This is an old revision of the document!
POPFile v1.1.0 comes with the first official Mac OS X installer! You can now install POPFile on your Mac easily.
System Requirements
You'll need several things to get started with POPFile on Mac OS X.
Mac
OS X 10.3.9 or later.
An e-mail account that uses the POP3 protocol (most accounts do, although you can't use POPFile with web-based services like Hotmail and Yahoo! Mail without extra software. See
Configuring Proxies & Firewalls).
Approximately 14MB free disk space is required for the default installation created by the Mac
OS X installer.
If you need the optional SSL Support, you can install it using POPFile-addssl.pkg installer. The module will allow POPFile to use SSL when connecting to a mail server, an additional 800KB of disk space is required for the extra Perl components and SSL libraries.
The word lists (called the corpus) used to classify your email will take some additional space depending on how much mail you use to train POPFile and how many buckets you create. POPFile keeps a temporary copy of recent mail (the Message History) for a few days to make it easy to correct any classification errors so some extra space is required for these recent messages. For some users only a few extra
MB will be sufficient for the corpus and Message History, for others an additional 100
MB may be required.
Installation
-
Run POPFile-x.x.x.pkg and follow the installation instructions.
POPFile will be installed in /Library/POPFile/
and it will be automatically launched in background.
Important note: Nothing will appear on your screen! To check if it's running correctly, read the “Accessing POPFile” section below.
Configura buckets. See
Bucket Setup.
Important note: The Mac
OS X installer does not create any bucket on your installation unlike the Windows installer. You need to make at least two buckets before using it.
-
Accessing POPFile
If you get an error message, check that POPFile is really running, and that you have the port number correct (it should be 8080, but if you changed it, you'll also need to change that in the web address you're going to.)
Utility scripts included in the installer package
The installer package includes several utility scripts written in AppleScript. You can copy them to your hard drive.
Installing POPfile MANUALLY on Mac OS X 10.4.x (Tiger)
This procedure shows you how to install POPfile on Mac OS X 10.4.x systems, and how to create a startup item that will start POPfile each time you reboot the system.
As of Mac OS X 10.4, Mac OS X comes with Perl and SQLite3 installed. So you'll simply need to install Xcode, a few Perl library packages, and a startup item.
At the time of this writing (January 2007), POPfile does not fully support SQLite3. On Mac OS X 10.4.x systems, POPfile requires the SQLite2 Perl package, DBD::SQLite2. So to run POPfile in Mac OS X 10.4.x, you'll need to install:
Apple's Xcode developer tools — to compile and install some Perl library packages
Perl library packages — that POPfile uses to classify email
POPfile startup item — to automatically start POPfile whenever you restart your computer
SQLite version 2 command-line tool (Optional) — an external tool you may use to de-fragment or verify the integrity of your POPfile database
Note: Because setting up CPAN, a Perl package manager, or Fink, another package manager, on a virgin system can complicate matters, we'll stick with the source and do it the old-school way to avoid complications.
Note: To edit scripts or configuration files, use a plain text editor (like the command-line editor,vi, or the GUI editor TextWrangler). Make sure the text file content is plain text.
TIP: On the command line, ~ means “your home directory”. So ~/Desktop/packages
means /Users/yourusername/Desktop/packages
.
Note: An alternative set of instructions is available here by Michael Artz.
Step By Step Instructions
NOTE: You should be logged into an administrator account for this procedure.
Installing the system requirements
Install Xcode from the CD/DVD that came with your Mac. You may also download it from here:
Apple Xcode Web Page
-
Download these Perl library packages (from the
CPAN Web Site) and place them all into a folder on your desktop named “packages”:
Install each of the Perl library packages you downloaded in the previous step:
Open a terminal window if one is not already open.
Enter the command to change the working directory to the “packages” folder on your desktop:
cd ~/Desktop/packages
Enter the command to expand the package (where
name is the name of the package):
tar xzvf name.tar.gz
Enter the command to change the working directory to the expanded package folder (where
name is the name of the expanded package folder):
cd name
Enter the command to build the GCC make file from the Perl make file:
perl MakeFile.PL
Enter the command to compile the project:
make
Note: If you compile any of these packages and it outputs an error starting out with something like: Can't locate DBD/SQLite2.pm in @INC, that means that package depends on other Perl library packages. The dependency package name is right after the word “locate” (in this example, it is DBD::SQLite2).
Enter the command to install the library package into your system:
sudo make install
Installing POPFile
Enter the command to create a folder to hold POPfile (we suggest ~/Library/POPfile):
mkdir ~/Library/POPfile
Note: While this folder can reside anywhere, we suggest you create it somewhere in your home directory so that if you back up your home directory, POPfile gets backed up as well. We assume you have used the location ~/Library/POPfile for the rest of this procedure.
Copy or move the POPfile ZIP archive into ~/Library/POPfile folder you just created.
Expand the POPfile ZIP archive archive in the ~/Library/POPfile folder. You should now have a bunch of files in ~/Library/POPfile - one of which is popfile.pl.
Note: If the POPfile ZIP archive expands into a sub-folder in ~/Library/POPfile, move all items into ~/Library/POPfile and get rid of the sub-folder.
Test your POPfile installation
Open a terminal window if one is not already open.
Enter the command to change the working directory to the ~/Library/POPfile folder:
cd ~/Library/POPfile
Enter the command to start POPfile manually:
perl popfile.pl
Watch the output in the terminal. If POPfile is installed properly, you should not see any errors.
Note: If you start POPfile and it outputs an error starting out with something like: Can't locate DBD/SQLite2.pm in @INC, that means you still need to install one or more Perl library packages. The package name is right after the word “locate” (in this example, the Perl library package you need to install is DBD::SQLite2).
Type Control-C into the terminal window to stop POPfile and exit to the command prompt.
At this point POPfile is installed properly, but will not start up automatically every time you reboot.
Creating a POPfile Startup Item for Mac OS X
NOTE: You should be logged into an administrator account for this procedure.
Create the Mac
OS X POPfile startup item:
Enter this command to create the folder /Library/
StartupItems/POPfile:
sudo mkdir -p /Library/StartupItems/POPfile
Create a plain text file named “
StartupParameters.plist” in the /Library/
StartupItems/POPfile folder with this content:
{
Description = "POPfile mail classification proxy";
Provides = ("popfile");
Requires = ("Network");
Uses = ("Disks", "Network Time", "IPServices");
OrderPreference = "Last";
Messages =
{
start = "Starting POPfile";
stop = "Stopping POPfile";
};
}
Create a plain text file named “POPfile” in the /Library/
StartupItems/POPfile/ folder with this content:
#!/bin/sh
#
# POPfile - startup script
#
# For this to work POPfile should be in /Library/POPfile
#
. /etc/rc.common
PFPATH='/Users//yourusername/Library/POPfile'
if [ "$1" == "start" ]
then
pid=$( ps -auxww | grep popfile.pl | grep -v grep | awk '{ print $2 }' )
if ! [ $pid ]; then
ConsoleMessage "Starting POPfile mail classification proxy"
cd "$PFPATH"
perl popfile.pl > /dev/null 2>&1 &
fi
elif [ "$1" == "stop" ]
then
pid=$( ps -auxww | grep popfile.pl | grep -v grep | awk '{ print $2 }' )
if [ $pid ]; then
ConsoleMessage "Stopping POPfile mail classification proxy"
kill -6 $pid
fi
elif [ "$1" == "restart" ]
then
pid=$( ps -auxww | grep popfile.pl | grep -v grep | awk '{ print $2 }' )
ConsoleMessage "Restarting POPfile mail classification proxy"
kill -6 $pid
cd "$PFPATH"
perl popfile.pl > /dev/null 2>&1 &
fi
Create a plain text file named “Localizable.strings” in the /Library/StartupItems/POPfile/Resources/English.lproj/ folder with this content:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist SYSTEM " file://localhost/System/Library/DTDs/PropertyList.dtd" ; ;>
<plist version="0.9">
<dict>
<key>Starting POPfile</key>
<string>Starting POPfile </string>
<key>Stopping POPfile </key>
<string>Stopping POPfile </string>
</dict>
</plist>
You should now have this hierarchy of folders and files:
/Library/
StartupItems/
POPfile/
POPfile
StartupParameters.plist
Resources/
English.lproj/
Localizable.strings
In a terminal window, enter these commands:
cd /Library/StartupItems
sudo chown -R root.admin popfile
cd popfile
sudo chmod 754 popfile
sudo chmod 644 StartupParameters.plist
Finally, to start up POPFile without rebooting enter this terminal command:
sudo /Library/StartupItems/POPfile/POPfile start
TODO: Add details about the relationship between POPfile, DBD::SQlite2, and the SQLite3 command-line tool included with Mac OS X 10.4.x.
TODO: Add instructions to edit the popfile.cfg file and change the bayes_dbconnect property to dbi:SQLite2:dbname=$dbname to speed up POPfile launch times.
RevisedStartupItem