/** * \file uid.c -- UIDL handling for POP3 servers without LAST * * For license terms, see the file COPYING in this directory. */ #include "config.h" #include #include #include #include #if defined(STDC_HEADERS) #include #include #endif #if defined(HAVE_UNISTD_H) #include #endif #include "fetchmail.h" #include "i18n.h" #include "sdump.h" /* * Machinery for handling UID lists live here. This is mainly to support * RFC1725/RFC1939-conformant POP3 servers without a LAST command, but may also * be useful for making the IMAP4 querying logic UID-oriented, if a future * revision of IMAP forces me to. * * These functions are also used by the rest of the code to maintain * string lists. * * Here's the theory: * * At start of a query, we have a (possibly empty) list of UIDs to be * considered seen in `oldsaved'. These are messages that were left in * the mailbox and *not deleted* on previous queries (we don't need to * remember the UIDs of deleted messages because ... well, they're gone!) * This list is initially set up by initialize_saved_list() from the * .fetchids file. * * Early in the query, during the execution of the protocol-specific * getrange code, the driver expects that the host's `newsaved' member * will be filled with a list of UIDs and message numbers representing * the mailbox state. If this list is empty, the server did * not respond to the request for a UID listing. * * Each time a message is fetched, we can check its UID against the * `oldsaved' list to see if it is old. * * Each time a message-id is seen, we mark it with MARK_SEEN. * * Each time a message is deleted, we mark its id UID_DELETED in the * `newsaved' member. When we want to assert that an expunge has been * done on the server, we call expunge_uid() to register that all * deleted messages are gone by marking them UID_EXPUNGED. * * At the end of the query, the `newsaved' member becomes the * `oldsaved' list. The old `oldsaved' list is freed. * * At the end of the fetchmail run, seen and non-EXPUNGED members of all * current `oldsaved' lists are flushed out to the .fetchids file to * be picked up by the next run. If there are no un-expunged * messages, the file is deleted. * * One disadvantage of UIDL is that all the UIDs have to be downloaded * before a search for new messages can be done. Typically, new messages * are appended to mailboxes. Hence, downloading all UIDs just to download * a few new mails is a waste of bandwidth. If new messages are always at * the end of the mailbox, fast UIDL will decrease the time required to * download new mails. * * During fast UIDL, the UIDs of all messages are not downloaded! The first * unseen message is searched for by using a binary search on UIDs. UIDs * after the first unseen message are downloaded as and when needed. * * The advantages of fast UIDL are (this is noticeable only when the * mailbox has too many mails): * * - There is no need to download the UIDs of all mails right at the start. * - There is no need to save all the UIDs in memory separately in * `newsaved' list. * - There is no need to download the UIDs of seen mail (except for the * first binary search). * - The first new mail is downloaded considerably faster. * * The disadvantages are: * * - Since all UIDs are not downloaded, it is not possible to swap old and * new list. The current state of the mailbox is essentially a merged state * of old and new mails. * - If an intermediate mail has been temporarily refused (say, due to 4xx * code from the smtp server), this mail may not get downloaded. * - If 'flush' is used, such intermediate mails will also get deleted. * * The first two disadvantages can be overcome by doing a linear search * once in a while (say, every 10th poll). Also, with flush, fast UIDL * should be disabled. * * Note: some comparisons (those used for DNS address lists) are caseblind! */ int dofastuidl = 0; #ifdef POP3_ENABLE /** UIDs associated with un-queried hosts */ static struct idlist *scratchlist; /** Read saved IDs from \a idfile and attach to each host in \a hostlist. */ static int dump_saved_uid(struct uid_db_record *rec, void *unused) { char *t; (void)unused; t = sdump(rec->id, rec->id_len); report_build(stdout, " %s\n", t); free(t); return 0; } void initialize_saved_lists(struct query *hostlist, const char *idfile) { struct stat statbuf; FILE *tmpfp; struct query *ctl; /* make sure lists are initially empty */ for (ctl = hostlist; ctl; ctl = ctl->next) { ctl->skipped = (struct idlist *)NULL; init_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved); init_uid_db(&ctl->newsaved); } errno = 0; /* * Croak if the uidl directory does not exist. * This probably means an NFS mount failed and we can't * see a uidl file that ought to be there. * Question: is this a portable check? It's not clear * that all implementations of lstat() will return ENOTDIR * rather than plain ENOENT in this case... */ if (lstat(idfile, &statbuf) < 0) { if (errno == ENOTDIR) { report(stderr, "lstat: %s: %s\n", idfile, strerror(errno)); exit(PS_IOERR); } } /* let's get stored message UIDs from previous queries */ if ((tmpfp = fopen(idfile, "r")) != (FILE *)NULL) { char buf[POPBUFSIZE+1]; char *host = NULL; /* pacify -Wall */ char *user; char *id; char *atsign; /* temp pointer used in parsing user and host */ char *delimp1; char saveddelim1; char *delimp2; char saveddelim2 = '\0'; /* pacify -Wall */ while (fgets(buf, POPBUFSIZE, tmpfp) != (char *)NULL) { /* * At this point, we assume the bug has two fields -- a user@host * part, and an ID part. Either field may contain spurious @ signs. * The previous version of this code presumed one could split at * the rightmost '@'. This is not correct, as InterMail puts an * '@' in the UIDL. */ /* first, skip leading spaces */ user = buf + strspn(buf, " \t"); /* * First, we split the buf into a userhost part and an id * part ... but id doesn't necessarily start with a '<', * espescially if the POP server returns an X-UIDL header * instead of a Message-ID, as GMX's (www.gmx.net) POP3 * StreamProxy V1.0 does. * * this is one other trick. The userhost part * may contain ' ' in the user part, at least in * the lotus notes case. * So we start looking for the '@' after which the * host will follow with the ' ' separator with the id. * * XXX FIXME: There is a case this code cannot handle: * the user name cannot have blanks after a '@'. */ if ((delimp1 = strchr(user, '@')) != NULL && (id = strchr(delimp1,' ')) != NULL) { for (delimp1 = id; delimp1 >= user; delimp1--) if ((*delimp1 != ' ') && (*delimp1 != '\t')) break; /* * It should be safe to assume that id starts after * the " " - after all, we're writing the " " * ourselves in write_saved_lists() :-) */ id = id + strspn(id, " "); delimp1++; /* but what if there is only white space ?!? */ /* we have at least one @, else we are not in this branch */ saveddelim1 = *delimp1; /* save char after token */ *delimp1 = '\0'; /* delimit token with \0 */ /* now remove trailing white space chars from id */ if ((delimp2 = strpbrk(id, " \t\n")) != NULL ) { saveddelim2 = *delimp2; *delimp2 = '\0'; } atsign = strrchr(user, '@'); /* we have at least one @, else we are not in this branch */ *atsign = '\0'; host = atsign + 1; /* find uidl db and save it */ for (ctl = hostlist; ctl; ctl = ctl->next) { if (strcasecmp(host, ctl->server.queryname) == 0 && strcasecmp(user, ctl->remotename) == 0) { uid_db_insert(&ctl->oldsaved, id, UID_SEEN); break; } } /* * If it's not in a host we're querying, * save it anyway. Otherwise we'd lose UIDL * information any time we queried an explicit * subset of hosts. */ if (ctl == (struct query *)NULL) { /* restore string */ *delimp1 = saveddelim1; *atsign = '@'; if (delimp2 != NULL) { *delimp2 = saveddelim2; } save_str(&scratchlist, buf, UID_SEEN); } } } fclose(tmpfp); /* not checking should be safe, mode was "r" */ } if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) { struct idlist *idp; for (ctl = hostlist; ctl; ctl = ctl->next) { report_build(stdout, GT_("Old UID list from %s:\n"), ctl->server.pollname); if (!uid_db_n_records(&ctl->oldsaved)) report_build(stdout, "%s\n", GT_(" ")); else traverse_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved, dump_saved_uid, NULL); report_complete(stdout, "\n"); } report_build(stdout, GT_("Scratch list of UIDs:\n")); if (!scratchlist) report_build(stdout, "%s\n", GT_(" ")); else for (idp = scratchlist; idp; idp = idp->next) { char *t = sdump(idp->id, strlen(idp->id)-1); report_build(stdout, " %s\n", t); free(t); } report_complete(stdout, "\n"); } } /** Assert that all UIDs marked deleted in query \a ctl have actually been expunged. */ static int mark_as_expunged_if(struct uid_db_record *rec, void *unused) { (void)unused; if (rec->status == UID_DELETED) rec->status = UID_EXPUNGED; return 0; } void expunge_uids(struct query *ctl) { traverse_uid_db(dofastuidl ? &ctl->oldsaved : &ctl->newsaved, mark_as_expunged_if, NULL); } static const char *str_uidmark(int mark) { static char buf[20]; switch(mark) { case UID_UNSEEN: return "UNSEEN"; case UID_SEEN: return "SEEN"; case UID_EXPUNGED: return "EXPUNGED"; case UID_DELETED: return "DELETED"; default: if (snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "MARK=%d", mark) < 0) return "ERROR"; else return buf; } } static int dump_uid_db_record(struct uid_db_record *rec, void *arg) { unsigned *n_recs; char *t; n_recs = (unsigned int *)arg; --*n_recs; t = sdump(rec->id, rec->id_len); report_build(stdout, " %s = %s\n", t, str_uidmark(rec->status)); free(t); return 0; } static void dump_uid_db(struct uid_db *db) { unsigned n_recs; n_recs = uid_db_n_records(db); if (!n_recs) { report_build(stdout, GT_(" ")); return; } traverse_uid_db(db, dump_uid_db_record, &n_recs); } /* finish a query */ void uid_swap_lists(struct query *ctl) { /* debugging code */ if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) { if (dofastuidl) { report_build(stdout, GT_("Merged UID list from %s:\n"), ctl->server.pollname); dump_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved); } else { report_build(stdout, GT_("New UID list from %s:\n"), ctl->server.pollname); dump_uid_db(&ctl->newsaved); } report_complete(stdout, "\n"); } /* * Don't swap UID lists unless we've actually seen UIDLs. * This is necessary in order to keep UIDL information * from being heedlessly deleted later on. * * Older versions of fetchmail did * * free_str_list(&scratchlist); * * after swap. This was wrong; we need to preserve the UIDL information * from unqueried hosts. Unfortunately, not doing this means that * under some circumstances UIDLs can end up being stored forever -- * specifically, if a user description is removed from .fetchmailrc * with UIDLs from that account in .fetchids, there is no way for * them to ever get garbage-collected. */ if (uid_db_n_records(&ctl->newsaved)) { swap_uid_db_data(&ctl->newsaved, &ctl->oldsaved); clear_uid_db(&ctl->newsaved); } /* in fast uidl, there is no need to swap lists: the old state of * mailbox cannot be discarded! */ else if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG && !dofastuidl) report(stdout, GT_("not swapping UID lists, no UIDs seen this query\n")); } /* finish a query which had errors */ void uid_discard_new_list(struct query *ctl) { /* debugging code */ if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) { /* this is now a merged list! the mails which were seen in this * poll are marked here. */ report_build(stdout, GT_("Merged UID list from %s:\n"), ctl->server.pollname); dump_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved); report_complete(stdout, "\n"); } if (uid_db_n_records(&ctl->newsaved)) { /* new state of mailbox is not reliable */ if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) report(stdout, GT_("discarding new UID list\n")); clear_uid_db(&ctl->newsaved); } } /** Reset the number associated with each id */ void uid_reset_num(struct query *ctl) { reset_uid_db_nums(&ctl->oldsaved); } /** Write list of seen messages, at end of run. */ static int count_seen_deleted(struct uid_db_record *rec, void *arg) { if (rec->status == UID_SEEN || rec->status == UID_DELETED) ++*(long *)arg; return 0; } struct write_saved_info { struct query *ctl; FILE *fp; }; static int write_uid_db_record(struct uid_db_record *rec, void *arg) { struct write_saved_info *info; int rc; if (!(rec->status == UID_SEEN || rec->status == UID_DELETED)) return 0; info = (struct write_saved_info *)arg; rc = fprintf(info->fp, "%s@%s %s\n", info->ctl->remotename, info->ctl->server.queryname, rec->id); return rc < 0 ? -1 : 0; } void write_saved_lists(struct query *hostlist, const char *idfile) { long idcount; FILE *tmpfp; struct query *ctl; struct idlist *idp; /* if all lists are empty, nuke the file */ idcount = 0; for (ctl = hostlist; ctl; ctl = ctl->next) traverse_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved, count_seen_deleted, &idcount); /* either nuke the file or write updated last-seen IDs */ if (!idcount && !scratchlist) { if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) { if (access(idfile, F_OK) == 0) report(stdout, GT_("Deleting fetchids file.\n")); } if (unlink(idfile) && errno != ENOENT) report(stderr, GT_("Error deleting %s: %s\n"), idfile, strerror(errno)); } else { char *newnam = (char *)xmalloc(strlen(idfile) + 2); strcpy(newnam, idfile); strcat(newnam, "_"); if (outlevel >= O_DEBUG) report(stdout, GT_("Writing fetchids file.\n")); (void)unlink(newnam); /* remove file/link first */ if ((tmpfp = fopen(newnam, "w")) != (FILE *)NULL) { struct write_saved_info info; int errflg = 0; info.fp = tmpfp; for (ctl = hostlist; ctl; ctl = ctl->next) { info.ctl = ctl; if (traverse_uid_db(&ctl->oldsaved, write_uid_db_record, &info) < 0) { int e = errno; report(stderr, GT_("Write error on fetchids file %s: %s\n"), newnam, strerror(e)); errflg = 1; goto bailout; } } for (idp = scratchlist; idp; idp = idp->next) if (EOF == fputs(idp->id, tmpfp)) { int e = errno; report(stderr, GT_("Write error on fetchids file %s: %s\n"), newnam, strerror(e)); errflg = 1; goto bailout; } bailout: (void)fflush(tmpfp); /* return code ignored, we check ferror instead */ errflg |= ferror(tmpfp); fclose(tmpfp); /* if we could write successfully, move into place; * otherwise, drop */ if (errflg) { report(stderr, GT_("Error writing to fetchids file %s, old file left in place.\n"), newnam); unlink(newnam); } else { if (rename(newnam, idfile)) { report(stderr, GT_("Cannot rename fetchids file %s to %s: %s\n"), newnam, idfile, strerror(errno)); } } } else { report(stderr, GT_("Cannot open fetchids file %s for writing: %s\n"), newnam, strerror(errno)); } free(newnam); } } #endif /* POP3_ENABLE */ /* uid.c ends here */