I see.
I still think that regex's are more intuitive/flexible though. ;)

Sam Clippinger wrote:
> If the entry starts with a dot, it will only match the end of the rDNS 
> name.  If there is no dot, it will match anywhere in the name.
> 
> -- Sam Clippinger
> 
> Eric Shubert wrote:
>> Sam Clippinger wrote:
>>
>>   
>>> Other connections are not being blocked because their rDNS names don't 
>>> end in country codes.  Instead, they use three-character TLDs like 
>>> ".com" and ".net".  If you want to block those connections as well, use 
>>> the "ip-in-rdns-keyword-file" option and put ".com" and ".net" in the 
>>> keyword file.
>>>     
>> That would match the string anywhere in the rdns string though, not only at
>> the end. Might this be a(nother) reason to implement regex matching?
>> (e.g. \.com$)
>>


-- 
-Eric 'shubes'
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