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Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin(3) |
Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin - SpamAssassin plugin base class
loadplugin MyPlugin /path/to/myplugin.pm
package MyPlugin;
use Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin;
our @ISA = qw(Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin);
sub new {
my ($class, $mailsa) = @_;
# the usual perlobj boilerplate to create a subclass object
$class = ref($class) || $class;
my $self = $class->SUPER::new($mailsa);
bless ($self, $class);
# then register an eval rule, if desired...
$self->register_eval_rule ("check_for_foo");
# and return the new plugin object
return $self;
}
...methods...
1;
This is the base class for SpamAssassin plugins; all plugins must be objects
that implement this class.
This class provides no-op stub methods for all the callbacks that
a plugin can receive. It is expected that your plugin will override one or
more of these stubs to perform its actions.
SpamAssassin implements a plugin chain; each callback event is
passed to each of the registered plugin objects in turn. Any plugin can call
"$self->inhibit_further_callbacks()" to
block delivery of that event to later plugins in the chain. This is useful
if the plugin has handled the event, and there will be no need for later
plugins to handle it as well.
If you're looking to write a simple eval rule, skip straight to
"register_eval_rule()", below.
In all the plugin APIs below, "options" refers
to a reference to a hash containing name-value pairs. This is used to ensure
future-compatibility, in that we can add new options in future without
affecting objects built to an earlier version of the API.
For example, here would be how to print out the
"line" item in a
"parse_config()" method:
sub parse_config {
my ($self, $opts) = @_;
print "MyPlugin: parse_config got ".$opts->{line}."\n";
}
The following methods can be overridden by subclasses to handle events.
- $plugin = MyPluginClass->new ($mailsaobject)
- Constructor. Plugins that need to register themselves will need to define
their own; the default super-class constructor will work fine for plugins
that just override a method.
Note that subclasses must provide the
$mailsaobject to the superclass constructor,
like so:
my $self = $class->SUPER::new($mailsaobject);
Lifecycle note: plugins that will need to store per-scan state
should not store that on the Plugin object; instead this should be
stored on the PerMsgStatus object, see
"check_start()" below. It is also
likewise recommended that configuration settings be stored on the Conf
object; see "parse_config()".
- $plugin->parse_config ( { options ... } )
- Parse a configuration line that hasn't already been handled.
"options" is a reference to a hash
containing these options:
- line
- The line of configuration text to parse. This has leading and trailing
whitespace, and comments, removed.
- key
- The configuration key; ie. the first "word" on the line.
- value
- The configuration value; everything after the first "word" and
any whitespace after that.
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
- user_config
- A boolean: 1 if reading a user's configuration,
0 if reading the system-wide configuration
files.
If the configuration line was a setting that is handled by this
plugin, the method implementation should call
"$self->inhibit_further_callbacks()".
If the setting is not handled by this plugin, the method should
return 0 so that a later plugin may handle it, or so
that SpamAssassin can output a warning message to the user if no plugin
understands it.
Lifecycle note: it is suggested that configuration be stored on
the "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object in
use, instead of the plugin object itself. That can be found as
"$plugin->{main}->{conf}", or as
"conf" in the $options hash reference
above. By storing it on "conf", this
allows per-user and system-wide configuration precedence to be dealt with
correctly.
- $plugin->finish_parsing_start ( { options ... } )
- Signals that the system-wide configuration has been completely read, but
internal data structures are not yet created. It is possible to use this
hook to dynamically change the configuration already read in or add new
config options.
"options" is a reference to
a hash containing these options:
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
Note: there are no guarantees that the internal data structures of
SpamAssassin will not change from release to release. In particular to this
plugin hook, if you modify the rules data structures in a third-party
plugin, all bets are off until such time that an API is present for
modifying that configuration data.
- $plugin->finish_parsing_end ( { options ... } )
- Signals that the system-wide configuration parsing has just finished, and
SpamAssassin is nearly ready to check messages.
"options" is a reference to
a hash containing these options:
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
Note: there are no guarantees that the internal data structures of
SpamAssassin will not change from release to release. In particular to this
plugin hook, if you modify the rules data structures in a third-party
plugin, all bets are off until such time that an API is present for
modifying that configuration data.
- $plugin->user_conf_parsing_start ( { options ... } )
- Signals that the per-user configuration has been completely read, but not
converted to internal data structures. It is possible to use this hook to
dynamically change the configuration already read in or add new config
options.
If "allow_user_rules" is
enabled in the configuration, it is possible that additional rules have
been added since the
"finish_parsing_start" plugin hook
invocation was called.
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
Note: there are no guarantees that the internal data structures of
SpamAssassin will not change from release to release. In particular to this
plugin hook, if you modify the rules data structures in a third-party
plugin, all bets are off until such time that an API is present for
modifying that configuration data.
- $plugin->user_conf_parsing_end ( { options ... } )
- Signals that the per-user configuration parsing has just finished, and
SpamAssassin is nearly ready to check messages. If
"allow_user_rules" is enabled in the
configuration, it is possible that additional rules have been added since
the "finish_parsing_end" plugin hook
invocation was called.
"options" is a reference to
a hash containing these options:
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
Note: there are no guarantees that the internal data structures of
SpamAssassin will not change from release to release. In particular to this
plugin hook, if you modify the rules data structures in a third-party
plugin, all bets are off until such time that an API is present for
modifying that configuration data.
- $plugin->signal_user_changed ( { options ... } )
- Signals that the current user has changed for a new one.
- username
- The new user's username.
- user_dir
- The new user's home directory. (equivalent to
"~".)
- userstate_dir
- The new user's storage directory. (equivalent to
"~/.spamassassin".)
- $plugin->services_authorized_for_username ( { options ... } )
- Validates that a given username is authorized to use certain services.
In order to authorize a user, the plugin should first check
that it can handle any of the services passed into the method and then
set the value for each allowed service to true (or any non-negative
value).
The current supported services are: bayessql
- username
- A username
- services
- Reference to a hash containing the services you want to check.
{
'bayessql' => 0
}
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
- $plugin->compile_now_start ( { options ... } )
- This is called at the beginning of
Mail::SpamAssassin::compile_now() so plugins can do any necessary
initialization for multi-process SpamAssassin (such as spamd or mass-check
-j).
- use_user_prefs
- The value of $use_user_prefs option in
compile_now().
- keep_userstate
- The value of $keep_userstate option in
compile_now().
- $plugin->compile_now_finish ( { options ... } )
- This is called at the end of Mail::SpamAssassin::compile_now() so
plugins can do any necessary initialization for multi-process SpamAssassin
(such as spamd or mass-check -j).
- use_user_prefs
- The value of $use_user_prefs option in
compile_now().
- keep_userstate
- The value of $keep_userstate option in
compile_now().
- $plugin->check_start ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message check operation is starting.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
Lifecycle note: it is recommended that rules that need to
track test state on a per-scan basis should store that state on this
object, not on the plugin object itself, since the plugin object will be
shared between all active scanners.
The message being scanned is accessible through the
"$permsgstatus->get_message()" API;
there are a number of other public APIs on that object, too. See
"Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
perldoc.
- $plugin->check_main ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message should be checked. Note that implementations of
this hook should return 1.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_tick ( { options ... } )
- Called periodically during a message check operation. A callback set for
this method is a good place to run through an event loop dealing with
network events triggered in a
"parse_metadata" method, for
example.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_dnsbl ( { options ... } )
- Called when DNSBL or other network lookups are being launched, implying
current running priority of -100. This is the place to start your own
asynchronously-started network lookups.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_post_dnsbl ( { options ... } )
- Called after the DNSBL results have been harvested. This is a good place
to harvest your own asynchronously-started network lookups.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_cleanup ( { options ... } )
- Called just before message check is finishing and before possible
auto-learning. This is guaranteed to be always called, unlike check_tick
and check_post_dnsbl. Used for cleaning up left callbacks or forked
children etc, last chance to make rules hit.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_post_learn ( { options ... } )
- Called after auto-learning may (or may not) have taken place. If you wish
to perform additional learning, whether or not auto-learning happens, this
is the place to do it.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->check_end ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message check operation has just finished, and the results
are about to be returned to the caller.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan. The current score, names of rules that hit,
etc. can be retrieved using the public APIs on this object.
- $plugin->finish_tests ( { options ... } )
- Called via "Mail::SpamAssassin::finish".
This should clear up any tests that a plugin has added to the namespace.
In certain circumstances, plugins may find it useful to
compile perl functions from the ruleset, on the fly. It is important to
remove these once the
"Mail::SpamAssassin" object is
deleted, however, and this API allows this.
Each plugin is responsible for its own generated perl
functions.
- conf
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object on
which the configuration data should be stored.
See also the
"register_generated_rule_method" helper
API, below.
- $plugin->extract_metadata ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message is being mined for metadata. Some plugins may wish
to add their own metadata as well.
- msg
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::Message" object
for this message.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->parsed_metadata ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message's metadata has been parsed, and can now be accessed
by the plugin.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->start_rules ( { options ... } )
- Called before testing a set of rules of a given type and priority.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- ruletype
- The type of the rules about to be performed.
- priority
- The priority level of the rules about to be performed.
- $plugin->hit_rule ( { options ... } )
- Called when a rule fires.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- ruletype
- The type of the rule that fired.
- rulename
- The name of the rule that fired.
- score
- The rule's score in the active scoreset.
- $plugin->ran_rule ( { options ... } )
- Called after a rule has been tested, whether or not it fired. When the
rule fires, the hit_rule callback is always called before this.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- ruletype
- The type of the rule that was tested.
- rulename
- The name of the rule that was tested.
- $plugin->autolearn_discriminator ( { options ... } )
- Control whether a just-scanned message should be learned as either spam or
ham. This method should return one of 1 to learn
the message as spam, 0 to learn as ham, or
"undef" to not learn from the message at
all.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->autolearn ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a message is about to be auto-learned as either ham or
spam.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- isspam
- 1 if the message is spam,
0 if ham.
- $plugin->per_msg_finish ( { options ... } )
- Signals that a
"Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
object is being destroyed, and any per-scan context held on that object by
this plugin should be destroyed as well.
Normally, any member variables on the
"PerMsgStatus" object will be cleaned
up automatically -- but if your plugin has made a circular reference on
that object, this is the place to break them so that garbage collection
can operate correctly.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->have_shortcircuited ( { options ... } )
- Has the current scan operation 'short-circuited'? In other words, can
further scanning be skipped, since the message is already definitively
classified as either spam or ham?
Plugins should return 0 to indicate
that scanning should continue, or 1 to indicate
that short-circuiting has taken effect.
- permsgstatus
- The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus"
context object for this scan.
- $plugin->bayes_learn ( { options ... } )
- Called at the end of a bayes learn operation.
This phase is the best place to map the raw (original) token
value to the SHA1 hashed value.
- toksref
- Reference to hash returned by call to tokenize. The hash takes the format
of:
{
'SHA1 Hash Value' => 'raw (original) value',
...
}
NOTE: This data structure has changed since it was originally
introduced in version 3.0.0. The values are no longer perl anonymous
hashes, they are a single string containing the raw token value. You can
test for backward compatibility by checking to see if the value for a
key is a reference to a perl HASH, for instance:
if (ref($toksref->{$sometokenkey}) eq 'HASH') {...
If it is, then you are using the old interface, otherwise you
are using the current interface.
- isspam
- Boolean value stating what flavor of message the tokens represent, if true
then message was specified as spam, false is nonspam. Note, when function
is scan then isspam value is not valid.
- msgid
- Generated message id of the message just learned.
- msgatime
- Received date of the current message or current time if received date
could not be determined. In addition, if the receive date is more than 24
hrs into the future it will be reset to current datetime.
- $plugin->bayes_forget ( { options ... } )
- Called at the end of a bayes forget operation.
- toksref
- Reference to hash returned by call to tokenize. See bayes_learn
documentation for additional information on the format.
- isspam
- Boolean value stating what flavor of message the tokens represent, if true
then message was specified as spam, false is nonspam. Note, when function
is scan then isspam value is not valid.
- msgid
- Generated message id of the message just forgotten.
- $plugin->bayes_scan ( { options ... } )
- Called at the end of a bayes scan operation. NOTE: Will not be called in
case of error or if the message is otherwise skipped.
- toksref
- Reference to hash returned by call to tokenize. See bayes_learn
documentation for additional information on the format.
- probsref
- Reference to hash of calculated probabilities for tokens found in the
database.
{
'SHA1 Hash Value' => {
'prob' => 'calculated probability',
'spam_count' => 'Total number of spam msgs w/ token',
'ham_count' => 'Total number of ham msgs w/ token',
'atime' => 'Atime value for token in database'
}
}
- score
- Score calculated for this particular message.
- msgatime
- Calculated atime of the message just learned, note it may have been
adjusted if it was determined to be too far into the future.
- significant_tokens
- Array ref of the tokens found to be significant in determining the score
for this message.
- $plugin->plugin_report ( { options ... } )
- Called if the message is to be reported as spam. If the reporting system
is available, the variable
"$options->{report}->report_available}"
should be set to 1; if the reporting system
successfully reported the message, the variable
"$options->{report}->report_return}"
should be set to 1.
- report
- Reference to the Reporter object
("$options->{report}" in the
paragraph above.)
- text
- Reference to a markup removed copy of the message in scalar string
format.
- msg
- Reference to the original message object.
- $plugin->plugin_revoke ( { options ... } )
- Called if the message is to be reported as ham (revokes a spam report). If
the reporting system is available, the variable
"$options->{revoke}->revoke_available}"
should be set to 1; if the reporting system
successfully revoked the message, the variable
"$options->{revoke}->revoke_return}"
should be set to 1.
- revoke
- Reference to the Reporter object
("$options->{revoke}" in the
paragraph above.)
- text
- Reference to a markup removed copy of the message in scalar string
format.
- msg
- Reference to the original message object.
- $plugin->whitelist_address( { options ... } )
- Called when a request is made to add an address to a persistent address
list.
- address
- Address you wish to add.
- cli_p
- Indicate if the call is being made from a command line interface.
- $plugin->blacklist_address( { options ... } )
- Called when a request is made to add an address to a persistent address
list.
- address
- Address you wish to add.
- cli_p
- Indicate if the call is being made from a command line interface.
- $plugin->remove_address( { options ... } )
- Called when a request is made to remove an address to a persistent address
list.
- address
- Address you wish to remove.
- cli_p
- Indicate if the call is being made from a command line interface.
- $plugin->spamd_child_init ()
- Called in each new child process when it starts up under spamd.
- $plugin->log_scan_result ( { options ... } )
- Called when spamd has completed scanning a message. Currently, only spamd
calls this API.
- result
- The 'result: ...' line for this scan. Format is as
described at
http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/SpamdSyslogFormat.
- $plugin->spamd_child_post_connection_close ()
- Called when child returns from handling a connection.
If there was an accept failure, the child will die and this
code will not be called.
- $plugin->finish ()
- Called when the "Mail::SpamAssassin"
object is destroyed.
- $plugin->learner_new ()
- Used to support human-trained probabilistic classifiers like the BAYES_*
ruleset. Called when a new
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Bayes" object has
been created; typically when a new user's scan is about to start.
- $plugin->learn_message ()
- Train the classifier with a training message.
- isspam
- 1 if the message is spam, 0 if it's non-spam.
- msg
- The message's
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Message"
object.
- id
- An optional message-identification string, used internally to tag the
message. If it is "undef", one will be
generated. It should be unique to that message.
- $plugin->forget_message ()
- Tell the classifier to 'forget' its training about a specific
message.
- msg
- The message's
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Message"
object.
- id
- An optional message-identification string, used internally to tag the
message. If it is "undef", one will be
generated. It should be unique to that message.
- $plugin->learner_sync ()
- Tell the classifier to 'sync' any pending changes against the current
user's training database. This is called by
"sa-learn --sync".
If you do not need to implement these for your classifier,
create an implementation that just contains
"return 1".
- $plugin->learner_expire_old_training ()
- Tell the classifier to perform infrequent, time-consuming cleanup of the
current user's training database. This is called by
"sa-learn
--force-expire".
If you do not need to implement these for your classifier,
create an implementation that just contains
"return 1".
- $plugin->learner_is_scan_available ()
- Should return 1 if it is possible to use the current user's training data
for a message-scan operation, or 0 otherwise.
- $plugin->learner_dump_database ()
- Dump information about the current user's training data to
"stdout". This is called by
"sa-learn --dump".
- magic
- Set to 1 if "magic" name-value metadata should be dumped.
- toks
- Set to 1 if the database of tokens should be dumped.
- regex
- Either "undef" to dump all tokens, or a
value which specifies a regular expression subset of the tokens to
dump.
- $plugin->learner_close ()
- Close any open databases.
- quiet
- Set to 1 if warning messages should be suppressed.
These methods provide an API for plugins to register themselves to receive
specific events, or control the callback chain behaviour.
- $plugin->register_eval_rule ($nameofevalsub, $ruletype)
- Plugins that implement an eval test will need to call this, so that
SpamAssassin calls into the object when that eval test is encountered. See
the REGISTERING EVAL RULES section for full details.
Since 4.0, optional $ruletype can be
specified to enforce that eval function cannot be called with wrong
ruletype from configuration, for example user using "header FOO
eval:foobar()" instead of "body FOO
eval:foobar()". Mismatch will result in lint failure.
$ruletype can be one of:
$Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf::TYPE_HEAD_EVALS
$Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf::TYPE_BODY_EVALS (allows both body and rawbody)
$Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf::TYPE_RAWBODY_EVALS
$Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf::TYPE_FULL_EVALS
- $plugin->register_generated_rule_method ($nameofsub)
- In certain circumstances, plugins may find it useful to compile perl
functions from the ruleset, on the fly. It is important to remove these
once the "Mail::SpamAssassin" object is
deleted, however, and this API allows this.
Once the method $nameofsub has been
generated, call this API with the name of the method (including full
package scope). This indicates that it's a temporary piece of generated
code, built from the SpamAssassin ruleset, and when
"Mail::SpamAssassin::finish()" is
called, the method will be destroyed.
This API was added in SpamAssassin 3.2.0.
- $plugin->register_method_priority($methodname, $priority)
- Indicate that the method named $methodname on the
current object has a callback priority of
$priority.
This is used by the plugin handler to determine the relative
order of callbacks; plugins with lower-numbered priorities are called
before plugins with higher-numbered priorities. Each method can have a
different priority value. The default value is
0. The ordering of callbacks to methods with
equal priority is undefined.
Typically, you only need to worry about this if you need to
ensure your plugin's method is called before another plugin's
implementation of that method. It should be called from your plugin's
constructor.
This API was added in SpamAssassin 3.2.0.
- $plugin->inhibit_further_callbacks()
- Tells the plugin handler to inhibit calling into other plugins in the
plugin chain for the current callback. Frequently used when parsing
configuration settings using
"parse_config()".
- Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::dbg($message)
- Output a debugging message $message, if the
SpamAssassin object is running with debugging turned on.
NOTE: This function is not available in the package
namespace of general plugins and can't be called via
$self->dbg(). If a plugin wishes to
output debug information, it should call
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::dbg($msg)".
- Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::info($message)
- Output an informational message $message, if the
SpamAssassin object is running with informational messages turned on.
NOTE: This function is not available in the package
namespace of general plugins and can't be called via
$self->info(). If a plugin wishes to
output debug information, it should call
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin::info($msg)".
In general, it is better for plugins to use the
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Logger" module to
import "dbg" and
"info" directly, like so:
use Mail::SpamAssassin::Logger;
dbg("some message");
info("some other message");
Plugins that implement an eval test must register the methods that can be called
from rules in the configuration files, in the plugin class' constructor.
For example,
$plugin->register_eval_rule ('check_for_foo', $Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf::TYPE_HEAD_EVALS)
will cause
"$plugin->check_for_foo()" to be called
for this SpamAssassin rule:
header FOO_RULE eval:check_for_foo()
Note that eval rules are passed the following arguments:
- - The plugin object itself
- - The "Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus" object calling the
rule
- - standard arguments for the rule type in use
- - any and all arguments as specified in the configuration file
In other words, the eval test method should look something like
this:
sub check_for_foo {
my ($self, $permsgstatus, ...arguments...) = @_;
...code returning 0 or 1
}
Note that the headers can be accessed using the
"get()" method on the
"Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus" object,
and the body by
"get_decoded_stripped_body_text_array()"
and other similar methods. Similarly, the
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Conf" object holding
the current configuration may be accessed through
"$permsgstatus->{main}->{conf}".
The eval rule should return 1 for a hit,
or 0 if the rule is not hit.
State for a single message being scanned should be stored on the
$permsgstatus object, not on the
$self object, since $self
persists between scan operations. See the 'lifecycle note' on the
"check_start()" method above.
Plugins will be called with the same arguments as a standard EvalTest. Different
rule types receive different information by default:
- - header tests: no extra arguments
- - body tests: fully rendered message as array reference
- - rawbody tests: fully decoded message as array reference
- - full tests: pristine message as scalar reference
The configuration file arguments will be passed in after the
standard arguments.
Note that if you write a plugin and need to determine if a particular helper
method is supported on
"Mail::SpamAssassin::Plugin", you can do
this:
if ($self->can("name_of_method")) {
eval {
$self->name_of_method(); # etc.
}
} else {
# take fallback action
}
The same applies for the public APIs on objects of other types,
such as
"Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus".
Mail::SpamAssassin(3)
Mail::SpamAssassin::PerMsgStatus(3)
http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/PluginWritingTips
http://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/show_bug.cgi?id=2163
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