docs/diploma

changeset 94:7c0357cd4590

excluded general text about MTAs (to reuse some bits (perhaps))
author meillo@marmaro.de
date Sun, 16 Nov 2008 15:28:50 +0100
parents a6f8a93abd64
children e83eada077fd
files thesis/pieces/mta-history-definition-sendmail.tex
diffstat 1 files changed, 92 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) [+]
line diff
     1.1 --- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
     1.2 +++ b/thesis/pieces/mta-history-definition-sendmail.tex	Sun Nov 16 15:28:50 2008 +0100
     1.3 @@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
     1.4 +\subsection{History of electronic mail}
     1.5 +%FIXME: shorter!!!
     1.6 +
     1.7 +Electronic mail\index{electronic mail} (short: \name{email})\citeweb{wikipedia:email} is a basic concept in \unix.\citeweb{unix-mail-intro} On \unix\ machines, a lot of information is distributed by \name{system mail}, which is email sent by the operating system. Beside that, email is the common communication system between humans working on computers.
     1.8 +
     1.9 +The \unix\ operating system supports email through the \name{mail user agent} (short: \NAME{MUA}) \name{/bin/mail}.
    1.10 +
    1.11 +Development of \unix\ was not only made in the \name{Bell Labratories} of \NAME{AT\&T}. The \name{Univerity of California at Berkeley} worked on their version of a \unix\ operating system, too. It is refered to as \NAME{UCB} \unix, or \name{Berkeley} \unix\index{Berkeley Unix}.
    1.12 +
    1.13 +The few features of \name{/bin/mail} lead to a second \NAME{MUA} from Berkeley: \name{Mail} (with a capital `M'). Later, the superior functionality of \name{Mail} went back to \name{Bell Labs} and into the program \name{mailx}, the successor of \name{/bin/mail}.
    1.14 +
    1.15 +Nowadays, \name{mailx} and \name{Mail} are quite equivalent and \name{/bin/mail} is linked to either of them---whichever is installed.
    1.16 +
    1.17 +At that time, computers were connected by various kinds of networks. \name{Bell Labs} had invented the \NAME{UUCP} program and protocol suite (for ``\unix\ to \unix\ copy'')\citeweb{wikipedia:uucp}. Berkeley however had an own creation called \name{Berknet} in use. And the \name{United States Department of Defence Advanded Research Projects Agency}'s (\NAME{ARPA}) effort on designing a new wide area network, led to the \NAME{ARPANET}\citeweb{wikipedia:arpanet}, based on the \name{transmission control protocol} (\NAME{TCP}). There were also other, minor, kinds of networks in use.
    1.18 +
    1.19 +Email was transfered between different machines within the same networks. The file transfer itself was made uniformly using \NAME{FTP}, but the higher layered logic of the transfer was different. For example was addressing done different: \NAME{UUCP} used a flat-style schema, while \NAME{ARPANET}'s was hierachical.
    1.20 +
    1.21 +Mail transport from one machine connected to one kind of network to a second machine connected to another was a problem. This showed up at Berkeley where some departments of the university had switched to \NAME{ARPANET}, and some to \NAME{UUCP}, while the rest used \name{Berknet}.
    1.22 +
    1.23 +It was around 1982, when Eric Allman, then a student at Berkeley, wrote \name{delivermail}. Its purpose was to transform email from one network to another. \name{delivermail}, like its successor---the more flexible \sendmail---intermediated between the different networks. They were able to transform email messages from any network to any other.
    1.24 +
    1.25 +Todays email structure is basicly the same as then. The major difference is the uniformity of the underlying network, which is nearly always the \NAME{ARPANET}-based \name{Internet}. Hence lowering the importance of the transformation capabilities of \MTA{}s, that was essential to \sendmail's success---yet being the primary motivation for the program.
    1.26 +
    1.27 +More information about the history of electronic mail can be found at: \citeweb{email:griffiths}, \citeweb{email:crocker}, \citeweb{email:vleck}, \citeweb{email:akkad}, \citeweb{email:murakami}, and \citeweb{email:tomlinson}. A good starting point for general information on internet history is \citeweb{wikipedia:historyoftheinternet}.
    1.28 +%TODO: check the websites which ones are the important ones; remove unnessesary ones
    1.29 +
    1.30 +
    1.31 +
    1.32 +\subsection{Definition of \MTA}
    1.33 +%FIXME: better title; work text over!
    1.34 +%TODO: when was the term ``mail transfer agent'' established?
    1.35 +% shorter!
    1.36 +
    1.37 +This thesis is about a \name{mail transfer agent} (or \index{mail transport agent|see{mail transfer agent}}\name{mail transport agent}, short \NAME{MTA}): \masqmail. \sendmail\ is one too---the most important one.
    1.38 +
    1.39 +The basic job of a \mta\ is to transfer/transport electronic mail from one host to another.
    1.40 +
    1.41 +Here are definitions from others:
    1.42 +
    1.43 +\begin{quote}
    1.44 +A mail transfer agent (MTA) is a highly specialized program that delivers mail and transports it between machines, like the post office.
    1.45 +\cite{costales97}
    1.46 +\end{quote}
    1.47 +
    1.48 +\begin{quote}
    1.49 +A mail transfer agent (MTA) (also called a mail transport agent, message transfer agent, or smtpd (short for SMTP daemon)), is a computer program or software agent that transfers electronic mail messages from one computer to another.
    1.50 +\citeweb{wikipedia:mta}
    1.51 +\end{quote}
    1.52 +
    1.53 +\begin{quote}
    1.54 +mail server (also known as a mail transfer agent or MTA, a mail transport agent, a mail router or an Internet mailer) is an application that receives incoming e-mail from local users (people within the same domain) and remote senders and forwards outgoing e-mail for delivery.
    1.55 +\citeweb{website:techtarget}
    1.56 +\end{quote}
    1.57 +
    1.58 +\begin{quote}
    1.59 +Message Transfer Agent - (MTA, Mail Transfer Agent): Any program responsible for delivering e-mail messages. Upon receiving a message from a Mail User Agent or another MTA, [...] it [...] delivers it to any local addressees and/or forwards it to other remote MTAs (routing) for delivery to remote recipients.
    1.60 +%Any program responsible for delivering e-mail messages. Upon receiving a message from a Mail User Agent or another MTA, often by SMTP over the Internet, it stores it temporarily locally and analyses the recipients and delivers it to any local addressees and/or forwards it to other remote MTAs (routing) for delivery to remote recipients. In either case it may edit and/or add to the message headers.
    1.61 +%
    1.62 +%The most widely used MTA for Unix is sendmail, which communicates using SMTP.
    1.63 +%
    1.64 +%RFC 2821 (SMTP) expands MTA as ``Mail Transfer Agent'' though this is less common. Alternatives with ``Transport'' are also seen but less correct.
    1.65 +\citeweb{website:thefreedictionary}
    1.66 +\end{quote}
    1.67 +
    1.68 +Common is the transfer of mail to other machines; this is the actual job. \MTA{}s work with mail, received from local users and/or remote machines. Mail delivery however is \emph{not} what \mta{}s are for, although probably every \MTA\ is able to deliver mail, and many do. \name{mail delivery agents} (short: \NAME{MDA}) are the programs for this job. Two of the best known \NAME{MDA}s are \name{procmail} and \name{maildrop}.
    1.69 +
    1.70 +
    1.71 +
    1.72 +\subsection{\name{sendmail-compatibility}}
    1.73 +\label{sec:sendmail}
    1.74 +%FIXME: rewrite!
    1.75 +% shorter!
    1.76 +
    1.77 +Allman wrote it to transfer emails between different networks, thus giving \sendmail\ mighty address rewriting abilities. In contrast to its predecessor \name{delivermail}, was \sendmail\ designed to offer greatest flexiblity in configuration; this enabled it to deal with any type of network.
    1.78 +
    1.79 +\sendmail\ was, and still is, very successful. So successful that it stands, like no other, for the whole group of \MTA{}s: \name{sendmail} actually is the \emph{de facto standard} for \mta{}s.
    1.80 +
    1.81 +Its author, Allman, sees three reasons for the huge success: the ``sloopy'' approach (accepting badly formed messages); its focus on the routing function; and the flexible configuration (this was important in \sendmail's early days).
    1.82 +\cite[page xviii]{costales97}
    1.83 +
    1.84 +Others see \sendmail's success more critical. One of them is quoted in the \name{MMDF} FAQs \citeweb{faqs:mmdf}:
    1.85 +\begin{quote}
    1.86 +Sendmail was once compared by one old Internet hand to ``those killer bees that escaped from the laboratory---and now they're everywhere and you can't get rid of 'em''.
    1.87 +\end{quote}
    1.88 +He definately hints here at \sendmail's many security vulnerabilities that came to light and on its complexity, in particular its obscure configuration file \path{sendmail.cf}.
    1.89 +
    1.90 +No matter how \sendmail\ is seen, one must admit its influence on \unix\ emailing programs. Most existing substitutes mimic \sendmail's interface and behavior. Most notable, they create a symbolic link named ``sendmail'' pointing to their own executable. The reason herefor are the many programs assuming an executable called ``sendmail'' on every computer system existing.
    1.91 +
    1.92 +\sendmail\ is not only ported to many platforms, even including \name{Microsoft Windows}, but also it is still the prefered \MTA\ on many systems.
    1.93 +
    1.94 +For deeper knowledge on \sendmail's history, see \cite{costales97} and \cite{vixie01}.
    1.95 +