docs/diploma

annotate thesis/tex/1-Introduction.tex @ 393:6494832a798c

fixed all half-spaces after RF, RG, TODO
author meillo@marmaro.de
date Sat, 07 Feb 2009 12:00:11 +0100
parents b4611d4e1484
children 8ef85e22ff7d
rev   line source
meillo@26 1 \chapter{Introduction}
meillo@42 2 \label{chap:introduction}
meillo@26 3
meillo@370 4 This chapter introduces some basic email concepts that are essential for understanding the remainder of the thesis. Then \masqmail---the program of interest---is presented. History, typical usage, and the function it provides are described. After an explanation of \masqmail's relevance, its weaknesses are pointed out. Solving these weaknesses is the topics that is covered throughout this thesis.
meillo@92 5
meillo@92 6
meillo@229 7
meillo@229 8
meillo@245 9
meillo@245 10 \section{Email prerequisites}
meillo@245 11
meillo@373 12 Electronic mail is a service on the Internet and thus, like other Internet services, defined and standardized by \name{Requests For Comments}\index{rfc} (short: \RFC{}s\index{rfc}) under management of the \name{Internet Engineering Task Force}\index{ietf} (short: \NAME{IETF}). \RFC{}s are highly technical documents and it is not required that the readers of this thesis are familiar with them.
meillo@306 13
meillo@370 14 This section gives an introduction into the basic internals of the email system in a low-technical language. It is intended to make the reader familiar with the essential concepts of email as they are essential throughout the thesis.
meillo@245 15
meillo@245 16
meillo@245 17 \subsubsection{Mail agents}
meillo@373 18 \index{mail agents}
meillo@245 19
meillo@378 20 This thesis will frequently use the three terms: \MTA, \MUA{}, and \MDA{}, naming the three different kinds of nodes of the email infrastructure. Here, they are explained with references to the ``snail mail'' system which is known from everyday life. Figure~\ref{fig:mail-agents} shows the relation between those three mail agents and the way an email message takes when passing through the system.
meillo@253 21
meillo@269 22 \begin{description}
meillo@269 23 \item[\MTA:]
meillo@373 24 \index{mta}
meillo@378 25 \name{Mail Transfer Agents} are the post offices for electronic mail. The basic job of an \MTA\ is to transport mail from senders to recipients, or more pedantic: from \MTA\ to \MTA. \sendmail, \exim, \qmail, \postfix, and, of course, \masqmail\ are \MTA{}s. \MTA{}s are explained in more detail in chapter~\ref{chap:mail-transfer-agents}.
meillo@245 26
meillo@373 27 \item[\MUA{}:]
meillo@373 28 \index{mua}
meillo@393 29 \name{Mail User Agents} are the software users deal with. A user writes and reads email with it. The \MUA{} passes outgoing mail to the nearest \MTA. Also the \MUA{} displays the contents of the user's mailbox. Well known \MUA{}s are \name{Mozilla Thunderbird} and \name{mutt} on Unix systems, and \name{Microsoft Outlook} on \name{Windows}.
meillo@245 30
meillo@373 31 \item[\MDA{}:]
meillo@373 32 \index{mda}
meillo@373 33 \name{Mail Delivery Agents} correspond to postmen in the real world. They receive mail, destined to recipients they are responsible for, from an \MTA, and deliver it to the mailboxes of those recipients. Many \MTA{}s include an own \MDA{}, but independent ones exist: \name{procmail} and \name{maildrop} are examples.
meillo@269 34 \end{description}
meillo@245 35
meillo@253 36 \begin{figure}
meillo@253 37 \begin{center}
meillo@253 38 \includegraphics[scale=0.75]{img/mail-agents.eps}
meillo@253 39 \end{center}
meillo@253 40 \caption{Mail agents and the way a mail message takes}
meillo@253 41 \label{fig:mail-agents}
meillo@253 42 \end{figure}
meillo@245 43
meillo@229 44
meillo@253 45
meillo@229 46
meillo@229 47
meillo@229 48
meillo@245 49 \subsubsection{Mail transfer with SMTP}
meillo@245 50
meillo@373 51 Today most of the email is transferred using the \name{Simple Mail Transfer Protocol}\index{smtp} (short: \SMTP), which is defined in \RFC\,821 and the successors \RFC\,2821 and \RFC\,5321. A good entry point for further information is \citeweb{wikipedia:smtp}.
meillo@245 52
meillo@373 53 A selection of important concepts of \SMTP\index{smtp!concepts of} is explained here.
meillo@245 54
meillo@374 55 First the \name{store and forward}\index{smtp!store and forward} transfer concept. This means mail messages are sent from \MTA\ to \MTA, until the final \MTA\ (the one which is responsible for the recipient) is reached. The message is stored for some time on each \MTA, until it is forwarded to the next \MTA.
meillo@245 56
meillo@392 57 This leads to the concept of \name{responsibility}\index{smtp!responsibility}. A mail message is always in the responsibility of one system. First it is the \MUA\index{mua}. When it is transferred to an \MTA, this \MTA\ takes over the responsibility for the message, too. The \MUA{} can then delete its copy of the message. This is the same for each transfer---from \MTA\ to \MTA\ and finally from \MTA\ to the \MDA{}---the message gets transferred and if the transfer was successful, the responsibility for the message is transferred as well. The responsibility chain ends at a user's mailbox where he himself has control on the message.
meillo@245 58
meillo@373 59 A third concept is about failure handling. At any step on the way an \MTA\ may receive a message it is unable to handle. In such a case this receiving \MTA\ will \name{reject}\index{smtp!rejecting} the message before it takes responsibility for it. The sending \MTA\ still has responsibility for the message and may try other ways for sending the message. If none succeeds the \MTA\ will send a \name{bounce message}\index{smtp!bouncing} back to the original sender with information on the type of failure. Bounces are only sent if the failure is expected to be permanent or if the transfer still was unsuccessful after many tries.
meillo@245 60
meillo@245 61
meillo@245 62
meillo@245 63 \subsubsection{Mail messages}
meillo@245 64
meillo@373 65 Mail messages\index{mail message} consist of text in a specific format. This format is specified in \RFC\,822, and the successors \RFC\,2822 and \RFC\,5322.
meillo@245 66
meillo@373 67 A message has two parts, the \name{header}\index{mail message!header} and the \name{body}\index{mail message!body}. The header of an email message is similar to the header of a (formal) letter. It spans the first lines of the message up to the first empty line. The header consists of several lines, called \name{header lines}\index{mail message!header lines} or simply \name{headers}. They specify the sender, the recipient(s), the date, and possibly further information. Their order is irrelevant. Headers are named like the colon-separated start of those lines, for example the ``\texttt{Date:}'' header. A user may write the header himself but normally the \MUA{} does this job.
meillo@245 68
meillo@373 69 The body is the payload\index{mail message!payload} of the message. It is under full control of the user. From the view point of the \SMTP\ protocol, it must consist of only 7-bit \NAME{ASCII}\index{ascii} text. But arbitrary content can be included by encoding it to 7-bit \NAME{ASCII}. \NAME{MIME}\index{mime} is the common \SMTP\ extension to handle such conversion automatically in \MUA{}s.
meillo@245 70
meillo@253 71 Following is a sample mail message with four header lines (\texttt{From:}, \texttt{To:}, \texttt{Date:}, and \texttt{Subject:}) and three lines of message body.
meillo@245 72
meillo@373 73 \codeinput{input/sample-email.txt}\index{mail message!example}
meillo@245 74
meillo@373 75 Email messages are put into \name{envelopes}\index{mail message!envelope} for transfer. This concept is also derived from the real world so it is easy to understand. The envelope is used to route the message from sender to recipient. It contains the sender's address and addresses of one or more recipients. Envelopes are generated by \MTA{}s, usually from mail header data. The user has not to deal with them.
meillo@253 76
meillo@260 77 Each \MTA\ on the way reads envelopes it receives and generates new ones. If a message has recipients on different hosts, then the message gets copied and sent within multiple envelopes, one for each host.
meillo@260 78
meillo@374 79 The sample message would lead to two envelopes\index{mail message!more envelopes}, one from \name{markus@host01} to \name{alice@host02}, the other from \name{markus@host01} to \name{bob@host03}. Both envelopes would contain the same message.
meillo@245 80
meillo@245 81
meillo@245 82
meillo@245 83
meillo@229 84
meillo@229 85
meillo@92 86 \section{The \masqmail\ project}
meillo@102 87 \label{sec:masqmail}
meillo@96 88
meillo@373 89 The \masqmail\ project\index{masqmail!the project} was initiated by \person{Oliver Kurth} in 1999. His aim was to create a small \MTA\ that is especially focused on computers with dial-up Internet connections\index{dial-up}. Throughout the next four years he worked steadily on it, releasing new versions every few weeks. During the active phase of development 53 version have been released. In average, this is a new version every 20 days.
meillo@96 90
meillo@393 91 This thesis is based on the latest release of \masqmail---version 0.2.21, dated November 2005\index{masqmail!latest release}. It was released after a 28 month gap of inactivity. The source code of 0.2.21 is the same as of 0.2.20, with only build documents modified. The homepage of \masqmail\ \citeweb{masqmail:homepage2}\index{masqmail!homepage} does not include this latest release, but it can be retrieved from the \name{Debian} package pool\index{debian!package pool}\footnote{The \NAME{URL} is:\\\url{http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/m/masqmail/masqmail_0.2.21.orig.tar.gz}} \citeweb{packages.debian}.
meillo@96 92
meillo@376 93 \masqmail\ is covered by the \name{General Public License}\index{gpl} (short: \NAME{GPL}) version two or any later version \cite{fsf:gpl}. This qualifies \masqmail\ as Free Software\index{free software} \cite{fsf:freesw-definition}.
meillo@102 94
meillo@370 95 \person{Kurth} abandoned \masqmail\ after 2005 and no one adopted the project since then. Thus, the author of this thesis decided to take over responsibility for \masqmail\ now. He received \person{Kurth}'s permission to do so in private telephone conversation with \person{Kurth} on September 4, 2008.
meillo@102 96
meillo@391 97 The program's new homepage\index{masqmail!homepage} \citeweb{masqmail:homepage} includes a collection of available information about this \MTA.
meillo@102 98
meillo@102 99
meillo@96 100
meillo@92 101
meillo@366 102 \subsection{Target field}
meillo@266 103 \label{sec:masqmail-target-field}
meillo@245 104
meillo@391 105 \person{Kurth}'s intention when creating \masqmail\ is best told in his own words:\index{masqmail!design intention}
meillo@375 106
meillo@92 107 \begin{quote}
meillo@366 108 MasqMail is a mail server designed for hosts that do not have a permanent internet connection eg. a home network or a single host at home. It has special support for connections to different \NAME{ISP}s. It replaces sendmail or other \MTA{}s such as qmail or exim.
meillo@257 109 \hfill\citeweb{masqmail:homepage2}
meillo@257 110 \end{quote}
meillo@375 111
meillo@366 112 It is intended to cover a specific niche: non-permanent Internet connection and different \name{Internet Service Providers} (short: \NAME{ISP}s).
meillo@257 113
meillo@393 114 Although it can basically replace other \MTA{}s it is not \emph{generally} aimed to do so. The package description of \masqmail\ within \name{Debian} states this more clearly by changing the last sentence to:\index{debian!masqmail package}
meillo@375 115
meillo@257 116 \begin{quote}
meillo@366 117 In these cases, MasqMail is a slim replacement for full-blown \MTA{}s such as sendmail, exim, qmail or postfix.
meillo@257 118 \hfill\citeweb{packages.debian:masqmail}
meillo@257 119 \end{quote}
meillo@257 120
meillo@375 121 The program is a good replacement ``in these cases'' but not generally, since it lacks essential features for running on publically accessable mail servers. It is primarily not secure enough for being accessible from untrusted locations.
meillo@257 122
meillo@391 123 \masqmail\ is best used in home networks which are non-permanently connected to the Internet\index{non-permanent}. It is easy configurable for situations which are rarely solvable with the common \MTA{}s. Such include different handling of mail to local or remote destination and respecting different routes of online connection. These features are explained in more detail in section~\ref{sec:masqmail-features}.
meillo@375 124
meillo@392 125 While many other \MTA{}s are general purpose \MTA{}s, \masqmail\ aims on special situations. Nevertheless, it can be used as general purpose \MTA, too. Especially this was a design goal of \masqmail: To be a replacement for \sendmail\ or similar \MTA{}s.\index{masqmail!sendmail replacement}
meillo@257 126
meillo@370 127 \masqmail\ is designed to run on workstations and on servers in small networks, like they are common in \NAME{SOHO}s (\name{Small Offices/Home Offices}).
meillo@257 128
meillo@257 129
meillo@257 130
meillo@260 131 \subsubsection*{Typical usage scenarios}
meillo@257 132
meillo@391 133 This section describes three common setups that make sensible use of \masqmail. The first two are shown in figure~\ref{fig:masqmail-typical-usage}.\index{masqmail!common setups}
meillo@257 134
meillo@257 135 \begin{figure}
meillo@257 136 \begin{center}
meillo@257 137 \includegraphics[scale=0.75]{img/masqmail-typical-usage.eps}
meillo@257 138 \end{center}
meillo@257 139 \caption{Typical usage scenarios for \masqmail}
meillo@257 140 \label{fig:masqmail-typical-usage}
meillo@257 141 \end{figure}
meillo@257 142
meillo@375 143 Imagine an Internet-connected home network consisting of some workstations.
meillo@260 144
meillo@269 145 \begin{description}
meillo@269 146 \item[Scenario 1:]
meillo@369 147 \label{scenario1}
meillo@375 148 If no server is present, every workstation would be equipped with \masqmail. Mail transfer within the same machine or within the local net works straight forward using direct transfer. Outgoing mail to the Internet is sent to an \name{Internet Service Provider} (short: \NAME{ISP}) for relaying whenever the router goes online. The configuration of \masqmail\ would be the same on every computer; only host names would differ.
meillo@269 149 To receive mail from the Internet requires a mailbox on the \NAME{ISP}'s mail server. Mail needs to be fetched from the \NAME{ISP}'s server onto the workstation using the \NAME{POP3} or \NAME{IMAP} protocol.
meillo@391 150 \index{isp}
meillo@391 151 \index{pop3}
meillo@391 152 \index{imap}
meillo@269 153
meillo@269 154 \item[Scenario 2:]
meillo@369 155 \label{scenario2}
meillo@378 156 In the same network but with a server, one could have \masqmail\ running on the server and using simple forwarders (see section~\ref{subsec:relay-only}) on the workstations to transfer mail to the server. The server would then, dependent on the destination of the message, deliver locally or relay to an \NAME{ISP}'s server for further relay. This setup does only support mail transfer to the server but not back to a workstation. However, this can be solved by mounting the user's mailbox from the server to the workstation or by using \NAME{POP3} or \NAME{IMAP}. Mail transfer from the \NAME{ISP} to the local server needs \NAME{POP3} or \NAME{IMAP} as well.
meillo@391 157 \index{isp}
meillo@391 158 \index{pop3}
meillo@391 159 \index{imap}
meillo@269 160
meillo@269 161 \item[Scenario 3:]
meillo@369 162 \label{scenario3}
meillo@369 163 A third scenario is unrelated as it is about notebooks. Notebooks are usually used as mobile workstations. One uses them to work at different locations. With the increasing popularity of wireless networks this becomes more and more common. Different networks demand for different setups: In one network it is best to send mail to an \NAME{ISP} for relay. In another network it might be preferred to use a local mail server. A third network may have no Internet access at all, hence using a local mail server is required. All these different setups can be configured once and then used by simply telling the online state to \masqmail, even automatically within a network setup script.
meillo@391 164 \index{isp}
meillo@391 165 \index{notebook}
meillo@269 166 \end{description}
meillo@269 167
meillo@269 168
meillo@374 169 In general, all kinds of usage scenarios within a trusted network are possible. Important to notice is that mail can not be sent from outside into the trusted network then. For using \masqmail\ on notebooks it is suggested to only accept mail from local users because notebooks are often in untrusted environments.
meillo@391 170 \index{untrusted environments}
meillo@257 171
meillo@257 172
meillo@257 173
meillo@257 174
meillo@257 175 \subsubsection*{Limitations}
meillo@391 176 \index{masqmail!limitations}
meillo@257 177
meillo@369 178 Although \masqmail\ is seen as a replacement for other general purpose \MTA{}s, it should not be used on large mail servers. The reasons are that it implements only a basic subset of features and that its performance and security is not as good as needed for such usage.
meillo@257 179
meillo@369 180 The author, \person{Kurth}, warns on the old project's website about using \masqmail\ to accept connections from the Internet because of the risk of being an open relay:
meillo@391 181 \index{open relay}
meillo@257 182
meillo@257 183 \begin{quote}
meillo@257 184 MasqMail is not designed to run on a host with a permanent internet connection. It does not have the ability to check for spam mail and it will relay everything from everywhere to everywhere. Use another mail server such as exim for permanent connections.
meillo@257 185 \hfill\citeweb{masqmail:homepage2}
meillo@92 186 \end{quote}
meillo@92 187
meillo@369 188 The actual problem is not the permanent Internet connection but listening for incoming mail on it. If a firewall is closed for incoming mail, then the permanent Internet connection is no problem. To use \masqmail\ for permanent Internet connections it needs to be secured with care.
meillo@391 189 \index{firewall}
meillo@160 190
meillo@392 191 The Internet is the common example for an untrusted network but other networks may be untrusted, too.
meillo@160 192
meillo@160 193
meillo@160 194
meillo@245 195
meillo@245 196
meillo@245 197
meillo@245 198
meillo@245 199
meillo@245 200
meillo@245 201
meillo@245 202
meillo@245 203
meillo@245 204 \subsection{Features}
meillo@238 205
meillo@374 206 This thesis regards version 0.2.21 of \masqmail. This is the last version released by \person{Oliver Kurth}.
meillo@238 207
meillo@238 208
meillo@238 209 \subsubsection*{The source code}
meillo@238 210
meillo@369 211 \masqmail\ is written in the C programming language. The program, as of version 0.2.21, consists of 34 source code and eight header files which contain about 9\,000 lines of code\footnote{Measured with \name{sloccount} by David A.\ Wheeler \citeweb{sloccount}.}. Additionally, it includes a \name{base64} implementation (about 300 lines) and \name{md5} code (about 150 lines). For systems that do not provide \name{libident}, this library is distributed as well (circa 600 lines); an available shared library has higher precedence in linking, though.
meillo@391 212 \index{c}
meillo@391 213 \index{lines of code}
meillo@391 214 \index{base64}
meillo@391 215 \index{md5}
meillo@391 216 \index{libident}
meillo@238 217
meillo@238 218 The only mandatory dependency is \name{glib}---a cross-platform software utility library, originated in the \NAME{GTK+} project. It provides safe replacements for many standard library functions, especially for the string functions. It also offers handy data containers, easy-to-use implementations of data structures, and much more.
meillo@391 219 \index{glib}
meillo@391 220 \index{masqmail!dependencies}
meillo@238 221
meillo@369 222 Some parts of \masqmail's functionality can be included or excluded at compile time by defining symbols. To enable maildir support for example, one has to add \verb_--enable-maildir_ to the configure call. Otherwise the concerning code gets removed during preprocessing.
meillo@391 223 \index{exclude code}
meillo@391 224 \index{maildir}
meillo@260 225
meillo@369 226 With \masqmail\ comes the small tool \path{mservdetect}; it helps setting up a configuration that uses the \name{mserver} system for online state detection. Two other binaries get compiled for testing purposes: \path{readtest} and \path{smtpsend}. These three additional programs use parts of \masqmail's source code; they only add a file with a \verb+main()+ function each.
meillo@391 227 \index{mserver}
meillo@391 228 \index{test program}
meillo@238 229
meillo@238 230
meillo@238 231
meillo@238 232 \subsubsection*{Features}
meillo@238 233 \label{sec:masqmail-features}
meillo@238 234
meillo@369 235 \masqmail\ supports two channels for incoming mail:
meillo@391 236 \index{masqmail!incoming channels}
meillo@369 237
meillo@369 238 \begin{enumerate}
meillo@391 239 \item Standard input which is used when \path{masqmail} (or the \path{sendmail} link) is executed on the command line
meillo@391 240 \item A \NAME{TCP} socket which is used by local or remote clients that talk \SMTP
meillo@369 241 \end{enumerate}
meillo@391 242 \index{sendmail!command}
meillo@391 243 \index{tcp socket}
meillo@369 244
meillo@369 245 The outgoing channels for mail are:
meillo@369 246
meillo@369 247 \begin{enumerate}
meillo@391 248 \item Direct delivery to local mailboxes (in \name{mbox} or \name{maildir} format)
meillo@391 249 \item Local pipes to pass mail to a program (e.g.\ to \MDA{}s or to gateways to \NAME{UUCP} or fax)
meillo@391 250 \item \NAME{TCP} sockets to transfer mail to other \MTA{}s using the \SMTP\ protocol
meillo@369 251 \end{enumerate}
meillo@391 252 \index{tcp socket}
meillo@391 253 \index{local delivery}
meillo@391 254 \index{mbox}
meillo@391 255 \index{maildir}
meillo@391 256 \index{uucp}
meillo@391 257 \index{fax}
meillo@391 258 \index{gateway}
meillo@369 259
meillo@378 260 Figure~\ref{fig:masqmail-channels} shows this as a picture. (The ``online state'' input is explained a bit later.)
meillo@260 261
meillo@260 262 \begin{figure}
meillo@260 263 \begin{center}
meillo@260 264 \includegraphics[scale=0.75]{img/masqmail-channels.eps}
meillo@260 265 \end{center}
meillo@260 266 \caption{Incoming and outgoing channels of \masqmail}
meillo@260 267 \label{fig:masqmail-channels}
meillo@391 268 \index{figure!incoming and outgoing channels of \masqmail}
meillo@260 269 \end{figure}
meillo@238 270
meillo@369 271 Outgoing \SMTP\ connections feature \SMTP-\NAME{AUTH} and \SMTP-after-\NAME{POP} authentication but incoming connections do not. Using wrappers for outgoing connections is supported. This allows encrypted communication through a gateway application like \name{openssl}.
meillo@391 272 \index{auth!smtp-auth}
meillo@391 273 \index{auth!smtp-after-pop}
meillo@238 274
meillo@369 275 Mail queuing is essential for \masqmail\ and thus supported of course, alias expansion is also supported.
meillo@391 276 \index{alias expansion}
meillo@238 277
meillo@376 278 The \masqmail\ executable can be called by various names for sendmail-compatibility reasons. As many programs expect the \MTA\ to be located at \path{/usr/lib/sendmail} or \path{/usr/sbin/sendmail}, symbolic links are pointing from there to the \masqmail\ executable. Furthermore does \sendmail\ support calling it with a different name instead of supplying command line arguments. The best known of these shortcuts is \path{mailq} which is equivalent to calling it with the argument \verb+-bq+. \masqmail\ recognizes the shortcuts \path{mailq}, \path{smtpd}, \path{mailrm}, \path{runq}, \path{rmail}, and \path{in.smtpd}. The first two are inspired by \sendmail. Not implemented yet is the shortcut \path{newaliases} because \masqmail\ does not generate binary representations of the alias file.\footnote{A shell script named \path{newaliases} that invokes \texttt{masqmail -bi} can provide the command to satisfy strict requirements.} \path{hoststat} and \path{purgestat} are missing for complete sendmail-compatibility.
meillo@391 279 \index{sendmail!compatibility}
meillo@391 280 \index{symbolic link}
meillo@391 281 \index{shortcuts}
meillo@238 282
meillo@391 283 Additional to the \MTA\ job, \masqmail\ also offers mail retrieval services by acting as a \NAME{POP3} client. It can fetch mail from different remote locations, also dependent on the active online connection. Such functionality is especially useful in a setup like \name{Scenario 2} on page~\pageref{scenario2}.
meillo@391 284 \index{pop3}
meillo@238 285
meillo@238 286
meillo@238 287
meillo@370 288 \subsubsection*{Online detection and online routes}
meillo@245 289 \label{sec:masqmail-routes}
meillo@391 290 \index{masqmail!online routes}
meillo@238 291
meillo@275 292 \masqmail\ focuses on handling different non-permanent online connections, thus a concept of online routes is used. One may configure any number of routes to send mail. Each route can have criteria to determine if some message is allowed to be sent over it. Mail to destinations outside the local network gets queued until a suitable online connections is available.
meillo@391 293 \index{non-permanent}
meillo@260 294
meillo@370 295 The idea behind this concept is sending mail to the Internet through the mail server of the same \NAME{ISP} over which one had dialed in. It was quite common that \NAME{ISP}s accepted mail for relay only if it came from a online connection they managed. This means, it was not possible to relay mail through the mail server of one \NAME{ISP} while being online through the connection of another \NAME{ISP}. \masqmail\ is a solution to the wish of switching the relaying mail server easily.
meillo@391 296 \index{isp}
meillo@257 297
meillo@316 298 Related is \masqmail's ability to rewrite the sender's email address dependent on which \NAME{ISP} is used. This prevents mail from being likely classified as spam.
meillo@391 299 \index{spam}
meillo@257 300
meillo@369 301 To react on the different situations, \masqmail\ needs to query the current online state. Is an online connection available? And if it is: Which one? Three methods are implemented:
meillo@391 302 \index{online state}
meillo@238 303
meillo@369 304 \begin{enumerate}
meillo@391 305 \item Reading from a file
meillo@391 306 \item Reading the output of a command
meillo@391 307 \item Querying an \name{mserver} system
meillo@369 308 \end{enumerate}
meillo@391 309 \index{mserver}
meillo@238 310
meillo@374 311 Each method may return a string naming the route that is online or returning nothing to indicate offline state.
meillo@369 312
meillo@369 313
meillo@369 314 Mail for hosts inside the local network or for users on the local machine is not touched by this concept; such mail is always sent immediately.
meillo@238 315
meillo@238 316
meillo@238 317
meillo@238 318
meillo@245 319
meillo@245 320
meillo@245 321
meillo@245 322
meillo@370 323 \section{Why \masqmail\ is worth it}
meillo@391 324 \index{masqmail!reasons to revive}
meillo@245 325
meillo@369 326 First of all, \masqmail\ is better suited for its target field of operation (multiple non-permanent online connections) than every other \MTA. Especially is such usage easy to set up because \masqmail\ was designed for that. Many alternative \MTA{}s were not designed for those scenarios at all as the following two example show: ``Exim is designed for use on a network where most messages can be delivered at the first attempt.'' \cite[page~30]{hazel01}. ``qmail was designed for well-connected hosts: those with high-speed, always-on network connectivity.'' \cite[page9]{sill02}.
meillo@391 327 \index{non-permanent}
meillo@391 328 \index{qmail}
meillo@391 329 \index{exim}
meillo@369 330
meillo@369 331 %fixme: hikernet
meillo@245 332
meillo@316 333 Additionally does \masqmail\ make it easy to run an \MTA\ on workstations or notebooks. There is no need to do complex configuration or to be a mail server expert. Only a handful of options need to be set; the host name, the local networks, and one route for relaying are sufficient in most times. %fixme: is that true?
meillo@391 334 \index{notebook}
meillo@245 335
meillo@369 336 Probably users say it best; in this case \person{Derek Broughton}:
meillo@391 337 \index{masqmail!users}
meillo@391 338
meillo@284 339 \begin{quote}
meillo@284 340 No kidding. The whole point is that you \_have\_ to have an \MTA\ and you don't
meillo@284 341 want to configure Postfix/Exim/Sendmail/Qmail (almost all of which I've
meillo@284 342 actually done).
meillo@284 343
meillo@369 344 I now use masqmail -- it's really simple, my configuration is all in debconf,
meillo@284 345 it's supported by whereami, and it's really simple :-)
meillo@284 346
meillo@284 347 I'm sure you can make any \MTA\ behave nicely when offline, but it was a chore
meillo@284 348 with all of them.
meillo@284 349 \hfill\citeweb[post~\#8]{ubuntuforums:simple-mailer}
meillo@284 350 \end{quote}
meillo@284 351
meillo@378 352 Not to forget \masqmail's size. \masqmail\ is much smaller than full-blown \MTA{}s like \sendmail, \postfix, or \exim, and still smaller than \qmail. (See section~\ref{sec:mta-comparison} for details.) This makes \masqmail\ a good choice for workstations or even embedded computers.
meillo@245 353
meillo@284 354 Again words of a user who chose \masqmail\ as \MTA\ on his old laptop with a 75 megahertz processor and eight megabytes of \NAME{RAM}:
meillo@391 355
meillo@284 356 \begin{quote}
meillo@284 357 Masqmail appears to be a great sendmail replacement in this case. It's small and is built to support sending mail ``off-line'', and to connecting to the \SMTP\ servers of several \NAME{ISP}s.
meillo@284 358 \hfill\citeweb{stosberg:low-mem-laptop}
meillo@284 359 \end{quote}
meillo@391 360 \index{isp}
meillo@391 361 \index{notebook}
meillo@92 362
meillo@92 363
meillo@92 364
meillo@370 365 Although the development on \masqmail\ has been stopped in 2003, \masqmail\ still has its users. Having users is already reason enough for further development and maintenance. This applies especially when the software covers a niche and when requirements for such software in general changed. Both is the case for \masqmail.
meillo@284 366
meillo@393 367 It is difficult to get numbers about users of Free Software because no one needs to tell anyone when he uses some software. \name{Debian}'s \name{popcon} statistics \citeweb{popcon.debian} are a try to provided numbers. For January 2009, the statistics report 60 \masqmail\ installations of which 49 are in active use. If it is assumed that one third of all \name{Debian} users report their installed software\footnote{One third is a high guess as it means there would be only about 230 thousand \name{Debian} installations in total. But according to the \name{Linux Counter} \citeweb{counter.li.org} between 490 thousand and 12 million \name{Debian} users can be estimated.}, there would be in total around 150 active \masqmail\ installations in \name{Debian}. \name{Ubuntu} which also does \name{popcon} statistics \citeweb{popcon.ubuntu}, counts 82 installations with 13 active ones. If here also one third of all systems submit their data, 40 active installations can be added. Including a guessed amount of additional 30 installations on other Unix operating systems makes about 220 \masqmail\ installations in total. Of course one person may have \masqmail\ installed on more than one computer, but a total of 150 different users seems to be realistic.
meillo@391 368 \index{debian!popcon}
meillo@391 369 \index{masqmail!users}
meillo@284 370
meillo@286 371 %The increasing number of systems using \masqmail, as it is shown on the \name{popcon} graph \citeweb{popcon.debian:masqmail}, seems to be impressive in the beginning as \masqmail\ was not developed during that time. But it might come from the increasing popularity of \name{popcon} over the time.
meillo@284 372
meillo@369 373 One thing became clear now: \masqmail\ has users. And software that is used should be developed and maintained.
meillo@92 374
meillo@92 375
meillo@275 376 % alternative: http://anfi.homeunix.org/sendmail/dialup10.html
meillo@96 377
meillo@275 378
meillo@175 379
meillo@96 380
meillo@96 381
meillo@245 382
meillo@245 383
meillo@245 384
meillo@245 385
meillo@92 386 \section{Problems to solve}
meillo@391 387 \index{masqmail!problems}
meillo@92 388
meillo@370 389 A program that is neglected for more than five years in a field of operation that changed during this time surely needs improvement. Security and spam have highly increased in importance since 2003. Dial-up connections became rare, instead broadband flat rates are common now. Other \MTA{}s evolved in respect to theses changes---\masqmail\ did not.
meillo@391 390 \index{dial-up connections}
meillo@96 391
meillo@369 392 The current market situation and trends for the future need to be identified. Looks at other \MTA{}s need to be taken. Required work on \masqmail\ needs to be defined in combination with the evaluation of strategies to do this work. And a plan for further development should be created.
meillo@96 393
meillo@96 394
meillo@245 395
meillo@245 396
meillo@245 397
meillo@245 398 \section{Delimitation}
meillo@96 399
meillo@369 400 This thesis is neither a installation guide for \masqmail\ nor a detailed explanation of \masqmail's source code. Installation and setup guides can be found on \masqmail's homepage \citeweb{masqmail:homepage}.
meillo@96 401
meillo@369 402 The \NAME{POP3} functionality of \masqmail\ receives few regard in this document because it is not directly related to the core of \masqmail\ which is being an \MTA.
meillo@391 403 \index{pop3}
meillo@96 404
meillo@369 405 The \name{mserver} system to query the online state is also only mentioned but not regarded further. It seems best to move this functionality into a separate program which is run through the shell command interface, anyway.
meillo@391 406 \index{mserver}
meillo@96 407
meillo@150 408
meillo@369 409