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Mail::Procmail(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::Procmail(3)

Mail::Procmail - Procmail-like facility for creating easy mail filters.

    use Mail::Procmail;

    # Set up. Log everything up to log level 3.
    my $m_obj = pm_init ( loglevel  => 3 );

    # Pre-fetch some interesting headers.
    my $m_from              = pm_gethdr("from");
    my $m_to                = pm_gethdr("to");
    my $m_subject           = pm_gethdr("subject");

    # Default mailbox.
    my $default = "/var/spool/mail/".getpwuid($>);

    pm_log(1, "Mail from $m_from");

    pm_ignore("Non-ASCII in subject")
      if $m_subject =~ /[\232-\355]{3}/;

    pm_resend("jojan")
      if $m_to =~ /jjk@/i;

    # Make sure I see these.
    pm_deliver($default, continue => 1)
      if $m_subject =~ /getopt(ions|(-|::)?long)/i;

    # And so on ...

    # Final delivery.
    pm_deliver($default);

procmail is a great mail filter program, but it has weird recipe format. It's pattern matching capabilities are basic and often insufficient. I wanted something flexible whereby I could filter my mail using the power of Perl.

I've been considering to write a procmail replacement in Perl for a while, but it was Simon Cozen's "Mail::Audit" module, and his article in The Perl Journal #18, that set it off.

I first started using Simon's great module, and then decided to write my own since I liked certain things to be done differently. And I couldn't wait for his updates.

"Mail::Procmail" allows a piece of email to be logged, examined, delivered into a mailbox, filtered, resent elsewhere, rejected, and so on. It is designed to allow you to easily create filter programs to stick in a .forward or .procmailrc file, or similar.

Note that several changes are due to personal preferences and do not necessarily imply deficiencies in "Mail::Audit".
General
Not object oriented. Procmail functionality typically involves one single message. All (relevant) functions are exported.
Delivery
Each of the delivery methods is able to continue (except pm_reject and pm_ignore).

Each of the delivery methods is able to pretend they did it (for testing a new filter).

No default file argument for mailbox delivery, since this is system dependent.

Each of the delivery methods logs the line number in the calling program so one can deduce which 'rule' caused the delivery.

Message IDs can be checked to suppress duplicate messages.

System commands can be executed for their side-effects.

pm_ignore logs a reason as well.

pm_reject will fake a "No such user" status to the mail transfer agent.

Logging
The logger function is exported as well. Logging is possible to a named file, STDOUT or STDERR.

Since several deliveries can take place in parallel, logging is protected against concurrent access, and a timestamp/pid is included in log messages.

A log reporting tool is included.

Robustness
Exit with TEMPFAIL instead of die in case of problems.

pm_pipe_to ignores SIGPIPE.

pm_pipe_to returns the command exit status if continuation is selected.

Commands and pipes can be protected against concurrent access using lockfiles.

Note that most delivery routines exit the program unless the attribute "continue=>1" is passed.

Also, the delivery routines log the line number in the calling program so it is easy to find out which 'rule' caused a specific delivery to take place.

This routine performs the basic initialisation. It must be called once.

Example:

    pm_init (logfile => "my.log", loglevel => 3, test => 1);

Attributes:

  • fh

    An open file handle to read the message from. Defaults to STDIN.

  • logfile

    The name of a file to log messages to. Each message will have a timestamp attached.

    The attribute may be 'STDOUT' or 'STDERR' to achieve logging to standard output or error respectively.

  • loglevel

    The amount of information that will be logged.

  • test

    If true, no actual delivery will be done. Suitable to test a new setup. Note that file locks are done, so lockfiles may be created and deleted.

  • debug

    Provide some debugging info.

  • trace

    Provide some tracing info, eventually.

  • verbose

    Produce verbose information, eventually.

This routine fetches the contents of a header. The result will have excess whitepace tidied up.

The header is reported using warn() if the debug attribute was passed (with a true value) to pm_init();

Example:

    $m_rcvd = pm_gethdr("received");    # get first (or only) Received: header
    $m_rcvd = pm_gethdr("received",2);  # get 3rd Received: header
    @m_rcvd = pm_gethdr("received");    # get all Received: headers

Like pm_gethdr, but without whitespace cleanup.

This routine fetches the body of a message, as a reference to an array of lines.

Example:

    $body = pm_body();                  # ref of lines
    $body = join("", @{pm_body()});     # as one string

This routine performs delivery to a Unix style mbox file, or maildir.

In case of an mbox file, the file is locked first by acquiring exclusive access. Note that older style locking, with a lockfile with ".lock" extension, is not supported.

Example:

    pm_deliver("/var/spool/mail/".getpwuid($>));

Attributes:

continue

If true, processing will continue after delivery. Otherwise the program will exit with a DELIVERED status.

This routine performs delivery to a command via a pipe.

Return the command exit status if the continue attribute is supplied. If execution is skipped due to test mode, the return value will be 0. See also attribute "testalso" below.

If the name of a lockfile is supplied, multiple deliveries are throttled.

Example:

    pm_pipe_to("my_filter", lockfile => "/tmp/pm.lock");

Attributes:

  • lockfile

    The name of a file that is used to guard against multiple deliveries. The program will try to exclusively create this file before proceding. Upon completion, the lock file will be removed.

  • continue

    If true, processing will continue after delivery. Otherwise the program will exit with a DELIVERED status, even when the command failed.

  • testalso

    Do this, even in test mode.

Executes a system command for its side effects.

If the name of a lockfile is supplied, multiple executes are throttled. This would be required if the command manipulates external data in an otherwise unprotected manner.

Example:

    pm_command("grep foo some.dat > /tmp/pm.dat",
               lockfile => "/tmp/pm.dat.lock");

Attributes:

lockfile

The name of a file that is used to guard against multiple executions. The program will try to exclusively create this file before proceding. Upon completion, the lock file will be removed.

testalso

Do this, even in test mode.

Send this message through to some other user.

Example:

    pm_resend("root");

Attributes:

continue

If true, processing will continue after delivery. Otherwise the program will exit with a DELIVERED status.

Reject a message. The sender will get a mail back with the reason for the rejection (unless stderr has been redirected).

Example:

    pm_reject("Non-existent address");

Ignore a message. The program will do nothing and just exit with a DELIVERED status. A descriptive text may be passed to log the reason for ignoring.

Example:

    pm_ignore("Another make money fast message");

Check for duplicate messages. Reject the message if its message ID has already been received.

Example:

    pm_dupcheck(scalar(pm_gethdr("message-id")));

Attributes:

  • dbm

    The name of a DBM file (created if necessary) to store the message IDs. The default name is ".msgids" in the HOME directory.

  • retain

    The amount of time, in days, that subsequent identical message IDs are considered duplicates. Each new occurrence will refresh the time stamp. The default value is 14 days.

  • continue

    If true, the routine will return true or false depending on the message ID being duplicate. Otherwise, if it was duplicate, the program will exit with a DELIVERED status.

Warning: In the current implementation, the DBM file will grow unlimited. A separate tool will be supplied to expire old message IDs.

The program will try to get an exclusive lock using this file.

Example:

    $lock_id = pm_lockfile("my.mailbox.lock");

The lock id is returned, or undef on failure.

Unlocks a lock acquired earlier using pm_lockfile().

Example:

    pm_unlockfile($lock_id);

If unlocking succeeds, the lock file is removed.

Logging facility. If pm_init() was supplied the name of a log file, this file will be opened, created if necessary. Every log message written will get a timestamp attached. The log level (first argument) must be less than or equal to the loglevel attribute used with pm_init(). If not, this message will be skipped.

Example:

    pm_log(2,"Retrying");

pm_report() produces a summary report from log files from Mail::Procmail applications.

Example:

    pm_report(logfile => "pmlog");

The report shows the deliveries, and the rules that caused the deliveries. For example:

  393  393  deliver[203]  /home/jv/Mail/perl5-porters.spool
  370  370  deliver[203]  /home/jv/Mail/perl6-language.spool
  174  174  deliver[203]  /home/jv/Mail/perl6-internals.spool
  160   81  deliver[311]  /var/spool/mail/jv
        46  deliver[337]
        23  deliver[363]
        10  deliver[165]

The first column is the total number of deliveries for this target. The second column is the number of deliveries triggered by the indicated rule. If more rules apply to a target, this line is followed by additional lines with an empty first and last column.

Attributes:

logfile

The name of the logfile to process.

If no logfile attribute is passed, pm_report() reads all files supplied on the command line. This makes it straighforward to run from the command line:

    $ perl -MMail::Procmail -e 'pm_report()' syslog/pm_logs/*

The following lines at the start of .procmailrc will cause a copy of each incoming message to be saved in $HOME/syslog/mail, after which the procmail-pl is run as a TRAP program (see the procmailrc documentation). As a result, procmail will transfer the exit status of procmail-pl to the mail transfer agent that invoked procmail (e.g., sendmail, or postfix).

    LOGFILE=$HOME/syslog/procmail
    VERBOSE=off
    LOGABSTRACT=off
    EXITCODE=
    TRAP=$HOME/bin/procmail-pl

    :0:
    $HOME/syslog/mail

WARNING: procmail seems to have problems when $HOME/syslog/mail gets too big (over 50Mb). If you want to maintain a huge archive, you can specify excess extents, like this:

    :0:
    $HOME/syslog/mail-ext1

    :0:
    $HOME/syslog/mail-ext2

An extensive example can be found in the examples directory of the "Mail::Procmail" kit.

Mail::Internet

LockFile::Simple

procmail documentation.

Johan Vromans, Squirrel Consultancy <jvromans@squirrel.nl>

Some parts are shamelessly stolen from Mail::Audit by Simon Cozens <simon@cpan.org>, who admitted that he stole most of it from programs by Tom Christiansen.

This program is Copyright 2000,2004 by Squirrel Consultancy. All rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or b) the "Artistic License" which comes with Perl.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License for more details.

2004-09-19 perl v5.32.1

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