Deep Dive

Today's Deep-Dive: Exim Internet Mailer


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Sending an email feels instant and effortless - but behind that simple click is a vast layer of open-source infrastructure that quietly keeps the internet running. In this episode, we dive into Exim, one of the world’s most important mail transfer agents, and explore the invisible machinery that routes, filters, and secures email at global scale.

Exim operates behind the scenes as a message transfer agent (MTA), the software responsible for moving email from server to server across the internet. Originally developed at the University of Cambridge, it became a major alternative to Sendmail by offering greater flexibility, extensive routing options, and powerful controls for checking incoming mail. Today, it remains a foundational part of internet communication - even if most users never see its name.

We unpack the architectural realities of running software like this: a codebase written primarily in C, optimized for speed and low-level system control, but demanding constant vigilance because of the security risks that come with manual memory management. That tension becomes especially clear in the episode’s discussion of a recent remote heap corruption vulnerability, and why the Exim team takes such a hard line on obsolete versions.

But this deep dive is about more than software internals. We also explore Exim’s recent decision to leave GitHub and move to a self-hosted Forgejo instance, a major act of digital independence that reflects a broader concern in open source: foundational internet infrastructure should not depend on centralized corporate platforms. Combined with self-hosted bug tracking and traditional mailing lists, Exim’s development workflow reflects a deep commitment to open, independent systems.

At its core, this episode is about the hidden communities that maintain the internet’s essential infrastructure—and the urgent question of what happens when those communities must hand that responsibility to the next generation.

If you’ve ever wondered what really happens after you press “send,” this deep dive into Exim reveals the open-source systems - and the people - quietly making global communication possible.

  • https://www.exim.org/
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