mirror of
https://github.com/moparisthebest/mailiverse
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97 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
97 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
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This is the document to read if you are going to further the development of Mailiverse.
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This is *NOT* the document to read if you just want to install it somewhere.
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For the time being I'm going to just write down anything that pops into my head.
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* Why is the BouncyCastle package name changed to org.bc?
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I don't trust google. Google puts the BouncyCastle package in the system loader of android phones.
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This makes it impossible to override. Google may very well have modified the BouncyCastle
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package to do the bidding of the NSA.
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Hence, I use BouncyCastle from the original source. However I used Eclipse to modify the package name from org.bouncycastle to org.bc.
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* What is the fucking deal with the Callbacks, it makes Mailiverse's java code super sucky.
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Unfortunately this is because Javascript is super sucky. Javascript, at the time of Mailiverse's coding does not have threads. The Java is cross compiled to Javascript for the web code.
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So.
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I came up with strings of callbacks.
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Let's say you are going to do a set of operations A -> B -> C -> D -> E -> F -> G.
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C and F happen to be computationally expensive.
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Basically, a chain of callbacks is created, and the C callback is offloaded to a worker frame.
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C's result is sent back to the original browser frame and the callbacks continue. Eventually F is offloaded, etc etc.
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You may say, well, why didn't you off load *everything* to the worker frame?
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Well, because it makes it a pain in the ass to reference objects. You get all of these copies of everything, things still suck. Maybe I should have, I don't know.
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So, things still suck. Don't blame me. Blame Sun, Firefox and Google.
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The web could have been a beautiful place in which true games/environments run at native c++ compiled speed within a browser. I could write in the language of my choice -- and not compile to fucking javascript. Instead we have stupid people selling stupid shit to other stupid people.
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* Ok, so tell me what these projects are, why did you do all this soft linking (ln -s) ?
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So, I'm writing for Java & Web & Android. Each one has different screw ups and each one has low level intricacies.
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So for instance logging is different on Web and Java.
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PBE operations are different from Android to Java to Web.
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Accessing web resources is different on Web and Java and Android.
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Instead of creating umpteen billion factories, I create a core set of files, Mailiverse.Core, and soft link what I need for each platform.
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Mailiverse-GWT references almost all of the Mailiverse.Core. It leaves out things for the server and it redoes some of the encryption routines and logging, etc.
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Mailiverse.Mail-WebServer is the apache tomcat server. It references only the things needed to run the server from Mailiverse.Core.
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Mailiverse.Web houses the static web files.
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* Why did you use Dropbox and S3 to store received mail? Why not from the mail server?
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Well, *you* can add the key store if you'd like. It's not that hard to do.
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For my particular situation, I wanted to keep the mail server running in my physical proximity.
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I wanted the ability to walk over and root the box through shear presence.
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But, bandwidth out of my apartment is incredibly low. Wat do?
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I worked out a solution where bandwidth to the box is spent authenticating (very very small amount) and handling incoming/outgoing mail (where things can be queued and slower than light speed).
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Then files which you need to go light speed are stored on providers (S3/Dropbox) which can handle light speed.
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* What sort of costs in S3 am I going to have.
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Probably about $0.02 a month per user.
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* What happens if mysql crashes and I lose all the backups of logins?
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You are screwed. Totally screwed. Make backups to a safe place of the mysql server.
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