nanolist is a lightweight mailing list manager written in Go. It's easy to deploy, and easy to manage. It was written as an antithesis of the experience of setting up other mailing list software.
nanolist is controlled by emailing nanolist with a command in the subject.
The following commands are available:
help
- Reply with a list of valid commandslists
- Reply with a list of available mailing listssubscribe list-id
- Subscribe to receive mail sent to the given listunsubscribe list-id
- Unsubscribe from receiving mail sent to the given list
No. If you'd like an online browsable archive of emails, I recommend looking into tools such as hypermail, which generate HTML archives from a list of emails.
If you'd like to advertise the lists on your website, it's recommended to do
that manually, in whatever way looks best. Subscribe buttons can be achieved
with a mailto:
link.
I'm only familiar with postfix, for which there are instructions below. The
gist of it is: have your mail server pipe emails for any mailing list addresses
to nanolist message
. nanolist will handle any messages sent to it this way,
and reply using the configured SMTP server.
Some people prefer mailing lists for patch submission and review, some people want to play mailing-list based games such as nomic, and some people are just nostalgic.
First, you'll need to build and install the nanolist binary:
go get github.com/eXeC64/nanolist
Second, you'll need to write a config to either /etc/nanolist.ini
or /usr/local/etc/nanolist.ini
as follows:
You can also specify a custom config file location by invoking nanolist
with the -config
flag: -config=/path/to/config.ini
# File for event and error logging. nanolist does not rotate its logs
# automatically. Recommended path is /var/log/mail/nanolist
# You'll need to set permissions on it depending on which account your MTA
# runs nanolist as.
log = /path/to/logfile
# An sqlite3 database is used for storing the email addresses subscribed to
# each mailing list. Recommended location is /var/db/nanolist.db
# You'll need to set permissions on it depending on which account your MTA
# runs nanolist as.
database = /path/to/sqlite/database
# Address nanolist should receive user commands on
command_address = lists@example.com
# SMTP details for sending mail
smtp_hostname = "smtp.example.com"
smtp_port = 25
smtp_username = "nanolist"
smtp_password = "hunter2"
# Create a [list.id] section for each mailing list.
# The 'list.' prefix tells nanolist you're creating a mailing list. The rest
# is the id of the mailing list.
[list.golang]
# Address this list should receieve mail on
address = golang@example.com
# Information to show in the list of mailing lists
name = "Go programming"
description = "General discussion of Go programming"
# bcc all posts to the listed addresses for archival
bcc = archive@example.com, datahoarder@example.com
[list.announcements]
address = announce@example.com
name = "Announcements"
description = "Important announcements"
# List of email addresses that are permitted to post to this list
posters = admin@example.com, moderator@example.com
[list.fight-club]
address = robertpaulson99@example.com
# Don't tell users this list exists
hidden = true
# Only let subscribed users post to this list
subscribers_only = true
Lastly, you need to hook the desired incoming addresses to nanolist:
In /etc/aliases
:
nanolist: "| /path/to/bin/nanolist message"
And run newaliases
for the change to take effect.
This creates an alias that pipes messages sent to the nanolist
alias to the
nanolist command.
The final step is telling your preferred MTA to route mail to this address when needed.
For postfix edit /etc/postfix/aliases
and add:
lists@example.com nanolist
golang@example.com nanolist
announce@example.com nanolist
robertpaulson99@example.com nanolist
and restart postfix.
Congratulations, you've now set up 3 mailing lists of your own!
nanolist is made available under the BSD-3-Clause license.