O’Reilly Books Latest LAMP Titles: mod_perl Pocket Reference (Sex offenders web site)

O’Reilly Books Latest LAMP Titles: mod_perl Pocket Reference SQL in a Nutshell Network Printing Books by topic: Linux Open Source Security System and Network Administration Unix Web and Internet O’Reilly Network Technologies: ONJava.com ONLamp.com openp2p.com Perl.com XML.com Apache BSD Java Javascript and CSS Linux Mac Mozilla .NET P2P Perl Policy PHP Python Web Services Wireless Do not edit non-mailbox-format lines. By default, formail prepends From to such lines. -i headerfield Append headerfield whether or not it already exists. Rename each existing headerfield to Old-headerfield, unless they are empty. -k For use only with -r. Keep the body as well as the fields specified by -r. -m minfields Require at least minfields before recognizing the beginning of a new message. Default is 2. -n Allow simultaneous formail processes to run. -p prefix Escape lines with prefix instead of >. -q Do not display write errors, duplicate messages, and mismatched Content-Length fields. This is the default; use -q- to turn it off. -r Throw away all existing fields, retaining only X-Loop, and generate autoreply header instead. You can preserve particular fields with the -i option. -s Must be the last option; everything following it will be assumed to be its arguments. Divide input to separate mail messages, and pipe them to the program specified or concatenate them to standard output (by default). -t Assume sender’s return address to be valid. (By default, formail favors machine-generated addresses.) -u headerfield Delete all but the first occurrence of headerfield. -x headerfield Display the contents of headerfield on a single line. -z When necessary, add a space between field names and contents. Remove (”zap”) empty fields.

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