Re: [exim] Exim4 wildcard after local_part addresses

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Autor: Bill Hacker
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Dla: exim
Temat: Re: [exim] Exim4 wildcard after local_part addresses
Chris Knadle wrote:

> On Thursday 19 January 2006 17:41, Giuliano Gavazzi wrote:
>
>>> Then I considered doing email routing with ldap, but that has a
>>>similar problem because the time in which wildcards can be used
>>>is in the address used for the lookup and not a wildcard in an
>>>address that's stored in the directory. [At least that's my current
>>>understanding after doing some experiments.]
>>
>>sorry, but I did not understand your current understanding.
>
>
>    I'll try to clarify.
>    If I were using the outdated inetLocalMailRecipient schema, I would have 
> ldap entries for people such as this (making it interesting):

>
>     dn: uid=lister,ou=People,dc=reddwarf
>     cn: Lister R D
>     uid: listerrd
>     mailHost: holly.reddwarf.net
>     mailRoutingAddress: lister@???
>     mailLocalAddress: smeghead@???
>     mailLocalAddress: listerrd52169@???
>     mailLocalAddress: listerrd*@???
>     objectClass: inetLocalMailRecipient
>     ...

>
>    I would be looking up the values under the mailLocalAddress attribute, and 
> rerouting email addresses found under the mailRoutingAddress attribute.  For 
> exact matches this works gangbusters.  But -- now let's say an email comes in 
> for <listerrd.trouble@???>.  A lookup is done for this, but a lookup 
> does not match <listerrd*@???>, and even if a wildcard is specified 
> at time of the lookup, that would only end up looking up 
> <listerrd.trouble*@???> which still won't find a match.

>
>    So -- does that explain what I wrote earlier?

>
>     - Chris

>


Not pushing SQL as the answer, there has to be a 'lighter' alternative,
but seems to me that what you want in PostgreSQL-speak is:

where <the DB field name> like 'local_part_prefix%' or <the DB field
name> = 'local_part'


- 'coz what is important will be seen either as the local_part or the
local_part_prefix. The suffix is either missing or 'don't care'.

Now the above sample is bass-ackwards even for PG, and neither properly
escaped nor correct lsearch/exim sytax, but the concept, I think, is to
find *either* an exact match *or* a partial match with anything
following it.

However 'correct' syntax shapes up, two phrases may be better than one
here, as the other challenge, ISTR, is that exim needs the '.' to
delineate prefix/suffix, and it may be missing....

There may be a simpler way in a regexp comparison to look only at the
first 'n' chracters, but I suspect you have highly variable length there...

HTH as a pointer to a way forward anyway...

Bill