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You must upload your PGP Key before using
PGPMail.
To use PGPMail, you need to create a form on one of your web pages.
PGP forms require three fields. The others are
optional. The required fields are:
- recipient
- username
- keyname
Field names are case sensative.
Now You seed to set up your form to Use the 'pgpmail.pl'.
The form action line should be
<FORM ACTION = "/cgi-sys/pgpmail.pl"
METHOD = "POST">
The 'pgpmail.pl' will do all the programming work
for you. You alter the behavior of 'pgpmail.pl' by using hidden
fields in your form.
There are three form fields that you must have
in your form for PGPMail to work correctly. This is the 'recipient',
'username', and 'keyname' fields.
Field: recipient
Description: This form field allows you to specify to whom
you wish for your form results to be mailed. Most likely you will
want to configure this option as a hidden form field with a value
equal to that of your e-mail address.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="recipient"
value="your_username@localnet.com">
Field: username
Description: This form field allows you to specify your
username in the system. This allows PGPMail to look for the configuration
files to encrypt the mail to be sent to you.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="username"
value="your_username">
Field: keyname
Description: This form field allows you to specify the
name of your public key. This will be the public key that PGPMail
uses to encrypt your mail. You must possess the private key in order
to decrypt the email that is sent.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="keyname"
value="public_keyname">
Field: subject
Description: The subject field will allow you to specify
the subject that you wish to appear in the e-mail that is sent to
you after this form has been filled out. If you do not have this
option turned on, then the script will default to a message subject:
WWW Form Submission
Syntax:
If you wish to choose what the subject is:
<input type=hidden name="subject"
value="Your Subject">
To allow the user to choose a subject:
<input type=text name="subject">
Field: email
Description: This form field will allow the user to specify their
return e-mail address. If you want to be able to return e-mail to
your user, I strongly suggest that you include this form field and
allow them to fill it in. This will be put into the From: field
of the message you receive.
Syntax:
<input type=text name="email">
Field: realname
Description: The realname form field will allow the user to input
their real name. This field is useful for identification purposes
and will also be put into the From: line of your message header.
Syntax:
<input type=text
name="realname">
Field: sort
Description: This field allows you to choose the order in which
you wish for your variables to appear in the e-mail that FormMail
generates. You can choose to have the field sorted alphabetically
or specify a set order in which you want the fields to appear in
your mail message. By leaving this field out, the order will simply
default to the order in which the browsers sends the information
to the script (which isn't always the exact same order they appeared
in the form.) When sorting by a set order of fields, you should
include the phrase 'order:' as the first part of your value for
the sort field, and then follow that with the field names you want
to be listed in the e-mail message, separated by commas.
Syntax:
To sort alphabetically:
<input type=hidden name="sort"
value="alphabetic">
To sort by a set field order:
<input type=hidden name="sort"
value="order:name1,name2,etc...">
Field: redirect
Description: If you wish to redirect the user to a different URL,
rather than having them see the default response to the fill-out
form, you can use this hidden variable to send them to a pre-made
HTML page.
Syntax:
To choose the URL the user will end up at:
<input type=hidden name="redirect"
value="http://your.address/to/file.html">
To allow the user to specify a URL he wishes to
travel to once the form is filled out:
<input type=text name="redirect">
Field: required
Description: You can now require for certain fields in your form
to be filled in before the user can successfully submit the form.
Simply place all field names that you want to be mandatory into
this field. If the required fields are not filled in, the user will
be notified of what they need to fill in, and a link back to the
form they just submitted will be provided.
Syntax:
If you want to require that the user fill in the email and phone
fields in your form, so that you can reach them once you have received
the mail, use a syntax like:
<input type=hidden name="required"
value="email,phone">
Field: env_report
Description: Allows you to have Environment variables included in
the e-mail message you receive after a user has filled out your
form. Useful if you wish to know what browser they were using, what
domain they were coming from or any other attributes associated
with environment variables. The following is a short list of valid
environment variables that might be useful:
REMOTE_HOST - Sends the hostname making a request.
REMOTE_ADDR - Sends the IP address of the remote host making the
request.
HTTP_USER_AGENT - The browser the client is using to send the request.
General format: software/version library/version
Syntax:
If you wanted to find the remote host and browser
sending the request, you would put the following into your form:
<input type=hidden name="env_report"
value="REMOTE_HOST,HTTP_USER_AGENT">
Field: title
Description: This form field allows you to specify the title and
header that will appear on the resulting page if you do not specify
a redirect URL.
Syntax:
If you wanted a title of 'Feedback Form Results':
<input type=hidden name="title"
value="Feedback Form Results">
Field: return_link_url
Description: This field allows you to specify a URL that will appear
as return_link_title, on the following report page. This field will
not be used if you have the redirect field set, but it is useful
if you allow the user to receive the report on the following page,
but want to offer them a way to get back to your main page.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="return_link_url"
value="http://your.host.xxx/main.html">
Field: return_link_title
Description: This is the title that will be used to link the user
back to the page you specify with return_link_url. The two fields
will be shown on the resulting form page as: <ul> <li><a
href="return_link_url">return_link_title</a>
</ul>
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="return_link_title"
value="Back to Main Page">
Field: background
Description: This form field allow you to specify a background image
that will appear if you do not have the redirect field set. This
image will appear as the background to the form results page.
Syntax:
<input type=hidden name="background"
value="http://your.host.xxx/image.gif">
Field: bgcolor
Description: This form field allow you to specify a bgcolor for
the form results page in much the way you specify a background image.
This field should not be set if the redirect field is.
Syntax:
For a background color of White:
<input type=hidden name="bgcolor"
value="#FFFFFF">
Field: text_color
Description: This field works in the same way as bgcolor, except
that it will change the color of your text.
Syntax:
For a text color of Black:
<input type=hidden name="text_color"
value="#000000">
Field: link_color
Description: Changes the color of links on the resulting page. Works
in the same way as text_color. Should not be defined if redirect
is.
Syntax:
For a link color of Red:
<input type=hidden name="link_color"
value="#FF0000">
Field: vlink_color
Description: Changes the color of visited links on the resulting
page. Works exactly the same as link_color. Should not be set if
redirect is.
Syntax:
For a visited link color of Blue:
<input type=hidden name="vlink_color"
value="#0000FF">
Field: alink_color
Description: Changes the color of active links on the resulting
page. Works exactly the same as link_color. Should not be set if
redirect is.
Syntax:
For a visited link color of Blue:
<input type=hidden name="alink_color"
value="#0000FF">
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Any other form fields that appear in your script
will be mailed back to you and displayed on the resulting page if
you do not have the redirect field set.
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