-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 David Purton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have a question about virus scanning at smtp time. Sadly I still > find Exim4 acl stuff a bit of a black art :( > > Sometimes a virus that clamav *does* already know about gets through. That's usually a new virus. > I'm figuring that this virus (in this case Worm.MyDoom.M) has > deliberately broken it's mime encoding and Exim has been unable to > extract the file to pass to ClamAV. Does this sound right? ClamAV might not know about it, yet. See ClamAV's website to find out how you can add the signature. > deny message = This message contains malformed MIME ($demime_reason) > demime = * > condition = ${if >{$demime_errorlevel}{2}{1}{0}} > > > If I understand this correctly, then it will deny any message with > broken mime encoding. > > 1. Will this help in my above situation? Possibly. Try it and see? Let us know what it does for you. > 2. Is this likely to mean that some legitimate email from say a well > known mail client will be rejected? (This is a business mail server, > so I need to be sure we aren't rejecting legit mail) Well, if anybody, anywhere is running a Microsoft MUA, then this is always a possibility whenever you try to enforce the RFCs. > If this is indeed useful, maybe Paul could add it to hs "Rejecting > Email Viruses the Right Way" page? Sure. > Also you could add the rejecting of all messages containing dodgy > windows execuatable extension too IMO. I prefer to actually find out if something really is hostile before I judge it. Err on the side of accepting it anyway if you need to make a judgement call, or you're bound to miss legitimate mail along the line. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.5 (GNU/Linux) iD4DBQFBD+GnUzgNqloQMwcRAvsVAJdo7T4LNVGdDC6QvMDmhyzY05xuAJ9YeRH5 ba5vxY2tsEeLbwD5j9b6dQ== =fuNk -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]