> Actually, that one will work even with host aliases. So if
> "mail.example.com" is a host alias for "example.com", you can use either
> "SKIPIFRECIP @example.com" or "SKIPIFRECIP @maill.example.com" -- either
> one will get all the @example.com mail.
OK, thanks.
BTW, that is a weird name for a
> What you could do instead is add a line:
>
> SKIPIFRECIP @example.com
>
> to the \IMail\Declude\recip.eml file, which would prevent the notification
> from going out if the recipient was on the @example.com domain.
Thanks. That would also have to include any alias, correct?
Actually
> What you could do instead is add a line:
>
> SKIPIFRECIP @example.com
>
> to the \IMail\Declude\recip.eml file, which would prevent the notification
> from going out if the recipient was on the @example.com domain.
Thanks. That would also have to include any alias, correct?
John
Does this go anywhere in the recip.eml file, at the top, or at the bottom.
Any commands in .eml files, along with the To:, From:, and Subject:
headers, must go at the top (anywhere before the first blank line).
-Scott
---
[This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude
truth long
before he can write down a logical proof. - Paul Halmos
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of R. Scott Perry
Sent: Friday, March 07, 2003 1:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Declude.Virus] Feature Request: NONPOSTNOTICEOFF
Scott, would it be possible to add a new feature for per domain scanning?
What I would like to see is a NONPOSTNOTICEOFF option.
What you could do instead is add a line:
SKIPIFRECIP @example.com
to the \IMail\Declude\recip.eml file, which would prevent the notification
from going o