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Home/ Questions/Q 334691
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T10:04:43+00:00 2026-05-12T10:04:43+00:00

I use procmail to do extensive sorting on my inbox. My next to last

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I use procmail to do extensive sorting on my inbox. My next to last recipe matches the incoming From: to a (very) long white/gold list of historically good email addresses, and patterns of email addresses. The recipe is:

# Anything on the goldlist goes straight to inbox
:0
* ? formail -zxFrom: -zxReply-To | fgrep -i -f $HOME/Mail/goldlist
{
  LOG="RULE Gold: "
  :0:
  $DEFAULT
}

The final recipe puts everything left in a suspect folder to be examined as probable spam. Goldlist is currenltty 7384 lines long (yikes…). Every once in a while, I get a piece of spam that has slipped through and I want to fix the failing pattern. I thought I read a while ago about a special flag in grep that helped show the matching patterns, but I can’t find that again. Is there a way to use grep that shows the pattern from a file that matched the scanned text? Or another similar tool that would answer the question short of writing a script to scan pattern by pattern?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T10:04:44+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 10:04 am

    grep -o will output only the matched text (as opposed to the whole line). That may help. Otherwise, I think you’ll need to write a wrapper script to try one pattern at a time.

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