This is my TODO list for procmail. My personal priorities are to
maintain and improve the efficiency, security, robustness, and
usability of procmail. Requests For Enhancement will probably go on
the bottom of the list unless they help increase one of the above
four. If they add bloat they'll probably drop off the list. If the
task can reasonably be farmed out to some exterior program then I can
almost guarantee you won't find it here. To quote the procmail README
file:
Please note that this program essentially is supposed to be static;
that means no extra features (honouring the VNIX spirit) are supposed
to be added (though any useful suggestions will be appreciated and
evaluated if time permits).
I have a separate page for the recording of "warts" and other "non-obvious behaviors". The
current version of the procmail HISTORY
file and SmartList HISTORY
file, as included in the source snapshots, are also available. You
can find links to snapshots of the current procmail and SmartList
source trees on those pages, or you can browse
the combined source tree.
Submissions for either this or the warts list and comments on the items
already on it should be sent to <bug@procmail.org>. Discussion
about procmail and SmartList development and changes takes place on
the procmail-dev and smartlist-dev mailing lists. To subscribe to
either list, send an email message to
<procmail-dev-request@procmail.org> or
<smartlist-dev-request@procmail.org> as appropriate with
"subscribe" in the body.
Completed Items
All of these are checked into the current snapshot or development version,
but don't appear in the released version. I didn't necesarily implement
all of these, but someone asked if I could make this list cover all of
the recent changes, so...
Procmail
SmartList
DSN fix
-
The DSN (Delivery Status Notification) recognizer was broken by the
CVS tabifier.
Bugs
These have not yet been fixed or are in the process of being fixed.
unlocking occurs late
-
Unlocking a locallockfile is delayed until the next line is read. If
a recipe ends on the last line of the
/etc/procmailrc
then
the lockfile won't be unlinked until after procmail gives up its root
privileges.
readmail() efficiency problems (part II)
mmap() a temp file
-
This requires a new level of abstraction on the handling of the message
memory block. I've implemented this in the snapshot and it works, but
the reading in of a new message could be more efficient. Or maybe not.
This requires a few bugfixes, testing, and tuning.
formail parsing bugs
-
Formail's message and address parser should be checked for conformance
with the latest messaging standards and against the draft message format
document. It has been fixed to accept and strip whitespace before
the colon, but there are probably other things to adjust. It also
needs to be checked for proper handling of NULs in header fields.
There was at least one bug caused by using
strcpy()
instead
of memcpy()
.
SmartList install and alias issues
-
SmartList needs to be setgid as well as setuid when not installed
setuid root. The docs should say so. Also, both procmail and
SmartList documention should say more about how things change in the
presence of smrsh.
SmartList procbounce doesn't handle multiple addresses
-
SmartList's procbounce needs to be updated to loop over multiple addresses
when they have been extracted from a DSN.
Address confusion in SmartList (part II)
-
While SmartList accepts subscribe and unsubscribe requests that specify
another address, rc.request checks for the address from the headers,
not from the request itself. It also appears that multigram may have a
problem with addresses that don't have a space between a double quote
and an open angle bracket (unconfirmed).
Don't use network/socket libraries if they're not needed
-
initmake should try compiling a program with
socket()
,
send()
, and gethostbyname()
and if it links
without any network or socket libraries, then don't use them. This would
fix both the problem of IRIX's broken -lnsl and -lsocket, and DYNIX's
broken -linet.
Locking inefficiencies
-
The temp file doesn't need to be removed each time procmail tries to
lock a mailbox. The retries should probably also be backed-off, either
with an exponential or Fibonacci. Then again, maybe not.
TIMEOUT problems
-
TIMEOUT doesn't work as expected with backquote expansion and ?
conditions if a shell is invoked. Procmail sends SIGTERM to the shell,
but it doesn't get passed on to the child of the shell that's holding
things up. The solution may be to have procmail put its kids in their
own process groups, then use killpg() (or kill(-pid)) to get them all.
How standard are process groups?
regexp matching bug
-
Procmail's regexp engine can be tricked into returning the wrong text
in MATCH. While there's always another regexp which will match the
same set of texts but set MATCH to the correct text, it's still a bug.
Here's an example.
Bad default for w/W flag
-
By default, procmail ignores the status of programs that it invokes.
This is usually the Wrong Thing. The default should be the same as the
'w' flag, and some other flag should tell procmail to ignore the exit
status.
No "$@" in logged abstract
-
When passing "$@" to a command, the "Folder:" logged does not
include any of arguments passed via the "$@"
Custom delimiter lossage
-
When using a custom message delimiter (like MMDF's ^A^A^A^A\n)
procmail fails to escape the delimiter in incoming messages,
resulting in corrupted mailboxes. Best current workaround is
to put a recipe in the /etc/procmailrc file that reads something
like
:0 fw
* ^A^A^A^A$
|perl -pe 's:\001\001\001\001$:\002\002\002\002:'
The "^A"s in the condition need to be real control-A characters.
Control-M isn't whitespace
-
Every so often someone copies an rcfile from a Windows box and
it ends up with CRs on the end of every line. They should be
treated just like spaces and tabs are. As if, the results are
really confusing.
Shell Expansion (part I)
-
Shell expansion of conditions via the '$' special treats
double-quotes weirdly. They should not be considered special
at all there.
Backslash-newline inconsistencies
-
Backslash-newline removal is almost completely inconsistent and
should be straightened out some how, but without breaking
anything that's in use.
Enhancements & Clarifications
GROUP_PER_USER at run-time?
-
Can GROUP_PER_USER be controlled at run-time by a variable set in the
/etc/procmailrc file?
Unnecesarily complicated "From " logic
-
The logic that governs the generation of the "From " line is probably
more complicated than it needs to be . In particular, could the
-o
flag be treated as if the invoker had written -f
$USER
?
new headers
-
Several new headers have been added by recent RFCs or are now in common
usage by mail programs. Many of these should be added to formail's
internal list for digest splitting.
mailbox format details
-
Each mailbox format has its own details. Messages in MH folders
shouldn't have a "From " pseudo-header and newer versions of MH store the
date that would have been there in a Delivery-Date: field. Maildir
messages have no "From " pseudo-header and are supposed to have
Delivered-To: field (but does that have to be added by the MTA to
reflect aliases?). mbox message must have a "From " pseudo-header.
Should procmail add a Delivery-Date: field and suppress the "From "
pseudo-header on (all?) directory mailboxes?
Error messages
-
It would make debugging some errors much easier if the errno message
was included in the log.
Filename/linenumber logging
-
On syntax errors and the like, procmail should log the name of rcfile
in effect and the line number.
Documentation fixups
-
The suggestions for what to put in a
.forward
file are
incorrect for sites with smrsh or exim, though the sendmail 8.10.0
version of smrsh appears to fix this.
uintmax_t for ultoan()
-
Currently, procmail assumes that unsigned long is the largest unsigned
integral type. While this is currently a safe assumption for
procmail's purposes, this changed with C90, the new version of the C
standard. Probable solution: if uintmax_t exists, use it. Otherwise,
continue to use unsigned long. I need to read C90 to make sure this'll
do it.
non-sgid installation
-
If procmail is already installed as the local mailer (#ifndef
CF_no_procmail_yet), then I think that recommend.c should skip the
examination of the sgidness of /bin/mail, et al, and just consider the
modes on the mailspool to determine whether procmail should be sgid
mail. If the spool is mode 1777 and procmail is already in use, then I
don't think procmail should be setgid.
Features
SmartList enhancements
-
Confirmation cookies (with Bible quotes on them?). The ability to send
out digests in HTML format, thereby allow links from the digest TOC to
individual messages and possible auto-inclusion of HTML versions of
individual messages (would probably require perl to do the MIME and
HTML correctly). A program for generating a sorted/threaded archive on
the web (like the procmail archive found at
http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/procmail/).
Other enhancements??? (Please send suggestions to me or
smartlist-dev!)
SmartList documentation enhancements
-
There's a bunch of common requests that the SmartList documention could
show how to do. For example, the documention could explain how to put
"[listname]" tags in the subject lines of messages. The FAQ linked to
from the homepage appears to cover this.
enhanced exitcodes for LMTP
-
Allow the return of full DSN style status codes when using LMTP. It
would probably involve the overloading of EXITCODE so that assigning a
text string would be a DSN code, while a simple number would be a EX_*
code. This is mostly waiting on the main LMTP work.
formail mime splitting
-
It would be nice if formail could split MIME multipart messages.
Currently people either use something like Perl to pull a full MIME
parse, or cruft up some partial solution that may or may not work in
the future. It would be nice if there was a middle solution that
didn't require people to learn Perl, but worked correctly all of the
time. This requires a big pile of thought on how it would work and
interface with procmail.
OR flag
-
Should there be a flag that causes conditions to be ORed instead of
ANDed? This would be a crutch for people who never studied logic
and/or can't remember DeMorgan's laws, but it would be a useful crutch,
given the number of times people ask "how do I 'or' conditions?"
levels of VERBOSEity [sic]
-
Should VERBOSE take a numeric value to indicate that some things should
be logged but not others (e.g., scoring would be logged if $VERBOSE >
3, while condition matching would be logged if $VERBOSE > 2)?
LOCKRETRYCOUNT to mimic lockfile's -r option
-
This is probably a bad idea for most situations, but when you need it,
it's a real pain to fake up. Hmm, perhaps procmail should unset/reset
it before the implicit delivery to $ORGMAIL?
Make procmail IPng aware/compatible
-
This is really low priority, but as IPv6 becomes real, network-aware
applications will need to be tweaked to handle both IPv4 and IPv6 (and
done properly, any future protocols with in certain bounds). procmail
is network-aware only in its talking to comsat/biff, but, well, some day
it'll have to be updated. This is more a reminder until the time comes
when most OS vendors are shipping IPv6-aware OSes
Make mailstat's output more customizable
-
To sure what this really means, but someone suggested it.
Shell Expansion (part II)
-
Shell expansion is stuck in the bourne shell days. It would
be really handy to have some of the newer forms like ${var##word}.
Provide for run-time configuration of compile-time values
-
The values of interest are mainly the spool location and the value of
the
GROUP_PER_USER
#define. The current idea is for
procmail to always read another rcfile,
/etc/procmail.conf
, after it initializes the environment
for the user but before reading /etc/procmailrc
or
$HOME/.procmailrc
. Only variable assignments and variable
capture recipes would be processed in that rcfile and a mismatched
HOST
would merely exit that rcfile without losing the
message.
Rejected Changes
These are changes that were thought about and rejected, along with why
they were rejected.
Don't send messages to comsat that specify pipes
-
It's kind of strange to send a message to comsat with a 'filename'
field like
|formail -I"Foo: bar" >>some-file
.
Currently, procmail simply leaves out the 'file position' field in the
message that it sends to comsat. Should it just not send a biff
message at all?
This isn't really doing any harm and may be useful for an extended
comsat daemon, or if procmail's biff messages have been directed to a
different port.
Eliminate LINEBUF
-
Instead of performing expansions in a fixed size buffer, dynamically
extend the buffers as needed.
Making procmail dynamically size it's expansion buffers is not
necessarily a Good Thing -- doing so may allow a remote (and untrusted)
user to consume arbitrary amounts of a precious system resource. This
is separate from the memory consumption brought about by the message
itself, as tools already exist to control that (in the MTA).
regexp enhancements
-
The most widely suggested enhancements include braces ({n,m} counting),
Perl-like \letter (\s, \t, \n, etc), better extraction operations, and
locale support (hard to explain). Instead of hacking such things onto
the current engine, it is likely that the entire engine will end up
being replaced by another implementation that supports a more standard
langauge. Backwards compatability will have to be maintained, of
course.
${_} != $_
-
The former is the value of the underbar variable in the environment,
the latter is the name of the current rcfile. No concensus emerged
from the discussion on the development list on how to change this, so
it is being left "as is".