Mercurial > libpst
annotate ChangeLog @ 26:9eeba3f4ca4b
more cleanup from Arne
author | carl |
---|---|
date | Sat, 25 Feb 2006 12:45:57 -0800 |
parents | f4643b609bdf |
children | 45eccad4b606 |
rev | line source |
---|---|
24 | 1 LibPST 0.5.3 (2006-02-20) |
16 | 2 =============================== |
3 | |
24 | 4 * switch to gnu autoconf/automake. This breaks the MS VC++ projects |
5 since the source code is now in the src subdirectory. | |
6 | |
16 | 7 * documentation switched to xml, building man pages and html |
8 from the master xml copy. | |
9 | |
24 | 10 * include rpm .spec file for building src and binary rpms. |
11 | |
16 | 12 |
12
3f627519a92d
properly ignore (second block zero) errors. that will just drop some unknown attachments, but the rest of the data is still found
carl
parents:
11
diff
changeset
|
13 LibPST 0.5.2 (2006-02-18) |
11 | 14 =============================== |
15 | |
16 * Added pst2ldif to convert the contacts to ldif format for import | |
17 into ldap databases. | |
18 | |
19 * Major changes to libpst.c to properly use the node depth values | |
20 from the b-tree nodes. We also use the item count values in the nodes | |
21 rather than trying to guess how many items are active. | |
22 | |
23 * Cleanup whitespace - using tabs for every four columns. | |
24 | |
25 | |
3 | 26 LibPST 0.5.1 (17 November 2004) |
27 =============================== | |
28 | |
29 Well, alot has happened since the last release of libpst. | |
30 | |
31 Release / Management: | |
32 | |
11 | 33 * The project has forked! The new maintainer is Joseph Nahmias. |
34 * We have changed hosting sites, thanks to sourceforge for hosting | |
35 to this point. From this point forward we will be using | |
36 alioth.debian.org. | |
37 * The project is now using SubVersioN for source control. You can | |
38 get the latest code by running: | |
39 svn co svn://svn.debian.org/svn/libpst/trunk . | |
40 * See | |
41 <http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/libpst-devel/2004-November/000000.html> | |
42 for more information. | |
3 | 43 |
44 Code Changes: | |
45 | |
11 | 46 * Added lspst program to list items in a PST. Still incomplete. |
47 * Added vim folding markers to readpst.c | |
48 * avoid the pseudo-prologue that MS prepends to the email headers | |
49 * fix build on msvc, since it doesn't have sys/param.h | |
50 * Re-vamped Makefile: | |
51 * Only define CFLAGS in Makefileif missing | |
52 * fixed {un,}install targets in Makefile | |
53 * Fixed up build process in Makefile | |
54 * Added mozilla conversion script from David Binard | |
55 * Fixed bogus creation of readpst.log on every invocation | |
56 * escaped dashes and apostrophe in manpages | |
57 * Updated TODO | |
58 * added manpages from debian pkg | |
59 * fix escaped-string length count to consider '\n', | |
60 thanks to Paul Bakker <bakker@fox-it.com>. | |
61 * ensure there's a blank line between header and body | |
62 patch from <johnh@aproposretail.com> (SourceForge #890745). | |
63 * Apply accumulated endian-related patches | |
64 * Removed unused files, upstream's debian/ dir | |
3 | 65 |
66 -- Joe Nahmias <joe@nahmias.net> | |
67 | |
68 LibPST v0.5 | |
69 =========== | |
70 | |
71 It is with GREAT relief that I bring you version 0.5 of the LibPST tools! | |
72 | |
73 Through great difficulties, this tool has survived and expanded to become even | |
74 better. | |
75 | |
76 The changes are as follows: | |
77 * RTF support. We can now decompress RTF bodies in emails, and are saved as attachments | |
78 * Better support in reading the indexes. Fixed many bugs with them | |
79 * Improved reliability. "Now we are getting somewhere!" | |
80 * Improved compiling. Hopefully we won't be hitting too many compile errors now. | |
81 * vCard handling. Contacts are now exported as vCard entries. | |
82 * vEvent handling. Support has begun on exporting Calendar entries as events | |
83 * Support for Journal entries has also begun | |
84 | |
85 If you have any problems with this release, don't hesitate to contact me. | |
86 | |
87 These changes come to you, as always, free under the GPL license!! What a wonderful | |
88 thing it is. It does mean that you can write your own program off of this library | |
89 and distribute it also for free. However, anyone with commercial interests for | |
90 developing applications they will be charging for are encouraged to get in touch | |
91 with me, as I am sure we can come to some arrangement. | |
92 | |
93 Dave Smith | |
94 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
95 | |
96 LibPST v0.4.3 | |
97 ============= | |
98 | |
99 Bug fix release. No extra functionality | |
100 | |
101 Dave Smith | |
102 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
103 | |
104 LibPST v0.4.2 | |
105 ============= | |
106 | |
107 The debug system has had an overhaul. The debug messages are no longer | |
108 printed to the screen when they are enabled. They are dumped to a | |
109 binary file. There is another utility called "readlog" that I have | |
110 written to handle these log files. It should make it easier to | |
111 selectively view bits of a log file. It also shows the position that | |
112 the log message was printed from. | |
113 | |
114 There is a new switch in readpst. It is -d. It enables the user to | |
115 specify the log file which the binary log is written to. If the switch | |
116 isn't used, the default file of "readpst.log" is used. | |
117 | |
118 The code is now Visual C++ compatible. It has compiled on Visual C++ | |
119 .net Standard edition, and produces the readpst.exe file. Use the project | |
120 file included in this distribution. | |
121 | |
122 There have been minor improvements elsewhere too. | |
123 | |
124 | |
125 LibPST v0.4.1 | |
126 ============= | |
127 | |
128 Fixed a couple more bugs. Is it me or do bugs just insert themselves | |
129 in random, hard to find places! | |
130 | |
131 Cured a few problems with regard to emails with multiple embeded | |
132 items. They are not fully re-created using Mime-types, but are | |
133 accessible with the -S switch (which saves everything as seperate | |
134 items) | |
135 | |
136 Fixed a problem reading the first index. Back sliders are now | |
137 detected. (ie when the value following the current one is smaller, not | |
138 bigger!) | |
139 | |
140 Added some error messages when we try and read outside of the PST | |
141 file, this was causing a few problems before, cause the return value | |
142 wasn't always checked, so it was possible to be reading random data, | |
143 and trying to make sense of it! | |
144 | |
145 Anyway, if you find any problems, don't hesitate to mail me | |
146 | |
147 Dave Smith | |
148 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
149 | |
150 LibPST v0.4 | |
151 =========== | |
152 | |
153 Fixed a nasty bug that occasionally corrupted attachments. Another bug | |
154 with regard to reading of indexes (also occasional). | |
155 | |
156 Another output method has been added which is called "Seperate". It is | |
157 activated with the -S switch. It operates in the following manor: | |
158 | |
159 |--Inbox-->000000 | |
11 | 160 | 000001 |
161 | 000002 | |
3 | 162 |--Sentmail-->0000000 |
11 | 163 | 0000001 |
164 | 0000002 | |
3 | 165 |
166 All the emails are stored in seperate files counting from 0 upwards, | |
167 in a folder named as the PST folder. | |
168 | |
169 When an email has an attachment, it is saved as a seperate file. The | |
170 filename for the attachment is made up of 2 parts, the first is the | |
171 email number to which it belongs, the second is its filename. | |
172 | |
173 The should now be runnable on big-endian machines, if the define.h | |
174 file is first modified. The #define LITTLE_ENDIAN must be commented | |
175 out, and the #define BIG_ENDIAN must be uncommented. | |
176 | |
177 More verbose error messages have been added. Apparently people got | |
178 confused when the program stopped for no visible reason. This has now | |
179 been resolved. | |
180 | |
181 Thanks for the continued support of all people involved. | |
182 | |
183 Dave Smith | |
184 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
185 | |
186 Libpst v0.3.4 | |
187 ============= | |
188 | |
189 Several more fixes. An Infinite loop and incorrect interpreting of | |
190 item index attributes. Work has started on making the code executable | |
191 on big endian CPUs. At present it should work with Linux on these | |
192 CPUs, but I would appreciate it if you could provide feedback with | |
193 regard to it's performance. I am also working with some other people | |
194 at make it operate on Solaris. | |
195 | |
196 A whole load more items are now recognized by the Item records. With | |
197 more items in Emails and Folders. I haven't got to the Contacts yet. | |
198 | |
199 Anyway, this is what I would call a minor feature enhancment and | |
200 bugfix release. | |
201 | |
202 Dave Smith | |
203 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
204 | |
205 LibPST v0.3.3 | |
206 ============= | |
207 | |
208 Fixed several items. Mainly memory leaks. Loads of them! oops.. | |
209 | |
210 I have added a new program, mainly of debugging, which when passed | |
11 | 211 an ID value and a pst file, will extract and decrypt that ID from |
3 | 212 the pst file. I don't see it being a huge attraction, or of much use |
213 to most people, but it is another example of writing an application | |
214 to use the libpst interface. | |
215 | |
216 Another fix was in the reading of the item index. This has hopefully | |
217 now been corrected. The result of this bug was that not all the emails | |
218 in a folder were converted. Hopefully you should have more luck now. | |
219 | |
220 Dave Smith | |
221 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
222 | |
223 LibPST v0.3.2 | |
224 ============= | |
225 | |
226 Quick bugfix release. There was a bug in the decryption of the basic | |
227 encryption that outlook uses. One byte, 0x6c, was incorrectly decrypted | |
228 to 0x6c instead of 0xcd. This release fixes this bug. Sorry... | |
229 | |
230 | |
231 LibPST v0.3.1 | |
232 ============= | |
233 | |
234 Minor improvements. Fixed bug when linking multiple blocks together, | |
235 so now the linking blocks are not "encrypted" when trying to read | |
236 them. | |
237 | |
238 | |
239 LibPST v0.3 | |
240 =========== | |
241 | |
242 A lot of bug fixing has been done for this release. Testing has been | |
243 done on the creation of the files by readpst. Better handling of | |
244 large binaries being extracted from the PST file has been implemented. | |
245 | |
246 Quite a few reports have come in about not being able to compile on | |
247 Darwin. This could be down to using macros with variable parameter | |
248 lists. This has now been changed to use C functions with variable | |
249 parameters. I hope this fixes a lot of problems. | |
250 | |
251 Added support for recreating the folder structure into normal | |
252 directories. For Instance: | |
253 | |
254 Personal Folders | |
255 |-Inbox | |
256 | |-Jokes | |
257 | |-Meetings | |
258 |-Send Items | |
259 | |
260 each folder containing an mbox file with the correct emails for that | |
261 folder. | |
262 | |
263 Dave Smith | |
264 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
265 | |
266 | |
267 LibPST v0.3 beta1 | |
268 ================= | |
269 | |
270 Again, a shed load of enhancements. More work has been done on the | |
271 mime creation. A bug has been fixed that was letting part of the | |
11 | 272 attachments that were created disappear. |
3 | 273 |
274 A major enhancement is that "compressible encryption" support has been | |
275 added. This was an incredibly simple method to use. It is basically a | |
276 ceasar cipher. It has been noted by several users already that the PST | |
277 password that Outlook uses, serves *no purpose*. It is not used to | |
278 encrypt the PST, it is mearly stored there. This means that the | |
279 readpst application is able to convert PST files without knowing the | |
280 password. Microsoft have some explaning to do! | |
281 | |
282 Output files are now not overwritten if they already exist. This means | |
283 that if you have two folders in your PST file named "fred", the first | |
284 one encountered will be named "fred" and the second one will be named | |
285 "fred00000001". As you can see, there is enough room there for many | |
286 duplicate names! | |
287 | |
288 Output filenames are now restricted. Any "/" or "\" characters in the | |
289 name are replaced with "_". If you find that there are any other | |
290 characters that need to be changed, could you please make me aware! | |
291 | |
292 Thanks to Berry Wizard for help with supporting the encryption. | |
293 | |
294 Thanks to Auke Kok, Carolus Walraven and Yogesh Kumar Guatam for providing debugging | |
295 information and testing. | |
296 | |
297 Dave Smith | |
298 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
299 | |
300 | |
301 LibPST v0.2 beta1 | |
302 ================= | |
303 | |
304 Hello once more... | |
305 | |
306 Attachments are now re-created in mime format. The method is very | |
307 crude and could be prone to over generalisation. Please test this | |
308 version, and if attachments are not recreated correctly, please send | |
309 me the email (complete message source) of the original and | |
310 converted. Cheers. | |
311 | |
312 I hope this will work for everyone who uses this program, but reality | |
313 can be very different! | |
314 | |
315 Let us see how it goes... | |
316 | |
317 Dave Smith | |
318 <dave.s@earthcorp.com> | |
319 | |
320 LibPST v0.2 alpha1 | |
321 =========== | |
322 | |
323 Hello! | |
324 | |
325 Some improvements. The internal code has been changed so that | |
326 attachments are now processed and loaded into the structures. The | |
327 readpst program is not finished yet. It needs to convert these binary | |
328 structs into mime data. At present it just saves them to the current | |
329 directory, overwriting any previous files with the attachment name. | |
330 | |
11 | 331 Improvements over previous version: |
3 | 332 * KMail output is supported - if the "-k" flag is specified, all the |
333 directory hierarchy is created using the KMail standard | |
334 * Lots of bugs and memory leaks fixed | |
335 | |
336 | |
337 Usage: | |
338 | |
339 ReadPST v0.2alpha1 implementing LibPST v0.2alpha1 | |
340 Usage: ./readpst [OPTIONS] {PST FILENAME} | |
341 OPTIONS: | |
342 -h - Help. This screen | |
343 -k - KMail. Output in kmail format | |
344 -o - Output Dir. Directory to write files to. CWD is changed *after* opening pst file | |
345 -V - Version. Display program version | |
346 | |
347 If you want to view lots of debug output, modify a line in "define.h" | |
348 from "//#define DEBUG_ALL" to "#define DEBUG_ALL". It would then be | |
349 advisable to pipe all output to a log file: | |
350 | |
351 ./readpst -o out pst_file &> logfile | |
352 | |
353 Dave Smith | |
354 | |
355 LibPST v0.1 | |
356 =========== | |
357 | |
358 Hi Folks! | |
359 | |
360 This has been a long, hard slog, but I now feel that I have got | |
361 somewhere useful. The included program "main" is able to read an | |
362 Outlook PST file and dump the emails into mbox files, separating each | |
363 folder into a different mbox file. All the mbox files are stored in | |
364 the current directory and no attempt is yet made to organise these | |
365 files into a directory hierarchy. This would not be too difficult to | |
366 achieve though. | |
367 | |
368 Email attachments are not yet handled, neither are Contacts. | |
369 | |
370 There is no pretty interface yet, but you can convert a PST file in | |
371 the following manner | |
372 | |
373 ./main {path to PST file} | |
374 | |
375 This is very much a work in progress, but I thought I should release | |
376 this code so that people can lose their conception that outlook files | |
377 will never be converted to Linux. | |
378 | |
379 I am intending that the code I am writing will be developed into | |
380 greater applications to provide USEFUL tools for accessing and | |
381 converting PST files into a variety of formats. | |
382 | |
383 One point I feel I should make is that Outlook, by default, creates | |
384 "Compressible Encryption" PST files. I have not, as yet, attempted to | |
385 write any decryption routines, so you will not be able to convert | |
386 these files. However, if you create a new PST file and choose not to | |
387 make an encrypted one, you can copy all your emails into this new one | |
388 and then convert the unencrypted one. | |
389 | |
390 I hope you enjoy, | |
391 | |
392 Dave Smith | |
393 | |
394 : vim: set tw=72 sw=4 ts=4: |