On 9/18/20 5:09 PM, Jeremy Harris via Exim-users wrote: > On 17/09/2020 23:30, Jim Fenton via Exim-users wrote: >> So instead I have tried putting into my mail_spool transport: >> >> headers_add = ${authresults {$primary_hostname}} >> >> but I'm not seeing the header field in locally-delivered messages (yes, >> I am using mail_spool local delivery). Is this the wrong approach? > It's not one I'd considered. My assumption was that since > one does authentication in the various ways as Exim accepts > the message, that was when the results would be recorded. > Obviously I wasn't thinking hard enough. > > I think it will mostly, but not quite all, work. > Bits of the ARC info, for example, I think will not. > Basically, all the items that are made > available as exim variables will be ok (because they get > passed along with the message even in spool files). > Other info will not. > > [ you're going to really confuse me, using a transport called > "mail_spool". What are you really trying to do? ]
I hadn't realized, but apparently the mail_spool transport is part of the config that's distributed with Debian, and not a generic Exim4 thing. Basically what I'm trying to do is get all locally delivered mail to have the Authentication-results header field added, but not messages sent externally (external domains should do their own email authentication anyway, and I don't want to pollute outgoing messages with non-useful stuff). I discovered that the message wasn't actually going to the mail_spool transport anyway, because I have a .procmailrc file. The procmail router in my config sends it to a different transport, procmail_pipe, in that case. So I had the headers_add in the wrong place. > > You could, in acl, plonk the header string into a variable > which this one transport then used to add it as a header. With it in the right transport (or the right router), it does add the authentication-results header field, but without the DKIM info. This suggestion will help with that. But I still have the problem that I want to put the new header field at the beginning, not the end, of the header. The ":at_start:" thing works for add_header in ACLs, but not for headers_add in routers or transports. I'm not sure how to fix that. Related question: when a router does a headers_add, does it only do that if that router accepts? Or does the header field get added when a subsequent router accepts? If the former, I need to add the header field in several local-ish routers. -Jim -- ## List details at https://lists.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users ## Exim details at http://www.exim.org/ ## Please use the Wiki with this list - http://wiki.exim.org/