Mark Dale writes:
> D'oh. My apologies. The error was not from the trailing '$' but
> from not having the quotes in place originally. All is now well
> (with the above).
No big deal; on the contrary, we really appreciate your report
confirming that the regex works as expected for you, after
> And what is the error in Mailman's error log.
GLOBAL_BAN_LIST = ['^[0-9a-z.]{6,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$']
D'oh. My apologies. The error was not from the trailing '$' but
from not having the quotes in place originally. All is now well
(with the above).
Thanks,
Mark
2018/06/04 10:33:14 [e
On 06/03/2018 05:58 PM, Mark Dale wrote:
>
> I can't see why either, but with the '$' left in place, the
> Mailman Web UI displayed the error "Sorry, we hit a bug..."
And what is the error in Mailman's error log.
--
Mark Sapiro The highway is for gamblers,
San Francisco Bay Area, Cali
On 06/03/2018 04:11 PM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
Ban list regexps are case insensitive.
Thank you for the clarification Mark.
The fact that the ones I saw never had periods following the plus sign.
ACK
--
Grant. . . .
unix || die
--
Mailman-U
> >> ^[0-9a-z.]{8,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$
> >
> > I'm getting errors with the above however it seems to do the job
> > if I enclose it in quotes and remove the trailing $ - like so:
> >
> > GLOBAL_BAN_LIST = ['^[0-9a-z.]{6,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com']
-
> What you have done is correct
On 06/03/2018 04:28 PM, Mark Dale wrote:
>
>> I use this regexp in the GLOBAL_BAN_LIST
>>
>> ^[0-9a-z.]{8,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$
>
> I'm getting errors with the above however it seems to do the job
> if I enclose it in quotes and remove the trailing $ - like so:
>
> GLOBAL_BAN_LIST = ['^[0
> I use this regexp in the GLOBAL_BAN_LIST
>
> ^[0-9a-z.]{8,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$
I'm getting errors with the above however it seems to do the job
if I enclose it in quotes and remove the trailing $ - like so:
GLOBAL_BAN_LIST = ['^[0-9a-z.]{6,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com']
Am I missing s
On 06/03/2018 09:53 AM, Grant Taylor via Mailman-Users wrote:
> On 06/02/2018 09:29 PM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
>> I use this regexp in the GLOBAL_BAN_LIST
>>
>> ^[0-9a-z.]{8,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$
>
> Are you not looking for capital letters?
Ban list regexps are case insensitive.
> I can see
On 06/02/2018 09:29 PM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
I use this regexp in the GLOBAL_BAN_LIST
^[0-9a-z.]{8,}\+[0-9a-z]{4,}@gmail\.com$
Are you not looking for capital letters?
I can see how the period in the first class would work, but I don't see
that in the second class.
What am I missing?
--
G
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
On Sat, 2018-06-02 at 20:50 -0700, Mark Sapiro wrote:
> Are they just script kiddies trying to be noticed or are they
> actually trying to accomplish something.
I don't think they know what potential they have, but they know there
has to be somethin
At 10:29 PM 6/2/2018, Mark Sapiro wrote:
On 06/02/2018 06:55 PM, David Andrews wrote:
>
> Does anyone have any solution for dealing with spam subscriptions from
> gmail
> addresses?
> The requests are coming from random addresses that contain a few words, a
> plus sign, then another random string
I have a different question.
For a few weeks now the Mailman 2.1 lists @python.org have seen a
massive number of web subscribes from addresses @yahoo.com and @aol.com
addresses. The aol.com ones seem to have abated but yahoo.com continues.
They mostly have local parts that look like first and last
On 06/02/2018 06:55 PM, David Andrews wrote:
>
> Does anyone have any solution for dealing with spam subscriptions from
> gmail
> addresses?
> The requests are coming from random addresses that contain a few words, a
> plus sign, then another random string of characters.
I use this regexp in the
A couple months ago I asked a question and got a
response from Mark Sapiro, see below. We are
having trouble implementing anything. We are
trying recaptcha, but it isn't popular with our
users, thousands of whom are blind. Here is what my Linux guy asks:
Does anyone have any solution for deal
On 02/23/2018 07:07 AM, David Andrews wrote:
>
> I have just two lists that receive a bunch of spam subscribes each day
> -- hundreds of them, in fact. For some reason -- which is good, they are
> held, so don't go through, not quite sure why. Two questions -- first
> is there a file I can erase
> I have a mailman installation with over 300 lists. It is cPanel, but
> I am the administrator so have access to command line etc.
>
> I have just two lists that receive a bunch of spam subscribes each
> day -- hundreds of them, in fact. For some reason -- which is good,
> they are held, so don't
On 02/23/18 10:07, David Andrews wrote:
> I have just two lists that receive a bunch of spam subscribes each
> day -- hundreds of them, in fact. For some reason -- which is good,
> they are held, so don't go through, not quite sure why. Two
> questions -- first is there a file I can erase for e
On 02/23/18 10:07, David Andrews wrote:
> Secondly, there is some commonality in the subscribe addresses, are
> there strings I can use to discard the subscribes so I never have to see them.
>
> Below are examples, there is a common word, or a common word, a
> period ., and another common word,
I have a mailman installation with over 300 lists. It is cPanel, but
I am the administrator so have access to command line etc.
I have just two lists that receive a bunch of spam subscribes each
day -- hundreds of them, in fact. For some reason -- which is good,
they are held, so don't go thro
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