ORBS database

2000-03-01 Thread Dan Ammellinn

Help please! I's got to ORBS. I'd tried to solve it by the month. Read the
every letter from mailing list. But haven't the result. Can you help me?
Thes're my scripts

rc*:
tcpcontrol /etc/tcp.smtp.cdb tcpserver -x /etc/tcp.smtp.cdb -u 82 -g 81 0
smtp
rblsmtpd /var/qmail/bin/qmail-smtpd 
tcpserver -u 82 -g 81 0 qmtp /var/qmail/bin/qmail-qmtpd 
tcpserver 0 pop3 /var/qmail/bin/qmail-popup my.mail.server \
/bin/checkpassword /var/qmail/bin/qmail-pop3d Maildir 
qmail-start '|dot-forward .forward
./Mailbox' splogger qmail

tcp.smtp

1.2.3.4:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
127.0.0.1:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
10.:allow,RELAYCLIENT=""
:allow

I have tcpserver of course. What's wrong here? Thanks.



Re: ORBS database

2000-03-01 Thread Frank Tegtmeyer


 I have tcpserver of course. What's wrong here? Thanks.

Do you have a rcpthosts file?  Is ORBS possibly testing from a
10.x.x.x address?

Regards, Frank



Re: ORBS database

2000-03-01 Thread Frank Tegtmeyer

 Is ORBS possibly testing from a
 10.x.x.x address?

:) was missing :)



ORBS database under tcpserver's cdb?

2000-01-23 Thread John Conover


Is there any way of running the ORGS IP database as a cdb under
tcpserver on port 25?

Anyone tried it?

Thanks,

John

-- 

John Conover[EMAIL PROTECTED]   http://www.inow.com/
631 Lamont Ct.  Tel. 408.370.2688  http://www.inow.com/ntropix/
Campbell, CA 95008  Fax. 408.379.9602  http://www.inow.com/nformatix/



Re: ORBS database under tcpserver's cdb?

2000-01-23 Thread cmikk


On 23 Jan 2000 23:33:07 - , John Conover writes:
 Is there any way of running the ORGS IP database as a cdb under
 tcpserver on port 25?

Ummm... you are aware of rblsmtpd, which is meant for doing
this blacklist thing, right?

Otherwise, how up-to-date do you need the list?  ORBS publishes
their list after 30 days, so you could download that and send it
through a quick perl filter.

The RSS (which is much better than ORBS -- it rejects less
legitimate mail, and a large amount of spam) is available publicly
via zone transfer, so you could run the output of a zone transfer
through a similar perl filter.

Not that it would be worth it, or anything.  It's much better
to subscribe via DNS, because you will only be transferring the
parts of the lists you are using, rather than the whole thing.
 
-- 
Chris Mikkelson  |  It was mentioned on CNN that the prime number
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |  discovered recently is four times bigger than
the previous record.  -- unknown