* sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? @ 2004-01-20 6:14 Rob Browning 2004-01-20 11:53 ` Simon Josefsson ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Rob Browning @ 2004-01-20 6:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Emacs doesn't always check for a non-zero exit status from sendmail, which can lead to silent mail lossage. For example: emacs21 -q [in the *scratch* buffer] (setq sendmail-program "/bin/false") C-j M-x vm-mail RET check that sendmail-program has right value with C-h v fill in a short test message C-c C-c emacs says `Sending...done' (no mail has been sent, of course) Although from reading mail-interactive's description, I wasn't sure if this behavior was a bug or intentional: mail-interactive's value is nil Documentation: *Non-nil means when sending a message wait for and display errors. nil means let mailer mail back a message to report errors. If this isn't just expected behavior, then someone suggested this as a fix: +++ emacs21-21.3+1/lisp/mail/sendmail.el @@ -794,7 +794,7 @@ (require 'mail-utils) (let ((errbuf (if mail-interactive (generate-new-buffer " sendmail errors") - 0)) + t)) (tembuf (generate-new-buffer " sendmail temp")) (case-fold-search nil) (coding (and (local-variable-p 'buffer-file-coding-system) @@ -972,7 +972,7 @@ (args (append (list (point-min) (point-max) program - nil errbuf nil "-oi") + (not mail-interactive) errbuf nil "-oi") (and mail-specify-envelope-from (list "-f" (or mail-envelope-from user-mail-address))) but I wasn't sure that this would be OK since it looks like it would briefly insert, and then remove the sendmail error output from the current buffer whenever mail-interactive is nil. (Thanks to Ian Jackson for the example, and Matt Kraai for the suggested fix.) -- Rob Browning rlb @defaultvalue.org and @debian.org; previously @cs.utexas.edu GPG starting 2002-11-03 = 14DD 432F AE39 534D B592 F9A0 25C8 D377 8C7E 73A4 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-20 6:14 sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? Rob Browning @ 2004-01-20 11:53 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-20 11:53 UTC (permalink / raw) Rob Browning <rlb@defaultvalue.org> writes: > Emacs doesn't always check for a non-zero exit status from sendmail, > which can lead to silent mail lossage. For example: > > emacs21 -q > [in the *scratch* buffer] > (setq sendmail-program "/bin/false") C-j > M-x vm-mail RET > check that sendmail-program has right value with C-h v > fill in a short test message > C-c C-c > emacs says `Sending...done' > (no mail has been sent, of course) > > Although from reading mail-interactive's description, I wasn't sure if > this behavior was a bug or intentional: > > mail-interactive's value is nil > Documentation: *Non-nil means when sending a message wait for and > display errors. nil means let mailer mail back a message to report > errors. It is intentional. I'm not sure it is a good idea, but it has been discussed before. > If this isn't just expected behavior, then someone suggested this as a > fix: I think the proper fix is to change the default value of `mail-interactive' to t instead, but I'm not sure there is agreement to do that. If you don't like the default behaviour of silently ignoring exit codes, you can customize the variable as well, no need to patch the code. IIRC, the motivation for this is that waiting for /usr/sbin/sendmail to exit, and thus return an exit code, can take hours with some MTAs if there is no network connectivity. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-20 6:14 sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? Rob Browning 2004-01-20 11:53 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-21 18:28 ` Kevin Rodgers 2004-01-21 22:33 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2 siblings, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-21 9:21 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel When mail-interactive is nil, Emacs should not wait. Many years ago I found that waiting for sendmail to finish took so long it was intolerable. Maybe that has changed; if so, we could change the default value of mail-interactive to make Emacs wait by default. What experiences do people have? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-21 18:28 ` Kevin Rodgers 2004-01-21 22:33 ` Simon Josefsson 1 sibling, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2004-01-21 18:28 UTC (permalink / raw) Richard Stallman wrote: > When mail-interactive is nil, Emacs should not wait. I think the variable name is confusing. From the user's perspective, sending mail interactively should not force him/her to wait. So when mail-interactive is is non-nil, Emacs should not wait; but when it is nil, it should wait. I.e. reverse the semantics of mail-interactive, or change the name to something like sendmail-send-it-synchronously (since it only applies to sendmail-send-it, not smtpmail-send-it or anything else that might be used for send-mail-function). > Many years ago I found that waiting for sendmail to finish took so > long it was intolerable. Maybe that has changed; if so, we could > change the default value of mail-interactive to make Emacs wait > by default. > > What experiences do people have? It's a lot easier to configure smtpmail.el (in site-start.el) than sendmail itself (in sendmail.cf), and smtpmail-send-it seems fast to me. -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-21 18:28 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2004-01-21 22:33 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-22 19:00 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-21 22:33 UTC (permalink / raw) Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > When mail-interactive is nil, Emacs should not wait. > > Many years ago I found that waiting for sendmail to finish took so > long it was intolerable. Maybe that has changed; if so, we could > change the default value of mail-interactive to make Emacs wait > by default. > > What experiences do people have? It has not changed. I recall (someone please correct me if I misremember) the XEmacs version of sendmail.el actually did change the default, just because the current situation can lead to lost mail, but it was quickly reverted because of the lockups. This was just a few years (1-2) ago. Another solution may be to make sendmail.el more asynchronous, so it can wait for sendmail to exit in the background, and then possibly report the error code. But this may not work well if /usr/lib/sendmail hangs for hours, which appears to sometimes be the case, because the user might quit emacs before sendmail finishes. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-21 22:33 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-22 19:00 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-22 19:09 ` Simon Josefsson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-22 19:00 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel But this may not work well if /usr/lib/sendmail hangs for hours, Are all mailers liable to hang for hours, or is it only Sendmail that does so? For instance, we use Exim. Can Exim hang for hours when you invoke it in this way to send a message? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-22 19:00 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-22 19:09 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-22 19:09 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > But this may not work well if > /usr/lib/sendmail hangs for hours, > > Are all mailers liable to hang for hours, or is it only Sendmail that > does so? For instance, we use Exim. Can Exim hang for hours when you > invoke it in this way to send a message? I don't know. As far as I remember, the reports were not very detailed, just that the change of default behaviour generated problems. Perhaps someone can experiment a little, although I'm not really sure what MTA and what configuration triggers the problem. I suspect that if the MTA is trying to deliver the message to its final destination, then it may hang regardless of what MTA is used. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-22 19:09 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-23 15:13 ` Jan D. 2004-01-25 14:46 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-23 12:29 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: rms, emacs-devel Simon Josefsson writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > I suspect that if the MTA is trying to deliver the message to its > final destination, then it may hang regardless of what MTA is used. IMO the correct way for a MUA to invoke sendmail (on Debian) is /usr/sbin/sendmail -odb -oee ... (To be portable to non-FHS systems, use /usr/lib/sendmail) This is supposed to (a) queue the message, exiting non-0 if unsuccessful (b) fork off a detached delivery attempt, which will deliver the message, leave it queued, or bounce it, as appropriate (c) exit 0, leaving the delivery attempting going The problem that RMS mentions happens if you don't give any -odX options: usually that means you'll get `foreground' delivery, which typically means that the MTA will try one delivery attempt now. This is even more unhelpful when combined with -oem (also sometimes the default), which (AIUI[1]) exits 0 on success or if the first delivery attempt fails but the message is queued, but exits nonzero if the delivery failed straight away even if the message was successfully bounced. Emacs needs, from the MTA, the behaviour I specify above for -odb -oee. Ie, exit status 0 from sendmail should mean the same as `250 OK' does after SMTP DATA final dot. If it is difficult to get this behaviour portably (which seems unlikely nowadays although may have been much harder in times past) then I think it's still worth doing. In any case any other behaviour by the MTA will always result in at least one or more of these symptoms: * Excessive delay when sending mail interactive. * Silently vanishing mail. (`Mail sent' but not actually sent.) * Interactive report of a problem sending mail (`Mail could not be sent') followed _also_ by a bounce. * Interactive report of a problem sending mail (`Mail could not be sent') but in fact the mail is also later delivered. Is there some way to configure Emacs to use -odb -oee ? If so we (FSF, or failing that, Debian) should change the default. If not all MTAs support -odb -oee (or use it to mean the same thing) then for Debian we should patch them, and probably FSF Emacs should have a configuration option to work with broken MTAs (in this case passing sendmail other options may be helpful). I know that Exim does support -odb -oee (and last time I looked the Exim docs are reasonably good about these questions). Exim 3.35 (which I'm running here) has a bug where at least one of stdin/stdout/stderr isn't properly closed by the asynchronous child, which can cause things to hang if you run sendmail via ssh or userv, but hopefully Emacs can be made to stop waiting when sendmail has exited, even if one of the pipes to it hasn't been closed at the other end. Smail interprets -oee to mean the same as -oem, but with background delivery you probably won't get too many false nonzero exits. The copy of the Sendmail Installation and Operation Guide I have to hand here is unhelpfully vague about the exact behaviour of the various -oeX options. (Search the document for the string `ErrorMode'.) Postfix seems to ignore -oeX and -odX completely. I think it's probably modern enough to do the right thing. Ian. (submitter of the Debian bug #114849, and long-time free software developer and user) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-23 15:13 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 11:20 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-25 14:46 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2004-01-23 15:13 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel, rms, Simon Josefsson > Simon Josefsson writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): >> I suspect that if the MTA is trying to deliver the message to its >> final destination, then it may hang regardless of what MTA is used. > > IMO the correct way for a MUA to invoke sendmail (on Debian) is > /usr/sbin/sendmail -odb -oee ... > (To be portable to non-FHS systems, use /usr/lib/sendmail) > > This is supposed to > (a) queue the message, exiting non-0 if unsuccessful > (b) fork off a detached delivery attempt, which will > deliver the message, leave it queued, or bounce it, > as appropriate > (c) exit 0, leaving the delivery attempting going > > The problem that RMS mentions happens if you don't give any -odX > options: usually that means you'll get `foreground' delivery, which > typically means that the MTA will try one delivery attempt now. This may not do the right thing. It is not uncommon to not run any sendmail daemon, but just forward everything to another host. If we do it like this, the mail will never be delivered, but sit in the queue forever. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 15:13 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 11:20 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 13:28 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 11:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel, rms, Simon Josefsson Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > This may not do the right thing. It is not uncommon to not run any > sendmail daemon, but just forward everything to another host. If we > do it like this, the mail will never be delivered, but sit in the > queue forever. There is no reliable way for Emacs to prevent /usr/lib/sendmail from choosing to sit on the mail, if that's what it's configured by the sysadmin to do. Consider an installation whose mail hub is temporarily down. System administrators can avoid this kind of grief by installing (or configuring) an implementation of /usr/lib/sendmail which always immediately delivers to the mail hub (by SMTP or otherwise) and has no queue. Requiring this is not a problem because all mail-sending programs on the client machine need the same behaviour. Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 11:20 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 13:28 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 13:40 ` Ian Jackson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 13:28 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel > Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): >> This may not do the right thing. It is not uncommon to not run any >> sendmail daemon, but just forward everything to another host. If we >> do it like this, the mail will never be delivered, but sit in the >> queue forever. > > There is no reliable way for Emacs to prevent /usr/lib/sendmail from > choosing to sit on the mail, if that's what it's configured by the > sysadmin to do. Consider an installation whose mail hub is > temporarily down. The point is if this is changed, there will be places where Emacs previously did deliver mail, and now no longer does. It is an incompatible change, not to be made lightly IMHO. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 13:28 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 13:40 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 13:50 ` Jan D. 2004-01-27 18:49 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 13:40 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > The point is if this is changed, there will be places where Emacs > previously did deliver mail, and now no longer does. It is an > incompatible change, not to be made lightly IMHO. Currently there are large numbers of places where Emacs sometimes loses mail ! Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 13:40 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 13:50 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:10 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-27 18:49 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 13:50 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel > Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): >> The point is if this is changed, there will be places where Emacs >> previously did deliver mail, and now no longer does. It is an >> incompatible change, not to be made lightly IMHO. > > Currently there are large numbers of places where Emacs sometimes > loses mail ! But since delivery is made in the foreground, you notice when that happens. Is it worth it to exchange this to a situation where mail is prehaps very quietly not delivered? Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 13:50 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 14:10 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 14:25 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:10 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > > Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > >> The point is if this is changed, there will be places where Emacs > >> previously did deliver mail, and now no longer does. It is an > >> incompatible change, not to be made lightly IMHO. > > > > Currently there are large numbers of places where Emacs sometimes > > loses mail ! > > But since delivery is made in the foreground, you notice when that > happens. Is it worth it to exchange this to a situation where mail > is prehaps very quietly not delivered? No, the situation I'm complaining about is precisely silent mail loss. I think you're mistaken about the current default: it's to deliver in the _background_, because Emacs effectively backgrounds /usr/lib/sendmail. Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 14:10 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:25 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:29 ` Ian Jackson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 14:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel >>> Currently there are large numbers of places where Emacs sometimes >>> loses mail ! >> >> But since delivery is made in the foreground, you notice when that >> happens. Is it worth it to exchange this to a situation where mail >> is prehaps very quietly not delivered? > > No, the situation I'm complaining about is precisely silent mail loss. > I think you're mistaken about the current default: it's to deliver in > the _background_, because Emacs effectively backgrounds > /usr/lib/sendmail. Actually, I have mail-interactive set to t, I forgot about that. What about setting timeouts to a lower value, wouldn't that help? Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 14:25 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 14:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 14:35 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:29 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > Actually, I have mail-interactive set to t, I forgot about that. > What about setting timeouts to a lower value, wouldn't that help? Timeouts, what timeouts ? Does Emacs have a timeout ? Changing the timeouts in your MTA is probably not a good idea (except perhaps as part of configuring it as a hub-based client - see my other mail). Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 14:29 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:35 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:42 ` Ian Jackson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 14:35 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel > Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): >> Actually, I have mail-interactive set to t, I forgot about that. >> What about setting timeouts to a lower value, wouldn't that help? > > Timeouts, what timeouts ? Does Emacs have a timeout ? No, but sendmail has. > > Changing the timeouts in your MTA is probably not a good idea (except > perhaps as part of configuring it as a hub-based client - see my other > mail). Since the reason not to deliver in the foreground per default is that it might hang, changing the MTA timeout for foreground delivery sounds like a way forward. At least you know when things fail. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 14:35 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-26 14:42 ` Ian Jackson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:42 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Simon Josefsson, rms, emacs-devel Jan D. writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > Since the reason not to deliver in the foreground per default is that > it might hang, changing the MTA timeout for foreground delivery sounds > like a way forward. At least you know when things fail. RFC1123 specifies minimum timeouts for SMTP delivery. These are far too long to make a user wait when sending mail. If a receiving site is as slow as permitted by the RFC, a single message delivery will take tens of minutes. So as I said, > > Changing the timeouts in your MTA is probably not a good idea (except > > perhaps as part of configuring it as a hub-based client - see my other > > mail). If your MTA is a hub-based client, and you're starting with a normal MTA, then as well as changing the timeouts you have to disable its queue (so that -odq and -odb do the same as -odi and so that all temporary or partial SMTP errors are treated as fatal). If you do this then Emacs can safely do -odb -oee as I suggested. If you don't do this then things will definitely go wrong some of the time, no matter what Emacs does. Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 13:40 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 13:50 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-27 18:49 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-27 21:03 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-27 18:49 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: jas, jan.h.d, emacs-devel Currently there are large numbers of places where Emacs sometimes loses mail ! If the mail gets lost, it is the mailer that loses it. That is not Emacs's fault. Emacs uses -oem -odb by default (when mail-interactive is nil) and that says to start another process to deliver the mail. -oem says to send the user mail to report any failure. If the mailer obeys those options, you won't lose mail without a failure report. Some seem to be suggesting that when mail-interactive is nil, Emacs could use -oem -odb, but even so wait for sendmail to terminate. I think that is what we used to do; but Emacs often had to wait for a substantial time, and I found that intolerable. Perhaps nowadays the wait will be smaller and acceptable. So people might want to try this change and see if it is fast enough. *** sendmail.el.~1.274.~ Sat Jan 3 09:10:43 2004 --- sendmail.el Tue Jan 27 13:04:02 2004 *************** *** 820,826 **** (require 'mail-utils) (let ((errbuf (if mail-interactive (generate-new-buffer " sendmail errors") ! 0)) (tembuf (generate-new-buffer " sendmail temp")) (multibyte enable-multibyte-characters) (case-fold-search nil) --- 820,826 ---- (require 'mail-utils) (let ((errbuf (if mail-interactive (generate-new-buffer " sendmail errors") ! nil0)) (tembuf (generate-new-buffer " sendmail temp")) (multibyte enable-multibyte-characters) (case-fold-search nil) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-27 18:49 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-27 21:03 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-29 17:52 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-27 21:03 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: jan.h.d, emacs-devel, Ian Jackson, jas > If the mail gets lost, it is the mailer that loses it. > That is not Emacs's fault. Unless Emacs did not give the mailer the tools necessary to report the loss. > Emacs uses -oem -odb by default (when mail-interactive is nil) > and that says to start another process to deliver the mail. > -oem says to send the user mail to report any failure. If sendmail is unable to deliver *any* mail, then it won't be able to report the failure either. > If the mailer obeys those options, you won't lose mail > without a failure report. Ian suggested to use -oeq which hands the message to sendmail in the foreground (with mail-interactive set to t) so sendmail gets a chance to complain if it has no space in the queue or if there's no queue and no hub, or if there's no queue and the hub is not accessible. It should still be "quick" in that sendmail should as much as possible stash the mail in a queue and attempt actual delivery later. If it is too slow, then setting mail-interactive to nil and do as we do now is the next-best-thing. > Some seem to be suggesting that when mail-interactive is nil, Emacs > could use -oem -odb, but even so wait for sendmail to terminate. My understanding is instead to set mail-interactive to t but change the args passed to sendmail so it does not immediately attempt to deliver the message. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-27 21:03 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-29 17:52 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-29 17:52 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: jan.h.d, emacs-devel, ijackson, jas Ian suggested to use -oeq which hands the message to sendmail in the foreground (with mail-interactive set to t) so sendmail gets a chance to complain if it has no space in the queue or if there's no queue and no hub, or if there's no queue and the hub is not accessible. When mail-interactive is t, Emacs uses -oep. That seems right. The intention of mail-interactive = t is that you should get to see errors right away, as much as possible, and this is what does that. If people find that there is reasonable performance waiting for sendmail to finish with -oem and -odb for mail-interactive = nil, we could conceivably try moving further to -oeq in that case. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-23 15:13 ` Jan D. @ 2004-01-25 14:46 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-25 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel, jas IMO the correct way for a MUA to invoke sendmail (on Debian) is /usr/sbin/sendmail -odb -oee ... Perhaps that means there should be a change in this code: (if mail-interactive ;; These mean "report errors to terminal" ;; and "deliver interactively" '("-oep" "-odi") Perhaps mail-interactive would be a good default if those options were different. But I am not sure. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-22 19:09 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-23 18:33 ` Eli Zaretskii 2004-01-23 18:38 ` Simon Josefsson 1 sibling, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-23 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel I suspect that if the MTA is trying to deliver the message to its final destination, then it may hang regardless of what MTA is used. I would expect people to design an MTAs not to wait very long in the process that you created to send the mail. If sendmail does this badly, does that mean they all do? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-23 18:33 ` Eli Zaretskii 2004-01-23 18:38 ` Simon Josefsson 1 sibling, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2004-01-23 18:33 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel, jas > From: Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> > Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2004 13:25:57 -0500 > > I would expect people to design an MTAs not to wait very long > in the process that you created to send the mail. I'm not an expert, but I always thought that the amount of time they wait is determined by the TCP/IP time-out, which is typically 1 or 2 minutes. At least for those cases where the destination doesn't respond. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-23 18:33 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2004-01-23 18:38 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 14:09 ` Ian Jackson 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-23 18:38 UTC (permalink / raw) Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > I suspect that if the MTA is trying to deliver the message to its > final destination, then it may hang regardless of what MTA is used. > > I would expect people to design an MTAs not to wait very long > in the process that you created to send the mail. If sendmail > does this badly, does that mean they all do? I guess not. But how do MTAs implement this, if they don't wait in the foreground? Simply storing the e-mail in /var/spool/mqueue and hope that the system is polling the queue every hour or so might not be reliable. This approach also has the disadvantage that any errors that CAN be detected (and reported to the user) immediately, probably won't be, since /usr/lib/sendmail will always just push the message on the queue, without doing any error checking or simple delivery attempts. Just some thoughts. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-23 18:38 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-26 14:09 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 16:21 ` Simon Josefsson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 14:09 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Simon Josefsson writes ("Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior?"): > Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > > I would expect people to design an MTAs not to wait very long > > in the process that you created to send the mail. If sendmail > > does this badly, does that mean they all do? > > I guess not. But how do MTAs implement this, if they don't wait in > the foreground? Simply storing the e-mail in /var/spool/mqueue and > hope that the system is polling the queue every hour or so might not > be reliable. When a user asks to send a mail, there is not time to do a delivery attempt to remote systems. Remote systems are allowed to be down (TCP connection times), and they're allowed to make the SMTP client wait for around 5 minutes _per SMTP response_, so a whole delivery can (and sometimes does) take quite a while even if it's going to succeed. If you think the system should try to do a delivery to another site on the Internet when the user hits `send', what do you think it should do when the delivery attempt takes longer than the user is reasonably prepared to wait ? (Personally I want mail sending to be nearly instant - pratting about waiting for SMTP is what I have computers for.) MTAs are not typically designed to allow the delivery attempt to be retrospectively made noninteractive, and the whole delivery attempt might last longer than the lifetime of the MUA, so you can't just remember you have it going and try to tell the user later. The fact is that delivery to remote sites, queue management, retry, timeouts, etc. are the _functions_ of an Internet MTA ! Without those functions being implemented somewhere you can't send mail to the Internet (or at least, not reliably). Ie, without a queue, and a queue runner (somewhere), your mail is already broken. Now, traditionally, UN*X used to have the model that every host was its own site. So every host has to take responsibility for maintaining a mail queue. In this model you should install a full-scale Internet MTA on your system, and when the user hits `send' the local full MTA should accept responsibility for it - putting it in the queue, and delivering/retrying as necessary. Nowadays people often prefer to have simpler `client' systems, many of which run some kind of UN*X. In this situation you may indeed not want to try to support and maintain a full MTA on such a client machine; instead, you have your some simpler (or more simply configured) software locally which attempts delivery to a mail hub, and the mail hub performs the necessary queueing etc. In this model when the user hits `send' the local mail software should immediately attempt to pass the message to the mail hub and report success only if and when the mail hub says `OK'. When the mail hub is down no-one can send mail, and attempts to do so can hang unpleasantly. Both of these are sensible models. Moreover, they have _identical_ requirements for the functionality and semantics of /usr/lib/sendmail: in all cases, the calling program _must_ wait for sendmail to exit and check the exit status (since on a modern UN*X, and many older ones, system resource problems can always cause failures). When the local /usr/lib/sendmail exits nonzero it has taken responsibility for the delivery of the message. What this means in the two models is different: with the full MTA it means that the message has been queued; with client-and-hub it means that the message has been transferred to the mail hub (possibly by SMTP) and the mail hub has accepted it. What this shows is that this is a matter of _system configuration_, not a matter of _MUA configuration_. Emacs shouldn't need to know which model is in use. Now let us consider options to /usr/lib/sendmail. The option set was designed for the traditional full MTA model. With queueless client passing mail by SMTP to a hub, most of these options don't make any sense. The SMTP spec says that the hub should say `OK' as soon as it has received the message, without performing a delivery attempt, and there is no way for a client to request specific error behaviour; if delivery fails later the hub is supposed to generate a bounce. So an SMTP client implicitly gets (from the hub) the behaviour equivalent to -odq with a mixture of reporting error codes now or bouncing later depending on when the hub detects the error. >From the point of view of a MUA on the client, a MUA passing `-odq' couldn't possibly mean putting the mail in the local queue, since there isn't one. If the system is supposed not to have a local queue, but passing -odb or -odq overrides this and puts the message in it, then this is a configuration problem. > This approach also has the disadvantage that any errors > that CAN be detected (and reported to the user) immediately, probably > won't be, since /usr/lib/sendmail will always just push the message on > the queue, without doing any error checking or simple delivery > attempts. Errors which depend on information from the global Internet, or dependent on the outcome of local delivery attempts, can't in general be detected during the time which it's reasonable to wait when sending mail. Simple local addressing errors can easily be detected anyway when the mail is queued. Of course the current Emacs default is that any errors which are detected by the MTA are not reported anywhere. For example, if you make a mistake while editing the headers of your mail, and commit a syntax error, your mail will silently vanish (depending on local MTA and configuration). Ian. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 14:09 ` Ian Jackson @ 2004-01-26 16:21 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 18:22 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-27 18:50 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-26 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw) I see much discussion, but few solutions. Here is one idea (I can't implement this now, but since I thought about the problem briefly, I reckoned I should write it down somewhere): The actual problem that users actually encounter seem to be when `sendmail-program' points to a non-existing, a non-executable, or a non-conforming (i.e., it rejects a command line parameter or exit immediately because of invalid configuration file) application. I think all of these cases can be detected, without negatively affecting proper operation, by using start-process instead of call-process with BUFFER=0. The code would spawn the process, poll the process for, e.g., 1 second, and if it is still running, continue. If it returns with a fatal error code within 1 second, report that to the user. One potential problem would be that if sendmail is still running when emacs is about to quit, then the process should not be killed. How can you achieve that? There is process-kill-without-query, but a process-forget-without-query would be needed here. E.g., replace (setq foo (call-process ... 0 ...)) with (setq foo (start-process ...)) (sit-for 1) (unless (eq 0 (process-exit-status foo)) (error "Invoking sendmail failed...")) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 16:21 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-26 18:22 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-26 19:26 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-27 18:50 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-26 18:22 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > I see much discussion, but few solutions. I see Ian's part of the discussion as just saying "we should always use mail-interactive and set sendmail's arguments to queuing". Sounds like a good solution to me. Your message seems to be about something else, but it also leads to the need to run sendmail not-in-the-background, so it goes in the same direction, i.e.: run sendmail in the foreground (telling it to queue the message) and if there's an error analyse it and report it clearly to the user (typically tellnig it that the delivery failed or that he should use smtpmail.el). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 18:22 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-26 19:26 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 20:47 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-26 19:26 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> I see much discussion, but few solutions. > > I see Ian's part of the discussion as just saying "we should always use > mail-interactive and set sendmail's arguments to queuing". Sounds like > a good solution to me. I missed the conclusion, sorry. Does all MTAs support that option? Doesn't this require that the system is running a queue poll every now and then? It isn't uncommon to see workstations that doesn't run sendmail -q or the equivalent (Windows comes to mind, not that this fact alone should influence us). I'm worried that the change will require environmental behaviour that emacs didn't require before, thus potentially introducing new breakage. > Your message seems to be about something else, but it also leads to the > need to run sendmail not-in-the-background, so it goes in the > same direction, i.e.: run sendmail in the foreground (telling it to queue > the message) and if there's an error analyse it and report it clearly to > the user (typically tellnig it that the delivery failed or that he should > use smtpmail.el). Yes. The approaches are not mutually exclusive, and in fact probably can be combined with some benefits. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 19:26 ` Simon Josefsson @ 2004-01-26 20:47 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-26 20:47 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel >> I see Ian's part of the discussion as just saying "we should always use >> mail-interactive and set sendmail's arguments to queuing". Sounds like >> a good solution to me. > I missed the conclusion, sorry. Does all MTAs support that option? > Doesn't this require that the system is running a queue poll every now > and then? Reread what Ian wrote: setting the args to "put in the queue" does not mean that it will necessarily put the mail in the queue: if there's no queue, it will deliver immediately to the mail hub (i.e. do-the-right-thing). Basically the arg just means "place this mail in some MTA queue somewhere, and do it fast". If you're running with a local daemon (i.e. a local queue), it'll put it there, otherwise it'll put it in your mail-hub's queue. This is how mailers are meant to be used, so if it doesn't work it's not an Emacs problem but a local config problem (that will impact other MUAs as well). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-26 16:21 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 18:22 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-27 18:50 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-27 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel I think all of these cases can be detected, without negatively affecting proper operation, by using start-process instead of call-process with BUFFER=0. I expect that would be slower in the usual case, and I don't want to pay such a price. The code would spawn the process, poll the process for, e.g., 1 second, and if it is still running, continue. (setq foo (start-process ...)) (sit-for 1) A one-second delay is absolutely unacceptable. If you can implement this method without any appreciable slowdown, then I have no objection to switching to it. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-20 6:14 sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? Rob Browning 2004-01-20 11:53 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2004-01-30 14:45 ` Stefan Monnier ` (2 more replies) 2 siblings, 3 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Rob Browning @ 2004-01-30 4:27 UTC (permalink / raw) Rob Browning <rlb@defaultvalue.org> writes: > Emacs doesn't always check for a non-zero exit status from sendmail, > which can lead to silent mail lossage. For example: Presuming I haven't misunderstood, where do we stand here? From what I gather everyone would be happy if we could do something that would make emacs always wait for the MTA to quit (checking the exit code), but only if that doesn't introduce "too much delay" when running on a properly configured system. (What would be "too much delay" in situations where something wasn't actually wrong and was legitimately causing the delay?) Personally, I can't imagine it being OK to leave things with potential for silent mail loss, especially not as the default, even if fixing it might introduce a 5 minute delay. If there is a 5 minute delay then that just tells me that my MTA is broken (probably misconfigured), or perhaps my hardware is bad, etc., and that I need to look in to it. Of course even if I can't fix the delay, *and* I don't mind the extra risk, I can always decide to set mail-interactive to nil. This issue could even be a FAQ. At the very least, I'd submit that perhaps the documentation for mail-interactive should be adjusted to provide more warning. i.e. "Setting mail-interactive to nil may cause you to lose mail under any number of unpredictable conditions[1] without any warning. Emacs will *not* check to see if the mailer process failed." ([1] Where unpredictable conditions include but are not limited to your partition filling up, broken libraries during or left after an upgrade, mailer running out of memory, PATH altered improperly, etc.) IMO if the common mailers (sendmail/postfix/exim/etc.) can be told to queue the mail reasonably quickly these days, then I'd prefer to see us figure out how to have emacs to do that by default while still making it easy for people in special circumstances to arrange for something faster, though perhaps less safe. Also, I'm not sure it's relevant (or even feasible with emacs current code), and I don't use any of these systems myself, but it seems like a lot of other MUAs just queue up the outgoing mail themselves and either send it via SMTP, either on-demand or in the background, and they treat messages that haven't made it out yet in much the same way that emacs treats unsaved buffers -- if you try to quit, they ask you about them. For people who have a properly configured postfix/sendmail/exim/whatever queuing arrangement, this might not be interesting, but for others, perhaps. -- Rob Browning rlb @defaultvalue.org and @debian.org; previously @cs.utexas.edu GPG starting 2002-11-03 = 14DD 432F AE39 534D B592 F9A0 25C8 D377 8C7E 73A4 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning @ 2004-01-30 14:45 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-30 14:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-31 7:51 ` Richard Stallman 2 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-30 14:45 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > properly configured system. (What would be "too much delay" in > situations where something wasn't actually wrong and was legitimately > causing the delay?) If sendmail is called with -oeq, it should only cause delay if there's a problem such as "your hub is down or slow". But if you access your hub through a 56K connection and send a 50MB attachment, then you'll suffer a serious legitimate delay (unless you use a local queue of course). > Personally, I can't imagine it being OK to leave things with potential > for silent mail loss, especially not as the default, even if fixing it > might introduce a 5 minute delay. If there is a 5 minute delay then > that just tells me that my MTA is broken (probably misconfigured), or > perhaps my hardware is bad, etc., and that I need to look in to it. > Of course even if I can't fix the delay, *and* I don't mind the extra > risk, I can always decide to set mail-interactive to nil. This issue > could even be a FAQ. I agree. But right now the mail-interactive setting of t implies a slower delivery than -oeq (it might try to contact the destination which will sooner or later be unavailable). I.e. right now you can choose between "fast and dangerous" or "very slow and safer". I'd like the default to be inbetween (i.e. -oeq). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2004-01-30 14:45 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-30 14:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-30 14:46 ` David Kastrup 2004-01-31 7:51 ` Richard Stallman 2 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-30 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > Also, I'm not sure it's relevant (or even feasible with emacs current > code), and I don't use any of these systems myself, but it seems like > a lot of other MUAs just queue up the outgoing mail themselves and > either send it via SMTP, either on-demand or in the background, and > they treat messages that haven't made it out yet in much the same way > that emacs treats unsaved buffers -- if you try to quit, they ask you > about them. For people who have a properly configured > postfix/sendmail/exim/whatever queuing arrangement, this might not be > interesting, but for others, perhaps. It's not really relevant since this thread is about sendmail.el (i.e. sending mail with an external MTA) whereas what you're suggesting is to do the mail sending ourselves, which is what smtpmail.el does (i.e. you're suggesting to add queue management to smtpmail.el). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-30 14:46 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-30 14:46 ` David Kastrup 2004-01-30 16:14 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2004-01-30 14:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Rob Browning, emacs-devel Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > > Also, I'm not sure it's relevant (or even feasible with emacs current > > code), and I don't use any of these systems myself, but it seems like > > a lot of other MUAs just queue up the outgoing mail themselves and > > either send it via SMTP, either on-demand or in the background, and > > they treat messages that haven't made it out yet in much the same way > > that emacs treats unsaved buffers -- if you try to quit, they ask you > > about them. For people who have a properly configured > > postfix/sendmail/exim/whatever queuing arrangement, this might not be > > interesting, but for others, perhaps. > > It's not really relevant since this thread is about sendmail.el > (i.e. sending mail with an external MTA) whereas what you're suggesting is > to do the mail sending ourselves, which is what smtpmail.el does > (i.e. you're suggesting to add queue management to smtpmail.el). Like (setq smtpmail-queue-mail t) does? -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-30 14:46 ` David Kastrup @ 2004-01-30 16:14 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-30 16:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Rob Browning, emacs-devel >> It's not really relevant since this thread is about sendmail.el >> (i.e. sending mail with an external MTA) whereas what you're suggesting is >> to do the mail sending ourselves, which is what smtpmail.el does >> (i.e. you're suggesting to add queue management to smtpmail.el). > Like (setq smtpmail-queue-mail t) does? *blush* Well, hmm, I guess so, yes. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2004-01-30 14:45 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-30 14:46 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2004-01-31 7:51 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-31 17:26 ` Rob Browning 2 siblings, 1 reply; 38+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-31 7:51 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Personally, I can't imagine it being OK to leave things with potential for silent mail loss, especially not as the default, even if fixing it might introduce a 5 minute delay. I set up the code the way it is because it caused a delay of a few seconds when everything was working properly. I found that unacceptable. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
* Re: sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? 2004-01-31 7:51 ` Richard Stallman @ 2004-01-31 17:26 ` Rob Browning 0 siblings, 0 replies; 38+ messages in thread From: Rob Browning @ 2004-01-31 17:26 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > I set up the code the way it is because it caused a delay of a few > seconds when everything was working properly. I found that unacceptable. I suspect we just disagree about the default. As I've mentioned, I'd favor arranging things so that mail loss is less likely by default, even if doing so might introduce a few scond delay. Of course we'd also need to provide good documentation for the alternative setting for those systems and people for whom the delay is a problem. However, I also got the impression from the current disussion that we might have other alternatives now. For example, are (most) MTAs better about queueing now, and can emacs itself handle queueing, and if either of these things is true, then can we arrange for alternatives that satisfy (nearly) everyone now? -- Rob Browning rlb @defaultvalue.org and @debian.org; previously @cs.utexas.edu GPG starting 2002-11-03 = 14DD 432F AE39 534D B592 F9A0 25C8 D377 8C7E 73A4 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 38+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2004-01-31 17:26 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 38+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2004-01-20 6:14 sendmail.el bug or expected behavior? Rob Browning 2004-01-20 11:53 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-21 9:21 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-21 18:28 ` Kevin Rodgers 2004-01-21 22:33 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-22 19:00 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-22 19:09 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-23 12:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-23 15:13 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 11:20 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 13:28 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 13:40 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 13:50 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:10 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 14:25 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:29 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 14:35 ` Jan D. 2004-01-26 14:42 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-27 18:49 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-27 21:03 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-29 17:52 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-25 14:46 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-23 18:25 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-23 18:33 ` Eli Zaretskii 2004-01-23 18:38 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 14:09 ` Ian Jackson 2004-01-26 16:21 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 18:22 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-26 19:26 ` Simon Josefsson 2004-01-26 20:47 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-27 18:50 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-30 4:27 ` Rob Browning 2004-01-30 14:45 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-30 14:46 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-30 14:46 ` David Kastrup 2004-01-30 16:14 ` Stefan Monnier 2004-01-31 7:51 ` Richard Stallman 2004-01-31 17:26 ` Rob Browning
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