NAME
Email::Fingerprint::Cache - Cache observed email fingerprints
VERSION
Version 0.01
SYNOPSIS
use Email::Fingerprint::Cache;
my %fingerprints; # To access cache contents
# Create a cache
my $cache = new Email::Fingerprint::Cache(
backend => "AnyDBM",
hash => \%fingerprints,
file => $file, # Created if doesn't exist
ttl => 3600 * 24 * 7, # Purge records after one week
);
# Prepare it for use
$cache->lock or die "Couldn't lock: $!"; # Waits for lock
$cache->open or die "Couldn't open: $!";
# Work with fingerprints
for my (@message_fingerprints) {
if ($fingerprints{$_}) {
print "Fingerprint found: $_\n";
next;
}
my $now = time;
$fingerprints{$_} = $now;
print "Fingerprint added: $_\n";
}
# Get rid of old records
$cache->purge;
# Print a listing of all fingerprints
$cache->dump;
# Finish up
$cache->close;
$cache->unlock;
ATTRIBUTES
METHODS
new
my $fingerprint = new Email::Fingerprint::Cache(
file => $file, # Default: .maildups
backend => "AnyDBM", # Default: "AnyDBM"
ttl => $sec, # Default: 3600*24*7
hash => $ref, # Optional
);
Returns a new Email::Fingerprint::Cache. The cache must still be opened before it can be used.
BUILD
Internal helper method; never called directly by users.
set_file
$file = $cache->set_file( 'foo' ) or die "Failed to set filename";
# now $file eq 'foo.db' or 'foo.dir', etc., depending on the backend;
# it is almost certainly NOT 'foo'.
Sets the file to be used for the cache. Returns the actual filename on success; false on failure.
The actual filename will probably differ from the 'foo', because the backend will usually add an extension or otherwise munge it.
set_file
has no effect while the cache file is locked or open!
get_backend
Returns the backend object for this cache.
dump
# Be a good citizen
$cache->lock;
$cache->open;
$cache->dump;
# Be a good neighbor
$cache->close;
$cache->unlock;
Dump a human-readable version of the contents of the cache. Data is printed in timestamp order.
The cache must first be opened, and should first be locked.
open
$cache->open or die;
Open the cache file, and tie it to a hash. This is delegated to the backend.
close
$cache->close;
Close the cache file and untie the hash.
lock
$cache->lock or die; # returns immediately
$cache->lock( block => 1 ) or die; # Waits for a lock
$cache->lock( %opts ) or die; # Backend-specific options
Lock the DB file to guarantee exclusive access.
unlock
$cache->unlock or warn "Unlock failed";
Unlock the DB file.
purge
$cache->purge; # Use default TTL
$cache->purge( ttl => 3600 ); # Everything older than 1 hour
Purge the cache of old entries. This reduces the risk of false positives from things like reused message IDs, but increases the risk of false negatives.
The default is one week. Dedicated spam-fighters might prefer to use a longer TTL.
DESTROY
Clean up the module. If the hash is still tied, we warn the user and call close()
on $self
.
DEMOLISH
Internal helper method, never called directly by user.
_delegate
Delegate the specified method to the backend. Internal method.
AUTHOR
Len Budney, <lbudney at pobox.com>
BUGS
The dump()
method assumes that Perl's time()
function returns seconds since the UNIX epoch, 00:00:00 UTC, January 1, 1970. The module will work on architectures with non-standard epochs, but the automated tests will fail.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-email-fingerprint at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Email-Fingerprint. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Email::Fingerprint::Cache
You can also look for information at:
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
RT: CPAN's request tracker
Search CPAN
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Email::Fingerprint::Cache is based on caching code in the eliminate_dups
script by Peter Samuel and available at http://www.qmail.org/.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2006-2011 Len Budney, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.