bionic (3) pop3.3tcl.gz

Provided by: tcllib_1.19-dfsg-2_all bug

NAME

       pop3 - Tcl client for POP3 email protocol

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  8.4

       package require pop3  ?1.9?

       ::pop3::open  ?-msex  0|1?  ?-retr-mode retr|list|slow? ?-socketcmd cmdprefix? ?-stls 0|1? ?-tls-callback
       stls-callback-command? host username password ?port?

       ::pop3::config chan

       ::pop3::status chan

       ::pop3::last chan

       ::pop3::retrieve chan startIndex ?endIndex?

       ::pop3::delete chan startIndex ?endIndex?

       ::pop3::list chan ?msg?

       ::pop3::top chan msg n

       ::pop3::uidl chan ?msg?

       ::pop3::capa chan

       ::pop3::close chan

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       The pop3 package provides a simple Tcl-only client library for the POP3 email protocol  as  specified  in
       RFC  1939  [http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1939.txt].   It works by opening the standard POP3 socket on
       the server, transmitting the username and password, then providing a Tcl API to access the POP3  protocol
       commands.   All server errors are returned as Tcl errors (thrown) which must be caught with the Tcl catch
       command.

TLS SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

       This package uses the TLS package to handle the security for https urls and other socket connections.

       Policy decisions like the set of protocols to support and what ciphers to use are not the  responsibility
       of  TLS,  nor  of  this  package  itself  however.   Such  decisions  are the responsibility of whichever
       application is using the package, and are likely influenced by the set of servers  the  application  will
       talk to as well.

       For        example,        in        light        of        the        recent        POODLE        attack
       [http://googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.co.uk/2014/10/this-poodle-bites-exploiting-ssl-30.html]  discovered
       by  Google  many  servers  will  disable  support  for  the  SSLv3  protocol.   To handle this change the
       applications using TLS must be patched, and not this package, nor TLS itself.  Such a  patch  may  be  as
       simple as generally activating tls1 support, as shown in the example below.

                  package require tls
                  tls::init -tls1 1 ;# forcibly activate support for the TLS1 protocol

                  ... your own application code ...

API

       ::pop3::open  ?-msex  0|1?  ?-retr-mode retr|list|slow? ?-socketcmd cmdprefix? ?-stls 0|1? ?-tls-callback
       stls-callback-command? host username password ?port?
              Open a socket connection to the server specified by host, transmit the username  and  password  as
              login  information  to  the server.  The default port number is 110, which can be overridden using
              the optional port argument.  The return value is a  channel  used  by  all  of  the  other  ::pop3
              functions.

              The command recognizes three options

              -msex boolean
                     Setting  this  option tells the package that the server we are talking to is an MS Exchange
                     server (which has some oddities we have to work around). The default is False.

              -retr-mode retr|list|slow
                     The retrieval mode determines how exactly messages are read from the server.   The  allowed
                     values  are  retr,  list  and  slow.   The  default  is retr. See ::pop3::retrieve for more
                     information.

              -socketcmd cmdprefix
                     This option allows the user to overide the use of the builtin socket command with any  API-
                     compatible  command. The envisioned main use is the securing of the new connection via SSL,
                     through the specification of the command tls::socket. This command is specially  recognized
                     as well, changing the default port of the connection to 995.

              -stls boolean
                     Setting  this  option  tells  the  package  to  secure  the connection using SSL or TLS. It
                     performs STARTTLS as described in IETF RFC 2595,  it  first  opens  a  normal,  unencrypted
                     connection  and  then  negotiates  a SSLv3 or TLSv1 connection. If the connection cannot be
                     secured, the connection will be closed and an error will be returned

              -tls-callback stls-callback-command
                     This option allows the user to overide the tls::callback  used  during  the  -stls  SSL/TLS
                     handshake. See the TLS manual for details on how to implement this callback.

       ::pop3::config chan
              Returns  the  configuration  of  the  pop3  connection  identified by the channel handle chan as a
              serialized array.

       ::pop3::status chan
              Query the server for the status of the mail spool.  The status is returned as  a  list  containing
              two  elements,  the first is the number of email messages on the server and the second is the size
              (in octets, 8 bit blocks) of the entire mail spool.

       ::pop3::last chan
              Query the server for the last email message read from the spool.  This value includes all messages
              read  from  all clients connecting to the login account.  This command may not be supported by the
              email server, in which case the server may return 0 or an error.

       ::pop3::retrieve chan startIndex ?endIndex?
              Retrieve a range of messages from the server.  If the endIndex is not specified, only one  message
              will be retrieved.  The return value is a list containing each message as a separate element.  See
              the startIndex and endIndex descriptions below.

              The retrieval mode determines how exactly messages are read from the server. The mode retr assumes
              that the RETR command delivers the size of the message as part of the command status and uses this
              to read the message efficiently. In mode list RETR does not deliver the size, but the LIST command
              does  and  we use this to retrieve the message size before the actual retrieval, which can then be
              done efficiently. In the last mode, slow, the system is unable to obtain the size of  the  message
              to retrieve in any manner and falls back to reading the message from the server line by line.

              It  should  also  be  noted  that the system checks upon the configured mode and falls back to the
              slower modes if the above assumptions are not true.

       ::pop3::delete chan startIndex ?endIndex?
              Delete a range of messages from the server.  If the endIndex is not specified,  only  one  message
              will  be  deleted.  Note, the indices are not reordered on the server, so if you delete message 1,
              then the first message in the queue is message 2 (message index 1 is no longer  valid).   See  the
              startIndex and endIndex descriptions below.

              startIndex
                     The  startIndex may be an index of a specific message starting with the index 1, or it have
                     any of the following values:

                     start  This is a logical value for the first message in the spool, equivalent to the  value
                            1.

                     next   The message immediately following the last message read, see ::pop3::last.

                     end    The  most  recent  message  in  the spool (the end of the spool).  This is useful to
                            retrieve only the most recent message.

              endIndex
                     The endIndex is an optional parameter and defaults to the value "-1",  which  indicates  to
                     only retrieve the one message specified by startIndex.  If specified, it may be an index of
                     a specific message starting with the index "1", or it may have any of the following values:

                     last   The message is the last message read by a POP3 client, see ::pop3::last.

                     end    The most recent message in the spool (the end of the spool).

       ::pop3::list chan ?msg?
              Returns the scan listing of the mailbox. If parameter msg is given, then the listing only for that
              message is returned.

       ::pop3::top chan msg n
              Optional  POP3  command,  not  all  servers  may support this.  ::pop3::top retrieves headers of a
              message, specified by parameter msg, and number of n lines from the message body.

       ::pop3::uidl chan ?msg?
              Optional POP3 command, not all servers may support this.  ::pop3::uidl returns the uid listing  of
              the  mailbox.  If  the  parameter  msg  is  specified,  then  the listing only for that message is
              returned.

       ::pop3::capa chan
              Optional POP3 command, not all servers may support this.   ::pop3::capa  returns  a  list  of  the
              capabilities  of the server.  TOP, SASL, UIDL, LOGIN-DELAY and STLS are typical capabilities.  See
              IETF RFC 2449.

       ::pop3::close chan
              Gracefully close the connect after sending a POP3 QUIT command down the socket.

SECURE MAIL TRANSFER

       A pop3 connection can be secured with SSL/TLS by requiring the package TLS  and  then  using  either  the
       option  -socketcmd  or  the option -stls of the command pop3::open.  The first method, option -socketcmd,
       will force the use of the tls::socket command when opening the connection.  This  is  suitable  for  POP3
       servers which expect SSL connections only. These will generally be listening on port 995.

                package require tls
                tls::init -cafile /path/to/ca/cert -keyfile ...

                # Create secured pop3 channel
                pop3::open -socketcmd tls::socket \\
                   $thehost $theuser $thepassword

                ...

       The  second  method,  option  -stls,  will connect to the standard POP3 port and then perform an STARTTLS
       handshake. This will only work for POP3 servers which have this capability. The package will confirm that
       the  server  supports  STARTTLS  and  the  handshake  was  performed  correctly  before  proceeding  with
       authentication.

                package require tls
                tls::init -cafile /path/to/ca/cert -keyfile ...

                # Create secured pop3 channel
                pop3::open -stls 1 \\
                   $thehost $theuser $thepassword

                ...

BUGS, IDEAS, FEEDBACK

       This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain bugs and  other  problems.   Please
       report  such  in the category pop3 of the Tcllib Trackers [http://core.tcl.tk/tcllib/reportlist].  Please
       also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either package and/or documentation.

       When proposing code changes, please provide unified diffs, i.e the output of diff -u.

       Note further that attachments are strongly preferred over inlined patches. Attachments  can  be  made  by
       going  to the Edit form of the ticket immediately after its creation, and then using the left-most button
       in the secondary navigation bar.

KEYWORDS

       email, mail, pop, pop3, rfc 1939, secure, ssl, tls

CATEGORY

       Networking