it is necessary to consider the option parent_domain_matches_subdomains =
Le mardi 08 mars 2011 à 00:45 +0100, mouss a écrit : > Le 07/03/2011 15:13, Stan Hoeppner a écrit : > > Noel Jones put forth on 3/7/2011 7:00 AM: > >> On 3/7/2011 4:47 AM, Stan Hoeppner wrote: > >>> > >>> I was taught to always start my expressions with "/^" and end them with > >>> "$/". Why did Steven teach me to do this if it's not necessary? > >> > >> That's good advice when you're actually matching something. > > > > Ok, so if I'm doing what I've heard called a "fully qualified regular > > expression", WRT FQrDNS matching, should I use the anchors or not? > > postmap -q says these all work (the actuals with action and text that is). > > > > /^(\d{1,3}-){3}\d{1,3}\.dynamic\.chello\.sk$/ > > .dynamic.chello.sk REJECT blah blah > > > > /^(\d{1,3}\.){4}dsl\.dyn\.forthnet\.gr$/ > > .dyn.forthnet.gr REJECT blah blah > > > /^(\d{1,3}-){4}adsl-dyn\.4u\.com\.gh$/ > /dyn\.4u.com\.gh$/ REJECT blah > > assuming you get real mail from there. otherwise > .4u.com.gh REJECT blah > > > /^[\d\w]{8}\.[\w]{2}-[\d]-[\d\w]{2}\.dynamic\.ziggo\.nl$/ > > ahem? I fail to see what yoy're trying to match here. \d is a \w, so > [\d\w] is the same as \w. do you mean \W (capital letter)? anyway: > > .dynamic.ziggo.nl REJECT blah blah > > > /^(\d{1,3}\.){4}dynamic\.snap\.net\.nz$/ > .dynamic.snap.net.nz REJECT blah > > > /^pppoe-dyn(-\d{1,3}){4}\.kosnet\.ru$/ > /\Wdyn\W.*\.kosnet\.ru$/ REJECT blah > > > > >> The special case of .* means, as you know, "anything or nothing". > >> There's never a case where it's necessary to explicitly match a leading > >> or trailing "anything or nothing". > > > > What of the case where you want to match something in the middle of the > > input string, with extra junk on both ends? > > well, that's what regular expressions are about by default: > /foo/ means contains foo > /^foo/ means starts with foo > /foo$/ means ends with foo > > so > /^bart.*homer.*marge$/ means: starts with "bart", ends with "marge" and > somewhere between these contains "homer". > > > > > >> Consider: > >> /^.*foo$/ > >> match the string beginning with anything or nothing, ending with foo. > >> > >> can always be simplified to: > >> /foo$/ > >> match the string ending with foo. > >> > >> This works the same without the ending $ anchor (contains foo, rather > >> than ends with foo), but helps the illustration. > > > > So, in my examples above, given we're matching rDNS patterns, are the > > anchors necessary, or helpful? If not using them means "contains", then > > they should still match. What advantage is there to using the anchors > > when matching rDNS patterns? Any? > > > >> (In the other special case where you're using $1, $2, etc. substitution > >> in the result, you might need some form of /^(.*foo)$/ to fill the > >> substitution buffer, but that's about substitution, not about matching.) > > > > Thank you for the continuing PCRE education Noel, and Ansgar. :) > > > -- gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-key 092164A7 http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x092164A7
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