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should use either a {{{.procmail.d/procmailrc}}} file or a {{{.forward}}} file, | can use either a {{{.procmail.d/procmailrc}}} file or a {{{.forward}}} file, |
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Take a look at {{{/home/mwolson/.procmailrc}}} and the {{{/home/mwolson/procmail.d}}} directory for a procmail configuration that is composed of several smaller files. |
= Notes for Beta Testers on Peer 1 Infrastructure = If you are beta testing an account on the new Peer 1 infrastructure (you should know who you are), the default procmail file location has changed. You should have a directory under your home AFS directory called .procmail.d. In this directory, procmail will look for a file called procmailrc. Create this and you should be all set. Note the new AFS file locations in the example files below, and look at mwolson's and leitgebj's procmail configuration in their home directories for more examples. |
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# # Change these to match your username! HOME=/afs/hcoop.net/user/m/mw/mwolson MAILDIR=/afs/hcoop.net/common/email/m/mw/mwolson |
MAILDIR=$HOME/Maildir |
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# If you want to keep track of where mail has been delivered, # uncomment this. If enabled, be sure to trim this file once # in a while (using cron is one way), because otherwise it can # grow quite large. It is strongly recommended to use the # path given here, so that the logs gets placed in a writable # location. #LOGFILE=$HOME/.logs/mail/procmail.log |
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# Create a log file in my home directory under "log", which will have to be # created manually. LOGFILE=/home/leitgebj/log/procmail.log |
# Create a log file LOGFILE=$HOME/.logs/mail/procmail.log |
This page has a sample .procmail.d/procmailrc file with comments. You can use either a .procmail.d/procmailrc file or a .forward file, but not both.
1. Which should I use?
If you simply want to send mail to another email address, using a .forward file is your best bet.
If you want to exercise control over your email by splitting it into various mailboxes or (in our case) IMAP folders based on custom criteria using the power of regexps, perhaps a .procmail.d/procmailrc file would be best for you.
2. What does this file do?
- Separates mail into different folders based on who it is from or who it is addressed to.
- If an email message did not get checked by the central spamassassin daemon, make sure it gets checked. It calls the client program instead of starting another spamassassin process. Most messages have already been checked -- these we don't touch. Occasionally spamassassin misses checking a message or two, somehow.
3. What does this file not do?
Force spam checking with a custom set of rules. The admins do not recommend checking spam with custom rules, since it causes spamassassin to be invoked twice for each message.
- This file can be split into smaller task-based files, but this is not done in the example.
4. Notes for Beta Testers on Peer 1 Infrastructure
If you are beta testing an account on the new Peer 1 infrastructure (you should know who you are), the default procmail file location has changed. You should have a directory under your home AFS directory called .procmail.d. In this directory, procmail will look for a file called procmailrc. Create this and you should be all set. Note the new AFS file locations in the example files below, and look at mwolson's and leitgebj's procmail configuration in their home directories for more examples.
5. Example file
# Example procmailrc filters # # We use a maildir here at hcoop.net MAILDIR=$HOME/Maildir DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/ # If you want to keep track of where mail has been delivered, # uncomment this. If enabled, be sure to trim this file once # in a while (using cron is one way), because otherwise it can # grow quite large. It is strongly recommended to use the # path given here, so that the logs gets placed in a writable # location. #LOGFILE=$HOME/.logs/mail/procmail.log # See the manpages `procmailrc' and `procmailex' for explanations # of the syntax involved. # The following 2 rules come before the spam rules because we # want to make sure that email from these people get through. # It's a form of whitelisting. # Stuff from the family :0 * ^From.*(familymember1@msn|familymember2@yahoo) .Family/ # Work-related :0 * ^From.*person@somecollege .Work/ # If mail hasn't been put through spamassassin, do so now :0 fW * !^X-Spam-Level: | spamc # All mail tagged as spam (eg. with a score higher than the set # threshold) is definitely spam. :0 * ^X-Spam-Status: Yes .Spam.Definitely/ # If it scores 3 or better, it's probably spam. :0 * ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*\* .Spam.Probably/ # The Debian Bug-Tracking System forwards me a copy of each bug report # I send in. Since I don't already have a copy of this report, put it # in my Sent box. :0 * ^From:.*me@hcoop\.net * ^To:.*submit@bugs\.debian\.org .Sent/ # Local mail (error messages and the like) :0 * ^(To:|From).*local\.domain\.org .Local/ # Vending stuff :0 * ^To:.*me(\+|_)vending@domain\.org .Vending/ # School-related :0 * ^To:.*me\+school@domain\.org .School/ # Crap sent to all students :0 * ^(To|Cc):.*[Rr]-[Uu]sers_ .Spam.Ignore/ # Bug reports :0 * ^(From|To|C[c]):.*(bugs\.debian\.org|bugzilla\.) .Bugs/ # LifeReader mailing list :0 * ^(From|To|C[c]):.*liferea-devel@lists .Lists.LifeRea/ # Neki_Fujiyama (Samurai Pizza Cats) list :0 * ^(From|To|C[c]):.*[Nn]eko_[Ff]ujiyama@yahoogroups .Lists.Neko_Fujiyama/ # Hcoop mailing list :0 * ^To:.*users@hcoop .Lists.HCoop/ # InfoWorld newsletters :0 * ^From.*@newsletter\.infoworld .Lists/ # Other lists :0 * ^(From|To|C[c]):.*(@lists\.|@yahoogroups) .Lists/ # Anything I've sent should go to Test :0 * ^From:.*(mwolson@|@mwolson\.org) .Test/
6. Another Example
I based my .procmailrc on the file above. However, I don't trust my procmail coding skills, so I had procmail create a log file of the messages that it receives, as well as a backup copy of each message for testing purposes. I also decided that the "Sender:" field is the best one to use for the lists that I receive, so I filter on this field. I took code in my .procmailrc from the "procmailex" man page, which I highly recommend.
I created the directory "log" in my home directory for the log file before putting the .procmailrc in place. I also created the folders to which mail would be filtered in thunderbird, although I'm not absolutely sure if this step is necessary.
Note that you should probably comment out the "backup" section once you're sure that your code works in order to save space. You will also have to rotate or truncate the procmail log file manually, or write a script for cron to use.
{{{## JustinLeitgeb .procmailrc
# We use a maildir here at hcoop.net MAILDIR=$HOME/Maildir DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/
# Create a log file LOGFILE=$HOME/.logs/mail/procmail.log
# Make a backup of all mail that we'll wipe out when we're sure that # filtering is working correctly. :0 c .backup/
# CFP (call for papers) list :0 * ^Sender.*owner-cfp@lists.sas.upenn.edu .lists.CFP/
# plone-users :0 * ^Sender.*plone-users-bounces@lists.sourceforge.net .lists.plone-users/
# nflug :0 * ^Sender.*nflug-bounces@nflug.org .lists.nflug/}}}