Re: [exim] mail relay - null or empty Envelope Sender proble…

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Autor: MarkdV
Data:  
Para: Ian Eiloart
CC: exim-users
Asunto: Re: [exim] mail relay - null or empty Envelope Sender problem...

Ian Eiloart wrote:
>
> --On 21 August 2009 18:56:13 +0200 MarkdV <markdv.exim@???> wrote:
>
>> Ian Eiloart wrote:
>>> --On 20 August 2009 16:32:40 +0100 Jethro R Binks
>>> <jethro.binks@???> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Thu, 20 Aug 2009, Todd Lyons wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Why is it an accept? That whole endpass thing just never really made
>>>>> a whole lot of sense to me. Every time I have a case where I need to
>>>>> use it, I have to study the docs and figure it out step by step. It's
>>>>> not a natural thought process, and for some reason the knowledge
>>>>> doesn't stick around after I've implemented it. I'll just assume that
>>>>> I'm getting old and just can't remember crap anymore...
>>>> If it's any consolution, I made similar grumbles to PH a few years ago
>>>> about endpass, I always struggled to get my head around it, and like
>>>> you, had to keep re-reading the docs. He didn't disagree that it was
>>>> non-intuitive and awkward. :)
>>> so, according to the docs, endpass can only be used in an accept
>>> statement.
>>>
>>> accept condition a
>>>        condition b
>>>        endpass
>>>             condition c
>>>             condition d

>>>
>>> will either accept, deny or pass. It'll accept if all conditions are
>>> true. It'll pass if a or b are false. It'll deny if a and b are true,
>>> but c or d are false.
>>>
>>>
>>>                a and b    !(a and b)
>>> c or d true:     accept     pass
>>> c or d false:    deny       pass
>> No, that first one should be c _and_ d true. You said it yourself, "if
>> _all_ conditions are true".

>
> quite right, it should be. Or. "! (c or d false)"
>
>>> I think it's equivalent to nesting, like this:
>>> accept condition a
>>>        condition b
>>>     deny
>>>         ! condition c
>>>         ! condition d
>> So, no... More like:

>>
>> accept condition a
>>         condition b
>>      require
>>         condition c
>>         condition d

>
> No, because "require c, d" passes when c or d are false. "deny !c, !d"
> denies when c or d are false.


IMHO what endpass does now resembles "require", because like require it
requires all conditions to be true otherwise it will reject. That's why
I thought require instead of deny.

deny
! cond c
! cond d

Will only deny if both c and d are false. Where endpass as we know it
will cause a deny if either of the conditions are false. See what I mean?

"!c and !d" is not the same as "!(c and d)". The former is what your
deny does, the latter can't be done with deny but is what require does.

> It should do what accept...endpass does.


Hmm.. wait. Maybe I misunderstood you, are you talking about a different
kind of modifier(s) for accept only? Or allow those modifiers to also be
applied to other statements (deny/require/warn)? I thought you meant the
latter...

>The problem is not the behaviour
> of endpass, but the poor self-documentation that results from the lack of
> clarity in meaning.


Agreed there. ;)

Cheers,
Mark.