Re: Don't like what rewrite_mail is doing.
On Mon, Jul 17, 2006 at 06:28:01PM -0400, Daryl C. W. O'Shea wrote: > FWIW, there were a lot of domains that weren't including a header list > at the time of the change. In fact, there still are a lot of domains > that aren't including a header list like, for example, yahoo-inc.com. There are some other benefits that came up while discussing it, such as "headers are placed around the Received header that added it for easier debugging", etc. I forget the ticket # but either there or the dev@ list is where the discussion took place. :) -- Randomly Generated Tagline: "lp1 on fire" - Linux kernel error message pgpxPLhZm9g1X.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Don't like what rewrite_mail is doing.
Magnus Holmgren wrote: On Monday 17 July 2006 05:30, Matt Kettler took the opportunity to write: Robert Nicholson wrote: Can anybody tell me why the X-Spam headers are put at the top? Yes, because doing otherwise will break DomainKeys signatures. As a matter of fact it won't do that unless a) the signature field doesn't list the header fields included in the signature (and with DKIM that is mandatory), or FWIW, there were a lot of domains that weren't including a header list at the time of the change. In fact, there still are a lot of domains that aren't including a header list like, for example, yahoo-inc.com. Of course, we also know that DKIM isn't just DK with a mandatory h=... Daryl
Re: Don't like what rewrite_mail is doing.
On Monday 17 July 2006 05:30, Matt Kettler took the opportunity to write: > Robert Nicholson wrote: > > Can anybody tell me why the X-Spam headers are put at the top? > > Yes, because doing otherwise will break DomainKeys signatures. As a matter of fact it won't do that unless a) the signature field doesn't list the header fields included in the signature (and with DKIM that is mandatory), or b) there were already X-Spam-* fields present and removed by SpamAssassin, but adding SA headers to outgoing mail is kinda meaningless, unless ... Actually, it might be useful to trust SA headers that are DK[IM]-signed by certain signers, but maybe you would skip passing such mail through your own SA installation then. > In general Received headers get added at the top, so that working down > the headers you can determine chronology. I'm not sure if this is a RFC > requirement or not, and I'm not sure if it would be required for this > header. However, given the general behaviors of adding Received: > headers, blending in with the trend of how headers are added is the > most-sensible thing to do. Yes, when you get used to it it's much better when you can see which MTA added which headers. -- Magnus Holmgren[EMAIL PROTECTED] (No Cc of list mail needed, thanks) pgpdygFMvGmTX.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Don't like what rewrite_mail is doing.
Robert Nicholson wrote: > Can anybody tell me why the X-Spam headers are put at the top? Yes, because doing otherwise will break DomainKeys signatures. > > Any chance I can set it so that it always puts the X-Spam headers > after From:? You can hack the code to do it, but I'd suggest not doing so because of the above problem. In general Received headers get added at the top, so that working down the headers you can determine chronology. I'm not sure if this is a RFC requirement or not, and I'm not sure if it would be required for this header. However, given the general behaviors of adding Received: headers, blending in with the trend of how headers are added is the most-sensible thing to do. > > > >