The wildcard isn't needed, and I doubt it's allowed either. See the info and
examples at
http://spamassassin.apache.org/full/3.0.x/dist/doc/Mail_SpamAssassin_Conf.html#whitelist_and_blacklist_options
Specifically, the string at the end of whitelist_from_rcvd which refers to
the reverse DNS of t
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
There are lists that use various servers for their distributions.
These servers can be described using wild cards as for instance
*.somelist.org
I tried to use such wild cards in local.cf as in
whitelist_from_rcvd [EMAIL PROTECTED] *.somelist.org
Gustafson, Tim a écrit :
> In my local.cf, I have the following:
>
> whitelist_from_rcvd [EMAIL PROTECTED] mail.someplace.com
>
> However, when messages arrive at my server from mydomain.com through
> mail.someplace.com, they are still being tagged as SPAM:
you didn't show the Received headers,
In my local.cf, I have the following:
whitelist_from_rcvd [EMAIL PROTECTED] mail.someplace.com
However, when messages arrive at my server from mydomain.com through
mail.someplace.com, they are still being tagged as SPAM:
sm-mta: k23G6r86071146: from=<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, size=38180, class=0,
nrcp