NAME siesh - interactive sieve shell SYNOPSIS $ siesh --debug --user USER --host SERVER --tls {require|auto} --port PORT DESCRIPTION Siesh provides a shell-like interface for manipulating sieve scripts using the ManageSieve protocol. OPTIONS --debug|-d Enable debugging. --user|-u USERNAME Specifies the username to use when logging into the sieve server. This option defaults to the value of the environment variable "USER". --host|-h HOST Specifies the machine to connect to. Defaults to "imap". --port|-p PORT Specifies the remote port to connect to. Defaults to 2000. --tls|-t {require|auto} Specifies whether TLS is required ("require") or optional ("auto"). Defaults to unset, disabling TLS. CONFIGURATION FILE When siesh is invoked, it first reads configurations variables from /etc/siesh.conf or ~/.siesh.conf if one of these files exist. The file is structured as a set of lines with name and values seperated by an equal sign. user = mario host = sieve.example.com port = 2000 tls = require debug = 1 Currently only these two variables are recognized. Values are overriden by options specified on the command line. COMMANDS list Prints a list of all scripts on the server. The currently active script, if any, is marked by a *** (astersik). Synonyms: ls delete *script-name* *...* Deletes a script. It's not possible to delete the currently active script, so please use deactivate first. There's no way to undelete a deleted script. Synonyms: rm edit *script-name* Edits a script on the server without downloading it explicitly to your disk first. Under the hood it creates a temporary file, puts the script content in it and calls $ENV{EDITOR} on it. After that the script is uploaded back. It's also possible to create and edit a new script with this command. If your script is syntactical incorrect, you will be prompted to re-edit the file or throw away your changes. activate *script-name* Activates the listed script. User may have multiple Sieve scripts on the server, yet only one script may be used for filtering of incoming messages. This is called the active script. Users may have zero or one active scripts deactivate Deactivate all scripts. Deactivation of all your scripts results in no filtering at all. cat *script-name* *...* Print scripts on the standard output. quit Terminates the sessiion with the remote SIEVE server. An end of file will also terminate the session and exit. help Print a short description of all commands. put *file-name* *script-name* Store a local file as script on the remote machine. get *file-name* *local-name* Retrieve a remote script and store it on the local machine. SEE ALSO Net::ManageSieve::Siesh, Net::ManageSieve COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2008 Mario Domgoergen, all rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.