--On 24 October 2010 22:10:34 -0700 Steve Atkins <st...@wordtothewise.com> wrote:
> > A DKIM verifier generates a single bit, "validly signed or not", > and an identifier in the "validly signed" case. Actually, my verifier produces two bits: one for the headers, and one for the body. In terms of authentication, that might not mean much. It is useful for debugging, though. It also says if the public key was unavailable, or contained a syntax error: For what it's worth, today, on one cluster, I see these counts: 12 invalid - public key record (currently?) unavailable 19 invalid - syntax error in public key record 31 verification failed - body hash mismatch (body probably modified in transit) 285 verification failed - signature did not verify (headers probably modified in transit) 1776 verification succeeded -- Ian Eiloart IT Services, University of Sussex 01273-873148 x3148 For new support requests, see http://www.sussex.ac.uk/its/help/ _______________________________________________ NOTE WELL: This list operates according to http://mipassoc.org/dkim/ietf-list-rules.html