Close... but you need a leading dot if you want it to match a domain name 
instead of looking for the keyword in the middle of the name.  So change your 
file to contain this:
        .rr.com
That should do it!

-- Sam Clippinger




On Oct 2, 2013, at 3:36 PM, BC wrote:

> 
> 
> This spam got through today (after being graylisted 8 minutes):
> 
> Oct  2 13:53:25 C2Q_Q9400 spamdyke[66462]: ALLOWED from: (unknown) to: 
> [email protected] origin_ip: 24.227.125.250
> origin_rdns: rrcs-24-227-125-250.se.biz.rr.com auth: (unknown) 
> encryption: (none) reason: 250_ok_1380743605_qp_66464
> 
> My ip-in-rdns-keyword-blacklist-file contains an entry (out of many 
> others) on one line like this:
> 
> rr.com
> 
> 
> Am I misunderstanding how this should work?  The filter should have 
> found the 'rr.com' in the rdns name that also contained the IP 
> address, right?
> 
> Thanks in advance.
> _______________________________________________
> spamdyke-users mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users

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