isync/src/config.c

287 lines
6.4 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/* $Id$
*
* isync - IMAP4 to maildir mailbox synchronizer
* Copyright (C) 2000-2002 Michael R. Elkins <me@mutt.org>
* Copyright (C) 2002-2003 Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@users.sf.net>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
*
* As a special exception, isync may be linked with the OpenSSL library,
* despite that library's more restrictive license.
*/
#include "isync.h"
#include <unistd.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <pwd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
config_t *boxes = 0;
/* set defaults from the global configuration section */
static void
config_defaults (config_t * conf)
{
memcpy (conf, &global, sizeof (config_t));
}
static char *
my_strndup (const char *s, size_t nchars)
{
char *r = malloc (sizeof (char) * (nchars + 1));
if (r)
{
memcpy (r, s, nchars);
r[nchars] = 0;
}
return r;
}
char *
expand_strdup (const char *s)
{
char path[_POSIX_PATH_MAX];
struct passwd *pw;
const char *p;
if (*s == '~')
{
s++;
if (*s == '/')
{
/* current user */
pw = getpwuid (getuid ());
p = s + 1;
}
else
{
char *user;
p = strchr (s, '/');
if (p)
{
user = my_strndup (s, (int)(p - s));
p++;
}
else
user = strdup (s);
pw = getpwnam (user);
free (user);
}
if (!pw)
return 0;
snprintf (path, sizeof (path), "%s/%s", pw->pw_dir, p ? p : "");
s = path;
}
else if (*s != '/')
{
snprintf (path, sizeof (path), "%s/%s",
global.maildir ? global.maildir : "", s);
s = path;
}
return strdup (s);
}
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
static int
is_true (const char *val)
{
return
!strcasecmp (val, "yes") ||
!strcasecmp (val, "true") ||
!strcasecmp (val, "on") ||
!strcmp (val, "1");
}
void
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
load_config (const char *where, int *o2o)
{
char path[_POSIX_PATH_MAX];
char buf[1024];
struct passwd *pw;
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
config_t **stor = &boxes, *cfg;
int line = 0;
FILE *fp;
char *p, *cmd, *val;
if (!where)
{
pw = getpwuid (getuid ());
snprintf (path, sizeof (path), "%s/.isyncrc", pw->pw_dir);
where = path;
}
patch from Daniel Resare <noa@metamatrix.se>: 1 giving a path to a nonexistant rc-file with the -c argument dumps core The patch adds a check to ensure that the given rc-file is accessible 2 the error messages given from failed openssl calls are bogus The handles the error from SSL_connect () correctly. The bug is understndable since the error handling in openssl is quite obfuscated. Good news is that the documentation manapges has been greatly updated in the latest version (0.9.6). See in particular err(3), ERR_get_error(3) and SSL_get_error(3). Please note that possible SSL_ERROR_SSL type errors from SSL_read() and SSL_write() is not handled. This should also be fixed. 3 connecting using the STARTTLS command with an imap server that is configured only to accept the TLSv1 protocol gives an error because isync sends an SSLv2 Hello message for backwards compability. (This is the case with the uw-imap 2000 that ships with redhat-7.0) I've read RFC2595 several times to see if it says something about compability SSL2/SSL3 hello messages but can't find anything. IMHO the correct thing to do is change the default to not use SSL2/3 compability hello when using the STARTTLS command but use it if the imaps port is used. The patch implements this change 4 repeated calls to SSL_CTX_set_options overwrites the old settings (the values needs to be ORed together) fixed in the patch patch from me@mutt.org: \Recent messages were put in the cur/ directory instead of new/ give error message when the LOGIN command fails
2001-02-14 20:46:41 +00:00
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
info ("Reading configuration file %s\n", where);
fp = fopen (where, "r");
if (!fp)
{
if (errno != ENOENT)
perror ("fopen");
patch from Daniel Resare <noa@metamatrix.se>: 1 giving a path to a nonexistant rc-file with the -c argument dumps core The patch adds a check to ensure that the given rc-file is accessible 2 the error messages given from failed openssl calls are bogus The handles the error from SSL_connect () correctly. The bug is understndable since the error handling in openssl is quite obfuscated. Good news is that the documentation manapges has been greatly updated in the latest version (0.9.6). See in particular err(3), ERR_get_error(3) and SSL_get_error(3). Please note that possible SSL_ERROR_SSL type errors from SSL_read() and SSL_write() is not handled. This should also be fixed. 3 connecting using the STARTTLS command with an imap server that is configured only to accept the TLSv1 protocol gives an error because isync sends an SSLv2 Hello message for backwards compability. (This is the case with the uw-imap 2000 that ships with redhat-7.0) I've read RFC2595 several times to see if it says something about compability SSL2/SSL3 hello messages but can't find anything. IMHO the correct thing to do is change the default to not use SSL2/3 compability hello when using the STARTTLS command but use it if the imaps port is used. The patch implements this change 4 repeated calls to SSL_CTX_set_options overwrites the old settings (the values needs to be ORed together) fixed in the patch patch from me@mutt.org: \Recent messages were put in the cur/ directory instead of new/ give error message when the LOGIN command fails
2001-02-14 20:46:41 +00:00
return;
}
buf[sizeof buf - 1] = 0;
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg = &global;
while ((fgets (buf, sizeof (buf) - 1, fp)))
{
p = buf;
cmd = next_arg (&p);
val = next_arg (&p);
line++;
if (!cmd || *cmd == '#')
continue;
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (!val) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: parameter missing\n", path, line);
continue;
}
if (!strcasecmp ("mailbox", cmd))
{
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
if (*o2o)
break;
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
cfg = *stor = malloc (sizeof (config_t));
stor = &cfg->next;
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
config_defaults (cfg);
/* not expanded at this point */
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->path = strdup (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("OneToOne", cmd))
{
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (boxes) {
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
forbid:
fprintf (stderr,
"%s:%d: keyword '%s' allowed only in global section\n",
path, line, cmd);
continue;
}
*o2o = is_true (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("maildir", cmd))
{
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (boxes)
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
goto forbid;
/* this only affects the global setting */
global.maildir = expand_strdup (val);
}
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
else if (!strcasecmp ("folder", cmd))
{
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (boxes)
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
goto forbid;
/* this only affects the global setting */
global.folder = strdup (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("inbox", cmd))
{
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (boxes)
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
goto forbid;
/* this only affects the global setting */
global.inbox = strdup (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("host", cmd))
{
#if HAVE_LIBSSL
if (!strncasecmp ("imaps:", val, 6))
{
val += 6;
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->use_imaps = 1;
cfg->port = 993;
cfg->use_sslv2 = 1;
cfg->use_sslv3 = 1;
}
#endif
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->host = strdup (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("user", cmd))
cfg->user = strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("pass", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->pass = strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("port", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->port = atoi (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("box", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->box = strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("alias", cmd))
{
2002-12-28 04:04:54 +00:00
if (!boxes) {
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
fprintf (stderr,
"%s:%d: keyword 'alias' allowed only in mailbox specification\n",
path, line);
continue;
}
cfg->alias = strdup (val);
}
else if (!strcasecmp ("maxsize", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->max_size = atol (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("MaxMessages", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->max_messages = atol (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("UseNamespace", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->use_namespace = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("CopyDeletedTo", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->copy_deleted_to = strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("Tunnel", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->tunnel = strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("Expunge", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->expunge = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("Delete", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->delete = is_true (val);
#if HAVE_LIBSSL
else if (!strcasecmp ("CertificateFile", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->cert_file = expand_strdup (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("RequireSSL", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->require_ssl = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("UseSSLv2", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->use_sslv2 = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("UseSSLv3", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->use_sslv3 = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("UseTLSv1", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->use_tlsv1 = is_true (val);
else if (!strcasecmp ("RequireCRAM", cmd))
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
cfg->require_cram = is_true (val);
#endif
else if (buf[0])
Bunch 'o patches from Oswald Buddenhagen: i implemented some cool stuff (tm). first, the long missing "create server-side missing mailboxes". -C now creates both local and remote boxes; -L and -R create only local/remote. second, i implemented a 1:1 remote:local folder mapping (-1) with an optional INBOX exception (inbox/-I). the remote folder is specified with the folder keyword (or -F switch) and takes precedence over the namespace setting. the local directory with the mailboxes can now be specified on the command line, too (-M). another patch: - made the -1 switch settable permanently (OneToOne). after all, you usually define your mailbox layout once forever. removed -A, as it is semantically -a modified by -1. - cleaned up message output a bit. still, the quiet variable should be used throughout the program. at best, create some generic output function, which obeys a global verbosity level variable. - optimized + cleaned up configuration parser slightly - minor cleanups add an (almost) unique id to every uploaded message and search for it right after. i thought about using the message-id, but a) it is not guaranteed to be unique in a mailbox (imagine you edit a mail and store the dupe in the same box) and b) some mails (e.g., postponed) don't even have one. a downside of the current implementation is, that this id-header remains in the mailbox, but given that it wastes only 27 bytes per mail and removing it would mean several roundtrips more, this seems acceptable. i changed the line-counting loop to use a mmapped file instead of reading it in chunks, as it makes things simpler and is probably even faster for big mails. the amount of goto statements in my code may be scary, but c is simply lacking a multi-level break statement. :) this is the "shut up" patch. :) it makes the -q option consequent, so to say. additionally it adds an -l option which gathers all defined/found mailboxes and just outputs the list. don't ask what i need it for. ;)
2002-10-30 02:23:05 +00:00
fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: unknown keyword '%s'\n", path, line, cmd);
}
fclose (fp);
}
config_t *
find_box (const char *s)
{
config_t *p = boxes;
for (; p; p = p->next)
{
if (!strcmp (s, p->path) || (p->alias && !strcmp (s, p->alias)))
return p;
else
{
/* check to see if the full pathname was specified on the
* command line.
*/
char *t = expand_strdup (p->path);
if (!strcmp (s, t))
{
free (t);
return p;
}
free (t);
}
}
return 0;
}