I'll grab one off of the machine tomorrow. Due to some of the security stuff, you can only get console access to that box. Ugh. Thanks --Kyle On Jan 17, 2008 3:00 PM, Alex LeDonne <aledonne.listmail / gmail.com> wrote: > On Jan 17, 2008 10:32 AM, Kyle Schmitt <kyleaschmitt / gmail.com> wrote: > > I'm having a few issues with gsubbing a regex on a binary file. > > With all text, this seems to work great, but with the binary junk in a > > file, only some of the instances are replaced, not all. > > Could you send an example where the regex failed? Then we can try to > figure out what's different about the failure case. > > -A > > > > > > What this script is supposed to do, is pull mail message out of > > quarantine, change who it's going to, and put it back in postfix's > > queue to send it on its way. > > > > This is a super-simplified version of the code in question (just > > in-case you're wondering, if you really write something like this, you > > need to change the ownership and permission of the resulting file, > > otherwise postfix won't pick it up). > > > > #!/usr/bin/ruby > > message_path="/var/spool/MailScanner/quarantine/20080111/ABCDEFG" > > postfix_outgoing_path="/var/spool/postfix/incoming/A/ABCDEFG" > > message=File.open(message_path,"rb"){|f| f.read()} > > message.gsub(/[a-z][a-z0-9]*@candycompany.foo/i,"review-spam / candycompany.foo") > > outgoing_message=File.open(postfix_outgoing_path,"wb"){|f| f.write(message)} > > > > Err. Since the real version of this script is rather lengthy and a > > little ugly, mostly due to the command-line-option parsing, anyone > > have a suggestion on a good CLI library to use :) my home-grown > > attempt is functional at best... > > > > Thanks, > > Kyle > >