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Diffstat (limited to 'crypto/heimdal/appl/popper/popper.8')
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diff --git a/crypto/heimdal/appl/popper/popper.8 b/crypto/heimdal/appl/popper/popper.8 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..30dc5b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/crypto/heimdal/appl/popper/popper.8 @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +.\" Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California. +.\" All rights reserved. +.\" +.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted +.\" provided that this notice is preserved and that due credit is given +.\" to the University of California at Berkeley. The name of the University +.\" may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this +.\" software without specific prior written permission. This software +.\" is provided ``as is'' without express or implied warranty. +.\" +.\" @(#)@(#)popper.8 2.3 2.3 (CCS) 4/2/91 Copyright (c) 1990 Regents of the University of California.\nAll rights reserved.\n +.\" +.TH popper 8 "August 1990" +.UC 6 +.ad +.SH NAME +popper \- pop 3 server +.SH SYNOPSIS +.B /usr/etc/popper +[ -d ] +[ -a ] +[ -k ] +[ -t trace-file] +[ -i ] +[ -p portnum] +.SH DESCRIPTION +.I Popper +is an implementation of the Post Office Protocol server that runs on a +variety of Unix computers to manage electronic mail for Macintosh +and MS-DOS computers. The server was developed at the University of +California at Berkeley and conforms fully to the specifications in RFC +1081 and RFC 1082. The Berkeley server also has extensions to +send electronic mail on behalf of a client. +.PP +The +.B \-d +flag sets the socket to debugging and turns on debugging. All debugging +information is saved using syslog(8). +.PP +The +.B \-t trace\-file +flag turns on debugging and saves the trace information in +.I trace\-file +using fprintf(s). +.PP +The +.B \-k +flag tells popper to talk the kerberised POP protocol (KPOP). +.PP +The +.B \-a +flag tells popper not to accept any cleartext passwords, but only OTPs. +.PP +The +.B \-i +flag tells popper it has not been started by inetd and should create +its own socket and listen on it. This is useful for debugging. +.PP +The +.B \-p portnum +flag tells popper on which port it should listen for connections when +creating a socket. +.SH HOW TO OBTAIN THE SERVER +.PP +The POP server is available via anonymous ftp from ftp.CC.Berkeley.EDU +(128.32.136.9, 128.32.206.12). It is in two files in the pub directory: +a compressed +tar file popper.tar.Z and a Macintosh StuffIt archive in BinHex format +called MacPOP.sit.hqx. +.SH THE POP TRANSACTION CYCLE +.PP +The Berkeley POP server is a single program (called popper) that is +launched by inetd when it gets a service request on the POP TCP port. +(The official port number specified in RFC 1081 for POP version 3 is +port 110. However, some POP3 clients attempt to contact the server at +port 109, the POP version 2 port. Unless you are running both POP2 and +POP3 servers, you can simply define both ports for use by the POP3 +server. This is explained in the installation instructions later on.) +The popper program initializes and verifies that the peer IP address is +registered in the local domain, logging a warning message when a +connection is made to a client whose IP address does not have a +canonical name. For systems using BSD 4.3 bind, it also checks to see +if a cannonical name lookup for the client returns the same peer IP +address, logging a warning message if it does not. The the server +enters the authorization state, during which the client must correctly +identify itself by providing a valid Unix userid and password on the +server's host machine. No other exchanges are allowed during this +state (other than a request to quit.) If authentication fails, a +warning message is logged and the session ends. Once the user is +identified, popper changes its user and group ids to match that of the +user and enters the transaction state. The server makes a temporary +copy of the user's maildrop (ordinarily in /usr/spool/mail) which is +used for all subsequent transactions. These include the bulk of POP +commands to retrieve mail, delete mail, undelete mail, and so forth. A +Berkeley extension also allows the user to submit a mail parcel to the +server who mails it using the sendmail program (this extension is +supported in the HyperMail client distributed with the server). When +the client quits, the server enters the final update state during which +the network connection is terminated and the user's maildrop is updated +with the (possibly) modified temporary maildrop. +.SH LOGGING +.PP +The POP server uses syslog to keep a record of its activities. On +systems with BSD 4.3 syslogging, the server logs (by default) to the +"local0" facility at priority "notice" for all messages except +debugging which is logged at priority "debug". The default log file is +/usr/spool/mqueue/POPlog. These can be changed, if desired. On +systems with 4.2 syslogging all messages are logged to the local log +file, usually /usr/spool/mqueue/syslog. +.SH DEBUGGING +.PP +The popper program will log debugging information when the -d parameter +is specified after its invocation in the inetd.conf file. Care should +be exercised in using this option since it generates considerable +output in the syslog file. Alternatively, the "-t <file-name>" option +will place debugging information into file "<file-name>" using fprintf +instead of syslog. +.PP +For SunOS version 3.5, the popper program is launched by inetd from +/etc/servers. This file does not allow you to specify command line +arguments. Therefore, if you want to enable debugging, you can specify +a shell script in /etc/servers to be launched instead of popper and in +this script call popper with the desired arguments. +.PP +You can confirm that the POP server is running on Unix by telneting to +port 110 (or 109 if you set it up that way). For example: +.PP +.nf +%telnet myhost 110 +Trying... +Connected to myhost.berkeley.edu. +Escape character is '^]'. ++OK UCB Pop server (version 1.6) at myhost starting. +quit +Connection closed by foreign host. +.fi +.SH VERSION 1.7 RELEASE NOTES +Extensive re-write of the maildrop processing code contributed by +Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@math.princeton.edu> that greatly reduces the +possibility that the maildrop can be corrupted as the result of +simultaneous access by two or more processes. +.PP +Added "pop_dropcopy" module to create a temporary maildrop from +the existing, standard maildrop as root before the setuid and +setgid for the user is done. This allows the temporary maildrop +to be created in a mail spool area that is not world read-writable. +.PP +This version does *not* send the sendmail "From " delimiter line +in response to a TOP or RETR command. +.PP +Encased all debugging code in #ifdef DEBUG constructs. This code can +be included by specifying the DEGUG compiler flag. Note: You still +need to use the -d or -t option to obtain debugging output. +.SH LIMITATIONS +The POP server copies the user's entire maildrop to /tmp and +then operates on that copy. If the maildrop is particularly +large, or inadequate space is available in /tmp, then the +server will refuse to continue and terminate the connection. +.PP +Simultaneous modification of a single maildrop can result in +confusing results. For example, manipulating messages in a +maildrop using the Unix /usr/ucb/mail command while a copy of +it is being processed by the POP server can cause the changes +made by one program to be lost when the other terminates. This +problem is being worked on and will be fixed in a later +release. +.SH FILES +.nf +/usr/spool/mail mail files +/etc/inetd.conf pop program invocation +/etc/syslog.conf logging specifications +.fi +.SH "SEE ALSO" +inetd(8), +RFC1081, +RFC1082 +.SH AUTHORS +Bob Campbell, Edward Moy, Austin Shelton, Marshall T Rose, and cast of +thousands at Rand, UDel, UCI, and elsewhere |