07-07-2008
Jim, that would be ~300GB since Jan 1, 2008 but that's only the half of it, we also have to pay for bandwidth.
Anyway there is absolutely no way we could do this. As pointed out there are too many security concerns both through direct misuse and through the inappropriate disclosure of information on other systems.
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
mimecheck
mimecheck(1) Check MIME attachments mimecheck(1)
NAME
mimecheck - determine the type of the MIME encoded of an attachment
mimezip - detect the type of MIME encoded zip archive in an attachment
mimebzip - detect the type of MIME encoded bzip2 data in an attachment
mimegzip - detect the type of MIME encoded gzip data in an attachment
SYNOPSIS
mimecheck boundary [file]
mimezip boundary [file]
mimebzip boundary [file]
mimegzip boundary [file]
DESCRIPTION
The scripts mimecheck, mimezip, mimebzip, and mimegzip can be used to determine the contents of MIME encoded attachments of the type appli-
cation/octet-stream. The scripts require the boundary as provided in the headers and/or bodys of mails with enclosed attachments. The
scripts read from standard input if no file was provided and write out the detected MIME type to standard out.
EXAMPLE
A short filter rule used by procmail(1) to check for DOS executables in MIME encoded zip archives found in many attachments:
BLANK="[ ]+"
TYPE="${BLANK}multipart/(alternative|mixed)"
:0
* $ ^Content-Type:${TYPE};(${BLANK}|$)*boundary=["']?[^ "';]+
{
BOUNDARY="${MATCH}"
TYPE=""
:0 B
* $ ^Content-Transfer-Encoding:${BLANK}base64
{
TYPE=`mimecheck ${BOUNDARY}`
:0
* TYPE ?? application/x-zip
{
TYPE=`mimezip ${BOUNDARY}`
}
}
:0
* TYPE ?? executable.*DOS
* TYPE ?? DOS.*executable
/dev/null
}
there is no guarantee that this piece of a procmailrc(5) file will work.
SEE ALSO
procmailrc(5), file(1), sed(1), mimencode(1).
COPYRIGHT
2007 SuSE LINUX Products GmbH, Nuernberg, Germany,
2007 Werner Fink.
AUTHORS
Werner Fink <werner@suse.de>.
3rd Berkeley Distribution Juni 28, 2007 mimecheck(1)