Wietse,

Congratulations on the anniversary (or is that birthday). And thank you for all the hard work!

Miles Fidelman

On Feb 12, 2017 21:07, "Wietse Venema" <wie...@porcupine.org <mailto:wie...@porcupine.org>> wrote:

    Last month it was 20 years ago that I started writing Postfix code.
    After coming to IBM research in November 1996, I spent most of
    December and January making notes on paper. I knew that writing a
    mail system was more work than any of my prior projects.

    The oldest tarball, dated 19970220, contains library functions plus
    two early versions of the master daemon. There are 8086 lines of
    code, 4204 lines after stripping the comments, and the only
    documentation was my pile of hand-written notes.

    For comparison, today's Postfix 3.2.0 RC1 release candidate weighs
    in at 236533 lines of code, 137257 after stripping comments. The
    documentation amounts to 32589 lines of hand-written HTML source,
    plus 41878 lines of auto-generated HTML.

    Much of today's effort is not visible as new features (thought there
    still are enough to make an upgrade worthwhile), but happens behind
    the scenes as improvements to internal code, and updated tests to
    ensure that future changes won't inadvertantly break something.

            Wietse


--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.  .... Yogi Berra

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