Document id

          _NOTE:_ This documentation may be slightly out of date. Please
          read the documentation inside each module that you're interested
          in for latest news.

        This page contains man pages from the procmail modules
        *pm-lib* which can be used as includerc plug-ins: some can be used
        as subroutines to your own programs and some are self containing
        recipes. There is no user or site specific settings in these
        modules.

        An attempt to minimize the use of external processes was a design
        goal. The modules try to use pure procmail way as much as possible
        (eg. to get date and directly from message without calling
        expensive shell `date'). It is important to remember that procmail
        is run on every incoming message and every CPU tick spent counts.

        .$Id: pm-lib.txt,v 1.1 2001/09/09 12:03:18 jaalto Exp $
        .$Contactid: jari.aalto@poboxes.com $
        .$URL: http://pm-lib.sourceforge.net/ $
        .$Keywords: procmail library includerc subroutine recipe $

         Document control

        This document has been automatically generated from the procmail rc
        files with 2 small perl programs in the following manner:

            % perl -S ripdoc.pl `ls pm-ja*.rc|sort`   > pm-lib.raw

            % perl -S t2html.pl                                           \
              --html-frame                                                \
              --base http://pm-lib.sourceforge.net/                       \
              --button-previous "http://pm-lib.sourceforge.net/"          \
              --title  "Procmail module documentation"                    \
              --author "Jari Aalto"                                       \
              --email  jari.aalto@poboxes.com                             \
              --meta-keywords "procmail, sendmail, programming, library"  \
              --meta-description "Procmail plug-in module documentation"  \
              --name-uniq                                                 \
              --Out                                                       \
              pm-lib.txt

        The perl program assume that the documentation sections have been
        written in Technical Text Format and you are looking at TF layout in
        this file. The perl programs can be found from CPAN entry
        http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-authors/id/J/JA/JARIAALTO/

         Automatic URL change notification service

        If you want to have automatic notification whenever my page
        changes, please visit this link and register any ULR in your
        reminder list. See also procmail module `pm-janetmind.rc'

Pm-jaaddr.rc -- extract 'foo@some.com' email address from variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)   1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .$Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$Created:       1997-11 $
        .$keywords:      procmail extractEmailAddress subroutine $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc extracts the various components of email address
        from variable `INPUT'. You can do quite a lot interesting things with
        your email address. Refer to http://www.qz.to/~eli/faqs/addressing.html
        for more information. One of the tricks that you could use if you
        don't have sendmail plus addressing capabilities, is that you put
        the additional infomation to the RFC comment. Eg. If you read and
        followup to posts in usenet games groups, you could use:

            From: <login@site.com> (John Doe+usenet.games)

        Or if your email address's localpart (that's characters before @)
        already signify your First and surname, you don't need to repeat it
        in comment. However, place special marker "+" to mark
        additional information part for your procmail recipes:

            From: <first.surname@site.com> (+usenet.games)

        The use of RFC comment should work everywhere because RFC requires
        that comments are preserved along with the address information.
        If you would have sendmail plus addressing capabilities you would
        have used:

            From: <login+usenet.games@site.com> (John Doe)

        The idea is that the list infomation is readily available from
        the email. The following recipe will derive the plus information
        and use it directly as a mailbox where to drop the message. I
        The Editor: Emacs, means anything to you, you can program it
        to generate the appropriate From headers automatically when you
        send mail from Gnus Mail/Newsreader MUA. Drop me a message if
        you need an examle how a piece of Emacs lisp code makes those
        magic RFC plus addresses in the background while you compose the
        body of the message.

            RC_EMAIL = $PMSRC/pm-jaaddr.rc
            TOME     = "(login1|login2)"

            :0
            *$ ^TO\/.*$TOME.*
            {
                INPUT       = $MATCH
                INCLUDERC   = $RC_EMAIL
                PLUS        = $COMMENT_PLUS

                #  If COMMENT_PLUS was defined, we found "+"
                #  address which contained "usenet.games", save it to
                #  folder.

                :0 :
                * PLUS ?? [a-z]
                $PLUS
            }

    Notes

        1998-05 David Hunt <dh@west.net> also mentioned that "you need to
        remember that some MTAs, (qmail for one, and soon vmail) use a dash
        ( - ) as the subaddress delimiter. So you'll want to allow for that
        in your code". For this reason the email part accepts both
        "-" and  "+". The RFC comment however accepts only "+".

    Example input

            "From: foo+procmail@this.site.com (Mr. foo)"        traditional
            "From: foo-procmail@this.site.com (Mr. foo)"        new styled

        NOTE: M$SOFT mailers tend to send idiotic smart quotes "'Mr. foo'"
        and this recipe ignores these two quotes ["'] as if message had
        only the standard ["]

    Returned values

            ADDRESS     "foo+procmail@this.site.com"
                        containing the email address without <>

            ACCOUNT     "foo+procmail"
                        all characters before @

            ACCOUNT1    "foo"
                        characters before plus: account1+account2@site
                        Note, if there is no "+", this is same as ACCOUNT.

            ACCOUNT2    "procmail"
                        _only_ set if plus found: account1+account2@site

            SITE        "this.site.com"
                        all characters after @

            DOMAIN      "site.com"
                        the main domain, preceding words in site are
                        considered subdomain (local) addresses.

                            sub.sub.domain.net

            SUB         "this.site"
                        all the sub-domain names without the NET part.

            SUB1        "site"
                        The first subdomain counted from the _RIGHT_ after NET

            SUB2        "this"
                        Second subdomain.

            SUB3        ""
                        Third subdomain.

            SUB4        ""
                        Fourth subdomain.

            NET         "com"
                        last characters after last period ( net,com,edu ...)

            COMMENT     Anything unside parenthesis (Mr. Foo) or if no
                        parentheses found, then anything between quotes
                        "Mr. Foo"

            COMMENT_PLUS Anything after the "+" in the comment, like
                         "Mr Foo+mail.usenet" --> "mail.usenet"

                         Note: some MTA's don't allow + character, this
                         alternatively '--' can be used:
                         "Mr Foo--mail.usenet"  --> "mail.usenet"

        Additionally there is variables DOT1 DOT2, which behave like
        ACCOUNT1 and ACCOUNT2, but in respect to dotted firstname.surname
        type address:

                john.doe@site.com

                ACCOUNT1    = john.doe
                ACCOUNT2    = <empty>
                DOT1        = john
                DOT2        = doe

        If there is plus, the ACCOUNT2 is defined

                john.doe+foo@site.com

                ACCOUNT1    = john.doe
                ACCOUNT2    = foo
                DOT1        = john          (in respect to ACCOUNT1)
                DOT2        = doe           (in respect to ACCOUNT1)


        Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if INPUT wasn't recognized or parsing
        the address failed.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

    Usage example

        Read From field and address from it. This is lot faster than using
        external `formail' call.

            PMSRC   = $HOME/pm
            RC_ADDR = $PMSRC/pm-jaaddr.rc

            :0
            *  ^From:\/.*@.*
            {
                INPUT = $MATCH

                #  Turn off the logging while executing this part
                VERBOSE="off"   INCLUDERC = $RC_ADDR  VERBOSE="on"

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                   # Hmm, no std email address found. Any other ideas?
                }
            }

Pm-jabup.rc --  Keeep N arriving message backup in separate directory

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 John Gianni, Jari Aalto
        .IdeaBy         1995-01 John Gianni <jjg@cadence.com>
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .$Keywords:     procmail backup recipe $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Preserve last N arriving messages in a separate sub-directory.
        This should be your safety-belt recipe that you put to the beginning
        of your .procmailrc.

        Procmail saves the backup files with names like: msg.rcG  msg.scG
        msg.3YS1, msg.4YS1, msg.VYS1, msg.fYS1 to the backup directory.

        Note: this recipe will alawys call shell commands for each message
        you recive. That is needed because cleaning of the backup directory.
        If you receive only small number of messages per day, the performance
        drop of your .procmailrc is not crucial. But if you store many messages
        per day, then the shell calls may be a performance problem.

        In that case, consider moving the cleanup to the pm-jacron.rc
        module (The cleanup is run only once a day, not for every message)

        John Gianni send his simple bsckup script to Jari, who packaged
        and generalized the code. The code is reused with John's permission
        and maintaining responsibility was transferred to Jari

    Required settings

        (none)

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_BUP_MAX, How many messages to keep at maximum. 32 is default
        o   JA_BUP_DIR, Where to store the messages. $HOME/Mail/bup by default
        o   JA_BUP_FILES, regexp to match the saved files. Procmail default.
        o   JA_BUP_CHECK_DIR. Once you have verified that this recipe works,
            that directories are ok, please set this flag to "no" to prevent
            running unnecessary `test' command for each email.

    Usage example

        You only want to keep backup of messages that are not from mailing
        lists. You may want to use TO_ macro to detect addresses better,
        this example matches against all headers

            LISTS          = "(procmail|list-1|list-2)"
            JA_BUP_DIR     = $HOME/Mail/backup/.        # Create the path too
            JA_BUP_MAX     = 42                         # this should be enough

            :0 c
            *$ ! $LISTS
            {
                INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jabup.rc
            }

        If you get many messages, please don't use this module. Instead
        see pm-jacron.rc where similar backup work is done better.

Pm-jacookie.rc -- Handle cookie (unique id) confirmations

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-12
        .keywords:      procmail cookieConfirm recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Overview of features

        o   Each user must register himself to cookie cache before he
            is considered "known"
        o   Unless user return the generated cookie string; which is
            typically a decimal or hex number, he is not considered as
            known and should not have access to services you provide.
        o   Can be used as a "doorbell" spam/UBE shield

    Description

        This recipe handles generating the cookie to new users, comparing
        the returned cookie against the original one and passing known
        users through if they already had returned their cookie.

        When you run automatised scripts, eg. to manage mailing lists
        where users can subscribe and unsubscribe, you have better to
        install safety measure so that someone can not subscribe his enemy
        to 30 mailing lists.

        The *cookie* is any continuous block of random characters that is
        sent to person who wanted to use the service. He must send back the
        *cookie* before the service starts or action, like subscribe will
        take in effect. If someone forges the From address to pretend to
        be someone else and then subscribes as-beeing-someone-else to a
        mailing list, the cookie protects this from happening.

        The cookie is sent to someone-else, and he must return the cookie
        before the "subscribe" service is activated. Obviously this
        someone-else will not be interested in sending back the cookie and
        thus the forgery fails. Isn't that simple, but efective protection
        against misuse?

        And nowadays when UBE (aka Spam) is crawling from every possible
        domain thinkable, you can also start requesting that people
        "join" to your white list, before you start discussing with them.
        Bulk email shotguns do not reply to you, so you won't get cookies
        back from them, but individual peoples that want to talk with
        you, may want to return the cookie. For start you should add your
        friends to your cookie database by hand, so that they don't get
        upset when you activate "cookie-shield".

        It's burden, I admit, to have to response to the cookies, but if
        that is the best way so far after the spam filters, to keep out
        uninvited people. Think this as a "doorbell", you don't usually
        let people in to your house without invitation or your approval.

        If you have strong spam shield already, then you may not want to
        install cookie confirmation for your mates. But it's possible with
        this module.

    How it works

        By default, the cookie generated uses CRC 32 `cksum', but if you have
        md5, you should use it. The cookie is generated from the reply
        address and immediately stored to cookie database file with entry

            DATE FROM-a COOKIE-a
            DATE FROM-b COOKIE-b

        If this was a new user or an old user, who has not registered his
        cookie yet, then original message is sent back to the sender with
        instructions: "please place the magic string to Subject line and
        resent the message."

        When cookie is returned back, a new line to the database is added,
        simply by adding a duplicate entry. The file now looks like this:

            DATE FROM-a COOKIE-a
            DATE FROM-b COOKIE-b
            DATE FROM-a COOKIE-a

        When there is two or more same entries, like FROM-a, the address
        is supposed to be known and person behind it "cleared".

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jadate.rc
        o   pm-jacookie1.rc
        o   pm-jastore.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_COOKIE_SEND, flag. Default is "yes". Set to "no" if you want
            to take full control of the message returned to user. You can check
            variable `ERROR' and use `key' which holds the unique `cookie'
        o   JA_COOKIE_CACHE, cache to determine if this is new user or not.
        o   JA_COOKIE_AUTO_KEY, flag. If set to "yes"; the cookie is
            initially put to the Subject when the message is bounched back.
            Receiver only has to press "r" to reply to send the cookie
            and message back (convenient). You set this flag to "no" when
            you want to avoid accidnebts eg. when receiver is about to
            subscribe to a mailing lists: he has to manually insert the cookie
            into subject. But keep flag to "yes" if you use this module to
            get your friends registered easily.
        o   JA_COOKIE_KEYS, the cookie database. Email address and person's
            access cookie.
        o   JA_COOKIE_MBOX, if contains [a-z] characters, then the message
            that got bounched due to unknown user, is stored into this
            mailbox. Only used if JA_COOKIE_SEND is set to "yes".
        o   JA_COOKIE_RC, dubroutine to generate the cookie id from INPUT.
            By default uses CRC 32.
        o   JA_COOKIE, the string from which the cookie will be generated.
            If you already have the return addres for the sender derived,
            you should assing a value to this to save unnecessary formail call.

    Returned values

        ERROR will contain the efective action when this recipe file ends

        o   "new-user", This is first message from sender.
        o   "known-user", message has email that has been "cleared" ie.
            cookie had been returned and user registered.
        o   "key-mismatch", This is at least second message from sender.
            But he dind't send the confirmation in this message.

        `key' is an internal variable in this recipe file and will hold the
        cookie id in case of "new-user" and "key-mismatch". You may want to
        use it if you generate your own reply.

    Example usage for UBE shield

        This is what I use to prevent unknown people from sending me UBE.
        It takes a bit extra, but they can easily return the message.
        Fill in the missing variables, this won't work out of the box for you.

             WORK = "(domain1|domain2|domain3)"
            LISTS = "(procmail|list-2|list-3|list-4)"
            VALID = "(postmaster|abuse|$LISTS|$WORK)"
            RC_COOKIE   = $PMSRC/pm-jacookie.rc

            :0
            *$ ! From:.*$VALID
            *$ ! $from_daemon
            {
                JA_COOKIE_SEND  = "no"   # Take over the resend control
                INCLUDERC       = $RC_COOKIE

                :0 wc: $RC_COOKIE.lock
                *    mail ?? yes
                * ! ^X-Loop: $JA_COOKIE_XLOOP
                *   ^Subject:\/.*
                | ( $FORMAIL -rkt -b                                        \
                    -A "X-Authentication-key: $key [$ERROR]"                \
                    -A "X-Loop: $JA_COOKIE_XLOOP";                          \
                    -I "Subject: $MATCH $key"                               \
                    echo "You Authentication key is: $key";                 \
                    echo "$JA_COOKIE_MSG";                                  \
                    ) | $SENDMAIL;                                          \
                    echo "[my; cookie; $ERROR; $JA_COOKIE]" >> $HIN

                :0
                * mail ?? yes
                $COOKIE_SPOOL
            }

    Example usage for subscriptions

            :0 c:        # keep backups, expired by cron
            $BACKUP

            $RC_COOKIE   = $PMSRC/pm-jacookie.rc

            ...Mailing lists handled here...
            ...Your work messages filed here..

            TO            = `formail -rt -zxTo:`  # We need this elswhere
            JA_COOKIE_TO  = $TO                   # Update this, it is known

            #   I run private List-X, and all subscribe requests must
            #   be confirmaed

            * ^TO_()list-x
            * ^Subject: +subscribe\>
            {
                JA_COOKIE_SEND  = "no"
                INCLUDERC = $RC_COOKIE

                :0
                * ERROR ?? known-user
                {
                    #   User sent the subsribe request again, allow joining
                    #   immediately.
                }
                :0 E
                {
                    # Because the Send was set to "no"; we're in charge
                    # to send a reply to the user.
                    # ...generate suitable message with formail -rt
                }

            }

            #   Any other messages may be UBE
            JA_COOKIE_SEND  = "yes"
            INCLUDERC       = $RC_COOKIE

Pm-jacookie1.rc -- Generate unique id from INPUT variable.

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .$Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$Created:      1997-12 $
        .$keywords:     procmail cookieMake subroutine $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        When given a string, this subroutine returns a unique number
        representing a string, a cookie.

    Required settings

        (none)

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   INPUT, String from which the magic-cookie is calculated
        o   JA_COOKIE_CMD: shell command to read INPUT and return decimal
            or hex cookie string as one continuous block of characters.
            It decaults to HP-UX `cksum', but your system may have `md5'
            or `chksum'

    Return values

        o   Variable OUTPUT will contain the cookie.

    Example usage

            INPUT           = "foo@site.com"
            JA_COOKIE_CMD   = "md5"     # or chksum
            INCLUDERC       = $PMSRC/pm-jacookie1.rc
            cookie          = $OUTPUT

Pm-jacron.rc -- Procmail: Run cron once a day

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Keywords:      procmail cron framework recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Framework for all cron tasks that can be run once a day.
        This is a wrapper recipe to your cron task list: when the day changes,
        you cron includerc is called.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source directory of procmail code. This recipe
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jadate.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_CRON_RUN_FLAG, You _must_ define this flag file.
        o   JA_CRON_DATE_FILE, File where the date information, last cron run,
            is kept. Defaults to $HOME/.yymmdd
        o   JA_CRON_RC, your includerc which is run when cron triggers.

        A file `JA_CRON_RUN_FLAG' which defaults to ~/.yymmdd.run is created
        when your includerc, that contains list of cron tasks, is run. If new
        mail arrives while your cron recipes are still running, you should
        prevent invoking the cron again by checking if this file exists.
        When all the cron tasks have been run, this flag file is removed.
        Remember to use "w" flag in your cron recipes where necessary
        to serialize the work.

    Return values

        (none)

    Usage example

        Save backups to separate directory, but do cleaning only once a day
        We do not keep backups from mailing list messages

            LISTS          = "(procmail|list-1|list-2)"
            BACKUP_DIR     = "$HOME/Mail/backup/."

            #   Store backups: separate files to directory

            :0 c:
            *$ ! $LISTS
            $BACKUP_DIR

            #   Run JA_CRON_RC once a day. It contains all daily cron tasks

            CRON_RC             = $PMSRC/pm-jacron.rc   # the framework
            JA_CRON_RC          = $PMSRC/pm-mycron.rc   # the tasks to do
            JA_CRON_RUN_FLAG    = $HOME/.cron-running   # define this!

            #   Do not enter here if message arrived at the same day when
            #   the cron is already running. The CRON_RC takes care
            #   of deleting the file when cron has finished.

            :0
            *$ ! ? $IS_EXIST $JA_CRON_RUN_FLAG
            {
                INCLUDERC = $CRON_RC
            }

        The *pm-mycron.rc* file may contain anything. For example to clean
        the backup directory; you add these statements there

            #   rm dummy: if ls doesn't return files, make sure rm has
            #   at least one argument.
            #
            #   ls -t: list files; newest first
            #
            #   sed: chop $max newest files from the listing, leaving the
            #   old ones

            max = 32

            :0 hwic
            | cd $BACKUP_DIR && $RM -f dummy `ls -t msg.* | $SED -e 1,${max}d`

            # End of file pm-mycron.rc

Pm-jadaemon.rc -- Handle DAEMON messages by changing subject

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail recipe daemon messages

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to Contactid with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        When you send a message to a address that had delivery troubles,
        you get a DAEMON message back explaining the error problem. I
        usually want to save these daemon mesaages to a different folder
        and check the folder from time to time. A typical daemon message
        is like this (shortened)

            From: Mail Delivery Subsystem <MAILER-DAEMON@my.domain.com>
            Subject: Warning: could not send message for past 4 hours

            The original message was received at...
            ----- Transcript of session follows -----
            Deferred: Connection timed out
            ----- Original message follows -----
            [YOUR MESSAGE AS YOU SENT IT WITH HEADERS]

        Well, when I read the subjects, I do not like the standard error
        messages, but I also like to know to which address the delivery
        failed and what was the original subject. This small recipe changes
        the daemon message's Subject to

            Subject BRIEF-ERROR-REASON, SENT-TO-ADDRESS, ORIGINAL-SUBJECT

        and from that you can immediately tell if you should be worried Eg.
        if SENT-TO-ADDRESS was your friend's, then you want to take actions
        immediately, but if it were your complaint to UBE message to
        postmaster, you don't want to bother reading that daemon message.
        Here are some real examples:

            fatal errors,postmaster,ABUSE (Was: Super Cool Site!)
            Host unknown,postmaster,ABUSE (Was: A-Credit Information)
            undeliverable,postmaster,Could you investigate this spam
            Warning-Returned,friend,Have you looked at this

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        needs scrips

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_DAEMON_REGEXP,   which messages to trigger

    Return values

        o   Variable ERROR will be set to "yes" if daemon message was handled
            otherwise; value is "no"

    Usage example

        Just add this recipe somewhere in your .procmailrc. The place where
        you would put this daemon message trapper subroutine is crucial:
        think carefylly how you order your recipes. One suggested order
        could be: backup important messages, cron-subroutine,
        handle duplicates, DAEMON MESSAGES, plus addressed message,
        server message (file server, ping responder...), MAILING LISTS,
        send possible vacation  replies only after all above, apply
        kill file, detect mime, save private messages and las FILTER UBE.


            PMSRC           = $HOME/pm
            RC_DAEMON       = $PMSRC/pm-jadaemon.rc
            DAEMON_MBOX     = $HOME/Mail/junk.daemon.mbox

            ...

            INCLUDERC       = $RC_DAEMON

            :0 :            # If that was a daemon message, put it to folder
            * ERROR ?? yes
            $DAEMON_MBOX

Pm-jadate.rc -- Read date from the message hdrs: From_, Receved:

    File id

        .Copyright (C) 1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:      1997-12
        .keywords:     procmail dateFromMessage recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This recipe will scan several headers to find the date string.
        When suitable header is found and the parsing has succeeded, the
        return variables are set. The Date values reflects the arrive time
        of the message; not the sending time. If nothing works, a shell call
        `date' is used as a last resort.

        Returned values

            YYYY    = 4 digits
            YY      = 2 digits
            MON     = 3 characters
            MM      = 2 digits
            DAY     = 3 characters
            DD      = 2 digits
            hh      = 2 digits      if available
            mm      = 2 digits      if available
            ss      = 2 digits      if available

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jadate1.rc
        o   pm-jadate3.rc
        o   pm-jadate4.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Usage example

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jadate.rc
            #   now we have all date variables that we need
            #
            $TODAY    = $YYYY-$MM-$DD

Pm-jadate1.rc -- 'Tue, 31 Dec 1997' date parser from variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail subroutine date parsing

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc parses date from variable `INPUT' which has string

            "Week, Daynbr Month Year"

        Example input

            "Tue, 31 Dec 1997"      -- without comma
            "Tue 31 Dec 1997"       -- with comma

        Returned values

            YYYY    = 4 digits
            YY      = 2 digits
            MON     = 3 characters
            MM      = 2 digits
            DAY     = 3 characters
            DD      = 2 digits
            hh      = 2 digits      If available
            mm      = 2 digits      If available
            ss      = 2 digits      If available
            TZ      = 5 characters  If available

        Variable ERROR is set to `yes' if it couldn't recognize the INPUT
        and couldn't parse the basic YYYY, YY, MM, DD variables.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

        The INPUT can have anything after "Week, dayNbr Month Year", or
        before it: you can pass a string like
        "Thu, 13 Nov 1997 11:43:23 +0200".

    Usage example

        The first *Received* header will tell when the message was received
        by your mailserver. We parse the date and avoid calling expensive
        `date' command.

            PMSRC           = $HOME/pm
            RC_DATE_WDMY    = $PMSRC/pm-jadate1.rc #Week-Day-Month-Year parser

            # Get time from first header, it ends like this:
            #
            #       Received: ... ; Thu, 13 Nov 1997 11:43:50 +0200

            :0
            *$ ^Received:.*;$s+\/...,$s+$d.*
            {
                INPUT = $MATCH

                #  Turn off the logging while executing this part

                VERBOSE=off   INCLUDERC = $RC_DATE_WDMY   VERBOSE=on

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                   # Use some other way to get the time or shout loudly
                }
            }

Pm-jadate2.rc -- 'YYYY-MM-DD' ISO date parser from variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:     procmail subroutine body-empty-test

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc parses date in format "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss"
        like `1997-12-01' and sets following variables whenever called

                YYYY    = 4 digits
                YY      = 2 digits
                MON     = 3 characters
                MM      = 2 digits
                DD      = 2 digits
                hh      = 2 digits  If avaliable
                mm      = 2 digits  If avaliable
                ss      = 2 digits  If avaliable

        Variable ERROR is set to `yes' if it couldn't recognize the INPUT
        and couldn't parse the basic YYYY, YY, MM, DD variables.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

        Last string in INPUT that matches number sequence `NNNN-NN-NN' is
        parsed.

    Usage example

            PMSRC          = $HOME/pm
            RC_DATE_ISO    = $PMSRC/pm-jadate2.rc # ISO date parser

            INPUT = "This is 1800-10-11, a very old date"

            #  Turn off the logging while executing this part

            VERBOSE="off"  INCLUDERC=$RC_DATE_ISO  VERBOSE="on"

Pm-jadate3.rc -- 'Tue Nov 25 19:32:57' date parser from variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail subroutine date parsing

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc parses date from variable INPUT which has string

            "Week, Month dayNbr hh:mm:ss yyyy",

        Example

            Tue Nov 25 19:32:57 1997

        Returned values

                YYYY    = 4 digits
                YY      = 2 digits
                MON     = 3 characters
                MM      = 2 digits
                DAY     = 3 characters
                DD      = 2 digits
                hh      = 2 digits
                mm      = 2 digits
                ss      = 2 sigits

        Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if it couldn't recognize the INPUT.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

    Usage example

        The first *Received* header will tell when the message was received
        by the mailserver. Parse the date and avoid calling expensive `date'
        command.

            PMSRC           = $HOME/pm
            RC_DATE_WMDT    = $PMSRC/pm-jadate4.rc #Week-Month-Day-Time parser

            # Get time from X-From-Line: Which was added by my MDA
            #   X-From-Line: procmail-request@informatik.rwth-aachen.de \
            #    Tue Nov 25 19:32:57 1997

            :0 c
            *$ ^X-From-Line:\/.*
            {
                INPUT = $MATCH

                #  Turn off the logging while executing subroutine

                VERBOSE=off   INCLUDERC = $RC_DATE_WMDT   VERBOSE=on

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                   # Use some other way to get the time or shout loudly
                }
            }

Pm-jadate4.rc -- make RFC 'Mon, 1 Dec 1997 17:41:09' and parse values

    File id

        .Copyright (C) 1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:      1997-12 $
        .keywords:     procmail dateFromSehll subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine calls shell command date once and prses the values.
        This should be your last resort if you haven't got the date values
        by any other means. This subroutine assumes that the DATE command
        knows the following % specifier formats (HP-UX)

            Y   NNNN    year
            h   MON     month
            d   NN      day
            a   WEEK    Like "Mon"
            H   NN      hour
            M   NN      min
            S   NN      sec

        Returned values

            DATE    = RFC date in format "Mon, 1 Dec 1997 17:41:09"
                      This is same as what you would see in From_

            YYYY    = 4 digits
            YY      = 2 digits
            MON     = 3 characters
            MM      = 2 digits
            DAY     = 3 characters
            DD      = 2 digits
            hh      = 2 digits
            mm      = 2 digits
            ss      = 2 sigits

        Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if values couldn't be set

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source directory of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jadate1.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Usage example

        The First Received line will tell when the message was received by
        the MDA. If thata fails, then get date from the system. If you send
        test messages to # yourself, you don't usually put From_ header in
        it and thus there is # no date information in 'dry run' tests.

            # Get time from first eader, which is always same in my system
            # Received: ... ; Thu, 13 Nov 1997 11:43:50 +0200

            INCLUDERC   = $PMSRC/pm-javar.rc    # to get $s $d definitions
            TODAY       # Clear it

            :0
            *$ ^Received:.*;$s+\/...,$s+$d.*
            {
                INPUT     = $MATCH
                INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jadate1.rc
                TODAY     = "$YYYY-$MM-$DD"
            }

            #   Check that variable did get set, if not then we have to call
            #   another date subroutine: Call shell then to find out date
            #
            #   You could also do this with ':0 E', but this is more
            #   educational

            :0
            *$ ! $TODAY^0
            {
                INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jadate4.rc    # Get date from Shell then
                TODAY     = $YYYY-$MM-$DD
            }

Pm-jadate5.rc -- 'Fri Jun 19 18:51:56 1998' date parser from var INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-06
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail subroutine date parsing

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc parses date from variable INPUT which has string

            "WeekDay Month dayNbr Year"

        Example input

            "Fri Jun 19 18:51:56 1998"      -- without comma
            "Fri, Jun 19 18:51:56 1998"     -- with comma

        Returned values

            YYYY    = 4 digits
            YY      = 2 digits
            MON     = 3 characters
            MM      = 2 digits
            DAY     = 3 characters
            DD      = 2 digits
            hh      = 2 digits      If available
            mm      = 2 digits      If available
            ss      = 2 digits      If available
            TZ      = 5 characters  If available

        Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if it couldn't recognize the INPUT
        and couldn't parse the basic YYYY,YY,MM,DD variables.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

        The INPUT can have anything after "Week, dayNbr Month Year", or
        before it: you can pass a string like
        "Fri Jun 19 18:51:56 1998 11:43:23 +0200".

    Usage example

        The first *Received* header will tell when the message was received
        by your mailserver. We parse the date and avoid calling expensive
        `date' command.

            PMSRC           = $HOME/pm
            RC_DATE_WDMY    = $PMSRC/pm-jadate5.rc #Week-Day-Month-Year parser

            # Get time from first header, it ends like this:

            :0
            *$ ()\/From .*
            {
                INPUT = $MATCH
                #  Turn off the logging while executing this part

                VERBOSE=off   INCLUDERC = $RC_DATE_WDMY   VERBOSE=on

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                   # Use some other way to get the time or shout loudly
                }
            }

Pm-jadup.rc -- Procmail: Handle duplicates; store to separate folder

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Keywords:      procmail filter duplicates recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This recipe stores duplicate messages to separate folder

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source directory of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jastore.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_ID_CACHE, Where to keep the Message-Id cache.
        o   JA_ID_CACHE_SIZE, how big cache, defualt is 8192
        o   JA_ID_MBOX, where to store duplicate messages
            when delivering message to duplicate mbox.
        o   JA_ID_IGNORE, if set to "yes", then ignore duplicate check

    Return values

        o   Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if duplicate message was trapped,
            otherwise value is "no"

    Usage Example

        For simple usage, just put this somewhere after backup recipes

                RC_DUP      = $PMSRC/pm-jadup.rc
                ...
                INCLUDERC   = $RC_DUP

        When you are testing messages, you send them over and over to
        .procmailrc; which means that same message should not be trapped by
        duplicate check. You can call `procmail' with option "-a test" which will
        set pseudo variable `$1'. The recipe below sets flag `JA_ID_IGNORE'
        to "yes" if test is on going and the duplicate filter should be
        bypassed.

            RC_DUP  = $PMSRC/pm-jadup.rc
            ARG     = $1        # Copy pseudo variable to $ARG

            :0
            * ARG ?? test
            {
                JA_ID_IGNORE = "yes"
            }

            #   Some microsoft product is known to send same message ids
            #   over and over. If we detect one, tunr off the duplicate test,
            #   because it would trash every message.
            #   <MAPI.Id.0016.00666479202020203030303430303034@MAPI.to.RFC822>

            :0
            * ! ^X-msmail
            * ! ^Message-ID: *<MAPI.*@MAPI.to.RFC822>
            {
                JA_ID_IGNORE = "yes"
            }

            #   Run this command every time a duplicate message is found.
            #   It writes a small log entry to MY_LOG

            INCLUDERC    = $RC_DUP

            :0 hwic:
            * ERROR ?? yes
            | echo "    [duplicate]" >> $BIFF

Pm-jaempty.rc -- check if message body is empty (nothing relevant)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)   1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .$Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$Created:      1997-11 $
        .$keywords:     procmail filter duplicates recipe $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This simple includerc will define variable BODY_EMPTY to "yes" or "no"
        when called like this

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jaempty.rc

    Required settings

        (none)

Pm-jafrom.rc -- get message's best FROM field without calling `formail'

    File id

        Copyright (C)   1997-98 Jari Aalto
        $Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        $Created:       1997-12 $
        $keywords:      procmail extracFROM subroutine $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc extracts the most likely FROM address from the
        message. The order of the search is Reply-to, From_, Sender, From
        and if none found, then as a last resort, call `formail'. You would
        usually use the returned value for logging purposes.

        Avoiding extra formail call could be usefull if you receive lot
        of messages per day.

        Example input

            (none)

        Returned values

            OUTPUT, containing the derived FROM field

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there. You nee procmail 3.11pre7 in
        order to use this subroutine. (due to formail -z switch)

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Usage example

        INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jafrom.rc
        FROM      = $OUTPUT   # now we have the 'best' FROM field

Pm-jafwd.rc -- Controlling forwarding remotedly, procmail 3.11pre7

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-10
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .keywords:      procmail forward mail

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Overview of features

        o   Requires procmail 3.11pre7+ (formail -z switch)
        o   You can send forward-on and forward-off control
            messages via email to control the forwarding in remote site.

    Description

        This includerc makes it possible to control your message forwarding
        via simple remote email message. Thanks to Era Eriksson and Timothy
        J Luoma who gave the initial idea to this forwarding module in the
        procmail mailing list 1997-10-07.

    Activating the forwarding by hand

        If you want to activate the forwarding from the local site where
        this module is, then you could simply write the forward address
        to the file pointed by *JA_FWD_FILE* which is `~/.forward-address'
        by default.

            % echo Me@somewhere.com > ~/.forward-address

        and when you no longer need forwarding, then remove that file.
        But really, this module is not used for that purpose, because it is
        lot easier to write

            :0
            ! Me@somewhere.com

        as a first statement in your .procmailrc when you want to forward
        your mail to another account.

    Activating the forwarding by remote email

        Suppose you're on the road and suddenly realise that you want your
        mail forwarded to the current account, then you send following
        control message

            Subject: forward-on password new-address@bar.com
            To: my-account@bar.com
            From: onTheRoad@some.com

        That message is is enough to get the mail forwarded to the address
        new-address@bar.com This script will repond to address From that
        the current forwarding is now pointing to address
        "new-address@bar.com".

    Deactivating forwarding by remote email

        The message is very similar, but the Subject header says

            Subject: forward-off password

        And no other fields are checked. Not even Reply-To. In this case
        the confirmation message is sent directly back to From address.

    Activating forwarding via body message

        If for some reason you have no control over the headers of email,
        eg when you send GSM-Mail message from your phone to your account:

            EMAIL foo@bar.com FORWARD-ON PASSWORD new-address@bar.com

        The email message looks like this:

            From: GenEmail <sms@FooBar.net>
            Date: Thu Sep 17, 11:42am +0200
            To:   "'Foo.Bar'" <foo@bar.com>
            Subject: Message 03384874987

            FORWARD-ON PASSWORD new-address@bar.com

        Instead of looking at the `Subject' field, you can get this module
        to look at the first words in the body field. See variable
        `JA_FWD_CONTROL_FIELD' which you want to set to "body".

    Restricting the control message aceptance

        If you only have persistent accounts, then you should set the
        *JA_FWD_FROM_MUST_MATCH* to match those addresses that you have.
        The following setting says that only control messages sent from
        these addresses are accepted. Nobody else can't change your
        forwarding settings.

            JA_FWD_FROM_MUST_MATCH = ".*(acc1@a.com|acc2@b.com)"

        Hm, that's not a bullet proof, because someone may in theory forge
        the From address. You propably should also set this variable to
        point to accounts where the mail can be legally forwarded to. Then,
        even if the imposter forges the From address; he can't get the
        email forwarded anywhere else than to the valid locations.

            JA_FWD_TO_MUST_MATCH = $JA_FWD_FROM_MUST_MATCH

        Consider also setting *JA_FWD_PASSWORD_CASE* to Procmail flag
        `D' which causes your control word "forward-on" and password
        to be case sensitive.

    Diagnostics

        If you don't receive confirmation message, then your control
        message was ill formed or you're not in the *JA_FWD_FROM_MUST_MATCH*
        list. There is no notification sent on failure, so that no attacker
        can draw conclusions.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Installation

        You should preset all necessary variables prior adding the
        includerc command to your .procmailrc. Here is one simple setup

            #JA_FWD_SENDMAIL    = "tee $HOME/test.mail" # Uncomment if testing
            JA_FWD_COPY         = no    # no copies stored while forwarding
            JA_FWD_PASSWORD_CASE= "D"   # case sensitive
            JA_FWD_PASSWORD     = "MyMagicString"
            JA_FWD_FROM         = $FROM # This is already known.
            INCLUDERC           = $PMSRC/pm-jafwd.rc

    Comments from the author

        Please realise that when you set the forwarding from a remote site,
        be very carefull when you type in the forward address or your mail
        ends up to somebody else's mailbox. Also I recommend that you keep
        *JA_FWD_COPY* to *yes* so that your local account always keep the
        copy of forwarded message.

        A step furher would conventionally encrypt(1)'ing your forwarded
        messages. This way even your top secret messaes would be mostly safe
        even if they end up to someone else's mailbox.

    File layout

        tinybm.el/&tags and tinytab.el for the 4 tab text placement. See
        also unix what(1) and GNUS RCS ident(1).

Pm-jalist.rc -- Subroutine to detect mailing LIST from message.

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-06
        .Keywords:      procmail subroutine list detect

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine tries to detect and derive the mailing list name as
        it appears in some of the know methods that ezlm, smarlist,
        listserv, majordomo etc normally use. After this subroutine has
        been applied to message the variable `LIST' contains the mailing
        list name. Subroutine adaptively finds new new mailing lists
        from the messages.

    Quick start

        If you just want to jump in and use this module and you
        see that some list isn't trapped, please set

        o   JA_LIST_HEADER_REGEXP to match the From: field site regexp.

        If you want to make some list more unique, like if name "Alert"
        was detected as list name, please set

        o   JA_LIST_MAKE_UNIQUE to match the list name, like "Alert"
            and the lista name will be converted to HOST-LIST format.

    Sendmail plus method for list subscription

        If you can use sendmail PLUS addressing capabillities, you may not
        be interested in this module, because you have an alternative way
        to handle mailing list messages. Let's suppose you want to
        subscribe to procmail maling list and want to save all messages
        to folser list.procmail, then you'd subribe with address:

            login+list.procmail@site.com

        The extra information after "+" is available to your procmail
        scripts via $ARG pseudo variable when procmail is the LDA. If you
        fortunate to have new sendmail, you usually subscribe to mailing
        lists with regular email address:

            login@site.com

        How do you detect the arriving mailing list messages?
        Traditionally, you would add a piece of recipe to .procmailrc to
        catch each list, but that's manual work every time. When you use
        this subroutine, you no longer need to write separate mailing list
        recipes to your .procmailrc every time you subscribe to a new
        mailing list. The detection of a new list happens in this
        subroutine for you.

    What you need to know before using this module

        There is lot of heuristics going on in this modules and one thing
        that you must do, if you're a member of tech support or if you
        get cron messages from your server. The rule is:

            If TO domain is same as FROM/SENDER/REPLY-TO domain
            then it is considered a mailing list message.

        This causes certain messages landing to category LIST automatically.
        This module can't possibly know that the following is not from
        mailing list, because it doesn't know "what is mailing list", only
        "how it probably looks like it". This is definitedly categorized as
        maling list message, because `From' and even `Reply-to' has same
        domain `foo.bar.net' as in `To'.

            To: support@foo.bar.net
            From: messagepad@foo.bar.net
            Reply-to: support@foo.bar.net
            Subject: Vmail See message to Eric

        You must prevent checking messages like this by surrounding the
        RC with if statement:

            #   Do not check these messages

            noList = "From.*(foo.bar.net|support.my.com)"

            :0
            *$ ! $noList
            {
                INCLLUDERC = $RC_LIST
            }

    Ask for help

        If you find maling lists that this subroutine does not detect, but
        which could have been detected by looking the headers in standard
        way, please send a email to  maintainer. There may be cases where it
        is impossible to detect the mailing list and in those cases you
        just has to carve a new entry to your procmailrc.

        When you keep your procmail log running, you may see message

             *** potential list ***

        Which is an indication that some new recipe could be added to
        to this subroutine to detect that mailing list. If the message
        you received WAS from a mailing list, please send all the headers
        to the maintainer so that support can be added.

        You can search for mailing list that interests you at:

            http://www.lsoft.com/lists/listref.html
            http://www.netmeg.net/faq/internet/mail/mailing-lists/

    Code note: Errors-To

        Bill Houle sent me interesting headers which caused me to add
        more heuristical approach that I would have originally wanted.
        From these headers there really is impossible to derive the
        original list name. So, I tossed my own and derived the name
        by combining Reply-To's LOGIN with Errors-To fields first server
        name

            Reply-To: news@doodle.foo.net
            Errors-To: bounced@doodle.foo.net

        The list name formed was "news-doodle". So, If you happen to see
        an odd name like this which doesn't remind your original list
        name, it may be due to poor headers that have no clue about
        the real name. No problem, check below how you would convert
        this name to better mailbox name.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

        o   pm-javar.rc is needed and must reside along $PMSRC

    Variable JA_LIST_KILL_POSTFIX

        If grabbed `LIST' match this regexp at the end of list name, then
        the postfix match will be removed. It is traditional that many
        lists name themself as list1-info, list2-beta, list3-l and you
        would prefer more names (for mbox) list1, list2 and list3. The
        default value will ditch "-(info|beta|l)".

    Variable JA_LIST_KILL_PREFIX

        Just like the postfix variable. If this string is matched at the
        beginning of the LIST, it is removed.

    Variable JA_LIST_HEADER_REGEXP

        This is *optional* variable, which you can set to match regexp of
        the mailing list domain address if it slipped through the tests
        in this module. There are some lists that send messages that don't
        carry enough information in headers to determine their list status.
        If you narrow the group by setting JA_LIST_HEADER_REGEXP, then for
        example lists like these, that identify themselves only through
        two headers, can be found:

            Reply-To: dispatch-faq@cnet.com
            From: CNET Digital Dispatch <dispatch@cnet.com>

        For that list you would set

            JA_LIST_HEADER_REGEXP = "(@cnet\.com)"

        Don't worry. all the other list detection recipes has already
        been tried, so this is last test that are carried out and variable
        JA_LIST_HEADER_REGEXP helps eliminating possible mishist

         You don't need set this variable to include all mailing list
         domains. Only to those ones that were not trapped. The default
         value for this is:

            "(amazon\.com|bookpool\.com)"

    Variable JA_LIST_MAKE_UNIQUE

        If you're subscribed to many mailing lists, that simply tell that
        they are *news* or *newsletter*, it will be impossible to
        differiantiate A *news* from B *news*. This varaible holds regular
        expression that, if matched, prepend the first hostname to the
        beginning of listname, thus making the list unique:

            news@some.com       --> some-news
            news@here.com       --> here-news

        The default value matches lists that are contain word *news*, but you
        may need to set this to more matches.

    Variable JA_LIST_CONVERSION

        Many times the grabbed `LIST' name is not what you would like to
        use for your mailbox name. You want to make the name perhaps
        more shorter, more descriptive or categorize the messages according
        to hierarchy. Let's say that you have subscribed to following mailing
        lists:

            LIST            LIST name    Description of mailing list
            (as grabbed)    you want

            jde             java.jde    Java Development Env
            java            java.prog   Java programming
            FLAMENCO        flamenco    Flamenco music
            tango-l         tango       Argentine Tango dancing
            tm-en-help      tm-en       Emacs TM mime package mailing list
            w3-beta         w3          Emacs WWW mailing list

        First, remember that the variable `JA_LIST_KILL_POSTFIX' is applied,
        so the actual `LIST' appear as follows:

            jde, java, FLAMENCO, tango, tm-en, w3

        Ok, Now we apply the conversion table by defining it as follows,
        where the grabbed LIST is first, then comes space(s), new name
        _and_ terminating colon. Repeat this for each list you want to
        convert.

            LIST CONVERSION,LIST CONVERSION,

        This gives us table below: Notice that antries tango-l, w3-beta
        were not included, because the `JA_LIST_KILL_POSTFIX' already got
        rid of the posfixes. Also note how the uppercase match FLAMENCO is
        converted to more suitable lowercase mailbox name. After you have
        set up this variable you can start saving messages to folders.

            JA_LIST_CONVERSION = "\
            jde       java.jde,\
            java      java.prog,\
            FLAMENCO  flamenco,\
            "

        The list conversion is done with pure procmail means, so it is very
        fast. It also means that the conversion is limited to FROM-STRING
        TO-STRING syntax. No wildcards or regular expressions are allowed.

          If you consider using an external process, like `sed' or `perl'
          to convert the grabbed list name to something else (when
          `JA_LIST_CONVERSION' method was not enough); think again. For each
          incoming mailing list message you launch external process. I get
          700 messages from various mailing lists a day so you can imagine how
          much load any external process would cause. Just use the grabbed
          mailing list name and `JA_LIST_CONVERSION' table if you care
          about system load.

        If you have many mailing lists that use uppercase names, it may be
        tedious to add each mailing list name to `JA_LIST_CONVERSION'.
        Possible alternative is to add conversion recipe: `tr' is most
        efficient here to convert name to lowercase. Again; think twice,
        extra process could be avoided if you use `JA_LIST_CONVERSION'.

            :0
            * ! LIST ?? ^^^^
            {
                :0 D            # still uppercase list name?
                * LIST ?? [A-Z]
                {
                    LIST = `echo $LIST | tr A-Z a-z`
                }

                :0 :
                list.$LIST
            }

    List name is not always the same

        One important thing to keep in mind is that when mailing list
        manager sends out list messages, the headers may some times change.
        This means that the list name grabbed by previous calls changes,
        although the list in practise has not changed at all.

        This is unfortunate, but it sometimes happens. Let's see an example.
        I was previously receiving messages from Cygwin mailing list named
        `gnu-win32'

            To: <gnu-win32@cygnus.com>, "Foo Bar" <foo@example.com>

        However, one say that same list was grabbed under name "cygwin", due
        to new header

            Mailing-List: contact cygwin-help@sourceware.cygnus.com; run by ezmlm

        Now I had two list names that both shuld be going to the same mailbox.
        No worries, just use the translate table to convert the list name
        to mailbox name:

            JA_LIST_CONVERSION = "\
            gnu-win32           cygwin32,\
            cygwin              cygwin32,\
            "

    Example: basic installation

        Here is recipe to save all your mailing list to separate folders.
        If you subsribe to new lists or unsubsribe to lists, you don't
        need to change anything.

            RC_LIST = $PMSRC/pm-jalist.rc   # name the subroutine

            ...

            #   Handle all mailing lists with one subroutine and recipe
            #   following it

            INCLUDERC = $RC_LIST

            :0                          # if list name was grabbed
            * LIST ?? [a-z]
            {
                dummy = "Saving mailing list: $LIST"

                :0 :
                list.$LIST
            }

Pm-jamime-decode.rc -- decode MIME body contents; quoted-printable, base64

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto
        .$Maintainer:   Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$Created:      1998-01 $
        .$Keywords:     procmail recipe $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Documentation

        The original father of the decoding scheme used here was
        presented by Peter Galbraith <galbraith@mixing.qc.dfo.ca> in
        procmail mailing list somewhere at the end of 1997.

        This includerc supposes that the header has MIME header
        Content-Type: text/plain and performs qp or base64 decoding
        on the whole message. Note, that if you receive messages that
        have many mime attachements, then this recipe is not suitable
        for it.

        Procmail is not designed to handle mime attachements and this
        recipe only applies to whole _body_.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Return values

        (none)

    Examples

        Instead of testing the existense of text/plain in the body,
        you can force decoding by settings JA_MIME_DECODE_REGEXP to
        ".*".

            RC_MIME_DECODE = $PMSRC/pm-jamime-decode.rc

            :0
            * condition
            { JA_MIME_DECODE_REGEXP = ".*" }

            INCLUDERC = $RC_MIME_DECODE     # call subroutine.


Pm-jamime-kill.rc -- General MIME attachement killer (vcards, html)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Keywords:      procmail MIME killer recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Microsoft Explorer has a bad habbit of including 7k
        application/ms-tnef attachement to the end of message. The sample
        message is described in next section. If you don't want to see that
        additional ms-tnef attachement, then plug in this module and you no
        longer see MS Explorer cruft.

        This recipe works like this: If email's structure is

            --boundary
            message-text (maybe quoted-printable)
            --boundary
            some-unwanted-mime-attachement
            --boundary

        then the attachement is killed from the body. The message-text part
        is also decoded if it was quoted printable. This leaves clean text;
        with no MIME anywhere. MIME headers have been modified as needed
        (due to conversion from multipart and possibly quoted printable to
        plain text):

            message

        But if email's structure was anything else, like if there were 3
        mime sections:

            --boundary
            message-text (maybe quoted-printable)
            --boundary
            some-attachement
            --boundary
            some-unwanted-mime-attachement
            --boundary

        then the "unwanted" part is emptyed by replacing area with one
        empty line. The message structure stays the same, but the killed
        "unwanted" part is labelled as text/plain so that your MUA will
        decode the MIME message correctly.

    Applications for other mime attachements

        All thse are covered when plug in the module.

        o   Lotus Notes sends similar extra attachement and you can use this
            same recipe to kill it. See example section.
        o   Microsoft Express sends a copy of message in html format in the
            attachement, you can kill that too, see example section.
        o   Netscape's Mozilla sends a copy of message in html. See example.
            Also it sends `vcards'
        o   Openmail sends 10-20 base64 attachements WINMAIL.DAT.

    Example of lotus notes attachement

            Subject: message
            From: foo@bar.com
            X-Lotus-FromDomain: XXX COMPANIES
            Mime-Version: 1.0
              Boundary="0__=cieg4oHxUNf2h3evyOXIsHTGDpFfaZilTDCFhpZSgsw"
            Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
              Boundary="0__=cieg4oHxUNf2h3evyOXIsHTGDpFfaZilTDCFhpZSgsw"

            --0__=cieg4oHxUNf2h3evyOXIsHTGDpFfaZilTDCFhpZSgsw
            Content-type: application/octet-stream;
                name="PIC10898.PCX"
            Content-transfer-encoding: base64

            eJ8+IjsQAQaQCAAEAAAAAAABAAEAAQeQBgAIAAAA5AQAAAAAAADoAAEIgAcA
            b3NvZnQgTWFpbC5Ob3RlADEIAQ2ABAACAAAAAgACAAEEkAYAyAEAAAEAAAAQ

            <AND-THE-REST-OF-BASE64>

            --0__=cieg4oHxUNf2h3evyOXIsHTGDpFfaZilTDCFhpZSgsw--

    Example of MS Explorer's ms-tnef message

            Subject: message
            From: foo@bar.com
            MIME-Version: 1.0
            Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
                boundary="---- =_NextPart_000_01BD04D4.A5AC6B00"
            Lines: 158

            ------ =_NextPart_000_01BD04D4.A5AC6B00
            Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

            <MESSAGE ITSELF IS HERE>

            ------ =_NextPart_000_01BD04D4.A5AC6B00
            Content-Type: application/ms-tnef
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

            eJ8+IjsQAQaQCAAEAAAAAAABAAEAAQeQBgAIAAAA5AQAAAAAAADoAAEIgAcA
            b3NvZnQgTWFpbC5Ob3RlADEIAQ2ABAACAAAAAgACAAEEkAYAyAEAAAEAAAAQ

            <AND-THE-REST-OF-BASE64>

            ------ =_NextPart_000_01BD04D4.A5AC6B00--

    Example of MS Express's html message

            MIME-Version: 1.0
            Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
                boundary="----=_NextPart_000_003A_01BD16E2.C97E27B0"
            X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 4.72.2106.4
            X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.72.2106.4

            This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

            ------=_NextPart_000_003A_01BD16E2.C97E27B0
            Content-Type: text/plain;
                charset="iso-8859-1"
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

            <ACTUAL TEXT>

            ------=_NextPart_000_003A_01BD16E2.C97E27B0
            Content-Type: text/html;
                charset="iso-8859-1"
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

            <SAME IN HTML>
            ------=_NextPart_000_003A_01BD16E2.C97E27B0--

    Example of Netscape's html attachement

            X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.04 [en] (X11; U; Linux 2.0.33 i686)
            MIME-Version: 1.0
            Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
                boundary="------------69D9D579CF587DC8BB26C49C"


            --------------69D9D579CF587DC8BB26C49C
            Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

            <ACTUAL TEXT>

            --------------69D9D579CF587DC8BB26C49C
            Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

            <SAME IN HTML>
            --------------69D9D579CF587DC8BB26C49C--

    Example of Netscape's vcard attachement.

            Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name="vcard.vcf"
            Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
            Content-Description: Card for Laird Nelson
            Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="vcard.vcf"

            begin:          vcard
            fn:             Laird Nelson
            n:              Nelson;Laird
            org:            Perot Systems Corporation
            email;internet: ljnelson@unix.amherst.edu
            title:          Software Engineer
            tel;work:       (617) 303-5059
            tel;fax:        (617) 303-5293
            tel;home:       (978) 741-3126
            note;quoted-printable:Information is for reference only;=0D=0A=
                    please do not abuse it.
            x-mozilla-cpt:  ;0
            x-mozilla-html: TRUE
            version:        2.1
            end:            vcard

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jamime.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        First of all, this is primarily a framework recipe to kill any kind
        of attachement. If you do not set JA_MIME_TYPE before calling
        this recipe, recipe will try to determine the right value by itself.
        See if the automatic detection works for you or preset the
        JA_MIME_TYPE beforehand if it fails (I'd like to hear about the
        failure and add the conditions as default)

        o   JA_MIME_TYPE is an case sensitive AWK *REGEXP*. Always use
            *lowercase* letters in this regexp because the line is lowercased
            before match is made. This regexp determines if the kill
            recipe is applied to the message or not. Value is set for
            MS explorer, MS express, Netscape and Lotus Notes etc.
            messages by default.
        o   JA_MIME_KILL_RE, additional *REGEXP* to kill lines from the
            message. Value is case sensitive awk regexp and by default matches
            Lotus notes tag: name="XXX.PCX".

        It may be possible that some messages are malformed and that they
        do not contain preper "boundary" definition string in the header. I
        have seen messages that have text/html attachements, but no proper
        Mime headers. For those cases there is additional variable that
        will kill all text up till matching line regardless of message
        content.

        o   JA_MIME_KILL2_RE = "text/html|application/ms-tnef" Update this to
            match attchements you receive. Set variable to "" if you don't
            want to change the body of non-compliant MIME message.

        That is your last resort if the standard MIME detection failed.
        (there must have been some problem in the sender's MUA that composed
        message)

    Possible conflict with your awk

        If you see an error message in the logfile saying that awk failed:

            procmail: Executing "awk,
            ...
            procmail: Error while writing to "awk"
            procmail: Rescue of unfiltered data succeeded

        it means that the system's standard `awk' doesn't support the
        variable passing syntax: do following test

            % awk '{print VAR; exit}' VAR="value" /etc/passwd

        And it should print "value". If not, then see if you have `nawk' or
        `gawk' is your system, which should understand the variable passing
        syntax. In HP 9 and 10 the standard awk will do fine. The only change
        you need is

            AWK = "nawk"        # if that works better than standard "awk"

        Somewhere at the top of your `.procmailrc'.

    Warnings

        You should know that the variable JA_MIME_KILL_RE is used to wipe
        any lines that match that regexp. This is due to MIME structure
        where continuing header lines exist in the body:

            ------=_NextPart_000_003A_01BD16E2.C97E27B0
            Content-Type: text/plain;
                charset="iso-8859-1"                << kill this line too

        If you want to be absolutely sure that anything valuable won't be
        accidentally killed (like a code line in programming language scripts),
        you should set this variable to nonsense value that newer matches:

            JA_MIME_KILL_RE = "match_it_never_I_hope"

    Usage example: Customizing the attachement killing

        Suppose you receive new `application/ms' type attachement that the
        default settings doen't cover. This is a new mime type and you
        have to instruct this module to kill it. You do this:

            myCustomMimeType = "application/ms"     # must be all lowercase

            :0
            *$ $myCustomMimeType
            {
                PM_JA_MIME_TYPE = $myCustomMimeType
            }

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jamime-kill.rc

        If you recive any other new types, just add similar recipes above
        `INCLUDERC' call.

    Usage example

        For default mime types mentined earlier, you just plug-in this module:

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jamime-kill.rc

        If you want to do all by yourself, you can add all this to your
        ~/.procmailrc. This demonstrates how the correct type is detected

            # .....................................................
            # 1) Uncomment following line if your standard "awk" is broken

            # AWK = "gawk"

            # .....................................................
            #  2) Next set correct value for attachement killing

            #  Kill Lotus notes .pcx attachements [already included]

            :0
            * ^X-Lotus-FromDomain:
            {
                JA_MIME_TYPE = "application/octet-stream"
            }

            #   Kill all html attachements

            :0 B
            * ^Content-Type:.*text/html
            {
                JA_MIME_TYPE = "text/html"
            }

            # .....................................................
            #  3) And now handle the message
            #    by default kill MS Explorer's ms-tnef attachement.

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jamime-kill.rc

Pm-jamime-save.rc -- save message's MIME attachement (one file) to a file

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Keywords:      procmail recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Documentation

        This module saves _one_ simple file attachement (MIME) from he
        message. The message must define following MIME headers. If
        "filename=" does not exists, then the message will not be
        handled.

            Mime-Version: <version>
            Content-Type: <type>
            Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="file.txt"

        Procmail is not very suitable for saving MIME attachements and
        you should not think that this the right tool for you.
        If you receive anything more than 1 attachement, this recipe
        does nothing, because that's out of our league and you need some
        more heavy weight mime tools. Eg. Perl CPAN has MIME libraries.

        _Note_: When the attachement is in the body, it is simply written
        to a disk and the place is replaced with message

            Extracted to file:/users/jaalto/junk/file.txt.1998-03-30

        The existing mime headers that surrounded the attachement are
        untouched, so don't try to press your Mail Agents MIME buttons
        at that point any more. 8There is no such file in that spot
        if you set `JA_MIME_SAVE_DEL' to `yes').

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_MIME_SAVE_DIR, point this to directory where you
            want to store attachements.
        o   JA_MIME_SAVE_DECODE, set this to "yes", if you want that
            attachement is decoded before written to disk. This usually
            opens quoted printable or base64 encoding.
        o   JA_MIME_SAVE_DEL, set this to "yes", if you want to remove
            the attachement from the body of the message after it has
            been filed. Be vary carefull if you use this option. If you
            keep backup cache of incoming mail, then you might try "yes".
        o   JA_MIME_SAVE_OVERWRITE, set this to "yes" if it's okay to
            overwrite to an existing filename found from attachement.
            If you get periodic attachements always with same name, then
            you would want to set this to yes.

    Core dump note

        Because procmail uses LINEBUF when filtering messages, a core
        dump may happen if the attachement beeing filtered is bigger than
        the LINEBUF. The current setting accepts 524K attachements, buf if
        you expect to get bigger than that, you want to increase
        `JA_MIME_SAVE_LINEBUF'.

    Possible conflict with your awk

        Awk is used because it is much more system load friendly than perl.
        If you see an error message in the logfile saying that awk failed:

            procmail: Executing "awk,
            ...
            procmail: Error while writing to "awk"
            procmail: Rescue of unfiltered data succeeded

        it means that the system's standard awk doesn't support the
        variable passing syntax: do following test

            % awk '{print VAR; exit}' VAR="value" /etc/passwd

        And it should print "value". If not, then see if you have `nawk' or
        `gawk' is your system, which should understand the variable passing
        syntax. In HP 9 and 10 the standard awk will do fine. The only
        change you need is

            AWK = "nawk"        # if that works better than standard "awk"

        Somewhere at the top of your .procmailrc

    Return values (none)

Pm-jamime.rc -- subroutine to read mime boundary etc. variables

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Keywords:      procmail MIME subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Documentation

        This includerc reads MIME boundary string from the message
        if it exists. The boudary string is typically found from
        Content-Type header.

            Mime-Version: 1.0
            Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=9i9nmIyA2yEADZbW

        In addition it will define few other mime variables. See the
        returned values. You use these variables later in your MIME
        message processing.

    Mime Notes

        1998-07-28 Brett Glass <brett@lariat.org> reported in PM-L that
        there was security exploit in long attachement filenames:
        http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/procmail/1998-07/msg00248.html

        And here is the url to the matter:

        http://www.sjmercury.com/business/microsoft/docs/security0728.htm


        When you use this module to detect mime messages, you can check the
        filename length with recipe:

            #  Recipe after calling $RC_MIME, this module,

            re       = ".........."     # regexp with 10 matches
            too_long = "$re$re$re$re"   # allow 40 characters maximum

            :0
            *$ $SUPREME^0  MIME_H_ATTACHEMENT ?? $re
            *$ $SUPREME^0  MIME_B_ATTACHEMENT ?? $re
            {
                dummy = "** Dangerously long mime attachement filename"
                dummy = "** $MIME_H_ATTACHEMENT $MIME_B_ATTACHEMENT"

                :0 :
                /var/spool/mail/MimeDanger
            }

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source directory of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Return values

        o   Variable MIME is set to "yes" or "no" if messages has mime version
            string
        o   MIME_VER contains the mime version string from the header.
        o   MIME_TYPE contains the Content-Type from the header.
        o   MIME_CTE contains Content-Transfer-Encoding from the header.
        o   MIME_H_QP is "yes" if Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
            is in the header.
        o   MIME_B_QP is "yes" if Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
            is found from the body.
        o   MIME_BOUNDARY contains the boundary string, which is used to
            differentiate mime sections in the body.
        o   MIME_BOUNDARY_COUNT is the number of boundary strings found
            from the body. The value is 3 if there is two mime sections,
            and 4 if 3 etc. MIME_BOUNDARY_COUNT -1 = count of sections.
        o   MIME_H_ATTACHEMENT, contains the filename if there was attachement
            filename in the header. Content-Disposition: attachment;
            filename="..."
        o   MIME_B_ATTACHEMENT. `body' file attachement. Note however that
            this is the match of first string in the body. There may be
            several attachements. MIME_B_ATTACHEMENT_FILE_COUNT tells you
            how many filenames are in the body.

    Usage example

        INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jamime-tag.rc

Pm-janetmind.rc -- handle http://minder.netmind.com/ messages

    File id

        .Copyright (C)   1998 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:      <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:        1998-01
        .Keywords:       procmail netmind recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        http://minder.netmind.com/

        ...Netmind, or The URL-minder is a free, automatic Web-surfing robot
        that keeps track of changes to Web pages that are important to you.
        When the URL-minder detects changes in any of the Web pages you
        have registered, it sends you e-mail. an efective way to test if
        the address is known to internet. You could usethis information to
        see if some automated reply to a address can be sent.


        In another words, if your're interested in some URL; say an FAQ page
        and any updates to them, you can tell Netmind to monitor the page
        changes for you and it send a message back every time page changes.

        This recipe "pretty formats" the announcement sent by Netmind
        by stripping the message to bare minimum. You usually aren't interested
        in 4k message which includes "Note from our sponsors", "Try the free
        online demo" etc. The things saved from the announcement message are:

        o   The changed url, which is moved to subject
        o   Cancellation url pointer
        o   url to the lists of your monitored urls
        o   your id number

        [Note]

        Please let Netmind send you one "pure" message first so that you
        have a huch what it originally looks like. Then plug int his module
        and see how the original message is reduced.

        [Thank you]

        The Doctor What <docwhat@holtje-christian-isdn.mis.tandem.com>
        1998-03-12 send me a patch, where a)body message is more informative
        b) Url is now included in the body for auto-click browsers c)
        mime headers were removed.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   If you se variable JA_NETMIND_SUBJECT to "yes", then the changed
            url http pointer is put to subject line.

    Usage example

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-janetmind.rc          # reformat the message

            :0:
            * netmind                                   # drop to folder
            url.mbox

Pm-janslookup.rc -- run nslookup on variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Keywords:      procmail nslookup subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine runs `nslookup' on given INPUT address. This may be
        an efective way to test if the address is known to internet. You
        could use this information to determine if some automated reply to
        a address can be sent. The know truth is that you can't validate
        whole email address

                to_someone@foo.com

        but you can validate "foo.com"; that's the closest you get.

        [Warning: If you don't use cache feature...]

        Do not however use this module to regularly check _all_ incoming
        from addresses with this subroutine for possible bogus UBE
        addresses, because calling nslookup

        o   may be slow, building to connection and querying the results
            may take several seconds. (some times, usually it's quote fast)
        o   consumes quite a lot resources.

        You can however check _some_ messages that are likely UBE to verify
        your doubts.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jaaddr.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   INPUT, the address (only strict domain part) which is checked.
            Eg. "this.domain.com". See examples for more.
            If this string contains "@" character, then additional
            subroutine pm-jaaddr.rc is called to extraxt the domain name
            INPUT = "John Doe <foo@site.com>" --> INPUT = "site.com"
        o   JA_NSLOOKUP_CACHE, filename. If exists, cache is used and updated.
        o   JA_NSLOOKUP_FORCE, if "yes", then cache is not used but a forced
            nslookup is performed.
        o   JA_NSLOOKUP_OPT, is currently empty, but you could see if you
            you want to use "-querytype=MX". However this option may give
            you response: "No mail exchanger (MX) records available",
            which is flagged as nslookup failure.
        o   JA_NSLOOKUP_SERVER, optional, the server to user for nslookup

        If the cache file can be read:

        o   Each entry has format "address.com ns-error". The error
            indication is added to the line if the nslookup failed when
            address was checked. Otherwise line contains "address.com".
        o   The cache is always checked first. If there is no entry matching
            the current address, only then is nslookup called and new entry
            added to cache.

    Return values

        o   Variable ERROR will be set to "yes" if nslookup failed or
            to "no" if nslookup succeeded. It can also contain "maybe" if
            nslookup returned "No address (A) records available"
        o   ERROR_MATCH contains one line lookup failure reason.

        Following conditions trigger "maybe" and no "ns-error" is written
        into the cache.

        o   "No address (A) records available for xxx"

    Usage example

        If you are going to check some header field, like From:, please
        explode the content with pm-jaaddr.rc first. Suppose you have
        string:

            "From: foo@ingrid.sps.mot.com (Yoshiaki foo)"

        You have to derive the address from string and pass the site name:
        Read From: field and address from it.

            PMSRC       = $HOME/pm
            RC_NSLOOKUP = $PMSRC/pm-janslookup.rc   # name the subroutine

            :0
            * MAYBE_UBE ?? yes
            * ^From:\/.*
            {
                INPUT       = $MATCH
                INCLUDERC   = $RC_NSLOOKUP  #   to nslookup

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                    #   Hmm, nslookup failed, can't send anything back to this
                    #   address
                }
            }

        Second example, check if the address is reachable before sending reply

            INPUT       = `$FORMAIL -rt -x To:`
            INCLUDERC   = $RC_NSLOOKUP

            :0
            *    ERROR ?? no
            {
                # okay, at least site address seems to be reachable
            }


Pm-jaorig.rc -- Extract embedded original message (simple recipe)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-06
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail recipe extract original message

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Documentation

        This subroutine digs embedded message from the body and replaces
        current message with it. Copy the message to folder before calling
        this subroutine if you need original.

        NOTE: This is _simple_ tool and the sole purpose is to derive
        simple embedded messages. Write full fledged perl script if you
        want better extracting features. The used AWK inside this procmail
        recipe will fail to find 30% of the cases, mostly duo to non-standard
        way of including the message. The recognized formats are as follows.
        Anything that differs from these are ignored or incorrectly parsed.

        o   Message is embedded left flushed "as is". With full headers or
            Minimum of `From:' `Subject' `Received'
        o   The embedded message is quoted with `>' with optional _one_
            space.

    Where you would use this module

        If you're subsribed to mailing lists that regularly sent copies of
        original message to the list, like forwarding spam to SPAM-L
        mailing list at http://bounce.to/dmuth, then you'd like to
        extract the original embedded message which you can then feed to
        your UBE filter to test if the shield holds.

            <spam-l-request@peach.ease.lsoft.com>
            subscribe SPAM-L <First name> <Last name>

        This recipe takes simplistic approach and tries it's best to
        extract embedded message. Idea for this recipe comes from Era
        Eriksson's posting "recipe to turn list postings back into original
        spam" 1998-06-25 in Procmail mailing list.

        o   Body must contain headers
        o   Remove all `>' quotations.
        o   extract everything to the end of message. (There are no means
            to get rid of the attached signatures that ot forwarding poster
            or list server may have attached.

    How the message is extracted

        When this recipe ends, the current message has been modified so that
        it _is_ _the_ _original_ _message_. Like if you would receive:

            HEADER-1        # The poster
            body-1          # his comments
            HEADER-2        # The original embedded message
            body-2
            body-1          # And poster's signature or mailing list footer

        The message now looks like

            HEADER-2
            body-2
            body-1

        And you can save this as original message or feed it to your
        UBE filter and test if it detects it.

    Code note: procmail or awk core dump

        For some reason procmil kept dumpig core I write the code in
        more nicer format like below, but if I made it compact, then it
        didn't dymp core. Go figure. I'm not pleased that I had to sacrafice
        clarity, but there was no other way.

            [The good style]            [The forced compact style]
            if ()                       if () { statement }
            {
                statement
            }

        I have no explanation why this
        happens, the same AWK code would work just fine most of the cases and
        then came this message `x' and caused dumping the code, if I feed
        some other messsage, I dind't get core dump. Total mystery to me.
        Don't let the log message fool you, this had nothing to do
        regexp  "^[> ]*From:.*[a-zA-Z]". If I deletd one line from AWK
        script, it worked ok, if I added it back the core dump happened with
        that message `x'

            procmail: Assigning "pfx=[> ]*"
            procmail: No match on "^[> ]*From:.*[a-zA-Z]"
            Segmentation fault (core dumped)

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail includerc code.
        This subroutine needs module(s):

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (none)

    Usage Example

        Let's assume that you want to feed all forwarded UBE that is
        posted to spam-l maling list to your filter and see if it needs
        improving by checking the logs later. The forwarded UBE to the list
        is labelled "SPAM:" in the subject line.

            $RC_LIST = $PMSRC/pm-jalist.rc   # mailing list detector
            $RC_ORIG = $PMSRC/pm-jaorig.rc   # extract original
            $RC_UBE  = $PMSRC/pm-jaube.rc    # UBE filter

            ...

            INCLUDERC = $RC_LIST            # defines variable `LIST'

            :0
            * ! LIST ^^^^
            {
                :0                          # spam-l mailing list
                * LIST ?? spam
                * Subject: +SPAM:
                {
                    INCLUDERC = $RC_ORIG    # Change it to UBE message

                    #   Ok, next feed it to filetr, set some vars first
                    #   Log = Short log; What filters were applied to message
                    #   mbx = If message was tarpped, save it here

                    JA_UBE_LOG      = "$PMSRC/pm-ube.log"
                    JA_UBE_MBOX     = "junk.ube.ok.mbox"

                    INCLUDERC = $RC_UBE

                    :0 :            # If comes here, filter failed
                    junk.ube.nok.mbx
                }

                :0 :                    # save normal list messages
                list.$LIST
            }



Pm-japing.rc -- reply shortly to message "Subject: ping"; account ok

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail ping auto-ack recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        When I'm on remote site and I don't seem to get throught
        with telnet or even with Unix ping(1), I want to know if the
        at least the mailserver is up. I can send a ping message and the
        auto responder will reply immediately.

        Sometimes, when you send a message to a person, it would be nice,
        if you could test that the destination address is valid, before
        sending a message to a black hole. If the receiver had ping
        service running; like this, then you would know that you spelled the
        the right address. (after wondering two weeks; why you don't get
        response). Nowadays finger(1) command seems to be blocked many times.

        This recipe answers to simple ping message like this:

            To: you@site.com
            Subject: ping

        Recipe sends a short message back to the sender.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jastore.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        (see Usage)

    Usage example

        JA_PING_MBOX    = $HOME/Mail/spool/ping.spool
        INCLUDERC       = $PMSRC/pm-japing.rc

Pm-japop3.rc -- Remotedly download messages by mail command request

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998-1999 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Keywords:      procmail pop3 emulation recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Ahem, that `pop3' is just to draw your attention. This module has
        nothing to do with pop3. The idea may resemble it though. This
        module listena pop3 requests, and when it gets one, it sends
        the whole mailbox content as separate forwarded messages to the
        account from where you sent the request.

        This is kinda "empty my mailbox in account X and send the messages
        to account Y"

        You might have permanent forwarding on in account X, but if that
        is your socondary account, you can ask what messages has been arrived
        there with this recipe.

        After you have configured your magic pop3 command, which is your
        password, simply send a message to account X, and this module
        initiates emptying the mailbox. Here is an example:

            Subject: pOp3-send [mailbox] [kill]

        o   `mailbox', is optional folder name which you want to process.
            it is $DEFAULT if not given in subject. Use *absolute* path if
            you specify one.
        o   if word `kill' is found, the mailbox will be meptied after
            forwarding. If the word is not found, messages are preserved.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-japop3.rc            # Phew! We include ourself, we are recursive.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   `JA_POP3_SUBJECT_CMD' is your personal access command string.
            If this is the first word in the subject line, forwarding starts.
            This string is case sensitive.
        o   `JA_POP3_TMP' is the file where mailbox is moved before starting
            to forward the messages. Do not put to point to yout $HOME,
            becaus that may exceed the quota.
        o   `JA_POP3_TO_MUST_MATCH' must contain regexp that match the email
            addresses where the pop3 messages are allowed to send. BE SURE
            TO DEFINE this. If you have account X,Y,Z where you want to receive
            pop3 messages, set this regexp to match those site's email addresses.
        o   `JA_POP3_LOGFILE' is the log where you can see how the forked
            procmail processes send each pop3 mail. You may want to set this
            to different location than your default `$LOGFILE'.

    Return value

        `STATUS' will contain mailbox name if valid pop3 request was received.
        You may wish to save the pop3 requests to separate folder. See example
        below.

    Example usage

        You install this same setup for each site where you have account. This
        is the account X, from where you want to empty the mailboxes.

            RC_POP3             = $PMSRC/pm-japop3.rc

            .. somewhere in your .procmailrc ..

            JA_POP3_SUBJECT_CMD = myPoPcmd
            INCLUDERC           = $RC_POP3

            #   Save all pop3 requests to folder

            :0 :
            * STATUS ?? [a-z]
            mail.pop3-req.mbox


    In account Y, from where you send the pop3 requests. Following code stores
    The received messages to separate folder

            #   The MATCH wil lhave the host name from where the messages
            #   were moved

            :0 :
            *$ X-Loop-Fwd:.*\.rc +\/$NSPC+
            mail.fwd.$MATCH.mbox

Pm-jarandf.rc -- pick (rand)om line from (f)ile

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .$Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$Created:      1997-12 $
        .$keywords:     procmail subroutine random GetLine  $

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Return random line or a line from a file. This subroutine uses
        shell command `awk' and possily `wc' to be as small burden to the
        system as possible.

    Required settings

        You must have awk that supports VAR=value assignment syntax outside
        the code block: that is, in the input line. I know no awk that
        would not have this feature, but at least you know now what it takes.

            % awk '{print VAR; exit;}' VAR=1 /etc/passwd

        Try using GNU awk, if your standard awk didn't print 1 in above
        test. (Put this line to the top of your .procmailrc)

            AWK = "gawk"

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        If intend to call this subroutine many times, then please calculate
        the number of lines beforehand and pass it to this subroutine. If
        the MAX is not set, then `wc' is called every time to find your the
        line count.

        o   FILE, from what file to select. Make sure this exists; existence
            is not checked here.
        o   [MAX] optional, number of lines in the FILE.

    Returned value

        variable LINE

    Example usage

            # Select random line from a file

            $RC_RANDF = $PMSRC/pm-jarand.rc
            $COOKIE   = $HOME/txt/cookie.lst

            ...somewhere..
            MAX=20 FILE=$COOKIE    INCLUDERC=$RC_RANDF

            #  LINE contains randomly read line

Pm-jasrv-check.rc -- check FILE validity, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the TPFS or MPFS file server.
        Check FILE for nonvalid filenames or other access problems.

    Input

        o   JA_SRV_F_FILE_CASE_SENSITIVE, flag
        o   FILE, filename to check. possibly converted to lowercase.

    Output

        o   stat, set to "ok" if filename is acceptable. Otherwise contains
            brief error reason;


Pm-jasrv-daemon.rc -- server request check, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the MPFS file server.
        Handle BOUNCES to mail server messages, eg if delivery failed
        due to maximum byte limit.

            552 <foo@site.com>... Message is too large; 100000 bytes max

    Input

        (none) This recipe examines headers and body to see if it's daemon
        bounce.

    Output

        o   stat, set to "daemon" if message was handled.

Pm-jasrv-err.rc -- send message, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This module is part of the MPFS file server.
        Ssnd error notice: file didn't exist.

    Input

        o   FILE, file or command that did ot exist.

    Output

        o   fld, additional field to be added to the saved mbox log message

Pm-jasrv-from.rc -- compose reply, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-09
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the MPFS file server.
        Compose headers for reply message using `formail' -rt.

        Here is dry run example to test this module

            % procmail DEFAULT=/dev/null VERBOSE=on LOGABSTRACT=all         \
                FORMAIL=/opt/local/bin/formail                              \
                JA_SRV_FORMAIL_FROM=me@here                                 \
                JA_SRV_CONTENT_TYPE=content-type                            \
                JA_SRV_XLOOP=xloop                                          \
                $HOME/pm/pm-jasrv-from.rc                                   \
                < $HOME/any-sample.email

    Input

        o   JA_SRV_FORMAIL_FROM, JA_SRV_XLOOP
        o   JA_SRV_CONTENT_TYPE

    Output

        (none)

Pm-jasrv-msg.rc -- send message, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the TPFS or MPFS file server. Run $CODE
        and return resutls to to user. Subroutine is meant to be used for
        informational messages.

    Input

        o   code, code to run in shell
        o   stat, status message for user

Pm-jasrv-multi.rc -- send multipart MIME message, subroutine for FileSrv

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of MPFS file server. Send out FILE as
        multipart MIME message. The message will always be base64
        encoded before sending.

    Input

        o   JA_SRV_MIME_MULTI_SEND, command to feed the composed and message
            which will handle sending it as multipart MIME.
        o   JA_SRV_MULTIPART_THRESHOLD is the hunk size for slitting mail.
        o   FILE, only filename part. Included in MIME headers.
        o   file, absolute path to send

Pm-jasrv-req.rc -- server request check, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the MPFS file server.
        Check if file server request is on the JA_SRV_SUBJECT and
        do case or incasensitive check.

        To Dry run this module use following skeleton. Substitute keywods
        as needed to reflect your system setup:

            % procmail DEFAULT=/dev/null VERBOSE=on LOGABSTRACT=all     \
              PMSRC=$HOME/txt JA_SRV_CMD_STRING=send                    \
              JA_SRV_SUBJECT="send newbie_article.rtf noconv"           \
              txt/pm-jasrv-req.rc < ~/test.mail

    Input

        o   JA_SRV_F_CMD_CASE_SENSITIVE; if "yes" then server request
            is case sensitive.
        o   JA_SRV_FORMAIL_FROM. the email From field

    Output

        o   stat, set to "ok" if request is accepted

Pm-jasrv-send.rc -- server request check, subroutine for File Server

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998-1999 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine is part of the MPFS file server.
        Send the requested file. You can dry-run test this module with
        following command: a) make sure that $HOME/test conatins any simple
        email message b) define FORMAIL if it isnot found from path.

            % procmail DEFAULT=/dev/null VERBOSE=on LOGABSTRACT=all     \
              PMSRC=$HOME/txt JA_SRV_LOG=/dev/null                      \
              FORMAIL=/opt/local/bin/formail                            \
              file=$HOME/test FILE=test WORD=WORD JA_SRV_FROM=foo@bar   \
              SENDMAIL="tee -a $HOME/test.send" txt/pm-jasrv-send.rc < ~/test

    Note:

        The MIME headers here selected previously were:

            Content-type: application/octet-stream
            Content-transfer-encoding: x-gzip64

        But Defining own CTE such as x-gzip64 is strongly discouraged by
        the MIME RFC's. Most e-mail clients would be at a loss on how to
        handle these. Many would just bomb out and not even give you the
        opportunity to save it to a file. a more correct MIME type is this,
        which is now used:

            Content-type: application/x-gzip
            Content-transfer-encoding: base64

    Input

       o    `FILE' is the filename(chdir to directory is already done)
            `file' is _absolute_ filename
            `WORD' is next word from subject line after FILE word.
       o    JA_SRV_CMD_STRING is flag
       o    JA_SRV_F_SUBJ_NOTIFY is flag

    Output

        o   FILE_ERROR is set to "yes" if file is not found.

Pm-jasrv.rc -- Jari's MPFS (Mime Procmail 3.11+ File server)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-09
        .Keywords:      procmail FileServer

        This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
        modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
        published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
        the License, or (at your option) any later version.

        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 the GNU
        General Public License for more details.

        You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
        with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
        Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

        You can get newest version by sending email to Maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This is the MPFS (Mime Procmail File Server) and it can send MIME
        compliant messages with command

            "send <ITEM> [WORD1] [WORD2]"

        Usually only the ITEM arg is used, and the rest of the words are for
        special uses like password and preventing file encoding. A typical
        request looks like:

            Subject: send help              # ask for file named 'help'

    Overview of features

        o   MIME types gzip and text/plain are supported.
        o   .gz .zip etc. files are sent out as base64 attachments
        o   .gz .tar.gz files that exceed 100K are sent out as MIME multiparts
        o   requires procmail 3.11+ and MATCH operator \/
        o   requires `mmencode' and `gzip' executables to be present in PATH.

    Install: server file directory

        You have to create a directory for the server where the files are kept.
        Usually I don't put the files there, but whenever I want to make a
        file available, I draw a hard or softlink to the real file.

            % mkdir $HOME/pm-server

            # Repeat this as needed for files you want to put available

            % cd $HOME/pm-server
            % ln -s $HOME/txt/interesting-file.txt interesting-file.txt

        You define the server directory by setting

            JA_SRV_FILE_DIR = $HOME/pm-server

        The short server log is written to file pointed by this variable:

            JA_SRV_LOG = $HOME/pm-server.log

        The incoming "send" requests are stored to mailbox pointed by
        following variable. The default value is /dev/null, but
        you may want to set it to ~/Mail/spool/log.srv.spool which can be
        used read as a newsgroup by Emacs Gnus [In Gnus create newsgroup with
        `G` `m' `nnml' `log.srv']

            JA_SRV_MSG_MBOX

    Install: special files

        Tweak this variable to commands you want to allow shell to execute
        in server's directory. This tells when <ITEM> "ls" means command
        instead of file

            JA_SRV_SH_COMMAND = "^(ls|what)$"

        That means that request like this:

            Subject: send ls            # run "ls" command and return results

        Be sure that the commands exist in your system. See man pages for
        more if you want to know what these commands do. Commands cannot
        take switches currently for security reasons. Eg. if you want to
        give access to "ls -la" listing, put a file "ls-la.txt" available
        in the directory, user can get it with "send ls-la.txt"

            ls      -- list directory
            file    -- print file type information.
            what    -- prints all @(#) tags from files
            ident   -- print all $ $ tags from files

    Install: file `help'

        Users want to get a help file with message "send help" and the
        `help' is just a file in your server directory. Be sure to supply it
        prior to any other files. You can always draw a link to a file if you
        don't want to name it that way (eg. if you keep several server help
        files in a RCS tree)

            #   draw symlink to `help'

            % ln -s $HOME/txt/srv-public-hlp.txt $HOME/server/help

    Basic usage in details

        The server accepts command in format

            "send <ITEM> [CMD|PASSWORD]"

        Where ITEM can be any name as long as it starts with [^ .]. The
        regexp says: Anything goes as long as FILE does _not_ start with
        space or period. This gives you quite a much freedom to construct
        filenames. if you want to hand out file:

            .procmailrc

        You can't. Instead make a link to point to plain "procmailrc"
        without the leading period. There is also additional checks
        against possible security threat "../" like below; user can't
        request such file.

            ../../../gotcha  or  dir/../../gotcha

        The filename cannot contain special characters like [*?<>{}()].

    Advanced usage

        [conversions]

        If some of your files are big, it makes sense to send them in
        compressed base64 format; which in MIME world is called content-type
        gzip. You can set a regexp to enforce encoding for your big
        files before they are sent to user. The following setting will send
        all text files in compressed format to user.

            JA_SRV_XGZIP_REGEXP = "\.txt"

        When the message is composed a header is inserted into the message
        telling how the message is to be decoded, in case user doesn't have
        decent MUA that can handle the MIME type:

            X-comment: To decode, cat msg| mmencode -u| gzip -d > test.txt

        [noconv and gz]

        The `WORD1' parameter after the `FILE' is optional and user can
        override base64 encoding and request plain file if he uses word
        "noconv".

            Subject: send <FILE> [noconv|gzip]

        However, there are files where `noconv' must not be obeyed, like
        the compressed packages that you have put available in .zip, .gz,
        .tar.gz or .tgz (GNU tar) format. Following variable controls
        when file is always sent as base64:

            JA_SRV_BASE64_ALWAYS

        If the `WORD1' is "gz" or "gzip", then the gzip is explicitly
        requested, This may be desirable, because some of the text files in
        the server directory may be big and some accounts don't accept big
        messages. A typical bounce looks like:

            552 <foo@site.com>... Message is too large; 100000 bytes max
            554 <foo@site.com> Service unavailable

        These kind of file server bounce messages are handled in separate
        module which notifies the user that his account didn't accept the
        sent file.

        [case sensitivity]

        By default the request word ("send") and ITEM (filename) are not
        case sensitive, unless you set these flags:

            JA_SRV_F_CMD_CASE_SENSITIVE  = "yes"
            JA_SRV_F_FILE_CASE_SENSITIVE = "yes"

        If values are "no", then these are identical commands:

            Subject: Send Help
            Subject  SEND HELP

    Multipart mime messages

        If you want to deliver big files, you better be sure not to send
        them as a big file. That blocks the connection between every host
        along the path that the big file is transferred. The
        solution is to use MIME multiparts that can be assembled back in
        the receiving MUA. (In case you don't have multipart assembler
        at hand, send message "send mime+.pl" to $Contactid and you will
        receive Perl script to do it).

        MIME multiparts are sent out if

        o   Filename matches JA_SRV_BASE64_ALWAYS, typically tar.gz, zip
        o   Filesize is bigger than JA_SRV_MULTIPART_THRESHOLD, where
            default chunk size is 100K.

        When a file meets these criteria, it is read to the `BODY' of message
        and base64 encoded. This all happens in memory, so watch
        procmail logs to see if any problems with very big files. (>30Meg).
        Next, if the base64 conversion succeeded, the composed is handed
        to

            JA_SRV_MIME_MULTI_SEND

        Which does the actual delivery and splitting. The default program
        used is `splitmail'. Make sure you have it or substitute the
        program with some equivalent one.

    Stopping server

        Sometimes you're making rearrangements in you file directory or
        doing some other maintenance and you are unable to respond to `send'
        requests. You can stop the server by setting

            JA_SRV_IN_USE = "no"

        And when you want to enable the server again; just comment out the
        statement or assign `yes'. [The default is `yes']. When this
        variable is set to `no', the server sends a message from following
        variable as a response to any "send" request.

            JA_SRV_IN_USE_NO_MSG

    Using password to validate file requests

        You should be aware that this file server's implementation is public
        in nature. Anyone who asks for a file is allowed to get it. But it
        would be good if you could limit the access to documents with some
        simple way, like if you set up two file servers (see next chapter)
        where one is public and the other is interesting only to group of
        people. You can define a string that must be found in Subject field
        by setting the following variable

            JA_SRV_PASSWORD = ".*"    # default

        The default value will match anything in the subject, thus making the
        server public. But if you set it like this

            JA_SRV_PASSWORD ".*123"

        Then string "123" must be there somewhere in the line, like here

            Subject: send <FILE> 123

        Yes, "123" is actually a CMD definition, but it doesn't matter
        because there is no CMD 123. Subject now matches password and the
        server can be accessed. Of course the following is valid too.

            Subject: send <FILE> noconv 123

        If the password was wrong, server won't tell it. The message just
        lands to your mailbox in that case and you can investigate who
        tried to access the restricted server.

    Changing server's command string (multiple servers)

        The default command string is "send", but you can change it and thus
        create multiple services. Here is one example, where you have set up
        two file servers where each has its own directory.

            #   The public server

            JA_SRV_CMD_STRING           = "send"
            JA_SRV_FILE_DIR             = $HOME/server/public
            INCLUDERC                   = $HOME/procmail/pm-jasrv.rc

            #   Company server, only interests fellow workers.
            #   Here "xyz-send" is just magic server request string.
            #   Notice case sensitivity settings.

            JA_SRV_F_CMD_CASE_SENSITIVE = "yes"
            JA_SRV_CMD_STRING           = "xyz-send"
            JA_SRV_PASSWORD             = ".*12qw"
            JA_SRV_FILE_DIR             = $HOME/server/public/xyz-dir
            INCLUDERC                   = $HOME/procmail/pm-jasrv.rc

    Notes from the author

        [basic Mime type note]

        All basic files that you send must be US-ASCII, 7bit. At least that
        is the default mime type used. See JA_SRV_CONTENT_TYPE. I once
        received following message back

            ----- Transcript of session follows -----
            554 <foo@bar>... Cannot send 8-bit data to 7-bit destination
            501 <foo@bar>... Data format error

        because in the previous releases, the MIME type headers were not
        in the message saying that the content really was plain 7bit ascii.

        [Sending the file as is]

        Note, that the file is included "as is" without any extra
        *start-of-file* or *end-of-file* tags. This is possible, because
        the file is sent in MIME format.

        [Using one line log entry]

        It may look very spartan to print a single line log entry. You see
        messages like above in the file server log. Using one line entry
        instead of multiline announcements makes it possible to write a small
        perl tool to parse information from a single line. If you get many
        file server messages per day, it quicker to look at the single line
        entries too.

            [ja-srv1; sh file;  Foo Bar <foo@site.com>;]
            [ja-srv1; send xxx-file.txt; Foo Bar <foo@site.com>;]
                      |
                      Server's request keywords (you may have multiple servers)

        [todo]

        (*) MIME multipart message's mime headers may need some adjustments.

        (*) I rely on simple regexp to send out base64 or gzip files.
        The natural extension would be to use file size threshold: if file
        is bigger than N bytes, send it out with gzip. And further: if
        file is more than NN bytes, send it out as multipart MIME.

        (*) In fact there is a slight mime type errors: .zip files
        should be send as application/zip. If you have experience with the
        mime types, please contact me and help me to sort out proper
        mime headers.

        If you have suggestions or ideas, please drop me am email.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to the source directory of procmail code. This
        subroutine will include many pm-jasrv-*.rc modules and other files
        from there.

        Please test the File Server in your environment before you start
        using it for every day. For example I had some weird local problem
        where PATH had /usr/contrib/bin/ where gzip was supposed to be, but
        in spite of my tries procmail didn't find it along the path. Don't
        ask why. I now use absolute binary name:

            GZIP = /usr/contrib/bin/gzip

        In addition, if your messages are not sent to recipient, but you
        get daemon message:

            ... Recipient names must be specified

        That's because you have setting SENDMAIL="sendmail"; which is not
        enough. It must be

            SENDMAIL = "sendmail -oi -t"

    Usage example

        This is my .procmailrc installation. Notice that the file server
        code is used only if you get "send" request. On the other hand, this
        double wrapping is not all necessary, you could as well rely on the
        File server's capability to detect SEND request.


            PMSRC   = $HOME/pm      # directory where the procmail rc files are
            RC_FSRV = $PMSRC/pm-jasrv.rc

            mySavedLOGFILE = $LOGFILE   # record file server actions elsewhere
            LOGFILE        = $PMSRC/pm-jasrv.log

            #   Listen "send" requests.
            :0
            *   ^Subject: +send\>
            {
                JA_SRV_FILE_DIR = $HOME/fsrv      # Where to get the files
                JA_SRV_LOG      = $HOME/fsrv.log  # Write log here
                INCLUDERC       = $RC_FSRV        # Use file server now
            }

            LOGFILE = $mySavedLOGFILE

Pm-jastore.rc -- Store messagee to inbox or gzip inbox

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto  <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-11 $
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail storing subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This subroutine stores the message to file pointed by `MBOX'. This
        subroutine is meant to be used with the the other general purpose
        includerc files. This makes it possible to have a centralized file
        storage handling for all your rc files.

        Regular user doesn't get much out of this rc unless he mixes both
        .gz and regular files in his .procmailrc

        R e p e a t: This module is basis for general purpose procmail
        rc plug-ins to strre message to mailbox pointed by some rc
        configuration variable. Normal user can simply say in his .procmailrc:

            :0:
            mail.private

    Required settings

        (none)

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        `MBOX' must have been set to point to message storage.

        if `MBOX_MH' is set to "yes"

        o   message is delivered to MH mailbox using `MBOX_MH_CMD'

        otherwise

        o   If MBOX is `some.mbox'     the message is stored as is.
        o   If MBOX is `some.mbox.gz'  the message is gzipped to folder.
        o   If MBOX is `some-dir/.'    then deliver as individual files

    Example usage

            $RC_MBOX   = $PMSRC/pm-jastore.rc

            :0
            * condition
            {
                MBOX = $HOME/Mail/spool/junk.mbox   INCLUDERC = $RC_MBOX
            }

Pm-jasubject.rc -- Subject field cleaner and canonicalizer (Re:)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1998 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1998-01
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail SubjectClean recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        There are many different Email programs out there that add their
        own `reply' characters to the subject field. The most sad programs
        come usually from PC platform. Eg. Microsoft has gained a lot of
        bad reputation due to it's own standards.

        o   MS Explorer can use localized reply strings,
            Eg `Vs:' or `vast:'  seems to be finnish `Vastaus'.
        o   MS product Outlook (??) can be configured similarly.
            I have received swedish `Sv:' `-Svar' for `Svaring' (eng: reply)
        o   MS mail uses `FW:' in forwarded mails.
        o   Intelligent MUAs try to keep count of replies with
            `Re2:' or `Re[2]'
        o   Japanese MUA Denshin 8 Go V321.1b7 has sent Re^2:
        o   Some mua uses `Re>'
        o   Lotus notes (in French version) uses `Ref:'
        o   Some MS product sends `UQ:'
        o   XXX uses `-reply'
        o   Forwarding schemes: (fwd) [fwd] <fwd> fw:  [FWD:  [FWD:]]
        o   Subject references: -subj subj- subj:

        There already is a de facto standard where message should contain
        only single `Re:' if message has been replied to (no matter how
        many times). This makes it possible to do efficient message
        threading by only using Subject and date fields. And grepping same
        subjects is lot easier than from this horrible mess. Note that
        all text is on one line, the subject has been broken only
        for visual reasons:

            Subject: re- Re^2: Re[32]: FW: Re: Re(15) Sv: Re[9]: -reply
                     (fwd) [fwd] <fwd> fw: [FWD:  [FWD:]]
                     -subj subj: subj: subj-
                     test

        This recipe standardizes any subject (like above) that has been
        replied to, to de facto format below. That is: "Any number of RE
        will be converted to *single* RE and any number of FWD will be converted
        to *single* FWD."

             Subject: Re: test (fwd)

    About In-Reply-To header

        If there is `In-Reply-to' header in the message, but there is not *Re:*
        in the subject line, one is added automatically. Some broken Mailers
        forget to add the *Re:* to the Subject line.

    Variable JA_SUBJECT_SAVE

        This is by default `yes' which makes the original subject saved under
        header field `Old-Subject'. If you don't want that extra header
        generated, set this variable to `no'

    Variable JA_SUBJECT_FWD_KILL

        This is by default `yes', which will kill extra forwarding indication
        words like (fwd) [fwd] <fwd> <f>. If you set this to `no', then all the
        fowarding words are preserved. The de facto forwad format is:

            Subject: This subject (fwd)

    Code note

        This subroutine's intention is to make your Subject like more
        expressive by deleting redundant information. I have taken
        a simplistic aproach where the Subject consists of list of WORDS
        whose each attribute can be either `ok' or `delete'. There is
        no attempt made to investigate the structire of the Subject.
        I'll explain this better with examples:

            Re: New subject (was Re: Old subject)

        should be treated syntactically like "New subject" and forgetting
        anything between parenthesis. This is however not respected and
        not even tried. The rule applied here is "One Re: is tolerated",
        so the subject won't change. It doesn't matter where "Re:" is.

        But here the subjject is changed. The rule applied is "Delete
        all unwanted words and then add one Re: to the beginning if OLD
        content had any Reply indications"

                Re: New subject (was Re: Old subject)
            --> Re: New subject (was Old subject)

        Now you understand how the Subject changing works.

    IMPORTANT notice

        Please check that your SHELL variable setting for procmail is `sh'
        derivate, /bin/sh or /bin/bash. This module won't work well with other
        shells.

    Awk usage note

        `awk' is a small, efective and much smaller than perl for little
        tasks. See the verbose log and make sure your awk understands
        VAR="value" passing syntax. Change it to `nawk' or `gawk' if they
        work better than your standard awk.

            AWK = "nawk"        # you may need this, try also gawk

    Example usage

        You need nothing special, just include this recipe
        before you save message to folder.

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-jasubject.rc

        Customizations: Let's say Polish M$Outlook uses `ODP:' instead of
        standard `re:' and you want to handle that too: Then set:

            JA_SUBJECT_KILL = "ODP:"
            JA_SUBJECT_SAVE = "no"
            INCLUDERC       = $PMSRC/pm-jasubject.rc

        You ca use JA_SUBJECT_KILL to kill any additional words from the
        subject line. Eg. if you have good newsreader, you don't need the
        mailing list prefixes that some mailing lists add to the beginning

            Subject: [LIST-xxx] the subject here

        to remove that list prefix, you simply match it

            JA_SUBJECT_KILL = "(list-xxx|list-yyy)"

        Inportant: The regexp must be _all_ lowercase, because when match
        happens, the word has been converted to lowercase.

    Debugging

        You can dry-run test this module with following command and wathing
        output. Substitute variables as they are in your system. You feed
        the content of entire example mail where the Subject thatt needs
        correction is found.

            % procmail SHELL=/bin/sh AWK=gawk VERBOSE=on LOGABSTRACT=all \
              PMSRC=txt JA_SUBJECT_KILL="(ace-users)" txt/pm-jasubject.rc  \
              < ~/test.mail

Pm-jatime.rc -- "hh:mm:ss" time parser from variable INPUT

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-11
        .$Contactid:    <jari.aalto@poboxes.com> $
        .$URL:          ftp://cs.uta.fi/pub/ssjaaa/ $
        .$Keywords:     procmail subroutine date parsing $

        This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
        modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
        published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of
        the License, or (at your option) any later version.

        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 the GNU
        General Public License for more details.

        You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
        with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
        Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

        You can get newest version by sending email to Contactid with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This includerc parses date from variable INPUT which has string

            "hh:mm:ss"

        Example input

            "Thu, 13 Nov 1997 11:43:23 +0200"

        Returned values

            hh      = 2 digits
            mm      = 2 digits
            ss      = 2 digits

        Variable ERROR is set to "yes" if it couldn't recognize the INPUT
        and couldn't parse all hh, mm, ss variables.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include pm-javar.rc from there.

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

            INPUT = string-to-parse

        The INPUT can be anything as long as it contains NN:NN:NN

    Usage example

        Get the time of received message. The From_ header will always
        have the standard time stamp.

            PMSRC           = $HOME/pm
            RC_DATE_TIME    = $PMSRC/pm-jatime.rc

            :0 c
            *  ^From +\/.*
            {
                INPUT = $MATCH
                #  Turn off the logging while executing this part

                VERBOSE=off   INCLUDERC = $RC_DATE_TIME   VERBOSE=on

                :0
                * ERROR ?? yes
                {
                   # Should not ever happen, you have broken From_
                }
            }

Pm-jaube.rc -- Jari's Unsolicited Bulk Email (UBE) filter.

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-09
        .Maintainer:    Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:      procmail UBE filter recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Warning

        Put all your UBE (aka spam) filters towards the end of your
        .procmailrc. The idea is that valid messages are filed
        first (mailing lists, your work and private mail, bounces) and only
        the uncategorized messages are checked.

    Overview of features

        o   Requires procmail 3.11pre7+
        o   Header based filtering: Minimum headers, Pegasus bulk mail,
            X-uidl validity check
        o   Address based filtering: Numeric address, Invalid address (eg.
            me@myMarketing.global), UBE-like(friend,remove request.)
        o   Text filtering: no html accepted, common advertising slogans.
        o   You don't need external files: site block lists, the
            heuristics nail most of the UBE messages. Just plug in this
            module and you have UBE shield active.

        Remember: this is not 100%, there is always some mishits, so
        don't just junk messages to `/dev/null'. Instead set `JA_UBE_MBOX'
        to the appropriate mailbox where you want to store the messages.

    Description

        My life changed when Daniel smith posted his spam.rc, where he had
        gathered many tips and heuristics to filter UBE email. The filter
        expressed work of many Procmail usears including [phil] and [dan].
        You can get the original file by sending email with subject
        `pm-dsspam.rc' to maintainer.

        I modified the filtering rules a bit, took out some rules that
        catched false email messages and made the package look a bit more
        general so that it could be included via `INCLUDERC' in the standard
        way. Not all ideas here are mine; many of them are directly from
        Dan's original filter with slight modifications.

        Thanks to Daniel and others, the UBE bomb days are gone, when this
        filter is active. Couple of UBE email may still lurk into my
        mailbox, but that's life; no shield is 100% proof.

    Logging the events

        The default subroutine `pm-jaube1.rc' does nothing fancy, but
        writes a short log to `JA_UBE_LOG' and stores the message into
        `JA_UBE_MBOX', which is sort of a brief biff log, where information
        about incoming mail and what happened to it is stored. When message
        arrives; date, from and subject should be written to the log and when
        message gets filed; you should write the folder and reason.
        Eg. my biff log looks like this:

            1997-12-08 Foo <bar@x.com>  send pm-tips.txt
                [ja-srv1; sent ema-keys.txt; Foo <bar@x.com> ;]
            1997-12-08 work@home.com  Extra Holiday $$$$$
                [jaube; Marketing-Big-ExitCode; LEGAL, MONEY-MAKING PHENOMENON]
            1997-12-09 Denizen <logger@california.com>  [RePol] hiding
            1997-12-09 david X <dx@a.com>  Re: Send list to incoming folder
            1997-12-09 david X <dx@a.com>  Re: Send list to incoming folder
            1997-12-09 OMC manager <omcman@foo.fi> "Environments updated"
                [my; work-localenv]
            1997-12-09 doodle@gruppe.org  Re: Gnus (Emacs Newsreader) FAQ
                [my; emacs;   Re: Gnus (Emacs Newsreader) FAQ ]

        First, I got a message to my fileserver and it responded. Then came
        a UBE message that was identified and saved to UBE folder. Next 3
        messages vere ones, that were filed to mailing-list folders and
        there was no [] action displayed for them (left out due to high
        volume of these messages). Second Last; that was internal work
        message, Lastly someone mailed me about Emacs and that message was
        filed to emacs folder.

        The basic timestamp recipe in my .procmailrc is as follows.
        Variable `TODAY' is `$YYYY-$MM-$DD' which you get from `pm-jadate.rc'.
        The `LISTS' exclude mailing lists. I don' want to see their activity.
        Variables `FROM' `SUBJECT' are read header fields from the message

            BIFF    = $HOME/tmp/pm.biff

            :0 hwic:
            *$ ! $LISTS
            |echo "$TODAY $FROM $FSUBJECT" >> $BIFF

        Here is small perl script to print summary of trapped UBE
        messages. It gives nice overview which recipes trap most of
        the UBE messages.

            perl5 -ne '/jaube; (\S+)/; $s{$1}++;                        \
                 END {  $s = (map{$x += $_; $_= $x} values %s)[-1];     \
                        $i = int $s{$_}/$s *100;                        \
                        for (keys %s) { printf "$s{$_} $i $_\n" }       \
                     }'                                                 \
                 pm-hdr.log                                             \
                 sort -nr

        Here is sample results of mine during 1998-08-16 - 1998-10-04.
        There are total of 3248 UBE messages trapped.

            count  %  type
            ------------------------------------------
            554 17  Marketing-CountBigLetterWords;
            457 14  Marketing;
            422 12  Marketing-SelectedBigLetterWords;
            349 10  AddrBogus-ToFrom;
            263  8  ReceivedFrom-Mismatch;
            223  6  NoDirectAddress-ToCc;
            216  6  HdrForgedPegasus;
            164  5  AddrBogus-To;
            151  4  MessageId;
            121  3  FromReceived-Mismatch;
            102  3  BodyHtml;
            73   2  Received-IPError;
            63   1  Identical-FromTo;
            53   1  AddrInvalid;
            15   0  From-nslookup;
            9    0  HdrReceivedTime;
            7    0  HdrX-UIDL;
            4    0  Marketing-headers;

    About bouncing message back with exitcode 67 or 77

        The gneral concensus is, that you should not send bounches, the UBE
        sender is not there, because the address is usually forged. Do not
        increase the network traffic. Instead save the messages to folders
        and periodically send complaints to postmasters that you find in
        `Received' headers. If you decide to bounce anyway, be sure to do
        `FROM_DAEMON' and mailing list tests before sending anything back.
        It's not nice to be forced to apologize about boounces to a wrong
        destination.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This recipe file
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc
        o   pm-jaube1.rc        (includes pm-jastore.rc)
        o   pm-janslookup.rc
        o   pm-jaaddr.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_UBE_VALID_ADDR, your email addresses or valid from addresses.
        o   JA_UBE_RC, inclurerc called when ube was trapped. The default
            action is to save the message to folder and write a brief log.
        o   JA_UBE_LOG, if not empty, then a brief message is written to
            this log file when ube was triggered.
        o   JA_UBE_HDR, If JA_UBE_LOG  is _empty_, no log is written to
            separate file, but a new header is added which tells which
            recipe was triggered.
        o   JA_UBE_MBOX, where to store the UBE. Add ".gz" extension to file
            name if you want to save messages in gzip format. If this variable
            is _empty_, the message is not stored anywhere, but falls
            through pm-jaube.rc.
        o   Various flags: Some of the ube detecting recipes give more
            false hits than nail real ube. Experiment with yourself and turn
            on or off the recipes that work for the kind of ube messages
            you receive.
        o   JA_UBE_MAX_BIG_WORDS, the maximum count of big letter words in the
            meswsage that is tolerated. The current count 5 is rather
            conservative and I suggest you to increase it to prevent
            trapping too many false hits. Alternatively update JA_UBE_CAPS_OK
            to include accepted words.
        o   JA_UBE_APPRENTLY_TO_MAX, how many Apparently-To headers are
            tolerated. Default is 3.
        o   JA_UBE_MAX_HTML_TAGS, maximum count of html tags allowed in the
            body

    Return values

        If you use your own `JA_UBE_RC' then you can read these values,
        when your script is called. They are also set after recipe
        if `JA_UBE_MBOX' is empty "".

        o   ERROR, is set to short ube trigger recipe reason
        o   ERROR_MATCH, is set to some MATCH that happened while triggering
            UBE message.

        The UBE reason ERROR is also seen in the separate header.

        o   JA_UBE_HDR, header not added if this is empty ""

    Usage example

        It is best, that the UBE filterings are put last to your .procmailrc.
        Handle all legimate messages at the beginning and save them to
        folders. Only messages that didn't fit to previous categories shgould
        be feed to to this recipe.

            # - All legimite messages already handled and saved before this
            # - Activate the filter only for messages that are not from
            #   daemon and not from valid senders: like from "my" domain
            #   and mailing lists and from soemwhere else. Define your
            #   favourite VALID_FROM regexp.

            RC_UBE     = $PMSRC/pm-jaube.rc
            VALID_FROM = "(my_domain|my_mailinglist)"

            :0
            *$ ! ^From:.*$VALID_FROM
            *$ ! $from_daemon
            {
                JA_UBE_MBOX = "junk.ube"
                INCLUDERC   = $RC_UBE
            }

        I have also received UBE messages that fool `FROM_DAEMON' test, so
        you could also consider using this condition. The standard daemon
        error message almost always has sentence "Transcript of session
        follows" in the body.

            *   -1^0       ^FROM_DAEMON
            * !  2^1  B ?? Transcript of session follows

        Intead of simple daemon test:

            *$ ! $from_daemon

    File layout

        tinybm.el/&tags and tinytab.el for the 4 tab text placement. See
        also unix what(1) and GNU RCS ident(1).

    Bug reports or updates

        1998-08-24 Gregory Sutter sent update to his recipe.

        1998-02-27 <bochmann@TUDURZ.urz.tu-dresden.de> (Henryk Bochmann)
        reported that the ReceivedFrom test triggered all htmail messages.
        Now Fiexed.

Pm-jaube1.rc -- Jari's UBE filter. Subroutine 1

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:      1997-09 $
        .Maintainer:   Jari Aalto <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Keywords:     procmail UBE filter subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Documentation

        This file is part of the "pm-jaube.rc". This subroutine is called
        when likely UBE message has been triggered.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source direcry of procmail code. This recipe file
        will include

        o   pm-jastore.rc

Pm-javac.rc -- Procmail: Vacation framework recipe (id-cache)

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-98 Jari Aalto
        .Created:       1997-11
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .keywords:      procmail vacation framework recipe

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        Framework for all programs that need to reply to messages only once.
        Usually known as "vacation" feature. If you cahnge th cache file,
        you can attach this recipe to any messages that you want to deal with
        only once.

    Required settings

        PMSRC must point to source directory of procmail code. This subroutine
        will include

        o   pm-javar.rc

    Call arguments (variables to set before calling)

        o   JA_VAC, To activate vacation, set value to "yes"
        o   JA_VAC_RC, When new message-id is found, run this includerc
        o   JA_VAC_ID_CACHE, Remember to clear this file when you start
            the vacation.

    Usage example

        To turn on the vacation feature, create ~/.vac file and recipe below
        activates vacation. If the vacation is not active, then cache file
        is removed. (automatic cleanup). The VERBOSE is also turned off
        when you're on vacation; so that your procmail log will not get
        filled.

        So when you go to vacation, you 'touch ~/.vac' and update
        ~/vacation.msg. When you come back, you 'rm ~/.vac'. That's it.

        IMPORTANT: If you are subscribed to mailing lists, be sure to file
        messages from those services first and put the vacation recipe
        only after the list or bot messages. Also add sufficent "!" conditions
        in order not to reply to other "bot" service messages.

            JA_VAC_ID_CACHE = $HOME/.pm-vac.cache

            :0
            *$ ? $IS_EXIST $HOME/.vac
            {
                VERBOSE     = off
                JA_VAC      = "yes"
                JA_VAC_RC   = $PMSRC/pm-myvac.rc        # my vacation recipe
                INCLUDERC   = $PMSRC/pm-javac.rc        # framework
            }
            :0 E                                        # else
            * ? $IS_EXIST $JA_VAC_ID_CACHE
            {
                dummy = `$RM -f $JA_VAC_ID_CACHE`
            }

        Here is example of pm-myvac.rc recipe

            #  Change subject

            :0 fhw
            * ^Subject: *\/[^ ].*
            | $FORMAIL -I "Subject: vacation (was: $MATCH)"

            :0 fb           # put message to body
            | $CAT $HOME/.vacation.msg

            :0              # Send it
            | $SENDMAIL

Pm-javar.rc -- Jari's global variable definitions

    File id

        .Copyright (C)  1997-1999 Jari Aalto
        .Contactid:     <jari.aalto@poboxes.com>
        .Created:       1997-12
        .Keywords:      procmail variableDEFS subroutine

        This code is free software in terms of GNU Gen. pub. Lic. v2 or later
        You can get newest version by sending email to maintainer with
        subject "send <FILENAME>"

    Description

        This file defines common variables that you can use in the recipe's
        condition line. Procmail does not know scape sequences
        like \t or \n and it is therefore much more readable to use
        variables for common regular expression matches. Pay attention that
        the line with "*$ ", where "$" expands the variables:

            :0
            *$ $s+something+$s+$d+$a+

        The equivalent without variables (you don't see the tabs and spaces)

            :0
            #  Space + tab
            * [         ]something[     ][0-9]+[a-z]+


        In addition all system dependent variables are defined in this module.
        For example if you have Gnu awk, I stringly suggest that you set:

            AWK = "path/to/gawk"

        Also if your `perl' binary still runs the perl 4, then please set

            PERL = "path/to/perl5"

        You can define these variables before or after the module, just make sure
        the binaries reflect your system settings.

    Standard variables defined

        See pm-tips.txt file for full explanation or look at the source code.

            SPC WSPC NSPC SPCL       # Whitespace, NonWhitespace, Whitespc+linefeed
            \s \d \D \w \W and \a \A # perl styled variables

    Special variable from_daemon

        In order to boost procmail and to save extra CU cycles, this module
        defines variable `from_daemon' that caches the information of ^FROM_DAEMON.
        You can refer to `from_daemon' as you would to big brother
        FROM_DAEMON. This has the advantage that procmail has already computed
        the result and the variable `from_daemon' is used as a cache, thus avoiding
        repeated FROM_DAEMON regexp tests, which are expensive.
        Variable `from_daemon_match' contains "" or the result of matched daemon
        text.

            *$ $from_daemon

        or the familiar

            *$ ! $from_daemon

        Instead of using the regexp parsing with

            * ^FROM_DAEMON

        and

            * ! ^FROM_DAEMON

    Special variable from_mailer

        Works like `from_daemon' variable but in respect to FROM_MAILER.
        The matches text is in `from_mailer_match'

    Usage example

        Put this as a first line in you includerc. It checks if WSPC
        is does not include space --> load the variable definitions.
        If the variable is already defined, the file is not loaded.
        This is something like #ifdef -- #endif in C language.

            :0
            * ! WSPC ?? ( )
            {
                INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-javar.rc
            }

        For your .procmailrc, you can simply put this, because you
        want to load the variables at startup

            INCLUDERC = $PMSRC/pm-javar.rc

    Defined modules

        After this file loads, you can refer to any module with $RC_MODULE.
        Eg. to call email spit module in your code you would use following.
        See at the end of this file for all defined modulenames.

            INCLUDERC = $RC_EMAIL


End
