll event and generate no errors. If we
get an -ERR then log an authentication failure. It has been reported that multidrop name matching fails when the
name to be matched contains a Latin-1 umlaut. Dollars to doughnuts
this is some kind of character sign-extension problem. Trouble is,
it's very likely in the BIND libraries. Someone should go in with a
debugger and check this. In the SSL support, add authentication of Certifying Authority
(Is this a Certifying Authority we recognize?). Debian wishlist item 181157: ssl key learning for self-signed certificates. Laszlo Vecsey writes: "I believe qmail uses a technique of
writing temporary files to nfs, and then moving them into place to
ensure that they're written. Actually a hardlink is made to the
temporary file and the destination name in a new directory, then
the first one is unlinked.. maybe a combination of this will help
with the fetchmail lock file." Move everything to using service strings rather that port
numbers, so we can get rid of ENABLE_INET6 everywhere but in
SockOpen (this will get rid of the kluge in rcfile_y.y). John Summerfield suggests that specifying a localname containing
@ ought to be treated as an smtpname option, with the domain part
removed for other purposes such as local-address matching. Maybe refuse multidrop configuration unless "envelope" is _explicitly_
configured (and tell the user he needs to configure the envelope
option) and change the envelope default to nil. This would
prevent a significant class of shoot-self-in-foot problems. Given the above change, perhaps treat a delivery as "temporarily
failed" (leaving the message on the server, not putting it into
.fetchids) when the header listed in the "envelope" option is not
found. (This is so you don't lose mail if you configure the wrong
envelope header.) Matthias Andree writes: NOTE that the current code need optimization, if I have
unseen articles 3 and 47, fetchmail will happily request LIST for
articles 3...47 rather than just 3 and 47. In cases where the message
numbers are far apart, this involves considerable overhead - which
could be alleviated by pipelining the list commands, which needs
either asynchronous reading while sending the commands, or knowing the
send buffer, to avoid deadlocks. Unfortunately, I don't have the time
to delve deeper into the code and look around. Note that such a pipelining function would be of universal use, so it
should not be in pop3.c or something. I'd think the best approach is to
call a "sender" function with the command and a callback, and the sender
will call the receiver when the send buffer is full and call the
callback function for each reply received. See the ESMTP PIPELINING RFC for details on the deadlock avoidance
requirements. The
Debian bug-tracking page for fetchmail lists other bug
reports.
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$Date: 2004/01/13 03:21:41 $
Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>