Charles Marcus: > On 2010-08-22 8:38 PM, Stan Hoeppner <s...@hardwarefreak.com> wrote: > > Stan Hoeppner put forth on 8/22/2010 7:34 PM: > >> So if we reverse the scenario and put the "REJECT" first, it's a final > >> decision? If so, and if I've described the situation correctly, why do > >> we have this opposite behavior between whitelisting and blacklisting? > >> If I've not described this correctly, what am I missing? > > > Noel's post answered my question, so ignore my previous message. > > > > "OK" != accept_it_right_now > > I guess I need some clarification now... > > My understanding is this is not true if you have all checks under > recipient_restrictions (and delay_reject enabled) - an OK in this case > *would* cause the message to be accepted immediately, while a DUNNO > would skip to the next check. > > But in any case, PERMIT/REJECT always happens immediately. > > Is this correct?
All smtpd_mumble_restrictions have an implicit PERMIT at the end. Postfix rejects mail when any of the smtpd_mumble_restrictions returns REJECT. I'm sure that this is documented. Wietse