Provided by: swaks_20240103.0-1_all bug

NAME

       Swaks - Swiss Army Knife SMTP, the all-purpose SMTP transaction tester

DESCRIPTION

       Swaks' primary design goal is to be a flexible, scriptable, transaction-oriented SMTP test tool.  It
       handles SMTP features and extensions such as TLS, authentication, and pipelining; multiple version of the
       SMTP protocol including SMTP, ESMTP, and LMTP; and multiple transport methods including UNIX-domain
       sockets, internet-domain sockets, and pipes to spawned processes.  Options can be specified in
       environment variables, configuration files, and the command line allowing maximum configurability and
       ease of use for operators and scripters.

QUICK START

       Deliver a standard test email to user@example.com on port 25 of test-server.example.net:

        swaks --to user@example.com --server test-server.example.net

       Deliver a standard test email, requiring CRAM-MD5 authentication as user me@example.com.  An "X-Test"
       header will be added to the email body.  The authentication password will be prompted for if it cannot be
       obtained from your .netrc file.

        swaks --to user@example.com --from me@example.com --auth CRAM-MD5 --auth-user me@example.com --header-X-Test "test email"

       Test a virus scanner using EICAR in an attachment.  Don't show the message DATA part.:

        swaks -t user@example.com --attach - --server test-server.example.com --suppress-data </path/to/eicar.txt

       Test a spam scanner using GTUBE in the body of an email, routed via the MX records for example.com:

        swaks --to user@example.com --body @/path/to/gtube/file

       Deliver a standard test email to user@example.com using the LMTP protocol via a UNIX domain socket file

        swaks --to user@example.com --socket /var/lda.sock --protocol LMTP

       Report all the recipients in a text file that are non-verifiable on a test server:

        for E in `cat /path/to/email/file`
        do
            swaks --to $E --server test-server.example.com --quit-after RCPT --hide-all
            [ $? -ne 0 ] && echo $E
        done

TERMS AND CONVENTIONS

       This document tries to be consistent and specific in its use of the following terms to reduce confusion.

       Target
           The  target  of  a  transaction  is  the  thing  that  Swaks  connects to.  This generic term is used
           throughout the documentation because most other terms improperly imply something about the  transport
           being used.

       Transport
           The transport is the underlying method used to connect to the target.

       Transaction
           A  transaction  is  the  opening  of  a connection over a transport to a target and using a messaging
           protocol to attempt to deliver a message.

       Protocol
           The protocol is the application language used to communicate with the  target.   This  document  uses
           SMTP  to  speak  generically of all three supported protocols unless it states that it is speaking of
           the specific 'SMTP' protocol and excluding the others.

       Message
           SMTP protocols exist to transfer messages, a set of bytes in an agreed-upon format that has a  sender
           and a recipient.

       Envelope
           A  message's  envelope contains the "true" sender and receiver of a message.  It can also be referred
           to as its components, envelope-sender and envelope-recipients.   It  is  important  to  note  that  a
           messages envelope does not have to match its "To:" and "From:" headers.

       DATA
           The DATA portion of an SMTP transaction is the actual message that is being transported.  It consists
           of  both the message's headers and its body.  DATA and body are sometimes used synonymously, but they
           are always two distinct things in this document.

       Headers
           A message's headers are defined as all the lines in the message's DATA section before the first blank
           line.  They contain information about the email that will be  displayed  to  the  recipient  such  as
           "To:",  "From:", "Subject:", etc.  In this document headers will always be written with a capitalized
           first letter and a trailing colon.

       Body
           A message's body is the portion of its DATA section following the first blank line.

       Option
           An option is a flag which changes Swaks' behavior.  Always called an option regardless of how  it  is
           provided.  For instance, "--no-data-fixup" is an option.

       Argument
           When  an  option  takes  addition  data  beside  the option itself, that additional data is called an
           argument. In "--quit-after <stop-point>'", "<stop-point>"  is  the  argument  to  the  "--quit-after"
           option.

       <literal-string>
           When  used  in  the definition of an option, text that is inside of angle brackets ("<>") indicates a
           descriptive  label  for  a  value  that  the  user  should  provide.   For  instance,   "--quit-after
           <stop-point>" indicates that "<stop-point>" should be replaced with a valid stop-point value.

       [<optional-value>]
           When  used  in  the  definition  of an option, text inside of square brackets ([]) indicates that the
           value is optional and can be omitted.  For instance, "--to [<recipient>]" indicates that  the  "--to"
           option can be used with or without a specified "<recipient>".

OPTION PROCESSING

       To prevent potential confusion in this document a flag to Swaks is always referred to as an "option".  If
       the  option takes additional data, that additional data is referred to as an argument to the option.  For
       example, "--from fred@example.com" might be provided to Swaks on the command line,  with  "--from"  being
       the option and "fred@example.com" being "--from"'s argument.

       Options  and  arguments  are  the  only  way to provide information to Swaks.  If Swaks finds data during
       option processing that is neither an option nor an option's  argument,  it  will  error  and  exit.   For
       instance,  if  "--no-data-fixup  1" were found on the command line, this would result in an error because
       "--no-data-fixup" does not take an argument and therefore Swaks would not know what to do with 1.

       Options can be given to Swaks in three  ways.   They  can  be  specified  in  a  configuration  file,  in
       environment variables, and on the command line.  Depending on the specific option and whether an argument
       is given to it, Swaks may prompt the user for the argument.

       When  Swaks  evaluates its options, it first looks for a configuration file (either in a default location
       or specified with "--config").  Then it evaluates any options  in  environment  variables.   Finally,  it
       evaluates command line options.  At each round of processing, any options set earlier will be overridden.
       Additionally,  any  option  can  be  prefixed  with  "no-" to cause Swaks to forget that the variable had
       previously been set (either in an earlier round, or earlier in  the  same  round).   This  capability  is
       necessary because many options treat defined-but-no-argument differently than not-defined.

       As  a  general rule, if the same option is given multiple time, the last time it is given is the one that
       will be used.  This applies to both intra-method (if "--from user1@example.com --from  user2@example.com"
       is  given,  "user2@example.com" will be used) and inter-method (if "from user1@example.com" is given in a
       config file and "--from user2@example.com" is given on the  command  line,  "user2@example.com"  will  be
       used)

       Each option definition ends with a parenthetical synopsis of how the option behaves.  The following codes
       can be used

       Arg-None, Arg-Optional, Arg-Required
           These  three  codes  are mutually exclusive and describe whether or not the option takes an argument.
           Note that this does not necessarily describe  whether  the  argument  is  required  to  be  specified
           directly,  but rather whether an argument is required eventually.  For instance, "--to" is labeled as
           Arg-Required, but it is legal to specify "--to" on the command line without  an  argument.   This  is
           because Swaks can prompt for the required argument if it is not directly provided.

       From-Prompt
           An  option  labeled  with  From-Prompt will prompt the user interactively for the argument if none is
           provided.

       From-File
           An option labeled with From-File will handle arguments as files in certain situations.

           If the initial argument is "-", the final argument is the contents of "STDIN".  Multiple options  can
           all specify "STDIN", but the same content will be used for each of them.

           If  the initial argument is prefixed with "@", the argument will be treated as a path to a file.  The
           file will be opened and the contents will be used as the final argument.  If the contents of the file
           can't be read, Swaks will exit.  To specify a literal string value starting with an "@", use two  "@"
           symbols.  The first will be stripped.  It is not possible to include an unqualified file which starts
           with  an  "@" sign (like "--attach @file.txt" or "--attach @@file.txt"), but if you include a path to
           the file which splits up the two "@" signs, that will work (eg "--attach @./@file.txt"  will  include
           the contents of the file @file.txt).

       Sensitive
           If  an option marked Sensitive attempts to prompt the user for an argument and the "--protect-prompt"
           option is set, Swaks will attempt to mask the user input from being echoed on  the  terminal.   Swaks
           tries  to  mask  the  input in several ways, but if none of them work program flow will continue with
           unmasked input.

       Deprecated
           An option labeled Deprecated has been officially deprecated and will be removed in a future  release.
           See the "DEPRECATIONS" section of this documentation for details about the deprecations.

       The exact mechanism and format for using each of the types is listed below.

       CONFIGURATION FILES
           A  configuration  file  can  be used to set commonly-used or abnormally verbose options.  By default,
           Swaks looks in order for $SWAKS_HOME/.swaksrc, $HOME/.swaksrc, and $LOGDIR/.swaksrc.  If one of those
           is found to exist (and "--config" has not been used) that file is used as the configuration file.

           Additionally, a configuration file in a non-default location can be specified using  "--config".   If
           this  is  set  and  not  given  an  argument Swaks will not use any configuration file, including any
           default file.  If "--config" points to a readable  file,  it  is  used  as  the  configuration  file,
           overriding  any  default  that may exist.  If it points to a non-readable file an error will be shown
           and Swaks will exit.

           A set of "portable" defaults can also be created by adding options to the end of  the  Swaks  program
           file.   As  distributed, the last line of Swaks should be "__END__".  Any lines added after "__END__"
           will be treated as the contents of a configuration file.  This allows a set of user preferences to be
           automatically copied from server to server in a single file.

           If configuration files have not been explicitly turned off, the  "__END__"  config  is  always  read.
           Only  one other configuration file will ever be used per single invocation of Swaks, even if multiple
           configuration files are specified.  If the "__END__" config and another config are to  be  read,  the
           "__END__"  config  will  be processed first.  Specifying the "--config" option with no argument turns
           off the processing of both the "__END__" config and any actual config files.

           In a configuration file lines beginning with a hash ("#") are ignored.  All other lines  are  assumed
           to  be  an  option  to  Swaks,  with the leading dash or dashes optional.  Everything after an option
           line's first space is assumed to be the option's argument and is  not  shell  processed.   Therefore,
           quoting is usually unneeded and will be included literally in the argument.

           There  is  a  subtle  difference between providing an option with no argument and providing an option
           with an empty argument.  If an option line does not have a space, the entire line is  treated  as  an
           option  and  there  is  no  argument.  If the line ends in a single space, it will be processed as an
           option with an empty argument.  So, "apt" will be treated as "--apt", but "apt " will be  treated  as
           "--apt ''".

           Here is an example of the contents of a configuration file:

               # always use this sender, no matter server or logged in user
               --from fred@example.com
               # I prefer my test emails have a pretty from header.  Note
               # the lack of dashes on option and lack of quotes around
               # entire argument.
               h-From: "Fred Example" <fred@example.com>

           Options specific to configuration file:

           --config [<config-file>]
               This  option  provides  a path to a specific configuration file to be used.  If specified with no
               argument, no automatically-found configuration file  (via  $HOME,  etc,  or  "__END__")  will  be
               processed.   If  the  argument  is a valid file, that file will be used as the configuration file
               (after "__END__" config).  If argument is not a valid, readable file, Swaks will error and  exit.
               This  option  can  be  specified  multiple  times,  but  only  the first time it is specified (in
               environment variable and the command line search order) will be used. (Arg-Optional)

       CONFIGURATION ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
           Options can be supplied via environment variables.  The variables are in  the  form  $SWAKS_OPT_name,
           where  "name"  is the name of the option that would be specified on the command line.  Because dashes
           aren't allowed in environment variable names in most UNIX-ish shells, no  leading  dashes  should  be
           used  and  any  dashes  inside  the option's name should be replaced with underscores.  The following
           would create the same options shown in the configuration file example:

               $ SWAKS_OPT_from='fred@example.com'
               $ SWAKS_OPT_h_From='"Fred Example" <fred@example.com>'

           Setting a variable to an empty value is the same as  specifying  it  on  the  command  line  with  no
           argument.   For  instance, setting <SWAKS_OPT_server=""> would cause Swaks to prompt the user for the
           server to which to connect at each  invocation.   On  Windows,  it  is  not  possible  to  set  empty
           environment  variables.   The  behavior  can be simulated by setting the environment variable to "<>"
           instead.  Additionally, embedding the header name in the header option via  environment  variable  is
           not   allowed   on   Windows   (eg   "SWAKS_OPT_header_Foo=bar"   will   result   in  an  error,  but
           "SWAKS_OPT_header="Foo: bar"" will work.)

           Because there is no inherent order in options provided by setting environment variables, the  options
           are  sorted  before  being  processed.   This  is  not  a great solution, but it at least defines the
           behavior,  which  would  be  otherwise  undefined.   As  an  example,  if  both  $SWAKS_OPT_from  and
           $SWAKS_OPT_f  were  set,  the  value  from  $SWAKS_OPT_from  would  be  used,  because it sorts after
           $SWAKS_OPT_f.  Also as a result of not having an inherent order in environment processing,  unsetting
           options  with  the  "no-" prefix is unreliable.  It works if the option being turned off sorts before
           "no-", but fails if it sorts after. Because "no-" is primarily meant to operate between config  types
           (for  instance, unsetting from the command line an option that was set in a config file), this is not
           likely to be a problem.

           In addition to setting the equivalent of command line options, $SWAKS_HOME can be set to a  directory
           containing the default .swaksrc to be used.

       COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
           The  final  method  of  supplying  options to Swaks is via the command line.  The options behave in a
           manner consistent with most UNIX-ish command line programs.  Many options have both a short and  long
           form  (for  instance  "-s"  and "--server").  By convention short options are specified with a single
           dash and long options are specified with a double-dash.  This is only a convention and either  prefix
           will work with either type.

           The  following  demonstrates  the  example  shown  in the configuration file and environment variable
           sections:

               $ swaks --from fred@example.com --h-From: '"Fred Example" <fred@example.com>'

TRANSPORTS

       Swaks can connect to a target via UNIX pipes ("pipes"), UNIX domain sockets ("UNIX sockets"), or internet
       domain sockets ("network sockets").  Connecting via network sockets is the default behavior.  Because  of
       the  singular  nature  of  the  transport  used, each set of options in the following section is mutually
       exclusive.  Specifying more than one of "--server", "--pipe", or "--socket"  will  result  in  an  error.
       Mixing  other  options  between transport types will only result in the irrelevant options being ignored.
       Below is a brief description of each type of  transport  and  the  options  that  are  specific  to  that
       transport type.

       NETWORK SOCKETS
           This  transport  attempts  to  deliver a message via TCP/IP, the standard method for delivering SMTP.
           This is the default transport for Swaks.  If none of "--server", "--pipe", or  "--socket"  are  given
           then  this  transport  is  used  and the target server is determined from the recipient's domain (see
           "--server" below for more details).

           This transport requires the IO::Socket::IP module for both IPv4 and IPv6 sockets.  If this module  is
           not  loadable,  Swaks  will  attempt to use the IO::Socket library for IPv4 and IO::Socket::INET6 for
           IPv6 support.  Attempting to use this transport with none of those libraries available will result in
           an error and program termination.

           The fall back to IO::Socket and IO::Socket::INET6 is deprecated and  will  be  removed  in  a  future
           release.  See DEPRECATIONS below

           -s, --server [<target-server>[:<port>]]
               Explicitly  tell  Swaks to use network sockets and specify the hostname or IP address to which to
               connect, or prompt if no argument is given.  If this option is not given and no  other  transport
               option  is  given,  the target mail server is determined from the appropriate DNS records for the
               domain of the recipient email address using the Net::DNS module.  If Net::DNS  is  not  available
               Swaks  will  attempt  to  connect to localhost to deliver.  The target port can optionally be set
               here.  Supported formats for this include SERVER:PORT  (supporting  names  and  IPv4  addresses);
               [SERVER]:PORT  and  SERVER/PORT (supporting names, IPv4 and IPv6 addresses).  A port set via this
               option will only be used if the "--port" option is not used.  See  also  "--copy-routing".  (Arg-
               Required, From-Prompt)

           -p, --port [<port>]
               Specify  which  TCP  port  on  the target is to be used, or prompt if no argument is listed.  The
               argument can be a service name (as retrieved by getservbyname(3)) or a port number.  The  default
               port  is  smtp/25  unless  influenced  by  the  "--protocol" or "--tls-on-connect" options. (Arg-
               Required, From-Prompt)

           -li, --local-interface [<local-interface>[:<port>]]
               Use argument as the local interface for the outgoing  SMTP  connection,  or  prompt  user  if  no
               argument  given.   Argument  can  be  an  IP address or a hostname.  Default action is to let the
               operating system choose the local interface.  See "--server" for additional comments  on  :<port>
               format.   A  port set via this option will only be used if the "--port" option is not used. (Arg-
               Required, From-Prompt)

           -lp, --local-port, --lport [<port>]
               Specify the outgoing port from which to originate the transaction.  The argument can be a service
               name (as retrieved by getservbyname(3)) or a port number.  If this option is  not  specified  the
               system  will  pick  an  ephemeral port.  Note that regular users cannot specify some ports. (Arg-
               Required, From-Prompt)

           --copy-routing <domain>
               The argument is interpreted as the domain part of an email address and it is  used  to  find  the
               target  server  using  the  same  logic  that  would  be  used to look up the target server for a
               recipient email address.  See "--to" option for more details on how the target is determined from
               the email domain. (Arg-Required)

           -4, -6
               Force IPv4 or IPv6. (Arg-None)

       UNIX SOCKETS
           This transport method attempts to deliver messages via a UNIX-domain socket file.  This is useful for
           testing MTA/MDAs that listen on socket files (for instance, testing LMTP delivery  to  Cyrus).   This
           transport  requires  the IO::Socket::UNIX module which is part of the standard Perl distribution.  If
           this module is not loadable, attempting to use this transport will result in  an  error  and  program
           termination.

           --socket [<socket-file>]
               This  option  takes  as  its argument a UNIX-domain socket file.  If Swaks is unable to open this
               socket it will display an error and exit. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       PIPES
           This transport attempts to spawn a process and communicate with it via pipes.   The  spawned  program
           must  be prepared to behave as a mail server over "STDIN"/"STDOUT".  Any MTA designed to operate from
           inet/xinet should  support  this.   In  addition,  some  MTAs  provide  testing  modes  that  can  be
           communicated  with  via  "STDIN"/"STDOUT".  This transport can be used to automate that testing.  For
           example, if you implemented DNSBL checking with Exim and you wanted to make sure it was working,  you
           could run "swaks --pipe "exim -bh 127.0.0.2"".  Ideally, the process you are talking to should behave
           exactly like an SMTP server on "STDIN" and "STDOUT".  Any debugging should be sent to "STDERR", which
           will be directed to your terminal.  In practice, Swaks can generally handle some debug on the child's
           "STDOUT", but there are no guarantees on how much it can handle.

           This  transport  requires  the IPC::Open2 module which is part of the standard Perl distribution.  If
           this module is not loadable, attempting to use this transport will result in  an  error  and  program
           termination.

           --pipe [<command-and-arguments>]
               Provide a process name and arguments to the process.  Swaks will attempt to spawn the process and
               communicate  with it via pipes.  If the argument is not an executable Swaks will display an error
               and exit. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

PROTOCOL OPTIONS

       These options are related to the protocol layer.

       -t, --to [<email-address>[,<email-address>[,...]]]
       --cc [<email-address>[,<email-address>[,...]]]
       --bcc [<email-address>[,<email-address>[,...]]]
           These options all tell Swaks to use the argument(s) as the envelope-recipient for the  email.   There
           are  subtle  differences between these three options, detailed below.  If any option is specified but
           with no arguments, Swaks will prompt the user for an argument.

           "--to" is special in that it is the only option required by Swaks. There is no default value for this
           option.  If no recipients are  provided  via  any  means,  user  will  be  prompted  to  provide  one
           interactively.   The only exception to this is if a "--quit-after" value is provided which will cause
           the SMTP transaction to be terminated before the recipient is needed.   If  multiple  recipients  are
           provided and the recipient domain is needed to determine routing, the domain of the last recipient in
           the "--to" argument list is used.

           The  primary distinction between these options is how their arguments are treated when generating the
           DATA  portion  of  the  email.   They  each  have  their  own  replacement  tokens   ("%TO_ADDRESS%",
           "%CC_ADDRESS%", and "%BCC_ADDRESS%" respectively) which can be used by anyone crafting a custom DATA.
           In  Swaks'  default  message, "%TO_ADDRESS%" will be used for the To: header and, if it is populated,
           "%CC_HEADER%" will be used for a Cc: header.  "%BCC_ADDRESS%" is not used in the default DATA.  (Arg-
           Required, From-Prompt)

       -f, --from [<email-address>]
           Use  argument as envelope-sender for email, or prompt user if no argument specified.  The string "<>"
           can be supplied to mean the null sender.  If user does not specify a sender address a  default  value
           is used.  The domain-part of the default sender is a best guess at the fully-qualified domain name of
           the  local  host.   The  method  of  determining  the local-part varies.  If the $LOGNAME environment
           variable is set, it will be used as the local-part.  Otherwise the  value  from  "Win32::LoginName()"
           will  be  used  on  Windows  and getpwuid(3) on UNIX-ish platforms.  See also "--force-getpwuid".  If
           Swaks cannot determine a local hostname and the sender address is needed for the  transaction,  Swaks
           will  error  and exit.  In this case, a valid string must be provided via this option. (Arg-Required,
           From-Prompt)

       --ehlo, --lhlo, -h, --helo [<helo-string>]
           String to use as argument to HELO/EHLO/LHLO command, or prompt user if no argument is specified.   If
           this  option  is  not used a best guess at the fully-qualified domain name of the local host is used.
           If Swaks cannot determine a local hostname and the helo string is needed for the  transaction,  Swaks
           will  error  and exit.  In this case, a valid string must be provided via this option. (Arg-Required,
           From-Prompt)

       -q, --quit, --quit-after <stop-point>
           Point at which the transaction should be stopped.  When the requested stopping point  is  reached  in
           the  transaction,  and  provided that Swaks has not errored out prior to reaching it, Swaks will send
           "QUIT" and attempt to close the connection cleanly.  These are the valid arguments  and  notes  about
           their meaning. (Arg-Required)

           PROXY
               Quit  after  the  server sends a response to a PROXY request.  Note that if there is not an error
               negotiating proxy, this will be synonymous with CONNECT.

           CONNECT, BANNER
               Terminate the session after receiving the greeting banner from the target.

           FIRST-HELO, FIRST-EHLO, FIRST-LHLO
               In a STARTTLS (but not tls-on-connect) session, terminate the transaction after the first of  two
               HELOs.  In a non-STARTTLS transaction, behaves the same as HELO (see below).

           XCLIENT
               Quit  after  XCLIENT  is  negotiation. This always quits after the point where XCLIENT would have
               been negotiated, regardless of whether it was attempted.

           XCLIENT-HELO
               Quit after the HELO that XCLIENT negotiation triggers. This  differs  from  HELO  and  FIRST-HELO
               because  XCLIENT  negotiation  can  happen  at  multiple points in the SMTP transaction and it is
               impossible to specifically refer to the XCLIENT-triggered HELO using the HELO or FIRST-HELO stop-
               points. This always quits after the point where the XCLIENT-triggered HELO would  have  occurred,
               regardless of whether it was attempted.

           STARTTLS, TLS
               Quit  the transaction immediately following TLS negotiation.  Note that this happens in different
               places depending on whether STARTTLS or tls-on-connect are used.  This  always  quits  after  the
               point where TLS would have been negotiated, regardless of whether it was attempted.

           HELO, EHLO, LHLO
               In a STARTTLS or XCLIENT session, quit after the second HELO.  Otherwise quit after the first and
               only HELO.

           AUTH
               Quit  after  authentication.   This  always quits after the point where authentication would have
               been negotiated, regardless of whether it was attempted.

           MAIL, FROM
               Quit after MAIL FROM: is sent.

           RCPT, TO
               Quit after RCPT TO: is sent.

       --da, --drop-after <stop-point>
           The option is similar to "--quit-after", but instead of trying to cleanly shut down  the  session  it
           simply  terminates  the  session.   This  option  accepts  the same stop-points as "--quit-after" and
           additionally accepts DATA and DOT, detailed below. (Arg-Required)

           DATA
               Drop the connection after DATA is sent by server.

           DOT Drop the connection after the final '.' of the message is sent by server.

       --das, --drop-after-send <stop-point>
           This option is similar to "--drop-after", but instead of dropping  the  connection  after  reading  a
           response to the stop-point, it drops the connection immediately after sending stop-point.  It accepts
           the  same stop-points as "--drop-after". If the stop-point is for an optional part of the transaction
           which is not actually sent (for instance STARTTLS or AUTH), this option will  behave  identically  to
           "--drop-after". See below for specific details. (Arg-Required)

           CONNECT
               Connect to the server and then drops the connection before receiving the server's banner.

           STARTTLS, TLS
               Behaves identically to "--drop-after".

           HELO, EHLO, LHLO
               Doesn't  necessarily  work as expected.  If it appears to read the HELO response incorrectly, use
               FIRST-HELO instead.

       --timeout [<time>]
           Use argument as the SMTP transaction timeout, or prompt user if  no  argument  given.   Argument  can
           either  be a pure digit, which will be interpreted as seconds, or can have a specifier s, m, or h (5s
           = 5 seconds, 3m = 180 seconds, 1h = 3600 seconds).  As a special case,  0  means  don't  timeout  the
           transactions.  Default value is 30s. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --protocol <protocol>
           Specify  which  protocol  to  use  in  the  transaction.  Valid options are shown in the table below.
           Currently the 'core' protocols are SMTP, ESMTP, and LMTP.  By  using  variations  of  these  protocol
           types one can tersely specify default ports, whether authentication should be attempted, and the type
           of  TLS  connection  that  should  be attempted.  The default protocol is ESMTP.  The following table
           demonstrates the available arguments to "--protocol" and the options each  sets  as  a  side  effect.
           (Arg-Required)

           SMTP
               HELO, "-p 25"

           SSMTP
               EHLO->HELO, "-tlsc -p 465"

           SSMTPA
               EHLO->HELO, "-a -tlsc -p 465"

           SMTPS
               HELO, "-tlsc -p 465"

           ESMTP
               EHLO->HELO, "-p 25"

           ESMTPA
               EHLO->HELO, "-a -p 25"

           ESMTPS
               EHLO->HELO, "-tls -p 25"

           ESMTPSA
               EHLO->HELO, "-a -tls -p 25"

           LMTP
               LHLO, "-p 24"

           LMTPA
               LHLO, "-a -p 24"

           LMTPS
               LHLO, "-tls -p 24"

           LMTPSA
               LHLO, "-a -tls -p 24"

       --pipeline
           If the remote server supports it, attempt SMTP PIPELINING (RFC 2920). (Arg-None)

       --prdr
           If     the     server     supports     it,     attempt    Per-Recipient    Data    Response    (PRDR)
           (<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-hall-prdr-00.txt>).  PRDR is not yet standardized, but MTAs  have
           begun implementing the proposal. (Arg-None)

       --force-getpwuid
           Tell  Swaks  to  use  the  system-default  method  of determining the current user's username for the
           default sender local-part instead of trying $LOGNAME first.   Despite  the  UNIX-ish-specific  option
           name, this option also works on Windows. (Arg-None)

TLS / ENCRYPTION

       These  are  options  related to encrypting the transaction.  These have been tested and confirmed to work
       with all three transport methods.  The Net::SSLeay module is  used  to  perform  encryption  when  it  is
       requested.   If  this  module  is  not  loadable  Swaks  will either ignore the TLS request or error out,
       depending on whether the request was optional.  STARTTLS is defined as an extension in the ESMTP protocol
       and will be unavailable if "--protocol" is set to a variation of plain SMTP.  Because it is  not  defined
       in the protocol itself, "--tls-on-connect" is available for any protocol type if the target supports it.

       A  local  certificate  is  not required for a TLS connection to be negotiated.  However, some servers use
       client certificate checking to verify that the client is allowed to connect.  Swaks can be told to use  a
       specific  local  certificate  using  the  "--tls-cert"  and  "--tls-key" options, and optionally to use a
       certificate chain using the "--tls-chain" option.

       -tls
           Require connection to use STARTTLS.  Exit if TLS  not  available  for  any  reason  (not  advertised,
           negotiations failed, etc). (Arg-None)

       -tlso, --tls-optional
           Attempt  to  use  STARTTLS  if  available,  continue  with normal transaction if TLS was unable to be
           negotiated for any reason.  Note that this is a semi-useless option as currently implemented  because
           after  a  negotiation  failure the state of the connection is unknown.  In some cases, like a version
           mismatch, the connection should be left as plaintext.  In others, like a  verification  failure,  the
           server-side  may  think that it should continue speaking TLS while the client thinks it is plaintext.
           There may be an attempt to add more granular state detection in the future, but for now just be aware
           that odd things may happen with this option if the TLS negotiation is attempted and fails. (Arg-None)

       -tlsos, --tls-optional-strict
           Attempt to use STARTTLS if available.  Proceed with transaction if TLS is negotiated successfully  or
           STARTTLS  not advertised.  If STARTTLS is advertised but TLS negotiations fail, treat as an error and
           abort transaction.  Due to the caveat noted above, this is a much saner option than "--tls-optional".
           (Arg-None)

       -tlsc, --tls-on-connect
           Initiate a TLS connection immediately on connection.  Following common convention, if this option  is
           specified  the  default  port  changes  from  25 to 465, though this can still be overridden with the
           --port option. (Arg-None)

       -tlsp, --tls-protocol <tls-version-specification>
           Specify which protocols to use (or not use) when negotiating TLS.  At the time of this  writing,  the
           available  protocols  are  sslv2,  sslv3,  tlsv1, tlsv1_1, tlsv1_2, and tlsv1_3.  The availability of
           these protocols is dependent on your  underlying  OpenSSL  library,  so  not  all  of  these  may  be
           available.   The  list  of  available  protocols  is shown in the output of "--dump" (assuming TLS is
           available at all).

           The specification string is a comma-delimited list of protocols that can be used or  not  used.   For
           instance  'tlsv1,tlsv1_1'  will  only  succeed if one of those two protocols is available on both the
           client and the server.  Conversely, 'no_sslv2,no_sslv3' will attempt to negotiate any protocol except
           sslv2 and sslv3.  The two forms of specification cannot be mixed. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-cipher <cipher-string>
           The argument to this option is passed to the underlying OpenSSL library to set the list of acceptable
           ciphers to the be used for the connection.  The format of this string  is  opaque  to  Swaks  and  is
           defined  in <https://www.openssl.org/docs/manmaster/man1/openssl-ciphers.html#CIPHER-LIST-FORMAT>.  A
           brief example would be "--tls-cipher '3DES:+RSA'". (Arg-Required)

       --tls-verify
           Tell Swaks to attempt to verify the server's certificate.  This option  is  identical  to  specifying
           both  the  "--tls-verify-ca"  and  "--tls-verify-host"  options.   See  those  options  for  detailed
           descriptions of how to fine-tune each type of verification.

           By default, TLS verification is not required.  If TLS verification  is  required  by  "--tls-verify",
           "--tls-verify-ca",  or  "--tls-verify-host"  and  the  requested  type  of  verification  fails,  TLS
           negotiation will not succeed. (Arg-None)

       --tls-verify-ca
           Require that the server's certificate be signed by a known certificate authority and not be  expired.
           By  default  the  list of known CAs will be whatever is available via the client Swaks is running on.
           To provide a custom CA, see "--tls-ca-path". (Arg-None)

       --tls-verify-host
           Require that the target of the current connection be  listed  in  the  server  certificate's  Subject
           Alternative Name (SAN) or Subject CommonName (CN).

           The  target  that  Swaks  uses  for  verification  will  vary.  It can be a hostname, either provided
           directly via the "--server" option or looked up via MX records.  In this case, verification  performs
           as  expected.  If the target is an IP, the IP will be looked up in the certificate, which is possible
           but unusual.  If the transport is "--pipe" or "--socket", there will not be a  meaningful  target  to
           verify  in  the  certificate  and  verification will fail.  In this situation it's better to use only
           "--tls-verify-ca" or to override the target used  for  verification  with  the  "--tls-verify-target"
           option. (Arg-None)

       --tls-verify-target <verification-string>
           When   set,   the   argument   to  this  option  will  be  used  as  the  host  to  be  verified  for
           "--tls-verify-host".  This is necessary when using "--tls-verify-host" with either  the  "--pipe"  or
           "--socket"  transports,  which  do  not  have a verifiable target by default.  It can also be used to
           override the default target lookup when using the "--server" transport.  For instance, it can be used
           to verify that the certificate of  a  server  explicitly  connect  to  via  IP  contains  a  specific
           certificate. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-ca-path <ca-location>
           Specify an alternate location for CA information for verifying server certificates.  The argument can
           point  to  a  file  or  directory.   The  default behavior is to use the underlying OpenSSL library's
           default information. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-cert <cert-file>
           Provide a path to a file containing the local certificate Swaks should use if TLS is negotiated.   If
           a  certificate  chain  needs  to be provided, it can be provided via this file or via a separate file
           with "--tls-chain".  The file path argument is required.  As currently implemented the certificate in
           the file must be in PEM format.  Contact the author if there's a compelling need for ASN1.   If  this
           option is set, "--tls-key" is also required. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-key <key-file>
           Provide a path to a file containing the local private key Swaks should use if TLS is negotiated.  The
           file  path argument is required.  As currently implemented the certificate in the file must be in PEM
           format.  Contact the author if  there's  a  compelling  need  for  ASN1.   If  this  option  is  set,
           "--tls-cert" is also required. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-chain <chain-file>
           Provide  a  path  to  a  file  containing  the  local  certificate  chain  Swaks should use if TLS is
           negotiated.  The file path argument is required.  As currently implemented  the  certificate  in  the
           file  must  be  in  PEM  format.   Contact the author if there's a compelling need for ASN1.  If this
           option is set, "--tls-cert" and "--tls-key" are also required. (Arg-Required)

       --tls-get-peer-cert [<output-file>]
           Get a copy of the TLS peer's certificate.  If no argument is given, it will be displayed to "STDOUT".
           If an argument is given it is assumed to be a filesystem path specifying where the certificate should
           be written.  The saved certificate can then be examined using standard  tools  such  as  the  openssl
           command.  If a file is specified its contents will be overwritten.  This option will only ever return
           one  certificate.   In order to get every certificate sent by the server, see "--tls-get-peer-chain".
           (Arg-Optional)

       --tls-get-peer-chain [<output-file>]
           Get a copy of the TLS certificate chain sent by the server.  If no argument  is  given,  it  will  be
           displayed  to  "STDOUT".   If  an  argument is given it is assumed to be a filesystem path specifying
           where the certificate should be written.  The saved chain can then be examined using  standard  tools
           such  as  the  openssl  command.   If  a file is specified its contents will be overwritten. See also
           "--tls-get-peer-cert". (Arg-Optional)

       --tls-sni <sni-string>
           Specify the Server Name Indication field to send when the TLS connection is initiated. (Arg-Required)

AUTHENTICATION

       Swaks will attempt to authenticate to the target mail server  if  instructed  to  do  so.   This  section
       details  available  authentication  types,  requirements,  options and their interactions, and other fine
       points in authentication usage.  Because authentication is defined as an extension in the ESMTP  protocol
       it will be unavailable if "--protocol" is set to a variation of SMTP.

       All  authentication  methods  require base64 encoding.  If the MIME::Base64 Perl module is loadable Swaks
       attempts to use it to perform these encodings.  If MIME::Base64 is not available Swaks will use  its  own
       onboard  base64 routines.  These are slower than the MIME::Base64 routines and less reviewed, though they
       have been tested thoroughly.  Using the MIME::Base64 module is encouraged.

       If authentication is required (see options below for when it is and isn't required) and the  requirements
       aren't  met  for the authentication type available, Swaks displays an error and exits.  Two ways this can
       happen include forcing Swaks to use a specific authentication type that Swaks can't use  due  to  missing
       requirements,  or  allowing  Swaks  to  use any authentication type, but the server only advertises types
       Swaks can't support.  In the former case Swaks errors out at option processing time  since  it  knows  up
       front  it  won't  be able to authenticate.  In the latter case Swaks will error out at the authentication
       stage of the SMTP transaction since Swaks will not be aware that it will  not  be  able  to  authenticate
       until that point.

       Following are the supported authentication types including any individual notes and requirements.

       The  following  options  affect  Swaks' use of authentication.  These options are all inter-related.  For
       instance, specifying "--auth-user" implies "--auth" and "--auth-password".  Specifying  "--auth-optional"
       implies "--auth-user" and "--auth-password", etc.

       -a, --auth [<auth-type>[,<auth-type>[,...]]]
           Require  Swaks  to authenticate.  If no argument is given, any supported auth-types advertised by the
           server are tried until one succeeds or all fail.  If one or  more  auth-types  are  specified  as  an
           argument,  each that the server also supports is tried in order until one succeeds or all fail.  This
           option requires Swaks to authenticate, so if  no  common  auth-types  are  found  or  no  credentials
           succeed, Swaks displays an error and exits. (Arg-Optional)

           The following tables lists the valid auth-types

           LOGIN, PLAIN
               These  basic  authentication  types  are  fully  supported  and  tested  and  have  no additional
               requirements

           CRAM-MD5
               The CRAM-MD5 authenticator requires the Digest::MD5 module.  It is fully tested and  believed  to
               work against any server that implements it.

           DIGEST-MD5
               The  DIGEST-MD5 authenticator (RFC2831) requires the Authen::SASL module.  Version 20100211.0 and
               earlier used Authen::DigestMD5 which had some protocol  level  errors  which  prevented  it  from
               working with some servers.  Authen::SASL's DIGEST-MD5 handling is much more robust.

               The DIGEST-MD5 implementation in Swaks is fairly immature.  It currently supports only the "auth"
               qop  type,  for instance.  If you have DIGEST-MD5 experience and would like to help Swaks support
               DIGEST-MD5 better, please get in touch with me.

               The DIGEST-MD5 protocol's "realm" value can be set using the "--auth-extra" "realm" keyword.   If
               no realm is given, a reasonable default will be used.

               The  DIGEST-MD5  protocol's  "digest-uri" values can be set using the "--auth-extra" option.  For
               instance, you could create the digest-uri-value of "lmtp/mail.example.com/example.com"  with  the
               option  "--auth-extra dmd5-serv-type=lmtp,dmd5-host=mail.example.com,dmd5-serv-name=example.com".
               The "digest-uri-value" string and its components is defined in RFC2831.  If none of these  values
               are given, reasonable defaults will be used.

           CRAM-SHA1
               The  CRAM-SHA1  authenticator  requires  the  Digest::SHA module.  This type has only been tested
               against  a  non-standard  implementation  on  an  Exim  server  and  may  therefore   have   some
               implementation deficiencies.

           NTLM/SPA/MSN
               These  authenticators  require  the Authen::NTLM module.  This type has been tested against Exim,
               Communigate, and Exchange 2007.

               In addition to the standard username and password, this authentication type can also recognize  a
               "domain".   The  domain can be set using the "--auth-extra" "domain" keyword.  Note that this has
               never been tested with a mail server that doesn't  ignore  DOMAIN  so  this  may  be  implemented
               incorrectly.

       -ao, --auth-optional [<auth-type>[,<auth-type>[,...]]]
           This  option  behaves  identically  to  "--auth"  except  that it requests authentication rather than
           requiring it.  If no common auth-types are found or no credentials  succeed,  Swaks  proceeds  as  if
           authentication had not been requested. (Arg-Optional)

       -aos, --auth-optional-strict [<auth-type>[,<auth-type>[,...]]]
           This  option  is  a  compromise  between  "--auth" and "--auth-optional".  If authentication is never
           attempted (server doesn't advertise authentication or no common authentication types are  found),  it
           behaves  like  "--auth-optional"  and the smtp transaction continues.  If authentication is attempted
           but fails, it behaves like "--auth" and exits with an error. (Arg-Optional)

       -au, --auth-user [<username>]
           Provide the username to be used for authentication.  If no username is provided, indicate that  Swaks
           should  attempt  to find the username via .netrc (requires the Net::Netrc module).  If no username is
           provided and cannot be found via .netrc,  the user will be prompted to provide one.  The string  "<>"
           can be supplied to mean an empty username. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       -ap, --auth-password [<password>]
           Provide  the  password to be used for authentication. If no password is provided, indicate that Swaks
           should attempt to find the password via .netrc (requires the Net::Netrc module).  If no  password  is
           provided  and cannot be found via .netrc,  the user will be prompted to provide one.  The string "<>"
           can be supplied to mean an empty password. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt, Sensitive)

       -ae, --auth-extra <key-value-pair>[,<key-value-pair>[,...]]
           Some of the authentication types allow  extra  information  to  be  included  in  the  authentication
           process.   Rather  than  add  a  new  option  for  every  nook  and cranny of each authenticator, the
           "--auth-extra" option allows this information to be supplied.  The  format  for  <key-value-pair>  is
           KEYWORD=VALUE. (Arg-Required)

           The following table lists the currently recognized keywords and the authenticators that use them

           realm, domain
               The  realm  and  domain  keywords  are  synonymous.  Using either will set the "domain" option in
               NTLM/MSN/SPA and the "realm" option in DIGEST-MD5

           dmd5-serv-type
               The dmd5-serv-type keyword is used by the DIGEST-MD5 authenticator and is used, in part, to build
               the digest-uri-value string (see RFC2831)

           dmd5-host
               The dmd5-host keyword is used by the DIGEST-MD5 authenticator and is used, in part, to build  the
               digest-uri-value string (see RFC2831)

           dmd5-serv-name
               The dmd5-serv-name keyword is used by the DIGEST-MD5 authenticator and is used, in part, to build
               the digest-uri-value string (see RFC2831)

       -am, --auth-map <key-value-pair>[,<key-value-pair>[,...]]
           Provides  a way to map alternate names onto base authentication types.  Useful for any sites that use
           alternate names for common types.  The format for  <key-value-pair>  is  AUTH-ALIAS=AUTH-TYPE.   This
           functionality  is  actually  used  internally  to map types SPA and MSN onto the base type NTLM.  The
           command line argument to simulate this would be "--auth-map SPA=NTLM,MSN=NTLM".   All  of  the  auth-
           types listed above are valid targets for mapping except SPA and MSN. (Arg-Required)

       -apt, --auth-plaintext
           Instead  of  showing AUTH strings base64 encoded as they are transmitted, translate them to plaintext
           before printing on screen. (Arg-None)

       -ahp, --auth-hide-password [<replacement-string>]
           If this option is specified,  any  time  a  readable  password  would  be  printed  to  the  terminal
           (specifically   AUTH   PLAIN   and   AUTH   LOGIN)   the   password   is  replaced  with  the  string
           'PROVIDED_BUT_REMOVED' (or the contents of <replacement-string> if provided).  The dummy  string  may
           or may not be base64 encoded, contingent on the "--auth-plaintext" option.

           Note  that  "--auth-hide-password"  is  similar, but not identical, to the "--protect-prompt" option.
           The former protects passwords from being displayed in the SMTP transaction regardless of how they are
           entered.  The latter protects sensitive strings when the user types them at the terminal,  regardless
           of how the string would be used. (Arg-Optional)

XCLIENT OPTIONS

       XCLIENT  is  an SMTP extension introduced by the Postfix project.  XCLIENT allows a (properly-authorized)
       client to tell a server to use alternate information, such as IP address or  hostname,  for  the  client.
       This  allows  much easier paths for testing mail server configurations.  Full details on the protocol are
       available at <http://www.postfix.org/XCLIENT_README.html>.

       The XCLIENT verb can be passed to the server multiple times per SMTP session with  different  attributes.
       For instance, HELO and PROTO might be passed in one call and NAME and ADDR passed in a second. Because it
       can  be  useful  for  testing, Swaks exposes some control over how the attributes are grouped and in what
       order they are passed to the server. The different options attempt to expose simplicity for  those  using
       Swaks as a client, and complexity for those using Swaks to test installs.

       --xclient-addr [<string>]
       --xclient-name [<string>]
       --xclient-port [<string>]
       --xclient-proto [<string>]
       --xclient-destaddr [<string>]
       --xclient-destport [<string>]
       --xclient-helo [<string>]
       --xclient-login [<string>]
       --xclient-reverse-name [<string>]
           These  options  specify  XCLIENT attributes that should be sent to the target server.  If <string> is
           not    provided,    Swaks    will    prompt    and    read    the    value    on    "STDIN".      See
           <http://www.postfix.org/XCLIENT_README.html>  for official documentation for what the attributes mean
           and their possible values, including the special "[UNAVAILABLE]" and "[TEMPUNAVAIL]" values.

           By way of simple example, setting "--xclient-name foo.example.com  --xclient-addr  192.168.1.1"  will
           cause Swaks to send the SMTP command "XCLIENT NAME=foo.example.com ADDR=192.168.1.1".

           Note  that  the "REVERSE_NAME" attribute doesn't seem to appear in the official documentation.  There
           is      a      mailing      list      thread      that      documents      it,      viewable       at
           <http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.mail.postfix.user/192623>.

           These  options  can  all  be mixed with each other, and can be mixed with the "--xclient" option (see
           below). By default all attributes will be combined into one XCLIENT call, but see  "--xclient-delim".
           (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --xclient-delim
           When  this option is specified, it indicates a break in XCLIENT attributes to be sent.  For instance,
           setting "--xclient-helo 'helo string' --xclient-delim --xclient-name  foo.example.com  --xclient-addr
           192.168.1.1"  will  cause  Swaks to send two XCLIENT calls, "XCLIENT HELO=helo+20string" and "XCLIENT
           NAME=foo.example.com ADDR=192.168.1.1".  This option is ignored where it doesn't make sense  (at  the
           start or end of XCLIENT options, by itself, consecutively, etc). (Arg-None)

       --xclient [<string>]
           This  is  the  "free  form"  XCLIENT  option.   Whatever  value is provided for <string> will be sent
           verbatim  as  the  argument  to  the  XCLIENT  SMTP  command.   For  example,  if  "--xclient  'NAME=
           ADDR=192.168.1.1  FOO=bar'" is used, Swaks will send the SMTP command "XCLIENT NAME= ADDR=192.168.1.1
           FOO=bar".  If no argument is passed on command line, Swaks will prompt and read the value on STDIN.

           The primary advantage to this over the more specific options above is that there is no XCLIENT syntax
           validation here.  This allows you  to  send  invalid  XCLIENT  to  the  target  server  for  testing.
           Additionally,  at  least  one  MTA (Message Systems' Momentum, formerly ecelerity) implements XCLIENT
           without advertising supported attributes.  The "--xclient" option allows you to skip  the  "supported
           attributes" check when communicating with this type of MTA (though see also "--xclient-no-verify").

           The  "--xclient"  option  can  be mixed freely with the "--xclient-*" options above.  The argument to
           "--xclient" will be sent in its own command group.   For  instance,  if  "--xclient-addr  192.168.0.1
           --xclient-port  26  --xclient  'FOO=bar  NAME=wind'"  is  given  to  Swaks, "XCLIENT ADDR=192.168.0.1
           PORT=26" and "XCLIENT FOO=bar NAME=wind" will both be sent to the target server. (Arg-Required, From-
           Prompt)

       --xclient-no-verify
           Do not enforce the requirement that an XCLIENT attribute must be advertised by the  server  in  order
           for  Swaks  to  send  it in an XCLIENT command.  This is to support servers which don't advertise the
           attributes but still support them. (Arg-None)

       --xclient-before-starttls
           If Swaks is configured to attempt both XCLIENT and STARTTLS, it will  do  STARTTLS  first.   If  this
           option is specified it will attempt XCLIENT first. (Arg-None)

       --xclient-optional
       --xclient-optional-strict
           In  normal  operation,  setting  one  of  the  "--xclient*" options will require a successful XCLIENT
           transaction to take place in order to proceed (that is, XCLIENT needs to be advertised, all the user-
           requested attributes need to have been advertised, and the  server  needs  to  have  accepted  Swaks'
           XCLIENT  request).   These options change that behavior.  "--xclient-optional" tells Swaks to proceed
           unconditionally past the XCLIENT stage  of  the  SMTP  transaction,  regardless  of  whether  it  was
           successful.   "--xclient-optional-strict"  is  similar  but  more  granular.  The strict version will
           continue to XCLIENT was not advertised, but will fail if XCLIENT was attempted but did  not  succeed.
           (Arg-None)

PROXY OPTIONS

       Swaks         implements         the         Proxy         protocol         as         defined         in
       <http://www.haproxy.org/download/1.5/doc/proxy-protocol.txt>.  Proxy allows an application load balancer,
       such as HAProxy, to be used in front of an MTA while still allowing the MTA  access  to  the  originating
       host  information.   Proxy support in Swaks allows direct testing of an MTA configured to expect requests
       from a proxy, bypassing the proxy itself during testing.

       Swaks makes no effort to ensure that the Proxy options used are  internally  consistent.   For  instance,
       "--proxy-family" (in version 1) is expected to be one of "TCP4" or "TCP6".  While it will likely not make
       sense to the target server, Swaks makes no attempt to ensure that "--proxy-source" and "--proxy-dest" are
       in the same protocol family as "--proxy-family" or each other.

       The "--proxy" option is mutually exclusive with all other "--proxy-*" options except "--proxy-version".

       When   "--proxy"   is   not  used,  all  of  "--proxy-family",  "--proxy-source",  "--proxy-source-port",
       "--proxy-dest", and  "--proxy-dest-port"  are  required.   Additionally,  when  "--proxy-version"  is  2,
       "--proxy-protocol" and "--proxy-command" are optional.

       --proxy-version [ 1 | 2 ]
           Whether  to use version 1 (human readable) or version 2 (binary) of the Proxy protocol.  Version 1 is
           the default.  Version 2 is only implemented through the "address block", and is roughly on  par  with
           the information provided in version 1. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy [<string>]
           This  option  provides  the  raw  proxy string which will be sent to the server.  The protocol prefix
           ("PROXY " for version 1, the 12-byte protocol header for version 2) can be  present  or  not  in  the
           argument.   This  option  allows sending incomplete or malformed Proxy strings to a target server for
           testing.  This option is mutually exclusive with all other "--proxy-*" options which provide granular
           proxy information.

           Because version 2 of the Proxy protocol is a binary protocol, there are multiple ways to provide  the
           argument to this option.  If the argument starts with "base64:", that prefix is stripped and the rest
           of  the string is base64 decoded before use.  If the argument starts with "@" it will be treated as a
           filename and the proxy value will be read from the file.  Any  other  value  is  assumed  to  be  the
           literal value for the proxy string. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt, From-File)

       --proxy-family [<string>]
           For  version  1, specifies both the address family and transport protocol.  The protocol defines TCP4
           and TCP6.

           For version 2, specifies only the address family.  The protocol defines AF_UNSPEC, AF_INET, AF_INET6,
           and AF_UNIX. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-protocol [<string>]
           For version 2, specifies the transport protocol.  The protocol defines  UNSPEC,  STREAM,  and  DGRAM.
           The default is STREAM.  This option is unused in version 1. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-command [<string>]
           For  version 2, specifies the transport protocol.  The protocol defines LOCAL and PROXY.  The default
           is PROXY.  This option is unused in version 1. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-source [<string>]
           Specify the source address of the proxied connection. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-source-port [<string>]
           Specify the source port of the proxied connection. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-dest [<string>]
           Specify the destination address of the proxied connection. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

       --proxy-dest-port [<string>]
           Specify the destination port of the proxied connection. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt)

DATA OPTIONS

       These options pertain to the contents for the DATA portion of the SMTP transaction.  By  default  a  very
       simple message is sent.  If the "--attach" or "--attach-body" options are used, Swaks attempts to upgrade
       to a MIME message.

       -d, --data [<data-portion>]
           Use argument as the entire contents of DATA.

           If no argument is provided, user will be prompted to supply value.

           If the argument "-" is provided the data will be read from "STDIN" with no prompt.

           If  the  argument  starts with "@" it will be treated as a filename.  If you would like to pass in an
           argument that starts with "@" and isn't a filename, prefix the argument with an additional "@".   For
           example, "@file.txt" will force processing of file.txt.  @@data will use the string '@data'.

           If  the  argument  does  not  contain  any literal (0x0a) or representative (0x5c, 0x6e or %NEWLINE%)
           newline characters, it will be treated as a filename.  If the file is open-able, the contents of  the
           file will be used as the data portion.  If the file cannot be opened, Swaks will error and exit.  The
           entire  behavior  described  in this paragraph is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
           Instead use a leading "@" to explicitly set that the argument is a filename.

           Any other argument will be used as the DATA contents.

           The value can be on one single line, with "\n" (ASCII 0x5c,  0x6e)  representing  where  line  breaks
           should  be  placed.   Leading  dots will be quoted.  Closing dot is not required but is allowed.  The
           default value for this option is "Date: %DATE%\nTo: %TO_ADDRESS%\nFrom: %FROM_ADDRESS%\nSubject: test
           %DATE%\nMessage-Id:            <%MESSAGEID%>\nX-Mailer:            swaks             v%SWAKS_VERSION%
           jetmore.org/john/code/swaks/\n%NEW_HEADERS%\n%BODY%\n".

           Very  basic token parsing is performed on the DATA portion.  The following table shows the recognized
           tokens and their replacement values. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt, From-File)

           %FROM_ADDRESS%, ..FROM_ADDRESS..
               Replaced with the envelope-sender.

           %TO_ADDRESS%, ..TO_ADDRESS..
               Replaced with the envelope-recipient(s) set by the "--to" option.

           %CC_ADDRESS%, ..CC_ADDRESS..
               Replaced with the envelope-recipient(s) set by the "--cc" option.

           %BCC_ADDRESS%, ..BCC_ADDRESS..
               Replaced with the envelope-recipient(s) set by the "--bcc" option.

           %DATE%, ..DATE..
               Replaced with the current time in a format suitable for inclusion in the Date: header.  Note this
               attempts to use the  standard  module  POSIX  for  timezone  calculations.   If  this  module  is
               unavailable  or  the  current  environment  doesn't  support  the %z strftime format token (as on
               Windows) the date string will be in GMT.

           %MESSAGEID%, ..MESSAGEID..
               Replaced with a message ID string suitable for use in a Message-Id header.  The  value  for  this
               token will remain consistent for the life of the process.

           %SWAKS_VERSION%, ..SWAKS_VERSION..
               Replaced with the version of the currently-running Swaks process.

           %NEW_HEADERS%, ..NEW_HEADERS..
               Replaced with the contents of the "--add-header" option.  If "--add-header" is not specified this
               token is simply removed.

           %BODY%, ..BODY..
               Replaced with the value specified by the "--body" option.  See "--body" for default.

           %NEWLINE%, ..BODY..
               Replaced  with  carriage  return,  newline  (0x0d, 0x0a).  This is identical to using "\n" (0x5c,
               0x6e), but doesn't have the escaping concerns that the backslash can cause on the newline.

       -dab, --dump-as-body [<section>[,<section>[,...]]]
           If "--dump-as-body" is used and no other option is used to change the default body  of  the  message,
           the  body  is replaced with output similar to the output of what is provided by "--dump".  "--dump"'s
           initial program capability stanza  is  not  displayed,  and  the  "data"  section  is  not  included.
           Additionally,  "--dump"  always  includes  passwords.   By  default "--dump-as-body" does not include
           passwords, though this can be changed with "--dump-as-body-shows-password".   "--dump-as-body"  takes
           the  same  arguments  as  "--dump"  except  the  SUPPORT  and DATA arguments are not supported. (Arg-
           Optional)

       -dabsp, --dump-as-body-shows-password
           Cause "--dump-as-body" to include plaintext passwords.  This option is not recommended.  This  option
           implies "--dump-as-body". (Arg-None)

       --body [<body-specification>]
           Specify  the body of the email.  The default is "This is a test mailing".  If no argument to "--body"
           is given, prompt to supply one interactively.  If "-"  is  supplied,  the  body  will  be  read  from
           standard  input.   Arguments beginning with "@" will be treated as filenames containing the body data
           to use (see "--data" for more detail).

           If, after the above processing, the argument represents an open-able file, the content of  that  file
           is  used  as the body.  This is deprecated behavior and will be removed in a future release.  Instead
           use a leading "@" to explicitly set that the argument is a filename.

           If the message is forced to MIME format  (see  "--attach")  "--body  'body  text'"  is  the  same  as
           "--attach-type  text/plain --attach-body 'body text'".  See "--attach-body" for details on creating a
           multipart/alternative body. (Arg-Required, From-Prompt, From-File)

       --attach [<attachment-specification>]
           When one or more "--attach" option is supplied, the message is changed into  a  multipart/mixed  MIME
           message.   The  arguments  to  "--attach" are processed the same as "--body" with respect to "STDIN",
           file contents, etc.  "--attach" can be supplied multiple times to create  multiple  attachments.   By
           default,  each  attachment  is attached as an application/octet-stream file.  See "--attach-type" for
           changing this behavior.

           If the contents of the attachment are provided via a file name, the MIME encoding will  include  that
           file name.  See "--attach-name" for more detail on file naming.

           It  is  legal  for "-" ("STDIN") to be specified as an argument multiple times (once for "--body" and
           multiple times for "--attach").  In this case, the same content will be  attached  each  time  it  is
           specified.   This  is  useful for attaching the same content with multiple MIME types. (Arg-Required,
           From-File)

       --attach-body [<body-specification>]
           This is a variation on "--attach" that is specifically for the body part of the  email.   It  behaves
           identically  to  "--attach"  in  that  it  takes the same arguments and forces the creation of a MIME
           message.  However, it is different in that the argument will always be the first  MIME  part  in  the
           message, no matter where in option processing order it is encountered.  Additionally, "--attach-body"
           options  stack  to  allow  creation  of  multipart/alternative  bodies.   For example, "--attach-type
           text/plain --attach-body 'plain text body' --attach-type text/html --attach-body 'html  body'"  would
           create a multipart/alternative message body. (Arg-Required, From-File)

       --attach-type <mime-type>
           By  default,  content  that  gets MIME attached to a message with the "--attach" option is encoded as
           application/octet-stream (except for the body, which  is  text/plain  by  default).   "--attach-type"
           changes  the  mime  type  for every "--attach" option which follows it.  It can be specified multiple
           times.  The current MIME type gets reset to application/octet-stream between  processing  body  parts
           and other parts. (Arg-Required)

       --attach-name [<name>]
           This  option sets the filename that will be included in the MIME part created for the next "--attach"
           option.  If no argument is set for this option, it causes no filename information to be included  for
           the next MIME part, even if Swaks could generate it from the local file name. (Arg-Optional)

       -ah, --add-header <header>
           This  option allows headers to be added to the DATA.  If "%NEW_HEADERS%" is present in the DATA it is
           replaced with the argument to this option.  If  "%NEW_HEADERS%"  is  not  present,  the  argument  is
           inserted  between  the first two consecutive newlines in the DATA (that is, it is inserted at the end
           of the existing headers).

           The option can either be specified multiple times or a single time with multiple headers separated by
           a literal "\n" string.  So, "--add-header 'Foo: bar' --add-header 'Baz: foo'" and "--add-header 'Foo:
           bar\nBaz: foo'" end up adding the same two headers. (Arg-Required)

       --header <header-and-data>, --h-<header> <data>
           These options allow a way to change headers that already exist  in  the  DATA.   "--header  'Subject:
           foo'"  and  "--h-Subject  foo" are equivalent.  If the header does not already exist in the data then
           this argument behaves identically to "--add-header".  However, if the header  already  exists  it  is
           replaced  with  the  one  specified.  Negating the version of this option with the header name in the
           option (eg "--no-header-Subject") will remove all previously processed "--header" options,  not  just
           the  ones used for 'Subject'. Embedding the header name in the option via environment variable is not
           supported on Windows and will result in an error. (Arg-Required)

       -g  This option is a direct alias to "--data -" (read DATA from "STDIN").  It  is  totally  secondary  to
           "--data".   Any  occurrence of "--data" will cause "-g" to be ignored.  This option cannot be negated
           with the "no-" prefix.  This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future version  of  Swaks.
           (Arg-None, Deprecated)

       --no-data-fixup, -ndf
           This  option  forces  Swaks to do no massaging of the DATA portion of the email.  This includes token
           replacement, From_ stripping, trailing-dot addition, "--body"/attachment inclusion,  and  any  header
           additions.   This  option  is  only  useful  when used with "--data", since the internal default DATA
           portion uses tokens. (Arg-None)

       --no-strip-from, -nsf
           Don't strip the From_ line from the DATA portion, if present. (Arg-None)

OUTPUT OPTIONS

       Swaks provides a transcript of its transactions to  its  caller  ("STDOUT"/"STDERR")  by  default.   This
       transcript  aims  to be as faithful a representation as possible of the transaction though it does modify
       this output by adding informational prefixes  to  lines  and  by  providing  plaintext  versions  of  TLS
       transactions

       The "informational prefixes" are referred to as transaction hints.  These hints are initially composed of
       those  marking  lines  that are output of Swaks itself, either informational or error messages, and those
       that indicate a line of data actually sent or received in a transaction.  This table indicates the  hints
       and their meanings:

       "==="
           Indicates an informational line generated by Swaks.

       "***"
           Indicates an error generated within Swaks.

       " ->"
           Indicates an expected line sent by Swaks to target server.

       " ~>"
           Indicates a TLS-encrypted, expected line sent by Swaks to target server.

       "**>"
           Indicates an unexpected line sent by Swaks to the target server.

       "*~>"
           Indicates a TLS-encrypted, unexpected line sent by Swaks to target server.

       "  >"
           Indicates  a raw chunk of text sent by Swaks to a target server (see "--show-raw-text").  There is no
           concept of "expected" or "unexpected" at this level.

       "<- "
           Indicates an expected line sent by target server to Swaks.

       "<~ "
           Indicates a TLS-encrypted, expected line sent by target server to Swaks.

       "<**"
           Indicates an unexpected line sent by target server to Swaks.

       "<~*"
           Indicates a TLS-encrypted, unexpected line sent by target server to Swaks.

       "<  "
           Indicates a raw chunk of text received by Swaks from a target server (see "--show-raw-text").   There
           is no concept of "expected" or "unexpected" at this level.

       The following options control what and how output is displayed to the caller.

       -n, --suppress-data
           Summarizes  the  DATA portion of the SMTP transaction instead of printing every line.  This option is
           very helpful, bordering on required, when using Swaks to  send  certain  test  emails.   Emails  with
           attachments,  for  instance,  will  quickly overwhelm a terminal if the DATA is not suppressed. (Arg-
           None)

       -stl, --show-time-lapse [i]
           Display time lapse between send/receive pairs.  This  option  is  most  useful  when  Time::HiRes  is
           available, in which case the time lapse will be displayed in thousandths of a second.  If Time::HiRes
           is  unavailable  or  "i" is given as an argument the lapse will be displayed in integer seconds only.
           (Arg-Optional)

           Don't display the transaction hint for informational transactions.  This is most useful when  needing
           to  copy  some  portion  of  the  informational  lines,  for  instance  the  certificate  output from
           "--tls-get-peer-cert". (Arg-None)

       -nih, --no-info-hints
       -nsh, --no-send-hints
       -nrh, --no-receive-hints
       -nth, --no-hints
           "--no-info-hints", "--no-send-hints", and "--no-receive-hints" suppress the  transaction  hints  from
           info,  send,  and receive lines, respectively.  This is often useful when copying some portion of the
           transaction for use elsewhere (for instance, "--no-send-hints --hide-receive --hide-informational" is
           a useful way to get only the client-side  commands  for  a  given  transaction  and  "--no-info-hints
           --tls-get-peer-cert"  for  copying  the  peer  certificate).  "--no-hints" is identical to specifying
           "--no-info-hints --no-send-hints --no-receive-hints". (Arg-None)

       -raw, --show-raw-text
           This option will print a hex dump of raw data sent and received by  Swaks.   Each  hex  dump  is  the
           contents of a single read or write on the network.  This should be identical to what is already being
           displayed (with the exception of the "\r" characters being removed).  This option is useful in seeing
           details when servers are sending lots of data in single packets, or breaking up individual lines into
           multiple  packets.   If  you  really  need  to go in depth in that area you're probably better with a
           packet sniffer, but this option is a good first step to seeing odd connection issues. (Arg-None)

       --output, --output-file <file-path>
       --output-file-stdout <file-path>
       --output-file-stderr <file-path>
           These options allow the user to send output to files instead of "STDOUT"/"STDERR".  The first  option
           sends  both  to the same file.  The arguments of &STDOUT and &STDERR are treated specially, referring
           to the "normal"  file  handles,  so  "--output-file-stderr  '&STDOUT'"  would  redirect  "STDERR"  to
           "STDOUT".  These options are honored for all output except "--help" and "--version". (Arg-Required)

       -pp, --protect-prompt
           Don't  echo  user  input  on  prompts  that  are potentially sensitive (right now only authentication
           password).  Very specifically, any option which is marked 'Sensitive' and eventually prompts  for  an
           argument  will do its best to mask that argument from being echoed.  See also "--auth-hide-password".
           (Arg-None)

       -hr, --hide-receive
           Don't display lines sent from the remote server being received by Swaks. (Arg-None)

       -hs, --hide-send
           Don't display lines being sent by Swaks to the remote server. (Arg-None)

       -hi, --hide-informational
           Don't display non-error informational lines from Swaks itself. (Arg-None)

       -ha, --hide-all
           Do not display any content to the terminal. (Arg-None)

       -S, --silent [ 1 | 2 | 3 ]
           Cause Swaks to be silent.  If no argument is given or if an argument of "1" is given, print no output
           unless/until an error occurs, after which all output is shown.  If an argument of "2" is given,  only
           print  errors.   If  "3"  is given, show no output ever.  "--silent" affects most output but not all.
           For instance, "--help", "--version", "--dump", and "--dump-mail" are not  affected.   For  historical
           reasons,  -S is not settable via environment variable on Windows, use SWAKS_OPT_silent instead. (Arg-
           Optional)

       --support
           Print capabilities and exit.  Certain  features  require  non-standard  Perl  modules.   This  option
           evaluates  whether  these modules are present and displays which functionality is available and which
           isn't, and which modules would need to be added to gain the missing functionality. (Arg-None)

       --dump-mail
           Cause Swaks to process all options to generate the message it would send, then print that message  to
           "STDOUT"  instead  of sending it.  This output is identical to the "data" section of "--dump", except
           without the trailing dot. (Arg-None)

       --dump [<section>[,<section>[,...]]]
           This option causes Swaks to print the results of option processing,  immediately  before  mail  would
           have  been  sent.   No  mail  will be sent when "--dump" is used.  Note that "--dump" is a pure self-
           diagnosis tool and no effort is made or will ever be made to mask passwords in the  "--dump"  output.
           If  a  section  is  provided as an argument to this option, only the requested section will be shown.
           Currently supported arguments are SUPPORT, APP, OUTPUT, TRANSPORT,  PROTOCOL,  XCLIENT,  PROXY,  TLS,
           AUTH, DATA, and ALL.  If no argument is provided, all sections are displayed (Arg-Optional)

       --help
           Display this help information and exit. (Arg-None)

       --version
           Display version information and exit. (Arg-None)

DEPRECATIONS

       The following features are deprecated and will be removed in a future version of Swaks

       use of IO::Socket and IO::Socket::INET6 modules
           Will be removed no sooner than (February 1, 2025).

           The  primary  method  of  sending  over  IPv4 and IPv6 sockets is implemented with the IO::Socket::IP
           module.  For the time being there is still legacy support of  the  IO::Socket  and  IO::Socket::INET6
           modules  which  were  previously  used.   Please  ensure IO::Socket::IP is installed to ensure future
           functionality.

PORTABILITY

       OPERATING SYSTEMS
           This program was primarily intended for use on UNIX-like operating systems, and it should work on any
           reasonable version thereof.  It has been developed and tested on Solaris, Linux, and Mac OS X and  is
           feature complete on all of these.

           This  program  is  known to demonstrate basic functionality on Windows using Strawberry Perl.  In all
           documentation, unless otherwise noted, "Windows" refers to running Swaks  via  CMD.exe,  not  WSL  or
           cygwin.   It has not been fully tested, but known to work are basic SMTP functionality and the LOGIN,
           PLAIN, and CRAM-MD5 auth types.  Unknown is any TLS functionality and  the  NTLM/SPA  and  DIGEST-MD5
           auth  types.   Some  functionality  is  known  to be limited on Windows, including inability to embed
           header name in environment variables (see  "CONFIGURATION  ENVIRONMENT  VARIABLES"  and  "--header"),
           inability  to generate a local-timezone date string (see "%DATE%" token under "--data"), inability to
           use "-S" option as an environment variable (see "--silent"), and inability to have a "set but  empty"
           value in an environment variable (see "CONFIGURATION ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" for workaround).

           Because  this  program  should  work  anywhere  Perl  works, I would appreciate knowing about any new
           operating systems you've thoroughly used Swaks on as well as any problems encountered on a new OS.

       MAIL SERVERS
           This program was almost exclusively developed against Exim mail servers.  It has been  used  casually
           by  the  author,  though  not thoroughly tested, with Sendmail, Smail, Exchange, Oracle Collaboration
           Suite, qpsmtpd, and Communigate.  Because all functionality in Swaks is based on known  standards  it
           should  work  with  any fairly modern mail server.  If a problem is found, please alert the author at
           the address below.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       LOGNAME
           If Swaks must create a sender address, $LOGNAME is used as the message local-part if it is  set,  and
           unless "--force-getpwuid" is used.

       SWAKS_HOME
           Used  when  searching  for  a  .swaksrc  configuration file.  See OPTION PROCESSING -> "CONFIGURATION
           FILES" above.

       SWAKS_OPT_*
           Environment variable prefix used to specify Swaks options from  environment  variables.   See  OPTION
           PROCESSING -> "CONFIGURATION ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" above.

EXIT CODES

       0   no errors occurred

       1   error parsing command line options

       2   error connecting to remote server

       3   unknown connection type

       4   while  running  with  connection  type  of "pipe", fatal problem writing to or reading from the child
           process

       5   while running with connection type of "pipe", child process died unexpectedly.  This  can  mean  that
           the program specified with "--pipe" doesn't exist.

       6   Connection  closed  unexpectedly.   If  the  close  is detected in response to the 'QUIT' Swaks sends
           following an unexpected response, the error code for that unexpected response is used  instead.   For
           instance,  if  a  mail  server returns a 550 response to a MAIL FROM: and then immediately closes the
           connection, Swaks detects that the connection is closed, but uses the more specific exit code  23  to
           detail  the  nature  of  the  failure.   If instead the server return a 250 code and then immediately
           closes the connection, Swaks will use the exit code 6 because there is not a more specific exit code.

       10  error in prerequisites (needed module not available)

       21  error reading initial banner from server

       22  error in HELO transaction

       23  error in MAIL transaction

       24  no RCPTs accepted

       25  server returned error to DATA request

       26  server did not accept mail following data

       27  server returned error after normal-session quit request

       28  error in AUTH transaction

       29  error in TLS transaction

       30  PRDR requested/required but not advertised

       32  error in EHLO following TLS negotiation

       33  error in XCLIENT transaction

       34  error in EHLO following XCLIENT

       35  error in PROXY option processing

       36  error sending PROXY banner

ABOUT THE NAME

       The name "Swaks" is a (sort-of) acronym for "SWiss Army Knife SMTP".  It was chosen to be fairly distinct
       and pronounceable.  While "Swaks" is unique as the name of a software package, it has  some  other,  non-
       software meanings.  Please send in other uses of "swak" or "swaks" for inclusion.

       "Sealed With A Kiss"
           SWAK/SWAKs turns up occasionally on the internet with the meaning "with love".

       bad / poor / ill (Afrikaans)
           Seen  in  the headline "SA se bes en swaks gekledes in 2011", which was translated as "best and worst
           dressed" by native speakers.  Google Translate doesn't like "swaks gekledes", but it  will  translate
           "swak" as "poor" and "swak geklede" as "ill-dressed".

LICENSE

       This  program  is  free  software;  you  can  redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License,  or
       (at your option) any later version.

       This  program  is  distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
       the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public
       License for more details.

       You  should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write
       to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.

CONTACT INFORMATION

       General contact, questions, patches, requests, etc to proj-swaks@jetmore.net.

       Change logs, this help, and the latest version are found at <http://www.jetmore.org/john/code/swaks/>.

       Swaks is crafted with love by John Jetmore from the cornfields of Indiana, United States of America.

NOTIFICATIONS

       Email
           updates-swaks@jetmore.net

           If you would like to be put on a list to receive  notifications  when  a  new  version  of  Swaks  is
           released, please send an email to this address.  There will not be a response to your email.

       Website
           <http://www.jetmore.org/john/blog/c/swaks/>

       RSS Feed
           <http://www.jetmore.org/john/blog/c/swaks/feed/>

       Twitter
           <http://twitter.com/SwaksSMTP>

perl v5.36.0                                       2024-01-05                                           SWAKS(1)