Re: [exim] How to set exim to manage the number of CC or BCC…

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著者: Sergio
日付:  
To: exim-users
題目: Re: [exim] How to set exim to manage the number of CC or BCC addresses?
Dave,
thanks a lot for your answer, it is appreciated.

4. Instead of blocking, you could just slow things down for mails with large
recipient lists, e.g. by adding a "delay" into your RCPT ACL. Then the mail
would still be allowed, and would still go through, but maybe the delay
would
help discourage your users from using large recipient lists, if that's what
you want.

This will be really nice to implement, wish I could have a delay time of 10
seconds between emails for customers with more that 50 recipients, do you
think it is possible to set this in exim?

Once again, thank you.

Regards,

Sergio Cabrera



On Jan 22, 2008 10:58 AM, Dave Evans <exim-users-20071221@???>
wrote:

> On Tue, Jan 22, 2008 at 10:39:12AM -0600, Sergio wrote:
> > Hi,
> > first of all I want to say hello to everybody in this list, very new
> around
> > here. If I do something wrong, I ask you to please teach me and not to
> ban
> > me.
>
> Will do :-)
>
> > Here is my question, I have some customers that are using my servers to
> send
> > emails to a bunch of people, not spam but customers and / or friends,
> but
> > some times the list of CC or BCC are hughe, yesterday I saw in my QUEUE
> > someone sending an email to 194 email accounts.
> >
> > So, would you be very kind to tell me how to modify EXIM in order to
> only
> > left a customer to send 10 or 20 emails maximum?
>
> A few thoughts at random:
>
> 1. Personally I wouldn't call 194 "huge" - not on mail server terms.
>
> 2. /Why/ do you want to limit this? I could understand if it was to
> control a
> malware flood being BCCd to 1000s of people at a time, but a "normal" mail
> to
> a couple of hundred people - what's the problem?
>
> 3. Although it's not quite the same thing as the CC/BCC list, the SMTP
> RCPT list
> is /usually/ the same, for normal mail; and SMTP mandates that the
> recipients-per-message limit must not be lower than 100. So you really
> don't
> want to set the limit at less than 100.
>
> 4. Instead of blocking, you could just slow things down for mails with
> large
> recipient lists, e.g. by adding a "delay" into your RCPT ACL. Then the
> mail
> would still be allowed, and would still go through, but maybe the delay
> would
> help discourage your users from using large recipient lists, if that's
> what
> you want.
>
> --
> Dave Evans
> http://djce.org.uk/
> http://djce.org.uk/pgpkey
>
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