From 3cbc5e6e624235f9ba40cfd5a2b18c11be371399 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Li xin Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2014 07:02:01 +0900 Subject: [PATCH 2/3] From debian to fix man file Signed-off-by: Li Xin --- man/procmail.man | 24 +++++++++++++++++------- man/procmailrc.man | 2 +- 2 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/man/procmail.man b/man/procmail.man index 175043a..1274ce8 100644 --- a/man/procmail.man +++ b/man/procmail.man @@ -44,11 +44,11 @@ at the end. should be invoked automatically over the .B @DOT_FORWARD@ file mechanism as soon as mail arrives. Alternatively, when installed by -a system administrator, it can be invoked from within the mailer immediately. -When invoked, it first sets some environment variables to default values, -reads the mail message from stdin until an EOF, separates the body from the -header, and then, if no command line arguments are present, it starts to look -for a file named +a system administrator (and in the standard Red Hat Linux configuration), it +can be invoked from within the mailer immediately. When invoked, it +first sets some environment variables to default values, reads the mail message from +stdin until an EOF, separates the body from the header, and then, if no command line +arguments are present, it starts to look for a file named .BR @PROCMAILRC@ . According to the processing recipes in this file, the mail message that just arrived gets distributed into the right folder @@ -166,7 +166,8 @@ must be specified on the command line. After the rcfile, procmail will accept an unlimited number of arguments.@ETCRCS_desc@ For some advanced usage of this option you should look in the .B EXAMPLES -section below.@LMTPOPTdesc@.SH ARGUMENTS +section below.@LMTPOPTdesc@ +.SH ARGUMENTS Any arguments containing an '=' are considered to be environment variable assignments, they will .I all @@ -723,6 +724,15 @@ path.@FW_comment@ .fi .ad .PP +Some mailers (notably exim) do not currently accept the above syntax. +In such case use this instead: +.PP +.na +.nf +|/usr/bin/procmail +.fi +.ad +.PP Procmail can also be invoked to postprocess an already filled system mailbox. This can be useful if you don't want to or can't use a $HOME/@DOT_FORWARD@ file (in which case the following script could @@ -754,7 +764,7 @@ exit 0 .SS "A sample small @PROCMAILRC@:" .na .nf -PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:@BINDIR@ +PATH=/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail #you'd better make sure it exists DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/mbox #completely optional LOGFILE=$MAILDIR/from #recommended diff --git a/man/procmailrc.man b/man/procmailrc.man index 472035f..7bf08dd 100644 --- a/man/procmailrc.man +++ b/man/procmailrc.man @@ -779,7 +779,7 @@ one trailing newline will be stripped. .PP Some non-optimal and non-obvious regexps set MATCH to an incorrect value. The regexp can be made to work by removing one or more unneeded -'*', '+', or '?' operator on the left-hand side of the \e/ token. +\&'*', '+', or '?' operator on the left-hand side of the \e/ token. .SH MISCELLANEOUS If the regular expression contains `\fB@TO_key@\fP' it will be substituted by .na -- 1.8.4.2