#!PERL_COMMAND
-# $Cambridge: exim/src/src/exipick.src,v 1.16 2010/02/23 03:01:57 jetmore Exp $
# This variable should be set by the building process to Exim's spool directory.
my $spool = 'SPOOL_DIRECTORY';
use Getopt::Long;
my($p_name) = $0 =~ m|/?([^/]+)$|;
-my $p_version = "20100222.0";
+my $p_version = "20100323.0";
my $p_usage = "Usage: $p_name [--help|--version] (see --help for details)";
my $p_cp = <<EOM;
Copyright (c) 2003-2010 John Jetmore <jj33\@pobox.com>
=item -bpra
-Same as '-bpr --unsorted' (exim)
+Same as '-bpa --unsorted' (exim)
=item -bpru
=item NUMERIC
-Valid comparisons are <, <=, >, >=, ==, and !=. Numbers can be integers or floats. Any number in a test suffixed with d, h, m, s, M, K, or B will be mulitplied by 86400, 3600, 60, 1, 1048576, 1024, or 1 respectively. Examples of valid numeric tests:
+Valid comparisons are <, <=, >, >=, ==, and !=. Numbers can be integers or floats. Any number in a test suffixed with d, h, m, s, M, K, or B will be multiplied by 86400, 3600, 60, 1, 1048576, 1024, or 1 respectively. Examples of valid numeric tests:
'$message_age >= 3d'
'$local_interface == 587'
'$message_size < 30K'
=item NEGATION
-There are many ways to negate tests, each having a reason for existing. Many tests can be negated using native operators. For instance, >1 is the opposite of <=1 and eq and ne are opposites. In addition, each individual test can be negated by adding a ! at the beginning of the test. For instance, '!$acl_m1 =~ /^DENY$/' is the same as '$acl_m1 !~ /^DENY$/'. Finally, every test can be specified by using the command line argument --not. This is functionally equivilant to adding a ! to the beginning of every test.
+There are many ways to negate tests, each having a reason for existing. Many tests can be negated using native operators. For instance, >1 is the opposite of <=1 and eq and ne are opposites. In addition, each individual test can be negated by adding a ! at the beginning of the test. For instance, '!$acl_m1 =~ /^DENY$/' is the same as '$acl_m1 !~ /^DENY$/'. Finally, every test can be specified by using the command line argument --not. This is functionally equivalent to adding a ! to the beginning of every test.
=back