display state, i.e., hidden/exposed tags or threads. This fixes at
least two problems:
- If the current message is a duplicate that is deleted by the "deldups"
command, then the dot was invalid making all messages appear to have
been deleted. It is now set to the surviving duplicate message.
- If the current message is tagged, the "hidetags" command would leave
the dot invalid and the dislay would reset it at the top of the
current screen. It is now set the the first untagged (and
not deleted) message after the previous (tagged) dot message.
From Anon Ymous
hfield() to be decoded as if they were "unstructured" regardless of
their type. This resulted from calling mime_decode_hfield() with the
body of the header line, i.e., the portion after the colon header
field name terminator, rather than the full header line.
From Anon Ymous
- Add a "forward" command as requested by garbled@.
From the manpage:
forward
Takes a list of messages and prompts for an address (or
addresses) to forward each message to. If no message list is
specified, the current message is used. The mail editor is run
for each message allowing the user to enter a message that will
precede the forward message. The message is sent as a multi-
part/mixed MIME encoded message.
- Add the ability to match messages that do (or do not) contain a
header field. E.g., the command "f ! /Subject:" will display the
list of messages that are missing a "Subject" field.
- Teach savemail() to prefix fake headlines so the mbox doesn't get
broken.
- Fixed a couple of "bugs" in the attachment editing routine.
- Add a "bounce" command as requested by garbled@.
From the manpage:
bounce Takes a list of messages and prompts for an address to bounce the
messages to. All the original header fields are preserved except
for the ``Delivered-To'', ``X-Original-To'' and ``Status''
fields. The new ``To'' field contains the bounce address(es)
plus any addresses in the old ``To'' field minus the user's local
address and any on the alternates list. (See the alternates com-
mand.)
- Introduce date_to_tm() and hl_date_to_tm() to parse the date and
headline date a bit more efficiently.
- If 'tm_isdst' is determined, let strftime(3) handle the '%Z' and
'%z' formats. Otherwise, output "-0000" and "???", respectively, to
help preserve with alignment; strftime(3) will output an empty
string in these case.
- Change fail() to use the '-d' flag (which sets the 'debug' variable)
rather than the "debug" _environment_ variable. This is more
consistent with other warnings.
- Don't use gcc C extensions, e.g., "case LOW ... HIGH:".
- Define is_WSP() in def.h to be an inline function that for checks
whitespace (WSP = ' ' or '\t'), as defined in RFC 2822. Use it
consistently in place of isblank().
- For consistency, rename skip_blank() to skip_WSP().
- Add inline skip_space() to complement skip_blank() (now skip_WSP).
- Check all ctype(3) calls for argument range issues.
- Whitespace and comment cleanup/changes.
FORTIFY_SOURCE feature of libssp, thus checking the size of arguments to
various string and memory copy and set functions (as well as a few system
calls and other miscellany) where known at function entry. RedHat has
evidently built all "core system packages" with this option for some time.
This option should be used at the top of Makefiles (or Makefile.inc where
this is used for subdirectories) but after any setting of LIB.
This is only useful for userland code, and cannot be used in libc or in
any code which includes the libc internals, because it overrides certain
libc functions with macros. Some effort has been made to make USE_FORT=yes
work correctly for a full-system build by having the bsd.sys.mk logic
disable the feature where it should not be used (libc, libssp iteself,
the kernel) but no attempt has been made to build the entire system with
USE_FORT and doing so will doubtless expose numerous bugs and misfeatures.
Adjust the system build so that all programs and libraries that are setuid,
directly handle network data (including serial comm data), perform
authentication, or appear likely to have (or have a history of having)
data-driven bugs (e.g. file(1)) are built with USE_FORT=yes by default,
with the exception of libc, which cannot use USE_FORT and thus uses
only USE_SSP by default. Tested on i386 with no ill results; USE_FORT=no
per-directory or in a system build will disable if desired.
2) When doing attachments set the "name=" parameter of the
Content-Type field, in addition to the (already) set "filename="
parameter of the Content-Disposition field. Some utilities (e.g.,
metamail) use this parameter for the filename even though (I believe)
the "filename=" parameter of the Content-Disposition field is
preferred by the standard (I can't find this explicitly except for
"application/octet-stream" types - see RFC1521 sec 7.4.1 and RFC2046
sec 4.5.1). My impression is that the "name=" parameter of the
Content-Types field is really intended for use when retrieving a file
not in the message, e.g., "message/external-body" Content-Types, and
not for the filename.
(Thanks to wiz@ for noticing this in his spam logs.)
3) Be more careful when determining the Content-Type of 1-byte
attachments. libmagic(3) isn't helpful on such small files.
1) Add support for message selection based on the message body. The
pattern matching is done on the MIME decoded body as would be seen by
the print command.
2) Don't hook editline when doing headers only: that mode is never
interactive and it messes up piping if output is redirected to a
command that expects tty input, such as 'more'.
1) When detaching, don't try to close things we shouldn't (after
doing the header). Specifically, mip->mi_head_end was not
getting set correctly in mime_sendmessage().
2) Change paging to be closer to its old behavior: next, dt, and dp
should only page if the crt variable is set; and don't automatically
page most other commands - the user can always pipe them into more.
Partially restore the "crt" variable: if set, the [pP]rint and [tT]ype
commands invoke the PAGER making them identical to the [pP]age and
[mM]more commands. Its value is now ignored. If anyone really
objects, I will do my best to restore the old behavior, but it really
doesn't fit very well into the current paging architecture.
1) Statification of modules.
2) Implement the 'detach' and 'Detach' commands for extracting mime
parts from messages.
3) Teach mail to output "In-Reply-To" and "References" header fields
when replying so others can thread us.
4) Implement threading, sorting, and tagging, supported by the
following commands: 'flatten', 'reverse', 'sort', 'thread',
'unthread', 'down', 'tset', 'up', 'expose', 'hide', 'tag',
'untag', 'invtags', 'tagbelow', 'hidetags', 'showtags'.
See the manpage for details (when available - soon).
5) Implement a 'deldups' command to delete duplicate messages based on
their "Message-Id" field, e.g., in replies to a mailing list that
are also CCed to a subscriber. (This can also be accomplished with
the threading and tagging commands.)
6) Implement 'ifdef' and 'ifndef' commands, and make the conditionals
nestable (i.e., implement a conditional stack). The if/else/endif
commands existed before, but they were primitive and undocumented.
The 'if' command currently recognizes the "receiving", "sending",
and "headersonly" mode keywords.
7) Teach the message selecting routine to understand regular
expressions if "regex-search" is defined. Otherwise only case
insensitive substring matches are done (as in the past).
8) Teach the message selection routine to understand boolean
expressions. Improved "colon-modifier" support. See the manpage
for details (when available - soon).
9) Extend paging to all commands (where relevant).
10) Add shell like piping and redirection of (standard) output (if
"enable-piping" is defined). Extend completion to these contexts.
11) The manpage should follow soon!!!!