.\" Hey, EMACS: -*- nroff -*- .\" First parameter, NAME, should be all caps .\" Second parameter, SECTION, should be 1-8, maybe w/ subsection .\" other parameters are allowed: see man(7), man(1) .TH SANITIZER 1 "February 27, 2002" .\" Please adjust this date whenever revising the manpage. .\" .\" Some roff macros, for reference: .\" .nh disable hyphenation .\" .hy enable hyphenation .\" .ad l left justify .\" .ad b justify to both left and right margins .\" .nf disable filling .\" .fi enable filling .\" .br insert line break .\" .sp insert n+1 empty lines .\" for manpage-specific macros, see man(7) .SH NAME sanitizer \- an email virus scanner .SH SYNOPSIS \fBsanitizer\fP \fI[conffile ...] [confoption ...]\fP .SH DESCRIPTION This manual page documents briefly the \fBsanitizer\fP command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original program does not have a manual page. The Anomy Sanitizer is what most people would call "an email virus scanner". That description is not totally accurate, but it does cover one of the more important jobs that the sanitizer can do for you - it can scan email attachments for viruses. Sanitizer acts as pipe. It expects an email message to scan on standard input, and returns filtered message on standard output. You could give a path to configuration file or just set some configuration variables in command line. .SH SEE ALSO .BR procmail (1). More info on configuration: \fB/usr/share/doc/sanitizer/sanitizer.html\fP .SH AUTHOR This manual page was written by Adam Byrtek , for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).