is one because of possible ways of subverting this setup, but that's a
risk I'm willing to take.
Thanks!
--Ian.
--
Ian R. Justman
UNIX hacker. Anime fan. Any questions?
ianj (at) ian-justman.com
Sahil Tandon wrote:
Ian R. Justman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'd like to know whether it is possible to bypass content_filter
based on whether someone has authenticated via SASL.
If users authenticate via the submission (587) port, you can modify the
service in master.cf wit
ad on the system.
--Ian.
--
Ian R. Justman
UNIX hacker. Anime fan. Any questions?
ianj (at) ian-justman.com
Ian R. Justman wrote:
Sahil Tandon wrote:
See the example here, in particular the section that begins with "If
for some reason SASL users connect to port 25":
http://www200.pair.com/mecham/spam/bypassing.html#10
The example is specific to amavisd-new as a content_filter but you
sages (spam/virus/banned
attachments) to kill messages dead in their tracks during the SMTP
sesssion. As such, I will have to change to something like D_DISCARD so
I can keep my mail queue clean.
Any thoughts?
Thanks!
--Ian.
--
Ian R. Justman
UNIX hacker. Anime fan. Any questions?
ianj (at
s a good basic reference for a Python
n00b? I am even tendering the thought of just ditching this thing in
favor of writing a script in a language I do know, Perl.
Thanks.
--Ian.
--
Ian R. Justman
UNIX hacker. Anime fan. Any questions?
ianj (at) ian-justman.com
rectly. It's like the MX lookup I want to see
happen never took place so I can satisfy the conditions for the table
lookup.
Is the "smtpd_check_recipient_mx_access" more for incoming connections
rather than outgoing mails?
Any ideas or suggestions? Googles on the subject aren't being very
fruitful on