ctm_smail, ctm_dequeue, ctm_rmail(1) | send and receive ctm 1 deltas via mail |
ctm_dequeue, ctm_smail, ctm_rmail(1) | send and receive ctm 1 deltas via mail |
ctm_rmail, ctm_smail, ctm_dequeue(1) | send and receive ctm 1 deltas via mail |
CTM_MAIL(1) | MidnightBSD General Commands Manual | CTM_MAIL(1) |
ctm_smail
,
ctm_dequeue
, ctm_rmail
— send and receive
ctm(1) deltas via
mail
ctm_smail |
[-l log]
[-m maxmsgsize]
[-c maxctmsize]
[-q queue-dir]
ctm-delta mail-alias |
ctm_dequeue |
[-l log]
[-n numchunks]
queue-dir |
ctm_rmail |
[-Dfuv ] [-l
log] [-p
piecedir] [-d
deltadir] [-b
basedir] [file ...] |
In conjunction with the
ctm(1) command,
ctm_smail
, ctm_dequeue
and
ctm_rmail
are used to distribute changes to a source
tree via email. The ctm_smail
utility is given a
compressed ctm delta, and a
mailing list to send it to. It splits the delta into manageable pieces,
encodes them as mail messages and sends them to the mailing list (optionally
queued to spread the mail load). Each recipient uses
ctm_rmail
(either manually or automatically) to
decode and reassemble the delta, and optionally call
ctm to apply it to the
source tree. At the moment, several source trees are distributed, and by
several sites. These include the FreeBSD-current
source and CVS trees, distributed by
freefall.FreeBSD.org
.
Command line arguments for ctm_smail
:
-l
log-m
maxmsgsizectm_smail
is allowed to send. It is approximate since mail headers and other
niceties are not counted in this limit. If not specified, it will default
to 64000 bytes, leaving room for 1535 bytes of headers before the rumoured
64k mail limit.-c
maxctmsize-q
queue-dirctm_dequeue
. This feature
allows the mailing of large deltas to be spread out over hours or even
days to limit the impact on recipients with limited network bandwidth or
small mail spool areas.ctm-delta is the delta to be sent, and mail-alias is the mailing list to send the delta to. The mail messages are sent using sendmail(8).
Command line arguments for
ctm_dequeue
:
-l
log-n
numchunksctm_dequeue
will send per run. By default, ctm_dequeue
will
send one mail message per run.queuedir is the directory containing the
mail messages stored by ctm_smail
. Up to
numchunks mail messages will be sent in each run. The
recipient mailing list is already encoded in the queued files.
It is safe to run ctm_dequeue
while
ctm_smail
is adding entries to the queue, or even to
run ctm_smail
multiple times concurrently, but a
separate queue directory should be used for each tree being distributed.
This is because entries are served in alphabetical order, and one tree will
be unfairly serviced before any others, based on the delta names, not delta
creation times.
Command line arguments for ctm_rmail
:
-l
log-p
piecedir-b
flag is given.-d
deltadir-b
basedirctm_rmail
without the
-p
flag. Deltas will not be applied if they do not
match the .ctm_status
file in
basedir (or if .ctm_status
does not exist).-D
-f
ctm_rmail
from
sendmail because
ctm can take a very long
time to complete, causing other people's mail to be delayed, and can in
theory cause spurious mail retransmission due to the remote
sendmail timing out,
or even termination of ctm_rmail
by mail filters
such as MH's
slocal. Do not worry
about zillions of background
ctm processes loading your
machine, since locking is used to prevent more than one
ctm invocation at a
time.-u
-u
flag to the
ctm command when applying
the complete deltas, causing it to set the modification time of created
and modified files to the CTM delta creation time.-v
-v
flag to the
ctm command when applying
the complete deltas, causing a more informative output. All
ctm output appears in the
ctm_rmail
log file.The file arguments (or stdin, if there are none) are scanned for delta pieces. Multiple delta pieces can be read from a single file, so an entire maildrop can be scanned and processed with a single command.
It is safe to invoke ctm_rmail
multiple
times concurrently (with different input files), as might happen when
sendmail is delivering
mail asynchronously. This is because locking is used to keep things
orderly.
Following are the important parts of an actual (very small) delta piece:
From: owner-src-cur To: src-cur Subject: ctm-mail src-cur.0003.gz 1/4 CTM_MAIL BEGIN src-cur.0003.gz 1 4 H4sIAAAAAAACA3VU72/bNhD9bP0VByQoEiyRSZEUSQP9kKTeYCR2gDTdsGFAwB/HRogtG5K8NCj6 v4+UZSdtUQh6Rz0eee/xaF/dzx8up3/MFlDkBNrGnbttAwyo1pxoRgoiBNX/QJ5d3c9/X8DcPGGo lggkPiXngE4W1gUjKPJCYyk5MZRbIqmNW/ASglIFcdwIzTUxaAqhnCPcBqloKEkJVNDMF0Azk+Bo dDzzk0Ods/+A5gXv9YyJHjMCtJwQNeESNma7hOmXDRxn CTM_MAIL END 61065
The subject of the message always begins with “ctm-mail” followed by the name of the delta, which piece this is, and how many total pieces there are. The data are bracketed by “CTM_MAIL BEGIN” and “CTM_MAIL END” lines, duplicating the information in the subject line, plus a simple checksum.
If the delta exceeds maxctmsize, then a message like this will be received instead:
From: owner-src-cur To: src-cur Subject: ctm-notice src-cur.0999.gz src-cur.0999.gz is 792843 bytes. The limit is 300000 bytes. You can retrieve this delta via ftp.
You are then on your own!
If deltas are to be applied then
ctm(1) and
gunzip(1) must be in your
PATH
.
The ctm_smail
,
ctm_dequeue
and ctm_rmail
utilities return exit status 0 for success, and 1 for various failures. The
ctm_rmail
utility is expected to be called from a
mail transfer program, and thus signals failure only when the input mail
message should be bounced (preferably into your regular maildrop, not back
to the sender). In short, failure to apply a completed delta with
ctm is not considered an
error important enough to bounce the mail, and
ctm_rmail
returns an exit status of 0.
To send delta 32 of src-cur to a group of wonderful code hackers known to sendmail as src-guys, limiting the mail size to roughly 60000 bytes, you could use:
ctm_smail -m 60000 /wherever/it/is/src-cur.0032.gz src-guys
To decode every ctm-mail
message in your
mailbox, assemble them into complete deltas, then apply any deltas built or
lying around, you could use:
ctm_rmail -p ~/pieces -d ~/deltas -b /usr/ctm-src-cur $MAIL
(Note that no messages are deleted by
ctm_rmail
. Any mail reader could be used for that
purpose.)
To create a mail alias called receiver-dude that will automatically decode and assemble deltas, but not apply them, you could put the following lines in your /etc/mail/aliases file (assuming the /ctm/tmp and /ctm/deltas directories and /ctm/log file are writable by user daemon or group wheel):
receiver-dude: "|ctm_rmail -p /ctm/tmp -d /ctm/deltas -l /ctm/log" owner-receiver-dude: real_dude@wherever.you.like
The second line will catch failures and drop them into your regular mailbox, or wherever else you like.
To apply all the deltas collected, and delete those applied, you could use:
ctm_rmail -D -d /ctm/deltas -b /ctm/src-cur -l /ctm/apply.log
For maximum flexibility, consider this excerpt from a procmail script:
PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH :0 w * ^Subject: ctm-mail cvs-cur | ctm_incoming
together with the shell script ~/bin/ctm_incoming:
#! /bin/sh PATH="$HOME/bin:/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin" export PATH cd $HOME/ctm && ctm_rmail -f -p pieces -d deltas -l log -b /ctm
which will deposit all
ctm deltas in
~/ctm/deltas, apply them to the tree in
/ctm, and drop any failures into your regular mail
box. Note the PATH
manipulation in
ctm_incoming which allows
ctm_rmail
to execute
ctm(1) on the
(non-FreeBSD) machine that this example was taken
from.
On its own, CTM is an insecure protocol - there is no authentication performed that the changes applied to the source code were sent by a trusted party, and so care should be taken if the CTM deltas are obtained via an unauthenticated medium such as regular email. It is a relatively simple matter for an attacker to forge a CTM delta to replace or precede the legitimate one and insert malicious code into your source tree. If the legitimate delta is somehow prevented from arriving, this will go unnoticed until a later delta attempts to touch the same file, at which point the MD5 checksum will fail.
To remedy this insecurity, CTM delta pieces generated by FreeBSD.org are cryptographically signed in a format compatible with the GNU Privacy Guard utility, available in /usr/ports/security/gpg, and the Pretty Good Privacy v5 utility, /usr/ports/security/pgp5. The relevant public key can be obtained by fingering ctm@FreeBSD.org.
CTM deltas which are thus signed cannot be undetectably altered by an attacker. Therefore it is recommended that you make use of GPG or PGP5 to verify the signatures if you receive your CTM deltas via email.
In normal operation, ctm_smail
will report
messages like:
ctm_smail: src-cur.0250.gz 1/2 sent to src-guys
or, if queueing,
ctm_smail: src-cur.0250.gz 1/2 queued for src-guys
The ctm_dequeue
utility will report
messages like:
ctm_dequeue: src-cur.0250.gz 1/2 sent
The ctm_rmail
utility will report messages
like:
ctm_rmail: src-cur.0250.gz 1/2 stored ctm_rmail: src-cur.0250.gz 2/2 stored ctm_rmail: src-cur.0250.gz complete
If any of the input files do not contain a valid delta piece,
ctm_rmail
will report:
ctm_rmail: message contains no delta
and return an exit status of 1. You can use this to redirect wayward messages back into your real mailbox if your mail filter goes wonky.
These messages go to stderr or to the log file. Messages from ctm(1) turn up here too. Error messages should be self explanatory.
Stephen McKay <mckay@FreeBSD.org>
January 24, 1995 | midnightbsd-3.1 |