| Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy - phpMan
Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy(3pm)
NAME
Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy - represents a DomainKeys Sender Signing Policy record
DESCRIPTION
DomainKeys sender signing policies are described in RFC4870(historical). It is a record
published in the message sender's (i.e. the person who transmitted the message) DNS that
describes how they sign messages.
CONSTRUCTORS
fetch() - fetch a sender signing policy from DNS
my $policy = Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy->fetch(
Protocol => "dns",
Sender => 'joe AT example.org',
);
The following named arguments are accepted:
Protocol
always specify "dns"
Author
the "author" of the message for which policy is being checked. This is the first
email address in the "From" header. According to RFC 2822, section 3.6.2, the "From"
header lists who is responsible for writing the message.
Sender
the "sender" of the message for which policy is being checked. This is the first
email address in the "Sender" header, or if there is not a "Sender" header, the "From"
header. According to RFC 2822, section 3.6.2, the "Sender" header lists who is
responsible for transmitting the message.
Depending on what type of policy is being checked, both the Sender and Author fields may
need to be specified.
If a DNS error or timeout occurs, an exception is thrown.
Otherwise, a policy object of some sort will be returned. If no policy is actually
published, then the "default policy" will be returned. To check when this happens, use
my $is_default = $policy->is_implied_default_policy;
new() - construct a default policy object
my $policy = Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy->new;
parse() - gets a policy object by parsing a string
my $policy = Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy->parse(
String => "o=~; t=y"
);
METHODS
apply() - apply the policy to the results of a DKIM verifier
my $result = $policy->apply($dkim_verifier);
The caller must provide an instance of Mail::DKIM::Verifier, one which has already been
fed the message being verified.
Possible results are:
accept
The message is approved by the sender signing policy.
reject
The message is rejected by the sender signing policy.
neutral
The message is neither approved nor rejected by the sender signing policy. It can be
considered suspicious.
flags() - get or set the flags (t=) tag
A vertical-bar separated list of flags.
is_implied_default_policy() - is this policy implied?
my $is_implied = $policy->is_implied_default_policy;
If you fetch the policy for a particular domain, but that domain does not have a policy
published, then the "default policy" is in effect. Use this method to detect when that
happens.
location() - where the policy was fetched from
DomainKeys policies only have per-domain policies, so this will be the domain where the
policy was published.
If nothing is published for the domain, and the default policy was returned instead, the
location will be "undef".
note() - get or set the human readable notes (n=) tag
Human readable notes regarding the record. Undef if no notes specified.
policy() - get or set the outbound signing policy (o=) tag
my $sp = $policy->policy;
Outbound signing policy for the entity. Possible values are:
"~" The default. The domain may sign some (but not all) email.
"-" The domain signs all email.
signall() - true if policy is "-"
testing() - checks the testing flag
my $testing = $policy->testing;
If nonzero, the testing flag is set on the signing policy, and the verify should not
consider a message suspicious based on this policy.
AUTHOR
Jason Long, <jlong AT messiah.edu>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006-2009 by Messiah College
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of
Perl 5 you may have available.
perl v5.14.2 2012-11-28 Mail::DKIM::DkPolicy(3pm)
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