Eli wrote:
> Michael wrote:
>
>>Thanks,
>>
>>I've just dumped it to a file and it reads two results
>>
>>One after another without a space in a text file which would explain
>>something but doesn't really match up with my error from the Exim log.
>>
>>You mentioned concatenating the result but will this work with
>>multiple rows as they are just not fields from within the same result
>>set
>
>
> The correct answer to your question is already documented in Exim with
> regards to SQL queries. It mentions that you get newlines and such at each
> row of a query, so if you're getting multiple rows, you're getting
> <word1>\n<word2> (maybe another \n at the end but that's not your problem).
> Exim sees the \n in between and barfs - it's not built to understand what
> you want with the \n character.
>
> To fix this, wrap your query reply (final field in your lookup statement,
> normally either blank, or {$value}) like this:
>
> ${sg{$value}{\\n}{, }}
>
> This translates all \n's to a comma and space, or in your case you'll want a
> colon and a space because this is what 2 blacklists look like:
>
> dnslists = sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org : bl.spamcop.net
>
>
>
>
> Bill Hacker wrote:
>
>>.... and no need for the above monkey-motion at all.
>
>
> Talk about monkey-motion! For such a relatively simple answer, you had the
> man running around town with his pants down ;P
>
>
> Eli.
>
>
ROFLMAO!
- 'Mea Culpa' - I am so accustomed to manually formating before I leave
SQL that I hadn't a clue that Exim had it's own tools for doing that....
(line end per record)
Fact is, I am beginning to wonder if there is anything Phil and helpers
*haven't* thought of already...
Great stuff!
- and more tools in the kit both ways.....
BTW - not overly impressed with SpamCop ... falsing a lot?
Thanks!
Bill