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mail/change_ldappass-2.2 (Score: 0.12613489)
Allows users to change their passwords stored in LDAP Tree
SquirrelMail (mail/suirrelmail) Plug-In to allow users to change their user passwords stored in an LDAP directory from within SquirrelMail.
mail/vlogin-3.10.2 (Score: 0.12613489)
Adds multi-site-hosting capabilities to SquirrelMail
SquirrelMail Plug-in that allows system administrators to use a single installation of SquirrelMail to provide web-mail capabilities for multiple domains.
mail/vmail-2.9.5 (Score: 0.12613489)
Vim interface to Gmail
Vmail is a Vim interface to Gmail. Why vmail? Because some people love using Vim 1000 times more than using a web browser or a GUI mail program.
mail/dracmail-0.1.2 (Score: 0.12613489)
DracMail is a webmail interface built using PHP
dracMail is a webmail interface built using PHP, ExtJS (JavaScript framework), MySQL and IMAP. Features include: Rich UI, WYSIWYG editor, HTML mail composing and message caching.
mail/dkfilter-0.11 (Score: 0.124828264)
Domainkeys filter for Postfix
This is an implementation of DomainKeys draft standard for the Postfix mail transfer agent. DomainKeys is proposed by Yahoo!, Inc. and this is a scheme to sign and verify e-mail messages on a per-domain basis. Protocol and other issues about this draft standard can be found at http://antispam.yahoo.com/domainkeys.
mail/asmail-2.1 (Score: 0.124828264)
Biff-type program, designed to match AfterStep
Asmail is a "mail-checker" like xbiff, but with the Afterstep look & feel. It indicates the status of your mailbox. It can be put in the Wharf, execute a program on incoming mail, execute a program upon mouseclick, show animations and more...
mail/spamguard-1.8 (Score: 0.124828264)
MTA spam prevention program for qmail/postfix/sendmail
Nearly all of today's mail system administrators face spam as their first threat. Because of this, EnderUNIX team has written this small application to automagically monitor malicious spammer activity in your mail server logs. spamGuard is written purely in C, to stop spammers hanging around. The program supports nearly all mostly used MTAs; qmail (both multilog and splogger), sendmail and Postfix.
mail/spamd-4.9.1 (Score: 0.12457434)
Traps spammers with a very slow smtp-login and return 4xx error
Spamd is a fake sendmail(8)-like daemon which rejects false mail. It is designed to be very efficient so that it does not slow down the receiving machine. spamd considers sending hosts to be of three types: blacklisted hosts are redirected to spamd and tarpitted i.e. they are communicated with very slowly to consume the sender's resources. Mail is rejected with either a 450 or 550 error message. A blacklisted host will not be allowed to talk to a real mail server. whitelisted hosts do not talk to spamd. Their connections are instead sent to a real mail server, such as sendmail(8). greylisted hosts are redirected to spamd, but spamd has not yet decided if they are likely spammers. They are given a temporary failure message by spamd when they try to deliver mail.
mail/xlbiff-3.0 (Score: 0.12457434)
The X Literate Biff - displays the from and subject from incoming mails
Xlbiff lets you preview new mail to decide if you want to read it immediately. Regular xbiff lets you know when you have mail but not what it is. Xlbiff lurks in the background, monitoring your mailbox file. When something shows up there, it invokes the scanCommand (MH's scan by default), and displays the output in a window. If more mail comes in, it scans again and resizes accordingly. If you're a Berkeley mail person, you can set scanCommand to: echo x | mail | grep "^.[NU]" Or use the ``frm'' utility that is part of the Elm port as your scanCommand. A simular utility is the ``fromwho'' package, posted to comp.sources.unix volume 25.
mail/avenger-0.8.4 (Score: 0.12307401)
Anti-spam SMTP server
Mail Avenger is a highly-configurable, MTA-independent SMTP server daemon. It lets users run messages through filters like ClamAV and SpamAssassin during SMTP transactions, so the server can reject mail before assuming responsibility for its delivery. Other unique features include TCP SYN fingerprint and network route recording, verification of sender addresses through SMTP callbacks, SPF (sender policy framework) as a general policy language, qmail-style control over both SMTP-level behavior and local delivery of extension addresses, mail-bomb protection, integration with kernel firewalls, and more.