Re: [Exim] Understanding directors + deleting duplicate mess…

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Autor: Dave C.
Data:  
A: Ross Boylan
CC: exim-users
Assumpte: Re: [Exim] Understanding directors + deleting duplicate messages

Are they duplicate because senders are sending the message twice, or
because the mail system is somehow delivering a single message more
than once to the same destination?

If the former, the solution is to throw a clue brick at the sender.

If the latter, that is not a normal condition. Normally, a message is
delivered exactly once to any specified destination, unless there is
some misconfiguration that causes it to do so more than once. Rather
than finding something to detect and stop the duplicates, it would be
better to find out what is causing them and correct that instead. Fix
the cause rather than the symptom.

If you are receiving mail from an ISP, it is posible that the
misconfiguration is in *their* system rather than yours. Wether to fix
the symptom or the cause in this case is a factor of how clueful the
ISP is, and wether they are willing to fix the problem if it is at
their end..


On Fri, 16 Jun 2000, Ross Boylan wrote:

> Duplicate messages are a chronic nuisance for me. Their causes are varied,
> but I would like to get rid of them. I gather this is considered a job for
> procmail. I have various reasons for not wanting to use procmail (see
> below), but it seems it should be easy to do in exim.
>
> I'm a home user, getting and sending mail via dial-up. Mostly I use the
> system, but my wife does sometimes also. My daughter probably will too
> when she's older.
>
> As an added wrinkle, I want mail to my wife to be duplicated to me, so I
> can tell her when she's got mail. I'm doing this now with a smartuser
> director.
>
> The duplicate elimination needs to be done on a per user basis, rather than
> per-message, so that multiple people can get the same message.
>
> I'd appreciate any suggestions or comments on the following strategy:
>
> After the smartuser director just mentioned has split the message,
> Put a duplicate_kill director.
> This has a condition, which is an embedded perl script.
> The perl script manages a database of seen message keys (keys of the 
> message id in the header seem to eliminate a lot of the duplicates for me).
> If this message has seen before, it returns true.
> Otherwise, it writes the key into the database, and returns false.  (this 
> is the part I can't do without perl, as far as I can tell.  Exim's lookup 
> facilities let me check if the key exists, but do not let me write one out).
> Back in the duplicate_kill director....
>    if the condition is true (the message is a duplicate) it uses an 
> appendfile transport to stuff the message in a duplicates file (just in case).
> Otherwise, processing proceeds as normal.

>
> Then I could write scripts to clean out the junk. (I might write to the
> database using the indicated key and the date as a value, to make it easy
> to age things).
>
> I'm running Debian potato. exim is Debian's recommended MTA; unfortunately
> the packaged binaries (reportedly) do not have embedded perl enabled.
>
> Footnote: Why I don't want to use procmail:
> 1. It's another program to learn, administer, and run.
> 2. It appears to lack any real documentation (all I see are FAQ's, tips,
> guides, but nothing laying out the command line options and the file format).
> 3. I have already invested time learning exim and getting its filters just
> so. If I use the filters (local ones), I'm not using procmail, and
> vice-versa (I think).
> 4. If I use procmail, or any other pipe, and try to send the results back
> to exim I have to worry about setting up a special port, making sure I'm
> conforming to Debian's and exim's requirements, and worry about special
> tricks to prevent loops.
> 5. It just seems ridiculous to have something described as a MTA which
> neither gets nor sends most of the mail (since fetchmail and procmail do
> the work).
>
> Speaking of documentation: It wasn't clear to me what addressing
> information different macros would pull out. Mail for me typically goes
> like this.
> Sender -> intermediates -> RossBoylan@??? which forwards it
> -> my actual account at my ISP -> fetchmail -> my local system (which
> includes some address rewriting rules).
>
> I tried it and think I figured out what was going on (namely that
> intermediates didn't count). For example, I thought maybe mindspring (my
> ISP) would show up as the sender of everything, since it was the
> immediately preceding system in the delivery chain. But it would have been
> nice to have more of an explanation.
>
> Also, the manual is very nice as a reference, but is not so helpful for
> getting started. It provides little guidance for what is essential or
> important vs peripheral. Now maybe you shouldn't use exim unless you know
> what you're doing, but I think I'm not the only one using it as I do
> (namely a home system for which I want to use mail, not become a mail
> guru). It would be nice to have something like a user's guide.
>
>
> --
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>


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