On 11/14/2013 7:17 PM, Yanko Hernández Álvarez wrote:
Hello:
I'm loosing my mind trying to classify my outgoing messages with sieve-test (2.0.9, centos 6.4). It came to the point I think it's not even possible with a sieve script.
Outgoing? Sieve is currently only applicable to incoming e-mail. If you managed to do something like this, I'd be interested to find out how. :)
I need to classify my outgoing messages in three folders:
1- To my department (@dept.example.com) 2- To my company (@example.com, @anyotherdept.example.com) (anyotherdept.example.com as in a way to say "any other domain that ends with 'example.com', but not 'dept.example.com'") 3- To the rest of the word (@any.other.domain)
The problematic requirement is I need to make a copy in EVERY IMAP folder that applies. For instance: for an email such as
From: myuser@dept.example.com To: user@dept.example.com, user@example.com, user@other.domain ...
I need to make a copy to all folders: Dept (because of user@dept.example.com), Company (because of user@example.com) and Rest (because of user@other.domain).
This should solve the first two:
require "fileinto"; require "relational";
if address :is :domain "To" "dept.example.com" { fileinto "Dept"; }
if allof ( address :value "ne" :domain "To" "dept.example.com", anyof ( address :matches :domain "To" "*.example.com", address :is :domain "To" "example.com")) { fileinto "Company"; }
Unfortunately, I cannot find a way to do #3. Perhaps some extremely convolved regular expression, but I wouldn't want to go there. Basically one needs to test that at least one of the addresses in the message does not match *.example.com, but I don't see how that could be achieved.
Regards,
Stephan.