DESCR:
mairix is a program for indexing and searching email messages stored in
Maildir, MH or mbox folders. The search mode populates a "virtual"
maildir (or MH) folder with symlinks which point to the real messages.
This folder can be opened as usual in your mail program.
From: David Cathcart <david@cathcart.cx>
ok robert@
The hashcash tool allows you to create hashcash stamps to attach to
emails you send, and to verify hashcash stamps attached to emails you
receive. Email senders attach hashcash stamps with the X-Hashcash:
header. A hashcash stamp constitutes a proof-of-work which takes a
parameterizable amount of work to compute for the sender. The
recipient can verify received stamps efficiently.
From: Armin Wolfermann <aw@osn.de>
ok alek@
kpoppassd is a kerberos password changing daemon that behaves like
poppassd. It allows a user to change his/her password remotely without
having to login. This is particularly useful for webmail systems that
use imap (i.e. horde/imp). The daemon works exactly like the original
poppassd. The only difference being that this poppassd changes a user's
Kerberos 5 password.
From Antoine Jacoutot <ajacoutot@lphp.org>
kpoppassd is a kerberos password changing daemon that behaves like
poppassd. It allows a user to change his/her password remotely without
having to login. This is particularly useful for webmail systems that
use imap (i.e. horde/imp). The daemon works exactly like the original
poppassd. The only difference being that this poppassd changes a user's
Kerberos 5 password.
From Antoine Jacoutot <ajacoutot@lphp.org>
mlmmj is a mailing list manager with the same functionality as the
brilliant ezmlm, but with a decent license and mail server independency.
From Simon Dassow <janus@errornet.de>
imapproxy keeps the connection to an IMAP server open after a client
logs out and reuses it when the client connects again. This is mostly
useful for webmail clients.
From Holger Mauermann <holger@mauermann.org>
relevant part of ChangeLog:
make getmail less conservative about remembering messages as already-seen
when unrelated errors occur after successfully delivering them