09-21-2018
Hi,
I'd just included that as a demonstration of how if works, really, so you could get an idea of what you need to do in your own code. So rather than directly using my example script, you'd adapt it and write your own if statement in your script to test the value of your temperature variable, after your script had set it.
So looking at your provided code, your could write an if statement at the end to test the value of the tc variable (assuming that's correct, and it does contain just a single integer that is the number you want to test). If the variable tc isnt' the right one then you'd use whatever variable contains the CPU temperature as an integer, and do the if tests on that.
If that doesn't work then if you can provide an example of the code you've written and what goes wrong when you run it, I'd be happy to help further in debugging and we can take things from there.
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
mimedefang.pl
MIMEDEFANG.PL(8) System Manager's Manual MIMEDEFANG.PL(8)
NAME
mimedefang.pl - Perl script to scan MIME messages.
SYNOPSIS
mimedefang.pl [-f filter] dir
DESCRIPTION
mimedefang.pl is a Perl script designed to work with mimedefang(8). It takes a single argument which is a directory which should contain
files laid out as described in mimedefang(8).
OPTIONS
-f filter
Specifies the name of the file containing the filter. If this option is omitted, the default filter /etc/mimedefang-filter is used.
OPERATION
mimedefang.pl evaluates the file /etc/mimedefang-filter as a Perl fragment. This file should define the filter procedure. For each part
of a MIME message, mimedefang.pl calls filter and disposes of the part as instructed by the filter. The various modes of disposition are
described in mimedefang-filter(5).
TESTING FILTERS
You are strongly recommended to test your filter before installing it in /etc/mimedefang-filter. To test the filter, save it in a file
(e.g. test-filter) and run this command:
mimedefang.pl -f test-filter -test
This tests the filter for syntactic correctness. If it passes, you can install it as a production filter. (Note that the test tests only
for correct Perl syntax; it doesn't make sure your filter does something sensible.)
MISCELLANEOUS OPTIONS
There are a few other ways to invoke mimedefang.pl:
mimedefang.pl -structure < mime_message
parses a message on stdin and prints lots of debugging information.
mimedefang.pl -prettyprint < mime_message
parses a message on stdin and prints it in a "nice" format (depending on your definition of "nice".)
mimedefang.pl -features
prints a list of detected optional Perl modules. The output looks something like this:
SpamAssassin: yes
mimedefang.pl -validate
calls the function filter_validate, if it is defined in your filter. filter_validate should return an integer; this becomes the exit code.
If filter_validate does not exist, an error message is printed and mimedefang.pl exits with an exit code of 1.
AUTHOR
mimedefang.pl was written by David F. Skoll <dfs@roaringpenguin.com>. The mimedefang home page is http://www.mimedefang.org/.
SEE ALSO
mimedefang(8), mimedefang-filter(5), mimedefang-protocol(7)
4th Berkeley Distribution 8 February 2005 MIMEDEFANG.PL(8)