Funky stuff, I'm sure I'll annoy you with an obscure bug I dig up shortly ;)
As for Irssi2, looks very interesting, I may be tinkering with it shortly.
Gonna see if I can write a minor patch for dovecot this week so that we can see number of messages downloading in a pop3 session in the logfile. Similar to the way UW does it, will be very useful for us at work trying to trace customers POP problems, I will submit it if anyone will find it useful.
Regards Andrew
On Sun, 2005-05-08 at 20:33 +0300, Timo Sirainen wrote:
- Several mbox fixes, upgrade recommended for test68 mbox users
- Possibly fixes some IMAP hangs where Dovecot just stopped replying
- Fixed delay-newmail workaround. It was badly broken before.
And somewhat off topic advertisement:
I got a bit distracted from Dovecot a week ago when a guy started mailing me about wanting to write an irssi2 client as a project to learn Ruby. Half a year ago I had written a semi-working irssi2 server but I got stuck with it because I wasn't interested about writing client for it. Now that the client actually works, irssi2's development has kind of exploded :)
Irssi2 is a bit related to Dovecot too, in that it'll be integrated with it more or less tightly to provide instant messaging support. Nothing prevents extending irssi2-protocol to support all other kinds of realtime events either, for example to send new mail notifications.
If you're interested, see:
http://main.irssi.org/projects/irssi2.html
And for the lazy, here's the introduction copy&pasted:
Shortly put, irssi2 is to instant messaging what IMAP is to mail. You can safely exit your irssi2 client, and irssi2 server just keeps on going. When you connect back with your client, you can see all the discussion that happened while you were away (and even older discussion, too, if you want).
You can also use multiple clients even at the same time, so you could for example keep one client always open at home and still be able to check what's going on with your mobile phone.
Irssi2 clients are encouraged to keep their configuration in server side, so nothing should prevent you from temporarily using another irssi2 client from your friend's home with no other configuration needed than irssi2 server's address, your username and password.
Irssi2 is designed to support multiple chat protocols (IRC, SILC, MSN, ICQ, etc.) but without ignoring hardcore IRC users. That means that unlike all other similar attempts (such as Jabber), irssi2's client-server protocol will actually allow fully featured irssi2 IRC client to be written with no compromises (but still the same client can be used to talk to MSN and elsewhere).
Note that irssi2 isn't trying to replace IRC servers (yet ;). irssi2 server simply connects to normal IRC servers just as a regular IRC client. To prevent mixups with these terms, IRC servers are usually called "gateways" in irssi2.
-- Andrew Hutchings (A-Wing) Linux Guru - Netserve Consultants Ltd. - www.domaincity.co.uk Admin - North Wales Linux User Group - www.nwlug.org.uk BOFH excuse 170: popper unable to process jumbo kernel