Autor: George Datum: To: exim-users Betreff: Re: [exim] Sender Recipient Verification with callout
Thank You.
Yes, I would use ! senders = lsearch*@;/etc/exim/list_of_OK_senders so I
could capture any address at a particular domain.
George Ascione
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Tony Finch [mailto:fanf2@hermes.cam.ac.uk] On Behalf Of
> Tony Finch
> Sent: Tuesday, June 13, 2006 6:23 AM
> To: gascione
> Cc: exim-users@???
> Subject: Re: [exim] Sender Recipient Verification with callout
>
> On Mon, 12 Jun 2006, gascione wrote:
>
> > # For sender domains, we do callout to verify if a sender
> > # exists.
> > deny
> > log_message = Sender verification with callout failed
> ! senders = lsearch;/etc/exim/list_of_OK_senders
> > ! verify = sender/callout=5s,maxwait=30s
> >
> > # For recipient domains, we do callout to verify if a recipient
> > # exists.
> > deny
> > log_message = Recipient verification with callout failed
> ! recipients = lsearch;/etc/exim/list_of_OK_recipients
> > ! verify = recipient/callout
>
> You might want to use lsearch*@ so that you can have wildcard
> addresses
> like *@brokendomain
>
> Or you might only care about the domain, so you can use the
> sender_domains
> and domains conditions instead of senders and recipients respectively.
>
> Tony.
> --
> <fanf@???> <dot@???> http://dotat.at/ ${sg{\N${sg{\
> N\}{([^N]*)(.)(.)(.*)}{\$1\$3\$2\$1\$3\n\$2\$3\$4\$3\n\$3\$2\$4}}\
> \N}{([^N]*)(.)(.)(.*)}{\$1\$3\$2\$1\$3\n\$2\$3\$4\$3\n\$3\$2\$4}}
>