2062 lines
67 KiB
Bash
2062 lines
67 KiB
Bash
#!/bin/sh
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# This is a shell archive (produced by shar 3.49)
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# To extract the files from this archive, save it to a file, remove
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# everything above the "!/bin/sh" line above, and type "sh file_name".
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#
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# made 07/28/1993 08:13 UTC by mmuegel@mot.com (Michael S. Muegel)
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# Source directory /home/ustart/NeXT/src/mail-tools/dist/foo
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#
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# existing files will NOT be overwritten unless -c is specified
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#
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# This shar contains:
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# length mode name
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# ------ ---------- ------------------------------------------
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# 4308 -r--r--r-- README
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# 12339 -r--r--r-- libs/date.pl
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# 3198 -r--r--r-- libs/elapsed.pl
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# 4356 -r--r--r-- libs/mail.pl
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# 6908 -r--r--r-- libs/mqueue.pl
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# 7024 -r--r--r-- libs/newgetopts.pl
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# 4687 -r--r--r-- libs/strings1.pl
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# 1609 -r--r--r-- libs/timespec.pl
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# 5212 -r--r--r-- man/cqueue.1
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# 2078 -r--r--r-- man/postclip.1
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# 6647 -r-xr-xr-x src/cqueue
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# 1836 -r-xr-xr-x src/postclip
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#
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# ============= README ==============
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if test -f 'README' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
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echo 'x - skipping README (File already exists)'
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else
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echo 'x - extracting README (Text)'
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sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'README' &&
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Document Revision Control Information:
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X mmuegel
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X /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/README,v
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X 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:12:53
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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X
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1. Introduction
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---------------
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X
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These tools may be of use to those sites using sendmail. Both are written in
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Perl. Our site, Mot.COM, receives a ton of mail being a top-level domain
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gateway. We have over 24 domains under us. Needless to say, we must have
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a robust mail system or my head, and others, would be on the chopping block.
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X
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2. Description
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--------------
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X
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The first tool, cqueue, checks the sendmail queue for problems. We use
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it to flag problems with subdomain mail servers (and even our own servers
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once in a while ;-). We run it via a cron job every hour during the day.
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You may find this too frequent, however.
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X
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The other program, postclip, is used to "filter" non-deliverable NDNs that
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get sent to our Postmaster account now and then. This ensures privacy of
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e-mail and helps avoid disk problems from huge NDNs. It is different than
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a brute force "just keep the header" approach because it tries hard to keep
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other parts of the message that look like non-delivery information.
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X
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Both have been used for some time at our site with no problems. Everything
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you need should be in this distribution: source, manual pages, and support
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libs. See the manual pages for a complete description of each tool.
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X
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3. Installation
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---------------
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X
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No fancy Makefile simply because these tools are all under a large
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hierarchy at my site. Installation should be a snap, however. Install
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the nroff(1) man(5) manual pages from the man subdirectory to the
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appropriate directory on your system. This might be something like
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/usr/local/man/man1.
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X
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Next, install all of the Perl libraries located in the lib subdirectory
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to your Perl library area. /usr/local/lib/perl is a good bet. The person
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who installed Perl at your site will be able to tell you for sure.
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X
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Finally, you need to install the programs. Note that cqueue wants to
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run setuid root by default. This is because the sendmail queue is normally
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only readable by root or some special group. In order to let any user
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run this suidperl is used. suidperl allows a Perl program to run with the
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privileges of another user.
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X
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You will have to edit both the cqueue and postclip programs to change
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the #! line at the top of each. Just change the pathname to whatever is
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appropriate on your system. Note that Larry Wall's fixin program from
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the Camel book can also be used to do this. It is very handy. It changes
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#! lines by looking at your PATH.
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X
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If you do not have suidperl on your system change the #! line in cqueue
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to reference perl instead of suidperl.
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X
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You may also wish to change some constants in cqueue. $DEF_QUEUE should be
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changed to your queue directory if it is not /usr/spool/mqueue. $DEF_TIME
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could be changed easy enough also. It is the time spec for the time duration
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after which a mail message will be reported on if the -a option has not been
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specified. See the manual page for more information and the format of this
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constant (same as the -t argument). Then again, neither of these has to
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be changed. Command line options are there to override their default
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values.
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X
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After you have edited the programs as necessary, all that remains is to
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install them to some executable directory. Install postclip mode 555
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and cqueue mode 4555 with owner root (if using suidperl) or mode 555
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(if not using suidperl).
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X
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4. Gripes, Comments, Etc
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------------------------
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X
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If you start using either of these let me know. I have other mail tools I
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will likely post in the future if these prove useful. Also, if you think
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something is just plain dumb/wrong/stupid let me know!
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X
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Cheers,
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-Mike
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X
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--
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| Michael S. Muegel | Internet E-Mail: mmuegel@mot.com |
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| UNIX Applications Startup Group | Moto Dist E-Mail: X10090 |
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| Corporate Information Office | Voice: (708) 576-0507 |
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| Motorola | Fax: (708) 576-4153 |
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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SHAR_EOF
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chmod 0444 README ||
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echo 'restore of README failed'
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Wc_c="`wc -c < 'README'`"
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test 4308 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
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echo 'README: original size 4308, current size' "$Wc_c"
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fi
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# ============= libs/date.pl ==============
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if test ! -d 'libs'; then
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echo 'x - creating directory libs'
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mkdir 'libs'
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fi
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if test -f 'libs/date.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
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echo 'x - skipping libs/date.pl (File already exists)'
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else
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echo 'x - extracting libs/date.pl (Text)'
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sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/date.pl' &&
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;#
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;# Name
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;# date.pl - Perl emulation of (the output side of) date(1)
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;#
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;# Synopsis
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;# require "date.pl";
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;# $Date = &date(time);
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;# $Date = &date(time, $format);
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;#
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;# Description
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;# This package implements the output formatting functions of date(1) in
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;# Perl. The format options are based on those supported by Ultrix 4.0
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;# plus a couple of additions from SunOS 4.1.1 and elsewhere:
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;#
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;# %a abbreviated weekday name - Sun to Sat
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;# %A full weekday name - Sunday to Saturday
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;# %b abbreviated month name - Jan to Dec
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;# %B full month name - January to December
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;# %c date and time in local format [+]
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;# %C date and time in long local format [+]
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;# %d day of month - 01 to 31
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;# %D date as mm/dd/yy
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;# %e day of month (space padded) - ` 1' to `31'
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;# %E day of month (with suffix: 1st, 2nd, 3rd...)
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;# %f month of year (space padded) - ` 1' to `12'
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;# %h abbreviated month name - Jan to Dec
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;# %H hour - 00 to 23
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;# %i hour (space padded) - ` 1' to `12'
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;# %I hour - 01 to 12
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;# %j day of the year (Julian date) - 001 to 366
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;# %k hour (space padded) - ` 0' to `23'
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;# %l date in ls(1) format
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;# %m month of year - 01 to 12
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;# %M minute - 00 to 59
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;# %n insert a newline character
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;# %p ante-meridiem or post-meridiem indicator (AM or PM)
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;# %r time in AM/PM notation
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;# %R time as HH:MM
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;# %S second - 00 to 59
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;# %t insert a tab character
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;# %T time as HH:MM:SS
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;# %u date/time in date(1) required format
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;# %U week number, Sunday as first day of week - 00 to 53
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;# %V date-time in SysV touch format (mmddHHMMyy)
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;# %w day of week - 0 (Sunday) to 6
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;# %W week number, Monday as first day of week - 00 to 53
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;# %x date in local format [+]
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;# %X time in local format [+]
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;# %y last 2 digits of year - 00 to 99
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;# %Y all 4 digits of year ~ 1700 to 2000 odd ?
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;# %z time zone from TZ environment variable w/ a trailing space
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;# %Z time zone from TZ environment variable
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;# %% insert a `%' character
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;# %+ insert a `+' character
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;#
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;# [+]: These may need adjustment to fit local conventions, see below.
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;#
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;# For the sake of compatibility, a leading `+' in the format
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;# specificaiton is removed if present.
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;#
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;# Remarks
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;# This is version 3.4 of date.pl
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;#
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;# An extension of `ctime.pl' by Waldemar Kebsch (kebsch.pad@nixpbe.UUCP),
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;# as modified by Marion Hakanson (hakanson@ogicse.ogi.edu).
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;#
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;# Unlike date(1), unknown format tags are silently replaced by "".
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;#
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;# defaultTZ is a blatant hack, but I wanted to be able to get date(1)
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;# like behaviour by default and there does'nt seem to be an easy (read
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;# portable) way to get the local TZ name back...
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;#
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;# For a cheap date, try...
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;#
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;# #!/usr/local/bin/perl
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;# require "date.pl";
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;# exit print (&date(time, shift @ARGV) . "\n") ? 0 : 1;
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;#
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;# This package is redistributable under the same terms as apply to
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;# the Perl 4.0 release. See the COPYING file in your Perl kit for
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;# more information.
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;#
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;# Please send any bug reports or comments to tmcgonigal@gallium.com
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;#
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;# Modification History
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;# Nmemonic Version Date Who
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;#
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;# NONE 1.0 02feb91 Terry McGonigal (tmcgonigal@gallium.com)
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;# Created from ctime.pl
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;#
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;# NONE 2.0 07feb91 tmcgonigal
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;# Added some of Marion Hakanson (hakanson@ogicse.ogi.edu)'s ctime.pl
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;# TZ handling changes.
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;#
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;# NONE 2.1 09feb91 tmcgonigal
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;# Corrected week number calculations.
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;#
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;# NONE 2.2 21oct91 tmcgonigal
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;# Added ls(1) date format, `%l'.
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;#
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;# NONE 2.3 06nov91 tmcgonigal
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;# Added SysV touch(1) date-time format, `%V' (pretty thin as
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;# mnemonics go, I know, but `t' and `T' were both gone already!)
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;#
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;# NONE 2.4 05jan92 tmcgonigal
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;# Corrected slight (cosmetic) problem with %V replacment string
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;#
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;# NONE 3.0 09jul92 tmcgonigal
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;# Fixed a couple of problems with &ls as pointed out by
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;# Thomas Richter (richter@ki1.chemie.fu-berlin.de), thanks Thomas!
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;# Also added a couple of SunOS 4.1.1 strftime-ish formats, %i and %k
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;# for space padded hours (` 1' to `12' and ` 0' to `23' respectivly),
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;# and %C for locale long date/time format. Changed &mH to take a
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;# pad char parameter to make to evaled code for %i and %k simpler.
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;# Added %E for suffixed day-of-month (ie 1st, 3rd, 4th etc).
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;#
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;# NONE 3.1 16jul92 tmcgonigal
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;# Added `%u' format to generate date/time in date(1) required
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;# format (ie '%y%m%d%H%M.%S').
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;#
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;# NONE 3.2 23jan93 tmcgonigal
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;# Added `%f' format to generate space padded month numbers, added
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;# `%E' to the header comments, it seems to have been left out (and
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;# I'm sure I wanted to use it at some point in the past...).
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;#
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;# NONE 3.3 03feb93 tmcgonigal
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;# Corrected some problems with AM/PM handling pointed out by
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;# Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com). Thanks Michael, I hope
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;# this is the behaviour you were looking for, it seems more
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;# correct to me...
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;#
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;# NONE 3.4 26jul93 tmcgonigal
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;# Incorporated some fixes provided by DaviD W. Sanderson
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;# (dws@ssec.wisc.edu): February was spelled incorrectly and
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;# &wkno() was always using the current year while calculating
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;# week numbers, regardless of year implied by the time value
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;# passed to &date(). DaviD also contributed an improved &date()
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;# test script, thanks DaviD, I appreciate the effort. Finally,
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;# changed my mailling address from @gvc.com to @gallium.com
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;# to reflect, well, my new address!
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;#
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;# SccsId = "%W% %E%"
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;#
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require 'timelocal.pl';
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package date;
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X
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# Months of the year
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@MoY = ('January', 'February', 'March', 'April', 'May', 'June',
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X 'July', 'August', 'September','October', 'November', 'December');
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X
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# days of the week
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@DoW = ('Sunday', 'Monday', 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday',
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X 'Thursday', 'Friday', 'Saturday');
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X
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# CUSTOMIZE - defaults
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$defaultTZ = 'CST'; # time zone (hack!)
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$defaultFMT = '%a %h %e %T %z%Y'; # format (ala date(1))
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X
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# CUSTOMIZE - `local' formats
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$locTF = '%T'; # time (as HH:MM:SS)
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$locDF = '%D'; # date (as mm/dd/yy)
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$locDTF = '%a %b %d %T %Y'; # date/time (as dow mon dd HH:MM:SS yyyy)
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$locLDTF = '%i:%M:%S %p %A %B %E %Y'; # long date/time (as HH:MM:SS a/p day month dom yyyy)
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X
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# Time zone info
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$TZ; # wkno needs this info too
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X
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# define the known format tags as associative keys with their associated
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# replacement strings as values. Each replacement string should be
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# an eval-able expresion assigning a value to $rep. These expressions are
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# eval-ed, then the value of $rep is substituted into the supplied
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# format (if any).
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%Tags = ( '%a', q|($rep = $DoW[$wday])=~ s/^(...).*/\1/|, # abbr. weekday name - Sun to Sat
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X '%A', q|$rep = $DoW[$wday]|, # full weekday name - Sunday to Saturday
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X '%b', q|($rep = $MoY[$mon]) =~ s/^(...).*/\1/|, # abbr. month name - Jan to Dec
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X '%B', q|$rep = $MoY[$mon]|, # full month name - January to December
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X '%c', q|$rep = $locDTF; 1|, # date/time in local format
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X '%C', q|$rep = $locLDTF; 1|, # date/time in local long format
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X '%d', q|$rep = &date'pad($mday, 2, "0")|, # day of month - 01 to 31
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X '%D', q|$rep = '%m/%d/%y'|, # date as mm/dd/yy
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X '%e', q|$rep = &date'pad($mday, 2, " ")|, # day of month (space padded) ` 1' to `31'
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X '%E', q|$rep = &date'dsuf($mday)|, # day of month (w/suffix) `1st' to `31st'
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X '%f', q|$rep = &date'pad($mon+1, 2, " ")|, # month of year (space padded) ` 1' to `12'
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X '%h', q|$rep = '%b'|, # abbr. month name (same as %b)
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X '%H', q|$rep = &date'pad($hour, 2, "0")|, # hour - 00 to 23
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|
X '%i', q|$rep = &date'ampmH($hour, " ")|, # hour (space padded ` 1' to `12'
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|
X '%I', q|$rep = &date'ampmH($hour, "0")|, # hour - 01 to 12
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|
X '%j', q|$rep = &date'pad($yday+1, 3, "0")|, # Julian date 001 - 366
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|
X '%k', q|$rep = &date'pad($hour, 2, " ")|, # hour (space padded) ` 0' to `23'
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X '%l', q|$rep = '%b %d ' . &date'ls($year)|, # ls(1) style date
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|
X '%m', q|$rep = &date'pad($mon+1, 2, "0")|, # month of year - 01 to 12
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X '%M', q|$rep = &date'pad($min, 2, "0")|, # minute - 00 to 59
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|
X '%n', q|$rep = "\n"|, # insert a newline
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|
X '%p', q|$rep = &date'ampmD($hour)|, # insert `AM' or `PM'
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|
X '%r', q|$rep = '%I:%M:%S %p'|, # time in AM/PM notation
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|
X '%R', q|$rep = '%H:%M'|, # time as HH:MM
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X '%S', q|$rep = &date'pad($sec, 2, "0")|, # second - 00 to 59
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X '%t', q|$rep = "\t"|, # insert a tab
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|
X '%T', q|$rep = '%H:%M:%S'|, # time as HH:MM:SS
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|
X '%u', q|$rep = '%y%m%d%H%M.%S'|, # daaate/time in date(1) required format
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|
X '%U', q|$rep = &date'wkno($year, $yday, 0)|, # week number (weeks start on Sun) - 00 to 53
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|
X '%V', q|$rep = '%m%d%H%M%y'|, # SysV touch(1) date-time format (mmddHHMMyy)
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X '%w', q|$rep = $wday; 1|, # day of week - Sunday = 0
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X '%W', q|$rep = &date'wkno($year, $yday, 1)|, # week number (weeks start on Mon) - 00 to 53
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X '%x', q|$rep = $locDF; 1|, # date in local format
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X '%X', q|$rep = $locTF; 1|, # time in local format
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X '%y', q|($rep = $year) =~ s/..(..)/\1/|, # last 2 digits of year - 00 to 99
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X '%Y', q|$rep = "$year"; 1|, # full year ~ 1700 to 2000 odd
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|
X '%z', q|$rep = $TZ eq "" ? "" : "$TZ "|, # time zone from TZ env var (w/trail. space)
|
|
X '%Z', q|$rep = $TZ; 1|, # time zone from TZ env. var.
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|
X '%%', q|$rep = '%'; $adv=1|, # insert a `%'
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X '%+', q|$rep = '+'| # insert a `+'
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);
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X
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sub main'date {
|
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X local($time, $format) = @_;
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X local($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, $wday, $yday, $isdst);
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X local($pos, $tag, $rep, $adv) = (0, "", "", 0);
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X
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X # default to date/ctime format or strip leading `+'...
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X if ($format eq "") {
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X $format = $defaultFMT;
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|
X } elsif ($format =~ /^\+/) {
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X $format = $';
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X }
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X
|
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X # Use local time if can't find a TZ in the environment
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X $TZ = defined($ENV{'TZ'}) ? $ENV{'TZ'} : $defaultTZ;
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|
X ($sec, $min, $hour, $mday, $mon, $year, $wday, $yday, $isdst) =
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X &gettime ($TZ, $time);
|
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X
|
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X # Hack to deal with 'PST8PDT' format of TZ
|
|
X # Note that this can't deal with all the esoteric forms, but it
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|
X # does recognize the most common: [:]STDoff[DST[off][,rule]]
|
|
X if ($TZ =~ /^([^:\d+\-,]{3,})([+-]?\d{1,2}(:\d{1,2}){0,2})([^\d+\-,]{3,})?/) {
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X $TZ = $isdst ? $4 : $1;
|
|
X }
|
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X
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X # watch out in 2070...
|
|
X $year += ($year < 70) ? 2000 : 1900;
|
|
X
|
|
X # now loop throught the supplied format looking for tags...
|
|
X while (($pos = index ($format, '%')) != -1) {
|
|
X
|
|
X # grab the format tag
|
|
X $tag = substr($format, $pos, 2);
|
|
X $adv = 0; # for `%%' processing
|
|
X
|
|
X # do we have a replacement string?
|
|
X if (defined $Tags{$tag}) {
|
|
X
|
|
X # trap dead evals...
|
|
X if (! eval $Tags{$tag}) {
|
|
X print STDERR "date.pl: internal error: eval for $tag failed: $@\n";
|
|
X return "";
|
|
X }
|
|
X } else {
|
|
X $rep = "";
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X # do the substitution
|
|
X substr ($format, $pos, 2) =~ s/$tag/$rep/;
|
|
X $pos++ if ($adv);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X $format;
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
# dsuf - add `st', `nd', `rd', `th' to a date (ie 1st, 22nd, 29th)
|
|
sub dsuf {
|
|
X local ($mday) = @_;
|
|
X
|
|
X return $mday . 'st' if ($mday =~ m/.*1$/);
|
|
X return $mday . 'nd' if ($mday =~ m/.*2$/);
|
|
X return $mday . 'rd' if ($mday =~ m/.*3$/);
|
|
X return $mday . 'th';
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
# weekno - figure out week number
|
|
sub wkno {
|
|
X local ($year, $yday, $firstweekday) = @_;
|
|
X local ($jan1, @jan1, $wks);
|
|
X
|
|
X # figure out the `time' value for January 1 of the given year
|
|
X $jan1 = &maketime ($TZ, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, $year-1900);
|
|
X
|
|
X # figure out what day of the week January 1 was
|
|
X @jan1= &gettime ($TZ, $jan1);
|
|
X
|
|
X # and calculate the week number
|
|
X $wks = (($yday + ($jan1[6] - $firstweekday)) + 1)/ 7;
|
|
X $wks += (($wks - int($wks) > 0.0) ? 1 : 0);
|
|
X
|
|
X # supply zero padding
|
|
X &pad (int($wks), 2, "0");
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
# ampmH - figure out am/pm (1 - 12) mode hour value, padded with $p (0 or ' ')
|
|
sub ampmH { local ($h, $p) = @_; &pad($h>12 ? $h-12 : ($h ? $h : 12), 2, $p); }
|
|
X
|
|
# ampmD - figure out am/pm designator
|
|
sub ampmD { shift @_ >= 12 ? "PM" : "AM"; }
|
|
X
|
|
# gettime - get the time via {local,gmt}time
|
|
sub gettime { ((shift @_) eq 'GMT') ? gmtime(shift @_) : localtime(shift @_); }
|
|
X
|
|
# maketime - make a time via time{local,gmt}
|
|
sub maketime { ((shift @_) eq 'GMT') ? &main'timegm(@_) : &main'timelocal(@_); }
|
|
X
|
|
# ls - generate the time/year portion of an ls(1) style date
|
|
sub ls {
|
|
X return ((&gettime ($TZ, time))[5] == @_[0]) ? "%R" : " %Y";
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
# pad - pad $in with leading $pad until lenght $len
|
|
sub pad {
|
|
X local ($in, $len, $pad) = @_;
|
|
X local ($out) = "$in";
|
|
X
|
|
X $out = $pad . $out until (length ($out) == $len);
|
|
X return $out;
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/date.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/date.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/date.pl'`"
|
|
test 12339 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/date.pl: original size 12339, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/elapsed.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/elapsed.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/elapsed.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/elapsed.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/elapsed.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# elapsed.pl - convert seconds to elapsed time format
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Michael S. Muegel <mmuegel@mot.com>
|
|
;#
|
|
;# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/elapsed.pl,v
|
|
;# 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:07:19
|
|
X
|
|
package elapsed;
|
|
X
|
|
# Time field types
|
|
$DAYS = 1;
|
|
$HOURS = 2;
|
|
$MINUTES = 3;
|
|
$SECONDS = 4;
|
|
X
|
|
# The array contains four records each with four fields. The fields are,
|
|
# in order:
|
|
#
|
|
# Type Specifies what kind of time field this is. Once of
|
|
# $DAYS, $HOURS, $MINUTES, or $SECONDS.
|
|
#
|
|
# Multiplier Specifies what time field this is via the minimum
|
|
# number of seconds this time field may specify. For
|
|
# example, the minutes field would be non-zero
|
|
# when there are 60 or more seconds.
|
|
#
|
|
# Separator How to separate this time field from the next
|
|
# *greater* field.
|
|
#
|
|
# Format sprintf() format specifier on how to print this
|
|
# time field.
|
|
@MULT_AND_SEPS = ($DAYS, 60 * 60 * 24, "+", "%d",
|
|
X $HOURS, 60 * 60, ":", "%d",
|
|
X $MINUTES, 60, ":", "%02d",
|
|
X $SECONDS, 1, "", "%02d"
|
|
X );
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Seconds_To_Elapsed
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Coverts a seconds count to form [d+]h:mm:ss. If $Collapse
|
|
;# is true then the result is compacted somewhat. The string returned
|
|
;# will be of the form [d+][[h:]mm]:ss.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Seconds, $Collapse
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Examples:
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (0, 0) -> 0:00:00
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (0, 1) -> :00
|
|
;#
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (119, 0) -> 0:01:59
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (119, 1) -> 01:59
|
|
;#
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (3601, 0) -> 1:00:01
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (3601, 1) -> 1:00:01
|
|
;#
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (86401, 0) -> 1+0:00:01
|
|
;# &Seconds_To_Elapsed (86401, 1) -> 1+:01
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Elapsed
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Seconds_To_Elapsed
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($Seconds, $Collapse) = @_;
|
|
X local ($Type, $Multiplier, @Multipliers, $Separator, $DHMS_Used,
|
|
X $Elapsed, @Mult_And_Seps, $Print_Field);
|
|
X
|
|
X $Multiplier = 1;
|
|
X @Mult_And_Seps = @MULT_AND_SEPS;
|
|
X
|
|
X # Keep subtracting the number of seconds corresponding to a time field
|
|
X # from the number of seconds passed to the function.
|
|
X while (1)
|
|
X {
|
|
X ($Type, $Multiplier, $Separator, $Format) = splice (@Mult_And_Seps, 0, 4);
|
|
X last if (! $Multiplier);
|
|
X $Seconds -= $DHMS_Used * $Multiplier
|
|
X if ($DHMS_Used = int ($Seconds / $Multiplier));
|
|
X
|
|
X # Figure out if we should print this field
|
|
X if ($Type == $DAYS)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Print_Field = $DHMS_Used;
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X elsif ($Collapse)
|
|
X {
|
|
X if ($Type == $HOURS)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Print_Field = $DHMS_Used;
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif ($Type == $MINUTES)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Print_Field = $DHMS_Used || $Printed_Field {$HOURS};
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Format = ":%02d"
|
|
X if (! $Printed_Field {$MINUTES});
|
|
X $Print_Field = 1;
|
|
X };
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Print_Field = 1;
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X $Printed_Field {$Type} = $Print_Field;
|
|
X $Elapsed .= sprintf ("$Format%s", $DHMS_Used, $Separator)
|
|
X if ($Print_Field);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X return ($Elapsed);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/elapsed.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/elapsed.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/elapsed.pl'`"
|
|
test 3198 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/elapsed.pl: original size 3198, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/mail.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/mail.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/mail.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/mail.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/mail.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# mail.pl - perl function(s) to handle mail processing
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/mail.pl,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:07:19 mmuegel Exp
|
|
X
|
|
package mail;
|
|
X
|
|
# Mailer statement to eval. $Users, $Subject, and $Verbose are substituted
|
|
# via eval
|
|
$BIN_MAILER = "/usr/ucb/mail \$Verbose -s '\$Subject' \$Users";
|
|
X
|
|
# Sendmail command to use when $Use_Sendmail is true.
|
|
$SENDMAIL = '/usr/lib/sendmail $Verbose $Users';
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Send_Mail
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Sends $Message to $Users with a subject of $Subject. If $Message_Is_File
|
|
;# is true then $Message is assumed to be a filename pointing to the mail
|
|
;# message. This is a new option and thus the backwards-compatible hack.
|
|
;# $Users should be a space separated list of mail-ids.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If everything went OK $Status will be 1 and $Error_Msg can be ignored;
|
|
;# otherwise, $Status will be 0 and $Error_Msg will contain an error message.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If $Use_Sendmail is 1 then sendmail is used to send the message. Normally
|
|
;# a mailer such as Mail is used. By specifiying this you can include
|
|
;# headers in addition to text in either $Message or $Message_Is_File.
|
|
;# If either $Message or $Message_Is_File contain a Subject: header then
|
|
;# $Subject is ignored; otherwise, a Subject: header is automatically created.
|
|
;# Similar to the Subject: header, if a To: header does not exist one
|
|
;# is automatically created from the $Users argument. The mail is still
|
|
;# sent, however, to the recipients listed in $Users. This is keeping with
|
|
;# normal sendmail usage (header vs. envelope).
|
|
;#
|
|
;# In both bin mailer and sendmail modes $Verbose will turn on verbose mode
|
|
;# (normally just sendmail verbose mode output).
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Users, $Subject, $Message, $Message_Is_File, $Verbose, $Use_Sendmail
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Status, $Error_Msg
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Send_Mail
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($Users, $Subject, $Message, $Message_Is_File, $Verbose,
|
|
X $Use_Sendmail) = @_;
|
|
X local ($BIN_MAILER_HANDLE, $Mailer_Command, $Header_Found, %Header_Map,
|
|
X $Header_Extra, $Mailer);
|
|
X
|
|
X # If the message is contained in a file read it in so we can have one
|
|
X # consistent interface
|
|
X if ($Message_Is_File)
|
|
X {
|
|
X undef $/;
|
|
X $Message_Is_File = 0;
|
|
X open (Message) || return (0, "error reading $Message: $!");
|
|
X $Message = <Message>;
|
|
X close (Message);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # If sendmail mode see if we need to add some headers
|
|
X if ($Use_Sendmail)
|
|
X {
|
|
X # Determine if a header block is included in the message and what headers
|
|
X # are there
|
|
X foreach (split (/\n/, $Message))
|
|
X {
|
|
X last if ($_ eq "");
|
|
X $Header_Found = $Header_Map {$1} = 1 if (/^([A-Z]\S*): /);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Add some headers?
|
|
X if (! $Header_Map {"To"})
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Header_Extra .= "To: " . join (", ", $Users) . "\n";
|
|
X };
|
|
X if (($Subject ne "") && (! $Header_Map {"Subject"}))
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Header_Extra .= "Subject: $Subject\n";
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Add the required blank line between header/body if there where no
|
|
X # headers to begin with
|
|
X if ($Header_Found)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Message = "$Header_Extra$Message";
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Message = "$Header_Extra\n$Message";
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Get a string that is the mail command
|
|
X $Verbose = ($Verbose) ? "-v" : "";
|
|
X $Mailer = ($Use_Sendmail) ? $SENDMAIL : $BIN_MAILER;
|
|
X eval "\$Mailer = \"$Mailer\"";
|
|
X return (0, "error setting \$Mailer: $@") if ($@);
|
|
X
|
|
X # need to catch SIGPIPE in case the $Mailer call fails
|
|
X $SIG {'PIPE'} = "mail'Cleanup";
|
|
X
|
|
X # Open mailer
|
|
X return (0, "can not open mail program: $Mailer") if (! open (MAILER, "| $Mailer"));
|
|
X
|
|
X # Send off the mail!
|
|
X print MAILER $Message;
|
|
X close (MAILER);
|
|
X return (0, "error running mail program: $Mailer") if ($?);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Everything must have went AOK
|
|
X return (1);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Cleanup
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Simply here so we can catch SIGPIPE and not exit.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Globals:
|
|
;# None
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# None
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# Nothing exciting
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub Cleanup
|
|
{
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/mail.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/mail.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/mail.pl'`"
|
|
test 4356 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/mail.pl: original size 4356, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/mqueue.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/mqueue.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/mqueue.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/mqueue.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/mqueue.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# mqueue.pl - functions to work with the sendmail queue
|
|
;#
|
|
;# DESCRIPTION
|
|
;# Both Get_Queue_IDs and Parse_Control_File are available to get
|
|
;# information about the sendmail queue. The cqueue program is a good
|
|
;# example of how these functions work.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/mqueue.pl,v
|
|
;# 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:07:19
|
|
X
|
|
package mqueue;
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Get_Queue_IDs
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Will figure out the queue IDs in $Queue that have both control and data
|
|
;# files. They are returned in @Valid_IDs. Those IDs that have a
|
|
;# control file and no data file are saved to the array globbed by
|
|
;# *Missing_Control_IDs. Likewise, those IDs that have a data file and no
|
|
;# control file are saved to the array globbed by *Missing_Data_IDs.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If $Skip_Locked is true they a message that has a lock file is skipped
|
|
;# and will not show up in any of the arrays.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If everything went AOK then $Status is 1; otherwise, $Status is 0 and
|
|
;# $Msg tells what went wrong.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Globals:
|
|
;# None
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Queue, $Skip_Locked, *Missing_Control_IDs, *Missing_Data_IDs
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Status, $Msg, @Valid_IDs
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Get_Queue_IDs
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($Queue, $Skip_Locked, *Missing_Control_IDs,
|
|
X *Missing_Data_IDs) = @_;
|
|
X local (*QUEUE, @Files, %Lock_IDs, %Data_IDs, %Control_IDs, $_);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Make sure that the * argument @arrays ar empty
|
|
X @Missing_Control_IDs = @Missing_Data_IDs = ();
|
|
X
|
|
X # Save each data, lock, and queue file in @Files
|
|
X opendir (QUEUE, $Queue) || return (0, "error getting directory listing of $Queue");
|
|
X @Files = grep (/^(df|lf|qf)/, readdir (QUEUE));
|
|
X closedir (QUEUE);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Create indexed list of data and control files. IF $Skip_Locked is true
|
|
X # then skip either if there is a lock file present.
|
|
X if ($Skip_Locked)
|
|
X {
|
|
X grep ((s/^lf//) && ($Lock_IDs {$_} = 1), @Files);
|
|
X grep ((s/^df//) && (! $Lock_IDs {$_}) && ($Data_IDs {$_} = 1), @Files);
|
|
X grep ((s/^qf//) && (! $Lock_IDs {$_}) && ($Control_IDs {$_} = 1), @Files);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X grep ((s/^df//) && ($Data_IDs {$_} = 1), @Files);
|
|
X grep ((s/^qf//) && ($Control_IDs {$_} = 1), @Files);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Find missing control and data files and remove them from the lists of each
|
|
X @Missing_Control_IDs = sort (grep ((! $Control_IDs {$_}) && (delete $Data_IDs {$_}), keys (%Data_IDs)));
|
|
X @Missing_Data_IDs = sort (grep ((! $Data_IDs {$_} && (delete $Control_IDs {$_})), keys (%Control_IDs)));
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
X # Return the IDs in an appartently random order
|
|
X return (1, "", keys (%Control_IDs));
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Parse_Control_File
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Will pase a sendmail queue control file for useful information. See the
|
|
;# Sendmail Installtion and Operation Guide (SMM:07) for a complete
|
|
;# explanation of each field.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# The following globbed variables are set (or cleared) by this function:
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Sender The sender's address.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# @Recipients One or more addresses for the recipient of the mail.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# @Errors_To One or more addresses for addresses to which mail
|
|
;# delivery errors should be sent.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Creation_Time The job creation time in time(3) format. That is,
|
|
;# seconds since 00:00:00 GMT 1/1/70.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Priority An integer representing the current message priority.
|
|
;# This is used to order the queue. Higher numbers mean
|
|
;# lower priorities.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Status_Message The status of the mail message. It can contain any
|
|
;# text.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# @Headers Message headers unparsed but in their original order.
|
|
;# Headers that span multiple lines are not mucked with,
|
|
;# embedded \ns will be evident.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# In all e-mail addresses bounding <> pairs are stripped.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If everything went AOK then $Status is 1. If the message with queue ID
|
|
;# $Queue_ID just does not exist anymore -1 is returned. This is very
|
|
;# possible and should be allowed for. Otherwise, $Status is 0 and $Msg
|
|
;# tells what went wrong.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Globals:
|
|
;# None
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Queue, $Queue_ID, *Sender, *Recipients, *Errors_To, *Creation_Time,
|
|
;# *Priority, *Status_Message, *Headers
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Status, $Msg
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Parse_Control_File
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($Queue, $Queue_ID, *Sender, *Recipients, *Errors_To, *Creation_Time,
|
|
X *Priority, *Status_Message, *Headers) = @_;
|
|
X local (*Control, $_, $Not_Empty);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Required variables and the associated control. If empty at the end of
|
|
X # parsing we return a bad status.
|
|
X @REQUIRED_INFO = ('$Creation_Time', 'T', '$Sender', 'S', '@Recipients', 'R',
|
|
X '$Priority', 'P');
|
|
X
|
|
X # Open up the control file for read
|
|
X $Control = "$Queue/qf$Queue_ID";
|
|
X if (! open (Control))
|
|
X {
|
|
X return (-1) if ((-x $Queue) && (! -f "$Queue/qf$Queue_ID") &&
|
|
X (! -f "$Queue/df$Queue_ID"));
|
|
X return (0, "error opening $Control for read: $!");
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Reset the globbed variables just in case
|
|
X $Sender = $Creation_Time = $Priority = $Status_Message = "";
|
|
X @Recipients = @Errors_To = @Headers = ();
|
|
X
|
|
X # Look for a few things in the control file
|
|
X READ: while (<Control>)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Not_Empty = 1;
|
|
X chop;
|
|
X
|
|
X PARSE:
|
|
X {
|
|
X if (/^T(\d+)$/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Creation_Time = $1;
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^S(<)?([^>]+)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Sender = $2;
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^R(<)?([^>]+)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@Recipients, $2);
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^E(<)?([^>]+)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@Errors_To, $2);
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^M(.*)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Status_Message = $1;
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^P(\d+)$/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Priority = $1;
|
|
X }
|
|
X elsif (/^H(.*)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Header = $1;
|
|
X while (<Control>)
|
|
X {
|
|
X chop;
|
|
X last if (/^[A-Z]/);
|
|
X $Header .= "\n$_";
|
|
X };
|
|
X push (@Headers, $Header);
|
|
X redo PARSE if ($_);
|
|
X last if (eof);
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # If the file was empty scream bloody murder
|
|
X return (0, "empty control file") if (! $Not_Empty);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Yell if we could not find a required field
|
|
X while (($Var, $Control) = splice (@REQUIRED_INFO, 0, 2))
|
|
X {
|
|
X eval "return (0, 'required control field $Control not found')
|
|
X if (! $Var)";
|
|
X return (0, "error checking \$Var: $@") if ($@);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Everything went AOK
|
|
X return (1);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/mqueue.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/mqueue.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/mqueue.pl'`"
|
|
test 6908 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/mqueue.pl: original size 6908, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/newgetopts.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/newgetopts.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/newgetopts.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/newgetopts.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/newgetopts.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# newgetopts.pl - a better newgetopt (which is a better getopts which is
|
|
;# a better getopt ;-)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Mike Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/newgetopts.pl,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:07:19 mmuegel Exp
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# New_Getopts
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Does not care about order of switches, options, and arguments like
|
|
;# getopts.pl. Thus all non-switches/options will be kept in ARGV even if they
|
|
;# are not at the end. If $Pass_Invalid is set all unkown options will be
|
|
;# passed back to the caller by keeping them in @ARGV. This is useful when
|
|
;# parsing a command line for your script while ignoring options that you
|
|
;# may pass to another script. If this is set New_Getopts tries to maintain
|
|
;# the switch clustering on the unkown switches.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Accepts the special argument -usage to print the Usage string. Also accepts
|
|
;# the special option -version which prints the contents of the string
|
|
;# $VERSION. $VERSION may or may not have an embeded \n in it. If -usage
|
|
;# or -version are specified a status of -1 is returned. Note that the usage
|
|
;# option is only accepted if the usage string is not null.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Switches is just like the formal arguemnt of getopts.pl. $Usage is a usage
|
|
;# string with or without a trailing \n. *Switch_To_Order is an optional
|
|
;# pointer to the name of an associative array which will contain a mapping of
|
|
;# switch names to the order in which (if at all) the argument was entered.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# For example, if @ARGV contains -v, -x, test:
|
|
;#
|
|
;# $Switch_To_Order {"v"} = 1;
|
|
;# $Switch_To_Order {"x"} = 2;
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Note that in the case of multiple occurances of an option $Switch_To_Order
|
|
;# will store each occurance of the argument via a string that emulates
|
|
;# an array. This is done by using join ($;, ...). You can retrieve the
|
|
;# array by using split (/$;/, ...).
|
|
;#
|
|
;# *Split_ARGV is an optional pointer to an array which will conatin the
|
|
;# original switches along with their values. For the example used above
|
|
;# Split_ARGV would contain:
|
|
;#
|
|
;# @Split_ARGV = ("v", "", "x", "test");
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Another exciting ;-) feature that newgetopts has. Along with creating the
|
|
;# normal $opt_ scalars for the last value of an argument the list @opt_ is
|
|
;# created. It is an array which contains all the values of arguments to the
|
|
;# basename of the variable. They are stored in the order which they occured
|
|
;# on the command line starting with $[. Note that blank arguments are stored
|
|
;# as "". Along with providing support for multiple options on the command
|
|
;# line this also provides a method of counting the number of times an option
|
|
;# was specified via $#opt_.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Automatically resets all $opt_, @opt_, %Switch_To_Order, and @Split_ARGV
|
|
;# variables so that New_Getopts may be called more than once from within
|
|
;# the same program. Thus, if $opt_v is set upon entry to New_Getopts and
|
|
;# -v is not in @ARGV $opt_v will not be set upon exit.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Switches, $Usage, $Pass_Invalid, *Switch_To_Order, *Split_ARGV
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# -1, 0, or 1 depending on status (printed Usage/Version, OK, not OK)
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub New_Getopts
|
|
{
|
|
X local($taint_argumentative, $Usage, $Pass_Invalid, *Switch_To_Order,
|
|
X *Split_ARGV) = @_;
|
|
X local(@args,$_,$first,$rest,$errs, @leftovers, @current_leftovers,
|
|
X %Switch_Found);
|
|
X local($[, $*, $Script_Name, $argumentative);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Untaint the argument cluster so that we can use this with taintperl
|
|
X $taint_argumentative =~ /^(.*)$/;
|
|
X $argumentative = $1;
|
|
X
|
|
X # Clear anything that might still be set from a previous New_Getopts
|
|
X # call.
|
|
X @Split_ARGV = ();
|
|
X
|
|
X # Get the basename of the calling script
|
|
X ($Script_Name = $0) =~ s/.*\///;
|
|
X
|
|
X # Make Usage have a trailing \n
|
|
X $Usage .= "\n" if ($Usage !~ /\n$/);
|
|
X
|
|
X @args = split( / */, $argumentative );
|
|
X
|
|
X # Clear anything that might still be set from a previous New_Getopts call.
|
|
X foreach $first (@args)
|
|
X {
|
|
X next if ($first eq ":");
|
|
X delete $Switch_Found {$first};
|
|
X delete $Switch_To_Order {$first};
|
|
X eval "undef \@opt_$first; undef \$opt_$first;";
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X while (@ARGV)
|
|
X {
|
|
X # Let usage through
|
|
X if (($ARGV[0] eq "-usage") && ($Usage ne "\n"))
|
|
X {
|
|
X print $Usage;
|
|
X exit (-1);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X elsif ($ARGV[0] eq "-version")
|
|
X {
|
|
X if ($VERSION)
|
|
X {
|
|
X print $VERSION;
|
|
X print "\n" if ($VERSION !~ /\n$/);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X warn "${Script_Name}: no version information available, sorry\n";
|
|
X }
|
|
X exit (-1);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X elsif (($_ = $ARGV[0]) =~ /^-(.)(.*)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X ($first,$rest) = ($1,$2);
|
|
X $pos = index($argumentative,$first);
|
|
X
|
|
X $Switch_To_Order {$first} = join ($;, split (/$;/, $Switch_To_Order {$first}), ++$Order);
|
|
X
|
|
X if($pos >= $[)
|
|
X {
|
|
X if($args[$pos+1] eq ':')
|
|
X {
|
|
X shift(@ARGV);
|
|
X if($rest eq '')
|
|
X {
|
|
X $rest = shift(@ARGV);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X eval "\$opt_$first = \$rest;";
|
|
X eval "push (\@opt_$first, \$rest);";
|
|
X push (@Split_ARGV, $first, $rest);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X eval "\$opt_$first = 1";
|
|
X eval "push (\@opt_$first, '');";
|
|
X push (@Split_ARGV, $first, "");
|
|
X
|
|
X if($rest eq '')
|
|
X {
|
|
X shift(@ARGV);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $ARGV[0] = "-$rest";
|
|
X }
|
|
X }
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X # Save any other switches if $Pass_Valid
|
|
X if ($Pass_Invalid)
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@current_leftovers, $first);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X warn "${Script_Name}: unknown option: $first\n";
|
|
X ++$errs;
|
|
X };
|
|
X if($rest ne '')
|
|
X {
|
|
X $ARGV[0] = "-$rest";
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X shift(@ARGV);
|
|
X }
|
|
X }
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@leftovers, shift (@ARGV));
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Save any other switches if $Pass_Valid
|
|
X if ((@current_leftovers) && ($rest eq ''))
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@leftovers, "-" . join ("", @current_leftovers));
|
|
X @current_leftovers = ();
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Automatically print Usage if a warning was given
|
|
X @ARGV = @leftovers;
|
|
X if ($errs != 0)
|
|
X {
|
|
X warn $Usage;
|
|
X return (0);
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X return (1);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/newgetopts.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/newgetopts.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/newgetopts.pl'`"
|
|
test 7024 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/newgetopts.pl: original size 7024, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/strings1.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/strings1.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/strings1.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/strings1.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/strings1.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# strings1.pl - FUN with strings #1
|
|
;#
|
|
;# NOTES
|
|
;# I wrote Format_Text_Block when I just started programming Perl so
|
|
;# it is probably not very Perlish code. Center is more like it :-).
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/strings1.pl,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:07:19 mmuegel Exp
|
|
X
|
|
package strings1;
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################;# Center
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Center $Text assuming the output should be $Columns wide. $Text can span
|
|
;# multiple lines, of course :-). Lines within $Text that contain only
|
|
;# whitespace are not centered and are instead collapsed. This may save time
|
|
;# when printing them later.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Text, $Columns
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Centered_Text
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Center
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($_, $Columns) = @_;
|
|
X local ($*) = 1;
|
|
X
|
|
X s@^(.*)$@" " x (($Columns - length ($1)) / 2) . $1@eg;
|
|
X s/^[\t ]*$//g;
|
|
X return ($_);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Format_Text_Block
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Formats a text string to be printed to the display or other similar device.
|
|
;# Text in $String will be fomratted such that the following hold:
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + $String contains the (possibly) multi-line text to print. It is
|
|
;# automatically word-wrapped to fit in $Columns.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + \n'd are maintained and are not folded.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + $Offset is pre-pended before each separate line of text.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + If $Offset_Once is $TRUE $Offset will only appear on the first line.
|
|
;# All other lines will be indented to match the amount of whitespace of
|
|
;# $Offset.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + If $Bullet_Indent is $TRUE $Offset will only be applied to the begining
|
|
;# of lines as they occured in the original $String. Lines that are created
|
|
;# by this routine will always be indented by blank spaces.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + If $Columns is 0 no word-wrap is done. This might be useful to still
|
|
;# to offset each line in a buffer.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + If $Split_Expr is supplied the string is split on it. If not supplied
|
|
;# the string is split on " \t\/\-\,\." by default.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# + If $Offset_Blank is $TRUE then empty lines will have $Offset pre-pended
|
|
;# to them. Otherwise, they will still empty.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# This is a realy workhorse routine that I use in many places because of its
|
|
;# veratility.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $String, $Offset, $Offset_Once, $Bullet_Indent, $Columns, $Split_Expr,
|
|
;# $Offset_Blank
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Buffer
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Format_Text_Block
|
|
{
|
|
X local ($String, $Real_Offset, $Offset_Once, $Bullet_Indent, $Columns,
|
|
X $Split_Expr, $Offset_Blank) = @_;
|
|
X
|
|
X local ($New_Line, $Line, $Chars_Per_Line, $Space_Offset, $Buffer,
|
|
X $Next_New_Line, $Num_Lines, $Num_Offsets, $Offset);
|
|
X local ($*) = 0;
|
|
X local ($BLANK_TAG) = "__FORMAT_BLANK__";
|
|
X local ($Blank_Offset) = $Real_Offset if ($Offset_Blank);
|
|
X
|
|
X # What should we split on?
|
|
X $Split_Expr = " \\t\\/\\-\\,\\." if (! $Split_Expr);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Pre-process the string - convert blank lines to __FORMAT_BLANK__ sequence
|
|
X $String =~ s/\n\n/\n$BLANK_TAG\n/g;
|
|
X $String =~ s/^\n/$BLANK_TAG\n/g;
|
|
X $String =~ s/\n$/\n$BLANK_TAG/g;
|
|
X
|
|
X # If bad $Columns/$Offset combo or no $Columns make a VERRRYYY wide $Column
|
|
X $Offset = $Real_Offset;
|
|
X $Chars_Per_Line = 16000 if (($Chars_Per_Line = $Columns - length ($Offset)) <= 0);
|
|
X $Space_Offset = " " x length ($Offset);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Get a buffer
|
|
X foreach $Line (split ("\n", $String))
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Offset = $Real_Offset if ($Bullet_Indent);
|
|
X
|
|
X # Find where to split the line
|
|
X if ($Line ne $BLANK_TAG)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $New_Line = "";
|
|
X while ($Line =~ /^([$Split_Expr]*)([^$Split_Expr]+)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X if (length ("$New_Line$&") >= $Chars_Per_Line)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Next_New_Line = $+;
|
|
X $New_Line = "$Offset$New_Line$1";
|
|
X $Buffer .= "\n" if ($Num_Lines++);
|
|
X $Buffer .= $New_Line;
|
|
X $Offset = $Space_Offset if (($Offset) && ($Offset_Once));
|
|
X $New_Line = $Next_New_Line;
|
|
X ++$Num_Lines;
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $New_Line .= $&;
|
|
X };
|
|
X $Line = $';
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X $Buffer .= "\n" if ($Num_Lines++);
|
|
X $Buffer .= "$Offset$New_Line$Line";
|
|
X $Offset = $Space_Offset if (($Offset) && ($Offset_Once));
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Buffer .= "\n$Blank_Offset";
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X return ($Buffer);
|
|
X
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/strings1.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/strings1.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/strings1.pl'`"
|
|
test 4687 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/strings1.pl: original size 4687, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= libs/timespec.pl ==============
|
|
if test -f 'libs/timespec.pl' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping libs/timespec.pl (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting libs/timespec.pl (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'libs/timespec.pl' &&
|
|
;# NAME
|
|
;# timespec.pl - convert a pre-defined time specifyer to seconds
|
|
;#
|
|
;# AUTHOR
|
|
;# Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
;#
|
|
;# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
;# mmuegel
|
|
;# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/libs/timespec.pl,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:07:19 mmuegel Exp
|
|
X
|
|
package timespec;
|
|
X
|
|
%TIME_SPEC_TO_SECONDS = ("s", 1,
|
|
X "m", 60,
|
|
X "h", 60 * 60,
|
|
X "d", 60 * 60 * 24
|
|
X );
|
|
X
|
|
$VALID_TIME_SPEC_EXPR = "[" . join ("", keys (%TIME_SPEC_TO_SECONDS)) . "]";
|
|
X
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
;# Time_Spec_To_Seconds
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Converts a string of the form:
|
|
;#
|
|
;# (<number>(s|m|h|d))+
|
|
;#
|
|
;# to seconds. The second part of the time spec specifies seconds, minutes,
|
|
;# hours, or days, respectfully. The first part is the number of those untis.
|
|
;# There can be any number of such specifiers. As an example, 1h30m means 1
|
|
;# hour and 30 minutes.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# If the parsing went OK then $Status is 1, $Msg is undefined, and $Seconds
|
|
;# is $Time_Spec converted to seconds. If something went wrong then $Status
|
|
;# is 0 and $Msg explains what went wrong.
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Arguments:
|
|
;# $Time_Spec
|
|
;#
|
|
;# Returns:
|
|
;# $Status, $Msg, $Seconds
|
|
;###############################################################################
|
|
sub main'Time_Spec_To_Seconds
|
|
{
|
|
X $Time_Spec = $_[0];
|
|
X
|
|
X $Seconds = 0;
|
|
X while ($Time_Spec =~ /^(\d+)($VALID_TIME_SPEC_EXPR)/)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Seconds += $1 * $TIME_SPEC_TO_SECONDS {$2};
|
|
X $Time_Spec = $';
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X return (0, "error parsing time spec: $Time_Spec") if ($Time_Spec ne "");
|
|
X return (1, "", $Seconds);
|
|
X
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
1;
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 libs/timespec.pl ||
|
|
echo 'restore of libs/timespec.pl failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'libs/timespec.pl'`"
|
|
test 1609 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'libs/timespec.pl: original size 1609, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= man/cqueue.1 ==============
|
|
if test ! -d 'man'; then
|
|
echo 'x - creating directory man'
|
|
mkdir 'man'
|
|
fi
|
|
if test -f 'man/cqueue.1' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping man/cqueue.1 (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting man/cqueue.1 (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'man/cqueue.1' &&
|
|
.TH CQUEUE 1L
|
|
\"
|
|
\" mmuegel
|
|
\" /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/man/cqueue.1,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:08:25 mmuegel Exp
|
|
\"
|
|
.ds mp \fBcqueue\fR
|
|
.de IB
|
|
.IP \(bu 2
|
|
..
|
|
.SH NAME
|
|
\*(mp - check sendmail queue for problems
|
|
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
|
.IP \*(mp 7
|
|
[ \fB-abdms\fR ] [ \fB-q\fR \fIqueue-dir\fI ] [ \fB-t\fR \fItime\fR ]
|
|
[ \fB-u\fR \fIusers\fR ] [ \fB-w\fR \fIwidth\fR ]
|
|
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
|
Reports on problems in the sendmail queue. With no options this simply
|
|
means listing messages that have been in the queue longer than a default
|
|
period along with a summary of queue mail by host and status message.
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
.IP \fB-a\fR 14
|
|
Report on all messages in the queue. This is equivalent to saying \fB-t\fR 0s.
|
|
You may like this command so much that you use it as a replacement for
|
|
\fBmqueue\fR. For example:
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
.RS
|
|
.RS
|
|
\fBalias mqueue cqueue -a\fR
|
|
.RE
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP \fB-b\fR 14
|
|
Also report on bogus queue files. Those are files that
|
|
have data files and no control files or vice versa.
|
|
.IP \fB-d\fR
|
|
Print a detailed report of mail messages that have been queued longer than
|
|
the specified or default time. Information that is presented includes:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IB
|
|
Sendmail queue identifier.
|
|
.IB
|
|
Date the message was first queued.
|
|
.IB
|
|
Sender of the message.
|
|
.IB
|
|
One or more recipients of the message.
|
|
.IB
|
|
An optional status of the message. This usually indicates why the message
|
|
has not been delivered.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP \fB-m\fR 14
|
|
Mail off the results if any problems were found.
|
|
Normaly results are printed to stdout. If this option
|
|
is specified they are mailed to one or more users. Results
|
|
are not printed to stdout in this case. Results are \fBonly\fR
|
|
mailed if \*(mp found something wrong.
|
|
.IP "\fB-q\fR \fIqueue-dir\fI"
|
|
The sendmail mail queue directory. Default is \fB/usr/spool/mqueue\fR or
|
|
some other site configured value.
|
|
.IP "\fB-t\fR \fItime\fR"
|
|
List messages that have been in the queue longer than
|
|
\fItime\fR. Time should of the form:
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
.RS
|
|
.RS
|
|
(<number>(s|m|h|d))+
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
.RE
|
|
.RE
|
|
.RS 14
|
|
The second portion of the above definition
|
|
specifies seconds, minutes, hours, or
|
|
days, respectfully. The first portion is the number of
|
|
those units. There can be any number of such specifiers.
|
|
As an example, 1h30m means 1 hour and 30 minutes.
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
The default is 2 hours.
|
|
.RE
|
|
.IP \fB-s\fR 14
|
|
Print a summary of messages that have been queued longer than
|
|
the specified or default time. Two separate types of summaries are printed.
|
|
The first summarizes the queue messages by destination host. The host name
|
|
is gleaned from the recipient addresses for each message.
|
|
Thus the actual host names for this summary should be taken with a grain
|
|
of salt since ruleset 0 has not been applied to the address the host was
|
|
taken from nor were MX records consulted. It would be possible to add
|
|
this; however, the execution time of the script would increase
|
|
dramatically. The second summary is by status message.
|
|
.IP "\fB-u\fR \fIusers\fR"
|
|
Specify list of users to send a mail report to other than
|
|
the invoker. This option is only valid when \fB-m\fR has been
|
|
specified. Multiple recipients may be separated by spaces.
|
|
.IP "\fB-w\fR \fIwidth\fR"
|
|
Specify the page width to which the output should tailored. \fIwidth\fR
|
|
should be an integer representing some character position. The default is
|
|
80 or some other site configured value. Output is folded neatly to match
|
|
\fIwidth\fR.
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
.nf
|
|
% \fBdate\fR
|
|
Tue Jan 19 12:07:20 CST 1993
|
|
X
|
|
% \fBcqueue -t 21h45m -w 70\fR
|
|
X
|
|
Summary of messages in queue longer than 21:45:00 by destination
|
|
host:
|
|
X
|
|
X Number of
|
|
X Messages Destination Host
|
|
X --------- ----------------
|
|
X 2 cigseg.rtsg.mot.com
|
|
X 1 mnesouth.corp.mot.com
|
|
X ---------
|
|
X 3
|
|
X
|
|
Summary of messages in queue longer than 21:45:00 by status message:
|
|
X
|
|
X Number of
|
|
X Messages Status Message
|
|
X --------- --------------
|
|
X 1 Deferred: Connection refused by mnesouth.corp.mot.com
|
|
X 2 Deferred: Host Name Lookup Failure
|
|
X ---------
|
|
X 3
|
|
X
|
|
Detail of messages in queue longer than 21:45:00 sorted by creation
|
|
date:
|
|
X
|
|
X ID: AA20573
|
|
X Date: 02:09:27 PM 01/18/93
|
|
X Sender: melrose-place-owner@ferkel.ucsb.edu
|
|
X Recipient: pbaker@cigseg.rtsg.mot.com
|
|
X Status: Deferred: Host Name Lookup Failure
|
|
X
|
|
X ID: AA20757
|
|
X Date: 02:11:30 PM 01/18/93
|
|
X Sender: 90210-owner@ferkel.ucsb.edu
|
|
X Recipient: pbaker@cigseg.rtsg.mot.com
|
|
X Status: Deferred: Host Name Lookup Failure
|
|
X
|
|
X ID: AA21110
|
|
X Date: 02:17:01 PM 01/18/93
|
|
X Sender: rd_lap_wg@mdd.comm.mot.com
|
|
X Recipient: jim_mathis@mnesouth.corp.mot.com
|
|
X Status: Deferred: Connection refused by mnesouth.corp.mot.com
|
|
.fi
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
.nf
|
|
Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
UNIX Applications Startup Group
|
|
Corporate Information Office, Schaumburg, IL
|
|
Motorola, Inc.
|
|
.fi
|
|
.SH COPYRIGHT NOTICE
|
|
Copyright 1993, Motorola, Inc.
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute without charge this
|
|
software, documentation, etc. is granted, provided that this
|
|
comment and the author's name is retained. The author nor Motorola assume any
|
|
responsibility for problems resulting from the use of this software.
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.nf
|
|
\fBsendmail(8)\fR
|
|
\fISendmail Installation and Operation Guide\fR.
|
|
.fi
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 man/cqueue.1 ||
|
|
echo 'restore of man/cqueue.1 failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'man/cqueue.1'`"
|
|
test 5212 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'man/cqueue.1: original size 5212, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= man/postclip.1 ==============
|
|
if test -f 'man/postclip.1' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping man/postclip.1 (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting man/postclip.1 (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'man/postclip.1' &&
|
|
.TH POSTCLIP 1L
|
|
\"
|
|
\" mmuegel
|
|
\" /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/man/postclip.1,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:08:25 mmuegel Exp
|
|
\"
|
|
.ds mp \fBpostclip\fR
|
|
.SH NAME
|
|
\*(mp - send only the headers to Postmaster
|
|
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
|
\*(mp [ \fB-v\fR ] [ \fIto\fR ... ]
|
|
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
|
\*(mp will forward non-delivery reports to a postmaster after deleting the body
|
|
of the message. This keeps bounced mail private and helps to avoid disk space problems. \*(mp tries its best to keep as much of the header trail as possible.
|
|
Hopefully only the original body of the message will be filtered. Only messages
|
|
that have a subject that begins with 'Returned mail:' are filtered. This
|
|
ensures that other mail is not accidently mucked with. Finally, note that
|
|
\fBsendmail\fR is used to deliver the message after it has been (possibly)
|
|
filtered. All of the original headers will remain intact.
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
You can use this with any \fBsendmail\fR by modifying the Postmaster alias.
|
|
If you use IDA \fBsendmail\fR you could add the following to <machine>.m4:
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
.RS
|
|
define(POSTMASTERBOUNCE, mailer-errors)
|
|
.RE
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
In the aliases file, add a line similar to the following:
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
.RS
|
|
mailer-errors: "|/usr/local/bin/postclip postmaster"
|
|
.RE
|
|
.SH OPTIONS
|
|
.IP \fB-v\fR
|
|
Be verbose about delivery. Probably only useful when debugging \*(mp.
|
|
.IP \fIto\fR
|
|
A list of one or more e-mail ids to send the modified
|
|
Postmaster messages to. If none are specified postmaster
|
|
is used.
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
.nf
|
|
Michael S. Muegel (mmuegel@mot.com)
|
|
UNIX Applications Startup Group
|
|
Corporate Information Office, Schaumburg, IL
|
|
Motorola, Inc.
|
|
.fi
|
|
.SH CREDITS
|
|
The original idea to filter Postmaster mail was taken from a script by
|
|
Christopher Davis <ckd@eff.org>.
|
|
.SH COPYRIGHT NOTICE
|
|
Copyright 1992, Motorola, Inc.
|
|
.sp 1
|
|
Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute without charge this
|
|
software, documentation, etc. is granted, provided that this
|
|
comment and the author's name is retained. The author nor Motorola assume any
|
|
responsibility for problems resulting from the use of this software.
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.nf
|
|
\fBsendmail(8)\fR
|
|
.fi
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0444 man/postclip.1 ||
|
|
echo 'restore of man/postclip.1 failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'man/postclip.1'`"
|
|
test 2078 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'man/postclip.1: original size 2078, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= src/cqueue ==============
|
|
if test ! -d 'src'; then
|
|
echo 'x - creating directory src'
|
|
mkdir 'src'
|
|
fi
|
|
if test -f 'src/cqueue' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping src/cqueue (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting src/cqueue (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'src/cqueue' &&
|
|
#!/usr/local/ustart/bin/suidperl
|
|
X
|
|
# NAME
|
|
# cqueue - check sendmail queue for problems
|
|
#
|
|
# SYNOPSIS
|
|
# Type cqueue -usage
|
|
#
|
|
# AUTHOR
|
|
# Michael S. Muegel <mmuegel@mot.com>
|
|
#
|
|
# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
# mmuegel
|
|
# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/src/cqueue,v 1.1 1993/07/28 08:09:02 mmuegel Exp
|
|
X
|
|
# So that date.pl does not yell (Domain/OS version does a ``)
|
|
$ENV{'PATH'} = "";
|
|
X
|
|
# A better getopts routine
|
|
require "newgetopts.pl";
|
|
require "timespec.pl";
|
|
require "mail.pl";
|
|
require "date.pl";
|
|
require "mqueue.pl";
|
|
require "strings1.pl";
|
|
require "elapsed.pl";
|
|
X
|
|
($Script_Name = $0) =~ s/.*\///;
|
|
X
|
|
# Some defaults you may want to change
|
|
$DEF_TIME = "2h";
|
|
$DEF_QUEUE = "/usr/spool/mqueue";
|
|
$DEF_COLUMNS = 80;
|
|
$DATE_FORMAT = "%r %D";
|
|
X
|
|
# Constants that probably should not be changed
|
|
$USAGE = "Usage: $Script_Name [ -abdms ] [ -q queue-dir ] [ -t time ] [ -u user ] [ -w width ]\n";
|
|
$VERSION = "${Script_Name} by mmuegel; 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:09:02";
|
|
$SWITCHES = "abdmst:u:q:w:";
|
|
$SPLIT_EXPR = '\s,\.@!%:';
|
|
$ADDR_PART_EXPR = '[^!@%]+';
|
|
X
|
|
# Let getopts parse for switches
|
|
$Status = &New_Getopts ($SWITCHES, $USAGE);
|
|
exit (0) if ($Status == -1);
|
|
exit (1) if (! $Status);
|
|
X
|
|
# Check args
|
|
die "${Script_Name}: -u only valid with -m\n" if (($opt_u) && (! $opt_m));
|
|
die "${Script_Name}: -a not valid with -t option\n" if ($opt_a && $opt_t);
|
|
$opt_u = getlogin || (getpwuid ($<))[0] || $ENV{"USER"} || die "${Script_Name}: can not determine who you are!\n" if (! $opt_u);
|
|
X
|
|
# Set defaults
|
|
$opt_t = "0s" if ($opt_a);
|
|
$opt_t = $DEF_TIME if ($opt_t eq "");
|
|
$opt_w = $DEF_COLUMNS if ($opt_w eq "");
|
|
$opt_q = $DEF_QUEUE if ($opt_q eq "");
|
|
$opt_s = $opt_d = 1 if (! ($opt_s || $opt_d));
|
|
X
|
|
# Untaint the users to mail to
|
|
$opt_u =~ /^(.*)$/;
|
|
$Users = $1;
|
|
X
|
|
# Convert time option to seconds and seconds to elapsed form
|
|
die "${Script_Name}: $Msg\n" if (! (($Status, $Msg, $Seconds) = &Time_Spec_To_Seconds ($opt_t))[0]);
|
|
$Elapsed = &Seconds_To_Elapsed ($Seconds, 1);
|
|
$Time_Info = " longer than $Elapsed" if ($Seconds);
|
|
X
|
|
# Get the current time
|
|
$Current_Time = time;
|
|
$Current_Date = &date ($Current_Time, $DATE_FORMAT);
|
|
X
|
|
($Status, $Msg, @Queue_IDs) = &Get_Queue_IDs ($opt_q, 1, @Missing_Control_IDs,
|
|
X @Missing_Data_IDs);
|
|
die "$Script_Name: $Msg\n" if (! $Status);
|
|
X
|
|
# Yell about missing data/control files?
|
|
if ($opt_b)
|
|
{
|
|
X
|
|
X $Report = "\nMessages missing control files:\n\n " .
|
|
X join ("\n ", @Missing_Control_IDs) .
|
|
X "\n"
|
|
X if (@Missing_Control_IDs);
|
|
X
|
|
X $Report .= "\nMessages missing data files:\n\n " .
|
|
X join ("\n ", @Missing_Data_IDs) .
|
|
X "\n"
|
|
X if (@Missing_Data_IDs);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# See if any mail messages are older than $Seconds
|
|
foreach $Queue_ID (@Queue_IDs)
|
|
{
|
|
X # Get lots of info about this sendmail message via the control file
|
|
X ($Status, $Msg) = &Parse_Control_File ($opt_q, $Queue_ID, *Sender,
|
|
X *Recipients, *Errors_To, *Creation_Time, *Priority, *Status_Message,
|
|
X *Headers);
|
|
X next if ($Status == -1);
|
|
X if (! $Status)
|
|
X {
|
|
X warn "$Script_Name: $Queue_ID: $Msg\n";
|
|
X next;
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Report on message if it is older than $Seconds
|
|
X if ($Current_Time - $Creation_Time >= $Seconds)
|
|
X {
|
|
X # Build summary by host information. Keep track of each host destination
|
|
X # encountered.
|
|
X if ($opt_s)
|
|
X {
|
|
X %Host_Map = ();
|
|
X foreach (@Recipients)
|
|
X {
|
|
X if ((/@($ADDR_PART_EXPR)$/) || (/($ADDR_PART_EXPR)!$ADDR_PART_EXPR$/))
|
|
X {
|
|
X ($Host = $1) =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/;
|
|
X $Host_Map {$Host} = 1;
|
|
X }
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X warn "$Script_Name: could not find host part from $_; contact author\n";
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # For each unique target host add to its stats
|
|
X grep ($Host_Queued {$_}++, keys (%Host_Map));
|
|
X
|
|
X # Build summary by message information.
|
|
X $Message_Queued {$Status_Message}++ if ($Status_Message);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Build long report information for this creation time (there may be
|
|
X # more than one message created at the same time)
|
|
X if ($opt_d)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Creation_Date = &date ($Creation_Time, $DATE_FORMAT);
|
|
X $Recipient_Info = &Format_Text_Block (join (", ", @Recipients),
|
|
X " Recipient: ", 1, 0, $opt_w, $SPLIT_EXPR);
|
|
X $Time_To_Report {$Creation_Time} .= <<"EOS";
|
|
X
|
|
X ID: $Queue_ID
|
|
X Date: $Creation_Date
|
|
X Sender: $Sender
|
|
$Recipient_Info
|
|
EOS
|
|
X
|
|
X # Add the status message if available to long report
|
|
X if ($Status_Message)
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Time_To_Report {$Creation_Time} .= &Format_Text_Block ($Status_Message,
|
|
X " Status: ", 1, 0, $opt_w, $SPLIT_EXPR) . "\n";
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Add the summary report by target host?
|
|
if ($opt_s)
|
|
{
|
|
X foreach $Host (sort (keys (%Host_Queued)))
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Host_Report .= &Format_Text_Block ($Host,
|
|
X sprintf (" %-9d ", $Host_Queued{$Host}), 1, 0, $opt_w,
|
|
X $SPLIT_EXPR) . "\n";
|
|
X $Num_Hosts += $Host_Queued{$Host};
|
|
X };
|
|
X if ($Host_Report)
|
|
X {
|
|
X chop ($Host_Report);
|
|
X $Report .= &Format_Text_Block("\nSummary of messages in queue$Time_Info by destination host:\n", "", 0, 0, $opt_w);
|
|
X
|
|
X $Report .= <<"EOS";
|
|
X
|
|
X Number of
|
|
X Messages Destination Host
|
|
X --------- ----------------
|
|
$Host_Report
|
|
X ---------
|
|
X $Num_Hosts
|
|
EOS
|
|
X };
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Add the summary by message report?
|
|
if ($opt_s)
|
|
{
|
|
X foreach $Message (sort (keys (%Message_Queued)))
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Message_Report .= &Format_Text_Block ($Message,
|
|
X sprintf (" %-9d ", $Message_Queued{$Message}), 1, 0, $opt_w,
|
|
X $SPLIT_EXPR) . "\n";
|
|
X $Num_Messages += $Message_Queued{$Message};
|
|
X };
|
|
X if ($Message_Report)
|
|
X {
|
|
X chop ($Message_Report);
|
|
X $Report .= &Format_Text_Block ("\nSummary of messages in queue$Time_Info by status message:\n", "", 0, 0, $opt_w);
|
|
X
|
|
X $Report .= <<"EOS";
|
|
X
|
|
X Number of
|
|
X Messages Status Message
|
|
X --------- --------------
|
|
$Message_Report
|
|
X ---------
|
|
X $Num_Messages
|
|
EOS
|
|
X };
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Add the detailed message reports?
|
|
if ($opt_d)
|
|
{
|
|
X foreach $Time (sort { $a <=> $b} (keys (%Time_To_Report)))
|
|
X {
|
|
X $Report .= &Format_Text_Block ("\nDetail of messages in queue$Time_Info sorted by creation date:\n","", 0, 0, $opt_w) if (! $Detailed_Header++);
|
|
X $Report .= $Time_To_Report {$Time};
|
|
X };
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Now mail or print the report
|
|
if ($Report)
|
|
{
|
|
X $Report .= "\n";
|
|
X if ($opt_m)
|
|
X {
|
|
X ($Status, $Msg) = &Send_Mail ($Users, "sendmail queue report for $Current_Date", $Report, 0);
|
|
X die "${Script_Name}: $Msg" if (! $Status);
|
|
X }
|
|
X
|
|
X else
|
|
X {
|
|
X print $Report;
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# I am outta here...
|
|
exit (0);
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0555 src/cqueue ||
|
|
echo 'restore of src/cqueue failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'src/cqueue'`"
|
|
test 6647 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'src/cqueue: original size 6647, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
# ============= src/postclip ==============
|
|
if test -f 'src/postclip' -a X"$1" != X"-c"; then
|
|
echo 'x - skipping src/postclip (File already exists)'
|
|
else
|
|
echo 'x - extracting src/postclip (Text)'
|
|
sed 's/^X//' << 'SHAR_EOF' > 'src/postclip' &&
|
|
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
|
|
X
|
|
# NAME
|
|
# postclip - send only the headers to Postmaster
|
|
#
|
|
# SYNOPSIS
|
|
# postclip [ -v ] [ to ... ]
|
|
#
|
|
# AUTHOR
|
|
# Michael S. Muegel <mmuegel@mot.com>
|
|
#
|
|
# RCS INFORMATION
|
|
# /usr/local/ustart/src/mail-tools/dist/foo/src/postclip,v
|
|
# 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:09:02
|
|
X
|
|
# We use this to send off the mail
|
|
require "newgetopts.pl";
|
|
require "mail.pl";
|
|
X
|
|
# Get the basename of the script
|
|
($Script_Name = $0) =~ s/.*\///;
|
|
X
|
|
# Some famous constants
|
|
$USAGE = "Usage: $Script_Name [ -v ] [ to ... ]\n";
|
|
$VERSION = "${Script_Name} by mmuegel; 1.1 of 1993/07/28 08:09:02";
|
|
$SWITCHES = "v";
|
|
X
|
|
# Let getopts parse for switches
|
|
$Status = &New_Getopts ($SWITCHES, $USAGE);
|
|
exit (0) if ($Status == -1);
|
|
exit (1) if (! $Status);
|
|
X
|
|
# Who should we send the modified mail to?
|
|
@ARGV = ("postmaster") if (! @ARGV);
|
|
$Users = join (" ", @ARGV);
|
|
@ARGV = ();
|
|
X
|
|
# Suck in the original header and save a few interesting lines
|
|
while (<>)
|
|
{
|
|
X $Buffer .= $_ if (! /^From /);
|
|
X $Subject = $1 if (/^Subject:\s+(.*)$/);
|
|
X $From = $1 if (/^From:\s+(.*)$/);
|
|
X last if (/^$/);
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Do not filter the message unless it has a subject and the subject indicates
|
|
# it is an NDN
|
|
if ($Subject && ($Subject =~ /^returned mail/i))
|
|
{
|
|
X # Slurp input by paragraph. Keep track of the last time we saw what
|
|
X # appeared to be NDN text. We keep this.
|
|
X $/ = "\n\n";
|
|
X $* = 1;
|
|
X while (<>)
|
|
X {
|
|
X push (@Paragraphs, $_);
|
|
X $Last_Error_Para = $#Paragraphs
|
|
X if (/unsent message follows/i || /was not delivered because/);
|
|
X };
|
|
X
|
|
X # Now save the NDN text into $Buffer
|
|
X $Buffer .= join ("", @Paragraphs [0..$Last_Error_Para]);
|
|
}
|
|
X
|
|
else
|
|
{
|
|
X undef $/;
|
|
X $Buffer .= <>;
|
|
};
|
|
X
|
|
# Send off the (possibly) modified mail
|
|
($Status, $Msg) = &Send_Mail ($Users, "", $Buffer, 0, $opt_v, 1);
|
|
die "$Script_Name: $Msg\n" if (! $Status);
|
|
SHAR_EOF
|
|
chmod 0555 src/postclip ||
|
|
echo 'restore of src/postclip failed'
|
|
Wc_c="`wc -c < 'src/postclip'`"
|
|
test 1836 -eq "$Wc_c" ||
|
|
echo 'src/postclip: original size 1836, current size' "$Wc_c"
|
|
fi
|
|
exit 0
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
| Michael S. Muegel | Internet E-Mail: mmuegel@mot.com |
|
|
| UNIX Applications Startup Group | Moto Dist E-Mail: X10090 |
|
|
| Corporate Information Office | Voice: (708) 576-0507 |
|
|
| Motorola | Fax: (708) 576-4153 |
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
"I'm disturbed, I'm depressed, I'm inadequate -- I've got it all!"
|
|
-- George from _Seinfeld_
|