Provided by: gnarwl_3.6.dfsg-6.2ubuntu1_amd64
NAME
gnarwl ‐ GNU Neat Autoreply With LDAP
SYNOPSIS
gnarwl [‐h] [‐c <cfgfile>] [‐a <address>] [‐s <address>]
DESCRIPTION
gnarwl is an email autoresponder, intended to be a vaction(1) program. Since a modern mailserver, usually (or even thousands) of mailaccounts, it is not (untrusted) users shell access so they may create/maintain file, required by vacation(1). With gnarwl , all user‐suplied data is stored within an so there are no per user ".forward" files (or even Configuration is conveniently done via one systemwide configfile. Like the old vacation(1) program, gnarwl accepts incomming stdin, and will send outgoing mail via an external MTA (it tains basic commandline compatibility, so it may be used replacement). Several gdbm databases are maintained, in order to make does not bounce back and force between gnarwl and MUA, b) mailing lists will not be bothered and c) addresses may never produce automatic replies. All files may be managed using the damnit(8) program.
OPTIONS
‐c <cfgfile> Use a different configfile than the one, compiled in. ‐a <alias> Force <address> as receiving address. ‐s <address> Force <address> as sending address. ‐h Print usage information.
CONFIGURATION
gnarwl typically uses one global configurationfile, but a up is also possible using the ‐c commandline switch. The words are recognized in the configfile: map_sender <macroname> Binds a macroname (case insensitive), refering to an incomming email. Defaults to "$sender". map_receiver <macroname> Binds a macroname (case insensitive), receiver(s) of an incomming email. Defaults to "$receiver". map_subject <macroname> Binds a macroname (case insensitive), refering to an incomming email. Defaults to "$subject". map_field <ldapattribute> <macroname> Binds a macroname (case insensitive), refering to a resultset, returned by the database. There are no this directive. server <address> Address of the databaseserver to query. Defaults to localhost. port <portnumber> Port, the LDAP server listens on. Defaults to 389. scope <base|one|sub> The scope used for searching the database. Default login <string> Destinguished name to bind with to the LDAP to bind anonymously. password <string> Password to use for binding to the LDAP database. is required to access the server, then the belong to the gnarwl user and have file permission 0400. base <destinguished name> Entrypoint of the search. There is no default for tive, it must be supplied by the administrator. protocol <0|2|3> Select protocol to bind to the ldapserver. The which means "autodetect". queryfilter <ldap queryfilter> Search pattern to match against the database. "(&(mail=$recepient)(vacationActive=TRUE)". result <ldap attribute> The name of the attribute, that is to be taken as The content of this field will be pasted in found via forceheader and forcefooter directives. remaining macros are expanded in the order of the result will be piped through to the MTA. blockfiles <directory> The directory, where gnarwl stores it’s are required to keep track on who was sent an Default is: "/build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/block/". umask <mode> What permission to give newly generated default is 0600. blockexpire <number> How long (in hours) to block a certain Default is 48 hours. Setting <number> to 0 (not recommended). No blockfiles are read/written maxreceivers <number> Ignore incomming email, specifying too many It does not matter, whether these are local or not, as gnarwl doesn’t know domains. Default is 256. maxheader <number> Ignore incomming email with more than this lines. Lines are counted before unfolding them, so really counts as at least two lines. Default is 256. badheaders <filename> Path to a database file, containing matching mailheader. If an entry stored in this file the header exactly, then this mail will be ignored by gnarwl is deactivated by default. blacklist <filename> Pointer to a database file, containing emailaddresses, gnarwl is not allowed to generate automatic replies for (useful to prevent automatic replies from addresses, which are people). This feature is deactivated by default. forceheader <filename> Path to a text file, containing a standardized to be pasted in front of every outgoing mail. end with a single empty line. Otherwise it is users are allowed to continue the header and separating empty line themselves. Default is not thing (that is: The user has to supply the "result" attribute). forcefooter <filename> Path to a text file, containing a standardized to be appended at the end of every generated mail. not to force anything. mta <prog> [<args>] Specify MTA for sending mail. It must be able to STDIN. Default is "/usr/sbin/sendmail". charset <encoding> LDAP stores text in unicode, which is ok, as mail doesn’t contain any non ASCII characters. specific characters (like german umlaute) end glyphs. With the "charset" directive, gnarwl tries these to the correct symbols. The <encoding> tain a string recognized by iconv(3). Default is convert anything (assume US‐ASCII charset / MIME recvheader <string> A whitespace separated list of headers (case does which may contain receiving addresses. Defaults to: "To Cc". loglevel <0|1|2|3> Specifies what to send to the syslog. A higher ically includes all lower loglevels (see section information).
SYSLOG
Since gnarwl is not meant to be invoked by anything but it’ll never print out messages to the systemconsole, but syslog(3), using the facility "mail". A log line is always lowing format: <level>/<origin> <message> The <level> field indicates the severity of the message, to the "loglevel" config directive. Possible values are: CRIT (loglevel 0) Critical messages. gnarwl cannot continue and will
die with a
non‐zero exit code. This usually causes the mail. WARN (loglevel 1) A warning. gnarwl can will continue, but full/intended functionality. INFO (loglevel 2) Status information. A message in the INFO normal behaviour. DEBUG (loglevel 3) Debugging information. gnarwl will log a lot of
information on
how mail is processed. The <origin> field gives a short hint about what caused in question, while <message> contains a short description ally happened.
AUTHOR
Patrick Ahlbrecht <p.ahlbrecht@billiton.de>
SEE ALSO
vacation(1), postfix(1), iconv(1), damnit(8), rfc822
FILES
/build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/etc/gnarwl.cfg main configuration file. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/.forward forward file for the mailsystem. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/blacklist.db gnarwl won’t send an autoreply for anyone whose listed herin. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/badhead‐ ers.db gnarwl will ignore mail, it is able to match a an entry in this file. Case is significant, no expanded. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/header.txt Standard header to paste in front of every outgoing mail. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/footer.txt Standard footer to append to every outgoing mail. /build/buildd/gnarwl‐3.6.dfsg/debian/gnarwl/var/lib/gnarwl/block/* block files. GNARWL(8)