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.
WWW: http://www.mailavenger.org/
PR: ports/80800
Submitted by: David Mazieres <dm+bugs+avenger@mailavenger.org>
the Ports Collection. The author specifically insists that no patches
be distributed for his software.
Please do not contact portmgr about this policy, it is the author's sole
choice.
Hat: portmgr
email based on arbitrary critera. It accepts SMTP connections and
forwards the SMTP commands and responses to another SMTP server. You
need to be able to write the filtering scripts that integrate it with
your particular needs.
PR: ports/80596
Submitted by: Dario Freni <saturnero@gufi.org>
It uses HELO, MAIL FROM and the MTA IP address for scoring their
correctness. It also uses definable DNSBLs in a scored fashion.
WWW: http://robtone.mine.nu/postfix/
PR: ports/80329
Submitted by: Robert Felber <robtone@ek-muc.de>
structure. It will fix uid/gid settings and permissions. It will
rename the message files to match their inodes. It will even create
directories and files that don't exist that should be there (you can
even create a queue from scratch). It will also print warnings for
any files it finds that should not exist.
PR: ports/79913
Submitted by: Renato Botelho <freebsd@galle.com.br>
reader to search mail stored in maildir folders. Based on the result of the
namazu query, nmzmail generates a maildir folder containing symbolic links to
the mails matching the query. A simple mutt macro makes easy to use nmzmail
from within mutt.
PR: ports/76102
Submitted by: Fernan Aguero <fernan@iib.unsam.edu.ar>
viewing and safe modification of the contents in a qmail queue.
Features include finding abusers, sorting messages by sender/sender's IP,
showing stats, requeue messages, queue consistency check, queue
backup/restore, and others.
PR: ports/79718
Submitted by: Matthew Will <mwill@spingen.com>
designed to significantly reduce the amount of junk email you receive. It
uses dynamic local and DNS-based remote whitelists, blacklists, and an
original auto-confirmation system for unknown but legitimate senders. It
includes features for protecting recipients from dangerous attachments and
HTML includes. It uses a set of original algorithms, including "Check relay
by NS", which simulates a dynamic whitelisting technique, and "Check delays",
also known as "Greylisting".
PR: ports/79508
Submitted by: Andrey E. Shevtsov <nyxo@dnuc.polyn.kiae.su>
system tray when new mail arrives in Mozilla Thunderbird. While it
supports the standard (FreeDesktop.org) system tray, as used by GNOME,
KDE and IceWM, it requires GNOME libraries to build and run.
WWW: http://moztraybiff.mozdev.org/
SpamControl is a collection of patches for qmail developed and maintained
by Erwin Hoffman (feh@fehcom.de).
Some SpamControl features: smtp-auth (plain, login and cram-md5),
requirement of brackets on addresses, qmail-queue, bigtodo, moreipme,
recipients...
WWW: http://www.fehcom.de/qmail/spamcontrol.html
PR: ports/77637
Submitted by: Renato Botelho <renato@galle.com.br>
by the Internet Engineering Task Force's (IETF) MARID Working Group
(Mail Authorization Records in DNS).
sid-milter implements the -core and -protocol specifications.
Additionally, sid-milter implements the "SPF Classic" record protocol
(v=spf1) as defined by the SPF community.
WWW: http://sendmail.net/sid-milter/
Netaddress no longer offers free accounts, and all their paid accounts
come with POP3 and IMAP access anyway.
PR: ports/78136
Submitted by: Sam 'Reaper' Lawrance
Clamfilter is a small, secure, and very efficient content filter for Postfix,
designed to filter messages efficiently through the clamd daemon.
Hurried by: vanilla
PR: 77380
Submitted by: SeaD <sead@mail.ru>
It performs the same actions as if you were to report spam to
spamcop.net with a Web browser, but from the commandline.
Spamcup is written in Perl.
WWW: http://sourceforge.net/projects/spamcup/
pfqueue is an effort to give postqueue/mailq/postsuper a
console (ncurses) interface: it won't add any particular
functionality to those provided with postfix itself, but
will hopefully make them to use.
It's a real-time queue scanner, that show per-queue lists
of existing messages; the messages can be deleted, put on
hold or released
Just for example, it may be useful to inspect a traffic jam
at a given time, to see what is falling into and unexpectedly
crowding you deferred queue
PR: ports/76203
Submitted by: Marcus Grando <marcus@corp.grupos.com.br>
DspamPD is a GPL'ed transparent smtp proxy which can do
content scanning through DSPAM and/or ClamAV...
DspamPD version v2.00 supports DSPAM version 3.x, both
stable and -devel ports and both clamav ports.
The attached shar will create the port for you.
PR: ports/76118
Submitted by: Ion-Mihai "IOnut" Tetcu <itetcu@people.tecnik93.com>
JBossMail currently consists of:
* Core Server - which provides thread pooling, connection handling, and
timeout configuration.
* POP Protocol Implementation - plugs into the Server MBean to provide a
POP implementation.
* SMTP Server - plugs into the Server MBean to provide an SMTP protocol
implementation.
* Mail Listeners - plug into the SMTP server to forward mail to the various
backends. Currently the JMSMailListener is provided. It forwards mails
to various JBossMQ queues. Message Driven Beans for remote and local
delivery are also provided.
* Mailbox implementations - provides backends to the mail server. Presently
an EJB Entity-based version is provided.
* SMTPSender - uses JavaMail to mail messages to remote servers
* Test suite - JUnit tests for the various portions of mail services.
Includes a few services including mock-jndi.
WWW: http://www.jboss.org/products/mailservices
Open WebMail is a webmail system based on the Neomail version 1.14 from
Ernie Miller. Open WebMail is 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.
Suggested by: openwebmail@turtle.ee.ncku.edu.tw, the author of openwebmail