NetBSD/usr.sbin/sendmail/KNOWNBUGS
1996-01-22 12:50:24 +00:00

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K N O W N B U G S I N S E N D M A I L
(for 8.7)
The following are bugs or deficiencies in sendmail that I am aware of
but which have not been fixed in the current release. You probably
want to get the most up to date version of this from FTP.CS.Berkeley.EDU
in /ucb/sendmail/KNOWNBUGS. For descriptions of bugs that have been
fixed, see the file RELEASE_NOTES (in the root directory of the sendmail
distribution).
This list is not guaranteed to be complete.
* Null bytes are not handled properly in headers.
Sendmail should handle full binary data. As it stands, it handles
all values in the body, but only 0x01-0x80 and 0xA0-0xFF in
the header. Notably missing is 0x00, which would require a major
restructuring of the code -- for example, almost no C library support
could be used to handle strings.
* Duplicate error messages.
Sometimes identical, duplicate error messages can be generated. As
near as I can tell, this is rare and relatively innocuous.
* $c (hop count) macro improperly set.
The $c macro is supposed to contain the current hop count, for use
when calling a mailer. This macro is initialized too early, and
is always zero (or the value of the -c command line flag, if any).
This macro will probably be removed entirely in a future release;
I don't believe there are any mailers left that require it.
* If you EXPN a list or user that has a program mailer, the output of
EXPN will include ``@local.host.name''. You can't actually mail to
this address. It's not clear what the right behaviour is in this
circumstance.
* MX records that point at non-existent hosts work strangly.
Consider the DNS records:
hostH MX 1 hostA
MX 2 hostB
hostA A 128.32.8.9
(note that there is no A record for hostB). If hostA is down,
an attempt to send to hostH gives "host unknown" -- that is, it
reflects out the status on the last host it tries, which in this
case is hostB, which is unknown. It probably ought to eliminate
hostB early in processing.
* \231 considered harmful.
Header addresses that have the \231 character (and possibly others
in the range \201 - \237) behave in odd and usually unexpected ways.
* accept() problem on SVR4.
Apparently, the sendmail daemon loop (doing accept()s on the network)
can get into a wierd state on SVR4; it starts logging ``SYSERR:
getrequests: accept: Protocol Error''. The workaround is to kill
and restart the sendmail daemon. We don't have an SVR4 system at
Berkeley that carries more than token mail load, so I can't validate
this. It is likely to be a glitch in the sockets emulation, since
"Protocol Error" is not possible error code with Berkeley TCP/IP.
I've also had someone report the message ``sendmail: accept:
SIOCGPGRP failed errno 22'' on an SVR4 system. This message is
not in the sendmail source code, so I assume it is also a bug
in the sockets emulation. (Errno 22 is EINVAL "Invalid Argument"
on all the systems I have available, including Solaris 2.x.)
* Sending user deletion not done properly in :include: lists.
If you don't have the "m" (me too) option set, then a person
sending to a list that contains themselves should not get a copy
of the message. However, if that list points to a :include: file
that has one address per line, this will break, and the sender
will always get a copy of their own message, just as though the
"m" option were set.
You can eliminate this by adding commas at the end of each line
of the :include: file.
* Excessive mailing list nesting can run out of file descriptors.
If you have a mailing list that includes lots of other mailing
lists, each of which has a separate owner, you can run out of
file descriptors. Each mailing list with a separate owner uses
one open file descriptor (prior to 8.6.6 it was three open
file descriptors per list). This is particularly egregious if
you have your connection cache set to be large.
* Connection caching breaks if you pass the port number as an argument.
If you have a definition such as:
Mport, P=[IPC], F=kmDFMuX, S=11/31, R=21,
M=2100000, T=DNS/RFC822/SMTP,
A=IPC [127.0.0.1] $h
(i.e., where $h is the port number instead of the host name) the
connection caching code will break because it won't notice that
two messages addressed to different ports should use different
connections.
* ESMTP SIZE underestimates the size of a message
Sendmail makes no allowance for headers that it adds, nor does it
account for the SMTP on-the-wire \r\n expansion. It probably doesn't
allow for 8->7 bit MIME conversions either.
(Version 8.21, last updated 8/27/95)