If you send me the full email that is causing the bounce I can unsubscribe it. 
I haven't seen the bounces.

BOb


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Matthew Pounsett [mailto:m...@conundrum.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2012 11:31 AM
> To: users@subversion.apache.org
> Subject: Cleaning out an old subscriber
> 
> Hi List Admins.  Sorry, but I couldn't find a list admin address on the web 
> site
> for this, so I'm sending it to the list itself.
> 
> I'm sure others have seen this too, but any time I post to the list I'm 
> getting a
> bounce from world.deshaw.com.  Could an admin track down this subscriber
> and remove them from the list?
> 
> Thanks,
>    Matt Pounsett
> 
> 
> Begin forwarded message:
> 
> > From: Postmaster <systems-postmas...@world.deshaw.com>
> > Subject: Important: message being returned.
> > Date: July 11, 2012 11:02:20 EDT
> > To: m...@conundrum.com
> > Reply-To: nob...@world.deshaw.com
> >
> > Thank you for your inquiry.  Justin Vallon is no longer with the firm.  For
> immediate assistance, please contact Reception at +1-212-478-0000.
> >
> > Sincerely,
> > The D. E. Shaw Group
> >
> >
> > -- 8< --- CUT HERE -------------------------- CUT HERE --- >8 --
> >
> >  From:    Matthew Pounsett <m...@conundrum.com>
> >  To:      Jason Heeris <jason.hee...@gmail.com>
> >  cc:      users@subversion.apache.org
> >  Subject: Re: Square brackets in file names and authz (in VisualSVN 2.5.5)
> >
> >
> >  On 2012/07/11, at 01:13, Jason Heeris wrote:
> >
> >> The problem is this: it doesn't seem to work on files with the '[' or ']'
> characters in their name. Ignoring VisualSVN's GUI for now, I've tried going
> one step further and editing the "authz-windows" file by hand and I just can't
> seem to get it to work. I've tried variations like:
> >
> >  I note by your examples that you're using a unix filesystem (as opposed to
> Windows).  I would be a little surprised if this worked there, since the 
> square
> brackets are normally used by unix shells as glob metacharacters, similarly to
> * and ?.
> >
> >  For example, 'tmp[123].txt' is a glob pattern to match tmp1.txt, tmp2.txt
> and tmp3.txt.
> >
> >  Sorry, I'm not sure how to help you make this work.  If you can avoid using
> those characters in file names, please do so at all costs.  A good rule of 
> thumb
> is that if you can't create the file from a command line in a shell without
> escaping characters, then don't use those characters.
> >
> >
> >> It's also worth pointing out that some paths have the "#" character in
> them. What do I do when I get to those?
> >
> >  This is commonly comment character.  It's possible to create a file with 
> > this
> character in it, but personally I'd avoid it.  It's possible you could escape 
> it like
> so: "tmp\#1.txt", but I'm not confident that will work.  If svn can't deal 
> with
> this one you might have a case for it being a bug, since it is technically a 
> legal
> file name.
> >
> >
> >
> >

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