-Design notes and philosophy
----------------------------
-
-public-inbox spawned around some basic ideas
---------------------------------------------
-
-* Public, non-real-time, archivable communication is essential to
- Free and Open Source software development.
-
-* Contributing to Free and Open Source projects should not require the
- use of non-Free/non-Open Source services or software.
-
-* Graphical user interfaces should not be required for text-based
- communication.
+public-inbox design notes
+-------------------------
Challenges to running normal mailing lists
------------------------------------------
+
1) spam
2) bounce processing of invalid/bad email addresses
3) processing subscribe/unsubscribe requests
public-inbox-mda(1)
* public-inbox uses SMTP for posting. Posting a message to a public-inbox
- instance is no different than sending a message to any open mailing
+ instance is no different than sending a message to any _open_ mailing
list.
-* readers may continue using use their choice of mail clients and
- mailbox formats, only learning a few commands of the ssoma(1) tool
- is required.
+* Existing spam filtering on an SMTP server is also effective on
+ public-inbox.
+
+* Readers may continue using use their choice of NNTP and mail clients.
* Atom is a reasonable feed format for casual readers and is supported
by a variety of feed readers.
developers and users of Free Software should not rely on proprietary
tools or services.
-* Existing infrastrucuture, tools, and user familarity.
+* Existing infrastructure, tools, and user familiarity.
There is already a large variety of tools, clients, and email providers
available. There are also many resources for users to run their own
SMTP server on a domain they control.
There is no need to ask the NSA for backups of your mail archives :)
* git, one of the most widely-used version control systems, includes many
- tools for for email: git-format-patch(1), git-send-email(1), git-am(1).
- Furthermore, the development of git itself is based on the git mailing
- list.
+ tools for for email, including: git-format-patch(1), git-send-email(1),
+ git-am(1), git-imap-send(1). Furthermore, the development of git itself
+ is based on the git mailing list: https://public-inbox.org/git/
+ (or http://hjrcffqmbrq6wope.onion/git/ for Tor users)
* Email is already the de-facto form of communication in many Free Software
- communities.
+ communities..
* Fallback/transition to private email and other lists, in case the
public-inbox host becomes unavailable, users may still directly email
each other (or Cc: lists for related/dependent projects).
-Notes
------
+Why git?
+--------
+
+* git is distributed and robust while being both fast and
+ space-efficient with text data. NNTP was considered, but does not
+ support delta-compression and places no guarantees on data/transport
+ integrity. However, a read-only NNTP gateway is implemented.
+
+* As of 2016, git is widely used and known to nearly all Free Software
+ developers. For non-developers it is packaged for all major GNU/Linux
+ and *BSD distributions. NNTP is not as widely-used nowadays.
+
+Why perl 5?
+-----------
+
+* Perl 5 is widely available on modern *nix systems with good a history
+ of backwards and forward compatibility.
+
+* git and SpamAssassin both use it, so it should be one less thing for
+ admins to install and waste disk space with.
+
+* Distributing compiled binaries has higher costs for storage/cache
+ space is required for each architecture. Having a runnable,
+ source-only distribution means any user already has access to all
+ of our source.
+
+Laziness
+--------
+
+* Stick to dependencies available in Debian main, this should make it
+ easier for potential users to install, and easier for distro
+ maintainers to pick up.
-* Expose Message-Id in HTML views to encourage replies from drive-by
- contributors
+* A list server being turned into an SMTP spam relay and being
+ blacklisted while an admin is asleep is scary.
+ Sidestep that entirely by having clients pull.
+
+* Eric has a great Maildir+inotify-based Bayes training setup
+ going back many years. Document, integrate and publicize it for
+ public-inbox usage, encouraging other admins to use it (it works
+ as long as admins read their public-inbox).
+
+* Custom, difficult-for-Bayes requires custom anti-spam rules.
+ We may steal rules from the Debian listmasters:
+ svn://anonscm.debian.org/pkg-listmaster
+
+* Full archives are easily distributable with git, so somebody else
+ can take over the list if we give up. Anybody may also run an SMTP
+ notifier/delivery service based on the archives.
+
+* Avoids bikeshedding about web UI decisions, GUI-lovers can write their
+ own GUI-friendly interfaces (HTML or native) based on public archives.
+
+Web notes
+---------
+
+* Getting users to install/run any new tool is difficult.
+ The web views must be easily read/cache/mirror-able.
+
+* There may also be a significant number of webmail users without
+ an MUA or feed reader; so a web view is necessary.
+
+* Expose Message-ID in web views to encourage replies from drive-by
+ contributors.
+
+* Raw text endpoint allows users to write client-side endpoints
+ without hosting the data themselves (or on a different server).
+
+What sucks about public-inbox
+-----------------------------
+
+* Lack of push notification. On the other hand, feeds seem popular.
+
+* some (mostly GUI) mail clients cannot set In-Reply-To headers
+ properly without the original message.
+
+Scalability notes
+-----------------
+
+See the public-inbox-v2-format(5) manpage for all the scalability
+problems solved.
Copyright
---------
-Copyright 2013, Eric Wong <normalperson@yhbt.net> and all contributors.
-License: AGPLv3 or later <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.txt>
+
+Copyright 2013-2020 all contributors <meta@public-inbox.org>
+License: AGPL-3.0+ <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl-3.0.txt>