Wakko Warner wrote:
> Usage:
> deny dnslists = some.blacklist.org!=127.0.0.3,127.0.0.4
>
> This is only an example. This means that if the IP is on the blacklist and
> matches the list, it will fail (thus will NOT deny).
>
I'm not sure I see the point. Can you describe how this is better than:
deny dnslists = some.blacklist.org
!dnslists = some.blacklist.org=127.0.0.3,127.0.0.4
As best I can tell, this does the same thing; if the host is in the
blacklist, deny, UNLESS the blacklist result was 127.0.0.3 or 127.0.0.4.