On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 09:32:04AM -0500, James D. Stallings wrote:
> You can enter these into access_db and place a DENY after each 

It may depend on your choice of MTA, but in sendmail at least, it's
"REJECT" not deny.

> of the dns names.  I know you can enter partials for the DNS 
> you want to block (like: .ni and .jp, etc..) but I do not think 
> you can do that with the access_db.  I think all entires in the 
> access_db have to be fully qualified.

I'm not sure what you mean by "I know you can enter partials ... but I
do not think you can do that".

accessdb (at least in sendmail) allows "partials".  From the README file:

For example,

        [EMAIL PROTECTED]                 REJECT
        cyberspammer.com                REJECT
        TLD                             REJECT
        192.168.212                     REJECT
        IPv6:2002:c0a8:02c7             RELAY
        IPv6:2002:c0a8:51d2::23f4       REJECT
 
would refuse mail from [EMAIL PROTECTED], any user from cyberspammer.com
(or any host within the cyberspammer.com domain), any host in the entire
top level domain TLD, 192.168.212.* network, and the IPv6 address
2002:c0a8:51d2::23f4.  It would allow relay for the IPv6 network
2002:c0a8:02c7::/48.

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