GNU Mailman

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GNU Mailman
File:Gnu mailman logo2010.png
270px
Mailman files
Developer(s) Barry Warsaw
Initial release July 30, 1999; 24 years ago (1999-07-30)[1]
Stable release 3.0.1 / November 15, 2015; 8 years ago (2015-11-15)[2]
Preview release 3.0b4 / April 28, 2014; 9 years ago (2014-04-28)[3]
Development status Mature
Written in Mostly Python, some C
Operating system Unix-like
Available in Many languages
Type Mailing list management software
License GNU GPLv2 +
Website www.gnu.org/software/mailman/

GNU Mailman is a computer software application from the GNU Project for managing electronic mailing lists.[4][5] Mailman is coded primarily in Python and currently maintained by Barry Warsaw. Mailman is free software, subject to the requirement of the GNU General Public License.[5]

History

A very early version of Mailman was written by John Viega while a graduate student, who then lost his copy of the source in a hard drive crash sometime around 1998.[6] Ken Manheimer at CNRI, who was looking for a replacement for Majordomo, then took over development. When Manheimer left CNRI, Barry Warsaw took over. Mailman 3, the first major new version in over a decade, was released in April 2015.[7]

File:Mailman admin interface.png
Web administration interface for GNU Mailman

Features

Mailman runs on Linux and most Unix-like systems. Since Mailman 3.0 it has required python-3.4 or newer.[8] It works with Unix-style mail servers such as Postfix, Sendmail and qmail. Features include:

  • A customizable home page for each maillist.
  • Web interfaces for list administration, archiving of messages, spam filtering, etc. Separate interfaces are available for users (for self-administration), moderators (to accept/reject list posts), and administrators.
  • Support for multiple administrators and moderators for each list.
  • Per-list privacy features, such as closed-subscriptions, private archives, private membership rosters, and sender-based posting rules.
  • Integrated bounce detection and automatic handling of bouncing addresses.
  • Integrated spam filters
  • Majordomo-style email based commands.
  • Support for virtual domains.
  • List archiving. The default archiver provided with Mailman 2 is Pipermail,[9] although other archivers can be used instead. The archiver for Mailman 3 is HyperKitty.[10]

See also

References

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Further reading

Reviews

Other resources

External links