user/dev discussion of public-inbox itself
 help / color / mirror / code / Atom feed
 Warning: Initial query:
 %22index: warn with info about the message as context%22
 returned no results, used:
 "index: warn with info about the message as context"
 instead

Search results ordered by [date|relevance]  view[summary|nested|Atom feed]
thread overview below | download mbox.gz: |
* Re: [PATCH] PublicInbox::Import Extend add with a optional raw message parameter
  2019-05-19 18:14  0%       ` Eric W. Biederman
@ 2019-05-19 22:04  0%         ` Eric Wong
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ results
From: Eric Wong @ 2019-05-19 22:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: meta

"Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
> Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> writes:
> 
> > "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
> >> Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> writes:
> >> 
> >> > "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
> >
> >> I will take a second look at the code.  I did not make it all of the
> >> way through last time.  I just know the bazillions of warnings I could
> >> not easily track down with old emails did not make me comfortable
> >> with that code base as anything other than a suggestion.
> >
> > Ah, I added ce18b29d175ef5f01f05d59c95bcf8e0cd40e611
> > ("index: warn with info about the message as context") exactly
> > for that.
> 
> Knowing what the code is doing in those modules would be interesting.

Yes, I considered adding Carp::longmess to it, but didn't need
it since (AFAIK) all the warnings were easily found by reading
the Email::* sources.

<snip> thanks for the info on IMAP modules

> Oh that and IO::Socket::SSL.  Something that is currently missing  (or
> at least missing until recently I haven't check in the last couple of
> months) is ssl support for our nntp sockets.  So do imap or prevent
> mischief for our nntp streams we need to use tls.  Which IO::Socket::SSL
> seems to do.

Yup, IO::Socket::SSL will be what we use for STARTTLS support,
not sure when I'll get around to it.

Fwiw, it's also used by Perlbal for non-blocking HTTPS with
Danga::Socket.  I plan on keeping PublicInbox::DS close to
Danga::Socket, for now[1])...

Using the TLS support in the kernel might be a fun option to
add, too; but portable stuff, first.

> But again I grabbed the first implementation that seems to work.  Going
> through those modules in detail to make certain nothing goofy is going
> on might be wise.

Yes; at least choosing IO::Socket::SSL seems straightforward.

Looking at Perl IMAP libraries in the past has made my head spin
in the past; and lack of IDLE support (or the cost of having an
entire process wait on it) has turned me off of going further,
so far.

In any case, I think anything we do for IMAP should use
git's credential system (same as git-imap-send) to minimize
setup.

> >> I think perhaps we could move all of the scrubbing into
> >> PublicInbox::Filter::Base.pm::scrub.  Instead of having a hard coded
> >> drop_unwanted_headers in PublicInbox::Import.  That would make it very
> >> straight forward to just make this a knob that the user controls
> >> for how they want their email received/imported.
> >
> > Not calling drop_unwanted_headers can have dangerous side-effects
> > (training loops, bugs in other consumers, private data exposure),
> > so I'm very hesitant to move it to Filter::Base
> 
> Usually it is my experience that dropping headers is more likely
> to cause loops than keeping them.  But I definitely understand
> the private data exposure angle.  However since this is my primary
> archive I don't want to loose the information, in case I need it to
> debug something.
> 
> > @PublicInbox::MDA::BAD_HEADERS is exposed via `our', so it could
> > remain stable-but-undocumented API if people really feel the
> > need to tweak it.  At most, we'd add a comment for that variable
> > asking potential hackers not to move/rename it.
> >
> >> If that general idea sounds palatable I will investigate to see
> >> if I can move the caching of the raw email into PublicInbox::MIME,
> >> see about moving the dropping of headers into an appropriate config
> >> knob.
> >
> > I think using $mime->{-public_inbox_raw} will be sufficient for
> > now.  Thanks.
> 
> Then I will move in that direction.  It seems a straight forward
> and simple change to make.

Alright, so treating @PublicInbox::MDA::BAD_HEADERS as a stable
interface ought to be enough?

Keeping qw(bytes lines content-length) could throw off
consumers.  The HTTP mbox.gz code filters them out, too;
but I just noticed the NNTP code doesn't, maybe it should...

[1] I've also been thinking about making PublicInbox::DS switch
    to EPOLLONESHOT/EV_ONESHOT to map better to my mind when
    distinguishing between SSL_ERROR_WANT_READ/WRITE..  And it
    would give me an excuse to pick up and dogfood an epoll API
    to reduce syscall overhead:
    https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1393206162-18151-1-git-send-email-n1ght.4nd.d4y@gmail.com/

^ permalink raw reply	[relevance 0%]

* Re: [PATCH] PublicInbox::Import Extend add with a optional raw message parameter
  2019-05-18 21:39  4%     ` Eric Wong
@ 2019-05-19 18:14  0%       ` Eric W. Biederman
  2019-05-19 22:04  0%         ` Eric Wong
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ results
From: Eric W. Biederman @ 2019-05-19 18:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric Wong; +Cc: meta

Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> writes:

> "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
>> Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> writes:
>> 
>> > "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
>> >> 
>> >> I don't trust the MIME type to not munge my email messages in horrible
>> >> ways upon occasion.  Therefore  allow for passing in the raw message
>> >> value instead of trusting the mime object to preserve it.
>> >> 
>> >> Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
>> >
>> > I've had the same concern in the past about Email::MIME and
>> > Email::Simple.  But after reading the code for Email::MIME,
>> > Email::Simple and Email::{MIME,Simple}::Header, I don't think
>> > the implementation of Email::MIME->as_string and all methods it
>> > calls does anything unreasonable.
>> >
>> > The only notable munging they seem to do is make irrelevant
>> > whitespace changes in headers and maybe fix quoting in headers.
>> > No body changes AFAIK.
>> 
>> I was hoping I could skip the Email::MIME stuff entirely but the headers
>> do need a bit of parsing to derive the git commit information.
>
> Perhaps parsing git commit information can be skipped, entirely
> (but it's still necessary for indexing, so I'm not sure if there's
>  any gain, there).
>
>> I will take a second look at the code.  I did not make it all of the
>> way through last time.  I just know the bazillions of warnings I could
>> not easily track down with old emails did not make me comfortable
>> with that code base as anything other than a suggestion.
>
> Ah, I added ce18b29d175ef5f01f05d59c95bcf8e0cd40e611
> ("index: warn with info about the message as context") exactly
> for that.

Knowing what the code is doing in those modules would be interesting.

>> >> The context here is because the only copy of messages that I save
>> >> I save in public-inbox I don't want to have to worry about losing
>> >> information.  So I just pass the raw email_str to add.
>> >> 
>> >> I expect if I were to export these lists public I would want to do
>> >> some more but for now I am just putting them in public-inbox
>> >> so that I can read and archive the lists locally.
>> >
>> > I worry about public archives getting badly munged, too.
>> >
>> >>  lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm     | 10 +++++-----
>> >>  lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm |  8 ++++----
>> >>  2 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
>> >
>> > Did you have plans to modify -mda/-watch or another script to
>> > use this?
>> 
>> I have been using this for a while with my own imap fetcher
>> script.  As for the others I certain could.  I don't use -mda
>> or -watch so they have not been a priority.
>
> OK.  Tangent: which IMAP module(s) did you choose? (and why?)
> I haven't gotten a chance to evaluate Perl IMAP client modules,
> yet; but I want to extend -watch to support IMAP.

The first one I found Mail::IMAPClient.  There are a few hiccups but it
seems to work for my purposes.  The hiccups are basically exceptions
thrown on failure and the PublicInbox modules not cleaning up after
themselves.  So I fork a process and let it exit when an die is called.
Instead of running the entire thing in a eval block.

I hope one of these days to upgrade it to use idle support but I haven't
gotten that far.  So far I just have a polling loop that runs every 5
minutes.

Oh that and IO::Socket::SSL.  Something that is currently missing  (or
at least missing until recently I haven't check in the last couple of
months) is ssl support for our nntp sockets.  So do imap or prevent
mischief for our nntp streams we need to use tls.  Which IO::Socket::SSL
seems to do.

But again I grabbed the first implementation that seems to work.  Going
through those modules in detail to make certain nothing goofy is going
on might be wise.

>> >> diff --git a/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm b/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
>> >> index 81a38fb6987d..0a63784414f2 100644
>> >> --- a/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
>> >> +++ b/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
>> >> @@ -359,7 +359,7 @@ sub clean_tree_v2 ($$$) {
>> >>  # returns undef on duplicate
>> >>  # returns the :MARK of the most recent commit
>> >>  sub add {
>> >> -	my ($self, $mime, $check_cb) = @_; # mime = Email::MIME
>> >> +	my ($self, $mime, $check_cb, $email_str) = @_; # mime = Email::MIME
>> >
>> > I usually place callback args at the end of the arg list so
>> > it's easy to write:
>> >
>> > 	$im->add($mime, sub {
>> > 		# ...
>> > 	});
>> >
>> > So having a parameter after the sub{} is a bit ugly...
>> > If I had to support this, I think I'd accept $mime being
>> > a plain hashref:
>> >
>> > 	if (ref($mime) eq 'HASH') {
>> > 		$raw = $mime->{raw};
>> > 		$mime = $mime->{mime};
>> > 	} else {
>> > 		$raw = $mime->as_string;
>> > 	}
>> >
>> > But, I'm still on the fence about the idea...
>> >
>> > Side note: I'm also taking the opportunity to use "$raw" instead
>> > of "$str", because I've been bitten by the difference header_raw
>> > vs header_str in the Email::MIME API, so consistency with
>> > that API would be good, here.
>> 
>> Yes the distinction about "$raw" is fair,
>> and the placement in the argument list makes sense.
>> 
>> As for the hashref.  Perhaps what I should do is modify
>> PublicInbox::MIME to at least conditionally keep the original raw email
>> around.  Then the logic to get the raw email could be kept in
>> PublicInbox::MIME as well.
>
> Actually, since Perl "objects" are open-ended hashrefs with no
> restrictions, we could set:
>
> 	$mime->{-public_inbox_raw} = $raw;
> 	$im->add($mime);
>
> That would work for any code using Email::MIME, as well.  I
> don't want the PublicInbox::MIME wrapper to be necessary forever
> (it's only to workaround old bugs in Email::MIME).
>
> And I doubt Email::* authors will start using "-public_inbox"
> prefixes in their code to mess with us.
>
> One caveat is we might need to modify our (Simple|MIME)->new callers:
>
> -	::(Simple|MIME)->new(\$raw);
> +	::(Simple|MIME)->new($raw);
>
> since Email::Simple->new(\$raw) can clobber $raw in the
> interest of memory savings, while the former preserves
> the original.

Noted.

>> Which let's me think the general solution is to have a configuration
>> option somewhere that says we want to archive the raw email.  We
>> update PublicInbox::MIME to always keep the original raw email.
>> 
>> If add is not configured to drop any headers we use the raw original
>> email str.  If add drops any headers we do what we do today.
>> 
>> I think perhaps we could move all of the scrubbing into
>> PublicInbox::Filter::Base.pm::scrub.  Instead of having a hard coded
>> drop_unwanted_headers in PublicInbox::Import.  That would make it very
>> straight forward to just make this a knob that the user controls
>> for how they want their email received/imported.
>
> Not calling drop_unwanted_headers can have dangerous side-effects
> (training loops, bugs in other consumers, private data exposure),
> so I'm very hesitant to move it to Filter::Base

Usually it is my experience that dropping headers is more likely
to cause loops than keeping them.  But I definitely understand
the private data exposure angle.  However since this is my primary
archive I don't want to loose the information, in case I need it to
debug something.

> @PublicInbox::MDA::BAD_HEADERS is exposed via `our', so it could
> remain stable-but-undocumented API if people really feel the
> need to tweak it.  At most, we'd add a comment for that variable
> asking potential hackers not to move/rename it.
>
>> If that general idea sounds palatable I will investigate to see
>> if I can move the caching of the raw email into PublicInbox::MIME,
>> see about moving the dropping of headers into an appropriate config
>> knob.
>
> I think using $mime->{-public_inbox_raw} will be sufficient for
> now.  Thanks.

Then I will move in that direction.  It seems a straight forward
and simple change to make.

Eric


^ permalink raw reply	[relevance 0%]

* Re: [PATCH] PublicInbox::Import Extend add with a optional raw message parameter
  @ 2019-05-18 21:39  4%     ` Eric Wong
  2019-05-19 18:14  0%       ` Eric W. Biederman
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ results
From: Eric Wong @ 2019-05-18 21:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eric W. Biederman; +Cc: meta

"Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
> Eric Wong <e@80x24.org> writes:
> 
> > "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com> wrote:
> >> 
> >> I don't trust the MIME type to not munge my email messages in horrible
> >> ways upon occasion.  Therefore  allow for passing in the raw message
> >> value instead of trusting the mime object to preserve it.
> >> 
> >> Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
> >
> > I've had the same concern in the past about Email::MIME and
> > Email::Simple.  But after reading the code for Email::MIME,
> > Email::Simple and Email::{MIME,Simple}::Header, I don't think
> > the implementation of Email::MIME->as_string and all methods it
> > calls does anything unreasonable.
> >
> > The only notable munging they seem to do is make irrelevant
> > whitespace changes in headers and maybe fix quoting in headers.
> > No body changes AFAIK.
> 
> I was hoping I could skip the Email::MIME stuff entirely but the headers
> do need a bit of parsing to derive the git commit information.

Perhaps parsing git commit information can be skipped, entirely
(but it's still necessary for indexing, so I'm not sure if there's
 any gain, there).

> I will take a second look at the code.  I did not make it all of the
> way through last time.  I just know the bazillions of warnings I could
> not easily track down with old emails did not make me comfortable
> with that code base as anything other than a suggestion.

Ah, I added ce18b29d175ef5f01f05d59c95bcf8e0cd40e611
("index: warn with info about the message as context") exactly
for that.

> >> The context here is because the only copy of messages that I save
> >> I save in public-inbox I don't want to have to worry about losing
> >> information.  So I just pass the raw email_str to add.
> >> 
> >> I expect if I were to export these lists public I would want to do
> >> some more but for now I am just putting them in public-inbox
> >> so that I can read and archive the lists locally.
> >
> > I worry about public archives getting badly munged, too.
> >
> >>  lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm     | 10 +++++-----
> >>  lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm |  8 ++++----
> >>  2 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-)
> >
> > Did you have plans to modify -mda/-watch or another script to
> > use this?
> 
> I have been using this for a while with my own imap fetcher
> script.  As for the others I certain could.  I don't use -mda
> or -watch so they have not been a priority.

OK.  Tangent: which IMAP module(s) did you choose? (and why?)
I haven't gotten a chance to evaluate Perl IMAP client modules,
yet; but I want to extend -watch to support IMAP.

> >> diff --git a/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm b/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
> >> index 81a38fb6987d..0a63784414f2 100644
> >> --- a/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
> >> +++ b/lib/PublicInbox/Import.pm
> >> @@ -359,7 +359,7 @@ sub clean_tree_v2 ($$$) {
> >>  # returns undef on duplicate
> >>  # returns the :MARK of the most recent commit
> >>  sub add {
> >> -	my ($self, $mime, $check_cb) = @_; # mime = Email::MIME
> >> +	my ($self, $mime, $check_cb, $email_str) = @_; # mime = Email::MIME
> >
> > I usually place callback args at the end of the arg list so
> > it's easy to write:
> >
> > 	$im->add($mime, sub {
> > 		# ...
> > 	});
> >
> > So having a parameter after the sub{} is a bit ugly...
> > If I had to support this, I think I'd accept $mime being
> > a plain hashref:
> >
> > 	if (ref($mime) eq 'HASH') {
> > 		$raw = $mime->{raw};
> > 		$mime = $mime->{mime};
> > 	} else {
> > 		$raw = $mime->as_string;
> > 	}
> >
> > But, I'm still on the fence about the idea...
> >
> > Side note: I'm also taking the opportunity to use "$raw" instead
> > of "$str", because I've been bitten by the difference header_raw
> > vs header_str in the Email::MIME API, so consistency with
> > that API would be good, here.
> 
> Yes the distinction about "$raw" is fair,
> and the placement in the argument list makes sense.
> 
> As for the hashref.  Perhaps what I should do is modify
> PublicInbox::MIME to at least conditionally keep the original raw email
> around.  Then the logic to get the raw email could be kept in
> PublicInbox::MIME as well.

Actually, since Perl "objects" are open-ended hashrefs with no
restrictions, we could set:

	$mime->{-public_inbox_raw} = $raw;
	$im->add($mime);

That would work for any code using Email::MIME, as well.  I
don't want the PublicInbox::MIME wrapper to be necessary forever
(it's only to workaround old bugs in Email::MIME).

And I doubt Email::* authors will start using "-public_inbox"
prefixes in their code to mess with us.

One caveat is we might need to modify our (Simple|MIME)->new callers:

-	::(Simple|MIME)->new(\$raw);
+	::(Simple|MIME)->new($raw);

since Email::Simple->new(\$raw) can clobber $raw in the
interest of memory savings, while the former preserves
the original.

> Which let's me think the general solution is to have a configuration
> option somewhere that says we want to archive the raw email.  We
> update PublicInbox::MIME to always keep the original raw email.
> 
> If add is not configured to drop any headers we use the raw original
> email str.  If add drops any headers we do what we do today.
> 
> I think perhaps we could move all of the scrubbing into
> PublicInbox::Filter::Base.pm::scrub.  Instead of having a hard coded
> drop_unwanted_headers in PublicInbox::Import.  That would make it very
> straight forward to just make this a knob that the user controls
> for how they want their email received/imported.

Not calling drop_unwanted_headers can have dangerous side-effects
(training loops, bugs in other consumers, private data exposure),
so I'm very hesitant to move it to Filter::Base

@PublicInbox::MDA::BAD_HEADERS is exposed via `our', so it could
remain stable-but-undocumented API if people really feel the
need to tweak it.  At most, we'd add a comment for that variable
asking potential hackers not to move/rename it.

> If that general idea sounds palatable I will investigate to see
> if I can move the caching of the raw email into PublicInbox::MIME,
> see about moving the dropping of headers into an appropriate config
> knob.

I think using $mime->{-public_inbox_raw} will be sufficient for
now.  Thanks.

^ permalink raw reply	[relevance 4%]

* [pushed] index: warn with info about the message as context
  2019-04-19  8:28  6% [RFC] index: warn with info about the message as context Eric Wong
@ 2019-05-06 19:14  7% ` Eric Wong
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ results
From: Eric Wong @ 2019-05-06 19:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: meta

commit ce18b29d175ef5f01f05d59c95bcf8e0cd40e611

^ permalink raw reply	[relevance 7%]

* [RFC] index: warn with info about the message as context
@ 2019-04-19  8:28  6% Eric Wong
  2019-05-06 19:14  7% ` [pushed] " Eric Wong
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ results
From: Eric Wong @ 2019-04-19  8:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: meta

This can help users track down the source of warnings
when presented with imperfect emails.

While we're at it, make the __WARN__ callback in t/v2writable.t
a no-op since we don't check for warnings, there.
---
 lib/PublicInbox/SearchIdxPart.pm | 7 +++++++
 lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm    | 5 ++++-
 script/public-inbox-index        | 3 +++
 t/v2writable.t                   | 3 +--
 4 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/lib/PublicInbox/SearchIdxPart.pm b/lib/PublicInbox/SearchIdxPart.pm
index 7fe2120..51d81a0 100644
--- a/lib/PublicInbox/SearchIdxPart.pm
+++ b/lib/PublicInbox/SearchIdxPart.pm
@@ -48,8 +48,15 @@ sub spawn_worker {
 sub partition_worker_loop ($$$$) {
 	my ($self, $r, $part, $bnote) = @_;
 	$0 = "pi-v2-partition[$part]";
+	my $current_info = '';
+	my $warn_cb = $SIG{__WARN__} || sub { print STDERR @_ };
+	local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {
+		chomp $current_info;
+		$warn_cb->("[$part] $current_info: ", @_);
+	};
 	$self->begin_txn_lazy;
 	while (my $line = $r->getline) {
+		$current_info = $line;
 		if ($line eq "commit\n") {
 			$self->commit_txn_lazy;
 		} elsif ($line eq "close\n") {
diff --git a/lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm b/lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm
index 6829a34..87e8f3e 100644
--- a/lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm
+++ b/lib/PublicInbox/V2Writable.pm
@@ -72,6 +72,7 @@ sub new {
 		im => undef, #  PublicInbox::Import
 		parallel => 1,
 		transact_bytes => 0,
+		current_info => '',
 		xpfx => $xpfx,
 		over => PublicInbox::OverIdx->new("$xpfx/over.sqlite3", 1),
 		lock_path => "$dir/inbox.lock",
@@ -949,8 +950,10 @@ sub index_sync {
 		my $fh = $self->{reindex_pipe} = $git->popen(@cmd, $range);
 		my $cmt;
 		while (<$fh>) {
+			chomp;
+			$self->{current_info} = "$i.git $_";
 			if (/\A$x40$/o && !defined($cmt)) {
-				chomp($cmt = $_);
+				$cmt = $_;
 			} elsif (/\A:\d{6} 100644 $x40 ($x40) [AM]\tm$/o) {
 				$self->reindex_oid($mm_tmp, $D, $git, $1,
 						$regen, $reindex);
diff --git a/script/public-inbox-index b/script/public-inbox-index
index 5adb6e7..2f810a5 100755
--- a/script/public-inbox-index
+++ b/script/public-inbox-index
@@ -85,6 +85,9 @@ sub index_dir {
 				}
 			}
 		}
+		local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {
+			print STDERR $v2w->{current_info}, ': ', @_;
+		};
 		$v2w->index_sync({ reindex => $reindex, prune => $prune });
 	} else {
 		my $s = PublicInbox::SearchIdx->new($repo, 1);
diff --git a/t/v2writable.t b/t/v2writable.t
index f171417..2826513 100644
--- a/t/v2writable.t
+++ b/t/v2writable.t
@@ -253,10 +253,9 @@ EOF
 }
 
 {
-	my @warn;
 	my $x = 'x'x250;
 	my $y = 'y'x250;
-	local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { push @warn, @_ };
+	local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub {};
 	$mime->header_set('Subject', 'long mid');
 	$mime->header_set('Message-ID', "<$x>");
 	ok($im->add($mime), 'add excessively long Message-ID');
-- 
EW


^ permalink raw reply related	[relevance 6%]

Results 1-5 of 5 | reverse | options above
-- pct% links below jump to the message on this page, permalinks otherwise --
2019-04-19  8:28  6% [RFC] index: warn with info about the message as context Eric Wong
2019-05-06 19:14  7% ` [pushed] " Eric Wong
2019-05-17  2:00     [PATCH] PublicInbox::Import Extend add with a optional raw message parameter Eric W. Biederman
2019-05-18  8:03     ` Eric Wong
2019-05-18 15:09       ` Eric W. Biederman
2019-05-18 21:39  4%     ` Eric Wong
2019-05-19 18:14  0%       ` Eric W. Biederman
2019-05-19 22:04  0%         ` Eric Wong

Code repositories for project(s) associated with this public inbox

	https://80x24.org/public-inbox.git

This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for read-only IMAP folder(s) and NNTP newsgroup(s).