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: /sbin/ [ dr-xr-xr-x ]

name : exigrep
#! /usr/local/cpanel/3rdparty/perl/536/bin/perl

# Copyright (c) The Exim Maintainers 2020 - 2023
# Copyright (c) 2007-2017 University of Cambridge.
# See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution.
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later

use warnings;
use strict;
BEGIN { pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.' };

use Pod::Usage;
use Getopt::Long qw(:config no_ignore_case);
use File::Basename;

# Except when they appear in comments, the following placeholders in this
# source are replaced when it is turned into a runnable script:
#
# PERL_COMMAND
# ZCAT_COMMAND
# COMPRESS_SUFFIX

# This file has been so processed.

# This is a perl script which extracts from an Exim log all entries
# for all messages that have an entry that matches a given pattern.
# If *any* entry for a particular message matches the pattern, *all*
# entries for that message are displayed.

# We buffer up information on a per-message basis. It is done this way rather
# than reading the input twice so that the input can be a pipe.

# There must be one argument, which is the pattern. Subsequent arguments
# are the files to scan; if none, the standard input is read. If any file
# appears to be compressed, it is passed through zcat. We can't just do this
# for all files, because zcat chokes on non-compressed files.

# Performance optimized in 02/02/2007 by Jori Hamalainen
# Typical run time acceleration: 4 times


use POSIX qw(mktime);


# This subroutine converts a time/date string from an Exim log line into
# the number of seconds since the epoch. It handles optional timezone
# information.

sub seconds
  {
  my($year,$month,$day,$hour,$min,$sec,$tzs,$tzh,$tzm) =
    $_[0] =~ /^(\d{4})-(\d\d)-(\d\d)\s(\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d)(?:.\d+)?(?>\s([+-])(\d\d)(\d\d))?/o;

  my $seconds = mktime $sec, $min, $hour, $day, $month - 1, $year - 1900;

  if (defined $tzs)
    {
    $seconds -= $tzh * 3600 + $tzm * 60 if $tzs eq "+";
    $seconds += $tzh * 3600 + $tzm * 60 if $tzs eq "-";
    }

  return $seconds;
  }


# This subroutine processes a single line (in $_) from a log file. Program
# defensively against short lines finding their way into the log.

my (%saved, %id_list, $pattern);

my $queue_time  = -1;
my $insensitive = 1;
my $invert      = 0;
my $related     = 0;
my $use_pager   = 1;
my $literal     = 0;


# If using "related" option, have to track extra message IDs
my $related_re='';
my @Mids = ();

sub do_line
  {

  # Convert syslog lines to mainlog format, as in eximstats.

  if (!/^\d{4}-/o) { $_ =~ s/^.*? exim\b.*?: //o; }

  return unless
    my($date,$id) = /^(\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d \d\d:\d\d:\d\d(?:\.\d+)? (?:[+-]\d{4} )?)(?:\[\d+\] )?(\w{6}\-\w{6}\-\w{2}|\w{6}-\w{11}-\w{4})?/o;

  # Handle the case when the log line belongs to a specific message. We save
  # lines for specific messages until the message is complete. Then either print
  # or discard.

  if (defined $id)
    {
    $saved{$id} = '' unless defined($saved{$id});

    # Save up the data for this message in case it becomes interesting later.

    $saved{$id} .= $_;

    # Are we interested in this id ? Short circuit if we already were interested.

    if ($invert)
      {
      $id_list{$id} = 1 if (!defined($id_list{$id}));
      $id_list{$id} = 0 if (($insensitive && /$pattern/io) || /$pattern/o);
      }
    else
      {
      if (defined $id_list{$id} ||
	($insensitive && /$pattern/io) || /$pattern/o)
	{
	$id_list{$id} = 1;
	get_related_ids($id) if $related;
	}
      elsif ($related && $related_re)
	{
	grep_for_related($_, $id);
	}
      }

    # See if this is a completion for some message. If it is interesting,
    # print it, but in any event, throw away what was saved.

    if (index($_, 'Completed') != -1 ||
	index($_, 'SMTP data timeout') != -1 ||
	  (index($_, 'rejected') != -1 &&
	    /^(\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d \d\d:\d\d:\d\d(?:\.\d+)? (?:[+-]\d{4} )?)(?:\[\d+\] )?(?:\w{6}\-\w{6}\-\w{2}|\w{6}-\w{11}-\w{4}) rejected/o))
      {
      if ($queue_time != -1 &&
	  $saved{$id} =~ /^(\d{4}-\d\d-\d\d \d\d:\d\d:\d\d ([+-]\d{4} )?)/o)
	{
	my $old_sec = &seconds($1);
	my $sec = &seconds($date);
	$id_list{$id} = 0 if $id_list{$id} && $sec - $old_sec <= $queue_time;
	}

      print "$saved{$id}\n" if ($id_list{$id});
      delete $id_list{$id};
      delete $saved{$id};
      }
    }

  # Handle the case where the log line does not belong to a specific message.
  # Print it if it is interesting.

  elsif ( ($invert && (($insensitive && !/$pattern/io) || !/$pattern/o)) ||
	 (!$invert && (($insensitive &&  /$pattern/io) ||  /$pattern/o)) )
    { print "$_\n"; }
  }

# Rotated log files are frequently compressed and there are a variety of
# formats it could be compressed with. Rather than use just one that is
# detected and hardcoded at Exim compile time, detect and use what the
# logfile is compressed with on the fly.
#
# List of known compression extensions and their associated commands:
my $compressors = {
  gz   => { cmd => 'zcat',  args => '' },
  bz2  => { cmd => 'bzcat', args => '' },
  xz   => { cmd => 'xzcat', args => '' },
  lzma => { cmd => 'lzma',  args => '-dc' },
  zst  => { cmd => 'zstdcat', args => '' },
};
my $csearch = 0;

sub detect_compressor_bin
  {
  my $ext = shift();
  my $c = $compressors->{$ext}->{cmd};
  $compressors->{$ext}->{bin} = `which $c 2>/dev/null`;
  chomp($compressors->{$ext}->{bin});
  }

sub detect_compressor_capable
  {
  my $filename = shift();
  map { &detect_compressor_bin($_) } keys %$compressors
    if (!$csearch);
  $csearch = 1;
  return undef
    unless (grep {$filename =~ /\.(?:$_)$/} keys %$compressors);
  # Loop through them, figure out which one it detected,
  # and build the commandline.
  my $cmdline = undef;
  foreach my $ext (keys %$compressors)
    {
    if ($filename =~ /\.(?:$ext)$/)
      {
      # Just die if compressor not found; if this occurs in the middle of
      # two valid files with a lot of matches, error could easily be missed.
      die("Didn't find $ext decompressor for $filename\n")
        if ($compressors->{$ext}->{bin} eq '');
      $cmdline = $compressors->{$ext}->{bin} ." ".
                   $compressors->{$ext}->{args};
      last;
      }
    }
  return $cmdline;
  }

sub grep_for_related
  {
  my ($line,$id) = @_;
  $id_list{$id} = 1 if $line =~ m/$related_re/;
  }

sub get_related_ids
  {
  my ($id) = @_;
  push @Mids, $id unless grep /\b$id\b/, @Mids;
  my $re = join '|', @Mids;
  $related_re = qr/$re/;
  }

# The main program. Extract the pattern and make sure any relevant characters
# are quoted if the -l flag is given. The -t flag gives a time-on-queue value
# which is an additional condition. The -M flag will also display "related"
# loglines (msgid from matched lines is searched in following lines).

GetOptions(
    'I|sensitive' => sub { $insensitive = 0 },
      'l|literal' => \$literal,
      'M|related' => \$related,
      't|queue-time=i' => \$queue_time,
      'pager!'         => \$use_pager,
      'v|invert'       => \$invert,
      'h|help'         => sub { pod2usage(-exit => 0, -verbose => 1) },
      'm|man'          => sub {
        pod2usage(
            -exit      => 0,
            -verbose   => 2,
            -noperldoc => system('perldoc -V 2>/dev/null >&2')
        );
      },
      'version'        => sub {
            print basename($0) . ": $0\n",
                "build: 4.98\n",
                "perl(runtime): $]\n";
            exit 0;
      },
) and @ARGV or pod2usage;

$pattern = shift @ARGV;
$pattern = quotemeta $pattern if $literal;

# Start a pager if output goes to a terminal
if (-t 1 and $use_pager)
  {
  # for perl >= v5.10.x: foreach ($ENV{PAGER}//(), 'less', 'more')
  foreach (defined $ENV{PAGER} ? $ENV{PAGER} : (), 'less', 'more')
    {
    local $ENV{LESS} .= ' --no-init --quit-if-one-screen';
    open(my $pager, '|-', $_) or next;
    select $pager;
    last;
    }
  }

# If file arguments are given, open each one and process according as it is
# is compressed or not.

if (@ARGV)
  {
  foreach (@ARGV)
    {
    my $filename = $_;
    if (-x '/bin/zcat' && $filename =~ /\.(?:gz)$/o)
      {
      open(LOG, "/bin/zcat $filename |") ||
        die "Unable to zcat $filename: $!\n";
      }
    elsif (my $cmdline = &detect_compressor_capable($filename))
      {
      open(LOG, "$cmdline $filename |") ||
        die "Unable to decompress $filename: $!\n";
      }
    else
      {
      open(LOG, "<$filename") || die "Unable to open $filename: $!\n";
      }
    do_line() while (<LOG>);
    close(LOG);
    }
  }

# If no files are named, process STDIN only

else { do_line() while (<STDIN>); }

# At the end of processing all the input, print any uncompleted messages.

for (keys %id_list)
  {
  print "+++ $_ has not completed +++\n$saved{$_}\n";
  }

__END__

=head1 NAME

exigrep - search Exim's main log

=head1 SYNOPSIS

B<exigrep> [options] pattern [log] ...

=head1 DESCRIPTION

The B<exigrep> utility is a Perl script that searches one or more main log
files for entries that match a given pattern.  When it finds  a  match,
it  extracts  all  the  log  entries for the relevant message, not just
those that match the pattern.  Thus, B<exigrep> can extract  complete  log
entries  for  a  given  message, or all mail for a given user, or for a
given host, for example.

If no file names are given on the command line, the standard input is read.

For known file extensions indicating compression (F<.gz>, F<.bz2>, F<.xz>,
F<.lzma>, and F<.zst>) a suitable de-compressor is used, if available.

The output is sent through a pager if a terminal is connected to STDOUT. As
pager are considered: C<$ENV{PAGER}>, C<less>, C<more>.

=head1 OPTIONS

=over

=item B<-l>|B<--literal>

This means 'literal', that is, treat all characters in the
pattern  as standing for themselves.  Otherwise the pattern must be a
Perl regular expression.  The pattern match is case-insensitive.

=item B<-t>|B<--queue-time> I<seconds>

Limit the output to messages that spent at least I<seconds> in the
queue.

=item B<-I>|B<--sensitive>

Do a case sensitive search.

=item B<-v>|B<--invert>

Invert the meaning of the search pattern. That is, print message log
entries that are not related to that pattern.

=item B<-M>|B<--related>

Search for related messages too.

=item B<--no-pager>

Do not use a pager, even if STDOUT is connected to a terminal.

=item B<-h>|B<--help>

Print a short reference help. For more detailed help try L<exigrep(8)>,
or C<exigrep --man>.

=item B<-m>|B<--man>

Print this manual page of B<exigrep>.

=back

=head1 SEE ALSO

L<exim(8)>, L<perlre(1)>, L<Exim|http://exim.org/>

=head1 AUTHOR

This  manual  page  was stitched together from spec.txt by Andreas Metzler L<ametzler at downhill.at.eu.org>
and updated by Heiko Schlittermann L<hs@schlittermann.de>.

=cut

© 2025 UnknownSec
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Web Design for Beginners

Web Design for Beginners

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Created by Linda Anderson
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Course
Web Design for Beginners
in Design
4.25
1:45 Hours
8 Jul 2021
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What you will learn?

Create any website layout you can imagine

Support any device size with Responsive (mobile-friendly) Design

Add tasteful animations and effects with CSS3

Course description

You can launch a new career in web development today by learning HTML & CSS. You don't need a computer science degree or expensive software. All you need is a computer, a bit of time, a lot of determination, and a teacher you trust. I've taught HTML and CSS to countless coworkers and held training sessions for fortune 100 companies. I am that teacher you can trust. 


Don't limit yourself by creating websites with some cheesy “site-builder" tool. This course teaches you how to take 100% control over your webpages by using the same concepts that every professional website is created with.


This course does not assume any prior experience. We start at square one and learn together bit by bit. By the end of the course you will have created (by hand) a website that looks great on phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops alike.


In the summer of 2020 the course has received a new section where we push our website live up onto the web using the free GitHub Pages service; this means you'll be able to share a link to what you've created with your friends, family, colleagues and the world!

Requirements

No prerequisite knowledge required

No special software required

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