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Mail::SPF::Result(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Mail::SPF::Result(3) |
Mail::SPF::Result - SPF result class
For the general usage of Mail::SPF::Result objects in code that calls
Mail::SPF, see Mail::SPF. For the detailed interface of
Mail::SPF::Result and its derivatives, see below.
package Mail::SPF::Foo;
use Error ':try';
use Mail::SPF::Result;
sub foo {
if (...) {
$server->throw_result('pass', $request)
}
else {
$server->throw_result('permerror', $request, 'Invalid foo');
}
}
package Mail::SPF::Bar;
use Error ':try';
use Mail::SPF::Foo;
try {
Mail::SPF::Foo->foo();
}
catch Mail::SPF::Result with {
my ($result) = @_;
...
};
my $result_name = $result->name;
my $result_code = $result->code;
my $request = $result->request;
my $local_exp = $result->local_explanation;
my $authority_exp = $result->authority_explanation
if $result->can('authority_explanation');
my $spf_header = $result->received_spf_header;
An object of class Mail::SPF::Result represents the result of an SPF
request.
There is usually no need to construct an SPF result object
directly using the "new" constructor.
Instead, use the "throw" class method to
signal to the calling code that a definite SPF result has been determined.
In other words, use Mail::SPF::Result and its derivatives just like
exceptions. See Error or "eval" in perlfunc for how to handle
exceptions in Perl.
The following constructor is provided:
- new($server, $request): returns
Mail::SPF::Result
- new($server, $request, $text): returns
Mail::SPF::Result
- Creates a new SPF result object and associates the given
Mail::SPF::Server and Mail::SPF::Request objects with it. An
optional result text may be specified.
The following class methods are provided:
- throw($server, $request): throws
Mail::SPF::Result
- throw($server, $request, $text): throws
Mail::SPF::Result
- Throws a new SPF result object, associating the given
Mail::SPF::Server and Mail::SPF::Request objects with it. An
optional result text may be specified.
Note: Do not write code invoking
"throw" on literal result class
names as this would ignore any derivative result classes provided by
Mail::SPF extension modules. Invoke the
"throw_result" method on a
Mail::SPF::Server object instead.
- name: returns string
- Abstract. Returns the result name of the result class (or object).
For classes of the Mail::SPF::Result::* hierarchy, this roughly
corresponds to the trailing part of the class name. For example, returns
"neutral-by-default" if invoked on
Mail::SPF::Result::NeutralByDefault. Also see the "code"
method. This method may also be used as an instance method.
This method must be implemented by sub-classes of
Mail::SPF::Result for which the result name differs from the
result code.
- class: returns class
- class($name): returns class
- Maps the given result name to the corresponding
Mail::SPF::Result::* class, or returns the result base class (the
class on which it is invoked) if no result name is given. If an unknown
result name is specified, returns undef.
- isa_by_name($name): returns boolean
- If the class (or object) on which this method is invoked represents the
given result name (or a derivative name), returns true. Returns
false otherwise. This method may also be used as an instance
method.
For example,
"Mail::SPF::Result::NeutralByDefault->isa_by_name('neutral')"
returns true.
- code: returns string
- Abstract. Returns the basic SPF result code
("pass",
"fail",
"softfail",
"neutral",
"none",
"error",
"permerror",
"temperror") of the result class on
which it is invoked. All valid result codes are valid result names as
well, the reverse however does not apply. This method may also be used as
an instance method.
This method is abstract and must be implemented by sub-classes
of Mail::SPF::Result.
- is_code($code): returns boolean
- If the class (or object) on which this method is invoked represents the
given result code, returns true. Returns false otherwise.
This method may also be used as an instance method.
Note: The "isa_by_name" method provides a
superset of this method's functionality.
- received_spf_header_name: returns string
- Returns 'Received-SPF' as the field name for
"Received-SPF" header fields. This
method should be overridden by Mail::SPF extension modules that
provide non-standard features (such as local policy) with the capacity to
dilute the purity of SPF results, in order not to deceive users of the
header field into mistaking it as an indication of a natural SPF
result.
The following instance methods are provided:
- throw: throws Mail::SPF::Result
- throw($server, $request): throws
Mail::SPF::Result
- throw($server, $request, $text): throws
Mail::SPF::Result
- Re-throws an existing SPF result object. If Mail::SPF::Server and
Mail::SPF::Request objects are specified, associates them with the
result object, replacing the prior server and request objects. If a result
text is specified as well, overrides the prior result text.
- server: returns Mail::SPF::Server
- Returns the Mail::SPF server object that produced the result at hand.
- request: returns Mail::SPF::Request
- Returns the SPF request that led to the result at hand.
- text: returns string
- Returns the text message of the result object.
- stringify: returns string
- Returns the result's name and text message formatted as a string. You can
simply use a Mail::SPF::Result object as a string for the same effect, see
"OVERLOADING".
- local_explanation: returns string; throws
Mail::SPF::EDNSError, Mail::SPF::EInvalidMacroString
- Returns a locally generated explanation for the result.
The local explanation is prefixed with the authority domain
whose sender policy is responsible for the result. If the responsible
sender policy referred to another domain's policy (using the
"include" mechanism or the
"redirect" modifier), that other
domain which is directly responsible for the result is also
included in the local explanation's head. For example:
example.com: <local-explanation>
The authority domain
"example.com"'s sender policy is
directly responsible for the result.
example.com ... other.example.org: <local-explanation>
The authority domain
"example.com" (directly or indirectly)
referred to the domain
"other.example.org", whose sender
policy then led to the result.
- received_spf_header: returns string
- Returns a string containing an appropriate
"Received-SPF" header field for the
result object. The header field is not line-wrapped and contains no
trailing newline character.
If a Mail::SPF::Result object is used as a string, the
"stringify" method is used to convert the object into a string.
The following result classes are provided:
- Mail::SPF::Result::Pass
- Mail::SPF::Result::Fail
- Mail::SPF::Result::SoftFail
- Mail::SPF::Result::Neutral
- •
- Mail::SPF::Result::NeutralByDefault
This is a special case of the
"neutral" result that is thrown as a
default when "falling off" the end of the record during
evaluation. See RFC 4408, 4.7.
- Mail::SPF::Result::None
- Mail::SPF::Result::Error
- Mail::SPF::Result::PermError
- Mail::SPF::Result::TempError
The following result classes have additional functionality:
- Mail::SPF::Result::Fail
- The following additional instance method is provided:
- authority_explanation: returns string; throws
Mail::SPF::EDNSError, Mail::SPF::EInvalidMacroString
- Returns the authority domain's explanation for the result. Be aware that
the authority domain may be a malicious party and thus the authority
explanation should not be trusted blindly. See RFC 4408, 10.5, for a
detailed discussion of this issue.
Mail::SPF, Mail::SPF::Server, Error, "eval" in perlfunc
<http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4408>
For availability, support, and license information, see the README
file included with Mail::SPF.
Julian Mehnle <julian@mehnle.net>
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