-.\" $Id: t-prot.1,v 1.115 2005/05/13 00:06:10 jochen Exp $
+.\" $Id: t-prot.1,v 1.125 2006/07/11 14:05:53 jochen Exp $
.\"
-.TH T-PROT "1" "May 2005" "T-PROT"
+.TH T-PROT "1" "July 2006" "T-PROT"
.SH NAME
t-prot \- TOFU Protection - Display Filter for RFC 2822 messages
.SH SYNOPSIS
.BI "t-prot [" OPTIONS "]..."
.SH DESCRIPTION
.PP
-This program is a filter which shall improve the readability for
-messages (emails and usenet postings) by *hiding* some annoying parts,
+This program is a filter to improve the readability of
+messages (emails and usenet posts) by *hiding* some annoying parts,
e.g. mailing list footers, signatures, and TOFU (see definition below),
as well as squeezing sequences of blank lines or punctuation.
.br
.TP
.BR "\-\-bigq" [=n[,x]]
"shrink big quotes":
-Blocks of quotes with more than n lines will be shrinked to x lines.
+Blocks of quotes with more than n lines will be shrunk to x lines.
Defaults are 30 for n and 10 for x.
.TP
.B "\-\-body"
.TP
.B "\-\-ftr\-ad"
"enable aggressive ad footer matching":
-With this option enabled t-prot makes footer detection really greedy: We
+With this option enabled, t-prot makes footer detection really greedy: We
assume that commercial email providers aren't even frightened to append
changing texts *under* their ads which are appended to the message body.
Because these texts even have changing lengths we simply detect the
.IR NOTE :
This option is considered stable by now. However, sometimes Kammquotes
should have been removed but weren't. Please send a bug report if this
-happens to you (after carefully reading the BUGS file, that is).
+happens to you (after carefully reading the BUGS and REPORTING BUGS
+section of this man page, that is).
.IP
Please also note that enabling this option is quite a performance hit.
.TP
an email and bounce it because there is TOFU inside.
.TP
.B \-\-pgp\-move
-Move pgp verification output to bottom; requires
+Move PGP verification output to bottom; requires
.BR "\-Mmutt" .
.TP
.B \-\-pgp\-move\-vrf
-Move pgp verification outout to bottom only if verification shows a good signature
+Move PGP verification outout to bottom only if verification shows a good signature
and the signature could be verified as authentic (using a trust path). If there is
-any problem with the signature, the pgp output should not be moved so the user is
+any problem with the signature, the PGP output should not be moved so the user is
more likely to notice. Requires
.BR "\-Mmutt" .
.sp
to be smart, there will be false positives.
.TP
.B \-\-pgp\-short
-Hide non-relevant pgp key uids; requires
+Hide non-relevant PGP key uids; requires
.BR "\-Mmutt" .
.TP
.B "\-r"
are read and respected when interpreting output by mutt or gnupg
(unless they are overruled by the --locale option). T-prot's own
output is English regardless of any locale setting.
+.SH EXIT STATUS
+On program exit, t-prot uses exit codes from
+.I /usr/include/sysexits.h
+and thus behaves in a manner that sendmail and others understand when
+calling t-prot.
+.sp
+Currently, the codes used are
+.RS 20
+.PD 0
+.TP
+EX_OK
+.TP
+EX_USAGE
+.TP
+EX_DATAERR
+.TP
+EX_UNAVAILABLE
+.TP
+EX_SOFTWARE
+.TP
+EX_IOERR
+.PD
+.RE
+.sp
+If, however, perl fails to compile and execute t-prot, perl's normal
+exit codes will be returned.
.SH TOFU?
TOFU is an abbreviation which mixes German and English words;
it expands to "text oben, full-quote unten" which means
Please point these people to the page
.I http://www.river.com/users/share/etiquette/edit.html
- thank you!
+.SH PERFORMANCE
+There are several ways to fine-tune t-prot's performance:
+.PP
+Some command line options are quite grave a performance hit -- do not
+use -k and especially --ms-smart if you are content without them.
+.PP
+Checking for special footers is very costly as well. Put as few footer
+files as absolutely needed in any footer directory.
+.PP
+All PGP related options are eating up lots of CPU time. Try to avoid them
+on unsigned and unencrypted messages.
+.PP
+When calling t-prot from within mutt, you might use mutt's folder-hook
+and message-hook facilities to turn options on only when needed, e.g. to
+set up a different footer directory for each mailing list folder.
.SH TROUBLESHOOTING
.TP
.IR Q :
All of the documentation and software included in the t-prot releases
is copyrighted by Jochen Striepe.
.PP
-Copyright \(co 2001-2005 Jochen Striepe. All rights reserved.
+Copyright \(co 2001-2006 Jochen Striepe. All rights reserved.
.PP
Redistribution and use, with or without modification, are permitted
provided that the following conditions are met:
You can get the latest version from
.IR http://www.escape.de/users/tolot/mutt/ .
.SH BUGS
+There is a problem when mutt gives a PGP verified or even a multipart
+message to t-prot: The information where the PGP encrypted/signed data
+or even attachments begin and end is plainly embedded in the text, not
+really cleanly recognizeable for t-prot. The problem should be worked
+around by now, please send a bug report if it does not work for you.
+.SH "REPORTING BUGS"
Please note that t-prot development happens on
.BR "current stable perl versions only" .
If you do run t-prot on earlier (or unstable) perl versions, you might
encounter perl compiler bugs (or funny t-prot behaviour). One solution
is to upgrade your perl, another is simply to write a bug report. If
you do not run a current perl version, please include this information
-in your bug report. Thank you.
+in your bug report.
.PP
-There is a problem when mutt gives a PGP verified or even a multipart
-message to t-prot: The information where the PGP encrypted/signed data
-or even attachments begin and end is plainly embedded in the text, not
-really cleanly recognizeable for t-prot. The problem should be worked
-around by now, please send a bug report if it does not work for you.
-.SH "REPORTING BUGS"
Please do
.I not
report a bug if
and the part about "display_filter",
.BR perl (1),
.BR aliases (5),
+.sp
RFCs 2045-2049 and 2822,
+.sp
.I http://got.to/quote/
-(German language),
+(German language),
+.br
.I http://www.river.com/users/share/etiquette/edit.html
(the Learn To Edit Messages HowTo has found a new home).