ezmlm-web-archiv/ezmlm-web-3.0
lars 2b79935e9e utf-8 support fixed
pretty names work again
fixed check for added mail addresses
config_all added
error messages for list creation clarified
2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
..
css additional config pages do not need changes to the cgi code anymore 2005-12-23 18:10:08 +00:00
lang utf-8 support fixed 2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
spec new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00
template utf-8 support fixed 2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
CHANGES utf-8 support fixed 2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
ezmlm-web.cgi utf-8 support fixed 2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
ezmlmwebrc MAIL_DOMAIN option included in ezmlmwebrc 2005-12-22 07:51:47 +00:00
htaccess.sample new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00
index.c new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00
INSTALL new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00
README new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00
TODO utf-8 support fixed 2005-12-24 10:01:08 +00:00
UPGRADING search order for ezmlmwebrc changed 2005-12-23 12:37:33 +00:00
webusers.sample new release 3.0 2005-12-22 07:45:03 +00:00

=================
| ezmlm-web-3.0 |
=================

If you only want to know how to install ezmlm-web, then you should
read INSTALL.

Contents
========
   I.   Copyright Stuff
  II.   Some Background
 III.   Requirements
  IV.   Files
   V.   Notes
  VI.   Multi-level list access
 VII.   Language Portability
VIII.   Bugs && Bug Reports
  XI.   Acknowledgements
   X.   Availability


I. Copyright Stuff - essentially the FreeBSD licence ...
==================
ezmlm-web - version 3.0 - 12/22/02005

Copyright (C) 1998, Guy Antony Halse, All Rights Reserved.

Please send bug reports and comments to ezmlm-web@sumpfralle.de

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

Neither name Guy Antony Halse nor the names of any contributors may be used
to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific
prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS
IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.


II. Some Background
===================
[this text was written by Guy Antony Halse - the original author of ezmlm-web]
The need for ezmlm-web arose from the fact that we host many student
societies on our system. These societies usually have a virtual host for web
and email, which is administered by a computer rep from the society. These
computer reps often have little or no knowledge of Unix and so we needed a
user friendly system that would let the create and maintain mailing lists
(such as members@foo.soc.ru.ac.za, committee@foo.soc.ru.ac.za, etc).

Since I am never keen to re-invent the wheel, I had a look at Steve Peterson's
script (http://virtation.com/qmail/ml-sub), which allows people to subscribe 
and unsubscribe from mailing lists using a form->email gateway. This is fine 
for putting on a web page saying "here come and join our mailing list", but
doesn't really allow you to administrate a list.

Security of mailing lists was a concern, as we really didn't want
unauthorised people to be able to alter some users list. Ezmlm-web itself
implements no security checks (apart from un-tainting input) and so relies
on the web server to do this (re-inventing the wheel again :). We use an
Apache webserver, so one can control access to a directory using a .htaccess
file or in the access.conf file. ApacheWeek have a good article on doing
this at http://www.apacheweek.com/features/userauth. I also give examples
later in this document.

This version of ezmlm-web is based to a large extent on previous
versions that I have developed. It has however been totally re-written to
make use of the Mail::Ezmlm perl module I wrote. At the same time it was
updated and extended to include the new features of ezmlm-idx. It includes 
many new features that have been suggested to me over the last few months,
and hopefully is now useful to a much larger group of people.

Since 02005 ezmlm-web is maintained by Lars Kruse (ezmlm-web@sumpfralle.de).
Only minor improvements had to be implemented to keep the already fully
functional ezmlm-web up to date.


III. Requirements
=================
This version of ezmlm-web requires the following;

* qmail v1.03
* ezmlm v0.53 (or ezmlm-idx v0.40)
* clearsilver v0.9.14 (only perl support is necessary)
* Perl v5.004 and the following modules;
  + Mail::Ezmlm v0.03 
  + Mail::Address v1.15
  + CGI v2.6 
  + CGI::Carp v1.06
  + DB_File v1.65
  + Getopt::Std v4.1
  + File::Find v?
  + File::Copy v2.02

The version number indicates the version of the module that ezmlm-web was
developed with. Earlier versions may work, but then they haven't been
tested. Have a look on http://www.CPAN.org/, http://www.qmail.org/, and
http://www.ezmlm.org/ for anything you are missing. Of course, newer 
versions are expected to work as well.

To install perl modules you may use the cpan command line interface.
Just run "cpan" and type something like "install Mail::Ezmlm".

You can download clearsilver (a templating engine - it is required since
ezmlm-web v3.0) from http://clearsilver.net.


IV. Files
=========
In this distribution you should find eight files;

README            This file. Provides some background information.
		  Not needed to run ezmlm-web.

INSTALL		  Notes on installation. Not needed to run ezmlm-web.

CHANGES           The change history. Not needed to run ezmlm-web

TODO              This file is a list of things I intend doing in future
                  versions of ezmlm-web. Not needed to run ezmlm-web.

ezmlm-web.cgi     The ezmlm-web script proper. This program requires that
                  you have perl5 installed on your machine and that your web
                  server is capable of running CGI scripts.

index.c           A C wrapper to allow ezmlm-web.cgi to run suid. Not
                  strictly necessary if your setup allows perl scripts to
                  run suid, but I prefer using wrappers anyway. It needs to
                  be edited and compiled to suit your system. Not needed to
                  run ezmlm-web.

ezmlmwebrc	  This is the configuration file for ezmlm-web. All options
		  are explained in this example file. You will need this
		  file to run ezmlm-web.

htaccess.sample   A sample Apache .htaccess file for controlling access to
                  the mailing lists. If you use another web server, you will
                  have to work this bit out for yourself.

webusers.sample   A sample webusers file for multi-level access control.

The directory "lang" contains the language files. You will need at least the 
one, that you have choosen in "ezmlmwebrc" by the option "HTML_LANGUAGE".


V. Notes
=========
* There is a function to delete mailing lists, but I really don't like the
  idea. The only reason I put it in is that bvi@rucus asked for it.
  If you set $UNSAFE_RD = 0 (the default) in the config section, the
  ezmlm-web won't actually delete the list. In this case it moves the <list> 
  to .<list> and all the associated .qmail files to a sub-directory called 
  deleted.qmail/ (In the users home directory. This is by far a safer way 
  (since you can restore lists) and therefore I recommend it.

* The HTML interface has been tested using Nutscrape, Internet Exploder, and
  Lynx. If anyone uses anything else and has problems, please let me know.

* I suggest that you make use of custom ezmlmwebrc files rather than using
  the -d command line switches - it makes fault diagnosis easier ...

* Please see the section on languages below.


VI. Multi-Level Access
=======================
Ezmlm-web has a multi-level access system. This depends on a file called
webusers being present in $LIST_DIR. If the file is not present, then ANY
valid user has access to all lists.  If, however, this file exists a number
of constraints come into place.

- The webusers file is scanned for either the list name (case insensitive) or
  an ALL (case sensitive) entry.
- The list entry (or ALL) is scanned for the current user (as set in
  $REMOTE_USER) or an ALL entry.
- If any valid match is made, then the user is allowed to edit the list.
  Otherwise the user is politely told to go away ;-)

If list creation is allowed and the webusers file exists, then the person who
creates the list is the default owner. As of yet there is no way to create users
through the web interface, but I intend to do this eventually.

The format of a webusers file is as follows;

list1: user1, user2, user3
ALL: user1, user2
list2: ALL

ie; listname colon (:) and a comma (,) separated list of users. Spaces are
ignored but each list must appear on a new line.

Once this file exists, the ezmlm-web script will allow the list users to
configure their access lists along with any other options.

You can permit some users to create lists by adding a line similar to the 
following to your webusers file:

ALLOW_CREATE: user2, user3

If there is no line starting with "ALLOW_CREATE:" in the webusers file, then
no one will be allowed to create lists. This behaviour is new for ezmlm-web
since version 2.2. To stay compatible to old installations, the commandline
option "-c" for ezmlm-web.cgi will still allow everyone to create lists. The
use of this option is deprecated, since the line "ALLOW_CREATE: ALL" provides
the same effect in a cleaner way.


VII. Language Portablity
=========================
One of the great new features of version 2.0 is that it is essentially
language independant (okay, not quite, but is 99% of the way there). Most of
the fixed strings, help, etc is defined in the files of lang directory.
Of course you can change them or create a new translation.

The language can be selected in ezmlmwebrc with the "HTML_LANGUAGE" option.

If anyone gets round to writing full templates for languages I would
appreciate it if you would do two things;

Firstly, make them public and announce them on the ezmlm@lists.cr.yp.to
mailing list so that others may benefit.

Secondly, please mail me a copy (ezmlm-web@sumpfralle.de) so that I may use
them in any future releases of ezmlm-web.


VIII. Bugs && Bug Reports
=======================
I don't know of any bugs, but then this is a rewrite and a first release. It
has been tested reasonably well, but not exhaustively. I know it works on
FreeBSD 4.0-STABLE, FreeBSD 3.4-RELEASE, RedHat 5.1, Redhat 6.0 and Debian
3.0 all using an Apache web server, but I would be interested to know whether
it works on other OSs and with other web servers.

Please mail bug reports and comments to ezmlm-web@sumpfralle.de.
Or (even better) submit a bug report at https://systemausfall.org/trac/ezmlm-web.
Or subscribe to the ezmlm-web mailinglist: ezmlm-web-subscribe@lists.systemausfall.org.


IX. Acknowledgements
===================
*  Guy Antony Halse (guy-ezmlm@rucus.ru.ac.za) - he created ezmlm-web
   and maintained it till 02005 
*  Keith Burdis (keith@rucus.ru.ac.za) - For constantly bugging me (Guy) and
   ensuring that I actually got round to writing some code :)
*  Bryan Kilian (bryan@rucus.ru.ac.za) and the administrators of the
   Litestep mailing list - For helping beta test and putting up with me (Guy)
   pestering them.
*  Several societies at Rhodes. For switching to my web interface and so
   unknowingly helping to beta test it.
*  Barry Irwin (bvi@moria.org) - For trusting me (Guy) and moving the Grahamstown
   Foundation over to qmail and ezmlm - yet another beta tester :-)
*  David Summers (david@summersoft.fay.ar.us) - For some ideas. And for
   offering to make up an RPM version. I hope the offer still exists for
   version 2.0 :-)
*  Glen Stewart (glen_stewart@associate.com) - For a multitude of ideas.
*  Fred Lindberg (lindberg@id.wustl.edu) for his useful posts to the 
   mailing list, suggestions, help, etc
*  Galen Johnson (gjohnson@totalsports.net) - For some ideas on bugfixes.
*  Reinin Ooyama (lenin@hasiru.net) - a japanese translation and bugixes for v2.3
*  Henning Rieger (age@systemausfall.org) - he designed most of the new
   interface for v3.0


X. Availability
=================
More information on ezmlm-web and developments to ezmlm-web can be found at:
https://systemausfall.org/toolforge/ezmlm-web

The public subversion repository is at:
https://svn.systemausfall.org/svn/ezmlm-web

The website of Guy Antony Halse (the author of ezmlm-web) is still at:
http://rucus.ru.ac.za/~guy/ezmlm/

The old ftp-archive of ezmlm-web is still available on:
ftp://rucus.ru.ac.za/pub/mail/ezmlm/