Hi Matt:

>> Now according to Michael's tests, the CR-only pattern leads to parsing
issues in Declude Virus where it can't even find the attachment to scan it
<<

The point I'm trying to make is, that the "attachment not discovered"
problem may not at all be a problem with incorrect linefeeds IN the
attachments themselves, but rather simply an error of incorrect linefeeds in
the HEADERS.  By not detecting the "intended" end-of-header (and possibly
MIME headers), Declude considers the body (and attachments) part of the
header until it reaches end-of-message.

In other words, they should be able to concentrate on handling single LF or
CF characters in the SMTP and MIME headers. Inside the attachments, Unix
style LF characters are pefectly fine and valid. The fact that attachments
are scanned is just a "secondary" problem of the underlying header issue.

Best Regards
Andy Schmidt

Phone:  +1 201 934-3414 x20 (Business)
Fax:    +1 201 934-9206 


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Matt
Sent: Monday, October 23, 2006 01:35 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] RE: On RFC Violation - Declude allows
attachments and Virus to pass through untouched and unscanned

Andy,

Declude introduced NONSTANDARDHDR as a vulnerability in 4.2.20.  This was
their answer to handling the "broken spam" issue, but it is not an
appropriate fix since this throws the message into your Virus directory
which is typically outside of one's review process.  There was an assumption
by Declude that this was all spam at the time that they introduced this as a
fix for the broken header thing (after they failed to find a solution for
resolving the header issues).

Here's what Scott Fisher said in response to my claim that this wasn't all
spam:


        "I certainly regularly receive incorrectly formatted email. I'm
pretty small volumne, but looking over my logs (I have an external test for
this condition), it is 111 non-spam messages this month. 
        
        My email volume is pretty low. But I'm not looking forward to hand
correcting 120 of these a month. "
        

I don't have stats on this, I just know that I don't need to be blocking
this.  In fact, the broken spam doesn't even get to Declude but very rarely
since greylisting takes care of it.  I would have just about a 100% FP rate
on this filter.

Now according to Michael's tests, the CR-only pattern leads to parsing
issues in Declude Virus where it can't even find the attachment to scan it.

I think the best approach is to read the E-mail into memory, convert the
main copy in memory to CRLF if a non-CRLF pattern is found anywhere and
store another original copy, set a value to trigger a Declude JunkMail test
if the pattern is present in the headers, and if that is set, when it comes
time to write the message, use the CRLF patterned headers and the original
body that way you aren't rewriting someone's purposefully formated LF-only
or CR-only pattern.

Unfortunately all it takes to trigger this is a Perl or PHP programmer doing
a message form and using \n being not aware of the RFC's, but being
consistent with Linux, and instead of the \r\n pattern that it should be.

I can't block E-mail based simply on this one pattern because it will
capture good E-mail regularly, and do so outside of my spam review system.
Also, there are dozens of RFC violations that are not only common, but also
tolerated by mail servers and E-mail clients, and outside of Declude, this
is one of those things that is mostly tolerated.  The reasoning to treat it
as a vulnerability was not because it was, but because they couldn't figure
out a way to rewrite the headers properly.  I'm confused as to why unless
they just simply didn't want to touch the code involved.  I do hope that
they go back and figure out how to make that work otherwise I will be faced
with blocking legitimate E-mail in a non-reviewable area, or potentially
passing viruses completely unscanned.  That's not a good set of choices.

Matt





Andy Schmidt wrote: 

        Hi Matt,
        
        I'm not sure that the issue is attachments. There is nothing wrong
with
        attachments using Unix/Apple linefeeds.  But the RFCs for SMTP (and
similar
        protocols) all require that each header line must end with CRLF and
each
        header line ends with CRLFCRLF.
        
        Anything else is not a legitimate SMTP mailer - but rather a poor
attempt in
        faking one.
        
        We agree that in the headers CR only or LF only should be "treated"
by
        Declude as if they were CRLF (and detected as header violations,
        nevertheless).  I also have no problem if Declude were to "fix"
those
        linefees to proper CRLF if it so desires.
        
        Best Regards
        Andy Schmidt
        
        Phone:  +1 201 934-3414 x20 (Business)
        Fax:    +1 201 934-9206 
        
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Matt
        Sent: Monday, October 23, 2006 12:27 AM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] RE: On RFC Violation - Declude
allows
        attachments and Virus to pass through untouched and unscanned
        
        
        Unfortunately, treating everything with only CR's or only LF's as a 
        virus/vulnerability is not perfectly accurate.  I definitely see 
        legitimate E-mail coming this way.  I believe the best solution is
to 
        just simply treat either CR, LF, or CRLF as line breaks when parsing
the 
        message in Declude for virus scanning, header modification, etc.
        
        Linux uses LF-only by default for line breaks in text files, and
this is 
        why this is common in both spamware and in homegrown E-mail scripts 
        (which may well be legitimate).  In fact, if someone attaches a text

        file created in Linux to an E-mail message, it should come through
with 
        a LF-only pattern in the text attachment, and that certainly isn't a

        virus.  CR-only is used by at least old Macs (OSX is now essentially
BSD 
        so it's LF-only now), and I haven't seen anyone use this format for 
        constructing E-mail, and I have my doubts about whether it is
supported 
        by E-mail clients if it was used in the MIME headers, but of course 
        attachments could come as CR-only and be fully legitimate, though
not 
        necessarily displayable as anything but a single line in non-old Mac

        E-mail clients.
        
        Detecting and correcting for this definitely seems easy to do.  In 
        VBScript, this is how I approach it with Linux format (LF-only):
        
            ' Correct for non-CRLF linebreaks.
            regEx.Global = True
            regEx.IgnoreCase = False
            regEx.Pattern = "[^\r]\n"
            '
            If regEx.Test(strMessage) Then
                boolTestBadCrLf = True
                strMessage = Replace(strMessage, vbLf, vbCrLf)
                strMessage = Replace(strMessage, vbCr & vbCrLf, vbCrLf)
            End If
        
        There are fancier ways to do the replacement as well, but this
seemed 
        appropriate for VBScript, and it only kicks in when the pattern is 
        found, and that is rare.  This also only affects what is in memory
and 
        not the file.
        
        It has been stated in the past that Declude tried resolving this
much 
        earlier when it was pointed out that the headers were being written
to 
        the end of the body.  I don't see why this would be the case if a
simple 
        check and replace was done immediately after reading in the file's 
        contents, and before all tests and before writing the headers.
        
        I do wish Declude would respond to this because it does concern me
now 
        that there is a parsing error that leads to huge vulnerability in 
        Declude, and while there is currently a method of blocking such
messages 
        in Declude with a vulnerability switch, I know that this is not a 
        universally accurate method, and I fear that it could tag things
such as 
        Linux style text attachments.
        
        Matt
        
        
        
        
        Andy Schmidt wrote:
          

                Hi,
                
                Well, the necessary logic seems absolutely simple:
                
                A) parse token, up to EITHER CR or LF
                
                B) if "CR" found, see if followed by LF, skip over CF/LF and
start new 
                line
                
                C) if only "CR" found, and not followed by LF, skip over CR
and start 
                new line. Set SMTP Header violation flag.
                
                D) if "LF" found, skip over LF and start new line.
                Set SMTP Header violation flag.
                
                The key is to detect an "apparent" end of headers - no
matter if it's 
                a proper CRLFCRLF sequence, or if it's only a CRCR or LFLF
or CRLFLF 
                combination so that spam can be recognized as such, virus
can't be 
                hidden in none-standard line feeds and Declude doesn't
attach headers 
                behind the body of the message.
                
                I'm certain that we are looking at one cause why obvious
spam is 
                currently slipping past Declude in the current releases.
                
                Best Regards
                Andy Schmidt
                
                Phone:  +1 201 934-3414 x20 (Business)
                Fax:    +1 201 934-9206 
                
                
                -----Original Message-----
                From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of 
                Matt
                Sent: Friday, October 20, 2006 05:35 PM
                To: [email protected]
                Subject: Re: SPAM-WARN: Re: [Possible
Spam][Declude.JunkMail] On RFC
                Violation - Declude allows attachments and Virus to pass
through untouched
                and unscanned
                
                I think that the real issue is that if Declude just simply
understood 
                CR patterns, the messages could be properly parsed, and
headers could 
                be properly inserted.
                
                There is a similar and longstanding issue with Declude
failing to 
                decode base64 encoding in very long lines (i.e. +1000 or so
characters 
                long).  This also leads to failing to scan the attachments.
One virus 
                has been spreading for the last year and a half with this
symptom, and 
                the only reason why my Declude virus stops it is because it
always 
                sends as an EXE, but this causes backscatter.  If this was
changed to 
                do something like a ZIP file, which most of us don't block,
it could 
                result in viruses passing straight through Declude.
                
                While Declude does have a new option to treat CR patterns as
a 
                vulnerability, this isn't something that I can use since
there is 
                unfortunately a steady, yet small, stream of legitimate
messages that 
                have this flaw.  The flaw itself doesn't represent a
vulnerability, in 
                fact this wouldn't be a vulnerability at all if Declude
understood how 
                to parse the messages.  I can't see how fixing this flaw, or
the 
                base64 long line flaw would take them any more than a couple
of hours.  
                I have a plug-in that I wrote for Declude that is fully
capable of 
                understanding CR patterns as well as long base64 code
without issue.
                
                Matt
                
                
                
                Michael Thomas - Mathbox wrote:
                
                        David,
                        
                        In my opinion, which others may not share, Declude
should detect all
                        RFC/MIME violations and flag them in some manner.
There exist quite
                    

        a 
          

                few
                        that are common to spam messages, but not flagged by
Declude. 
                However, that
                        is a totally different subject than the point of my
test. The RFC 
                violation
                        was simply a symptom. Some admins might not choose
to delete or
                    

        block
          

                        messages with that construction. There exist
well-known web sites
                that
                        generate response email messages where one or two
lines out 50-100
                are
                        missing one of the Cr/Lf pair characters.
                        
                        The point is that for many (maybe most) people on
this list, Declude
                    

        
          

                is the
                        lock and keys for securing email passing through
their mail servers.
                    

        
          

                Declude
                        trusts that the email message will be well-formed.
Because of that
                        mis-placed trust, Declude did not reliably detect
any attachment, 
                regardless
                        of type, and therefore did not invoke the scanners.
Note that this 
                test was
                        performed on Declude version 3.1.1. Maybe, the new
gateway product
                    

        is 
          

                not
                        quite so trusting. I have no idea. We are an ISP and
would not pay 
                the fees
                        associated with ISP use of the gateway product.
                        
                        In any event, this is a well-known issue and has
been for some time.
                    

        
          

                I
                        reported this issue to Declude and the list some
time ago regarding 
                spam not
                        being scanned because of this issue. At that time, I
was so focused 
                on the
                        spam problem, I did not think about the
attachment/virus side of the
                    

        
          

                issue,
                        which should have been obvious to me.
                        
                        Michael Thomas
                        Mathbox
                        978-683-6718
                        1-877-MATHBOX (Toll Free)
                          
                        
                          
                
                                -----Original Message-----
                                From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
                                Behalf Of David Sullivan
                                Sent: Friday, October 20, 2006 3:51 PM
                                To: [email protected]
                                Subject: SPAM-WARN: Re: [Possible
Spam][Declude.JunkMail] On
                
                                RFC Violation - Declude allows attachments
and Virus to pass
                
                                through untouched and unscanned
                                
                                Hello Michael,
                                
                                Thanks for the great research.
                                
                                Wouldn't this be the purpose of
                                Vulnerability detection in Declude? "Declude
detects
                    

        mal-formed
          

                                messages that can allow viruses to be hidden
from email
                server virus
                                scanners."
                                
                                We treat all vulnerabilities as viruses,
send the notice and
                    

        86 the
          

                                message.
                                
                                -David
                                
                                
                                
                                Thursday, October 19, 2006, 10:52:25 PM, you
wrote:
                                
                                MTM> Hi All,
                                
                                MTM> Well, when responding on
[email protected]
                    

        to
          

                                Will about RFC
                                MTM> violations, I said I would test this
and I did.
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> While writing this message, I happened
to think about 
                                attachments. It would
                                MTM> appear to me, that there is an implied
possibility for 
                                attachments and
                                MTM> therefore viruses to pass through
undetected. All that 
                                should be required is
                                MTM> that the lines that make up the entire
email, including
                
                                the attachment
                                MTM> section, be terminated with line feeds
instead of 
                                carriage return/line feed
                                MTM> pairs. Under such condition, Declude
would see only one
                
                                line and not find
                                MTM> the relevant sections. I will test this
possibility.
                                MTM> --------------------
                                
                                MTM> Tested: Declude v3.1.1 for IMail
                                
                                MTM> As it happens,  my suspicions were
accurate. I wrote a 
                                script that could be
                                MTM> modified to remove either the
carriage-returns or the 
                                line-feeds from a
                                MTM> message file. I then created a message
in Outlook 
                                Express, added an
                                MTM> executable file (uptime.exe) as an
attachment and saved
                
                                it in my Draft
                                MTM> folder. I then dragged that message to
the same
                    

        location
          

                                as the script and
                                MTM> renamed it to match the file name in
the script 
                                (Rfc.eml) I ran the script,
                                MTM> which stripped the carriage-returns and
produced 
                                Rfc2.eml. I renamed
                                MTM> Rfc2.eml to RfcNoCr.eml. In the script,
I then changed 
                                vbCr to vbLf and ran
                                MTM> it again, which stripped the line-feeds
and produced 
                                Rfc2.eml. I renamed
                                MTM> Rfc2.eml to RfcNoLf.eml.
                                
                                MTM> Now, to get IIS SMTP to actually
process the file, you 
                                must edit each file
                                MTM> and remove the single Cr or Lf and
press the Enter Key,
                
                                producing a CrLf
                                MTM> pair after the To field and the From
field. I also
                    

        added
          

                                the string "No Cr"
                                MTM> to the end of the subject of
RfcNoCr.eml and added No
                Lf 
                                to the subject of
                                MTM> RfcNoLf.eml. So for example change:
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> From: "Michael Thomas - Mathbox"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
                <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  [Cr]To:
                                MTM> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
                [Cr]Subject: Test Attachment 
                                Pass-Through on RFC
                                MTM> Violation[Cr]<line continues>
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> Change To
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> From: "Michael Thomas - Mathbox"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
                <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
                                MTM> To: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
                                MTM> Subject: Test Attachment Pass-Through
on RFC Violation 
                                No Cr[Cr]<line
                                continues>>
                                MTM> --------------------
                                
                                MTM> Now it so happens, a long time ago, I
wrote a couple of
                
                                tests to detect
                                MTM> these RFC violations, so first I had to
disable them in
                
                                my GLOBAL.CFG, which
                                MTM> I did by commenting them out. Note that
I also BAN the 
                                .EXE extension and I
                                MTM> left that enabled.
                                
                                MTM> Now copy and paste the two files into
the pickup 
                                directory of your favorite
                                MTM> IIS SMTP pickup directory. Viola, you
just passed an 
                                executable through
                                MTM> Declude and through your mail server.
That executable 
                                could very well have
                                MTM> been a virus.
                                
                                MTM> Note that Declude detected RfcNoLf.eml
as [Outlook 'CR'
                
                                Vulnerability]. Ok
                                MTM> good.
                                
                                MTM> But Declude let RfcNoCr.eml pass
straight through 
                                without calling the virus
                                MTM> scanners, because Declude did NOT see
an attachment. 
                                Also, because Declude
                                MTM> did not see an attachment, Declude did
not ban the .EXE
                
                                extension.
                                
                                MTM> Here are the log entries from
RfcNoLf.eml
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Scanning 
                                Time: 218ms
                                MTM> [kernel=31 user=187]
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Virus 
                                scanner 1 reports exit
                                MTM> code of 0
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Virus 
                                detected. Not continuing
                                MTM> with remaining scanners.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd 0:      
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Starting 
                                EXT check .
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd
                                MTM>
C:\IMAIL\spool\proc\work\D1b2101b7000083ba.vir\*.*
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd 0
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Deleted
                                MTM>
C:\IMAIL\spool\proc\work\D1b2101b7000083ba.vir\0.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd
                    

        report.txt
          

                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Deleted
                                MTM>
                C:\IMAIL\spool\proc\work\D1b2101b7000083ba.vir\report.txt.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd
                han=13e9c0 b=False
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd File(s) 
                                are INFECTED [[Outlook
                                MTM> 'CR' Vulnerability]: 0]
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd High
                code=23.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd AV
                returned 23
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Scanned: 
                                CONTAINS A VIRUS
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd From: 
                                [EMAIL PROTECTED] To:
                                MTM> [EMAIL PROTECTED] [incoming from
XX.XXX.XXX.X]
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Subject: 
                                Test Attachment
                                MTM> Pass-Through on RFC Violation No Lf
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Skipping 
                                non-AV E-mail
                                MTM> BANnotify.eml
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd
                                MTM> C:\IMAIL\Declude\postmaster.eml
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd Starting 
                                E-mail file
                                MTM> C:\IMAIL\Declude\postmaster.eml
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.471
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd 
                                C:\IMAIL\IMail1.exe -h
                                MTM> "mathbox.com" -t
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
                <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   -u 
                                "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   -s
                                MTM> "Mathbox Email Virus Scanning detected
and quarantined
                a 
                                virus" -f
                                MTM>
"C:\IMAIL\spool\proc\work\D1b2101b7000083ba.sm0"
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:23.487
q1b2101b7000083ba.smd TempName
                =
                                MTM> C:\IMAIL\Declude\postmaster.eml
                                MTM> --------------------
                                
                                MTM> Here are the log entries from
RfcNoCr.eml
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.690
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                Scan File 1 to
                                MTM> C:\Progra~1\FSI\F-Prot\FPcmd.exe /TYPE
/SILENT /SERVER 
                                /NOMEM /ARCHIVE
                                MTM> /NOBOOT /DUMB /REPORT=report.txt.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd CFG: 
                                Setting report parse 1 to
                                MTM> Infection.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                Scan File 2 to
                                MTM> C:\imail\declude\runclamscan.exe log=3
                                MTM> C:\clamav-devel\bin\clamscan.exe
                                MTM> --quiet --no-summary --tempdir=c:\tmp\
                                MTM>
--database=C:\clamav-devel\share\clamav\ --max-ratio=0 
                                --mbox -l report.txt.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd CFG: 
                                Setting report parse 2 to
                                MTM> FOUND.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                virus directory to:
                                MTM> C:\IMAIL\spool\virus
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Incoming 
                                E-mail scanning
                                MTM> turned ON
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Outgoing 
                                E-mail scanning
                                MTM> turned ON
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                AVAFTERJM to ON.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                MAXATONCE to 20.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                scanner timeout to 120
                                MTM> seconds
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Setting 
                                AUTOFORGE to OFF.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Scanner 0
                
                                Virus Codes: 3 6 8 9
                                MTM> 10 .  OK Codes: 
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.721
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Scanner 1
                
                                Virus Codes: 1 .  OK
                                MTM> Codes: 
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.908
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Skip 
                                Extensions: GIF TXT MPG
                                MTM> PNG 
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:10.955
q1b2101da000083bb.smd 48 Ban 
                                Extensions: ADE ADP ASD
                                MTM> ASP BAS BAT BIN CAB CHM CMD COM CPL CRT
DLL EXE HLP HTA
                
                                HTO INF INS ISP JS
                                MTM> JSC JSE KSH LNK MDB MDE MSI OCX PCD PIF
REG SCF SCR SCT
                
                                SHB SHS SYS VB VBE
                                MTM> VBS VBX VSMACROS VXD WSC WSF WSH 
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.002
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Virus Pro
                
                                Registered
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.018
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Starting 
                                locality check
                                MTM> (sender=mathbox.com; nr=1 ca=off).
nHas=1.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.018
q1b2101da000083bb.smd 
                                [EMAIL PROTECTED] [0-0] is
                                MTM> local domain1 viaFM
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.018
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Ending 
                                locality check
                                MTM> (cached), sender=local.
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.018
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Local
                    

        host
          

                                = mathbox.com
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.018
q1b2101da000083bb.smd
                                MTM> [EMAIL PROTECTED] Offset=5
                                MTM> Flags=1
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.033
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Msgid: 
                                MTM> 10/19/2006 20:41:11.049
q1b2101da000083bb.smd Subject: 
                                Test Attachment
                                MTM> Pass-Through on RFC Violation No Cr
                                MTM> --------------------
                                
                                
                                MTM> Here is the script to strip Cr or Lf,
just change the 
                                vbCr below to vbLf.
                                MTM> Just save it as:
                                MTM> Rfc.vbs
                                MTM> --------------------
                                MTM> Dim InFile
                                MTM> Dim OutFile
                                MTM> Dim Fso, File
                                MTM> Dim AllText
                                
                                MTM>   InFile = "Rfc.eml"
                                MTM>   OutFile = "Rfc2.eml"
                                
                                MTM>   Set Fso =
CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
                                MTM>     If Fso.FileExists( InFile ) = True
Then
                                MTM>       Set File = Fso.OpenTextFile(
InFile, 1, False, 0
                )
                                MTM>         AllText = File.ReadAll
                                MTM>         File.Close
                                MTM>       Set File = Nothing
                                MTM>       AllText = Replace( AllText, vbCr,
"" )
                                MTM>       Set File = Fso.OpenTextFile(
OutFile, 2, True, 0
                )
                                MTM>         File.Write AllText
                                MTM>         File.Close
                                MTM>       Set File = Nothing
                                MTM>     End If
                                MTM>   Set Fso = Nothing
                                MTM> --------------------
                                
                                
                                MTM> Finally, if you want to test for these
RFC violations,
                    

        see
          

                                MTM>
http://www.mathbox.com/NoCrTest/NoCrTest.zip
                                
                                
                                MTM> Michael Thomas
                                MTM> Mathbox
                                MTM> 978-683-6718
                                MTM> 1-877-MATHBOX (Toll Free)
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                
                                MTM> ---
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                                -- 
                                Best regards,
                                 David
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