## @mainpage Writing Milters in Python
#
# At the lowest level, the milter
module provides a thin wrapper
# around the sendmail
# libmilter API. This API lets you register callbacks for a number of
# events in the process of sendmail receiving a message via SMTP. These
# events include the initial connection from a MTA, the envelope sender and
# recipients, the top level mail headers, and the message body. There are
# options to mangle all of these components of the message as it passes through
# the %milter.
#
# At the next level, the Milter
module (note the case difference)
# provides a Python friendly object oriented wrapper for the low level API. To
# use the Milter module, an application registers a 'factory' to create an
# object for each connection from a MTA to sendmail. These connection objects
# must provide methods corresponding to the libmilter event callbacks.
#
# Each callback method returns a code to tell sendmail whether to proceed with
# processing the message. This is a big advantage of milters over other mail
# filtering systems. Unwanted mail can be stopped in its tracks at the
# earliest possible point. The callback return codes are
# milter.CONTINUE, milter.REJECT, milter.DISCARD, milter.ACCEPT,
# milter.TEMPFAIL, milter.SKIP, milter.NOREPLY.
#
# The Milter.Base class provides default implementations for
# event methods that do nothing, and also provides wrappers for the libmilter
# methods to mutate the message. It automatically negotiates with MTA
# which protocol steps need to be processed by the %milter, based on
# which callback methods are overridden.
#
# The Milter.Milter class provides an alternate default
# implementation that logs the main milter callbacks, but otherwise does
# nothing. It is provided for compatibility.
#
# The mime module provides a wrapper for the Python email package
# that fixes some bugs, and simplifies modifying selected parts of a MIME
# message.
#
# @section threading
#
# The libmilter library which pymilter wraps
# handles
# all signals itself, and expects to be called from a single main thread.
# It handles SIGTERM, SIGHUP, and SIGINT, mapping the first two to
# smfi_stop
# and the last to an internal ABORT.
#
# If you use python threads or threading modules, then signal handling gets
# confused. Threads may still be useful, but you may need to provide an
# alternate means of causing graceful shutdown.
#
# You may find the
#
# multiprocessing module useful. It can be a drop-in
# replacement for threading as illustrated in
# milter-template.py.
#
# @section Useful python packages for milters
#
# pymilter - this package.
#
# pyspf checks the
# SMTP envelope sender (MAIL FROM, passed to the Milter.Base.envfrom callback)
# against a Sender Policy published in DNS by the sending domain. This
# can prevent forgery of the MAIL FROM. SPF is Sender Policy Framework.
#
# pydkim checks a DKIM signature
# of the email body and headers against a public key published in DNS by
# the signing domain. DKIM is DomainKeys Identified Mail.
#
# The authres module
# parses and formats the Authentication-Results email header, providing
# a standard place to summarize the results from DKIM, SPF, rDNS, SMTP AUTH,
# and other email authentication methods.
#
# pydspam wraps
# the libdspam API of the DSPAM
# project.
#
# pysrs rewrites
# MAIL FROM to include a timestamped signature so that "bounce spam"
# can be immediately rejected.
#
# pygossip is a
# system to track reputation by domain and authentication level and type,
# and a simple protocol to gossip about reputations with other mail servers.
#
# @section Milters written with pymilter
#
# Verify Domain is a
# Postfix milter that rejects/fixes manipulated From: header
# on a mail host with multiple virtual domains.
#
# BMS Milter has several
# milters, a big complicated spam filter that integrates multiple
# authentication protocols with pydspam, and two simple ones: spfmilter.py and
# dkim-milter.py.
#