rev |
line source |
meillo@0
|
1 .H0 "Preface" no
|
meillo@0
|
2
|
meillo@23
|
3 .P
|
meillo@87
|
4 I have discovered the mail client \fInmh\fP in Fall 2009.
|
meillo@87
|
5 At that time I used \fImutt\fP, as many advanced Unix users do.
|
meillo@87
|
6 When I read about nmh, its concepts convinced me at once.
|
meillo@87
|
7 The transition from mutt to nmh was similar to beginning with
|
meillo@87
|
8 file management in the Unix shell when being used to the
|
meillo@53
|
9 \fImidnight commander\fP,
|
meillo@87
|
10 or like starting with vi when being used to modeless editors.
|
meillo@87
|
11 Such a change is not trivial, but, in being convinced by the
|
meillo@31
|
12 concepts and by having done similar transitions for file management
|
meillo@53
|
13 and editing already, it was not too difficult.
|
meillo@51
|
14 In contrast, setting up nmh to a convenient state became a tedious task
|
meillo@23
|
15 that took several months.
|
meillo@28
|
16 Once having nmh arranged to a convenient state, I enjoyed using it
|
meillo@28
|
17 because of its conceptional elegance and its scripting capabilities.
|
meillo@106
|
18 Nevertheless, it was still inconvenient for handling attachments,
|
meillo@87
|
19 non-ASCII character encodings, and similar features of modern emailing.
|
meillo@31
|
20 My setup demanded more and more additional configuration and helper scripts
|
meillo@87
|
21 to have nmh behave the way I wanted; yet my
|
meillo@31
|
22 expectations were rather common for modern emailing.
|
meillo@106
|
23 As a computer scientist and programmer, I wanted to improve the situation.
|
meillo@8
|
24 .P
|
meillo@106
|
25 In Spring 2010, I sent a message to the \fInmh-workers\fP mailing list,
|
meillo@106
|
26 asking for the possibility to offer a Google Summer of Code project for me.
|
meillo@106
|
27 Participating in the development of nmh in this manner appeared attractive
|
meillo@106
|
28 to me, because I would have been able to work full time on nmh.
|
meillo@106
|
29 Although the nmh community had reacted generally positive to the suggestion,
|
meillo@106
|
30 the administrative work for a GSoC project would had been too much.
|
meillo@106
|
31 Nonetheless, my proposal had activated the nmh community.
|
meillo@31
|
32 In the following weeks, goals for nmh's future were discussed.
|
meillo@31
|
33 In these discussions, I became involved in the
|
meillo@53
|
34 question whether nmh should include mail transfer facilities.
|
meillo@34
|
35 .[
|
meillo@34
|
36 nmh-workers thread mta mua
|
meillo@34
|
37 .]
|
meillo@87
|
38 I argued for the MTA of nmh to be removed.
|
meillo@87
|
39 In this fundamental question,
|
meillo@87
|
40 my opinion differed from the opinion of most others.
|
meillo@87
|
41 Sadly, besides the discussions, hardly any real work was done.
|
meillo@87
|
42 Being unable to work on nmh in a way that would be accepted at university
|
meillo@87
|
43 as part of my studies, I needed to choose another project.
|
meillo@8
|
44 .P
|
meillo@23
|
45 Half a year later, starting in August 2010,
|
meillo@23
|
46 I took one semester off to travel through Latin America.
|
meillo@87
|
47 During my time in Argentina, I wanted to work on Free Software.
|
meillo@23
|
48 This brought me back to nmh.
|
meillo@53
|
49 Richard Sandelman, an active nmh user, cared for the official basis.
|
meillo@106
|
50 Juan Granda, an Argentine Free Software developer,
|
meillo@87
|
51 provided a computer with Internet connection.
|
meillo@53
|
52 Thanks to them, I was able to work on nmh during my three-month
|
meillo@87
|
53 stay in Santiago del Estero, Argentina.
|
meillo@106
|
54 Quickly it became obvious that I would not succeed with my main goal,
|
meillo@87
|
55 to improve the character encoding handling.
|
meillo@87
|
56 (One of its ramifications is the
|
meillo@87
|
57 missing transfer decoding of quoted text in replies.)
|
meillo@23
|
58 As this is one of the most intricate parts of the system, the goal
|
meillo@53
|
59 was simply set too high.
|
meillo@53
|
60 Instead, I improved the code base as I read through it.
|
meillo@87
|
61 I found minor bugs for which I proposed fixes.
|
meillo@53
|
62 In the same go, I improved the documentation in minor ways.
|
meillo@53
|
63 When I started with larger code changes,
|
meillo@53
|
64 I had to discover that the community was reluctant to change.
|
meillo@53
|
65 Its wish for compatibility was much stronger than its
|
meillo@31
|
66 wish for convenient out-of-the-box setups \(en in contrast to my opinion.
|
meillo@106
|
67 This, once again, led to long discussions.
|
meillo@53
|
68 I came to understand their point of view, but it was different to mine.
|
meillo@23
|
69 At the end of my three-month project, I had become familiar with
|
meillo@87
|
70 nmh's code base and community,
|
meillo@53
|
71 I had improved the project in minor ways,
|
meillo@87
|
72 and I still was convinced that I wanted to continue to do so.
|
meillo@23
|
73 .P
|
meillo@53
|
74 Another half year later, the end of my studies came within reach.
|
meillo@23
|
75 I needed a topic for my master's thesis.
|
meillo@106
|
76 Without question, I wanted to work on nmh.
|
meillo@106
|
77 But not exactly on nmh, because I had accepted that its
|
meillo@106
|
78 community has different goals than I have.
|
meillo@87
|
79 Working on nmh would result in much discussion and, in consequence,
|
meillo@87
|
80 little progress.
|
meillo@23
|
81 After careful thought, I decided to start an experimental version of nmh.
|
meillo@31
|
82 I wanted to implement my own ideas of how an MH-like system should look like.
|
meillo@31
|
83 I wanted to create a usable alternative version to be compared with
|
meillo@31
|
84 the present state of nmh.
|
meillo@53
|
85 Eventually, my work would be proven successful or not.
|
meillo@53
|
86 In any case, the nmh project would profit from my experiences.
|
meillo@28
|
87
|
meillo@30
|
88 .U2 "Focus of this Document
|
meillo@8
|
89 .P
|
meillo@53
|
90 This document explains the design goals and implementation decisions
|
meillo@53
|
91 for mmh.
|
meillo@31
|
92 It discusses technical, historical, social and philosophical considerations.
|
meillo@31
|
93 On the technical side, this document
|
meillo@31
|
94 explains how an existing project was stream-lined by removing rough edges
|
meillo@106
|
95 and better exploitation of the central concepts.
|
meillo@106
|
96 On the historical side, changes through time are discussed,
|
meillo@106
|
97 regarding the use cases and the email features,
|
meillo@106
|
98 as well as the reactions to them.
|
meillo@31
|
99 Socially, this document describes the effects
|
meillo@28
|
100 and experiences of a newcomer with revolutionary aims entering an old
|
meillo@53
|
101 and matured software project.
|
meillo@106
|
102 Philosophical thoughts on style, mainly based on the Unix
|
meillo@53
|
103 philosophy, are present throughout the discussions.
|
meillo@53
|
104 The document describes the changes to nmh,
|
meillo@53
|
105 but as well, it clarifies my personal perception of the
|
meillo@53
|
106 concepts of MH and Unix, and explain my therefrom resulting point of view.
|
meillo@23
|
107 .P
|
meillo@31
|
108 This document is written for the community around MH-like mail systems,
|
meillo@31
|
109 including developers and users.
|
meillo@106
|
110 Despite the focus on MH-like systems, this document may be valuable
|
meillo@106
|
111 to anyone interested in the Unix philosophy and anyone in contact with
|
meillo@106
|
112 old software projects, be it code- or community-related.
|
meillo@28
|
113 .P
|
meillo@106
|
114 The reader is expected to be familiar with Unix, C and emailing.
|
meillo@53
|
115 Good Unix shell knowledge is required, because MH relies fundamentally
|
meillo@28
|
116 on the shell. Without the power of the shell, MH becomes a motorbike
|
meillo@30
|
117 without winding roads: boring.
|
meillo@31
|
118 Introductions to Unix and its shell can be found in ``The UNIX Programming
|
meillo@37
|
119 Environment'' by Kernighan and Pike
|
meillo@37
|
120 .[
|
meillo@37
|
121 kernighan pike unix prog env
|
meillo@37
|
122 .]
|
meillo@37
|
123 or ``The UNIX System'' by Bourne.
|
meillo@37
|
124 .[
|
meillo@37
|
125 bourne unix system
|
meillo@37
|
126 .]
|
meillo@53
|
127 The reader is assumed to be a C programmer,
|
meillo@53
|
128 but the document should be understandable otherwise, too.
|
meillo@53
|
129 The definitive guide to C is Kernighan and Ritchie's
|
meillo@53
|
130 ``The C Programming Language''.
|
meillo@37
|
131 .[
|
meillo@37
|
132 kernighan ritchie c prog lang
|
meillo@37
|
133 .]
|
meillo@106
|
134 A book about system-level C programming can be helpful
|
meillo@106
|
135 additional literature, such as those written by Rochkind and Curry.
|
meillo@37
|
136 .[
|
meillo@37
|
137 rochkind advanced unix prog
|
meillo@37
|
138 .]
|
meillo@37
|
139 .[
|
meillo@37
|
140 curry system prog
|
meillo@37
|
141 .]
|
meillo@106
|
142 Old books are likely more helpful for understanding,
|
meillo@106
|
143 because large parts of the source code are old.
|
meillo@53
|
144 The reader is expected to know the format of email messages and
|
meillo@53
|
145 the structure of email transfer systems, at least on a basic level.
|
meillo@53
|
146 It's advisable to have cross-read the RFCs 821 and 822.
|
meillo@31
|
147 Further more, basic understanding of MIME is good to have.
|
meillo@106
|
148 The Wikipedia provides good introduction-level information about email.
|
meillo@53
|
149 .P
|
meillo@28
|
150 Frequent references to the Unix philosophy will be made.
|
meillo@53
|
151 Gancarz has tried to sum it up in his book
|
meillo@34
|
152 ``The UNIX Philosophy''.
|
meillo@34
|
153 .[
|
meillo@34
|
154 gancarz unix phil
|
meillo@34
|
155 .]
|
meillo@47
|
156 Even better, though less concrete, are ``The UNIX Programming Environment''
|
meillo@34
|
157 .[
|
meillo@34
|
158 kernighan pike unix prog env
|
meillo@34
|
159 .]
|
meillo@34
|
160 and ``The Practice of Programming''
|
meillo@34
|
161 .[
|
meillo@34
|
162 kernighan pike practice of prog
|
meillo@34
|
163 .]
|
meillo@34
|
164 by Kernighan and Pike.
|
meillo@34
|
165 The term paper ``Why the Unix Philosophy still matters''
|
meillo@34
|
166 .[
|
meillo@34
|
167 why unix phil still matters schnalke
|
meillo@34
|
168 .]
|
meillo@34
|
169 by myself
|
meillo@53
|
170 provides an overview on the philosophy, including a case study of MH.
|
meillo@53
|
171 .P
|
meillo@30
|
172 Although a brief introduction to MH is provided in Chapter 1, the reader
|
meillo@53
|
173 is encouraged to have a look at the \fIMH Book\fP
|
meillo@53
|
174 ``MH & nmh: Email for Users & Programmers'' by Jerry Peek.
|
meillo@34
|
175 .[
|
meillo@34
|
176 peek mh
|
meillo@34
|
177 .]
|
meillo@53
|
178 The current version is available freely on the Internet.
|
meillo@30
|
179 It is the definitive guide to MH and nmh.
|
meillo@30
|
180 .P
|
meillo@30
|
181 This document is neither a user's tutorial to mmh nor an introduction
|
meillo@53
|
182 to any of the topics covered.
|
meillo@53
|
183 The technical discussions are on an advanced level.
|
meillo@52
|
184 Nevertheless, as knowledge of the fundamental concepts is the most valuable
|
meillo@51
|
185 information a user can acquire about some program or software system,
|
meillo@52
|
186 this document may be worth a read for non-developers as well.
|
meillo@8
|
187
|
meillo@8
|
188
|
meillo@28
|
189 .U2 "Organization
|
meillo@0
|
190 .P
|
meillo@28
|
191 Which font for what use.
|
meillo@28
|
192 Meaning of `foo(1)'.
|
meillo@28
|
193 RFCs.
|
meillo@28
|
194 .P
|
meillo@68
|
195 References to source code repository commits are printed as
|
meillo@68
|
196 .Ci 1a2b3c4 .
|
meillo@68
|
197 They can be looked up with
|
meillo@68
|
198 .Cl "git show XXX
|
meillo@68
|
199 on the command line or
|
meillo@68
|
200 online at
|
meillo@68
|
201 .CW "http://git.marmaro.de/?p=mmh;a=commitdiff;h=XXX" ,
|
meillo@68
|
202 replacing `\f(CWXXX\fP' with the hash value.
|
meillo@68
|
203 In this example:
|
meillo@68
|
204 .Cl "git show 1a2b3c4
|
meillo@68
|
205 or
|
meillo@68
|
206 .CW "http://git.marmaro.de/?p=mmh;a=commitdiff;h=1a2b3cd" .
|
meillo@68
|
207 Whereas the code repository will probably be available on the Internet
|
meillo@68
|
208 forever, a website URL is always at risk to change.
|
meillo@68
|
209 .P
|
meillo@51
|
210 This thesis is divided into XXX chapters, ...
|
meillo@24
|
211 .P
|
meillo@24
|
212 .I Chapter 1
|
meillo@24
|
213 introduces ...
|
meillo@24
|
214 .P
|
meillo@24
|
215 .I Chapter 2
|
meillo@24
|
216 describes ...
|
meillo@24
|
217 .P
|
meillo@24
|
218 .I Chapter 3
|
meillo@24
|
219 covers ...
|
meillo@24
|
220
|
meillo@23
|
221
|
meillo@28
|
222 .U2 "Acknowledgments
|
meillo@23
|
223 .P
|
meillo@24
|
224 To be written at the very end.
|