Provided by: libsendmail-pmilter-perl_1.00-1_all bug

NAME

       Sendmail::PMilter::Context - per-connection milter context

DESCRIPTION

       A Sendmail::PMilter::Context is the context object passed to milter callback functions as
       the first argument, typically named "$ctx" for convenience.  This manual explains publicly
       accessible operations on $ctx.

METHODS

       $ctx->getpriv
           Returns the private data object for this milter instance, set by $ctx->setpriv() (see
           below).  Returns undef if setpriv has never been called by this milter instance.

       $ctx->getsymval(NAME)
           Retrieves the macro symbol named NAME from the macros available from the MTA for the
           current callback.  This typically consists of a one-letter macro name, or a multi-
           letter macro name enclosed in {curly braces}.  If the requested macro was not defined
           by the MTA ny the time getsymval is called, returns undef.

           Some common macros include the following.  (Since milter is a protocol first
           implemented in the Sendmail MTA, the macro names are the same as those in Sendmail
           itself.)

           $ctx->getsymval('_')
             The remote host name and address, in standard SMTP "name [address]" form.

           $ctx->getsymval('i')
             The MTA's queue ID for the current message.

           $ctx->getsymval('j')
             The MTA's idea of local host name.

           $ctx->getsymval('{if_addr}')
             The local address of the network interface upon which the connection was received.

           $ctx->getsymval('{if_name}')
             The local hostname of the network interface upon which the connection was received.

           $ctx->getsymval('{mail_addr}')
             The MAIL FROM: sender's address, canonicalized and angle bracket stripped.  (This is
             typically not the same value as the second argument to the "envfrom" callback.)
             Will be defined to the empty string '' if the client issued a MAIL FROM:<> null
             return path command.

           $ctx->getsymval('{rcpt_addr}')
             The RCPT TO: recipient's address, canonicalized and angle bracket stripped.  (This
             is typically not the same value as the second argument to the "envrcpt" callback.)

           Not all macros may be available at all times, of course.  Some macros are only
           available after a specific phase is reached, and some macros may only be available
           from certain MTA implementations.  Care should be taken to check for undef returns in
           order to cover these cases.

       $ctx->setpriv(DATA)
           This is the place to store milter-private data that is sensitive to the current SMTP
           client connection.  Only one value can be stored, so typically an arrayref or hashref
           is initialized in the "connect" callback and set with $ctx->setpriv.

           This value can be retrieved on subsequent callback runs with $ctx->getpriv.

       $ctx->setreply(RCODE, XCODE, MESSAGE)
           Set an extended SMTP status reply (before returning SMFIS_REJECT or SMFIS_TEMPFAIL).
           RCODE should be a short (4xx or 5xx) numeric reply code, XCODE should be a long
           ('4.x.x' or '5.x.x') ESMTP reply code, and MESSAGE is the full text of the message to
           send.  Example:

                   $ctx->setreply(451, '4.7.0', 'Cannot authenticate you right now');
                   return SMFIS_TEMPFAIL;

           Note that after setting a reply with this method, the SMTP result code comes from
           RCODE, not the difference between SMFIS_REJECT or SMFIS_TEMPFAIL.  However, for
           consistency, callbacks that set a 4xx response code should use SMFIS_TEMPFAIL, and
           those that set a 5xx code should return SMFIS_REJECT.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.  In the case of failure, typically
           only caused by bad parameters, a generic message will still be sent based on the
           SMFIS_* return code.

       $ctx->shutdown()
           A special case of "$ctx->setreply()" which sets the short numeric reply code to 421
           and the ESMTP code to 4.7.0.  Under Sendmail 8.13 and higher, this will close the
           MTA's communication channel quickly, which should immediately result in a "close"
           callback and end of milter execution.  (However, Sendmail 8.11-8.12 will treat this as
           a regular 4xx error and will continue processing the message.)

           Always returns a true value.

           This method is an extension that is not available in the standard Sendmail::Milter
           package.

       $ctx->addheader(HEADER, VALUE)
           Add header HEADER with value VALUE to this mail.  Does not change any existing headers
           with the same name.  Only callable from the "eom" callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

       $ctx->addrcpt(ADDRESS)
           Add address ADDRESS to the list of recipients for this mail.  Only callable from the
           "eom" callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

       $ctx->chgheader(HEADER, INDEX, VALUE)
           Change the INDEX'th header of name HEADER to the value VALUE.  Only callable from the
           "eom" callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

       $ctx->delrcpt(ADDRESS)
           Remove address ADDRESS from the list of recipients for this mail.  The ADDRESS
           argument must match a prior argument to the "envrcpt" callback exactly (case
           sensitive, and including angle brackets if present).  Only callable from the "eom"
           callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.  A success return does not
           necessarily indicate that the recipient was successfully removed, but rather that the
           command was queued for processing.

       $ctx->progress()
           Sends an asynchronous "progress" message to the MTA, which should reset the MTA's
           internal communications timer.  This can allow longer than normal operations, such as
           a deliberate delay, to continue running without dropping the milter-MTA connection.
           This command can be issued at any time during any callback, although issuing it during
           a "close" callback may trigger socket connection warnings in Perl.

           Always returns a true value.

           This method is an extension that is not available in the standard Sendmail::Milter
           package.

       $ctx->quarantine(REASON)
           Quarantine the current message in the MTA-defined quarantine area, using the given
           REASON as a text string describing the quarantine status.  Only callable from the
           "eom" callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

           This method is an extension that is not available in the standard Sendmail::Milter
           package.

       $ctx->replacebody(BUFFER)
           Replace the message body with the data in BUFFER (a scalar).  This method may be
           called multiple times, each call appending to the replacement buffer.  End-of-line
           should be represented by CR-LF ("\r\n").  Only callable from the "eom" callback.

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.

       $ctx->setsender(ADDRESS)
           Replace the envelope sender address for the given mail message.  This method provides
           an implementation to access the mlfi_setsender method added to the libmilter library
           as part of the mlfi-setsender project
           (http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/mlfi-setsender).

           Returns a true value on success, undef on failure.  A success return does not
           necessarily indicate that the recipient was successfully removed, but rather that the
           command was queued for processing.

SEE ALSO

       Sendmail::PMilter