Perdition is a mail retrieval proxy that allows users to connect to a
content-free POP3 or IMAP4 server that will redirect them to their real
POP3 or IMAP4 server. This enables mail retrieval for a domain to be
split across multiple backend servers on a per user basis. It can also
be used as a POP3 or IMAP4 proxy in firewall applications.
Perdition supports arbitrary library based map access to determine the
server for each user - POSIX regex, GDBM, PostgreSQL, MySQL, NIS and
OpenLDAP libraries ship with the distribution.
The use of perditon to scale mail services beyond a single box is discussed
in a paper the author wrote on high capacity email, so be sure to check the
web page.
Fancy biff program under X11 environment.
Hbiff is a replacement for xbiff that flashes when new mail arrives like the
traditional xbiff. In addition, if you click on the hbiff icon, a window
will popup showing the mail headers. This makes hbiff better than xlbiff
where privacy is an issue since the headers are only displayed when you
request. hbiff can also run the MUA for you.
Mailparse is an extension for parsing and working with email messages.
It can deal with rfc822 and rfc2045 (MIME) compliant messages.
Mailparse is stream based, which means that it does not keep in-memory
copies of the files it processes - so it is very resource efficient
when dealing with large messages.
ifile is a general mail filtering system that works with a mail client to
intelligently filter mail according to the way the user tends to organize
mail. ifile uses the machine learning algorithm Naive Bayes to classify
e-mail documents.
ifile is different from other mail filtering programs in three major ways:
1.ifile does not require you to generate a set of rules in order to
successfully filter mail
2.ifile uses the entire content of messages for filtering purposes
3.ifile learns as you move incorrectly filtered messages to new mailboxes
ifile is not dependent upon any specific mail system and should be adaptable
to any mail system which allows an outside program to perform mail
filtering.
IM (Internet Message) provides a series of user interface commands
(imput, imget, imls, ...) and backend Perl5 modules to integrate
E-mail and NetNews user interface. They are designed to be used both
from Mew version 1.x and on command line.
The folder style of IM is exactly the same as that of MH. So, you can
replace MH with this package without any migration works. Moreover,
you are able to operate your messages both by IM and MH with
consistent manner.
IM is copyrighted by IM developing team. You can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the modified BSD license.
Although you installed IM successfully, yet you must be initialized on
your home directory at once. Execute imsetup command with your account
after im installed.
% imsetup
This is the IMAP4rev1 server from the University of Washington.
Included are (almost) backwards-compatible POP2 and POP3 servers.
IMAP Spam Begone (isbg) is a script that makes it easy to scan
an IMAP inbox for spam using SpamAssassin and get your spam
moved to another folder.
Unlike the normal mode of deployments for SpamAssassin, isbg
does not need to be involved in mail delivery, and can run on
completely different machines to where your mailbox actually
is.
KBiff is a mail notification utility for the KDE project.
Features:
o Pure GUI Configuration
o Session Management
o Panel Docking
o Animated Gifs
o Sounds
o Supported mailbox formats: mbox, maildir, mh, POP3(s), IMAP4(s), and NNTP.
The Apache Java Enterprise Mail Server (a.k.a. Apache James) is a 100% pure
Java SMTP and POP3 Mail server and NNTP News server. We have designed James
to be a complete and portable enterprise mail engine solution based on
currently available open protocols.
James is also a mail application platform. We have developed a Java API to
let you write Java code to process emails that we call the mailet API. A
mailet can generate an automatic reply, update a database, prevent spam,
build a message archive, or whatever you can imagine. A matcher determines
whether your mailet should process an email in the server. The James project
hosts the Mailet API, and James provides an implementation of this mail appli
-cation platform API.
James is based upon the Apache Avalon application framework, formerly a
product of the Apache Avalon project.
These are a collection of subroutines that encapsulate much of the
format-specific and tedious details of the JAM message base format.
The idea is that application programmers by using these routines can
concentrate on the more high-level issues of their programs instead
of worrying about their JAM routines.