Mail::SRS::Daemon(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Mail::SRS::Daemon(3pm) |
Mail::SRS::Daemon - modular daemon for Mail::SRS
my $daemon = new Mail::SRS::Daemon( SecretFile => $secretfile, Separator => $separator, ); $daemon->run();
The SRS daemon listens on a socket for SRS address transformation requests. It transforms the addresses and returns the new addresses on the socket.
It may be invoked from exim using ${readsocket ...}, and probably from other MTAs as well. See http://www.anarres.org/projects/srs/ for examples.
Construct a new Mail::SRS object and return it. All parameters which are valid for Mail::SRS are also valid for Mail::SRS::Daemon and will be passed to the constructor of Mail::SRS verbatim. The exception to this rule is the Secret parameter, which will be promoted to a list and will have all secrets from SecretFile included. New parameters are documented here. See Mail::SRS for the rest.
Secret will specify a primary secret and override SecretFile if both are specified. However, secrets read from SecretFile still be used for decoding if both are specified.
Run the daemon. This method will never return. Errors and exceptions are caught, and error messages are returned down the socket.
Given :all, this module exports the following variables.
The daemon waits for a single line of text from the client, and will respond with a single line. The lines are all of the form "COMMAND args...". Currently, two commands are supported: forward and reverse.
A forward request looks like:
FORWARD sender@source.com alias@forwarder.com
A reverse request looks like:
REVERSE srs0+HHH=TT=domain=local-part@forwarder.com
In either case, the daemon will respond with either a translated address, or a line starting "ERROR ", followed by a message.
Add more daemon-related options, such as path to socket, or inet socket address.
Mail::SRS, srsd, http://www.anarres.org/projects/srs/
Shevek CPAN ID: SHEVEK cpan@anarres.org http://www.anarres.org/projects/
Copyright (c) 2004 Shevek. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2022-11-27 | perl v5.36.0 |