Occupation: Computer Scientist Birth: 1951
This will surprise some of your readers, but my primary interest is not with computer security. I am primarily interested in writing software that wo….
However, writing software without defects is not sufficient. In my experience, it is at least as difficult to write software that is safe - that is, ….
In a previous life I wrote the software that controlled my physics experiments. That software had to deal with all kinds of possible failures in equi….
For many people my software is something that you install and forget. I like to keep it that way..
At the time the Sendmail program had a very poor reputation with respect to security, with four root vulnerabilities per year for two successive year….
Most of the effort in the software business goes into the maintenance of code that already exists..
Postfix keeps running even if one Postfix process dies; Windows requires that someone restarts the service..
Defect-free software does not exist..
One bug in an SMTP server can open up the whole machine for intrusion..
Coming back to the topic of computer security, the TCP Wrapper is an example of such a safety net. I wrote it when my systems were under attack by so….
I want to avoid locking people into solutions that work only with Postfix. People should have a choice in what software they want to use with Postfix….
As of today, the Postfix mail transport agent has almost 50,000 lines of code, comments not included..
I was going to visit IBM for six months as a visiting scientist. Now, six months is a lot of time, so I came with a whole list of projects that I mig….
The challenge with Postfix, or with any piece of software, is to update software without introducing problems..
Qmail out of the box works fine, so people will want to use it regardless of licensing restrictions, even when the software does not ship with their ….
When I write software, I know that it will fail, either due to my own mistake, or due to some other cause..
Adding functionality is not just a matter of adding code..
I don't expect an overnight change of all desktops to what the US Military used to call B3 level security. And even that would not stop users from sh….
Lack of documentation is becoming a problem for acceptance..
Like all software, Qmail can survive only when it keeps up with changing requirements..
Writing software that's safe even in the presence of bugs makes the challenge even more interesting..