OpenDMARC is an open source implementation of Domain-based Message
Authentication, Reporting & Conformance, or DMARC. It builds on the
successes of technologies such as DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM)
and the Sender Policy Framework (SPF) to create an infrastructure
that enforces policy on domain names that are visible to end users,
and creates a feedback framework for identifying and tracking
fraudulent use of domain names in email.
It includes a library for handling DMARC record parsing,
a database schema and tools for aggregating and processing transaction
history to produce DMARC reports, and a filter that ties it all together
with an MTA using the milter protocol.
Open WebMail is a webmail system designed to manage very large mail folder
files in a memory efficient way. It also provides a range of features to help
users migrate smoothly from Microsoft Outlook to Open WebMail. Open WebMail
has the following features: multiple languages, multiple iconsets/styles,
strong MIME support, virtual host/login alias, PAM support, online password
changing, convenient folder/message operations, draft folder, confirmed
reading support, full content search, a spelling checker, auto reply, mail
filtering, POP3 support, and message count previewing.
Registers several mail folder types that are known as network based
messaging protocols. Folder names for these protocols should be
specified using a URI syntax.
Email::Stuffer, as its name suggests, is a fairly casual module used to stuff
things into an email and send them. It is a high-level module designed for
ease of use when doing a very specific common task, but implemented on top of
the light and tolerable Email:: modules.
Email::Stuffer is typically used to build emails and send them in a single
statement, as seen in the synopsis. And it is certain only for use when
creating and sending emails. As such, it contains no email parsing
capability, and little to no modification support.
A Perl module used by websieve for creating Sieve scripts on an Cyrus
IMAP mail server. Sometimes also referenced as 'perlsieve'.
This is a Mail::Audit plugin which provides easy access to files attached
to mail messages. Besides Mail::Audit, it requires the MIME::Entity
module.
This module communicates with an IMAP server. Each IMAP server command is mapped
to a method of this object. Although other IMAP modules exist on CPAN, this has
several advantages over other modules:
- It parses the more complex IMAP structures like envelopes and body structures
into nice Perl data structures.
- It correctly supports atoms, quoted strings and literals at any point. Some
parsers in other modules aren't fully IMAP compatiable and may break at odd
times with certain messages on some servers.
- It allows large return values (eg. attachments on a message) to be read
directly into a file, rather than into memory.
- It includes some helper functions to find the actual text/plain or text/html
part of a message out of a complex MIME structure. It also can find a list of
attachements, and CID links for HTML messages with attached images.
- It supports decoding of MIME headers to Perl utf-8 strings automatically, so
you don't have to deal with MIME encoded headers (enabled optionally).
While the IMAP protocol does allow for asynchronous running of commands, this
module is designed to be used in a synchronous manner. That is, you issue a
command by calling a method, and the command will block until the appropriate
response is returned. The method will then return the parsed results from the
given command.
Mail::Procmail.pm is a Perl module that provides procmail-like
tools that you can use to write your own mail filtering program.
Mail::Sender provides an object oriented interface to sending mails. It
doesn't need any outer program. It connects to a mail server directly
from Perl, using Socket.
This is a POP3 proxycache server useful for use with webmail clients.
It keeps track of existing connections and caches them.