libSieve provides a library to interpret Sieve scripts, and to execute
those scripts over a given set of messages. The return codes from the
libSieve functions let your program know how to handle the message, and
then it's up to you to make it so. libSieve makes no attempt to have
knowledge of how SMTP, IMAP, or anything else work; just how to parse
and deal with a buffer full of emails. The rest is up to you!
libvmime is a MIME manipulation library.
A free & open modern, fast email client with user-friendly encryption and
privacy features.
Mailpile is still in beta, but many people already find it useful.
Given a Email::MIME object, detach all attachments from the message.
Net::SMTP_auth implements a client interface to the SMTP and ESMTP protocol
AUTH service extension, enabling a perl5 application to talk to and
authenticate against SMTP servers. This documentation assumes that you are
familiar with the concepts of the SMTP protocol described in RFC821 and with
the AUTH service extension described in RFC2554.
SquirrelMail is a standards-based webmail package written in PHP.
It includes built-in pure PHP support for the IMAP and SMTP protocols,
and all pages render in pure HTML 4.0 (with no Javascript required) for
maximum compatibility across browsers. It has very few requirements
and is very easy to configure and install. SquirrelMail has a all
the functionality you would want from an email client, including
strong MIME support, address books, and folder manipulation
qSheff is a wrapper for the qmail queue that scans email for viruses and
spam. Infected messages are rejected before they reach the queue, so the
server doesn't perform any job for them. After checking the message, it
will wake the qmail queue. Some of the supported features:
- Antivirus executing (ClamAV)
- Header and body filtering
- Subject filtering
- Attachment blocking
- Quarantine support
- White/black lists
- Single line logging for qmail
- Basic DoS attack prevention
- And much more...
Sigrot is a small program for signature rotation. It keeps a file with your
favorite signatures and puts a random one in your signature each time you
run it. You can also specify a standard part of your signature which will
not change, ie. your name or PGP key.
The rlytest utility tests a host to determine whether it will relay
third-party email. It will try to relay an email message to yourself
through that host. A host that allows third-party relay is subject to
attack by Internet vandals, and frequently is hijacked by spammers to
relay massive amounts of junk email. A host that allows third-party
relay should IMMEDIATELY be secured, disconnected, or shunned as a
menace to the Internet.
See http://www.unicom.com/sw/rlytest for more information.
rlytest was written by Chip Rosenthal.
The collection of l10n/i18n data files for Squirrelmail.