| upas: |
| from thread(3): |
| It is not safe to call rfork in a threaded program, except to call |
| rfork(RFNOTEG) from the main proc before any other procs have been cre- |
| ated. To create new processes, use proccreate. |
| |
| |
| upas/fs: |
| when serving a file writes tbox.tmp when writing back tbox. |
| make L.mbox in home directory (sometimes) |
| |
| =======> auth stuff: |
| Server, Certificate, ... |
| |
| * POP3/IMAP Server (receiving emails): mail.physik.fu-berlin.de (unchanged) |
| * SMTP Server (sending emails): mail.physik.fu-berlin.de (unchanged and not relevant for this change [no STARTTLS/SMTP_AUTH]) |
| * Certificate Authority (CA) Certificate: cacert.crt (CN=ZEDV) |
| SHA1 Fingerprint: 37:19:00:47:BB:91:20:94:3B:AA:A7:75:57:D5:4C:0D:EA:5C:18:D9 |
| MD5 Fingerprint: 56:58:1C:91:DC:08:1B:42:D0:C2:D6:D4:FF:28:AE:C5 |
| * mail.physik.fu-berlin.de Fingerprints (IMAP/POP3): |
| SHA1 Fingerprint: 75:C6:A5:1E:CB:F4:33:2E:95:85:A0:65:87:71:19:08:3D:19:FE:7D |
| MD5 Fingerprint: 67:76:23:98:65:0A:39:44:5B:79:BD:91:31:49:59:7A |
| |
| The fingerprints can be displayed in the mail clients and can be optained using: |
| |
| openssl s_client -connect mail.physik.fu-berlin.de:993 -showcerts # IMAP |
| openssl s_client -connect mail.physik.fu-berlin.de:995 -showcerts # POP3 |
| |
| Save all between -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- and -----END CERTIFICATE----- |
| |
| openssl x509 -noout -fingerprint -in mail.physik.fu-berlin.de.pem # MD5 |
| openssl x509 -sha1 -noout -fingerprint -in mail.physik.fu-berlin.de.pem # SHA1 |
| |
| <======= auth stuff |
| |
| upas/ned: |
| need to understand singleton stuff. |
| |
| need to understand wait (cf lpdaemon.c ~315) is it safe to fork in a threaded prog? shoud i use proccreate? |
| |
| routines to check/fix: |
| appendtofile() |
| switchmb() |
| rooted() |
| plumb() <= understand how this works, it may help in deciding how to present attachments in acme/Mail |
| |
| |
| upas/marshal: |
| some attachments work, some don't. looks like pdf files work while ps don't!? problem in body64() |
| actually, it seems like the size of attachment is the problem: large attacments don't seem to work, somewhere between 19967 and 161065 is the failure point. |