NAME

Sendmail::AccessDB - An interface to the Sendmail access.db list

SYNOPSIS

use Sendmail::AccessDB qw(spam_friend whitelisted);
$friend_or_hater = spam_friend('user@example.com');
$whitelisted = whitelisted('sender@example.com');

DESCRIPTION

This module is designed so that users of the Sendmail::Milter module (or other Sendmail programmers) can ascertain if a user has elected to whitelist themselves as a "spam friend" (where there should be no spam filtering on mail to them) or, where spam-filtering is not the default, but an option, where certain receipients have been labeled as "spam haters"

USAGE

use Sendmail::AccessDB qw(spam_friend);
$friend_or_hater = spam_friend('user@example.com');

Ordinarily, this will look for such things as "Spam:user@example.com", "Spam:user@", etc., in the /etc/mail/access.db file. There is an optional second argument "Category", which could be used if you wanted to enable specific checks, for example, if you wanted to customize down to a per-check basis, you might use:

$rbl_friend_or_hater = spam_friend('user@example.com',
                                   'qualifier' => 'maps_rbl'); 
$dul_friend_or_hater = spam_friend('user@example.com',
                                   'qualifier' => 'maps_dul'); 

Caution should be taken when defining your own categories, as they may inadvertantly conflict with Sendmail-defined categories.

use Sendmail::AccessDB qw(whitelisted);
$whitelisted = whitelisted('sender@example.com');
$whitelisted_host = whitelisted('foo.example.com');
$whitelisted_addr = whitelisted('192.168.1.123');

Would check for appropriate whitelisting entries in access.db. Some lookups might be ambiguous, for example:

$whitelisted = whitelisted('foobar');

where it is hard to know if that is supposed to be a hostname, or a sender. whitelisted() accepts the 'type' argument, such as:

$whitelisted = whitelisted('foobar','type'=>'hostname');
$whitelisted = whitelisted('postmaster','type'=>'mail');

It's also possible to feed the qualifier argument, if necessary, for example, to do:

$whitelisted = whitelisted('host.example.com','type'=>'hostname',
                           'qualifier' => 'Connect');

which would check to see if this host has an OK flag set for the Connect qualifier.

There is also the generic "lookup", which, at its simplest, takes a single argument:

$rc = lookup('host.example.com');

will do a lookup on host.example.com. But if you wanted to pay attention to parent-domains, you might do:

$rc = lookup('host.example.com', 'type'=>'hostname');

but if you wanted to find out if 'host.example.com', or any of its parent domains ('example.com' and 'com'), had a value in the "MyQual" qualifier, you might do:

$rc = lookup('host.example.com','type'=>'hostname','qualifier'=>'MyQual');

which would look up, in order 'MyQual:host.example.com', 'MyQual:example.com', and 'MyQual:com', returning the first (most specific) one found.

BUGS

None that I've found yet, but I'm sure they're there.

SUPPORT

Feel free to email me at <dredd@megacity.org>

AUTHOR

Derek J. Balling
CPAN ID: DREDD
dredd@megacity.org
http://www.megacity.org/software.html

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2001 Derek J. Balling. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

SEE ALSO

perl(1).

PUBLIC METHODS

Each public function/method is described here. These are how you should interact with this module.

spam_friend

Usage     : $friend_or_hater = spam_friend($recipient,
                                           ['qualifier' => $category])
Purpose   : Consults the /etc/mail/access.db to check for spamfriendliness
Returns   : 'FRIEND','HATER', or undef (which would mean default 
            behavior for that site)
Argument  : The recipient e-mail address and an optional qualifier if
            the default of 'Spam' is not desired. 
Throws    : 
Comments  : 
See Also  : 

whitelisted

Usage     : whitelisted($value)
Purpose   : Determine if an e-mail address, hostname, or IP address is
            explicitly whitelisted, in that it contains an "OK" or "RELAY"
            value in the database.
Returns   : 0/1, true or false as to whether the argument is whitelisted
Argument  : Either an email-address (e.g., foo@example.com), an IP address
            (e.g., 10.200.1.230), or a hostname (e.g., mailhost.example.com)
            as well as 'type' and 'qualifer' arguments (see lookup for greater
            detail)
Throws    : 
Comments  : The code makes a pretty good attempt to figure out what type
            of argument $value is, but it can be overriden using the 'type'
            qualifier.
See Also   : 

lookup

 Usage     : lookup ($lookup_key, 
		     'type'=>{'mail','ip','hostname'} ,   [optional]
		     'qualifier'=>'qualifier'             [optional]
		     'file'=>'filename'                   [optional]
		     )
 Purpose   : Do a generic lookup on a $lookup_key in the access.db and
             return the value found (or undef if not)
 Returns   : value in access.db or undef if not found
 Argument  : $lookup_key - mandatory. 'type'=>mail/ip/hostname will cause
             lookups against all necessary lookups according to sendmail logic
             (for things like hostname lookups where subdomains inherit 
             attributes of parent domains, etc.), 'qualifier'=>$q, where $q 
             will be preprended to the beginning of all lookups, (e.g., $q =
             'Spam', lookup would be against 'Spam:lookup_value')
 Throws    : 
 Comments  : If not using 'type', the 'qualifier' field can be mimicked by 
             simply looking for 'Qualifier:lookup'.
 See Also  : 

PRIVATE METHODS

Each private function/method is described here. These methods and functions are considered private and are intended for internal use by this module. They are not considered part of the public interface and are described here for documentation purposes only.

_expand_ip, _expand_hostname, _expand_address

Usage     : @expanded = _expand_ip($ip); # For example
Returns   : Given an ip, hostname, or e-mail address, it will expand
            that into the "appropriate lookups" which sendmail would use
            (e.g., given '192.168.1.2', _expand_ip would return
            192.168.1.2, 192.168.1, 192.168, and 192)
Argument  : The IP Address, hostname, or e-mail address to expand
Throws    : 
Comments  : 
See Also  :