Hi, On Tue, Dec 09, 2014 at 05:08:22PM -0600, David Champion wrote: > * On 09 Dec 2014, John Long wrote: > > The messages seem to all have message-ids in the form > > > > bunchofch...@m.something.com > > You'll need to be much more specific if you want help writing a matching > regex. Is "something" a semantic variable or literal? What does > "bunchofchars" look like?
What difference does it make. I want to score on m.anything.com where: "m." is a literal anything is anything and ".com" is a literal > From all I can gather it sounds like they're generating totally legit > and normalized message-ids. Any message-id that someone out here > provides you will match false positives as well. In theory yes. In practice, not so far. If it gets to that point, I'll have to look into it but so far it is not causing any problems except for the fact my pattern is somehow broken and matches mx. as well as m. > That's why we need specific examples to help. They are normal message ids and normal email addresses. I noticed that on most of them they use the abovementioned form of email address and message-id and that is enough to score on them, if I could match it. Thanks, /jl -- ASCII ribbon campaign ( ) Powered by Lemote Fuloong against HTML e-mail X Loongson MIPS and OpenBSD and proprietary / \ http://www.mutt.org attachments / \ Code Blue or Go Home! Encrypted email preferred PGP Key 2048R/DA65BC04