Mail::DKIM::DkimPolicy(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Mail::DKIM::DkimPolicy(3) |
Mail::DKIM::DkimPolicy - represents a DKIM Sender Signing Practices record
The Sender Signing Practices (SSP) record can be published by any domain to help a receiver know what to do when it encounters an unsigned message claiming to originate from that domain.
The record is published as a DNS TXT record at _policy._domainkey.DOMAIN where DOMAIN is the domain of the message's "From" address.
This record format has been superceded by ADSP. See Mail::DKIM::AuthorDomainPolicy for information about ADSP. It is implemented here because at one time it appeared this is what would be standardized by the IETF. It will be removed from Mail::DKIM at some point in the future. The last version of the SSP specification can be found at <http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-dkim-ssp-02>.
Lookup a DKIM signing practices record.
my $policy = Mail::DKIM::DkimPolicy->fetch( Protocol => 'dns', Author => 'jsmith@example.org', );
Construct a default policy object.
my $policy = Mail::DKIM::DkimPolicy->new;
Apply the policy to the results of a DKIM verifier.
my $result = $policy->apply($dkim_verifier);
The caller must provide an instance of Mail::DKIM::Verifier, one which has already been fed the message being verified.
Possible results are:
Get or set the flags (t=) tag.
A colon-separated list of flags. Flag values are:
Is this policy implied?
my $is_implied = $policy->is_implied_default_policy;
If you fetch the policy for a particular domain, but that domain does not have a policy published, then the "default policy" is in effect. Use this method to detect when that happens.
Where the policy was fetched from.
If the policy is domain-wide, this will be domain where the policy was published.
If the policy is user-specific, TBD.
If nothing is published for the domain, and the default policy was returned instead, the location will be "undef".
Get or set the outbound signing policy (dkim=) tag.
my $sp = $policy->policy;
Outbound signing policy for the entity. Possible values are:
True if policy is "all".
True if policy is "strict".
Checks the testing flag.
my $testing = $policy->testing;
If nonzero, the testing flag is set on the signing policy, and the verify should not consider a message suspicious based on this policy.
Jason Long, <jlong@messiah.edu>
Copyright (C) 2006-2007 by Messiah College
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
2018-10-13 | perl v5.34.0 |