On Fri, 16 Jan 1998, Philip Hazel wrote:
= On Thu, 15 Jan 1998, Sherwood Botsford wrote:
=
= > How do I test exim's reaction to an address. E.g.
= > test that a dbm search works, test lookups of a thousand addresses
= > using lsearch, vs dbm vs nis. test that if I want to reject
=
= exim -bt <address>
exim -d4 -bt billy@???
Debug level set to 4
domainlist router called for billy@???: route_domain = bingo.edu
domainlist router failed
lookuphost router called for billy@???: dns lookup: route_domain = bingo.edu
lookuphost router failed
literal router called for billy@???: route_domain = bingo.edu
literal router failed
billy@??? is undeliverable:
unknown mail domain
This tells me that it's undeliverable.
exim -d4 -bt 12345@???
Debug level set to 4
domainlist router called for 12345@???: route_domain = trash.com
domainlist router failed
lookuphost router called for 12345@???: dns lookup: route_domain = trash.com
routed by lookuphost router:
deliver to 12345@???
transport: smtp
host jgsullivan.com [209.67.26.134] MX=10
12345@???
remote delivery to 12345@???
router = lookuphost, transport = smtp
host jgsullivan.com [209.67.26.134] MX=10
This one is deliverable.
But remember I had that sender_reject of ^\d+@.*\.com
So how do I test that?
=
= to test delivery strategy;
=
= exim -bv <address>
=
= to test verification. With -d you get more information, with -d2 yet
= more, and with -d9 lots more.
=
= > soandso@??? that it does what I'd expect.
= > I thought that exim -d -f testaddresss myaddress woudl work,
=
= -f sets the sending address for an incoming local message.
Right. But if I do that, it jsut delivers it. It doesn't seem
to apply any of the stuff I've put in my sender_reject_host list.
Sherwood Botsford | email avatar@???
Sorcerers Apprentice | Office CAB 642B
System Administrator | Tel: 403 492 5728
Trouble shooter | Fax: 403 492 6826
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