Excellent, thank you.
Since I'd like this exim4 instance as my "normal" incoming mailserver as
well, is there a condition to grab auth-tls incoming mail as well?
Reminded requirements/desires:
- if incoming mail is authenticated, then pipe to this script
- if someone locally is trying to send mail, then just send it out to the world
as normal
- if incoming mail is not authenticated and not local, then process as
normal (aliases, graylisting, procmail, etc)
Reading around the docs, I can see exim was written to be able to do
anything.
JLC
On Wed, Aug 22, 2007 at 08:21:03PM +0200, Daniel Tiefnig wrote:
> Jean-Luc Cooke wrote:
> > How do I create the rule:
> > - if incoming mail is authenticated, then pipe to this script.
> > - if someone locally is trying to send mail using "/usr/sbin/sendmail
> > -t", then just send it out to the world as normal.
>
> There's an expansion variable called $sender_host_address that is emtpy
> for locally submitted messages. So, implementing something like the
> following two routers should do the trick:
>
> remote_smtp:
> driver = dnslookup
> domains = ! +local_domains
> condition = ${if eq{$sender_host_address}{}}
> transport = remote_smtp
>
> pipe_to_script:
> driver = accept
> domains = ! +local_domains
> transport = your_pipe_transport
> no_more
>
>
> lg,
> daniel
>
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