s to make it a
> little faster also.
>
> Using DNS is not really a problem, but it would be a little nicer to keep
> it inside (which is also on a faster LAN).
I'd suggest putting your internal entries in /etc/hosts until you get
that internal DNS server up and ru
se positives on this method.
http://lists.roaringpenguin.com/pipermail/mimedefang/2005-September/027960.html
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer 2727 W. Roscoe Street
Information Technology Department
David F. Skoll ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) @ 2006.01.31 17:59:34 -0500:
> Sean Ware wrote:
>
> > Oh man! -- I assume such devices at least keep the translations open
> > for the length of a TCP session?
>
> They'd have to, or the TCP session would break.
That's what I
necessarily follow the same guidelines, of course. -- It's just my own
morbid curiosity.)
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer 2727 W. Roscoe Street
Information Technology Department Chicago, IL 60618-5909
re a particular reason why
you'd prefer this to be a DNS-based service than HTTP?
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer 2727 W. Roscoe Street
Information Technology Department Chicago, IL 60618-5909
[EMAIL PROTECTED
he second and third lines tell sendmail not to
dnl # wait at all. All other systems will be required to wait 2
dnl # seconds (2000 milliseconds, defined in the feature below.
FEATURE(`greet_pause', `2000')dnl
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network
their server to send mail directly to the Internet. This
> > should be very easy to do with nearly all the MTA's out there.
>
> They could be shooting themselves in the foot here, unless they're
> willing to provide reverse dns service for the poor souls.
They
r matches user name (that is, "from myself")
Yup.
Some variation on this recipie ought to do the trick:
:0:
* ^X-Outbound: Yes
* ^From:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer
. It does exactly what I intended
it to do.
> 2) Is there a way to detect how many of a given header there are,
> short of slurping ./HEADERS?
That I don't know. I suspect looking at ./HEADERS is probably your
best course.
> 3) Is there a way to make an action_change_all_headers
-j DROP
>
> No more Asia.
... and no more Australia. (Which may not be what you intended.) For a
slightly more granular approach to this task, I suggest some of the
variations on the KRFILTER project.
http://www.hakusan.tsg.ne.jp/tjkawa/lib/krfilter/index-e.jsp
Sean
--
Sean Ware
u.com/Documents/bogon-bn-agg.txt
http://www.completewhois.com/bogons/data/bogons-cidr-all.txt
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer 2727 W. Roscoe Street
Information Technology Department Chicago
headers('Subject');
action_change_header('Subject', "*SPAM* $Subject");
md_graphdefang_log('spam', "$hits/$req:$names:", $RelayAddr);
action_add_part($entity, "text/plain", "-suggest",
"
imedefang-init
The check script David sent earlier works perfectly with the init
script above.
Sean
--
Sean Ware Midway Amusement Games, LLC
Senior Network Engineer 2727 W. Roscoe Street
Information Technology Department
ile::Find::name;
$mod =~ s/^$File::Find::topdir\/?//;
$mod =~ s/\.pm$//i;
$mod=~s!/!::!g;
my $ver=MM->parse_version($File::Find::name);
print "$mod ($ver)\n"
},
@INC
)
---End Included Script----
....Sean
--
Sean Ware Midwa
spammers
> list. This is done in an attempt to limit the website ability to server
> traffic efficiently by causing extra traffic.
And today's followup news article where said service goes down in a
ball of flames:
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/security/0,261744,39168558,00
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