NAME
mailbot - A MIME-aware autoresponder utilitySYNOPSIS
mailbot
[options] { program} [arg...]
In .mailfilter:
if (/^Subject: *info/) { cc "| mailbot -t /usr/share/autoresponse/info -d autoresponsedb \ -A 'From: [email protected]' /usr/bin/sendmail -f ''" }
DESCRIPTION
mailbot reads an E-mail message on standard input and creates an E-mail message replying to the original message's sender. A program is specified as an argument to mailbot after all of mailbot options. program is expected to read the created autoreply on its standard input, and mail it. If program is not specified, mailbot runs 'sendmail -f ""'. mailbot has several options for suppressing duplicate autoresponse messages. If mailbot chooses not to send an autoresponse, it quietly terminates without running program. The autoresponse is optionally formatted as a MIME delivery status notification. The text of the autoresponse is specified by the -t or the -m argument. Either one is required. Everything else is optional. The only exception is the -T replydraft option, which requires the -l option instead of either -t or -m. The default behavior is to send an autoresponse unless the original message has the "Precedence: junk" or the "Precedence: bulk" header, or the "Precedence: list" header, or the "List-ID:" header, or if its MIME content type is "multipart/report" (this is the MIME content type for delivery status notifications). The -M option formats the the autoresponse itself as a MIME delivery status notification.OPTIONS
-A " header: value"Add a header to the autoresponse. Multiple
-A options are allowed. In most situations, the -A option must
be used to set the “From:” header in the autogenerated
response.
-f address
Address the autoresponse to address,
which must be an RFC 2822[1] address. By default mailbot takes
the autoresponse address from the From: (or the Reply-To:) header in the
original message. -f, if present, overrides and explicitly sets the
autoresponse address. " address" must immediately follow the
-f option without an intervening space (it's a single command line
argument). An -f option without an address takes the address
from the SENDER environment variable.
-t filename
Read text autoresponse from filename,
which must contain a plain text message in “flowed-text” format.
In a “flowed-text”-formatted message, each line that ends with a
space character indicates that the line logically flows into the next line.
This allows the message to be reformatted for any shown display width.
Note
Messages in languages (see the -c option) which use spaces as word
delimiters must have two spaces at the end of a flowed line. The last
space on a flowed line is logically removed, and the first space separates the
last word on the previous line from the first word on the next line.
Otherwise, the two words will not have a logical space between them if they
get repositioned as part of adjusting the message's width for display.
Messages in ideographic languages that do not use spaces as word delimiters need
only one space trailing a flowed line.
Note
The trailing whitespace has no visual impact when shown by software that does
not implemented flowed text format, and always displays messages using their
original width.
-c charset
Set the autoresponse's MIME character set to
charset. Run mailbot without any arguments to see the default
character set.
-m filename
Read a MIME autoresponse from filename. This
is similar to the -t option, except that filename contains MIME
headers, followed by a blank line, and the corresponding MIME content. The
contents of filename are inserted in the autoresponse without further
processing.
The specified file must contain the “Content-Type” header
specifying the “text/plain” MIME type, with the
“format=flowed”, “delsp=yes”, and the
“charset” attributes, which override the -c parameter. If
the specified file has a “Content-Transfer-Encoding” header it
must be either “7bit” or “8bit”, it may not be
“quoted-printable”. mailbot always drops any existing
“Content-Transfer-Encoding” header and always adds the
“Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit” header, even with the
-m, since the salutation inserted into the message includes the
sender's name, which may contain 8-bit characters. Example:
Note
When the -m option is specified mailbot ignores the locale's
character set and formats the autoreply according to the character set read
from the “Content-Type” header.
-M address
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; delsp=yes; charset="iso-8859-1" Mary had a little lamb, Its fleece was white as snow. And everywhere Mary went, The lamb was sure to go.
Format the autoresponse as a delivery status
notification ( RFC 1894[2]). address is an RFC 2822[1]
E-mail address that generates the DSN. Note that the -A option should
still be used in addition to -M in order to set the From: header on the
autoresponse. -M sets the DSN address only. The -M option
automatically sets -T replydsn
-R type
Specify the feedback report type, with
type set to abuse, fraud, other, or virus. Must be used together with
“-T feedback” or “-T replyfeedback”.
-T format
Set the reply format. format must be
one of the following values:
-N
•“reply” - the default
reply format.
•“replyall” - like
“reply”, except also puts the recipients in the original
message's “To:” and “Cc:” headers into the
“Cc:” header of the generated reply.
•“replydsn” - like
“reply”, except the message is formatted as a delivery status
notification.
•“replydraft” - like
“reply”, with the text of the autoresponse coming from a maildir
specified by the -l option. See “Autoreplies from a maildir
folder”, below.
•“forward” - attach the
original message as forwarded text.
•“forwardatt” - attach
the original message as a forwarded message attachment.
•“feedback” - generate an
Email Feedback Report message (see RFC 5965[3]). The “-R”
option is required when this is specified.
•“replyfeedback” - like
“feedback”, but also adds a “To:” header,
addressed to the original message's sender.
Do not quote the contents of the original
message in the message created by “reply”,
“replyall”, “replydsn”, “feedback”,
and “replyfeedback” options.
Note
The original message gets quoted, in the absence of this option, only if the
original message was formatted as plain text. mailbot is unable to
quote an original message which was formatted as HTML, or any other
non-plaintext format.
Note
For “replydsn”, “feedback”, and
“replyfeedback” options, the convention is to attach the
original message, or only its headers, separately; so this option should
always be specified for these three reply formats.
-a
Attach the entire message, for
“replydsn”, “feedback”, and
“replyfeedback”, instead of only its headers.
-e
Generate a reply
(“reply”-formats) to the address listed in any
“Errors-To” or “Return-Path” header, if present,
instead of the “From” header.
-S “salutation”
Use the given salutation in the
“reply”. The default value is “%F writes:”. The
following substitutions are recognized in the salutation string:
All other characters in the salutation string are left as is.
-F “marker”
•%% - an explicit % character.
•%n - a newline character.
•%C - the “X-Newsgroup:”
header from the original message.
•%N - the “Newsgroups:”
header from the original message.
•%i - the “Message-ID:”
header from the original message.
•%f - the original message's sender's
address.
•%F - the original message's sender's
name.
•%S - the “Subject:”
header from the original message
•%d - the original message's date, in
the local timezone.
•%{...}d - use strftime()
to format the original message's date. A plain %d is equivalent to %{%a, %d %b
%Y %H:%M:%S %z}d.
When generating a forward, use the
marker to separate the forwarded message from the autoreply text,
instead of the default “--- Forwarded message ---”
-r addrlist
addrlist is a comma-separated list of
RFC 2822[1] E-mail addresses. mailbot sends an autoresponse only
if the original message has at least one of the specified addresses in any To:
or Cc: header.
-d filename
Create a small database, filename, that
keeps track of senders' E-mail addresses, and prevent duplicate autoresponses
going to the same address (suppress autoresponses going back to the same
senders, for subsequent received messages). The -d option is only
available if maildrop has GDBM/DB extensions enabled.
-D x
Do not send duplicate autoresponses (see the
-d option) for at least x days (default: 1 day). The -d
option creates a database of E-mail addresses and the times an autoresponse
was last mailed to them. Another autoresponse to the same address will not be
mailed until at least the amount of time specified by the -D option has
elapsed.
-s " subject"
Set the Subject: header on the autoresponse to
subject.
-n
Show the resulting message, do not send it.
Used for debugging purposes.
--feedback-original-envelope-id "<envelopeid>",
--feedback-original-mail-from "<mailfrom>",
--feedback-reporting-mta " dns; hostname",
--feedback-source-ip aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd,
--feedback-incidents n,
--feedback-authentication-results "results",
--feedback-original-rcpt-to "<rcptto>",
--feedback-reported-domain example.com
Optional parameters to include in the feedback
report generated by “feedback” and
“replyfeedback”. mailbot always adds
“Arrival-Date” with the current time, as well as
“Version” and “User-Agent”.
“--feedback-authentication-results”,
“--feedback-original-rcpt-to” and
“--feedback-reported-domain” may be specified more than
once.
-l maildir
Specifies the maildir for the “-T
replydraft” option. See “Autoreplies from a maildir
folder”, below.
Autoreplies from a maildir folder
In .mailfilter:cc "| mailbot -T replydraft -l './Maildir/.Vacation' \ -d autoresponsedb \ -A 'From: [email protected]' /usr/bin/sendmail -f ''" to "./Maildir"
SEE ALSO
maildrop(1)[4], reformail(1)[5], reformime(1)[6].AUTHOR
Sam VarshavchikAuthor
NOTES
- 1.
- RFC 2822
- 2.
- RFC 1894
- 3.
- RFC 5965
- 4.
- maildrop(1)
- 5.
- reformail(1)
- 6.
- reformime(1)
06/20/2015 | Courier Mail Server |