I see. I still think that regex's are more intuitive/flexible though. ;) Sam Clippinger wrote: > If the entry starts with a dot, it will only match the end of the rDNS > name. If there is no dot, it will match anywhere in the name. > > -- Sam Clippinger > > Eric Shubert wrote: >> Sam Clippinger wrote: >> >> >>> Other connections are not being blocked because their rDNS names don't >>> end in country codes. Instead, they use three-character TLDs like >>> ".com" and ".net". If you want to block those connections as well, use >>> the "ip-in-rdns-keyword-file" option and put ".com" and ".net" in the >>> keyword file. >>> >> That would match the string anywhere in the rdns string though, not only at >> the end. Might this be a(nother) reason to implement regex matching? >> (e.g. \.com$) >>
-- -Eric 'shubes' _______________________________________________ spamdyke-users mailing list spamdyke-users@spamdyke.org http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users