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A Python mail server forked from Lamson

Project description

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Salmon - A Python Mail Server

Salmon is a pure Python mail server designed to create robust and complex mail applications in the style of modern web frameworks. Salmon is designed to sit behind a traditional mail server in the same way a web application sits behind Apache or Nginx. It has all the features of a web application stack (templates, routing, handlers, state machine) and plays well with other libraries, such as Django and SQLAlchemy.

Salmon has been released uner the GNU GPLv3, as published by the FSF.

Features

Salmon supports running in many contexts for processing mail using the best technology currently available. Since Salmon is aiming to be a modern mail server and Mail processing framework, it has some features you don’t find in any other Mail server.

  • Written in portable Python that should run on almost any Unix server.

  • Handles mail in almost any encoding and format, including attachments, and canonicalizes them for easier processing.

  • Sends nearly pristine clean mail that is easier to process by other receiving servers.

  • Properly decodes internationalized mail into Python unicode, and translates Python unicode back into nice clean ascii and/or UTF-8 mail.

  • Supports working with Maildir queues to defer work and distribute it to multiple machines.

  • Can run as an non-root user on privileged ports to reduce the risk of intrusion.

  • Salmon can also run in a completely separate virtualenv for easy deployment.

  • A flexible and easy to use routing system lets you write stateful or stateless handlers of your email.

  • Helpful tools for unit testing your email applications with nose, including spell checking with PyEnchant.

  • Ability to use Jinja2 or Mako templates to craft emails including the headers.

  • Easily configurable to use alternative sending and receiving systems, database libraries, or any other systems you need to talk to.

  • Yet, you don’t have to configure everything to get stated. A simple salmon gen command lets you get an application up and running quick.

  • Finally, many helpful commands for general mail server debugging and cleaning.

Installing

pip install salmon-mail

Project Information

Project documentation can be found here

Fork

Salmon is a fork of Lamson. In the summer of 2012 (2012-07-13 to be exact), Lamson was relicensed under a BSD variant that was revokable. The two clauses that were of most concern:

4. Contributors agree that any contributions are owned by the copyright holder
and that contributors have absolutely no rights to their contributions.

5. The copyright holder reserves the right to revoke this license on anyone who
uses this copyrighted work at any time for any reason.

I read that to mean that I could make a contribution but then have said work denied to me because the orginal author didn’t like the colour of my socks. So I went and found the latest version that was available under the GNU GPL version 3.

Salmon is an anagram of Lamson, if you hadn’t worked it out already.

Source

You can find the source on GitHub:

https://github.com/moggers87/salmon

Status

Salmon has just had some major changes to modernise the code-base. The main APIs should be compatible with releases prior to 3.0.0, but there’s no guarantee that older applications won’t need changes.

Python versions supported are: 2.7, 3.5, and 3.6.

See the CHANGELOG for more details on what’s changed since version 2.

License

Salmon is released under the GNU GPLv3 license, which can be found here

Contributing

Pull requests and issues are most welcome.

I will not accept code that has been submitted for inclusion in the original project due to the terms of its new licence.

Testing

The Salmon project needs unit tests, code reviews, coverage information, source analysis, and security reviews to maintain quality. If you find a bug, please take the time to write a test case that fails or provide a piece of mail that causes the failure.

If you contribute new code then your code should have as much coverage as possible, with a minimal amount of mocking.

Security

Salmon follows the same security reporting model that has worked for other open source projects: If you report a security vulnerability, it will be acted on immediately and a fix with complete full disclosure will go out to everyone at the same time. It’s the job of the people using Salmon to keep track of security relate problems.

Additionally, Salmon is written in as secure a manner as possible and assumes that it is operating in a hostile environment. If you find Salmon doesn’t behave correctly given that constraint then please voice your concerns.

Development

Salmon is written entirely in Python and runs on Python 2.7 with experimental support for Python 3. It should hopefully run on any platform that supports Python and has Unix semantics.

If you find yourself lost in source code, just yell.

PEP-8 should be followed where possible, but feel free to ignore the 80 character limit it imposes (120 is a good marker IMO).

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