X-Git-Url: http://pileus.org/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=fetchmail-FAQ.html;h=0e4e0054d5146d760e321700474b0f27109ab857;hb=f16d8d23439b5569f0c2e1af22494708b507f277;hp=2786fecde6d5489e43057d14f02df54d49dbd3a5;hpb=9db4126dddb31083d0c0713851af3506174a5ced;p=~andy%2Ffetchmail
diff --git a/fetchmail-FAQ.html b/fetchmail-FAQ.html
index 2786fecd..0e4e0054 100644
--- a/fetchmail-FAQ.html
+++ b/fetchmail-FAQ.html
@@ -7,8 +7,8 @@
WARNING!
Be sure that
@@ -31,11 +31,11 @@ Page
Frequently Asked Questions About Fetchmail
-Before reporting any bug, please read G3 for
-advice on how to include diagnostic information that will get your
-bug fixed as quickly as possible.
+Support? Bug reports? Please read G3 for what information is required to get your problem
+solved as quickly as possible.
-Note that this FAQ is occasionally updated from the SVN repository
+
Note that this FAQ is occasionally updated from the Git repository
and speaks in the past tense ("since") about a fetchmail release that is
not yet available. Please try a release candidate for that version in
case you need the new option.
@@ -70,9 +70,9 @@ below).
G1. What is fetchmail and why should I bother?
G2. Where do I find the latest FAQ and fetchmail sources?
-G3. I think I've found a bug. Will you fix it?
+G3. Something doesn't work/I think I've found a bug. Will you fix it?
G4. I have this idea for a neat feature. Will you add it?
-G5. I want to make fetchmail behave like Outlook Express.
+G5. I want to make fetchmail remove kept mail after some days.
G6. Is there a mailing list for exchanging tips?
G7. So, what's this I hear about a fetchmail paper?
G8. What is the best server to use with fetchmail?
@@ -115,8 +115,9 @@ often than others?
C6. Fetchmail works OK started up manually, but not
from an init script.
C7. How can I forward mail to another
-host?.
-
+host?
+C8. Why is "NOMAIL" an error?/I frequently get messages
+from cron!
How to make fetchmail play nice with various MTAs
@@ -131,7 +132,7 @@ host?.
How to make fetchmail work with various servers
-S1. How can I use fetchmail with qpopper?
+S1. How can I use fetchmail with qpopper?
S2. How can I use fetchmail with Microsoft Exchange?
S3. How can I use fetchmail with HP OpenMail?
S4. How can I use fetchmail with Novell GroupWise?
@@ -150,6 +151,7 @@ host?.
I7. How can I use fetchmail with SpryNet?
I8. How can I use fetchmail with comcast.net or other
Maillennium servers?
+I9. How can I use fetchmail with GMail/Google Mail?
How to set up well-known security and authentication
methods
@@ -160,7 +162,7 @@ methods
K4. What do I have to do to use the IMAP-GSS protocol?
K5. How can I use fetchmail with SSL?
K6. How can I tell fetchmail not to try TLS if the server
- advertises it?
+ advertises it? Why does fetchmail use SSL even though not configured?
Runtime fatal errors
@@ -170,8 +172,8 @@ connect failed' messages.
work.
R3. Fetchmail dumps core when given an invalid rc
file.
-R4. Fetchmail dumps core in -V mode, but operates
-normally otherwise.
+R4. Fetchmail dumps core in -V mode, but operates
+ normally otherwise.
R5. Running fetchmail in daemon mode doesn't
work.
R6. Fetchmail randomly dies with socket errors.
@@ -180,10 +182,13 @@ an OS upgrade
R8. Fetchmail is timing out after fetching certain
messages but before deleting them
R9. Fetchmail is timing out during message fetches
-R10. Fetchmail is dying with SIGPIPE.
+R10. Fetchmail is dying with SIGPIPE.
R11. My server is hanging or emitting errors on CAPA.
R12. Fetchmail isn't working and reports getaddrinfo
- errors.
+ errors.
+R13. What does "Interrupted system call" mean?
+R14. Since upgrading fetchmail/OpenSSL, I can no longer connect!
+R15. Help, I'm getting Authorization failure!
Hangs and lockups
@@ -211,8 +216,8 @@ mail is going to root anyway.
domain properly.
M3. I tried to run a mailing list using multidrop,
and I have a mail loop!
-M4. My multidrop fetchmail seems to be having DNS
-problems.
+M4. My multidrop fetchmail seems to be having DNS
+ problems.
M5. I'm seeing long DNS delays before each message is
processed.
M6. How do I get multidrop mode to work with
@@ -233,8 +238,8 @@ line.
being split.
X4. My mail is being mangled in a new and different
way.
-X5. Using POP3, retrievals seems to be fetching too
-much!
+X5. Using POP3, retrievals seems to be fetching too
+much!
X6. My mail attachments are being dropped or
mangled.
X7. Some mail attachments are hanging
@@ -243,6 +248,9 @@ fetchmail.
messages.
X9. Missing "Content-Transfer-Encoding" header
with Domino IMAP
+X10. Fetchmail delivers partial messages
+
+
Other problems
O1. The --logfile option doesn't work if the logfile
@@ -263,8 +271,8 @@ order?
working?
O9. Why does fetchmail keep retrieving the same
messages over and over?
-O10. Why is the received date on all my messages the
-same?
+O10. Why is the received date on all my messages the
+ same?
O11. I keep getting messages that say "Repoll
immediately" in my logs.
O12. Fetchmail no longer expunges mail on a 451 SMTP response.
@@ -276,6 +284,8 @@ immediately" in my logs.
O16. Why is the Fetchmail FAQ only available in
ISO-216 A4 format? How do I get the FAQ in Letter
format?
+O17. Linux logs "TCP(fetchmail:...): Application bug, race
+ in MSG_PEEK."
General problems
@@ -284,11 +294,13 @@ bother?
Fetchmail is a one-stop solution to the remote mail retrieval
problem for Unix machines, quite useful to anyone with an
-intermittent PPP or SLIP connection to a remote mailserver. It can
-collect mail using any variant of POP or IMAP and forwards via port
-25 to the local SMTP listener, enabling all the normal
-forwarding/filtering/aliasing mechanisms that would apply to local
-mail or mail arriving via a full-time TCP/IP connection.
+intermittent or dynamic-IP connection to a remote mailserver, SLIP or
+PPP dialup, or leased line when SMTP isn't desired. Fetchmail can
+collect mail using any variant of POP or IMAP and forwards to a the
+local SMTP (via TCP socket) or LMTP (via TCP or Unix socket) listener or
+into an MDA program, enabling all the normal
+forwarding/filtering/aliasing mechanisms that would apply to local mail
+or mail arriving via a full-time TCP/IP connection.
Fetchmail is not a toy or a coder's learning exercise, but an
industrial-strength tool capable of transparently handling every
@@ -297,15 +309,23 @@ up to mail retrieval and rerouting for an entire client domain.
Fetchmail is easy to configure, unobtrusive in operation, powerful,
feature-rich, and well documented.
-Fetchmail is open-source
-software. The openness of the sources is the strongest assurance of
-quality you can have. Extensive peer review by a large,
-multi-platform user community has shown that fetchmail is as near
-bulletproof as the underlying protocols permit.
+Fetchmail is Open Source
+Software. The openness of the sources enables you to review and
+customize the code, and contribute your changes.
+
+A former fetchmail maintainer once claimed that Open Source software
+were the strongest quality assurance, but the current maintainers do not
+believe that open source alone is a criterion for quality – the remotely exploitable POP3
+ vulnerability (CVE-2005-2335) lingered undiscovered in
+fetchmail's code for years, which is a hint that open source code does
+not audit itself.
Fetchmail is licensed under the GNU General Public
-License.
+href="http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html">GNU General Public
+License v2. Details, including an exception that allows linking
+against OpenSSL, are in the COPYING file in the fetchmail
+distribution.
If you found this FAQ in the distribution, see the README for
fetchmail's full feature list.
@@ -315,7 +335,7 @@ fetchmail sources?
The latest HTML FAQ is available alongside the latest fetchmail
sources at the fetchmail home page: http://fetchmail.berlios.de/.
+href="http://www.fetchmail.info/">http://www.fetchmail.info/.
You can also usually find both in the
POP mail tools directory on iBiblio.
@@ -324,18 +344,19 @@ POP mail tools directory on iBiblio.
distribution. Because it freezes at distribution release time, it
may not be completely current.
-
+
The first thing you should to is to upgrade to the newest version of
fetchmail, and then see if the problem reproduces. So you'll probably
save us both time if you upgrade and test with the latest
version before sending in a bug report.
-I will fix bugs, provided you include enough diagnostic information
+
Bugs will be fixed, provided you include enough diagnostic information
for me to go on. Send bugs to fetchmail-users.
-When reporting bugs, please include the following:
+When sending bugs or asking for help, please do not make up
+ information except your password and please
+report the following:
- Your operating system.
@@ -344,15 +365,22 @@ When reporting bugs, please include the following:
name and origin of the RPM or other binary package you
installed.
-- A copy of your POP or IMAP server's greeting line.
-
- The name and version of the SMTP listener or MDA you are
forwarding to.
- Any command-line options you used.
-- The output of fetchmail -V called with whatever other
-command-line options you used.
+- The output of env LC_ALL=C fetchmail -V called with
+whatever other command-line options you used.
+
+- The output of env LC_ALL=C fetchmail --nodetach -vvv
+--nosyslog with whatever other command-line options you use
+routinely.
+
It is very important that the transcript include your
+POP/IMAP server's greeting line, so I can identify it in case of server
+problems. This transcript will not reveal your passwords, which are
+specially masked out precisely so transcripts can be passed around.
+
If you have FTP access to your remote mail account, and you have
@@ -370,22 +398,17 @@ introduced in the upper half of the sequence; if it doesn't, the
failure was introduced in the lower half. Now bisect that half in
the same way. In a very few tries, you should be able to identify
the exact adjacent pair of versions between which your bug was
-introduced -- and with information like that, I can usually come up
-with a fix very quickly.
-
-Another useful thing you can do, if you're using POP3, is to
-test for IMAP4 support on your mailserver using the autoprobe
-function of fetchmailconf. If you have IMAP4, and fetchmailconf
-doesn't tell you it's broken, switch immediately. POP3 is a weak,
-poorly-designed protocol with chronic problems, and the later
-versions after RFC1725 actually get worse rather than better.
-Changing over to IMAP4 may well make your problem go away -- and if
-your ISP doesn't have IMAP4 support, bug them to supply it.
-
-It is helpful if you include your .fetchmailrc file, but not
+introduced. Please include session transcripts (as
+described in the last bullet point above) of both
+the working and failing versions. Often, the source of the problem
+can instantly identified by looking at the differences in protocol
+transactions.
+
+It may helpful if you include your .fetchmailrc file, but not
necessary unless your symptom seems to involve an error in
configuration parsing. If you do send in your .fetchmailrc, mask
-the passwords first!
+the passwords first! Otherwise, fetchmail -V – as directed above
+– will usually suffice.
If fetchmail seems to run and fetch mail, but the headers look
mangled (that is, headers are missing or blank lines are inserted
@@ -396,20 +419,6 @@ mail mangling. There are lots of ways for other programs in the
mail chain to screw up that look like fetchmail's fault, but you
may be able to fix these by tweaking your configuration.
-A transcript of the failed session with -v -v (yes, that's
-two -v options, enabling debug mode) will almost always be
-useful. It is very important that the transcript include your
-POP/IMAP server's greeting line, so I can identify it in case of
-server problems. This transcript will not reveal your passwords,
-which are specially masked out precisely so transcripts can be
-passed around.
-
-If you upgraded your fetchmail and something broke, you should
-include session transcripts with -v -v of both the working and
-failing versions. Very often, the source of the problem can
-instantly identified by looking at the differences in protocol
-transactions.
-
If the bug involves a core dump or hang, a gdb stack trace is
good to have. (Bear in mind that you can attach gdb to a running
but hung process by giving the process ID as a second argument.)
@@ -420,18 +429,18 @@ CFLAGS=-g LDFLAGS=" " ./configure
Then rebuild in order to generate a version that can be
-gdb-traced.
+traced with a debugger such as gdb, dbx or idb.
Best of all is a mail file which, when fetched, will reproduce
the bug under the latest (current) version.
-Any bug I can reproduce will usually get fixed very quickly,
-often within 48 hours. Bugs I can't reproduce are a crapshoot. If
-the solution isn't obvious when I first look, it may evade me for a
-long time (or to put it another way, fetchmail is well enough
-tested that the easy bugs have long since been found). So if you
-want your bug fixed rapidly, it is not just sufficient but nearly
-necessary that you give me a way to reproduce it.
+Any bug I can reproduce will usually get fixed quite quickly.
+Bugs I can't reproduce are a crapshoot. If the solution isn't obvious
+when I first look, it may evade me for a long time (or to put it another
+way, fetchmail is well enough tested that the easy bugs have long since
+been found). So if you want your bug fixed rapidly, it is not just
+sufficient but necessary that you give me a way to
+easily reproduce it.
@@ -461,48 +470,54 @@ href="esrs-design-notes.html">ESR's design
notes. Note that this document is partially obsoleted by the
updated design notes.
-
+
The second-most-requested feature for fetchmail, after
content-based filtering, is the ability to have it remove messages
from a maildrop after N days, typically to be used with the
-keep
option as a sort of poor man's newsgroup
-facility. Microsoft's Outlook Express supports this.
+keep
option. Several messaging programs with graphical
+user interface support this feature.
This feature is not yet implemented. It may be at a future date,
spare time of developers permitting.
+For the time being, the contrib/ directory contains some unsupported
+ tools that may help, namely mold-remover.py and delete-later.
+
-There is a fetchmail-users list (fetchmail-users@lists.berlios.de)
+
There is a fetchmail-users list
+<fetchmail-users@lists.berlios.de>
for bug reports and people who want to discuss configuration issues of
-fetchmail. It's a Mailman list, see http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/fetchmail-users.
+fetchmail. Please see G3 above for information you need to
+report. It's a Mailman list, see http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/fetchmail-users
+for info and subscription.
There is a fetchmail-devel list
-(fetchmail-devel@lists.berlios.de) for people who want to discuss
+<fetchmail-devel@lists.berlios.de> for people who want to discuss
fixes and improvements in fetchmail and help co-develop it. It's a
Mailman list, which you can sign up for at http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/fetchmail-devel.
-There is also an announcements-only list,
-fetchmail-announce@lists.berlios.de, which you can sign up for at http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/fetchmail-devel.
+There is also an announcements-only list,
+<fetchmail-announce@lists.berlios.de>, which you can sign up for at http://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/fetchmail-announce.
-The fetchmail development was also a sociological experiment, an
-extended test to see if my theory about the critical features of
-the Linux development model is correct.
+Eric S. Raymond also considered fetchmail development a sociological
+experiment, an extended test to see if my theory about the critical
+features of the Linux development model is correct.
-The experiment was a success. I wrote a paper about it titled He considers the experiment a success. He wrote a paper about it titled The
Cathedral and the Bazaar which was first presented at Linux
Kongress '97 in Bavaria and very well received there. It was also
given at Atlanta Linux Expo, Linux Pro '97 in Warsaw, and the first
Perl Conference, at UniForum '98, and was the basis of an invited
-presentation at Usenix '98. The folks at Netscape tell me it helped
+presentation at Usenix '98. The folks at Netscape told ESR it helped
them decide to give
away the source for Netscape Communicator.
@@ -513,40 +528,29 @@ paper on the Web with a search for that title.
-Fetchmail will work with any POP, IMAP, ETRN, or ODMR server
-that conforms to the relevant RFCs (and even some outright broken
-ones like Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise). This doesn't mean it works
-equally well with all, however. POP2 servers, and POP3 servers
-without UIDL, limit fetchmail's capabilities in various ways
-described on the manual page.
+Fetchmail will work with any POP3, IMAP, ETRN, or ODMR server
+that conforms to the relevant standards/RFCs (and even some outright
+broken ones like Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise). This doesn't mean it works equally
+well with all, however. POP3 servers without UIDL
+limit fetchmail's capabilities in various ways described on the manual
+page.
Most modern Unixes (and effectively all Linux/*BSD systems) come
with POP3 support preconfigured (but beware of the horribly broken
POP3 server mentioned in D2). An increasing
-minority also feature IMAP (you can detect IMAP support by running
-fetchmail in AUTO mode, or by using the 'Probe for supported
-protocols' function in the fetchmailconf utility).
+minority also feature IMAP (you can detect IMAP support by using the
+'Probe for supported protocols' function in the fetchmailconf
+utility - unfortunately it does not detect SSL-wrapped variants).
If you have the option, we recommend using or installing an
-IMAP4rev1 server; it has the best facilities for tracking message
-'seen' states. It also recovers from interrupted connections more
-gracefully than POP3, and enables some significant performance
-optimizations.
-
-Don't be fooled by NT/Exchange propaganda. M$ Exchange is just
-plain broken (see item S2) and NT cannot handle
-the sustained load of a high-volume remote mail server. Even
-Microsoft itself knows better than to try this; their own Hotmail
-service runs over Solaris! For extended discussion, see John
-Kirch's excellent white
-paper on Unix vs. NT performance.
+IMAP4rev1 or UIDL-capable POP3 server.
A decent POP3/IMAP server that has recently become popular is Dovecot.
Avoid qmail,
- it's broken.
+ it's broken and unmaintained.
@@ -555,20 +559,19 @@ with fetchmail?
transport programs. It also doesn't care which user agent you
use, and user agents are as a rule almost equally indifferent to
how mail is delivered into your system mailbox. So any of the
-popular Unix mail agents -- elm, pine, mh, or
-mutt -- will work fine with
+mutt – will work fine with
fetchmail.
All this having been said, I can't resist putting in a discreet
plug for mutt. Mutt's interface
is only a little different from that of its now-moribund ancestor
elm, but its flexibility and excellent handling of MIME and PGP put it
-in a class by itself. You won't need its built-in POP3 support, though;
-most of the mutt developers will cheerfully admit that fetchmail's is
-better :-).
+in a class by itself. You won't need its built-in POP3 support, though.
+
@@ -577,13 +580,6 @@ en clair?
ranges from trivial to impossible. It may even be next to
useless.
-Most people use fetchmail over phone wires (whether plain old
-copper or DSL), which are hard to tap. Anybody with the skill and
-resources to do this could get into your server mailbox with much less
-effort by subverting the server host. So if your provider setup is
-phone-company wire going straight into a service box, you probably
-don't need to worry.
-
In general there is little point in trying to secure your fetchmail
transaction unless you trust the security of the server host you are
retrieving mail from. Your vulnerability is more likely to be an
@@ -594,16 +590,16 @@ concentrator or DSL POP you dial in to and the mailserver host).
Having realized this, you need to ask whether password
encryption alone will really address your security exposure. If you
think you might be snooped between server and client, it's better
-to use end-to-end encryption on your whole mail stream so none of
-it can be read. One of the advantages of fetchmail over
-conventional SMTP-push delivery is that you may be able to arrange
-this by using ssh(1); see K3.
+to use end-to-end encryption such as GnuPG (see below) on your whole
+mail stream so none of it can be read. One of the advantages of
+fetchmail over conventional SMTP-push delivery is that you may be able
+to arrange encryption by using ssh(1); see K3.
Note that ssh is not a complete privacy solution either, as your
mail could have been snooped in transit to your POP server from
wherever it originated. For best security, agree with your
correspondents to use a tool such as GPG (Gnu Privacy Guard) or PGP
+ href="http://www.gnupg.org/">GnuPG (Gnu Privacy Guard) or PGP
(Pretty Good Privacy).
If ssh/sshd isn't available, or you find it too complicated for
@@ -618,7 +614,7 @@ to a CAPABILITY query). Do a fetchmail -v
to see
these, or telnet direct to the server port (110 for POP3, 143 for
IMAP).
-If your mailserver is using IMAP 2000, you'll have CRAM-MD5
+
If your mailserver is using IMAP 2000, it'll have CRAM-MD5
support built in. Fetchmail autodetects this; you can skip the rest
of this section.
@@ -628,11 +624,12 @@ autoprobe facility will detect it and tell you if you have it). If
you see something in the greeting line that looks like an
angle-bracket-enclosed Internet address with a numeric left-hand
part, that's an APOP challenge (it will vary each time you log in).
-You can register a secret on the host (using
-popauth(8)
or some program like it). Specify the
+For some hosts, you need to register a secret on the host (using
+popauth(8)
or some program like that). Specify the
secret as your password in your .fetchmailrc; it will be used to
encrypt the current challenge, and the encrypted form will be sent
-back the the server for verification.
+back the the server for verification. Note that APOP is no longer
+considered secure since March 2007.
Alternatively, you may have Kerberos available. This may require
you to set up some magic files in your home directory on your
@@ -648,8 +645,8 @@ present by looking for AUTH=KERBEROS_V4 in the CAPABILITY
response.
If you are fetching mail from a CompuServe POP3 account, you can
-use their RPA authentication (which works much like APOP). See I1 for details. If you are fetching mail from
+use their RPA authentication. See I1 for details.
+If you are fetching mail from
Microsoft Exchange using IMAP, you will be able to use NTLM.
Your POP3 server may have the RFC1938 OTP capability to use
@@ -677,8 +674,8 @@ end-to-end encryption if you have an SSL-enabled mailserver.
to use a dynamic IP address?
Yes. In order to avoid giving indigestion to certain picky MTAs
-(notably exim), fetchmail always makes the RCPT
-TO address it feeds the MTA a fully qualified one with a hostname
+(notably exim), fetchmail always makes the RCPT TO
+address it feeds the MTA a fully qualified one with a hostname
part. Normally it does this by appending @ and "localhost", but
when you are using Kerberos or ETRN mode it will append @ and your
machine's fully-qualified domain name (FQDN).
@@ -687,7 +684,7 @@ machine's fully-qualified domain name (FQDN).
in daemon mode and outlasts the dynamic IP address assignment your
client machine had when it started up.
-Since the new IP address (looked up at RCPT TO interpretation
+
Since the new IP address (looked up at RCPT TO interpretation
time) doesn't match the original, the most benign possible result
is that your MTA thinks it's seeing a relaying attempt and refuses.
More frequently, fetchmail will try to connect to a nonexistent
@@ -697,7 +694,7 @@ mail to the wrong machine!
Use the smtpaddress
option to force the appended
hostname to one with a (fixed) IP address of 127.0.0.1 in your
/etc/hosts
. (The name 'localhost' will usually work;
-or you can use the IP address itself).
+or you can use the IP address itself.)
Only one fetchmail option interacts directly with your IP
address, 'interface
'. This option can be used to set
@@ -706,7 +703,7 @@ use. Such a restriction is sometimes useful for security reasons,
especially on multihomed sites. See C3.
I recommend against trying to set up the interface
-option when initially developing your poll configuration -- it's
+option when initially developing your poll configuration – it's
never necessary to do this just to get a link working. Get the link
working first, observe the actual address range you see on
connections, and add an interface
option (if you need
@@ -724,11 +721,11 @@ that case.
You can use On-Demand Mail Relay (ODMR) with a dynamic IP
address; that's what it was designed for, and it provides
capabilities very similar to ETRN. Unfortunately ODMR servers are
-not yet widely deployed, as of early 2001.
+still not yet widely deployed, as of 2006.
If you're using a dynamic-IP configuration, one other
(non-fetchmail) problem you may run into with outgoing mail is that
-some sites will bounce your email because the hostname your giving
+some sites will bounce your email because the hostname you're giving
them isn't real (and doesn't match what they get doing a reverse
DNS on your dynamically-assigned IP address). If this happens, you
need to hack your sendmail so it masquerades as your host.
@@ -805,7 +802,9 @@ heavy loads?
Fetchmail streams message bodies line-by-line; the most core it
ever requires per message is enough memory to hold the RFC822
header, and that storage is freed when body processing begins. It
-is, accordingly, quite economical in its use of memory.
+is, accordingly, quite economical in its use of memory. It will store
+the UID or UIDL data in core however, which can become considerable if
+you are keeping lots of messages on the server.
After startup time, a fetchmail running in daemon mode stats its
configuration file once per poll cycle to see whether it has
@@ -827,7 +826,7 @@ FreeBSD.
As of release 6.3.0, fetchmail's
Makefile[.in] should work flawlessly with BSD's portable make used on
FreeBSD. With older releases, use GNU make (usually installed as
-gmake
).
+gmake
; otherwise try pkg_add -r gmake).
@@ -836,9 +835,9 @@ fetchmail lexer.
formats, so you do not need to use lex unless you hacked the .l or .y
files.
-fetchmail's lexer has been developed with GNU flex, and the lex tools
-shipped by some UNIX vendors (HP, SGI, Sun) are known to be incapable of
-compiling fetchmail's lexer.
+fetchmail's lexer has been developed with GNU flex and uses some of
+its specialties, so the lexer cannot be compiled with the lex tools
+shipped by some UNIX vendors (HP, SGI, Sun).
@@ -884,6 +883,11 @@ directory.
+If your file predates 6.3.0
+
+The netsec option was discontinued and needs to be
+removed.
+
If your file predates 5.8.9
If you were using ETRN mode, change your smtphost
@@ -891,8 +895,8 @@ option to a fetchdomains option.
If your file predates 5.8.3
-The 'via localhost' special case for use with ssh tunnelling is
-gone. Use the %h feature of plugin instead.
+The 'via localhost' special case for use with ssh tunnelling is
+gone. Use the %h feature of plugin instead.
If your file predates 5.6.8
@@ -1267,7 +1271,7 @@ mainsite.example.com is polled, which with a polling interval of
every 5 minutes means that secondary.example.com will be polled
every 30 minutes.
-
fetchmail on, use the smtphost
or
smtpname
option. See the manual page for details.
+C8. Why is "NOMAIL" an error?/I frequently get messages
+from cron!
+
+Some users want to write scripts that take action only if mail
+could/could not be retrieved, thus fetchmail reports if it has retrieved
+messages or not.
+
+If you do not want "no mail" to be an error condition (for instance,
+for cron jobs), use a POSIX-compliant shell and add this to the end of
+the fetchmail command line, it will change an exit code of 1 to 0 and
+others to 1:
+
+|| [ $? -eq 1 ]
+
+
+If you want to map more than one code to 0, you cannot cascade multiple
+|| [ $? -eq N ], but you must instead use the
+-o operator inside the brackets, (see the test(1)
+manpage for details), such as:
+
+
+|| [ $? -eq 1 -o $? -eq 9 ]
+
+
+A full cron line might then look like this:
+
+
+*/15 * * * * fetchmail -s || [ $? -eq 1 ]
+
+
+
How to make fetchmail play nice with various MTAs
T1. How can I use fetchmail with
@@ -1378,38 +1413,49 @@ at start of a text line.
T2. How can I use fetchmail with
qmail?
+qmail as your local SMTP server
+
+Avoid qmail,
+ it's broken and unmaintained.
+
Turn on the forcecr
option; qmail's listener mode
doesn't like header or message lines terminated with bare
-linefeeds.
-
-(This information is thanks to Robert de Bath
+linefeeds.
+(This information contributed by Robert de Bath
<robert@mayday.cix.co.uk>.)
-If a mailhost is using the qmail package, then, providing the local
-hosts are also using qmail, it is possible to set up one fetchmail link
-to be reliably collect the mail for an entire domain.
+qmail as your ISP's POP3 server
+
+Note that qmail's POP3 server, as of version 1.03 and netqmail 1.05,
+miscalculates the message sizes, so you may see size-related fetchmail
+warnings.
+
+If a mailhost is using the qmail package, then it is usually possible
+to set up one fetchmail link to reliably collect the mail for an entire
+domain.
One of the basic features of qmail is the 'Delivered-To:'
message header. Whenever qmail delivers a message to a local
mailbox it puts the username and hostname of the envelope recipient
-on this line. The major reason for this is to prevent mail
-loops.
+on this line. One major reason for this is to prevent mail
+loops, the other is to transport envelope information which is essential
+for multidrop (domain-in-a-mailbox) schemes.
-To set up qmail to batch mail for a disconnected site the
+
To set up qmail to batch mail for a disconnected site, the
ISP-mailhost will have normally put that site in its 'virtualhosts'
control file so it will add a prefix to all mail addresses for this
site. This results in mail sent to
-'username@userhost.userdom.dom.com' having a 'Delivered-To:' line
+'username@userhost.userdom.example.com' having a 'Delivered-To:' line
of the form:
- Delivered-To: mbox-userstr-username@userhost.userdom.dom.com
+ Delivered-To: mbox-userstr-username@userhost.userdom.example.com
A single host maildrop will be slightly simpler:
- Delivered-To: mbox-userstr-username@userhost.dom.com
+ Delivered-To: mbox-userstr-username@userhost.example.com
The ISP can make the 'mbox-userstr-' prefix anything they choose
@@ -1418,41 +1464,17 @@ but a string matching the user host name is likely.
To use this line you must:
-- Ensure the option 'envelope Delivered-To:' is in the fetchmail
+
- Ensure the option '
envelope "Delivered-To"
' is in the fetchmail
config file.
-- Ensure you have a localdomains containing 'userdom.dom.com' or
-'userhost.dom.com' respectively.
-
-
-So far this reliably delivers messages to the correct machine of
-the local network, to deliver to the correct user the
-'mbox-userstr-' prefix must be stripped off of the user name. This
-can be done by setting up an alias within the qmail MTA on each
-local machine. Simply create a dot-qmail file called
-'.qmail-mbox-userstr-default' in the alias directory (normally
-/var/qmail/alias) with the contents:
-
-
- | ../bin/qmail-inject -a -f"$SENDER" "${LOCAL#mbox-userstr-}@$HOST"
-
+Ensure the option 'qvirtual "mbox-userstr-"
' is
+in the fetchmail config file, in order to remove this prefix from the
+username. (added by Luca Olivetti)
-Note this does require a modern /bin/sh.
-
-Peter Wilson adds:
-
-"My ISP uses "alias-unzzippedcom-" as the prefix, which means
-that I need to name my file ".qmail-unzzippedcom-default". This is
-due to qmail's assumption that a message sent to user-xyz is
-handled by the file ~user/.qmail-xyz (or
-~user/.qmail-default)."
-
-Luca Olivetti adds:
-
-If you aren't using qmail locally, or you don't want to set up
-the alias mechanism described above, you can use the option
-'qvirtual "mbox-userstr-"
' in your fetchmail config
-file to strip the prefix from the local user name.
+Ensure you have a localdomains
option containing
+'userdom.example.com
' or 'userhost.userdom.example.com
'
+respectively.
+
T3. How can I use fetchmail with
exim?
@@ -1560,38 +1582,10 @@ IMAP?
How to make fetchmail work with various servers
-S1. How can I use fetchmail with
-qpopper?
-
-Qualcomm's qpopper is probably the best-of-breed among POP3
-servers, and is very widely deployed. Nevertheless, it has some
-problems which fetchmail exposes. We recommend using IMAP instead if at all possible. If you must talk to
-qpopper, here are some problems to be aware of:
-
-Problems with retrieving large messages from qpopper 2.53
-
-Tony Tang <tony@atn.com.hk> reports
-that there is a bad intercation between fetchmail and qpopper 2.5.3
-under Red Hat Linux versions 5.0 to 5.2, kernels 2.0.34 to 2.0.35.
-When fetching very large messages (over 700K) from 2.5.3, fetchmail
-will hang with a socket error.
-
-This is probably not a fetchmail bug, but rather a symptom of
-some problem in the networking stack that qpopper's transmission
-pattern is tickling, as fetchpop (another Linux POP client) also
-displays the hang but Netscape running under Win95 does not. The
-problem can also be banished by upgrading to
-qpopper 3.0b1.
-
-Bad interaction with fetchmail 4.4.2 to 4.4.7
-
-Versions of fetchmail from 4.4.2 through 4.4.7 had a bad
-interaction with Eudora qpopper versions 2.3 and later. See X5 for details. The solution is to upgrade your
-fetchmail.
+S1. How can I use fetchmail with
+ qpopper?
+
+The information that used to be here was obsolete and dropped.
S2. How can I use fetchmail with Microsoft
Exchange?
@@ -1601,34 +1595,47 @@ so broken that it's unusable. One symptom is that messages without
a terminating newline get the POP3 message termination dot emitted
-- you guessed it -- right after the last character of the message,
with no terminating newline added. This will hang fetchmail or any
-other RFC-compliant server. IMAP is alleged to work OK, though.
+other RFC-compliant client. IMAP is alleged to work OK, though.
+
+Exchange 2003 SP2 has been observed to alter MIME boundary
+lines in multipart messages between one IMAP FETCH command and the next
+under some circumstances -- for instance, when the top-level
+Content-Transfer-Encoding is "binary" (which is commonplace with Perl's
+MIME::Lite module). This causes MUAs to not detect attachments, but
+render the whole message body as one lump of hardly legible to
+unintelligible text, rather than nicely presenting text part and
+attachments or images separately. The cause is that Exchange uses its
+own message store and needs to convert back to MIME message format
+on-the-fly, and apparently this is sometimes subject to such
+inconsistencies.
+
-Older versions of Exchange are semi-usable. They randomly drop
-attachments on the floor, though. Microsoft acknowledges this
-as a known bug and apparently has no plans to fix it.
+Fetchmail using IMAP usually supports the proprietary NTLM mode used
+with Microsoft Exchange servers. "Usually" here means that it fails on some
+servers for reasons that we haven't been able to debug yet, perhaps it's
+related to the NTLM domain.
-Fetchmail using IMAP supports the proprietary NTLM mode used
-with M$ Exchange servers. To enable this, configure fetchmail with
+
To enable this NTLM mode, configure fetchmail with
the --enable-NTLM option and recompile it. Specify a user option
value that looks like 'user@domain': the part to the left of the @
will be passed as the username and the part to the right as the
NTLM domain.
-M$ Exchange violates the POP3 and IMAP RFCs. Its LIST command
+
Microsoft Exchange violates the POP3 and IMAP RFCs. Its LIST command
does not reveal the real sizes of mail in the pop mailbox, but the
sizes of the compressed versions in the exchange mail database
(thanks to Arjan De Vet and Guido Van Rooij for alerting us to this
problem).
-Fetchmail works with M$ Exchange, despite this brain damage. Two
-features are compromised. One is that the --limit option will not
+
Fetchmail works with Microsoft Exchange, despite this brain damage.
+Two features are compromised. One is that the --limit option will not
work right (it will check against compressed and not actual sizes).
The other is that a too-small SIZE argument may be passed to your
ESMTP listener, assuming you're using one (this should not be a
problem unless the actual size of the message is above the
listener's configured length limit).
-Somewhat belatedly, I've learned that there's supposed to be a
+
ESR learned that there's supposed to be a
registry bit that can fix this breakage:
@@ -1692,7 +1699,7 @@ reported in KB Q168109)
deleted.
-The Microsoft pod-person who revealed this information to me
+
The Microsoft employee who revealed this information to ESR
admitted that he couldn't find it anywhere in their public
knowledge base.
@@ -1700,7 +1707,7 @@ knowledge base.
as its symptom a response to LOGIN that says "NO Ambiguous Alias".
Grant Edwards writes:
-This means that Exchange Server is too f*&#ing stupid to
+
This means that Exchange Server is too [...] stupid to
figure out which mailbox belongs to you. Instead of actually
keeping track of which inbox belongs to which user, it uses some
half-witted, guess-o-matic heuristic to try to guess your mailbox
@@ -1708,9 +1715,7 @@ name from your username.
In your case it doesn't work because your username maps to more
than one mailbox. For some people it doesn't work because their
-username maps to zero mailboxes. This is yet another inept, lame,
-almost criminally negligent design decision from our friends in
-Redmond.
+username maps to zero mailboxes.
You've got several options:
@@ -1721,11 +1726,7 @@ usernames and mailbox names are the same.
Get your administrator to add an alias that maps your username
explicitly to your mailbox name.
-
-But, the best option involves a tactical nuclear weapon (an old
-ASROC will do), pissing off a lot people who live downwind from
-Redmond, and your choice of any Linux, NetBSD, FreeBSD, or Solaris
-CD-ROM.
+
S3. How can I use fetchmail with HP
OpenMail?
@@ -1736,39 +1737,33 @@ href="#S2">Microsoft Exchange. The message sizes it gives in
the LIST are rounded to the nearest 1024 bytes. It also has a nasty
habit of discarding headers it doesn't recognize, such as X- and
Resent- headers.
-
-As with M$ Exchange, the only real fix for these problems is to
-get a POP (or preferably IMAP) server that isn't brain-dead.
-OpenMail's project manager claims these bugs have been fixed in
+
OpenMail's project manager claims these bugs have been fixed in
6.0.
We've had a more recent report (December 2001) that the TOP
-command fails, returning only one line regrardless of its argument,
+command fails, returning only one line regardless of its argument,
on something identifying itself as "OpenMail POP3 interface".
S4. How can I use fetchmail with Novell GroupWise?
-The Novell GroupWise IMAP server would be better named
-GroupFoolish; it is (according to the designer of IMAP) unusably
-broken. Among other things, it doesn't include a required content
-length in its BODY[TEXT] response.
+The Novell GroupWise IMAP server is (according to the designer of
+IMAP) unusably broken. Among other things, it doesn't include a required
+content length in its BODY[TEXT] response.
-Fetchmail works around this problem, but we strongly recommend
-voting with your dollars for a server that isn't brain-dead. If you
-stick with code as shoddy as GroupWise seems to be, you will
-probably pay for it with other problems.
+Fetchmail works around this problem to some extent, but no guarantees.
S5. How can I use fetchmail with
InterChange?
You can't. At least not if you want to be able to see
-attachments. InterChange has a bug similar to the MailMax server;
+attachments. InterChange has a bug similar to the MailMax server (see below):
it reports the message length with attachments but doesn't download
them on TOP or RETR.
-On Jan 9 2001, the people at InfiniteMail sent me mail informing
-me that their new 3.61.08 release of InterChange fixes this
-problem. I don't have any reports one way or the other yet.
+On Jan 9 2001, the people at InfiniteMail sent ESR mail informing
+him that their new 3.61.08 release of InterChange fixed this
+problem.
S6. How can I use fetchmail with MailMax?
@@ -1921,10 +1916,6 @@ it to use RETR instead.
You may need to raise the MaxHopCount parameter in your sendmail.cf
to avoid having fetched mail rejected.
-(Note: Other failure modes have been reported on usa.net's
-servers. They seem to be chronically flaky. We recommend finding
-another provider.)
-
I4. How can I use fetchmail with geocities
POP3 servers?
@@ -1946,9 +1937,6 @@ mda "sed -e '1s/^\t/Received: /' | formail | /usr/bin/procmail -d <user>"
Geocities' servers sometimes think that the first 45 messages have
already been read.
-Fix: Get an email provider that doesn't suck. The pop-up ads on
-Geocities are lame, you should boycott them anyway.
-
I5. How can I use fetchmail with Hotmail or Lycos Webmail?
You can't directly. But you can use fetchmail with hotmail or lycos
@@ -2011,20 +1999,47 @@ sites.)
Workaround for older versions: use the fetchall option.
+I9. How can I use fetchmail with GMail/Google Mail?
+
+Google's IMAP servers, as of April 2008, are broken and re-encode
+MIME-encoded headers improperly and are not feature-complete yet. The
+model how their servers organize mail also deviates in significant ways
+from what the POP3 or IMAP protocol 'fathers' conceived. This means all
+sorts of strange effects, for instance, your sent mail may show up in
+the mail that fetchmail fetches. It's best to avoid fetching mail from
+Google until they are using standards-compliant software.
+
+If you still need to use Google's mail service, these links may help (valid as of 2011-04-13):
+
+
How to set up well-known security and authentication
methods
K1. How can I use fetchmail with SOCKS?
-Giuseppe Guerini added a --with-socks option that supports
-linking with socks library. If you specify the value of this option
-as "yes", the configure script will try to find the Rconnect
+
Giuseppe Guerini added a --with-socks compile-time option
+that supports linking with socks library. If you specify the value of
+this option as "yes", the configure script will try to find the Rconnect
library and set the makefile up to link it. You can also specify a
directory containing the Rconnect library.
-Alan Schmitt has added a similar --with-socks5 option that may
+
Alan Schmitt has added a similar --with-socks5 option that may
work better if you have a recent version of the SOCKS library.
+In either case, fetchmail has no direct configuration hooks, but you
+can specify which socks configuration file the library should read by
+means of the SOCKS_CONF environment variable. In order to
+bypass the SOCKS proxy altogether, you could run (adding your usual
+options to the end of this line):
+
+env SOCKS_CONF=/dev/null fetchmail
+
K2. How can I use fetchmail with IPv6 and
IPsec?
@@ -2073,19 +2088,17 @@ shouldn't be a problem.
IMAP-GSS protocol?
Fetchmail can use RFC1731 GSSAPI authorization to safely
-identify you to your IMAP server, as long as you can share Kerberos
-V credentials with your mail host and you have a GSSAPI-capable
-IMAP server. UW-IMAP (available via FTP at ftp.cac.washington.edu)
-is the only one I'm aware of and the one I recommend anyway for
-other reasons. You'll need version 4.1-FINAL or greater though, and
-it has to have GSS support compiled in.
-
-Neither UW-IMAP nor fetchmail compile in support for GSS by
-default, since it requires libraries from the Kerberos V
-distribution (available via FTP at athena-dist.mit.edu).
-If you have these, compiling in GSS support is simple: add a
+identify you to your IMAP server, as long as you can share
+Kerberos V credentials with your mail host and you have a GSSAPI-capable
+IMAP server.
+
+fetchmail does not compile in support for GSS by
+default, since it requires libraries from a Kerberos V
+distribution, such as MIT
+ Kerberos or Heimdal
+ Kerberos.
+
+If you have these, compiling in GSS support is simple: add a
--with-gssapi=[/path/to/krb5/root]
option to
configure. For instance, I have all of my Kerberos V libraries
installed under /usr/krb5 so I run configure
@@ -2112,21 +2125,18 @@ cleartext in your .fetchmailrc, or across the network.
SSL?
You'll need to have the OpenSSL libraries installed.
+href="http://www.openssl.org/">OpenSSL libraries installed, and they
+should at least be version 0.9.7.
Configure with --with-ssl. If you have the OpenSSL libraries
-installed in the default location (/usr/local/ssl) ths will
+installed in commonly-used default locations, this will
suffice. If you have them installed in a non-default location,
-you'll need to specify it as an argument to --with-ssl after an
-equal sign.
-
-Note that there is a known bug in the implementation of SSL_peek
-under OpenSSL versions 0.9.5 and older that fetchmail occasionally
-tripped over, causing hangs. It is recommended that you install
-0.9.6 or later.
+you'll need to specify the OpenSSL installation directory as an argument
+to --with-ssl after an equal sign.
Fetchmail binaries built this way support ssl
,
sslkey
, and sslcert
options that control
-SSL encryption. You will need to have an SSL-enabled mailserver to
+SSL encryption, and will automatically use tls
if the
+server offers it. You will need to have an SSL-enabled mailserver to
use these options. See the manual page for details and some words
of care on the limited security provided.
@@ -2143,7 +2153,8 @@ fetchmail is primarily designed to run forever as a background
daemon, that option is not available in this case.
If you don't have the libraries installed, but do have the
-OpenSSL utility toolkit, something like this may work:
+OpenSSL utility toolkit, something like this may work (but will not
+authenticate the server):
poll MYSERVER port 993 plugin "openssl s_client -connect %h:%p"
@@ -2214,7 +2225,8 @@ a man-in-the-middle attack is in progress - or it might just mean that the
server changed its key. It's up to you to determine which has happened.
K6. How can I tell fetchmail not to use TLS
- if the server advertises it?
+ if the server advertises it? Why does fetchmail use SSL even
+ though not configured?
Some servers advertise STLS (POP3) or STARTTLS (IMAP), and fetchmail
will automatically attempt TLS negotiation if SSL was enabled at compile
@@ -2330,6 +2342,10 @@ broken.
R3. Fetchmail dumps core when given an
invalid rc file.
+Note that this bug should no longer occur when using prepackaged
+fetchmail versions or installing unmodified original tarballs, since
+these ship with a proper parser .c file.
+
This is usually reported from AIX or Ultrix, but has even been
known to happen on Linuxes without a recent version of
flex
installed. The problem appears to be a result of
@@ -2340,23 +2356,11 @@ building with an archaic version of lex.
Fix: build and install the latest version of flex.
-R4. Fetchmail dumps core in -V mode, but
-operates normally otherwise.
-
-We've had this reported to us under Linux using libc-5.4.17 and
-gcc-2.7.2. It does not occur with libc-5.3.12 or earlier
-versions.
-
-Workaround: link with GNU malloc rather than the stock C library
-malloc.
+R4. Fetchmail dumps core in -V mode, but
+ operates normally otherwise.
-We're told there is some problem with the malloc() code in that
-version which makes it fragile in the presence of multiple free()
-calls on the same pointer (the malloc arena gets corrupted).
-Unfortunately it appears from doing gdb traces that whatever free()
-calls producing the problem are being made by the C library itself,
-not the fetchmail code (they're all from within fclose, and not an
-fclose called directly by fetchmail, either).
+The information that used to be here referred to bugs in Linux libc5
+ systems, which are deemed obsolete by now.
R5. Running fetchmail in daemon mode
doesn't work.
@@ -2366,7 +2370,7 @@ doesn't work.
fetchmail in detached daemon mode doesn't work, but that using the
same options with -N (nodetach) is OK. We have another report of
similar behavior from one Linux user, but many other Linux users
-reportt no problem.
+report no problem.
If this happens, you have a specific portability problem with
the code in daemon.c that detaches and backgrounds the daemon
@@ -2449,22 +2453,16 @@ fetches
This is probably a general networking issue. Sending a "RETR"
command will cause the server to start sending large amounts of
data, which means large packets. If your networking layer has a
-packet-fragmentation problem, that's where you'll see it.
+packet-fragmentation problem or improper firewall settings break Path
+MTU discovery (when for instance all ICMP traffic is blocked), that's
+where you'll see it.
-R10. Fetchmail is dying with
-SIGPIPE.
+R10. Fetchmail is dying with
+ SIGPIPE.
-This probably means you have an mda
option. Your
-MDA is croaking while being passed a message. Best fix is to remove
-the mda
option and pass mail to your port 25 SMTP
-listener.
-
-If for some reason you are invoking sendmail via the
-mda option (rather than delivering to port 25 via smtp),
-don't forget to include the -i switch. Otherwise you will
-occasionally get mysterious delivery failures with a SIGPIPE as the
-sendmail instance dies. The problem is messages with a single dot
-at start of a text line.
+Fetchmail 6.3.5 and newer block SIGPIPE, and many older versions have
+ already handled this signal, so you shouldn't be seeing SIGPIPE
+at all.
R11. My server is hanging or emitting
errors on CAPA.
@@ -2490,6 +2488,70 @@ declaration auth password in your .fetchmailrc.
POP3+SSL | 995 |
+Non-fatal signals (such as timers set by fetchmail itself) can
+interrupt long-running functions and will then be reported as
+"Interrupted system call". These can sometimes be timeouts.
+
+If the upgrade you did encompassed an upgrade to OpenSSL 1.0.0 or newer, you
+may need to run c_rehash
on your certificate directories,
+particularly if you are using local certs directories (f. i. through fetchmail's --sslcertpath
option).
+
+Reason: OpenSSL 1.0.0, relative to earlier versions, uses a different hash
+for the symbolic links (symlinks) in its certs/
directory, so you
+need to recreate the symlinks by running c_rehash
+ /etc/ssl/certs (adjust this to where your installation keeps its
+certificates), and you cannot easily share this certs directory with
+applications linked against older OpenSSL versions.
+
+First, try upgrading to fetchmail 6.3.18 or newer. Release 6.3.18 has
+received a considerable number of bug fixes for the authentication
+feature (AUTH, AUTHENTICATE, SASL). Most notably, fetchmail aborts SASL
+authentication attempts properly with an asterisk if it detects that it
+cannot make progress with a particular authentication scheme. This fixes
+issues where GSSAPI-enabled fetchmail cannot authenticate against
+Microsoft Exchange 2007 and 2010. Note that this is a
+bug in old fetchmail versions!
+
+Fetchmail by default attempts to authenticate using various schemes.
+Fetchmail tries these schemes in order of descending security, meaning
+the most secure schemes are tried first.
+
+However, sometimes the server offers a secure authentication scheme
+that is not properly configured, or an authentication scheme such as
+GSSAPI does requires credentials to be acquired externally. In some
+situations, fetchmail cannot know the scheme will fail without trying
+it. In most cases, fetchmail should proceed to the next authentication
+scheme automatically, but this sometimes does not work.
+
+One POP3 daemon used in the Berkeley Unix world that reports
itself as POP3 version 1.004 actually throws the queue away. 1.005
fixed that. If you're running this one, upgrade immediately. (It
-also truncates long lines at column 1024)
+also truncates long lines at column 1024.)
Many POP servers, if an interruption occurs, will restore the
-whole mail queue after about 10 minutes. Others will restore it
+whole mail queue after about 10 minutes. Better ones will restore it
right away. If you have an interruption and don't see it right
away, cross your fingers and wait ten minutes before retrying.
-Some servers (such as Microsoft's NTMail) are mis-designed to
-restore the entire queue, including messages you have deleted. If
-you have one of these and it flakes out on you a lot, try setting a
-small --fetchlimit
value. This will result in more IP
-connects to the server, but will mean it actually executes changes
-to the queue more often.
-
-Qualcomm's qpopper, used at many BSD Unix sites, is better
-behaved. If its connection is dropped, it will first execute all
-DELE commands as though you had issued a QUIT (this is a technical
-violation of the POP3 RFCs, but a good idea in a world of flaky
-phone lines). Then it will re-queue any message that was being
-downloaded at hangup time. Still, qpopper may require a noticeable
-amount of time to do deletions and clean up its queue. (Fetchmail
-waits a bit before retrying in order to avoid a 'lock busy'
-error.)
+Good servers are designed to restore the entire queue, including
+messages you have deleted. If you have one of these and it flakes out on
+you a lot, try setting a small --fetchlimit
value. This
+will result in more IP connects to the server, but will mean it actually
+executes changes to the queue more often.
Somehow your fetchmail is never recognizing the hostname part of
-recipient names it parses out of To/Cc/envelope-header lines as
-matching the name of the mailserver machine. To check this, run
+recipient names it parses out of Envelope-header lines (or these are
+improperly configured) as
+matching a name within the designated domains. To check this, run
fetchmail in foreground with -v -v on. You will probably see a lot
of messages with the format "line rejected, %s is not an alias of
the mailserver" or "no address matches; forwarding to %s."
-These errors usually indicate some kind of DNS configuration
-problem either on the server or your client machine.
+These errors usually indicate some kind of configuration
+problem.
It would be better to fix your DNS, however. DNS problems can
-hurt you in lots of ways, for example by making your machines
-intermittently or permanently unreachable to the rest of the
-net.
+necessary) and add enough 'Occasionally these errors indicate the sort of header-parsing
problem described in M7.
@@ -2688,8 +2734,11 @@ setting up a UUCP feed.
If neither of these alternatives is available, multidrop mode
may do (though you are going to get hurt by some mailing
list software; see the caveats under THE USE AND ABUSE OF MULTIDROP
-MAILBOXES on the man page). If you want to try it, the way to do it
-is with the 'localdomains
' option.
+MAILBOXES on the man page, and check what is needed at Some ways of accumulating a whole domain's messages in a single
server mailbox mean it all ends up with a single envelope address
-that is useless for rerouting purposes. You may have to set
+that is useless for rerouting purposes. In this particular case, sell
+your ISP a clue. If that does not work, you may have to set
'no envelope
' to prevent fetchmail from being
-bamboozled by this.
+bamboozled by this, but a missing envelope makes multidrop routing
+unreliable.
As of 2.2, the configure script has been hacked so the bind
-library is linked only if it is actually needed. So under Linux it
-won't be, and this problem should go away.
+The real solution however is to make sure that fetchmail can find the
+envelope recipient properly, which will reliably prevent this message
+duplication.
+
Fetchmail is sometimes reported to deliver partial messages. This
+is usually related to network outages that occur while fetchmail is
+downloading a message body. In such cases, fetchmail has downloaded a
+complete header, so your header will be intact. The message body will be
+truncated, and fetchmail will later attempt to redownload the
+message (providing the server is standards conformant).
+
+The reason for the truncation is that fetchmail streams the body
+directly from the POP3/IMAP server into the SMTP/LMTP server or MDA (in
+order to save memory), so fetchmail has already written a part of the
+message before it notices it will be incomplete, and fetchmail cannot
+abort a transaction it has started, and it's unclear if it ever will be
+able to, because this is not standardized and the outcome will depend on
+the receiving software (be it SMTP/LMTP or MDA).
+
This is a feature, not a bug. It's in line with normal practice
for system daemons and allows you to suppress logging by removing
-the log, without hacking potentially fragile startup scripts. To
-get around it, just touch(1) the logfile before you run fetchmail
-(this will have no effect on the contents of the logfile if it
-already exists).
+the log file, without hacking potentially fragile startup scripts.
+To get around it, just touch(1) the logfile before you run fetchmail
+(this will have no effect on the contents of the logfile if it already
+exists).
-No, but versions 5.2.2 and later will notice when you modify
-your rc file and restart, reading it.
+your rc file and restart, reading it. Note that this causes troubles if
+you need to provide a password via the console, unless you're running in
+--nodetach mode.
Because you're using a POP3 other than Qualcomm qpopper, or an
-IMAP with a long expunge interval.
-
According to the POP3 RFCs, deletes aren't actually performed
until you issue the end-of-session QUIT command. Fetchmail cannot
-fix this, because doing it right takes cooperation from the server.
-There are two possible remedies:
-
-One is to switch to qpopper (the free POP3 server from Qualcomm,
-the Eudora people). The qpopper software violates the POP3 RFCs by
-doing an expunge (removing deleted messages) on a line hangup, as
-well as on processing a QUIT command.
+fix this, but there is a workaround: use the --expunge option with a
+reasonably low figure that works for you. Try 10 for a start.
-IMAP is less susceptible to this problem, because the "deleted"
+message marks are persistent, but they aren't in POP3. Note that the
+--expunge default for IMAP is different than the default for POP3.
If you get very unlucky, you might take a line hit in the window
between the delete and the expunge. If you've set a longer expunge
@@ -3377,18 +3420,21 @@ hangs near the start of each poll cycle.
also each time it gets a HELO in listener mode.
Your resolver configuration may be causing one of these lookups
-to fail and time out. Check /etc/resolv.conf
and
-/etc/hosts
file. Make sure your hostname and
-fully-qualified domain name are both in /etc/hosts
,
-and that hosts is looked at before DNS is queried. You probably
-also want your remote mail server(s) to be in the hosts file.
+to fail and time out. Check your Configuring your bind library to cache DNS lookups locally may
help, and is a good idea for speeding up other services as well.
-Switching to a faster MTA like qmail or exim might help.
+Switching to a faster MTA like There are various forms of lossage involving the POP3 UIDL
-feature that can lead to all your old messages being seen again
-after a line drop. I have given up trying to fix these, as the UIDL
-code breaks worse every time I touch it. The problem is
-fundamental; maintaining and garbage-collecting the right kind of
-client-side state is just hard. Whoever put UIDLs in RFC1725 and
-removed LAST should be hung up by his thumbs and whipped with
-scorpions. The right answers are either (a) live with the
-occasional breakage, (b) switch to IMAP4, or (c) fix the code
-yourself and send me a patch. Unless you choose (c), I don't want
-to hear about it.
+turn one of them off - which one, depends on why they have been set in
+the first place, and to a lesser degree on the upstream server.
This can also happen when some other mail client is logged in to
your mail server, if it uses a simple exclusive-locking scheme (and
@@ -3448,45 +3483,17 @@ is write-locked by the other instance yours can neither mark
messages seen or delete them. The solution is to either (a) wait
for the other client to finish, or (b) terminate it.
-Unfortunately, this is exactly the way POP3 servers are supposed
-to behave on a line drop, according to the RFCs. I recommend
-switching to IMAP and using a short expunge interval.
-
-This is a design choice in your MTA, not fetchmail. It's taking
-the received date from the last Received header.
+This is your server barfing on the CAPA probe that fetchmail sends.
+This is your server barfing on the CAPA probe that fetchmail sends.
+Because some servers like to drop the connection after that probe,
+fetchmail will re-poll immediately with this probe defeated.
If you run fetchmail in daemon mode (say "set daemon 600"), you will
get the message only once per run.
@@ -3510,7 +3517,8 @@ not keen on checking the sender addresses. This problem typically
occurs if your mail server is not checking the sender addresses, but
your local server is.
-Or, you could check your nameserver configuration and query logs for
dns errors.
@@ -3520,7 +3528,7 @@ dns errors.