Sam,
On 2015-09-15 07:27, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
Actually, no. The sender-blacklist-* and recipient-blacklist-*
filters
operate on different data from the header-blacklist-* filters. The
reason is because the sender and recipient addresses are given
during
the SMTP protocol and aren't part of the message itself -- the
addresses you see in your mail client are the From and To entries
from
the message header. The first paragraph here explains in a little
more
detail:
http://www.spamdyke.org/documentation/README.html#REJECTING_SENDERS
[1]
[1]
Yes, sorry, I should have realised that . .
Put another way, the sender address doesn't have to match the
"From"
address visible in the mail client -- well-behaved mail clients
make
them the same, but that's a courtesy and not a requirement. The
Reply-To address is part of the message header and, again, is only
a
convention used by well-behaved clients. If you've ever been Bcc'd
on
a message, you've seen this in action -- the sender's mail client
gave
your address as a recipient but didn't put your address on the
"To"
line in the message header.
Right, so, some follow up questions: I moved the following from the
sender-blacklist to the header-blacklist:
@iskysoft.com [2]
- first in the conf file then later into a separate
header-blacklist-file with all the massaged addresses from my old
setup - but the sender above still seems to be getting through. I
thought the "@" was supposed to act like a wild card? Am I still
doing something wrong?
When I add addresses etc to blacklists etc, is there any way of
doing a test myself to see that the block is working? Using a telnet
to port 25 on my qmail server and manually pasting header lines is
not a real test is it?
Thanks,
Phil.
-- Sam Clippinger
On Sep 13, 2015, at 9:20 PM, Philip Rhoades via spamdyke-users
<spamdyke-users@spamdyke.org> wrote:
Sam,
On 2015-09-14 11:38, Sam Clippinger via spamdyke-users wrote:
I'm not entirely sure I understand your question... if the
Reply-To
address is always the same, you should be able to block it using
the
header blacklist filter.
Ah . . OK - I will try that but doesn't that mean that:
sender-blacklist-entry
is redundant - ie:
header-blacklist-entry
should cover everything?
Thanks,
Phil.
If you're wanting to compare the Reply-To
address to the From address or the sender address, spamdyke
doesn't
have that ability.
-- Sam Clippinger
On Sep 13, 2015, at 4:11 PM, Philip Rhoades via spamdyke-users
<spamdyke-users@spamdyke.org> wrote:
People,
One variety of spam that is successfully delivered to me has a
different "From:" addresses but the same "Reply-To:" address - I
can't see a way of blocking these mails in the conf file via the
"Reply-To:" address - is it possible?
Thanks,
Phil.
--
Philip Rhoades
PO Box 896
Cowra NSW 2794
Australia
E-mail: p...@pricom.com.au
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