> From: Gary Mills > were identical in each case. When I finally checked the DCC log > files, I found that the body checksums were different in each case. > The message contained an application/ms-tnef attachment encoded in > base64. Apparently, it was encoded slightly differently each time! > It was sent from Microsoft Exchange. I'm amazed that this could even > happen.
< eJ8+IikIAQaQCAAEAAAAAAABAAEAAQeQBgAIAAAA5AQAAAAAAADoAAEIgAcAGAAAAElQTS5NaWNy > eJ8+IikJAQaQCAAEAAAAAAABAAEAAQeQBgAIAAAA5AQAAAAAAADoAAEIgAcAGAAAAElQTS5NaWNy < AQAhACcAAgBIAQEJgAEAIQAAADMyMjY5RkQzNUQ1NDE1NDM5NUIzRkI1MTA4OUE5NkM5ABAHAQOQ > AQAwACgAAgBYAQEJgAEAIQAAADMyMjY5RkQzNUQ1NDE1NDM5NUIzRkI1MTA4OUE5NkM5ABAHAQOQ < APYQAAAAAEAABzComu8A6UPHAUAACDC6u7xXSUTHAQMA3j+fTgAAAwDxPwkEAAAeAPg/AQAAAAwA > APYQAAAAAEAABzComu8A6UPHAUAACDB5V5xwS0THAQMA3j+fTgAAAwDxPwkEAAAeAPg/AQAAAAwA < AAAAVB8= > AAAAqh4= I don't understand what is meanb by "encoded slightly differently". When I decode those lines, the pairs of results differ. Unless you have a Microsoft or other product that understands those differing messages as somehow being the same, the messages clearly differ. Perhaps the Microsoft product that sends them encodes a different date or some kind of digital rights management key in each retransmission. That would make no sense given the store-and-forward reality of SMTP, but such craziness would not be a first for Microsoft's embracing and extending of standards, whether calculated or unthinking. To tell the greylist server to ignore such differences, try adding -Gweak-body to GREY_DCCD_ARGS in /var/dcc/dcc_conf Vernon Schryver [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ DCC mailing list [email protected] http://www.rhyolite.com/mailman/listinfo/dcc
