Lightweight, asynchronous IMAP serving in Python.
Project description
pymap
Lightweight, asynchronous IMAP serving in Python.
This project attempts to simplify the complexity of the IMAP protocol into a set of clean Python APIs that can be implemented by pluggable backends. Everything runs in an asyncio event loop.
API Documentation
Table of Contents
Install and Usage
$ pip install pymap
$ pymap --help
$ pymap dict --help
$ pymap maildir --help
dict Plugin
The dict plugin uses in-memory dictionary objects to store mail and metadata. While the server is running, all concurrent and future connections will see the same data, including added and removed messages, but no changes will persist if the server is restarted.
You can try out the dict plugin with demo data:
$ pymap --port 1143 --debug dict --demo-data
In another terminal, connect to port 1143 and run some commands:
* OK [CAPABILITY IMAP4rev1 STARTTLS AUTH=PLAIN AUTH=LOGIN AUTH=CRAM-MD5 BINARY UIDPLUS MULTIAPPEND IDLE APPENDLIMIT=1000000000] Server ready 163.1.168.192.in-addr.arpa
. login demouser demopass
. OK Authentication successful.
. select INBOX
* OK [PERMANENTFLAGS (\Answered \Deleted \Draft \Flagged \Seen)] Flags permitted.
* FLAGS (\Answered \Deleted \Draft \Flagged \Recent \Seen)
* 4 EXISTS
* 1 RECENT
* OK [UIDNEXT 105] Predicted next UID.
* OK [UIDVALIDITY 4097774359] UIDs valid.
* OK [UNSEEN 4] First unseen message.
. OK [READ-WRITE] Selected mailbox.
. logout
* BYE Logging out.
. OK Logout successful.
Here are some other commands to try:
. uid fetch 1:* all
. list "" ""
. create "A New Folder"
. store * +FLAGS (\Deleted)
. expunge
Add new messages using the append command:
. append INBOX (\Flagged) {38+}
From: user@example.com
test message!
maildir Plugin
The maildir plugin uses on-disk storage for mail and metadata. For mail data, it uses the eponymous Maildir format. However, since Maildir alone is not enough for modern IMAP usage, it is extended with additional data as described in Dovecot's MailboxFormat/Maildir, with the intention of being fully compatible.
For login, the plugin uses a simple formatted text file, e.g.:
john::s3cretp4ssword
sally:mail/data:sallypass
susan:/var/mail/susan:!@#$%^:*
The colon-delimited fields are the user ID, the mailbox path, and the password. The mailbox path may be empty, relative, or absolute. An empty mailbox path will use the user ID as a relative path.
Try out the maildir plugin:
$ pymap --port 1143 --debug maildir /path/to/users.txt
Once started, check out the dict plugin example above to connect and see it in action. The biggest difference is, when stop and restart the pymap server, your mail messages remain intact.
redis Plugin
The redis plugin uses the Redis data structure store for mail and metadata. It requires aioredis and will not appear in the plugins list without it.
$ pip install aioredis
$ pymap redis --help
Keys are composed of a heirarchy of prefixes separated by :
. For example, the
key containing the flags of a message might be:
3fd347cdfaee4b509f8847043d52b501:Sent:37:msg:9173:flags
In this example, the 3fd347cdfaee4b509f8847043d52b501
prefix was a randomly
generated UUID acting as the namespace for the login user. The user has a
mailbox Sent
with UIDVALIDITY value 37
and a message with the UID 9173
.
The default way to create logins is to simply set a key of only the username to its password. For example:
127.0.0.1:6379> SET john "s3cretp4ssword"
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> SET sally "sallypass"
(integer) 1
Logins may also be looked up from a hash, with a templated key, or where the
value is a JSON string with a "password"
field. See the plugin help and API
documentation for more details.
Try out the redis plugin:
$ pymap --port 1143 --debug redis redis://localhost
Once started, check out the dict plugin example above to connect and see it in action.
Admin Tool
The pymap-admin
tool can be used to perform various admin functions against a
running pymap server. This is a separate grpc service using grpclib
listening on a UNIX socket, typically /tmp/pymap/admin-<pid>.sock
.
The admin tool and service have extra dependencies you must install first:
pip install grpclib protobuf
append
Command
To append a message directly to a mailbox, without using IMAP, use the
append
admin command. First, check out the help:
$ pymap-admin append --help
As a basic example, you can append a message to a dict
plugin backend like
this:
$ cat <<EOF | pymap-admin append demouser
> From: user@example.com
>
> test message!
> EOF
validity: 1784302999
uid: 101
The output is the UID validity value of the mailbox the message was appended
to, and the UID of the appended message. In this example, demouser
is the
login user and the default mailbox is INBOX
.
Supported Extensions
In addition to RFC 3501, pymap supports a number of IMAP extensions to give clients easier and more powerful use.
RFC 2177
Adds the IDLE
capability and command, which lets clients wait (without
issuing commands) and receive mailbox updates as they happen without polling.
RFC 2180
Defines some conventions for handling multi-access in scenarios such as
EXPUNGE
and mailbox deletion.
RFC 3502
Adds the MULTIAPPEND
capability, allowing multiple messages to be atomically
appended to a mailbox with a single APPEND
command.
RFC 3516
Adds the BINARY
extension, providing better support for the encoding and
transfer of binary data.
RFC 4315
Adds the UIDPLUS
capability, which adds the UID EXPUNGE
command and defines
the APPENDUID
and COPYUID
giving clients more insight into the messages
added to a mailbox.
RFC 4466
No additional functionality by itself, but allows pymap to be extended easily and more robustly handle bad client implementations.
RFC 5530
Adds additional IMAP response codes that can help tell an IMAP client why a command failed.
RFC 7889 (partial)
Adds the APPENDLIMIT=
capability, declaring the maximum message size a server
will accept from an APPEND
command. Mailbox-specific limitations defined
by the RFC are not supported.
Development and Testing
You will need to do some additional setup to develop and test plugins. First off, I suggest activating a venv. Then, install the test requirements and a local link to the pymap package:
$ pip install -r test/requirements.txt
$ pip install -e .
Run the tests with py.test:
$ py.test
If you intend to create a pull request, you should make sure the full suite of tests run by CI/CD is passing:
$ py.test --mypy --flake8 --cov=pymap
A py.test run executes both unit and integration tests. The integration tests
use mocked sockets to simulate the sending and receiving of commands and
responses, and are kept in the test/server/
subdirectory.
Type Hinting
This project makes heavy use of Python's type hinting system, with the intention of a clean run of mypy:
mypy pymap
No code contribution will be accepted unless it makes every effort to use type
hinting to the extent possible and common in the rest of the codebase. There is
no need to attempt --strict
mode.
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Ian Good
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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