qmail-ldap comes as a bundle of features a ISP needs. It is complete so that no other patches are needed and if you do not configure them you will end with a behaviour like stock qmail.
Also most of the stuff you find as external patches has been integrated in a different way in qmail-ldap. So it is almost impossible to apply one of those patches. Also the maintenance of a qmail-ldap patch set is exponentially more complex with no gain.
So if you like to have a list of all patches applied read QLDAPNEWS and QLDAPINSTALL and compare the features with the list of patches a www.qmail.org.
If you have a patch that absolutly needs to be included you could send a request to the list.
Claudio,
I understand what you are saying, but I am approaching this from a different perspective.
I currently run qmail v1.03 vanilla, i.e. no patches (well, apart from the errno issue). I'm currently setting up ldap on my home network and would like to add ldap support to qmail. However, I'm a little hesitant in deploying software that has a whole bunch of additional patches that I don't need.
I'll hack through the patch manually and see if I can work out what patches have been applied.
Cheers,
R.
