Bernd Eckenfels wrote:
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
This sort of thing is why I would rather use any RBL within
SpamAssassin, rather than at SMTP delivery time. Even if one of these
services goes completely belly up and blacklists the world, I don't
automatically lose mail from it
Bernd Eckenfels wrote:
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
This sort of thing is why I would rather use any RBL within
SpamAssassin, rather than at SMTP delivery time. Even if one of these
services goes completely belly up and blacklists the world, I don't
automatically lose mail from it.
Pl
a folder instead so that I can debug.
Matthew Whitworth
s. keeling wrote:
FYI, procmail users: This appears to work fairly well so far; fwiw:
#
# inept mailing list (un)su[b]?scribe attempts, and "vacation" dorks.
#
:0 HB
* 1^0 ()(I will be out o
a folder instead so that I can debug.
Matthew Whitworth
s. keeling wrote:
FYI, procmail users: This appears to work fairly well so far; fwiw:
#
# inept mailing list (un)su[b]?scribe attempts, and "vacation" dorks.
#
:0 HB
* 1^0 ()(I will be out o
I just set up a Debian snort sensor logging to a postgresql database (on
the same host) and noticed that the alerts in the database have
timestamps seven hours earlier than their timestamps in the snort alert
file. The seven hours is interesting because that's my current offset
from GMT -- onl
I just set up a Debian snort sensor logging to a postgresql database (on
the same host) and noticed that the alerts in the database have
timestamps seven hours earlier than their timestamps in the snort alert
file. The seven hours is interesting because that's my current offset
from GMT -- onl
-0700, Matthew Whitworth wrote:
I have a dual-homed host spanning two networks and I would like to leave
one of its interfaces unconfigured so that I can use libpcap
applications on that network unobserved. I can do this using the
command string "ifconfig eth1 0.0.0.0 up", but I was wo
, Matthew Whitworth wrote:
I have a dual-homed host spanning two networks and I would like to leave
one of its interfaces unconfigured so that I can use libpcap
applications on that network unobserved. I can do this using the
command string "ifconfig eth1 0.0.0.0 up", but I was wo
I have a dual-homed host spanning two networks and I would like to leave
one of its interfaces unconfigured so that I can use libpcap
applications on that network unobserved. I can do this using the
command string "ifconfig eth1 0.0.0.0 up", but I was wondering if there
was a way to do this us
I have a dual-homed host spanning two networks and I would like to leave
one of its interfaces unconfigured so that I can use libpcap
applications on that network unobserved. I can do this using the
command string "ifconfig eth1 0.0.0.0 up", but I was wondering if there
was a way to do this us
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