At 21:56 04-04-2009, Eagle Link Customer Service wrote:
>This is the part I'm a bit confused about. So far all I've done is generate
>the keys and edit the DNS records. I'm running CentOS 4. Instructions I've
>read tell me to edit /etc/sysconfig/dkim-milter (the config file) to change
>"Domains" to list all the domains. The closest thing I could find was
>"SIGNING_DOMAIN", so I did that. Then everything says that you must use the
>same key on all domains, but I'm not sure why since
>KEYFILE="/etc/dkim-milter/${SIGNING_DOMAIN}_${SELECTOR_NAME}.key.pem" should
>make it chose the right file based on the domain. I haven't even begun to
>configure postfix yet or any startup file for dkim-milter because I wanted
The /etc/sysconfig/dkim-milter file is not the same as the
dkim-filter configuration file. I have not read the script to find
out how it actually works.
The "SIGNING_DOMAIN" should be the domain for which you want to DKIM
sign messages. The script was most likely written to handle one
domain only. The easiest way to get around that is to modify the
startup parameters so that the script points to a dkim-filter
configuration file (-x). You can then specify the domain names in there.
Which version of dkim-milter did you install?
>to get everything configured correctly first. So can anyone tell me why I
>need to use the same keys and how the config should look for that?
You don't have to use the same keys unless the software you run has
that restriction. dkim-filter supports multiple keys. You can use a
different key for each domain or you can use the same key for all domains.
Regards,
-sm
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
dkim-milter-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dkim-milter-discuss