procmail

procmail
Original author(s) Stephen R. van den Berg
Developer(s) Philip A. Guenther
Initial release December 7, 1990
Stable release 3.22 / September 10, 2001
Development status Finished
Operating system Any Unix-like
Platform Cross-platform
Type Mail filter
License GPL or Artistic License
Website www.procmail.org

In email systems, procmail, a mail delivery agent (MDA), can sort incoming mail into various directories and filter out spam messages. Procmail is stable, but no longer maintained.[1] Users who wish to use a maintained program are advised to use an alternative MDA, such as maildrop.

Invocation

The procmail mail delivery agent is generally not started from the command line, but is usually invoked by mail delivery subsystems, such as a mail transport agent (like Sendmail or Postfix), or from a mail retrieval agent (such as fetchmail). This makes the mail processing event-driven. The companion tool formail allows procmail to be used in batch-processing on mail that already is in a user's mailbox.

Recipes

The procmail agent uses recipes, to determine where to deliver the various mail messages.

Elements of a recipe

Each recipe that procmail uses consists of:

Recipes can be conditional or unconditional

Recipes used by procmail can be conditional or unconditional. If the conditions are left out, the recipe is unconditional.

Types of recipes

Procmail has two kinds of recipes:

Processing of recipes

Recipes are read from top to bottom. The first delivering recipe terminates the delivery process (unless the mode flag specifies otherwise).

Conditions

Conditions are usually extended regular expressions, although there are other forms of condition also.

Basic operation

The procmail tool reads mail messages given to it from standard input. The procmail tool will process the recipes before distributing the mail messages into the appropriate mailboxes.

Other operations

Other common operations carried out with procmail include filtering and sorting of emails into different folders according to keywords in from, to, subject, text of the mail, or sending autoreplies, but more sophisticated operations are also possible.

Spam filtering

A common practice is to let procmail call an external spam filter program, such as SpamAssassin. This method can allow for spam to be filtered or even deleted.

Managing mailing lists

The procmail developers have built a mailing list manager called SmartList on top of procmail.

Further reading

See also

External links

References

  1. Willis, Nathan. "Reports of procmail's death are not terribly exaggerated". Linux Weekly News. Retrieved 27 October 2013.