NAME¶
Postfix::Parse::Mailq - parse the output of the postfix mailq command
VERSION¶
version 1.004
SYNOPSIS¶
use Postfix::Parse::Mailq;
my $mailq_output = `mailq`;
my $entries = Postfix::Parse::Mailq->read_string($mailq_output);
my $bytes = 0;
for my $entry (@$entries) {
next unless grep { /\@aol.com$/ } @{ $entry->{remaining_rcpts} };
$bytes += $entry->{size};
}
print "$bytes bytes remain to send to AOL destinations\n";
METHODS¶
read_file¶
read_handle¶
read_string¶
my $entries = Postfix::Parse::Mailq->read_string($string, \%arg);
This methods read the output of postfix's
mailq from a file (by name), a
filehandle, or a string, respectively. They return an arrayref of hashrefs,
each hashref representing one entry in the queue as reported by
mailq.
Valid arguments are:
spool - a hashref of { queue_id -> spool_name } pairs
if given, this will be used to attempt to indicate in which
spool messages currently are; it is not entirely reliable (race!)
parse_block¶
my $entry = Mailq->parse_block(\@lines);
Given all the lines in a single entry's block of lines in mailq output, this
returns data about the entry.
WARNING¶
This code is really rough and the interface will change. Entries will be
objects. There will be some more methods. Still, the basics are likely to keep
working, or keep pretty close to what you see here now.
AUTHOR¶
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Ricardo SIGNES.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.