also sprach dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.01.09.0118 +0100]: > What does it take to setup an RBL domain? My guess is that you just > need a DNS server.
pretty much. to RBL an IP 1.2.3.4, you create two entries in a zone, say rbl.madduck.net (which happens to be one btw...) 4.3.2.1 IN A 127.0.0.2 IN TXT "use a proper relay, will ya?" the existence of an A record tells the MTA to bounce, 127.0.0.2 is just what MAPS used and so everyone copied that, and the TXT will be part of the bounce message. > (I can't filter on IPs anyways since 99.99% of my mail comes out of > pony-express.cs.rit.edu due to my .forward file there, if you use > "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" it will go straight to my machine) yeah, that sucks. i am sure that there are tools out there who'd do that for you from procmail. sure, they can't SMTP-refuse, but whatever... and if that fails, Mail::Audit plus the rbltest tool will make writing one rather easy... > | why can't you block with exim system-wide? > > You can setup various thing in exim's main config, or install a system > filter (which can do stuff a user's filter can't such as 'fail'). I > haven't gotten into the details of a system filter yet. i am working on the same thing for postfix :) > | and dman said that exim can incorporate your own filters on a user > | basis... > > Yes -- I've got both ~/.exim/filter, which is the filter file for > messages to be delivered to me, and ~/.exim/bouncelist which is a list > of regexes for rejecting senders (that exim, not my filter file, > checks). that *is* pretty nice... -- martin; (greetings from the heart of the sun.) \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:" [EMAIL PROTECTED] oxymoron: micro$oft works
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