Mail::SpamAssassin - Spam detector and markup engine
my $spamtest = Mail::SpamAssassin->new(); my $mail = $spamtest->parse($message); my $status = $spamtest->check($mail);
if ($status->is_spam()) { $message = $status->rewrite_mail(); } else { ... } ...
$status->finish(); $mail->finish();
Mail::SpamAssassin is a module to identify spam using several methods including text analysis, internet-based realtime blacklists, statistical analysis, and internet-based hashing algorithms.
Using its rule base, it uses a wide range of heuristic tests on mail headers and body text to identify ``spam'', also known as unsolicited bulk email. Once identified as spam, the mail can then be tagged as spam for later filtering using the user's own mail user agent application or at the mail transfer agent.
If you wish to use a command-line filter tool, try the spamassassin
or the spamd
/spamc
tools provided.
Mail::SpamAssassin
object. You may pass a hash
reference to the constructor which may contain the following attribute-
value pairs.
There are also two special cases: (1) if the special case of ``info'' is passed as a debug facility, then all informational messages are enabled; (2) if the special case of ``all'' is passed as a debug facility, then all debugging facilities are enabled.
1
to recurse through directories when reading configuration
files, instead of just reading a single level. (optional, default 0)
rules_filename
, site_rules_filename
,
and userprefs_filename
.
config_text
, this text is placed after config_text to allow an
override of config files.
UNWANTED_LANGUAGE_BODY
, and are using config_text
instead of
rules_filename
, site_rules_filename
, and userprefs_filename
, you will
need to set this. It should be the path to the languages file normally
found in the SpamAssassin rules directory.
site_rules_filename
directory will
be ignored. *.pre files (used for loading plugins) found in the
site_rules_filename
directory will still be used. (default: 0)
Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus
object. Used for debugging.
username
attribute will use this as the current user's name.
Otherwise, the default is taken from the runtime environment (ie. this process'
effective UID under UNIX).
If none of rules_filename
, site_rules_filename
, userprefs_filename
, or
config_text
is set, the Mail::SpamAssassin
module will search for the
configuration files in the usual installed locations using the below variable
definitions which can be passed in.
'__prefix__/etc/mail/spamassassin' '__prefix__/etc/spamassassin'
Defaults to ``@@PREFIX@@''.
sa-update
and compiling rulesets to native code. Defaults to
``@@LOCAL_STATE_DIR@@''.
The $parse_now option, by default, is set to false (0). This
allows SpamAssassin to not have to generate the tree of internal
data nodes if the information is not going to be used. This is
handy, for instance, when running spamassassin -d
, which only
needs the pristine header and body which is always parsed and stored
by this function.
For more information, please see the Mail::SpamAssassin::Message
and Mail::SpamAssassin::Message::Node
POD.
Mail::SpamAssassin::Message
object,
to determine if it is spam or not.
Returns a Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus
object which can be
used to test or manipulate the mail message.
Note that the Mail::SpamAssassin
object can be re-used for further messages
without affecting this check; in OO terminology, the Mail::SpamAssassin
object is a ``factory''. However, if you do this, be sure to call the
finish()
method on the status objects when you're done with them.
$mailtext
, to determine if it
is spam or not.
Otherwise identical to check()
above.
Mail::SpamAssassin::Message
object.
If $isspam
is set, the mail is assumed to be spam, otherwise it will
be learnt as non-spam.
If $forget
is set, the attributes of the mail will be removed from
both the non-spam and spam learning databases.
$id
is an optional message-identification string, used internally
to tag the message. If it is undef
, the Message-Id of the message
will be used. It should be unique to that message.
Returns a Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgLearner
object which can be used to
manipulate the learning process for each mail.
Note that the Mail::SpamAssassin
object can be re-used for further messages
without affecting this check; in OO terminology, the Mail::SpamAssassin
object is a ``factory''. However, if you do this, be sure to call the
finish()
method on the learner objects when you're done with them.
learn()
and check()
can be run using the same factory. init_learner()
must be called before using this method.
finish_learner()
) (optional, default 0).
verbose
, which will output diagnostics to stdout
if set to 1.
dump_bayes_db()
setuid
), meaning
that SpamAssassin should close any per-user databases it has open, and re-open
using ones appropriate for the new user.
Note that this should be called after reading any per-user configuration, as that data may override some paths opened in this method. You may pass the following attribute-value pairs:
username
attribute.
userstate_dir
will be the
.spamassassin
subdirectory of this dir.
user_dir/.spamassassin
.
Mail::SpamAssassin::Message
object, as
human-verified spam. This will submit the mail message to live,
collaborative, spam-blocker databases, allowing other users to block this
message.
It will also submit the mail to SpamAssassin's Bayesian learner.
Options is an optional reference to a hash of options. Currently these can be:
Mail::SpamAssassin::Message
object, as
human-verified ham (non-spam). This will revoke the mail message from live,
collaborative, spam-blocker databases, allowing other users to block this
message.
It will also submit the mail to SpamAssassin's Bayesian learner as nonspam.
Options is an optional reference to a hash of options. Currently these can be:
Note that To and Cc addresses are not used.
Note that the $mail object is not modified.
Warning: if the input message in $mail contains a mixture of CR-LF (Windows-style) and LF (UNIX-style) line endings, it will be ``canonicalized'' to use one or the other consistently throughout.
User preferences are as defined in the Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf
manual page.
In other words, they include scoring options, scores, whitelists and
blacklists, and so on, but do not include rule definitions, privileged
settings, etc. unless allow_user_rules
is enabled; and they never include
the administrator settings.
DBI
module is installed, and the
configuration parameters user_scores_dsn
, user_scores_sql_username
, and
user_scores_sql_password
are set correctly.
The username in $username
will also be used for the username
attribute of
the Mail::SpamAssassin object.
Net::LDAP
and URI
modules are
installed, and the configuration parameters user_scores_dsn
,
user_scores_ldap_username
, and user_scores_ldap_password
are set
correctly.
The username in $username
will also be used for the username
attribute of
the Mail::SpamAssassin object.
Mail::SpamAssassin::PersistentAddrList
for the API these factory objects
must implement, and the API the objects they produce must implement.
Normally, Mail::SpamAssassin uses lazy evaluation where possible, but if you
plan to fork()
or start a new perl interpreter thread to process a message,
this is suboptimal, as each process/thread will have to perform these actions.
Call this function in the master thread or process to perform the actions straightaway, so that the sub-processes will not have to.
If $use_user_prefs
is 0, this will initialise the SpamAssassin
configuration without reading the per-user configuration file and it will
assume that you will call read_scoreonly_config
at a later point.
If $keep_userstate
is true, compile_now()
will revert any configuration
options which have a default with __userstate__ in it post-init(),
and then re-change the option before returning. This lets you change
$ENV{'HOME'} to a temp directory, have compile_now()
and create any
files there as necessary without disturbing the actual files as changed
by a configuration option. By default, this is disabled.
finish()
languages
or triplets.txt
,
in the system-wide rules directory, and return its full path if
it exists, or undef if it doesn't exist.
(This API was added in SpamAssassin 3.1.1.)
dont_copy_prefs
is
not set.
# create object w/ configuration my $spamtest = Mail::SpamAssassin->new( ... );
# backup configuration to %conf_backup my %conf_backup = (); $spamtest->copy_config(undef, \%conf_backup) || die "config: error returned from copy_config!\n";
... do stuff, perhaps modify the config, etc ...
# reset the configuration back to the original $spamtest->copy_config(\%conf_backup, undef) || die "config: error returned from copy_config!\n";
Note that the contents of the associative arrays should be considered opaque by calling code.
Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin
.
(This API was added in SpamAssassin 3.2.0.)
HTML::Parser
Sys::Syslog
See also <http://spamassassin.apache.org/> and <http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/> for more information.
Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf(3)
Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus(3)
spamassassin(1)
sa-update(1)
See <http://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/>
The SpamAssassin(tm)
Project <http://spamassassin.apache.org/>
SpamAssassin is distributed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, as
described in the file LICENSE
included with the distribution.
The latest version of this library is likely to be available from CPAN as well as:
E<lt>http://spamassassin.apache.org/E<gt>