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Pigeonhole project: Sieve support for Dovecot.
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Pigeonhole for Dovecot v2.4 Introduction ============ This package is part of the Pigeonhole project (http://pigeonhole.dovecot.org). It adds support for the Sieve language (RFC 5228) and the ManageSieve protocol (RFC 5804) to the Dovecot Secure IMAP Server. In the literal sense, a pigeonhole is a a hole or recess inside a dovecot for pigeons to nest in. It is, however, also the name for one of a series of small, open compartments in a cabinet used for filing or sorting mail. As a verb, it describes the act of putting an item into one of those pigeonholes. The name `Pigeonhole' therefore well describes an important part of the functionality that this project adds to Dovecot: sorting and filing e-mail messages. The Sieve language is used to specify how e-mail needs to be processed. By writing Sieve scripts, users can customize how messages are delivered, e.g. whether they are forwarded or stored in special folders. Unwanted messages can be discarded or rejected, and, when the user is not available, the Sieve interpreter can send an automated reply. Above all, the Sieve language is meant to be simple, extensible and system independent. And, unlike most other mail filtering script languages, it does not allow users to execute arbitrary programs. This is particularly useful to prevent virtual users from having full access to the mail store. The intention of the language is to make it impossible for users to do anything more complex (and dangerous) than write simple mail filters. Using the ManageSieve protocol, users can upload their Sieve scripts remotely, without needing direct filesystem access through FTP or SCP. Additionally, a ManageSieve server always makes sure that uploaded scripts are valid, preventing compile failures at mail delivery. This package provides Sieve support as a plugin to Dovecot's Local Delivery Agent (LDA) and Dovecot's LMTP service. The ManageSieve protocol is provided is an additional service, next to Dovecot's own POP3 and IMAP services. Features ======== * The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation aims to be admin- and user-friendly. Much like Dovecot itself, common error messages are made as easily understandable as possible. Any crash, no matter how it happened, is considered a bug that will be fixed. The compiler does not bail on the first error, but it looks for more script errors to make debugging more efficient. * The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation is, much like the Sieve language itself, highly extensible with new Sieve capabilities. This includes support for third-party plugins. It should eventually provide the necessary infrastructure for at least all currently known relevant (proposed) Sieve extensions. The goal is to keep the extension interface provided by the Sieve implementation as generic as possible, i.e. without explicit support for specific extensions. New similar extensions can then use the same interface methods without changes to the Sieve engine code. If an extension is not loaded using the require command, the compiler truly does not know of its existence. * The Pigeonhole Sieve plugin is backwards compatible with the old CMUSieve plugin, which provided Sieve support for older versions of Dovecot. All Sieve extensions supported by the old plugin are also supported by the Pigeonhole Sieve plugin, including those that are now considered to be deprecated. * The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation supports executing multiple Sieve scripts sequentially. Using this feature it is possible to execute administrator-controlled Sieve scripts before and after the user's personal Sieve script, guaranteeing that responses and message deliveries are never duplicated. This implementation is based on a draft specification (http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-degener-sieve-multiscript-00), which defines the Sieve behavior when multiple scripts are executed sequentially on the same message. * The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation includes a test suite to automatically assess whether the compiled Sieve engine works correctly. The test suite is an extension to the Sieve language and is therefore easily extended with new tests. Currently, the test suite is mostly limited to testing script processing. The performed actions are not tested fully yet. * The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation supports the new and very useful variables extension, which allows maintaining state information throughout a Sieve script across subsequent rules. * The Pigeonhole Sieve plugin is distributed with a sieve-test tool that simplifies testing Sieve scripts and provides additional debugging facilities. Sieve Implementation Status =========================== The core of the language (as specified in RFC 5228) is fully supported. In addition to that, this Sieve implementation features various extensions. The following list outlines the implementation status of each supported extension: The language extensions defined in the base specification are fully supported: encoded-character (RFC 5228; page 10) fileinto (RFC 5228; page 23) envelope (RFC 5228; page 27) The following Sieve language extensions are also supported: copy (RFC 3894): fully supported. body (RFC 5173): fully supported. environment (RFC 5183): fully supported (v0.4.0+). variables (RFC 5229): fully supported. vacation (RFC 5230): fully supported. + vacation-seconds (RFC 6131): fully supported (v0.2.3+). relational (RFC 5231): fully supported. imap4flags (RFC 5232): fully supported. subaddress (RFC 5233): fully supported, but with limited configurability. spamtest and virustest (RFC 5235): fully supported (v0.1.16+). date (RFC 5260; Section 4): fully supported (v0.1.12+). index (RFC 5260; Section 6): fully supported (v0.4.7+). editheader (RFC 5293): fully supported (v0.3.0+). reject (RFC 5429; Section 2.2): fully supported. enotify (RFC 5435): fully supported (v0.1.3+). mailto method (RFC 5436): fully supported (v0.1.3+). xmpp method (RFC 5437): is under development and will become available as a plugin. ihave (RFC 5463): fully supported (v0.2.4+). mailbox (RFC 5490; Section 3): fully supported (v0.1.10+), but ACL permissions are not verified for mailboxexists. mboxmetadata and servermetadata (RFC 5490): fully supported (v0.4.7+) foreverypart (RFC 5703; Section 3): fully supported (v0.4.10+). mime (RFC 5703; Section 4): fully supported (v0.4.10+). extracttext (RFC 5703; Section 7): fully supported (v0.4.12+). include (RFC 6609): fully supported (v0.4.0+). imapsieve (RFC 6785): fully supported (v0.4.14+). duplicate (RFC 7352): fully supported (v0.4.3+). regex (draft v08; not latest version): almost fully supported, but UTF-8 is not supported. The following deprecated extensions are supported for backwards compatibility: imapflags (obsolete draft): fully backwards compatible (v0.1.3+) notify (obsolete draft): fully backwards compatible (v0.1.15+) The availability of these deprecated extensions is disabled by default. The following Dovecot-specific Sieve extensions are available: vnd.dovecot.debug (v0.3.0+): Allows logging debug messages. vnd.dovecot.execute (v0.4.0+; sieve_extprograms plugin): Implements executing a pre-defined set of external programs with the option to process string data through the external program. vnd.dovecot.filter (v0.4.0+; sieve_extprograms plugin): Implements filtering messages through a pre-defined set of external programs. vnd.dovecot.pipe (v0.4.0+; sieve_extprograms plugin): Implements piping messages to a pre-defined set of external programs. vnd.dovecot.report (v0.4.14): Implements sending MARF reports (RFC 5965). The following extensions are under development: ereject (RFC 5429; page 4): implemented, but currently equal to reject. Many more extensions to the language exist. Not all of these extensions are useful for Dovecot in particular, but many of them are. Currently, the author has taken notice of the following extensions: replace (RFC 5703; Section 5): planned. enclose (RFC 5703; Section 6): planned. envelope-dsn, envelope-deliverby, redirect-dsn and redirect-deliverby (RFC 6009): planned; depends on lib-smtp changes in Dovecot. extlists (RFC 6134): planned. convert (RFC 6558): under consideration. These extensions will be added as soon as the necessary infrastructure is available. Compiling and Configuring ========================= Refer to INSTALL file. Sieve Tools =========== To test the sieve engine outside deliver, it is useful to try the commands that exist in the src/sieve-tools/ directory of this package. After installation, these are available at your $prefix/bin directory. The following commands are installed: sievec - Compiles sieve scripts into a binary representation for later execution. Refer to the next section on manually compiling Sieve scripts. sieve-test - This is a universal Sieve test tool for testing the effect of a Sieve script on a particular message. It allows compiling, running and testing Sieve scripts. It can either be used to display the actions that would be performed on the provided test message or it can be used to test the actual delivery of the message and show the messages that would normally be sent through SMTP. sieve-dump - Dumps the content of a Sieve binary file for (development) debugging purposes. sieve-filter - Allow running Sieve filters on messages already stored in a mailbox. When installed, man pages are also available for these commands. In this package the man pages are present in doc/man and can be viewed before install using e.g.: man -l doc/man/sieve-test.1 Various example scripts are bundled in the directory 'examples'. These scripts were downloaded from various locations. View the top comment in the scripts for url and author information. Compiling Sieve Scripts ======================= When the LDA Sieve plugin executes a script for the first time (or after it has been changed), it is compiled into into a binary form. The Pigeonhole Sieve implementation uses the .svbin extension to store compiled Sieve scripts (e.g. .dovecot.svbin). To store the binary, the plugin needs write access in the directory in which the script is located. A problem occurs when a global script is encountered by the plugin. For security reasons, global script directories are not supposed to be writable by the user. Therefore, the plugin cannot store the binary when the script is first compiled. Note that this doesn't mean that the old compiled version of the script is used when the binary cannot be written: it compiles and uses the current script version. The only real problem is that the plugin will not be able to update the binary on disk, meaning that the global script needs to be recompiled each time it needs to be executed, i.e. for every incoming message, which is inefficient. To mitigate this problem, the administrator must manually pre-compile global scripts using the sievec command line tool. For example: sievec /var/lib/dovecot/sieve/global/ This is often necessary for scripts listed in the sieve_default, sieve_before and sieve_after settings. For global scripts that are only included in other scripts using the include extension, this step is not necessary, since included scripts are incorporated into the binary produced for the main script located in a user directory. Compile and Runtime Logging =========================== Log messages produced at runtime by the Sieve plugin are written to two locations: * Messages are primarily logged to the user log. By default this log file is located in the same directory as the user's main active personal script (as specified by the sieve setting). This log file bears the name of that script file appended with ".log", e.g. ".dovecot.sieve.log". The location of the user log file can also be explicitly configured using the sieve_user_log setting (e.g. for when Sieve scripts are not stored on the local file system). If there are errors or warnings in the script, the messages are appended to that log file until it eventually grows too large. When that happens, the old log file is rotated to a ".log.0" file and an empty log file is started. Informational messages are not written to this log file and the log file is not created until messages are actually logged, i.e. when an error or warning is produced. * Messages that could be of interest to the system administrator are also written to the Dovecot LDA logging facility (usually syslog). This includes informational messages that indicate what actions are executed on incoming messages. Compile errors encountered in the user's private script are not logged here. The ManageSieve service reports compile errors and warnings only back to the user. System and configuration-related messages are written to the Dovecot logging facility. Known issues ============ Sieve ----- Most open issues are outlined in the TODO file. The more generic ones are (re-) listed here: * Compile errors are sometimes a bit obscure and long. This needs work. Suggestions for improvement are welcome. * The documentation needs work. ManageSieve ----------- For up to date information please visit https://doc.dovecot.org/admin_manual/pigeonhole_managesieve_server/ Authors ======= Refer to AUTHORS file. Contact Info ============ Stephan Bosch <stephan at rename-it dot nl> IRC: Freenode, #dovecot, S[r]us Web: http://pigeonhole.dovecot.org Please use the Dovecot mailing list <dovecot at dovecot.org> for questions about this package. You can post to the list without subscribing, the mail then waits in a moderator queue for a while. See http://dovecot.org/mailinglists.html
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