On Wed, 23 Feb 2005, Marilyn Davis wrote:
> > I don't immediately see how it works in the routers. Does it work the
> > same as "verify = sender"? If I have a router with
> > "verify_sender_only" set, will "verify = header_sender" go there?
>
> Ooops. Rather, if my router has: verify_sender = no, will
> header_sender verification try that router?
I had, in fact, (on a double-take) understood that that was what you
were asking... the answer is "no".
> Now I have a router just for verifying the envelope sender, and one
> just for verifying recipients. I'd like to verify the header_sender
> in an ACL but I want that to be another special router. Can I arrange
> that?
I'm afraid not.
> When verify = header_sender is happening, if a Reply-To: address can't
> be verified, will it then try to verify the From: address?
>
> I don't seem to find any info in the regular places.
verify = header_sender/<options>
This condition is relevant only in an ACL that is run after a message
has been received, that is, in an ACL specified by "acl_smtp_data" or |
"acl_not_smtp". It checks that there is a verifiable address in at least |
one of the Sender:, Reply-To:, or From: header lines. Such an address is |
loosely thought of as a 'sender' address (hence the name of the test). |
(That's from the 4.50 manual.) So the answer is "yes".
--
Philip Hazel University of Cambridge Computing Service,
ph10@??? Cambridge, England. Phone: +44 1223 334714.
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