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MD5 2126fd125ea26b73b20f01fcd5940369
146 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
146 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
/* ========================================================================
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* Copyright 1988-2006 University of Washington
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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*
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* ========================================================================
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*/
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QUESTION: Is c-client Y2K compliant?
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ANSWER:
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There are no known Y2K issues in c-client; nor have there ever
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been any known Y2K issues in c-client from its inception.
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Some older versions of c-client don't like the two-digit year
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"00", although the only impact of this is that messages with that year
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will sort before any other messages. Nobody should be using two-digit
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years in email messages any more (use "2000" instead of "00").
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You may wish to read the document calendar.txt for more
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information about the Y3.3K/Y4K, Y20K, and Y4)K issues. Assuming that
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c-client is still around in 2000-40,000 years, someone will have to
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deal with these.
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Within the plausible lifetimes of people today, there are three
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known date-related issues in c-client which will have to be addressed
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in the future. If I am still alive when the first problem hits, I
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will be nearly 82 years old, and won't be maintaining c-client any
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more.
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Y2038:
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c-client, like most UNIX software, has Y2038 issues. On Tuesday,
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January 19, 2038 at 03:14:08 Coordinated Universal Time (also known as
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UTC, UT, or historically GMT), the clock on 32-bit UNIX systems will
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wrap around to a negative number; that is, from 0x7fffffff to
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0x80000000.
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c-client uses an unsigned long for its 32-bit time; however the C
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library on most UNIX systems uses a signed long and will interpret
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that time as being Friday, December 13, 1901 at 20:45:52 UTC.
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Fixing this problem will require changing the C library to use
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either unsigned longs or a wider (e.g. 64-bit) value for time. Lots
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of work will need to be done on 32-bit UNIX systems as 2038
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approaches. History suggests that most of the work will be done in
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the autumn of 2037... ;-) It's not known if anything is necessary to
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do to c-client other than just rebuild it with the new C library.
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Going to 32-bit unsigned longs means that there will be a Y2106
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bug that someone will have to fix. Hopefully nobody will even think
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of using 32-bit systems by then.
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Y2070:
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c-client assumes that 2-digit years with values of 70 or greater
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are in the 20th century, and that 2-digit years with values of 69 or
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less are in the 21st century. Time for UNIX began on January 1, 1970
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and email on ARPAnet happened between the first TENEX systems shortly
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after that; consequently there is no ambiguity with email data with
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2-digit years prior to the year 2070. This is used only when parsing
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a 2-digit year. c-client never generates one.
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Fixing this problem requires convincing people not to use 2-digit
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years. This is a lesson that people should have figured out 70 years
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earlier with Y2K. Consequently, this may be a "non-problem."
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Otherwise, look in mail_parse_date() for the comment "two digit year"
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and change the statement as desired. [Note: do not change the
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definition of BASEYEAR since the UNIX port assumes that this matches
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when time began in the operating system.]
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Y2098:
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On January 1, 2098, the year in per-message internal dates will
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expire, since a 7-bit field is allocated for the year. c-client will
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mistakenly think that the day is January 1, 1970.
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Fortunately, it is easy to fix this problem. Just increase the
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width of "year" in MESSAGECACHE in mail.h. If you make it 8 bits,
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it'll be good until January 1, 2216; 9 bits makes it good until 2482.
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10 bits will push it back that you'd worry about the Y2800 question
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before having to increase it again. If you ignore Y2800, 11 bits will
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push it it back to having to worry about Y4K first.
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Y2800:
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At this year, you will need to decide whether to keep the Gregorian
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calendar, which is one day slow every 20,000 years, or go to the more
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accurate Eastern Orthodox calendar which is one day slow every 45,000
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years. The Gregorian and Eastern Orthodox calendars diverge at this
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year.
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There hasn't been any statement about how the international
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community will deal with the situation of the Orthodox calendar being
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one day ahead of the Gregorian calendar between 2800 and 2900. This
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will happen again between 3200 and 3300, and at gradually increasing
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intervals until 48,300 when the shift becomes permanent (assuming no
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Y20K or Y40K fixes).
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If you wish to make the transition to the Eastern Orthodox calendar,
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rebuild c-client with -DUSEORTHODOXCALENDAR=1. You can then ignore Y4K
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and Y20K!
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Y3.3K/Y4K:
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Some time around the year 3300, the calendar has gotten one day
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behind. To remedy this, a little-known rule in the Gregorian calendar
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is that years that are evenly divisible by 4000 are not leap years.
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Unlike the other rules, this rule hasn't had effect yet, and won't for
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another 2000 years.
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To fix the Y4K problem, just rebuild c-client with -DY4KBUGFIX=1.
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Y20K:
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Those of you who stuck with the Gregorian calendar have a
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problem; the calendar is now one day slow. The Pope has not made any
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statement about how this problem will be fixed. Maybe they'll declare
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that 20,004 is also not a leap year or something.
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There is no fix for this problem in c-client.
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Y40K:
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Greeks, Serbs, Russians, and other Eastern Orthodox have spent
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the past 38,000 years laughing at westerners' increasingly futile
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efforts to keep the Gregorian calendar in order. The day of reckoning
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has come; the Orthodox calendar is now one day slow. The Patriarch of
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Istanbul (nee Constantinople) has not made any statement about how this
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will be fixed.
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There is no fix for this problem in c-client.
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