Software:Majordomo

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Majordomo
Original author(s)Brent Chapman
Initial releaseJune 1992; 32 years ago (1992-06)[1]
Final release
1.94.5 / 19 January 2000; 24 years ago (2000-01-19)
Written inPerl
Operating systemUnix
TypeMailing lists
LicenseFreeware[2]
Websiteold.greatcircle.com/majordomo/

Majordomo is a mailing list manager (MLM) developed by Brent Chapman. It is written in Perl and works in conjunction with sendmail on UNIX and related operating systems. The name is derived from Latin "majordomo" meaning "master of the house"; in English, the word refers to a large household's chief servant.

The current version of Majordomo is 1.94.5, released 19 January 2000.[3]

The official website warns that it will not work with Perl versions 5.001 and 5.005_01 specifically. It recommends to use Perl 4.036 or the latest version available. Support for Perl 4.036 may not be kept for the future.[4]

History

With the advent of email, many mailing lists were maintained manually, with a list owner adding and removing participants by editing a text file. In 1984, LISTSERV was developed to run on IBM VM mainframes, and automated mailing lists on a large scale.

Most mailing lists moved to commercial mailing list hosting services, often with a stipend of $100 or more paid to the list owner by the hosting service in exchange for the transfer. Most of those hosting providers were subsequently bought out by Yahoo!, and merged into its Yahoo! Groups service.[citation needed]

Majordomo has been in widespread use since 1992,[1] predating the popularity of the web browser, in an era when many people had access to email but the World Wide Web did not enjoy wide deployment. As a result, tasks such as subscribing and unsubscribing are only handled by sending mail messages.[5]

There are front-ends, such as MajorCool,[6] to provide a web interface. Many mailing lists still use Majordomo.

Majordomo 2

As of 18 May 2004, there was work being done to completely rewrite Majordomo with a focus on keeping the familiar email interface while greatly improving the web interface and other features. This coding effort is referred to as Majordomo 2[7] and is being used by the OpenBSD project.[8]

Licensing

Majordomo is community-supported source available software; the license states "No part of Majordomo may be incorporated into any program or other product that is sold, or for which any revenue is received without written permission of Great Circle Associates".[9] There are a few exceptions listed in the license to this: "You may install Majordomo at your site and run mailing lists for other (sic) using it, and charge for that service. You may install Majordomo at other sites, and charge for your time to install, configure, customize, and manage it. You may charge for enhancements you've made to the Majordomo software, subject to the distribution restrictions listed [in the license]. You may not charge for the Majordomo software itself".

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Mailing Lists -- Majordomo History". Living Internet. http://www.livinginternet.com/l/lji.htm. Retrieved 20 February 2013. "The first version took him [Brent Chapman] about 20 hours, consisted of about 600 lines of code in the Perl language, and was deployed in June, 1992." 
  2. Majordomo License Agreement
  3. Wilson, Chan. "Majordomo 1.94.5 released -- security and bugfix release". Majordomo-Announce. Great Circle. http://www.greatcircle.com/lists/majordomo-announce/mhonarc/majordomo-announce.2000/msg00000.html. Retrieved 19 February 2013. 
  4. "What is Majordomo?". Majordomo Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ). Great Circle. http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/majordomo-faq.html#1.1. Retrieved 19 February 2013. "Majordomo is written in Perl. It will work with Perl 4.036 or Perl 5.002 or greater" 
  5. "Majordomo". Linux Links - The Linux Portal Site. http://www.linuxlinks.com/article/20080722144848351/Majordomo.html. Retrieved 20 February 2013. "It is written in Perl and has a long history, coming into popular use since 1992" 
  6. Houle, Bill. "MajorCool: A Web Interface To Majordomo". SILICONexus. http://www.siliconexus.com/MajorCool/. Retrieved 19 February 2013. 
  7. "Majordomo 2". Steven Pritchard. http://www.mj2.org/. Retrieved 19 February 2013. 
  8. OpenBSD Mailing List Server
  9. "Majordomo License Agreement". Great Circle Associates. p. 2.b.. http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/LICENSE. Retrieved 19 February 2013. "No part of Majordomo may be incorporated into any program or other product that is sold, or for which any revenue is received without written permission of Great Circle Associates, with the following exceptions" 

External links