[pmg-devel] [PATCH v2 docs] pmg-mail-filter: grammar, typo, phrasing fixes
Aaron Lauterer
a.lauterer at proxmox.com
Thu Apr 23 10:29:35 CEST 2020
LGTM
Reviewed-By: Aaron Lauterer <a.lauterer at proxmox.com>
On 4/23/20 10:18 AM, Oguz Bektas wrote:
> also change a confusing example in the regex guide
>
> Signed-off-by: Oguz Bektas <o.bektas at proxmox.com>
> ---
> v1->v2:
> * aaron fixes
>
>
> pmg-mail-filter.adoc | 38 +++++++++++++++++++-------------------
> 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/pmg-mail-filter.adoc b/pmg-mail-filter.adoc
> index 91e9a00..47410bf 100644
> --- a/pmg-mail-filter.adoc
> +++ b/pmg-mail-filter.adoc
> @@ -14,24 +14,24 @@ certain criteria:
>
> 'Who' - objects::
>
> -Who is the sender or receiver of the e-mail? Those objects can be used
> +Who is the sender or receiver of the email? Those objects can be used
> for the 'TO' and/or 'FROM' category.
> +
> ====
> -Example: EMail-object - Who is the sender or receiver of the e-mail?
> +Example: EMail-object - Who is the sender or receiver of the email?
> ====
>
> 'What' - objects::
>
> -What is in the e-mail?
> +What is in the email?
> +
> ====
> -Example: Does the e-mail contain spam?
> +Example: Does the email contain spam?
> ====
>
> 'When' - objects::
>
> -When is the e-mail received by {pmg}?
> +When is the email received by {pmg}?
> +
> ====
> Example: Office Hours - Mail is received between 8:00 and 16:00.
> @@ -42,15 +42,15 @@ Example: Office Hours - Mail is received between 8:00 and 16:00.
> Defines the final actions.
> +
> ====
> -Example: Mark e-mail with “SPAM:” in the subject.
> +Example: Mark email with “SPAM:” in the subject.
> ====
>
> Rules are ordered by priority, so rules with higher priority are
> executed first. It is also possible to set a processing direction:
>
> -'In':: Rule applies for all incoming e-mails
> +'In':: Rule applies for all incoming emails
>
> -'Out':: Rule applies for all outgoing e-mails
> +'Out':: Rule applies for all outgoing emails
>
> 'In & Out':: Rule applies for both directions
>
> @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ reset the filter rules.
>
> [thumbnail="pmg-gui-mail-filter-actions.png", big=1]
>
> -Please note that some actions stops further rule precessing. We call
> +Please note that some actions stop further rule processing. We call
> such actions 'final'.
>
> Accept
> @@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ removed attachments.
> Header Attributes
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> -This object is able to add or modify mail header attributes. As notice above, you can use xref:rule_system_macros[macros], making this a very powerful object. For example, the 'Modify Spam Level' actions adds detailed infomation about detected Spam characteristics to the ` X-SPAM-LEVEL` header.
> +This object is able to add or modify mail header attributes. As with notifications above, you can use xref:rule_system_macros[macros], making this a very powerful object. For example, the 'Modify Spam Level' actions adds detailed information about detected Spam characteristics to the `X-SPAM-LEVEL` header.
>
> .'Modify Spam Level' Header Attribute
> ----
> @@ -170,7 +170,7 @@ Add a Disclaimer.
> [thumbnail="pmg-gui-mail-filter-who-objects.png", big=1]
>
> This type of objects can be used for the 'TO' and/or 'FROM' category,
> -and macth the sender or receiver of the e-mail. A single object can
> +and match the sender or receiver of the email. A single object can
> combine multiple items, and the following item types are available:
>
> EMail::
> @@ -191,10 +191,10 @@ This can be used to match the senders IP address.
>
> LDAP User or Group::
>
> -Test if the mail address belong to a specific LDAP user or group.
> +Test if the mail address belongs to a specific LDAP user or group.
>
> We have two important 'Who' - objects called 'Blacklist' and
> -'Whitelist'. Those are used in the default ruleset to globally block
> +'Whitelist'. These are used in the default ruleset to globally block
> or allow specific senders.
>
>
> @@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ This also matches the filenames for all regular (non-archived) attachments.
> [thumbnail="pmg-gui-mail-filter-when-objects.png", big=1]
>
> 'When' - objects are use to activate rules at specific daytimes. You
> -can compose them of one or more time-frame items.
> +can compose them of one or more time frame items.
>
> The default ruleset defines 'Office Hours', but this is not used by
> the default rules.
> @@ -274,15 +274,15 @@ Metacharacters
> Some characters have a special meaning. These characters are called
> metacharacters. The Period (`.`) is a commonly used metacharacter. It
> matches exactly one character, regardless of what the character is.
> -`e.mail` would match either "e-mail" or "e-mail" or "e2mail" but not
> -"e-some-mail".
> +`e.mail` would match either "e-mail" or "e2mail" but not
> +"e-some-mail" or "email".
>
> The question mark (`?`) indicates that the character immediately
> -preceding it either zero or one time. `e?mail` would match
> +preceding it shows up either zero or one time. `e?mail` would match
> either "email" or "mail" but not "e-mail".
>
> Another metacharacter is the star (`*`). This indicates that the
> -character immediately to its left may repeated any number of times,
> +character immediately preceding it may be repeated any number of times,
> including zero. `e*mail` would match either "email" or "mail" or
> "eeemail".
>
> @@ -296,4 +296,4 @@ including the null string. For example: `.*company.*` matches
> "company at domain.com" or "company at domain.co.uk" or
> "department.company at domain.com".
>
> -The book xref:Friedl97[] provides a more comprehensive introduction.
> \ No newline at end of file
> +The book xref:Friedl97[] provides a more comprehensive introduction.
>
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