Provided by: interimap_0.5.7-2ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       InterIMAP - Fast bidirectional synchronization for QRESYNC-capable IMAP servers

SYNOPSIS

       interimap [OPTION ...]  [COMMAND] [MAILBOX ...]

DESCRIPTION

       interimap  performs stateful synchronization between two IMAP4rev1 servers.  Such synchronization is made
       possible by the QRESYNC IMAP extension; for convenience reasons servers must also  support  the  LIST-EX‐
       TENDED,  LIST-STATUS  (or NOTIFY) and UIDPLUS IMAP extensions.  See also the supported extensions section
       below.

       Stateful synchronization is only possible for mailboxes supporting persistent message Unique  Identifiers
       (UID) and persistent storage of mod-sequences (MODSEQ); any non-compliant mailbox will cause interimap to
       abort.   Furthermore,  because UIDs are allocated not by the client but by the server, interimap needs to
       keep track of associations between local and remote UIDs for each mailbox.  The synchronization state  of
       a  mailbox  consists of its UIDNEXT and HIGHESTMODSEQ values on each server; it is then assumed that each
       message with UID smaller than UIDNEXT have been replicated to the other server,  and  that  the  metadata
       (such  as flags) of each message with MODSEQ at most HIGHESTMODSEQ have been synchronized.  Conceptually,
       the synchronization algorithm is derived from RFC 4549 with the RFC 7162 (sec. 6) amendments,  and  works
       as follows:

       1. SELECT  (on  both  servers) a mailbox the current UIDNEXT or HIGHESTMODSEQ values of which differ from
          the values found in the database (for either server).  Use the QRESYNC SELECT parameter from RFC  7162
          to  list changes (vanished messages and flag updates) since HIGHESTMODSEQ to messages with UID smaller
          than UIDNEXT.

       2. Propagate these changes onto the other server: get the corresponding UIDs from the database, then:

           a. issue a UID STORE command, followed by UID EXPUNGE, to remove messages that have not already  been
              deleted on both servers; and

           b. issue  some UID STORE commands to propagate flag updates (send a single command for each flag list
              in order the reduce the number of round trips).

           (Conflicts may occur if the metadata of a message has been updated on  both  servers  with  different
           flag  lists; in that case, interimap issues a warning and updates the message on each server with the
           union of both flag lists.)  Repeat this step if the server sent some updates in the meantime.  Other‐
           wise, update the HIGHESTMODSEQ value in the database.

       3. Process new messages (if the current UIDNEXT value of the mailbox differs from the one  found  in  the
          database)  by  issuing a UID FETCH command; process each received message on-the-fly by issuing an AP‐
          PEND command with the message’s RFC822 body, FLAGS and INTERNALDATE.  Repeat this step if  the  server
          received  new messages in the meantime.  Otherwise, update the UIDNEXT value in the database.  Go back
          to step 2 if the server sent some metadata (such as flag) updates in the meantime.

       4. Go back to step 1 to proceed with the next unsynchronized mailbox.

COMMANDS

       By default, interimap synchronizes each mailbox listed by the LIST "" "*" IMAP command; the list-mailbox,
       list-select-opts and ignore-mailbox options from the configuration file can be used to shrink  that  list
       and  save  bandwidth.  However if some extra argument are provided on the command line, interimap ignores
       these options and synchronizes the given MAILBOXes instead.  Note that each MAILBOX is taken “as is”;  in
       particular, it must be UTF-7 encoded, unquoted, and the list wildcards `*' and `%' are passed verbatim to
       the  IMAP  server.  If the local and remote hierarchy delimiter differ, then within the MAILBOX names the
       local delimiter should be used (it is transparently substituted for remote commands and responses).

       If the synchronization was interrupted during a previous run while some messages  were  being  replicated
       (but  before  the UIDNEXT or HIGHESTMODSEQ values have been updated), interimap performs a “full synchro‐
       nization” on theses messages: downloading the whole UID and flag lists on each servers  allows  interimap
       to  detect messages that have been removed or for which their flags have changed in the meantime.  Final‐
       ly, after propagating the offline changes for these messages, interimap resumes the  synchronization  for
       the rest of the mailbox.

       Specifying  one  of  the commands below makes interimap perform an action other than the default QRESYNC-
       based synchronization.

       --repair [MAILBOX ...]
              List the database anomalies and try to repair them.  (Consider only the given MAILBOXes if non-op‐
              tional arguments are provided.)  This is done by performing a  so-called  “full  synchronization”,
              namely: 1/ download all UIDs along with their flag list both from the local and remote servers; 2/
              ensure  that  each  entry  in the database corresponds to an existing UID; and 3/ ensure that both
              flag lists match.  Any message found on a server but not in the database is replicated on the oth‐
              er server (which in the worst case, might yield a message duplicate).  Flag conflicts  are  solved
              by updating each message to the union of both lists.

       --delete MAILBOX [MAILBOX ...]
              Delete the given MAILBOXes on each target (by default each server plus the database, unless --tar‐
              get  specifies  otherwise)  where it exists.  Note that per the IMAP4rev1 standard deletion is not
              recursive.  Thus MAILBOX’s children are not deleted.

       --rename SOURCE DEST
              Rename the mailbox SOURCE to DEST on each target (by default each server plus the database, unless
              --target specifies otherwise) where it exists.  interimap aborts if DEST already exists on  either
              target.   Note  that per the IMAP4rev1 standard renaming is recursive.  Thus SOURCE’s children are
              moved to become DEST’s children instead.

OPTIONS

       --config=FILE
              Specify an alternate configuration file.  Relative paths start from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/interimap, or
              ~/.config/interimap if the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable is unset.

       --target={local,remote,database}
              Limit the scope of a --delete or --rename command to the given target.  Can be repeated to act  on
              multiple targets.  By default all three targets are considered.

       --watch[=seconds]
              Don’t  exit  after  a successful synchronization.  Instead, keep synchronizing forever.  Sleep for
              the given number of seconds (by default 1 minute if --notify is unset, and 15 minutes if  --notify
              is set) between two synchronizations.  Setting this options enables SO_KEEPALIVE on the socket for
              types other than tunnel.

       --notify
              Whether  to  use the IMAP NOTIFY extension to instruct the server to automatically send updates to
              the client.  (Both local and remote servers must support RFC 5465 for this to work.)  This greatly
              reduces IMAP traffic since interimap can rely on server notifications instead of manually  polling
              for  updates.  If the connection remains idle for 15 minutes (configurable with --watch), then in‐
              terimap sends a NOOP command to avoid being logged out for inactivity.

       -q, --quiet
              Try to be quiet.

       --debug
              Turn on debug mode.  Debug messages, which includes all IMAP traffic besides literals, are written
              to the given logfile.  The LOGIN and AUTHENTICATE commands are however redacted (in order to avoid
              disclosing authentication credentials) unless the --debug flag is set multiple times.

       -h, --help
              Output a brief help and exit.

       --version
              Show the version number and exit.

CONFIGURATION FILE

       Unless told otherwise by the --config=FILE command-line option, interimap reads  its  configuration  from
       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/interimap/config (or ~/.config/interimap/config if the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment vari‐
       able  is  unset)  as an INI file.  The syntax of the configuration file is a series of OPTION=VALUE lines
       organized under some [SECTION]; lines starting with a `#' or `;' character are ignored as comments.   The
       [local] and [remote] sections define the two IMAP servers to synchronize.  Valid options are:

       database
              SQLite version 3 database file to use to keep track of associations between local and remote UIDs,
              as well as the UIDVALIDITY, UIDNEXT and HIGHESTMODSEQ of each known mailbox on both servers.  Rel‐
              ative  paths start from $XDG_DATA_HOME/interimap, or ~/.local/share/interimap if the XDG_DATA_HOME
              environment variable is unset.  This option is only available in the default  section.   (Default:
              HOST.db, where HOST is taken from the [remote] or [local] sections, in that order.)

       list-reference
              An  optional “reference name” to use for the initial LIST command, indicating the context in which
              the MAILBOXes are interpreted.  For instance, by specifying list-reference=perso/ in  the  [local]
              section,  MAILBOX names are interpreted relative to perso/ on the local server; in other words the
              remote mailbox hierarchy is mapped to the perso/ sub-hierarchy on the local server.  This is  use‐
              ful  for  synchronizing multiple remote servers against different namespaces belonging to the same
              local IMAP server (using a different interimap instance for each local namespace ↔ remote synchro‐
              nization).

              (Note that if the reference name is not a level of mailbox hierarchy and/or does not end with  the
              hierarchy  delimiter,  by  RFC 3501 its interpretation by the IMAP server is implementation-depen‐
              dent.)

       list-mailbox
              A space separated list of mailbox patterns to use when issuing the initial LIST command  (overrid‐
              den  by  the MAILBOXes given as command-line arguments).  Names containing special characters such
              as spaces or brackets need to be enclosed in double quotes.  Within double  quotes  C-style  back‐
              slash  escape  sequences  can be used (`\t' for an horizontal tab, `\n' for a new line, `\\' for a
              backslash, etc.), as well as hexadecimal escape sequences `\xHH'.   Furthermore,  non-ASCII  names
              must be UTF-7 encoded.  Two wildcards are available, and passed verbatim to the IMAP server: a `*'
              character  matches  zero or more characters, while a `%' character matches zero or more characters
              up to the hierarchy delimiter.  Hard-coding the hierarchy delimiter in this setting is not advised
              because the server might silently change it at some point.  A null character should  be  used  in‐
              stead.   For  instance, if list-mailbox is set "foo\x00bar" then, assuming the hierarchy delimiter
              is `/', only the mailbox named foo/bar is considered for synchronization.

              This option is only available in the default section.  (The default pattern, *, matches all  visi‐
              ble mailboxes on the server.)

       list-select-opts
              An  optional  space  separated list of selectors for the initial LIST command.  (Requires a server
              supporting the LIST-EXTENDED IMAP extension.)  Useful values are SUBSCRIBED  (to  list  only  sub‐
              scribed  mailboxes),  REMOTE  (to also list remote mailboxes on a server supporting mailbox refer‐
              rals), and RECURSIVEMATCH (to list parent mailboxes with children matching one of the above  list-
              mailbox patterns).  This option is only available in the default section.

       ignore-mailbox
              An  optional  Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE) covering mailboxes to exclude: any (UTF-7
              encoded and unquoted) mailbox listed in the initial LIST responses is ignored if  it  matches  the
              given  expression after trimming the reference names and substituting the hierarchy delimiter with
              the null character.  For instance, specifying ^virtual(?:\x00|$) excludes the mailbox named  “vir‐
              tual”  as well as its descendants.  Note that the MAILBOXes given as command-line arguments bypass
              the check and are always considered for synchronization.  This option is only available in the de‐
              fault section.

       logfile
              A file name to use to log debug and informational messages.  (By default these messages are  writ‐
              ten to the error output.)  This option is only available in the default section.

       log-prefix
              A  printf(3)-like  format string to use as prefix for each log message.  Interpreted sequences are
              %n and %m, expanding respectively to the component name (local/remote) and  to  the  name  of  the
              mailbox  relevant  for the log entry.  Conditions on a specifier %X can be obtained with %?X?then?
              or %?X?then&else?, which expands to then if the %X specifier expands to a non-empty string, and to
              else (or the empty string if there is no else condition) if it doesn’t.  Literal % characters need
              to  be  escaped  as  %%,  while  &,  ?  and  \  characters  need  to  be   \-escaped.    (Default:
              %?n?%?m?%n(%m)&%n?: ?.)

       type   One  of  imap,  imaps or tunnel.  type=imap and type=imaps are respectively used for IMAP and IMAP
              over SSL/TLS connections over an INET socket.  type=tunnel causes interimap to create  an  unnamed
              pair of connected sockets for inter-process communication with a command instead of opening a net‐
              work  socket.  Note that specifying type=tunnel in the [remote] section makes the default database
              to be localhost.db.  (Default: imaps.)

       host   Server hostname or IP address, for type=imap and type=imaps.  The value can optionally be enclosed
              in square brackets to force its interpretation as an IP  literal  (hence  skip  name  resolution).
              (Default: localhost.)

       port   Server port.  (Default: 143 for type=imap, 993 for type=imaps.)

       proxy  Optional  SOCKS  proxy to use for TCP connections to the IMAP server (type=imap and type=imaps on‐
              ly), formatted as PROTOCOL://[USER:PASSWORD@]PROXYHOST[:PROXYPORT].  If PROXYPORT is  omitted,  it
              is  assumed  at port 1080.  Only SOCKSv5 is supported (with optional username/password authentica‐
              tion), in two flavors: socks5:// to resolve hostname locally, and socks5h:// to let the proxy  re‐
              solve hostname.

       command
              Command to use for type=tunnel.  Must speak the IMAP4rev1 protocol on its standard output, and un‐
              derstand  it  on  its  standard  input.   The value is passed to `/bin/sh -c` if it contains shell
              metacharacters; otherwise it is split into words and the resulting list is passed to execvp(3).

       STARTTLS
              Whether to use the STARTTLS directive to upgrade to a secure connection.  Setting this to YES  for
              a server not advertising the STARTTLS capability causes interimap to immediately abort the connec‐
              tion.  (Ignored for types other than imap.  Default: YES.)

       auth   Space-separated  list  of preferred authentication mechanisms.  interimap uses the first mechanism
              in that list that is also advertised (prefixed with AUTH=) in the server’s capability list.   Sup‐
              ported authentication mechanisms are PLAIN and LOGIN.  (Default: PLAIN LOGIN.)

       username, password
              Username  and  password  to  authenticate with.  Can be required for non pre-authenticated connec‐
              tions, depending on the chosen authentication mechanism.

       compress
              Whether to use the IMAP COMPRESS extension for servers advertising it.  (Default: NO for the  [lo‐
              cal] section, YES for the [remote] section.)

       null-stderr
              Whether to redirect command’s standard error to /dev/null for type=tunnel.  This option is ignored
              when the --debug flag is set.  (Default: NO.)

       SSL_protocols
              Space-separated  list  of  SSL/TLS  protocol versions to explicitly enable (or disable if prefixed
              with an exclamation mark !).  Potentially  known  protocols  are  SSLv2,  SSLv3,  TLSv1,  TLSv1.1,
              TLSv1.2,  and TLSv1.3, depending on the OpenSSL version used.  Enabling a protocol is a short-hand
              for disabling all other protocols.

              DEPRECATED: Use SSL_protocol_min and/or SSL_protocol_max instead.

       SSL_protocol_min, SSL_protocol_max
              Set minimum resp.  maximum SSL/TLS protocol version to use for the connection.  Potentially recog‐
              nized values are SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, and TLSv1.3, depending  on  the  OpenSSL  version
              used.

       SSL_cipherlist, SSL_ciphersuites
              Sets  the  TLSv1.2  and  below cipher list resp.  TLSv1.3 cipher suites.  The combination of these
              lists is sent to the server, which then determines which cipher to use (normally  the  first  sup‐
              ported  one  from  the list sent by the client).  The default suites depend on the OpenSSL version
              and its configuration, see ciphers(1ssl) for more information.

       SSL_fingerprint
              Space-separated list of acceptable fingerprints for the server certificate’s  Subject  Public  Key
              Info,  in  the form [ALGO$]DIGEST_HEX where ALGO is the digest algorithm (by default sha256).  At‐
              tempting to connect to a server with a non-matching certificate SPKI fingerprint causes  interimap
              to  abort  the connection during the SSL/TLS handshake.  The following command can be used to com‐
              pute the SHA-256 digest of a certificate’s Subject Public Key Info:

                     $ openssl x509 -in /path/to/server/certificate.pem -pubkey \
                         | openssl pkey -pubin -outform DER \
                         | openssl dgst -sha256

              Specifying multiple digest values can be useful in key rollover scenarios and/or when  the  server
              supports certificates of different types (for instance a dual-cert RSA/ECDSA setup).  In that case
              the connection is aborted when none of the specified digests matches.

       SSL_verify
              Whether to 1/ verify the server certificate chain; and 2/ match its Subject Alternative Name (SAN)
              or Subject CommonName (CN) against the value of the host option.  (Default: YES.)

              Note  that  using SSL_fingerprint to specify the fingerprint of the server certificate provides an
              independent server authentication measure as it pins directly its  key  material  and  ignore  its
              chain of trust.

       SSL_CAfile
              File  containing trusted certificates to use during server certificate verification when SSL_veri‐
              fy=YES.

              Trusted CA certificates are loaded from the default system  locations  unless  one  (or  both)  of
              SSL_CAfile or SSL_CApath is set.

       SSL_CApath
              Directory  to use for server certificate verification when SSL_verify=YES.  This directory must be
              in “hash format”, see verify(1ssl) for more information.

              Trusted CA certificates are loaded from the default system  locations  unless  one  (or  both)  of
              SSL_CAfile or SSL_CApath is set.

       SSL_hostname
              Name  to  use for the TLS SNI (Server Name Indication) extension.  The default value is taken from
              the host option when it is a hostname, and to the empty string when it is an IP literal.   Setting
              SSL_hostname to the empty string explicitly disables SNI.

SUPPORTED EXTENSIONS

       interimap takes advantage of servers supporting the following extensions to the IMAP4rev1 protocol (those
       marked as “recommended” give the most significant performance gain):

       • LITERAL+ (RFC 2088, recommended);

       • MULTIAPPEND (RFC 3502, recommended);

       • COMPRESS=DEFLATE (RFC 4978, recommended);

       • NOTIFY (RFC 5465);

       • SASL-IR (RFC 4959); and

       • UNSELECT (RFC 3691).

KNOWN BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

       • Using interimap on two identical servers with a non-existent or empty database will duplicate each mes‐
         sage  due  to the absence of local ↔ remote UID association.  (Should they arise, an external tool such
         as doveadm-deduplicate(1) can be used to weed them out.)  Hence one needs to manually  empty  the  mail
         store on one end when migrating to interimap from another synchronization solution.

       • interimap is single threaded and doesn’t use IMAP command pipelining.  Synchronization could be boosted
         up  by  sending  independent commands (such as the initial LIST and STATUS commands) to both servers in
         parallel, and for a given server, by sending independent commands (such as flag updates) in a pipeline.

       • Because the IMAP protocol doesn’t have a specific response code for when a message is moved to  another
         mailbox  (either using the MOVE command from RFC 6851, or via COPY + STORE + EXPUNGE), moving a message
         causes interimap to believe that it was deleted while another one (which is replicated again) was added
         to the other mailbox in the meantime.

       • Because the IMAP protocol doesn’t provide a way for clients to determine whether a disappeared  mailbox
         was  deleted  or renamed, interimap aborts when a known mailbox disappeared from one server but not the
         other.  The --delete (resp.  --rename) command should be used instead to  delete  (resp.   rename)  the
         mailbox on both servers as well as within interimap’s internal database.

       • PLAIN and LOGIN are the only authentication mechanisms currently supported.

       • interimap will probably not work with non RFC-compliant servers.  In particular, no work-around is cur‐
         rently implemented beside the tunables in the configuration file.  Moreover, few IMAP servers have been
         tested so far.

STANDARDS

       • M.  Leech, M.  Ganis, Y.  Lee, R.  Kuris, D.  Koblas and L.  Jones, SOCKS Protocol Version 5, RFC 1928,
         March 1996.

       • M.  Leech, Username/Password Authentication for SOCKS V5, RFC 1929, March 1996.

       • J.  Myers, IMAP4 non-synchronizing literals, RFC 2088, January 1997.

       • D.  Goldsmith and M.  Davis, A Mail-Safe Transformation Format of Unicode, RFC 2152, May 1997.

       • C.  Newman, Using TLS with IMAP, POP3 and ACAP, RFC 2595, June 1999.

       • M.  Crispin, Internet Message Access Protocol - Version 4rev1, RFC 3501, March 2003.

       • M.  Crispin, Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - MULTIAPPEND Extension, RFC 3502, March 2003.

       • A.  Melnikov, Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) UNSELECT command, RFC 3691, February 2004.

       • M.  Crispin, Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - UIDPLUS extension, RFC 4315, December 2005.

       • A.  Melnikov, Synchronization Operations for Disconnected IMAP4 Clients, RFC 4549, June 2006.

       • A.  Gulbrandsen, The IMAP COMPRESS Extension, RFC 4978, August 2007.

       • R.   Siemborski and A.  Gulbrandsen, IMAP Extension for Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)
         Initial Client Response, RFC 4959, September 2007.

       • A.  Gulbrandsen and A.  Melnikov, The IMAP ENABLE Extension, RFC 5161, March 2008.

       • B.  Leiba and A.  Melnikov, Internet Message Access Protocol version 4 - LIST Command  Extensions,  RFC
         5258, June 2008.

       • A.  Gulbrandsen, C.  King and A.  Melnikov, The IMAP NOTIFY Extension, RFC 5465, February 2009.

       • A.   Melnikov  and T.  Sirainen, IMAP4 Extension for Returning STATUS Information in Extended LIST, RFC
         5819, March 2010.

       • A.  Gulbrandsen and N.  Freed, Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) - MOVE Extension, RFC 6851, Jan‐
         uary 2013.

       • A.  Melnikov and D.  Cridland, IMAP Extensions: Quick Flag Changes  Resynchronization  (CONDSTORE)  and
         Quick Mailbox Resynchronization (QRESYNC), RFC 7162, May 2014.

BUGS AND FEEDBACK

       Bugs  or  feature  requests  for  interimap  should  be  filed  with  the Debian project’s bug tracker at
       <https://www.debian.org/Bugs/>.

SEE ALSO

       A getting started guide is available locally at  <file:///usr/share/doc/interimap/getting-started.md.gz>,
       and online at <https://guilhem.org/interimap/getting-started.html>.

AUTHORS

       Guilhem Moulin (mailto:guilhem@fripost.org).

                                                    July 2015                                       interimap(1)