Given the following header: DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha1; d=bluehornet.com; s=bluehornet-1.bh; c=relaxed/simple; q=dns/txt; i...@bluehornet.com; t=1258661618; h=From:Subject:X-Outgoing:Date; bh=3HPqQ2/9JeqpKI5xZpBSBX0GumA=; b=XpEFvxW0dFfl5OlV5dHIU8Ni6rwDsdZc6VtH75m06ssjPZWhQn3RAXGUwzBGQkmj SxvJflgYzAqWFGJJK2dkcyHClpWtnaADS6+ydLJxo3ZufzKT8Ndz5R1zKnlHyzoI; X-TokenInfo-NoToken:
and given the following From: From: "Buffets, Inc." <ec...@buffetsinc.com> is whitelist_from_dkim *...@buffetsinc.com bluehornet.com the correct syntax for whitelisting these emails? I'm adding address book users into the user_prefs files, but without the signing domain this is useless and emails for my users are still getting tagged up as spam (these in particular score 7-10 points without the whitelist). Is there a better way, or do I just have to go in and find a DKIM-Signature for each address book entry and then parse out the d= field? grep -r "^DKIM-Signature:" $HOME/Maildir | awk '{print $4}' | sed 's/d=//' | sed 's/;//' | sort -u I dunno, doesn't seem that efficient (oh, and it doesn't work since the d= doesn't appear in the same location in all the headers). -- RUDOLPH'S RED NOSE IS NOT ALCOHOL-RELATED Bart chalkboard Ep. 5F07