solved.. (maybe, I will do more tests ...)
   
I made this way:

blacklist_from @domain.com 

and  then, i  create a meta test , like this:

header __FROM_BADDOMAIN From =~ /some\.com/i
header __FROM_BADDOMAIN_GOOD_TO To =~ /myser\@mydomain\.com/i
meta FROM_BADDOMAIN_UNBLACKLIST_TO  (__FROM_BADDOMAIN &&
__FROM_BADDOMAIN_GOOD_TO)
score FROM_BADDOMAIN_UNBLACKLIST_TO -100

(tips  obtained in
http://markmail.org/message/7dz5ez2en442n6t5#query:+page:1+mid:ydrr57kl2msbprcc+state:results)









Em 08-02-2012 18:38, Bowie Bailey escreveu:
> On 2/8/2012 3:07 PM, Rejaine Monteiro wrote:
>   
>> It's not exactly what I need ... I'll try to be clearer (sorry by poor
>> english)
>>
>> I need something like this:  blacklist a entire @somedomain but accept
>> when the *recipient * (not the sender) is certain user of *my* domain
>>
>> Or ...   blacklist_from  *@somedomain.com  except when destination is
>> myuser@mydomain
>>
>> i tried this:
>>
>> blacklist_from  *@somedomain.com
>> whitelist_to myu...@mydomain.com
>>
>> I tried this but it didn't work (for obvious reasons):
>>
>> content analysis details:   (98 points, 5.0 required)
>>  pts rule name              description
>> ---- ----------------------
>> --------------------------------------------------
>> 100 USER_IN_BLACKLIST      From: address is in the user's black-list
>> -6.0 USER_IN_WHITELIST_TO   User is listed in 'whitelist_to'
>>     
> You could use blacklist_from in the main config and then in the
> user_prefs use unblacklist_from to override it for this particular user.
>
>   

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