mailfoot(1)

NAME

   mailfoot - a full-online-ordered-training simulator for use with dbacl.

SYNOPSIS

   mailfoot command [ command_arguments ]

DESCRIPTION

   mailfoot   automates   the   task   of   testing  email  filtering  and
   classification programs such as dbacl(1).  Given a set  of  categorized
   documents,  mailfoot initiates test runs to estimate the classification
   errors and  thereby  permit  fine  tuning  of  the  parameters  of  the
   classifier.

   Full Online Ordered Training is a learning method for email classifiers
   where each incoming email is learned as soon  as  it  arrives,  thereby
   always   keeping   category  descriptions  up  to  date  for  the  next
   classification.   This  directly  models  the  way  that   some   email
   classifiers are used in practice.

   FOOT's  error  rates  depend  directly on the order in which emails are
   seen.  A small change in ordering, as might happen  due  to  networking
   delays,  can  have  an  impact  on  the  number  of misclassifications.
   Consequently, mailfoot does not give  meaningful  results,  unless  the
   sample  emails  are  chosen  carefully.   However,  as  this  method is
   commonly used by spam filters, it is still worth  computing  to  foster
   comparisons.  Other  methods   (see mailcross(1),mailtoe(1)) attempt to
   capture the behaviour of classification errors in other ways.

   To improve and stabilize the error rate calculation, mailfoot  performs
   the FOOT simulations several times on slightly reordered email streams,
   and averages the results. The reorderings  occur  by  multiplexing  the
   emails  from  each  category mailbox in random order. Thus if there are
   three categories, the first email classified is  chosen  randomly  from
   the  front  of the sample email streams of each type.  The second email
   is also chosen randomly among the three types, from the front of the
    streams after the first email was removed. Simulation stops  when  all
   sample streams are exhausted.

   mailfoot  uses the environment variable MAILFOOT_FILTER when executing,
   which permits the  simulation  of  arbitrary  filters,  provided  these
   satisfy  the compatibility conditions stated in the ENVIRONMENT section
   below.

   For  convenience,  mailfoot  implements  a  testsuite  framework   with
   predefined  wrappers  for several open source classifiers. This permits
   the direct comparison of dbacl(1) with  competing  classifiers  on  the
   same set of email samples. See the USAGE section below.

   During  preparation, mailfoot builds a subdirectory named mailfoot.d in
   the current working directory.  All needed calculations  are  performed
   inside this subdirectory.

EXIT STATUS

   mailfoot returns 0 on success, 1 if a problem occurred.

COMMANDS

   prepare size
          Prepares  a subdirectory named mailfoot.d in the current working
          directory,  and  populates  it  with  empty  subdirectories  for
          exactly size subsets.

   add category [ FILE ]...
          Takes  a  set of emails from either FILE if specified, or STDIN,
          and associates them  with  category.   The  ordering  of  emails
          within  FILE  is preserved, and subsequent FILEs are appended to
          the first in  each  category.   This  command  can  be  repeated
          several times, but should be executed at least once.

   clean  Deletes the directory mailfoot.d and all its contents.

   run    Multiplexes  randomly  from the email streams added earlier, and
          relearns categories only when a  misclassification  occurs.  The
          simulation is repeated size times.

   summarize
          Prints average error rates for the simulations.

   plot [ ps | logscale ]...
          Plots  the  number  of  errors  over  simulation  time. The "ps"
          option, if present, writes the plot to a postscript file in  the
          directory  mailfoot/plots, instead of being shown on-screen. The
          "logscale" option, if present, causes the plot to be on the  log
          scale for both ordinates.

   review truecat predcat
          Scans  the  last  run  statistics  and extracts all the messages
          which belong to category truecat but have been  classified  into
          category  predcat.   The  extracted  messages  are copied to the
          directory mailfoot.d/review for perusal.

   testsuite list
          Shows a list of available filters/wrapper scripts which  can  be
          selected.

   testsuite select [ FILTER ]...
          Prepares  the  filter(s) named FILTER to be used for simulation.
          The filter name is the name of a wrapper script located  in  the
          directory  /usr/share/dbacl/testsuite.   Each filter has a rigid
          interface documented below, and the act of selecting  it  copies
          it  to  the  mailfoot.d/filters  directory. Only filters located
          there are used in the simulations.

   testsuite deselect [ FILTER ]...
          Removes    the    named    filter(s)    from    the    directory
          mailfoot.d/filters so that they are not used in the simulation.

   testsuite run [ plots ]
          Invokes  every selected filter on the datasets added previously,
          and calculates misclassification rates. If the "plots" option is
          present,  each filter simulation is plotted as a postscript file
          in the directory mailfoot.d/plots.

   testsuite status
          Describes the scheduled simulations.

   testsuite summarize
          Shows the cross validation results for all filters.  Only  makes
          sense after the run command.

USAGE

   The  normal  usage pattern is the following: first, you should separate
   your email collection into several categories (manually or  otherwise).
   Each  category  should be associated with one or more folders, but each
   folder should not contain more than  one  category.  Next,  you  should
   decide how many runs to use, say 10.  The more runs you use, the better
   the predicted error rates. However, more runs take more time.  Now  you
   can type

   % mailfoot prepare 10

   Next,  for  every  category,  you must add every folder associated with
   this category. Suppose you have three categories named spam, work,  and
   play,  which  are  associated with the mbox files spam.mbox, work.mbox,
   and play.mbox respectively. You would type

   % mailfoot add spam spam.mbox
   % mailfoot add work work.mbox
   % mailfoot add play play.mbox

   You should aim for a similar number of emails in each category, as  the
   random  multiplexing  will be unbalanced otherwise. The ordering of the
   email messages in each *.mbox  file  is  important,  and  is  preserved
   during each simulation. If you repeatedly add to the same category, the
   later mailboxes will be appended to the first, preserving  the  implied
   ordering.

   You   can  now  perform  as  many  FOOT  simulations  as  desired.  The
   multiplexed emails are  classified  and  learned  one  at  a  time,  by
   executing    the    command   given   in   the   environment   variable
   MAILFOOT_FILTER. If not set, a default value is used.

   % mailfoot run
   % mailfoot summarize

   The testsuite commands are designed to simplify  the  above  steps  and
   allow  comparison  of  a wide range of email classifiers, including but
   not limited  to  dbacl.   Classifiers  are  supported  through  wrapper
   scripts, which are located in the /usr/share/dbacl/testsuite directory.

   The  first stage when using the testsuite is deciding which classifiers
   to compare.  You can view a list of available wrappers by typing:

   % mailfoot testsuite list

   Note that the wrapper scripts are NOT  the  actual  email  classifiers,
   which  must  be  installed  separately  by your system administrator or
   otherwise.  Once this is done, you can select one or more wrappers  for
   the simulation by typing, for example:

   % mailfoot testsuite select dbaclA ifile

   If some of the selected classifiers cannot be found on the system, they
   are not selected. Note also that  some  wrappers  can  have  hard-coded
   category   names,   e.g.   if   the  classifier  only  supports  binary
   classification. Heed the warning messages.

   It remains only to run the simulation. Beware, this  can  take  a  long
   time (several hours depending on the classifier).

   % mailfoot testsuite run
   % mailfoot testsuite summarize

   Once you are all done, you can delete the working files, log files etc.
   by typing

   % mailfoot clean

SCRIPT INTERFACE

   mailfoot testsuite takes care of learning and classifying your prepared
   email  corpora  for  each  selected  classifier. Since classifiers have
   widely varying interfaces, this is  only  possible  by  wrapping  those
   interfaces  individually  into  a  standard  form  which can be used by
   mailfoot testsuite.

   Each wrapper script is a command  line  tool  which  accepts  a  single
   command  followed  by  zero or more optional arguments, in the standard
   form:

   wrapper command [argument]...

   Each wrapper script also makes use  of  STDIN  and  STDOUT  in  a  well
   defined  way.  If  no  behaviour  is described, then no output or input
   should be used.  The possible commands are described below:

   filter In this case, a single email is expected on STDIN, and a list of
          category filenames is expected in $2, $3, etc. The script writes
          the category name corresponding to the input email on STDOUT. No
          trailing newline is required or expected.

   learn  In this case, a standard mbox stream is expected on STDIN, while
          a suitable category file name is expected in $2.  No  output  is
          written to STDOUT.

   clean  In  this  case, a directory is expected in $2, which is examined
          for old database information. If any old  databases  are  found,
          they are purged or reset. No output is written to STDOUT.

   describe
          IN  this  case,  a  single  line  of  text is written to STDOUT,
          describing the filter's functionality. The line should  be  kept
          short to prevent line wrapping on a terminal.

   bootstrap
          In  this case, a directory is expected in $2. The wrapper script
          first checks for the existence of its associated classifier, and
          other  prerequisites.  If  the  check  is  successful,  then the
          wrapper is cloned  into  the  supplied  directory.   A  courtesy
          notification  should  be  given  on STDOUT to express success or
          failure.  It is also permissible  to  give  longer  descriptions
          caveats.

   toe    Used by mailtoe(1).

   foot   In  this  case, a list of categories is expected in $3, $4, etc.
          Every possible category must be listed. Preceding this list, the
          true category is given in $2.

ENVIRONMENT

   Right  after loading, mailfoot reads the hidden file .mailfootrc in the
   $HOME directory, if it exists, so this would be a good place to  define
   custom values for environment variables.

   MAILFOOT_FILTER
          This variable contains a shell command to be executed repeatedly
          during the running stage.  The command should  accept  an  email
          message  on  STDIN  and output a resulting category name. On the
          command line, it should also  accept  first  the  true  category
          name,  then  a list of all possible category file names.  If the
          output category does not  match  the  true  category,  then  the
          relevant   categories   are   assumed   to  have  been  silently
          updated/relearned.  If MAILFOOT_FILTER  is  undefined,  mailfoot
          uses a default value.

   TEMPDIR
          This  directory  is exported for the benefit of wrapper scripts.
          Scripts which need to create temporary files should place them a
          the location given in TEMPDIR.

NOTES

   The  subdirectory  mailfoot.d  can grow quite large. It contains a full
   copy of the training corpora, as well as learning files for size  times
   all the added categories, and various log files.

   FOOT simulations for dbacl(1) are very, very slow (order n squared) and
   will take all night to perform. This is not easy to improve.

WARNING

   Because the ordering of emails within the added mailboxes matters,  the
   estimated  error  rates  are  not well defined or even meaningful in an
   objective sense.  However, if the sample  emails  represent  an  actual
   snapshot  of a user's incoming email, then the error rates are somewhat
   meaningful. The  simulations  can  then  be  interpreted  as  alternate
   realities  where a given classifier would have intercepted the incoming
   mail.

SOURCE

   The source code for the latest version of this program is available  at
   the following locations:

   http://www.lbreyer.com/gpl.html
   http://dbacl.sourceforge.net

AUTHOR

   Laird A. Breyer <[email protected]>

SEE ALSO

   bayesol(1) dbacl(1), mailcross(1), mailinspect(1), mailtoe(1), regex(7)



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