Hi, I just uploaded a new package, mailagent-3.44-1. First, a blurb:
>>Randal L. Schwartz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: RLS> Or, if you are a *real* power user, use mailagent. I found it RLS> to be more feature-ized than procmail, and I had been using RLS> procmail extensively. RLS> Besides, it's entirely in Perl, and allows Perl extensions RLS> trivially, *and* it does a full RFC-822 analysis on the header RLS> for you! RLS> The procmail binary is smaller than the perl binary + mailagent, RLS> so if you are merely running simple rules in procmail and then RLS> delivering directly from there to mailboxes, you don't need the RLS> power or expense of mailagent. RLS> However, if you are doing *anything* with formail or invoking RLS> other utilities to help you decide where the mail needs to go, I RLS> think you'll find that mailagent is a net win. Most of the RLS> stuff that I was using formail for is now handled directly RLS> within the perl image. DESCRIPTION: An automatic mail-processing tool Mailagent allows you to process your mail automatically. This has far more functionality than procmail, and is easier to configure (providing, of course, that you grok perl). As a mail processing tool, this slices, it dices, it ... Given a set of lex-like rules, you are able to file mails to specific folders (plain Unix-style folders and also MMDF and MH ones), forward messages to a third person, pipe a message to a command or even post the message to a newsgroup. It is also possible to process messages containing some commands. You may also set up a vacation program, which will automatically answer your mail while you are not there, but more flexibly than the Unix command of the same name. You only need to supply a message to be sent and the frequency at which this will occur. Some simple macro substitutions allow you to re-use some parts of the mail header into your vacation message, for a more personalized reply. You may also set up a generic mail server, without the hassle of the lower-level concerns like error recovery, logging or command parsing. The mailagent is not usually invoked manually but is rather called via the filter program, which is in turn invoked by sendmail. That means you must have sendmail/smail on your system to use this. You also must have perl to run the mailagent scripts. It is possible to extend the mailagent filtering commands by implementing them in perl and then having them automagically loaded when used. Date: 12 Dec 95 07:22 UT Source: mailagent Binary: mailagent Version: 3.44-1 Description: mailagent: An automatic mail-processing tool Priority: Low Changes: * Added debian.* files Files: -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 454966 Dec 12 02:21 mailagent-3.44-1.tar.gz -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 6112 Dec 12 02:22 mailagent-3.44-1.diff.gz -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 325583 Dec 12 02:21 mailagent-3.44-1.deb 81718c4530117aa54d53b23ef32de39d mailagent-3.44-1.tar.gz d746b9b54998a4a9706b5772b8f84da5 mailagent-3.44-1.diff.gz af117afb594941deb7a0b15b84f2b937 mailagent-3.44-1.deb manoj -- "Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force! It is a dangerous servant and a terrible master." -- George Washington %% -- Manoj Srivastava Systems Research Programmer, Project Pilgrim, Phone: (413) 545-3918 A143B Lederle Graduate Research Center, Fax: (413) 545-1249 University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <URL:http://www.pilgrim.umass.edu/%7Esrivasta/>