PROCMAIL(1)                 General Commands Manual                PROCMAIL(1)


NAME
       procmail - autonomous mail processor

SYNOPSIS
       procmail [-ptoY] [-f fromwhom]
            [parameter=value | rcfile] ...
       procmail [-toY] [-f fromwhom] [-a argument] ...
            -d recipient ...
       procmail [-ptY] -m [parameter=value] ...  rcfile
            [argument] ....br procmail -v

DESCRIPTION
       For a quick start, see NOTES at the end.

       Procmail should be invoked automatically over the .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
       $HOME/.procmailrc.  According to the processing recipes in this file,
       the mail message that just arrived gets distributed into the right
       folder (and more).  If no rcfile is found, or processing of the rcfile
       falls off the end, procmail will store the mail in the default system
       mailbox.

       If no rcfiles and no -p have been specified on the command line,
       procmail will, prior to reading $HOME/.procmailrc, interpret commands
       from /etc/procmailrc (if present).  Care must be taken when creating
       /etc/procmailrc, because, if circumstances permit, it will be executed
       with root privileges (contrary to the $HOME/.procmailrc file of
       course).

       If running suid root or with root privileges, procmail will be able to
       perform as a functionally enhanced, backwards compatible mail delivery
       agent.

       Procmail can also be used as a general purpose mail filter, i.e.,
       provisions have been made to enable procmail to be invoked in a special
       sendmail rule.

       The rcfile format is described in detail in the procmailrc(5) man page.

       The weighted scoring technique is described in detail in the
       procmailsc(5) man page.

       Examples for rcfile recipes can be looked up in the procmailex(5) man
       page.

   Signals
       TERMINATE   Terminate prematurely and requeue the mail.

       HANGUP      Terminate prematurely and bounce the mail.

       INTERRUPT   Terminate prematurely and bounce the mail.

       QUIT        Terminate prematurely and silently lose the mail.

       ALARM       Force a timeout (see TIMEOUT).

       USR1        Equivalent to a VERBOSE=off.

       USR2        Equivalent to a VERBOSE=on.

OPTIONS
       -v   Procmail will print its version number, display its compile time
            configuration and exit.

       -p   Preserve any old environment.  Normally procmail clears the
            environment upon startup, except for the value of TZ.  However, in
            any case: any default values will override any preexisting
            environment variables, i.e., procmail will not pay any attention
            to any predefined environment variables, it will happily overwrite
            them with its own defaults.  For the list of environment variables
            that procmail will preset see the procmailrc(5) man page.  If both
            -p and -m are specified, the list of preset environment variables
            shrinks to just: LOGNAME, HOME, SHELL, ORGMAIL and MAILDIR.

       -t   Make procmail fail softly, i.e., if procmail cannot deliver the
            mail to any of the destinations you gave, the mail will not
            bounce, but will return to the mailqueue.  Another delivery-
            attempt will be made at some time in the future.

       -f fromwhom
            Causes procmail to regenerate the leading `From ' line with
            fromwhom as the sender (instead of -f one could use the alternate
            and obsolete -r).  If fromwhom consists merely of a single `-',
            then procmail will only update the timestamp on the `From ' line
            (if present, if not, it will generate a new one).

       -o   Instead of allowing anyone to generate `From ' lines, simply
            override the fakes.

       -Y   Assume traditional Berkeley mailbox format, ignore any
            Content-Length: fields.

       -a argument
            This will set $1 to be equal to argument.  Each succeeding -a
            argument will set the next number variable ($2, $3, etc).  It can
            be used to pass meta information along to procmail.  This is
            typically done by passing along the $@x information from the
            sendmail mailer rule.

       -d recipient ...
            This turns on explicit delivery mode, delivery will be to the
            local user recipient.  This, of course, only is possible if
            procmail has root privileges (or if procmail is already running
            with the recipient's euid and egid).  Procmail will setuid to the
            intended recipients and delivers the mail as if it were invoked by
            the recipient with no arguments (i.e., if no rcfile is found,
            delivery is like ordinary mail).  This option is incompatible with
            -p.

       -m   Turns procmail into a general purpose mail filter.  In this mode
            one rcfile must be specified on the command line.  After the
            rcfile, procmail will accept an unlimited number of arguments.  If
            the rcfile is an absolute path starting with /etc/procmailrcs/
            without backward references (i.e. the parent directory cannot be
            mentioned) procmail will, only if no security violations are
            found, take on the identity of the owner of the rcfile (or
            symbolic link).  For some advanced usage of this option you should
            look in the EXAMPLES section below..SH ARGUMENTS Any arguments
            containing an '=' are considered to be environment variable
            assignments, they will all be evaluated after the default values
            have been assigned and before the first rcfile is opened.

       Any other arguments are presumed to be rcfile paths (either absolute,
       or if they start with `./' relative to the current directory; any other
       relative path is relative to $HOME, unless the -m option has been
       given, in which case all relative paths are relative to the current
       directory); procmail will start with the first one it finds on the
       command line.  The following ones will only be parsed if the preceding
       ones have a not matching HOST-directive entry, or in case they should
       not exist.

       If no rcfiles are specified, it looks for $HOME/.procmailrc.  If not
       even that can be found, processing will continue according to the
       default settings of the environment variables and the ones specified on
       the command line.

EXAMPLES
       Examples for rcfile recipes can be looked up in the procmailex(5) man
       page.  A small sample rcfile can be found in the NOTES section below.

       Skip the rest of this EXAMPLES section unless you are a system
       administrator who is vaguely familiar with sendmail.cf syntax.

       The -m option is typically used when procmail is called from within a
       rule in the sendmail.cf file.  In order to be able to do this it is
       convenient to create an extra `procmail' mailer in your sendmail.cf
       file (in addition to the perhaps already present `local' mailer that
       starts up procmail).  To create such a `procmail' mailer I'd suggest
       something like:

              Mprocmail, P=/opt/homebrew/Cellar/procmail/14/bin/procmail, F=mSDFMhun, S=11, R=21,
                      A=procmail -m $h $g $u

       This enables you to use rules like the following (most likely in
       ruleset 0) to filter mail through the procmail mailer (please note the
       leading tab to continue the rule, and the tab to separate the
       comments):

              R$*<@some.where>$*
                      $#procmail $@/etc/procmailrcs/some.rc $:$1@some.where.procmail$2
              R$*<@$*.procmail>$*
                      $1<@$2>$3       Already filtered, map back

       And /etc/procmailrcs/some.rc could be as simple as:

              SENDER = "<$1>"                 # fix for empty sender addresses
              SHIFT = 1                       # remove it from $@

              :0                              # sink all junk mail
              * ^Subject:.*junk
              /dev/null

              :0 w                            # pass along all other mail
              ! -oi -f "$SENDER" "$@"

       Do watch out when sending mail from within the /etc/procmailrcs/some.rc
       file, if you send mail to addresses which match the first rule again,
       you could be creating an endless mail loop.

FILES
       /etc/passwd            to set the recipient's LOGNAME, HOME and SHELL
                              variable defaults

       /var/mail/$LOGNAME     system mailbox; both the system mailbox and the
                              immediate directory it is in will be created
                              every time procmail starts and either one is not
                              present

       /etc/procmailrc        initial global rcfile

       /etc/procmailrcs/      special privileges path for rcfiles

       $HOME/.procmailrc      default rcfile

       /var/mail/$LOGNAME.lock
                              lockfile for the system mailbox (not
                              automatically used by procmail, unless $DEFAULT
                              equals /var/mail/$LOGNAME and procmail is
                              delivering to $DEFAULT)

       /usr/sbin/sendmail     default mail forwarder

       _????`hostname`        temporary `unique' zero-length files created by
                              procmail

SEE ALSO
       procmailrc(5), procmailsc(5), procmailex(5), sh(1), csh(1), mail(1),
       mailx(1), binmail(1), uucp(1), aliases(5), sendmail(8), egrep(1),
       grep(1), biff(1), comsat(8), lockfile(1), formail(1), cron(1)

DIAGNOSTICS
       Autoforwarding mailbox found
                              The system mailbox had its suid or sgid bit set,
                              procmail terminates with EX_NOUSER assuming that
                              this mailbox must not be delivered to.

       Bad substitution of "x"
                              Not a valid environment variable name specified.

       Closing brace unexpected
                              There was no corresponding opening brace
                              (nesting block).

       Conflicting options    Not all option combinations are useful

       Conflicting x suppressed
                              Flag x is not compatible with some other flag on
                              this recipe.

       Couldn't create "x"    The system mailbox was missing and could
                              not/will not be created.

       Couldn't create maildir part "x"
                              The maildir folder "x" is missing one or more
                              required subdirectories and procmail could not
                              create them.

       Couldn't create or rename temp file "x"
                              An error occurred in the mechanics of
                              delivering to the directory folder "x".

       Couldn't determine implicit lockfile from "x"
                              There were no `>>' redirectors to be found,
                              using simply `$LOCKEXT' as locallockfile.

       Couldn't read "x"      Procmail was unable to open an rcfile or it was
                              not a regular file, or procmail couldn't open an
                              MH directory to find the highest numbered file.

       Couldn't unlock "x"    Lockfile was already gone, or write permission
                              to the directory where the lockfile is has been
                              denied.

       Deadlock attempted on "x"
                              The locallockfile specified on this recipe is
                              equal to a still active $LOCKFILE.

       Denying special privileges for "x"
                              Procmail will not take on the identity that
                              comes with the rcfile because a security
                              violation was found (e.g.  -p or variable
                              assignments on the command line) or procmail had
                              insufficient privileges to do so.

       Descriptor "x" was not open
                              As procmail was started, stdin, stdout or stderr
                              was not connected (possibly an attempt to
                              subvert security)

       Enforcing stricter permissions on "x"
                              The system mailbox of the recipient was found to
                              be unsecured, procmail secured it.

       Error while writing to "x"
                              Nonexistent subdirectory, no write permission,
                              pipe died or disk full.

       Exceeded LINEBUF       Buffer overflow detected, LINEBUF was too small,
                              PROCMAIL_OVERFLOW has been set.

       MAILDIR is not an absolute path

       MAILDIR path too long

       ORGMAIL is not an absolute path

       ORGMAIL path too long

       default rcfile is not an absolute path

       default rcfile path too long
                              The specified item's full path, when expanded,
                              was longer than LINEBUF or didn't start with a
                              file separator.

       Excessive output quenched from "x"
                              The program or filter "x" tried to produce too
                              much output for the current LINEBUF, the rest
                              was discarded and PROCMAIL_OVERFLOW has been
                              set.

       Extraneous x ignored   The action line or other flags on this recipe
                              makes flag x meaningless.

       Failed forking "x"     Process table is full (and NORESRETRY has been
                              exhausted).

       Failed to execute "x"  Program not in path, or not executable.

       Forced unlock denied on "x"
                              No write permission in the directory where
                              lockfile "x" resides, or more than one procmail
                              trying to force a lock at exactly the same time.

       Forcing lock on "x"    Lockfile "x" is going to be removed by force
                              because of a timeout (see also: LOCKTIMEOUT).

       Incomplete recipe      The start of a recipe was found, but it stranded
                              in an EOF.

       Insufficient privileges
                              Procmail either needs root privileges, or must
                              have the right (e)uid and (e)gid to run in
                              delivery mode.  The mail will bounce.

       Invalid regexp "x"     The regular expression "x" contains errors (most
                              likely some missing or extraneous parens).

       Kernel-lock failed     While trying to use the kernel-supported locking
                              calls, one of them failed (usually indicates an
                              OS error), procmail ignores this error and
                              proceeds.

       Kernel-unlock failed   See above.

       Lock failure on "x"    Can only occur if you specify some real weird
                              (and illegal) lockfilenames or if the lockfile
                              could not be created because of insufficient
                              permissions or nonexistent subdirectories.

       Lost "x"               Procmail tried to clone itself but could not
                              find back rcfile "x" (it either got removed or
                              it was a relative path and you changed directory
                              since procmail opened it last time).

       Missing action         The current recipe was found to be incomplete.

       Missing closing brace  A nesting block was started, but never finished.

       Missing name           The -f option needs an extra argument.

       Missing argument       You specified the -a option but forgot the
                              argument.

       Missing rcfile         You specified the -m option, procmail expects
                              the name of an rcfile as argument.

       Missing recipient      You specified the -d option or called procmail
                              under a different name, it expects one or more
                              recipients as arguments.

       No space left to finish writing "x"
                              The filesystem containing "x" does not have
                              enough free space to permit delivery of the
                              message to the file.

       Out of memory          The system is out of swap space (and NORESRETRY
                              has been exhausted).

       Processing continued   The unrecognised options on the command line are
                              ignored, proceeding as usual.

       Program failure (nnn) of "x"
                              Program that was started by procmail returned
                              nnn instead of EXIT_SUCCESS (=0); if nnn is
                              negative, then this is the signal the program
                              died on.

       Quota exceeded while writing "x"
                              The filesize quota for the recipient on the
                              filesystem containing "x" does not permit
                              delivering the message to the file.

       Renaming bogus "x" into "x"
                              The system mailbox of the recipient was found to
                              be bogus, procmail performed evasive actions.

       Rescue of unfiltered data succeeded/failed
                              A filter returned unsuccessfully, procmail tried
                              to get back the original text.

       Skipped: "x"           Couldn't do anything with "x" in the rcfile
                              (syntax error), ignoring it.

       Suspicious rcfile "x"  The owner of the rcfile was not the recipient or
                              root, the file was world writable, or the
                              directory that contained it was world writable,
                              or this was the default rcfile
                              ($HOME/.procmailrc) and either it was group
                              writable or the directory that contained it was
                              group writable (the rcfile was not used).

       Terminating prematurely whilst waiting for ...
                              Procmail received a signal while it was waiting
                              for ...

       Timeout, terminating "x"
                              Timeout has occurred on program or filter "x".

       Timeout, was waiting for "x"
                              Timeout has occurred on program, filter or file
                              "x".  If it was a program or filter, then it
                              didn't seem to be running anymore.

       Truncated file to former size
                              The file could not be delivered to successfully,
                              so the file was truncated to its former size.

       Truncating "x" and retrying lock
                              "x" does not seem to be a valid filename or the
                              file is not empty.

       Unable to treat as directory "x"
                              Either the suffix on "x" would indicate that it
                              should be an MH or maildir folder, or it was
                              listed as an second folder into which to link,
                              but it already exists and is not a directory.

       Unexpected EOL         Missing closing quote, or trying to escape EOF.

       Unknown user "x"       The specified recipient does not have a
                              corresponding uid.

EXTENDED DIAGNOSTICS
       Extended diagnostics can be turned on and off through setting the
       VERBOSE variable.

       [pid] time & date      Procmail's pid and a timestamp.  Generated
                              whenever procmail logs a diagnostic and at least
                              a second has elapsed since the last timestamp.

       Acquiring kernel-lock  Procmail now tries to kernel-lock the most
                              recently opened file (descriptor).

       Assigning "x"          Environment variable assignment.

       Assuming identity of the recipient, VERBOSE=off
                              Dropping all privileges (if any), implicitly
                              turns off extended diagnostics.

       Bypassed locking "x"   The mail spool directory was not accessible to
                              procmail, it relied solely on kernel locks.

       Executing "x"          Starting program "x".  If it is started by
                              procmail directly (without an intermediate
                              shell), procmail will show where it separated
                              the arguments by inserting commas.

       HOST mismatched "x"    This host was called "x", HOST contained
                              something else.

       Locking "x"            Creating lockfile "x".

       Linking to "x"         Creating a hardlink between directory folders.

       Match on "x"           Condition matched.

       Matched "x"            Assigned "x" to MATCH.

       No match on "x"        Condition didn't match, recipe skipped.

       Non-zero exitcode (nnn) by "x"
                              Program that was started by procmail as a
                              condition or as the action of a recipe with the
                              `W' flag returned nnn instead of EXIT_SUCCESS
                              (=0); the usage indicates that this is not an
                              entirely unexpected condition.

       Notified comsat: "$LOGNAME@offset:file"
                              Sent comsat/biff a notice that mail arrived for
                              user $LOGNAME at `offset' in `file'.

       Opening "x"            Opening file "x" for appending.

       Rcfile: "x"            Rcfile changed to "x".

       Reiterating kernel-lock
                              While attempting several locking methods, one of
                              these failed.  Procmail will reiterate until
                              they all succeed in rapid succession.

       Score: added newtotal "x"
                              This condition scored `added' points, which
                              resulted in a `newtotal' score.

       Unlocking "x"          Removing lockfile "x" again.

WARNINGS
       You should create a shell script that uses lockfile(1) before invoking
       your mail shell on any mailbox file other than the system mailbox
       (unless of course, your mail shell uses the same lockfiles (local or
       global) you specified in your rcfile).

       In the unlikely event that you absolutely need to kill procmail before
       it has finished, first try and use the regular kill command (i.e., not
       kill -9, see the subsection Signals for suggestions), otherwise some
       lockfiles might not get removed.

       Beware when using the -t option, if procmail repeatedly is unable to
       deliver the mail (e.g., due to an incorrect rcfile), the system
       mailqueue could fill up.  This could aggravate both the local
       postmaster and other users.

       The /etc/procmailrc file might be executed with root privileges, so be
       very careful of what you put in it.  SHELL will be equal to that of the
       current recipient, so if procmail has to invoke the shell, you'd better
       set it to some safe value first.  See also: DROPPRIVS.

       Keep in mind that if chown(1) is permitted on files in
       /etc/procmailrcs/, that they can be chowned to root (or anyone else) by
       their current owners.  For maximum security, make sure this directory
       is executable to root only.

       Procmail is not the proper tool for sharing one mailbox among many
       users, such as when you have one POP account for all mail to your
       domain. It can be done if you manage to configure your MTA to add some
       headers with the envelope recipient data in order to tell Procmail who
       a message is for, but this is usually not the right thing to do.
       Perhaps you want to investigate if your MTA offers `virtual user
       tables', or check out the `multidrop' facility of Fetchmail.

BUGS
       After removing a lockfile by force, procmail waits $SUSPEND seconds
       before creating a new lockfile so that another process that decides to
       remove the stale lockfile will not remove the newly created lock by
       mistake.

       Procmail uses the regular TERMINATE signal to terminate any runaway
       filter, but it does not check if the filter responds to that signal and
       it only sends it to the filter itself, not to any of the filter's
       children.

       A continued Content-Length: field is not handled correctly.

       The embedded newlines in a continued header should be skipped when
       matching instead of being treated as a single space as they are now.

MISCELLANEOUS
       If there is an existing Content-Length: field in the header of the mail
       and the -Y option is not specified, procmail will trim the field to
       report the correct size.  Procmail does not change the fieldwidth.

       If there is no Content-Length: field or the -Y option has been
       specified and procmail appends to regular mailfolders, any lines in the
       body of the message that look like postmarks are prepended with `>'
       (disarms bogus mailheaders).  The regular expression that is used to
       search for these postmarks is:
              `\nFrom '

       If the destination name used in explicit delivery mode is not in
       /etc/passwd, procmail will proceed as if explicit delivery mode was not
       in effect.  If not in explicit delivery mode and should the uid
       procmail is running under, have no corresponding /etc/passwd entry,
       then HOME will default to /, LOGNAME will default to #uid, SHELL will
       default to /bin/sh, and ORGMAIL will default to /tmp/dead.letter.

       When in explicit delivery mode, procmail will generate a leading `From
       ' line if none is present.  If one is already present procmail will
       leave it intact.  If procmail is not invoked with one of the following
       user or group ids: root, daemon, uucp, mail, x400, network, list,
       slist, lists or news, but still has to generate or accept a new `From '
       line, it will generate an additional `>From ' line to help distinguish
       fake mails.

       For security reasons procmail will only use an absolute or $HOME-
       relative rcfile if it is owned by the recipient or root, not world
       writable, and the directory it is contained in is not world writable.
       The $HOME/.procmailrc file has the additional constraint of not being
       group-writable or in a group-writable directory.

       If /var/mail/$LOGNAME is a bogus mailbox (i.e., does not belong to the
       recipient, is unwritable, is a symbolic link or is a hard link),
       procmail will upon startup try to rename it into a file starting with
       `BOGUS.$LOGNAME.' and ending in an inode-sequence-code.  If this turns
       out to be impossible, ORGMAIL will have no initial value, and hence
       will inhibit delivery without a proper rcfile.

       If /var/mail/$LOGNAME already is a valid mailbox, but has got too loose
       permissions on it, procmail will correct this.  To prevent procmail
       from doing this make sure the u+x bit is set.

       When delivering to directories, MH folders, or maildir folders, you
       don't need to use lockfiles to prevent several concurrently running
       procmail programs from messing up.

       Delivering to MH folders is slightly more time consuming than
       delivering to normal directories or mailboxes, because procmail has to
       search for the next available number (instead of having the filename
       immediately available).

       On general failure procmail will return EX_CANTCREAT, unless option -t
       is specified, in which case it will return EX_TEMPFAIL.

       To make `egrepping' of headers more consistent, procmail concatenates
       all continued header fields; but only internally.  When delivering the
       mail, line breaks will appear as before.

       If procmail is called under a name not starting with `procmail' (e.g.,
       if it is linked to another name and invoked as such), it comes up in
       explicit delivery mode, and expects the recipients' names as command
       line arguments (as if -d had been specified).

       Comsat/biff notifications are done using udp.  They are sent off once
       when procmail generates the regular logfile entry.  The notification
       messages have the following extended format (or as close as you can get
       when final delivery was not to a file):
              $LOGNAME@offset_of_message_in_mailbox:absolute_path_to_mailbox

       Whenever procmail itself opens a file to deliver to, it consistently
       uses the following kernel locking strategies: flock(2).

       Procmail is NFS-resistant and eight-bit clean.

NOTES
       Calling up procmail with the -h or -? options will cause it to display
       a command-line help and recipe flag quick-reference page.

       There exists an excellent newbie FAQ about mailfilters (and procmail in
       particular); it is maintained by Nancy McGough <nancym@ii.com> and can
       be obtained by sending a mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the
       following in the body:
              send usenet/news.answers/mail/filtering-faq

       If procmail is not installed globally as the default mail delivery
       agent (ask your system administrator), you have to make sure it is
       invoked when your mail arrives.  In this case your $HOME/.forward
       (beware, it has to be world readable) file should contain the line
       below.  Be sure to include the single and double quotes, and unless you
       know your site to be running smrsh (the SendMail Restricted SHell), it
       must be an absolute path.The \fB#\fP\fIYOUR_USERNAME\fP is not actually
       a parameter that is required by procmail, in fact, it will be discarded
       by sh before procmail ever sees it; it is however a necessary kludge
       against overoptimising sendmail programs:


       "|IFS=' '&&p=/opt/homebrew/Cellar/procmail/14/bin/procmail&&test -f $p&&exec $p -Yf-||exit 75 #YOUR_USERNAME"

       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/.forward file (in which case the following script could
       periodically be called from within cron(1), or whenever you start
       reading mail):

              #!/bin/sh

              ORGMAIL=/var/mail/$LOGNAME

              if cd $HOME &&
               test -s $ORGMAIL &&
               lockfile -r0 -l1024 .newmail.lock 2>/dev/null
              then
                trap "rm -f .newmail.lock" 1 2 3 13 15
                umask 077
                lockfile -l1024 -ml
                cat $ORGMAIL >>.newmail &&
                 cat /dev/null >$ORGMAIL
                lockfile -mu
                formail -s procmail <.newmail &&
                 rm -f .newmail
                rm -f .newmail.lock
              fi
              exit 0

   A sample small $HOME/.procmailrc:
       PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/homebrew/Cellar/procmail/14/bin
       MAILDIR=$HOME/Mail      #you'd better make sure it exists
       DEFAULT=$MAILDIR/mbox   #completely optional
       LOGFILE=$MAILDIR/from   #recommended

       :0:
       * ^From.*berg
       from_me

       :0
       * ^Subject:.*Flame
       /dev/null

       Other examples for rcfile recipes can be looked up in the procmailex(5)
       man page.

SOURCE
       This program is part of the procmail mail-processing-package (v3.22)
       available at http://www.procmail.org/ or ftp.procmail.org in
       pub/procmail/.

MAILINGLIST
       There exists a mailinglist for questions relating to any program in the
       procmail package:
              <procmail-users@procmail.org>
                     for submitting questions/answers.
              <procmail-users-request@procmail.org>
                     for subscription requests.

       If you would like to stay informed about new versions and official
       patches send a subscription request to
              procmail-announce-request@procmail.org
       (this is a readonly list).

AUTHORS
       Stephen R. van den Berg
              <srb@cuci.nl>
       Philip A. Guenther
              <guenther@sendmail.com>

BuGless                           2001/08/27                       PROCMAIL(1)