Marc Perkel wrote:
> Richard Clayton wrote:
> The sender is autoresponse@???
> But the sending server in the received lines is accounting.paypal.com
>
> So - I want to grab just the "paypal.com" part can see if I can find
> that in the received lines. It's part of my anti-phishing code. The idea
> being that email from paypal.com will come from paypay servers somewhere
> in received.
What's so hard about this???
mx custserv.paypal.com.
> custserv.paypal.com does not exist, try again
mx accounting.paypal.com.
> accounting.paypal.com does not exist, try again
mx paypal.com.
> paypal.com MX 10 smtp1.sc5.paypal.com
> paypal.com MX 10 smtp2.nix.paypal.com
> paypal.com MX 10 smtp1.nix.paypal.com
mx com.
> com MX record currently not present
Just strip the subdomain off until you get an MX. How difficult could that
be??? You can do this with embedded perl and it would be quite easy to do.
Or you could compare all MX's
If you're wondering about say demon.co.uk:
mx demon.co.uk.
> demon.co.uk MX 5 lon1-hub-internal.mail.demon.net
> demon.co.uk MX 5 anchor-hub-internal.mail.demon.net
mx co.uk.
> co.uk MX record currently not present
mx uk.
> uk MX record currently not present
I use a trailing . to force it not to look the domain up by using my local
domain in /etc/resolv.conf
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