# master.procmail - Debian mailing list sorting procmail file. # Copyright (C) 1999 Edward Betts # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA # # On Debian GNU/Linux systems, the complete text of the GNU General # Public License can be found in `/usr/share/common-licenses/GPL'. # Introduction # This rcfile is aimed at developers with a small amount of bandwidth (people # using modems to connect to the Internet). The mailing lists # debian-devel-changes and debian-changes carry the details of package uploads # for all of the different architectures, however, most developers are using # one or at most two of these architectures, and are not interested in uploads # for the others. # # The recipes below will erase announcements of package uploads to # architectures that are not of much interest, before forwarding other # messages to the forward address. Uploads that include source will be # displayed, because I think they are interesting. # Instructions # 1. Subscribe to debian-devel-changes and/or debian-changes using your Debian # e-mail address so that mail goes to your account on master. # 2. Change the enviroment variables below to specify the: # a) e-mail address that you want mail to be forwarded to # b) the architectures you are NOT interested in # c) the packages you are interested in # 3. Upload the file to master. Rename it to ~/.procmailrc, or refer to it # from ~/.procmailrc using INCLUDERC # # That should be it, configured, try sending a mail to your debian.org address # and see if it makes its way to the specified e-mail forwarding address. # # Read the procmail, procmailrc, procmailex and procmailsc for more # information. # Master mail filtering procmail file by Edward Betts # Configuration # Forwarding address, the place to send all the mail that is not erased. # PLEASE CHANGE THIS! I DO NOT WANT YOUR MAIL! I could set up some stuff with # LOGNAME to check this, but it would reduce performance and I trust my fellow # developers. FORWARD=edward@hairnet.demon.co.uk # The architectures that do NOT interest you. If you are an i386 man like me, # then this setting should be fine, you will get i386 and hurd-i386 changes. # If a new architectures is introduced (MIPS? ia64?) you will see uploads # listed here until you add it to this line. ARCHS=alpha|arm|powerpc|sparc|m68k # Packages changes on other architectures of interest. This is basicly a list # of the binary packages that I maintain. As far as I see it most developers # will just want to change this to a list of packages that they maintain. PACKAGES=colortail|esh|vh|x2vnc|sniffit # Packages on other archs of interest # Debian Development Changes mailing list is big. Archs that are not of # interest to me are deleted. # # The only exception is packages that I would like to see when they are # compiled on other Archs; I use this for my own binary packages. :0: * ^X-Mailing-List: * $^Subject: Accepted .+ \(($ARCHS )*($ARCHS)\) to .+ * !$^Subject: Accepted ($PACKAGES) .+ /dev/null # Every thing else goes to the forward address. :0 * !^FROM_DAEMON * !^X-Loop: $FORWARD | formail -A"X-Loop: $FORWARD" | $SENDMAIL -oi $FORWARD # vim:ft=procmail