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qpopper(8)							    qpopper(8)

NAME
       qpopper -- POP3 server (v4.1)

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/local/libexec/qpopper [ [ address ] [ : ] [ port ] ]
	    [ -b buildir ] [ -c ] [ -d ] [ -D drac-host ]
	    [ -e login_delay=nn,expire=nn ] [ -f config-file ]
	    [ -k ] [ -K service ] [ -l0|1|2 ] [ -p0|1|2|3|4 ]
	    [ -R ] [ -s ] [ -S ] [ -t trace-file ] [ -T timeout ]
	    [ -u ] [ -U ] [ -v ] [ -V ] [ -x ] [ -y log-facility ]

NOTE
       This man page may be out of date.  Please see the Administrator's Guide
       included in the distribution or on the Qpopper web  site	 at  www.qpop‐
       per.org/documentation.html

DESCRIPTION
       Qpopper	is  a  POP3 server to enable POP3 clients to read and download
       mail. This server implements the POP protocol defined in RFC  1939  and
       the RFC 2449 extensions.	 This implementation runs on a variety of Unix
       platforms, including Linux.

       The server also enables clients to send mail using XTND XMIT, which  is
       processed via sendmail(8).

OPTIONS
       [address][:][port]
	      If  compiled  as	a standalone daemon (instead of being run from
	      inetd), you can can specify the IP address and/or port number to
	      bind   to	  at   run-time	  as   parameter   1,	e.g.,  'popper
	      199.46.50.7:8110 -S' or 'popper 8110 -S -T600'.  If IPv6 support
	      is  compiled  in,	 address can be also IPv6 address by enclosing
	      the address with `[' and `]'.  If not specified, the IP  address
	      defaults	to all available.  The default port is 110 except when
	      _DEBUG (not simply DEBUG) is defined, then it is 8765.

	      See the Administrator's  Guide  file  for	 more  information  on
	      standalone mode.

       -b bulldir
	      Turns  on the bulletin feature and specifies the bulletin direc‐
	      tory path.  The command line overrides the compiled value if  it
	      is  defined.   To	 enable	 bulletins  by	default	 and specify a
	      default  bulletin	 directory  during  compilation,  include  the
	      --enable-bulletins=bull-directory flag when running ./configure.
	      The usual bulletin directory is /var/spool/bulls.

	      A bulletin database can be used to track the  bulletins  instead
	      of  the  users'  home  directory.	  This	feature	 is enabled by
	      including the --enable-bulldb=bull-directory flag	 when  running
	      ./configure.

       -c     Downcases	 user  names.	This  permits users to configure their
	      clients with user names in UPPER or MiXeD case, and still login,
	      assuming their actual user name is all lower case.

       -d     Turns  on	 debug logging if compiled (pass --enable-debugging to
	      ./configure).  All debugging information	is  saved  using  sys‐
	      log(8).	If  this  option  is used, it should be first, so that
	      debug records are generated for subsequent options.

       -D drac-host
	      If  compiled  with  --enable-drac,  specifies  the  drac	 host.
	      Defaults to localhost.

       -e x=value,...
	      Sets  POP3  extensions.  Sets x to the specified value.  Used to
	      include Login Delay and/or Expire response tags to the CAPA com‐
	      mand.

	      Remember	neither Expire nor Login Delay is enforced by qpopper;
	      Sysadmins have to implement them by some other means.   However,
	      you  can	enforce	 EXPIRE	 0  (no retention at all) by using the
	      --enable-auto-delete flag with ./configure.   This  causes  mes‐
	      sages to be automatically deleted after they are downloaded.

       -f config-file
	      Reads additional run-time options from config-file.  See Config-
	      File Options for option names and syntax.

       -k     Enables Kerberos authentication when qpopper has	been  compiled
	      with  --with-kerberos5.	You  must  already have libraries that
	      support Kerberos.

       -K service
	      The specified Kerberos service is used instead of the  compiled-
	      in value.	 The default is rcmd, but pop is also common.

       -l 0|1|2
	      Sets  TLS/SSL  handling.	Must have compiled with OpenSSL or SSL
	      Plus.

	      0 is the default.	 TLS/SSL is not supported.

	      1 enables the STLS command.  This permits a  client  to  attempt
	      TLS/SSL negotiation after connecting.

	      2	 Causes Qpopper to attempt TLS negotiation when a client first
	      connects.	 This is for alternate-port support.

       -p 0|1|2|3|4
	      Sets plain-text password handling options.  To use this  option,
	      you  must have an alternative to plain-text passwords available,
	      such as APOP.

	      0 is the default, which permits plain-text  passwords  only  for
	      those users who are not in the APOP database.

	      1	 disables  plain-text  passwords for all users, even those who
	      are not in the APOP database.

	      2 permits plain-text passwords for all users, even those who are
	      in the APOP database (this allows clients to fall back on plain-
	      text authentication if they do not support APOP).

	      3 allows plain-text passwords only for connections on the	 loop-
	      back (127.*.*.*)	address.

	      4	 permits plain-text passwords only if TLS/SSL has been negoti‐
	      ated for the  session  (requires	an  executable	compiled  with
	      OpenSSL or SSL Plus).

       -R     Disables reverse lookups on client IP addresses.

       -t trace-file
	      Turns  on	 debug logging if compiled (pass --enable-debugging to
	      ./configure) and writes  the  trace  information	in  trace-file
	      using  fprintf(3V).  If this option is used, it should be first,
	      so that debug records are generated for subsequent options.

       -s     Turns on statistics logging using syslog(8) or  trace-file.   At
	      the  end	of  each  popper session, the following information is
	      logged: username, number of messages deleted,  number  of	 bytes
	      deleted,	number of message left on server, number of bytes left
	      on server.

       -S     Enables server mode.  This mode reduces disk I/O and disk	 space
	      usage when popper is used on a system that serves POP only users
	      exclusively.

       -T timeout
	      option changes the default compiled value POP_TIMEOUT for termi‐
	      nating a session with a pop client.

	      When  the	 server	 is  waiting  for a command to arrive from the
	      client, it times out after the specified number of  seconds  and
	      terminates  the  session.	  This	avoids having popper processes
	      hang forever waiting for command input from clients  which  have
	      terminated abnormally or are hung.

	      A	 small value is ok for small to medium networks where the net‐
	      work delay is within a few seconds.  In this case 15-30  seconds
	      is  not  unreasonable.   Networks	 with  large delays in sending
	      packets (e.g., SLIP links) may require a larger value.  In  this
	      case 300 seconds (5 minutes) is not unreasonable.

	      Note  that  RFC  1939  requires a minimum of 600 second (10 min‐
	      utes).

       -u     After a user authenticates, process options from a  file	called
	      .qpopper-options in the user's home directory.  This file can be
	      owned by and writable by the user.

       -U     After a user authenticates, process options from a  file	called
	      .<user>.qpopper-options  in the spool directory, where <user> is
	      the user name.  This file should not be owned by nor writable by
	      the user.

       -v     Report the current version and exit.

       -V     Report the current version and exit.

       -x     Disable  use  of	XTND  XMIT.  NOTE: Administrators are strongly
	      encouraged to disable XTND XMIT in favor of mechanisms  such  as
	      SMTP AUTH.

       -y  log-facility

       Processing Options are described below.

   Processing Options
       Here   are  some	 options the values of which are announced to clients.
       Syntax of the options is:

		      opt=value,...

       This sets option opt to be value.  Multiple options can be specified at
       one instance and are comma separated.

       The following are the options supported:
	      login_delay
	      expire

   Config-File Options
       You can set Qpopper run-time options either from the command line or in
       a configuration file.

       Configuration files use different option names and a  different	syntax
       than  the command-line (because command-line options are limited to one
       character).

       The general syntax of the config file (in ABNF) is:

	    config-line	 ::= comment-line / reset-line / set-line

	    comment-line ::= "#" <comment-text to end of line>

	    reset-line	 ::= "reset" boolean-option

	    set-line	 ::= implicit-set / explicit-set

	    explicit-set ::= "set" option "=" value

	    implicit-set ::= "set" boolean-option

	    option	 ::= boolean-option / integer-option /
			     string-option / mnemonic-option

	    value	 ::= "true" / "false" / integer / name

	    string	 ::= <"> 1*255 CHAR <">

	    CHAR	 ::= <any printable character except space or tab>

       In other words the line starts with set or reset, then an option	 name,
       and either ends there or has an = followed by a value.

       A  comment  line	 starts with #.	 The rest of the line is ignored.  You
       can also use # to end any line.	Everything else on the line is a  com‐
       ment.

       Note  that  reset can only be used with boolean options.	 The = and the
       value are omitted when reset is used.  When set is used with a  boolean
       option, you can omit the = and value if you wish (it defaults to true),
       or you can use any of the four values true, false, 1, or 0.

       Some options are "restricted", meaning that they can't  be  used	 in  a
       .qpopper-options	  file	 in  a	user's	home  directory	 and/or	 in  a
       <user>.qpopper-options file in the spool directory.

       The following are the command line options you can use:

       announce-login-delay
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-elogin_delay=xx"
	   Restricted: no

       announce-expire
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-e expire=xxx"
	   Restricted: no

       bulldir
	   Type: Name
	   Equivalent switch: "-b bulldir"
	   Restricted: no

       bulldb-nonfatal
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-B"
	   Restricted: no

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-bulldb.

       clear-text-password
	   Type: Mnemonic
	   Equivalent switch: "-p0|1|2|3|4"
	   Values:

	   default
		  Permits clear-text passwords for any user not	 in  the  APOP
		  database.

	   never  Clear-text  passwords are never permitted.  Users not in the
		  APOP database are unable to use Qpopper.

	   always Clear-text passwords are always permitted, even for users in
		  the APOP database.

	   local  Clear-text passwords are permitted only when the client con‐
		  nects through the local interface (127.*.*.*).

	   tls	  Clear-text passwords are permitted  when  TLS/SSL  has  been
		  negotiated for the session.  Available only if compiled with
		  OpenSSL or SSL Plus.

	   ssl	  (Same as tls).
	   Restricted: not valid in a configuration file in  the  user's  home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

       config-file
	   Type: Name
	   Equivalent switch: "-f config-file"
	   Restricted: no

       debug
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-d debug
	   Restricted: no

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-debug.

       downcase-user
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-c"
	   Restricted:	not  valid  in a configuration file in the user's home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

       drac-host
	   Type: Name
	   Equivalent switch: "-D drac-host"
	   Restricted: no

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-drac

       kerberos
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-k"
	   Restricted: not valid in a configuration file in  the  user's  home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-kerberos5 or -DKERBEROS

       kerberos-service
	   Type: Name
	   Equivalent switch: "-K service-name"
	   Restricted:	not  valid  in a configuration file in the user's home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-kerberos5 or -DKERBEROS

       mail-lock-check
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-L msgs"
	   Restricted: no

       reverse-lookup
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-R" (Sense reversed!)
	   Restricted: not valid in a configuration file in  the  user's  home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

	   Sense  reversed  from command-line switch.  Using -R is the same as
	   'SET REVERSE-LOOKUP = FALSE'.

       server-mode
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-S"
	   Restricted: no

       statistics
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-s"
	   Restricted: no

       timeout
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-T timeout"
	   Restricted: no

       tls-support
	   Type: Mnemonic
	   Equivalent switch: "-l"
	   Values:

	   default
		  TLS/SSL not supported.

	   none	  (same as default).

	   stls	  Enables support for the STLS command.

	   alternate-port
		  Enables alternate-port TLS/SSL.
	   Restricted: not valid in a configuration file in  the  user's  home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

	   Only valid if compiled with OpenSSL or SSL Plus.

       tracefile
	   Type: Name
	   Equivalent switch: "-t logfile"
	   Restricted: no

	   Only valid if compiled with --enable-debug.

       spool-options
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-U"
	   Restricted:	not  valid  in a configuration file in the user's home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

       user-options
	   Type: Integer
	   Equivalent switch: "-u"
	   Restricted: not valid in a configuration file in  the  user's  home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

       xtnd-xmit
	   Type: Boolean
	   Equivalent switch: "-x"
	   Restricted:	not  valid  in a configuration file in the user's home
	   directory nor in the spool directory.

BULLETINS
       The bulletin feature gives system administrators a way to  send	impor‐
       tant announcements to all POP users without having to do mass mailings.

       The  bulletin  directory contains one file per bulletin. Each file con‐
       tains a single mail message with a header and body  in  normal  mailbox
       format.	The  first  line of each such bulletin must be a "From " line.
       The easiest way for sysadmins to create such bulletins is to mail them‐
       selves  a  copy	of  the	 bulletin using the account to which they want
       replies to be sent, then use their mail program to save the message  to
       a file in the bulletin directory in mailbox format. The bulletin direc‐
       tory must be world readable.

       The name of each bulletin file begins with the bulletin number, and may
       optionally  continue  with any other characters. E.g., the file name of
       bulletin number 23 might be "23.pophost_down_sunday".

       Popper creates a file named .popbull in	the  home  directory  of  each
       user.   This file contains a single line recording the highest numbered
       bulletin received by the user.

       Each time a POP client connects to the server, any new bulletins	 which
       the  user has not received previously are automatically appended to the
       user's mail.

       When a bulletin is copied, the "To" header line	is  replaced  by  "To:
       username@thishost",  and any "Status:" header lines are deleted. Other‐
       wise, the bulletin is copied as is.

       When a new user checks for mail the  first  time,  popper  creates  the
       .popbull	 file  in the user's home directory and seeds it with the cur‐
       rent maximum bulletin number. Thus new users do not get old bulletins.

       Bulletins can be enabled by default, and the bulletin directory	speci‐
       fied, by including the --enable-bulletins=bull-directory flag when run‐
       ning ./configure.

       To use a database instead of .popbull files in users' home  directories
       for tracking the highest bulletin seen by a user, include the --enable-
       bulldb=bull-directory flag when running	./configure.   You  must  also
       create two empty files in the bulletin directory, called bulldb.pag and
       bulldb.dir.  When a bulletin database is used, qpopper checks  for  and
       uses any .popbull files in the user's home directory, to provide conti‐
       nuity.

       To specify the maximum number of bulletins sent to new  users,  include
       the  --with-new-bulls  flag  when  running  ./configure.	  For example,
       --with-new-bulls=10 says that new users get at most ten bulletins.

THE POP TRANSACTION CYCLE
       The Qpopper server is a single program (called popper) that is launched
       by  inetd  when	it  gets  a service request on the POP TCP port.  (The
       official port number specified in RFC 1939 for POP version  3  is  port
       110.   However, some POP3 clients attempt to contact the server at port
       109, the POP version 2 port.  Unless you are running both POP2 and POP3
       servers,	 you  can simply define both ports for use by the POP3 server.
       This is explained in the installation instructions later on.)

       The qpopper program initializes and verifies that the peer  IP  address
       is registered in the local domain (unless the -R command-line option is
       used), logging a warning message when  a	 connection  is	 made  with  a
       client  whose  IP  address does not have a canonical name.  For systems
       using BSD 4.3 bind, it also checks to see if a  canonical  name	lookup
       for the client returns the same peer IP address, logging a warning mes‐
       sage if it does not.

       The server enters the authorization state, during which the client must
       correctly identify itself by providing a valid Unix userid and password
       on the server's host machine (or successfully authenticate  using  APOP
       or AUTH).  No other exchanges are allowed during this state (other than
       a request to quit.)  If authentication  fails,  a  warning  message  is
       logged and the session ends.

       Once  the user is identified, qpopper changes its user and group ids to
       match that of the user and enters the transaction  state.   The	server
       makes  a	 temporary  copy  of the user's maildrop which is used for all
       subsequent transactions	(unless	 running  in  server  mode  ).	 These
       include	the  bulk  of  POP  commands  to  retrieve  mail, delete mail,
       undelete mail, and so forth.

       When the client quits, the server enters the final update state, during
       which  the  network connection is terminated and the user's maildrop is
       updated with the (possibly) modified temporary maildrop.

LOGGING
       The POP server uses syslog to keep a record of its activities.  On sys‐
       tems  with  BSD	4.3  syslogging,  the  server logs (by default) to the
       "local0" facility at priority "notice" for all messages	except	debug‐
       ging  which  is	logged	at  priority "debug".  The default log file is
       /var/log/messages.  These can be changed, if desired.  On systems  with
       4.2  syslogging	all messages are logged to the local log file, usually
       /usr/spool/mqueue/syslog.

DEBUGGING
       Qpopper logs debugging information when the -d parameter	 is  specified
       after  its invocation in the inetd.conf file.  Care should be exercised
       in using this option since it generates considerable output in the sys‐
       log  file.  Alternatively, the "-t <file-name>" option places debugging
       information into file "<file-name>" using fprintf instead of syslog.

       For SunOS version 3.5, the popper program is  launched  by  inetd  from
       /etc/servers.   This  file  does	 not allow you to specify command line
       arguments.  Therefore, if you want to enable debugging, you can specify
       a  shell script in /etc/servers to be launched instead of popper and in
       this script call popper with the desired arguments.

       You can confirm that the POP server is running on Unix by telneting  to
       port 110 (or 109 if you set it up that way).  For example:

       %telnet pop.qualcomm.com 110
       Trying...
       Connected to pop.qualcomm.com.
       Escape character is '^]'.
       +OK QPOP (version 3.0) at pop.qualcomm.com starting.
       quit
       +OK Pop server at pop.qualcomm.com signing off.
       Connection closed by foreign host.

EXTENSIONS
       The server implements several extended commands.

       XTND XMIT: Sends a mail message using /usr/sbin/sendmail.

       XTND XLIST header [num]: Extracts and returns the specified header line
       for the specified message number. If the "num"  parameter  is  missing,
       returns	the  header  line for all the messages which are not currently
       marked for deletion.

       XMANGLE: Can be used as a modifier to the TOP, RETR, LIST commands. The
       result is to condense MIME messages into a single part. For example:

	      RETR 10 XMANGLE(text=html;headers=to:,cc:,from:,date:)
       results	in  transforming message 10 into a single part of content-type
       text/html with only those headers which were requested.

       Qpopper also supports the "-no-mime" user  name	hack.	As  a  way  to
       enable  MIME-mangling  with  clients  that  do not support XMANGLE, add
       "-no-mime" to the user name.  For example, if  the  userid  is  "mary",
       enter it in the client as "mary-no-mime".

FILES
       /var/mail	       mail files
       /etc/ftpusers	       list of unwelcome/restricted users
       /etc/inetd.conf	       pop program invocation
       /etc/syslog.conf	       logging specifications
       /var/spool/bulls	       bulletins
       ~/.popbull	       largest bulletin number seen by user

SEE ALSO
       inetd(8), inetd.conf(4), sendmail(8)

AUTHORS
       Randall	Gelles,	 Praveen  Yaramada, Laurence Lundblade, Mark Erickson,
       Bob Campbell, Edward Moy, Austin Shelton, Marshall T Rose, and cast  of
       thousands  at  Rand,  UDel, UCI, QUALCOMM Incorporated and the Internet
       user community.

4.3 Berkeley Distribution	 26 April 2010			    qpopper(8)
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